About the Author
Mrs. Elder was born in the summer of 1973 in Carson City, Nevada to a loving family who named her after a Great Uncle who'd recently passed on. Along with her older sister, she started life in a large family of dozens of aunts, uncles, cousins, great aunts, and grandparents.
Meeting and marrying her first wife Tami in 1999, and meeting her second wife Rachel in 2006, she was finally able to transition from male to female in 2008 with the full support of both. All three were married together in a religious ceremony in 2016, and she does her best to maintain a healthy relationship with the two of them without showing favoritism or preference.
Showing an aptitude for math as a pre-teen, she's now a retired Statistical Data Analyst. Enjoying her early retirement, she currently spends her days with the complex calculus of household budgets, grocery shopping, young adult maintenance (raising two children), and the day-to-day cooking and cleaning of being a housewife, all on top of the writing she began in 2019.
Between being 'Wife and Mother', she finds time to spend with her mother, father, sister, brother-in-law, niece, nephews, and friends. In addition to writing, she enjoys old movies, black and white TV shows, dancing to 80's music, playing tabletop role-playing games and older computer games, target shooting, and discussing everything from theoretical physics to politics.
A staunch conservative libertarian, she most values her faith, family, friends, country, personal liberties, and her right to defend herself from oppression from those who would try to define or limit her based on who or what they think she is, who or what she should be, or what she should believe in.
by RobertaME
Every Day is Your Last is a prequel to Lost Faith. They are written so that either book can be read first, but there are a few spoilers in Every Day is Your Last, so it's best that Lost Faith be read first.
I hope you enjoy them!
RobertaME
Eric Dunning was only twelve and in the last six months had watched his mother Erica waste away with cancer, eight years after the death of his father Jack in the early months of fighting in Afghanistan. Torn away from everything he has ever known, a happy southern California life with his mother and his best friend April, he is sent to the complete opposite side of the country to live with an aunt and cousin he has never met. Enduring one trauma after another, circumstances alter the way he sees life, God, and himself in ways he could never have imagined.
Set against the backdrop of rural northern New Hampshire in the 2010s, Lost Faith combines elements of coming-of-age, transformation, self-discovery, and romance, interwoven with a potential answer to the question, "Why does a loving God allow good people to suffer?" It is written as a companion story to the novel, Every Day is Your Last.
Copyright © 2019, 2021 Roberta Elder - All Rights Reserved
130,129 words
This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents herein are either the products of the authors imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events or firms is purely coincidental. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher.
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Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Eric looked out the window of the cab through rivers of raindrops that ran down the side of the roof in little streams. The sun was just reaching the ebb of twilight in the wet October sky as he opened the cab door and stepped out onto the muddy driveway in front of the house that was to be where he would live from now on. He couldn't call it home; that was back in Newport Beach.
The scent of rain and the faint hint of ozone combined with the imposing edifice, marble pillars standing to either side of four perfect marble steps up to the massive oak front door, to create a frightening scene. The twelve-year-old gulped as he'd had no idea what his aunt Heather's home would be like when he'd left Southern California. He had thought that even in twenty-ten northern New Hampshire would all be farms and rustic shacks made of hewn logs. The last thing he had expected was what appeared to him to be a mansion.
The cab driver irately came around the vehicle, stomping through the mud quickly. "Hey kid! You owe me another thirty-eight fifty!"
Startled by the man and his situation, Eric lost his footing and slipped in the mud, falling backwards onto his rear. Looking up at the imposing and obviously irritated man as mud and rain soaked into his ratty jeans, he blinked up at him. "I... I gave you all I had left." He pointed toward the massive building. "Th-they should be able to p-pay the r-rest, sir!"
Pulling the child up by his jacket accompanied by the sound of seams popping, the cabby growled at him. "They better be able to pay kid, or I'm calling the cops!" He dragged Eric up the fine marble steps, the youth noting that their passage left the only blemishes on the pristine wrap-around porch. Banging on the door in one continuous stream of noise, the cabby nearly fell through the doorway when it opened.
Eric looked into the house and saw a monstrously huge man in a tuxedo jacket staring at them with a look of near disdain. He was obviously well muscled and very tall, seeming at least half again as tall as Eric's four foot-ten height. He guessed he could use each leg of the man's pant legs as a sleeping bag.
The stranger stepped into the doorway, blocking most of it. "May I help you, sir?" he said in low even tones. "What is your business here?"
The cabby was initially intimidated, but determined to get what was owed to him. "Look Jeeves, you know this kid?" He hoisted Eric onto his tiptoes.
The man in the doorway looked emotionlessly down at the dangling child who had a terrified and broken look in his young eyes. "I have never seen him before sir, however..."
Even as he spoke, the cabby lifted Eric up by the jacket with his free hand, popping more seams on the sleeves as he hoisted the child completely off his feet. "You little thief! Think I have nothing better to do than... Ah!" He screamed as the man in the doorway gripped his arm like a vice, making him drop Eric unceremoniously onto the soiled and torn seat of his pants. "Lego of me!" he screamed, finally stepping away as the giant man released him. "What're you, crazy!" he yelled.
Clearing his throat, the huge man answered, "I only acted to prevent you from harming the boy, sir." Looking down at the child, he bent at the waist and offered a hand to him. "I am Fredrick, Madame Hargrave's butler. Would you, young sir, be Eric Dunning?"
Nodding as Fredrick helped him back up, he stammered shyly, "Y-yes, sir."
The driver moved up again cautiously. "Say...what's the gag here? You said you didn't know him!"
"I have never met young Master Eric before, sir." Fredrick replied smartly, "However, he was expected... though not until next week at the soonest."
"Well, the kid still owes me thirty-eight fifty for his fare! I hauled him all the way out here from Boston-Manchester and he shorted me! I ought to call the cops!"
"Fredrick?" a light feminine voice said from behind the butler. "What's going on?"
"Just an issue regarding young Master Dunning, Madame Hargrave." he replied with a slight turn of the head. "It appears he is here far in advance of when you were expecting him. There is also a... cab driver... insisting on an additional fee for the fare, Madame."
Watching as Fredrick moved back into the house, a woman came into Eric's view. Heather Hargrave was dressed in a formal gown of pink satin and lace, organza sleeves extending almost all the way to her fingertips. Her lovely blonde hair was curled and coifed perfectly to frame her beautiful countenance centered around two of the bluest eyes Eric had ever seen. As she looked down at him with a concerned expression, he felt ashamed of his disheveled appearance just being in her presence.
The driver, hoping to just get his money and go, cleared his throat. "Evening, lady! I drove the kid here all the way from Boston-Manchester and... well... he shorted my fare! Then this guy grabs me and almost breaks my arm!"
Fredrick bowed slightly to her and whispered in her ear. She sighed as she looked at the two strangers before saying, "Very well, Fredrick. Pay him what he is due."
Retrieving two twenty-dollar bills, Fredrick handed them to the driver. "The change and a receipt, if you please, sir." he intoned flatly.
Snatching the money from his meaty hands, the cabby grumbled and went back to his vehicle, Fredrick moving out the doorway to follow him.
"Won't you come in?" Heather said lovingly.
Stepping slowly and cautiously into the house, Eric's shoes squished with each footfall, making him embarrassed for even being in her lovely home. "S-sorry I'm such a m-mess. I... I fell d-down outside... Mrs. Hargrave?"
"You may call me 'Aunt Heather', Eric. And don't worry about the mess. Though you might want to remove those shoes!" she said lightly. Sweeping her hand toward a marble bench along the wall opposite the door, Eric could now see it was actually the side of an ornate marble stairway.
Making his way over to it, he sat down just as Fredrick came back in; the sound of the cab speeding off into the rainy night.
"Eric?" his aunt Heather asked. "Don't you have any luggage or bags? Were they still in the cab?"
He slowly shook his head. "They... they were lost somewhere when I changed planes... Detroit maybe? I... I asked the lady at the counter about them. She just gave me a number to call. She... she said they might be able to have them in a few days or so."
Heather looked down at the child who she hadn't seen since he was three years old. Her sister-in-law's son, Eric's defeated and vacant visage vaguely resembled both of his deceased parents, but favored Erica and her late husband's side of the family more. But his hair looks so much like Jack's! she noted of the boy's bedraggled dirty-blonde locks. Smiling at him sweetly as he started pealing his soggy shoes and socks off, she swallowed back her own inner turmoil over the family's loss and lowered herself down to the floor so she wouldn't tower over him.
"We weren't expecting you until the first of the month, Eric. I am sorry that we aren't prepared for your arrival, but I do hope you come to love living at Hargrave House, sweetie!"
Eric froze as she called him sweetie, the same thing his mother had always called him. His thoughts drifted to their final time together.
Erica Dunning smiled weakly as her son entered her hospital room. "Hi, sweetie!" she greeted him weakly, barely able to turn her head toward the door.
He swallowed hard, the sight of his mother so weak and helpless making him want nothing more than to just cry, but he made himself smile. "Hey, Mom! Looking beautiful as always! Coming home today?" he chirped.
She tried to keep smiling at him, but her strength was ebbing quickly. Her usual reply of 'Thank you, Eric! I bet I'm home by tomorrow!' was one of the ways they coped with her leukemia, but today she just sadly shook her head, knowing it was simply false hope. "No, sweetie."
Pausing as his smile fell like sunset, Eric shook his head. "No, Mom! You're supposed to say..."
She coughed painfully, reaching a hand out to her only child. "I'm sorry, sweetie! I'm afraid today I will be going Home... to be with your father." Her eyes drifted away aimlessly. "My Jack!" she almost whispered, her heart breaking for him just one more time.
"Mom?" Eric said taking her hand. It was cold and fragile, almost as though if he squeezed it too hard it would crack into powder like fine china. "You... you can't go! I... I need you!"
"I know, sweetie!" she said as a tear ran down her cheek. "I don't want to... but God has other plans for us... and sometimes they're hard to endure. My biggest regret is that I won't be here for you. Taking care of you, watching you grow, and being there for you when you need me. That and there's so many things I wanted to tell you when you got old enough to understand. About your father, about our family, about love and life."
"There are so many stories I wanted to tell you. Like how you got your name?" She laughed lightly as she remembered the day. "The doctor was so sure you were going to be a girl, we didn't even have a boy name picked! Jack wanted to call you 'Erica Bella'... 'Erica the beautiful'!" She laughed again at the memory of the wondrous sense of humor that was his gift, coughs eventually overtaking the light chuckles. "You should have seen his face when we found out the doctor was wrong and he had a son!"
Eric smiled weakly. "I guess he was pretty jazzed, huh Mom!" He tried to keep his tone up beat.
Nodding, his mother slowly blinked and smiled. "And then stammered like an idiot over what we were going to call you!"
He nodded at her. "I like my name just fine, Mom. Eric Bell is a great name!"
Chuckling once more, Erica's smile evaporated with her waning strength. "There's so much more. Things I wanted you to know about your father. What kind of man he was, why I loved him so much, why he had to do what he did... but it just isn't meant to be, sweetie. I'm sorry... so very sorry!" Her eyes closed long enough that Eric thought she might have fallen asleep, but a moment later she opened them once more.
"How are the Stones treating you, sweetie?"
Eric sighed as he looked down, thinking about his best friend April Stone. Her parents had taken him in six months earlier when his mother had been admitted to the hospital expecting only a short stay, but the longer it had gone on, the less welcoming her parents had become. "It's OK, I guess. Am... am I going to be staying with them for a long time, Mom?"
She shook her head once more. "No. I've written to your aunt Heather. She was my brother Richie's wife before he and your father died. She wrote me back to say she was going to take care of you from now on. You're going to go live with her in New Hampshire."
His eyes grew wide. "New Hampshire? But... I'll be so far away! Away from April... from my school... from all my friends! Why can't I stay here?" Eric's eyes began to well up with tears. "Why can't you stay here?"
"I wish I could, sweetie!" she said as she weakly released her hand from his and wiped the tear from his cheek. "I really do! But sometimes things happen and we don't get a choice... we just have to accept them. They make us who we are." Her strength gone, her hand slid back down onto her bed lifelessly. "I love you, sweetie. Always have, always will." her eyes closing once more.
"I love you too, Mom." He paused and waited for her to open her eyes again, but the machine next to her bed started beeping loudly. "Mom? Mom!? Mom!" As he watched her, tears dripping down his cheeks, a nurse came and escorted him out of her room for the last time.
"Eric!?" Heather said a fourth time, this time nearly shouting at the child who had gone almost catatonic for several seconds in the middle of taking off his shoes. "Eric, sweetie?" She watched as he blinked back to life, tears forming in his eyes as he resumed his task. "Are you alright?"
He nodded and stuffed his soaking wet socks into his old and worn out ill-fitting shoes. "I... I'll be fine, Aunt Heather." he sniffed.
Seeing for herself just how traumatized he was, but wanting to teach him to be a man as Erica had asked in her last letter, Heather stood and cleared her throat. "Very well. We were just about to sit down to dinner. I normally insist that we dress for dinner. It's our tradition, but seeing as you have nothing else..." She turned to her butler. "Fredrick, please take him upstairs, draw him a bath, and deliver his clothes to Franchesca for laundering as quickly as possible. Dinner will have to be postponed until he can join us."
"Yes, Madame." he said in his deep monotone. Taking Eric by the hand, he walked her nephew around the railing and up the stairs.
Eric finally started taking in how truly huge his aunt's house was. The entryway emptied out into a large living room with a high ceiling. On the right wall were the expansive front windows he'd seen from the outside. The opposite wall had a spacious archway into another room with a gaping fireplace beyond it. The room was decorated with an openness to it, all with very fine antiques.
Following the huge man up the stairs, he noticed the walls decorated with old oil paintings of people who must have lived long ago. Planters, figurines, and vases filled almost every corner and crevice of what he'd seen of the house so far. Thinking it should smell musty and old, he was surprised that instead it smelled clean and fresh, as though the house had been built only yesterday. Reaching the second landing, he turned to the right, following Fredrick up six more steps, and out into a hallway off to his right. Just as he came around the corner and into the hall, he came face-to-face with a girl.
Drawing in a breath of surprise, Eric nearly shrieked. The girl who stood before him was a miniature version of his aunt Heather. Soft, long, blonde curls fell around her neck and shoulders while vibrant blue eyes stared widely back at him, looking him up and down. Her face was a creamy complexion with a cute nose above pink lips that sat agape.
Mirroring the up and down look the girl gave him, he saw what his aunt had meant when she said they 'dressed' for dinner. The girl wore a pretty pink and white dress that came down just past her knees, the kind he'd only ever seen in windows of high-quality dress shops when he was out with his mother. White stockings adorned her thin legs and pink patent leather sandals covered her tiny feet.
She recovered more quickly than he did, smiling at him gaily. "You must be Eric! I'm Faith!" Her face growing confused, she added, "Mamma told us you weren't going to be here until after Halloween."
Recovering the use of his tongue, Eric slowly shook his soaking wet and muddy head. "Um... n-nice to meet you Faith. I'm Eric..." he blushed. "...but... you know that. S-sorry." He fidgeted as his torn and soaked jacket dripped onto the pristine marble floor, the scent of rain and mud filling the hall. "So... do you always get dressed up like that? Just for dinner?"
Nodding, her smile seemed almost infectious were it not for the crushing weight of loneliness in his soul. "Uh-huh! Do you like my dress?" Faith spun around and began circling him, looking at his clothes. "Is that where you're going? To get cleaned up and dressed for dinner?"
He shrugged absently. "I guess. I don't have any nice clothes or nuthin' like yours, though." He felt like he should make a joke about that, but instead he just apathetically stood there... too hurt and scared to care.
Faith turned to Fredrick. "What'll he wear to dinner, Freddie?" she asked him innocently.
"It appears the only option is what he has on now, Miss Faith." the muscular butler answered. Turning to Eric, he urged him on as he then turned down the hallway. "This way, young Master Eric."
"It's very nice meeting you, Eric!" Faith sang as she danced around behind him toward the stairway. "I hope you'll like it here!"
His eyes were fixed on her as she walked away, slowly following the butler blindly, Faith still smiling at him as he watched her until she disappeared down the stairs. At last turning his head in the direction he'd been walking he saw Fredrick open a door on the left side of the hallway. Following the man into the room, Eric stopped at the doorway, too stunned to move.
The room before him was easily three times larger than his old room and beautifully decorated. Cream silk and white lace curtains adorned the two windows in the far wall and lush carpet the color of beach sand covered the floor. A matched set of antique stained oak furniture decorated the room, and creamy floral wallpaper brightened every wall, reflecting the light from the crystal chandelier in the middle of the ceiling. It was breathtaking.
Turning, Fredrick saw the boy stopped in the doorway. Doubling back, he took the child's hand, leading him between the vanity and dresser that sat along the hallway wall to their left and the four-poster bed on their right. The headboard of the bed was finely carved with vines and roses, and silk pillows decorated it flawlessly along with a comforter that matched the color of the carpet. The blanket was so thick and fluffy that it alone seemed to add six inches to the height of the bed.
"This is to be your room, Master Eric." Fredrick said flatly. "And this is your private bath." He led Eric through a doorway situated between the dresser along the hallway wall and the giant bed.
The bathroom light came on with a loud snap, Eric squinting into the room cautiously as though he might have been intruding. Looking ahead of him, he could see white wooden shelves built into the far wall with more on the wall to the left; to the right sat an old but pristine white porcelain pedestal sink. Above it hung a huge ornate wall mirror with a fine stained oak frame and gold piping that ran round the edges. Passing it as he entered, he caught his reflection and turned away at the sight, his dirty-blonde hair, muddy and unkempt, hanging down past his shoulders in a tangled mess.
Opposite the sink he saw more wooden shelves hanging from the wall, each filled with towels, washcloths, and other linens the same beach-sand color as the carpet in the bedroom. The marble tiles in the floor each had an intricate swirl of gray, brown, and dirty orange that seemed to have been matched to the rest of the decor.
Stopping, he watched Fredrick approach the white porcelain clawfoot tub that occupied the entire far end of the bathroom. Nearly six feet long and half as wide, a curtain of white wispy material surrounded it that almost seemed to float in the air with the slightest breeze. Between the tub and sink, along the wall to his right, he saw an old style toilet with the tank several feet above the bowl and a chain hanging down. A finely carved marble handle at the end of the chain matched the marbled pattern on the floor.
Warming the water, Fredrick pulled the curtain and rotated another handle, sending the water up a golden pipe and out the white porcelain showerhead.
"Madame Hargrave called for a bath, however given the late hour, I believe a shower would be more prudent." He stood and looked at Eric. "Remove your clothes and place them in the basket there." he indicated a rectangular white wicker laundry basket sitting opposite the toilet. Removing a large cream-colored towel from the shelves, he hung it from the ornate gold rod that resided on the wall between the toilet and the tub.
Moving aside as Fredrick silently exited the room, closing the door behind him, Eric stripped down and dropped his wet and dirty clothes into the hamper. In doing so he saw that the cab driver had torn the sleeves from the shoulders of his threadbare shirt. The pants were iffy at best, with wide holes in the knees, a tear in the seat, and legs far too short for his size, while the shoes that he'd left in the entryway were likewise falling apart. It left him one set each of socks and underwear, the former with holes in the toes and the latter tight fitting. He'd grown several inches in the last six months, but the Stones had refused to pay for any new clothes for him.
Entering the shower, he stood in the warm water and relaxed a moment as the grime of travel began to wash away. Looking around, he saw a small golden shelf on the wall near the faucet that contained a bar of soap, a bottle of shampoo, body wash, and a safety razor.
Picking up the shampoo absently, he washed his bedraggled 'beach bum' hair, as April had always called it. He'd meant to get a haircut before leaving Newport Beach, liking his longer style but wanting it better kept, however the Stones had wanted him out and gone as soon as possible, barely leaving time to pack, let alone see to a haircut.
Idly wondering what city his luggage had wandered off to, he noticed a feminine scent began filling the room. Thinking that his aunt Heather had come into the room, after checking to see he was alone, he brought a hand down to sniff the lather coating it and his hair. Looking again at the toiletries, only then realizing that they were all for an adult woman, not a young boy.
Sighing apathetically, he heard the door open and watched through the gauzy curtain and plastic liner surrounding him as an eclipsing shadow entered, retrieved his clothing remnants from the basket, and exited. Rinsing out his hair, he sniffed it and confirmed his suspicions. His hair no longer stank of mud and sweat, but rather the girly perfumed scent of lilac and roses.
Unfazed, he next examined the body wash and saw it was something called Japanese Cherry Blossom. Not knowing what that was, he set it aside and sniffed the bar of soap and was overpowered with a strong floral scent. Knowing he had to get clean with something, he used the soap and turned off the water once he was clean and rinsed.
Reaching out and pulling in the soft towel, he wrapped it around his shoulders and stood in the tub for several minutes until he began shivering. The lights flickered twice as he stood in the damp tub, the sound of the storm outside that had mildly abated on his arrival seemed to regain its strength with every passing minute.
Slowly making his way out, he dried himself, becoming very aware that he was now all alone, in a strange place thousands of miles from everyone he had ever known, and had nothing but a borrowed towel. He missed April terribly, and had been missing his mother so much that he thought he might die of heartache. He also found himself missing all his girl friends from school, and even missed his teachers and April's grouchy parents. Most especially at the moment though, he missed his luggage.
Once dry, he slowly walked back into the bedroom with the towel wrapped around his chest, taking a seat on a small chair. He sighed and looked at the room again. It was then that he noticed that the room had a distinctively feminine style, and even the chair he sat in was for the lady's vanity he sat next to. Sadly, he shook his head. "I'm in a girl's room." he said absently. Thinking that he felt he should be angrier about it than he was, he lacked even the desire to be mad about it.
"I'm sorry, but this is the only available room to give you." Heather said from the doorway, a slight bit of irritation evident in her voice. "As I said, we weren't expecting you until next week. We thought we had more time."
"Oh!" Eric exclaimed, startled at her sudden presence. "I um... I wasn't... just... uh..." He hung his head in shame at seeming to complain about the lavish room she'd given him. "I'm sorry, Aunt Heather."
Entering the room, she sighed wearily. "Always be mindful of what you say, sweetie. You never know who may be listening."
"I know." he shrugged. "I wasn't really complaining about the room. It was more just like, a comment. It's really nice. Beautiful, really! I just feel like my entire life is one big disaster. I mean, what else can go wrong?"
Almost as soon as the words were out of his mouth, all the lights went out.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Gasping as the room was plunged into darkness, a crack of thunder rolling over the house several seconds later, Eric thought he heard someone squeal in fear. After it passed, he found himself wrapped in his aunt Heather's arms and he could finally hear the sobs of fright escaping his own lips.
"It's alright, sweetie!" she soothed the terrified child. "I've got you! You're alright!"
Petting his head to soothe him, she noticed the sweet floral scent of women's shampoo drifting through the room. Leaning forward, she was mortified to learn that her suspicions were correct. "Oh, sweetie!" she exclaimed. "I think I understand why you were upset before. You had to use the lady's shampoo and soap that was in the shower, didn't you?" Feeling the orphan boy just shrug in apathy, she sighed. "We really weren't prepared for you! First thing tomorrow, I promise we'll drive down to Berlin and buy you all new clothes to wear and all the other things you'll need like shampoo. How does that sound?"
"You might have to do it without me." Eric answered as he slowly pulled away from his aunt. "I was looking at my shirt and pants when I took them off and they got torn pretty good, so I don't think I'll have any clothes 'till then." He looked up at her. "What'll I do?"
"I've had my maid Franchesca focus exclusively on getting your clothes repaired, cleaned, and..." She stopped when she had a horrible thought. Just as she was about to say something, a light moved out in the hallway. Turning to look, she watched as Fredrick brought in two oil lamps.
"Pardon the interruption, Madame, but I thought you could use this." he said as he handed her one of them. "I have called the power company. There is an extensive blackout over the area that is not expected to be resolved anytime soon. Shall I turn the gas system on, Madame?"
"Thank you, Fredrick," she smiled at him as she took the lamp. "I would appreciate it if you could see to it as soon as possible."
"Franchesca also wanted me to deliver a message, Madame." he said bowing to her slightly. "I delivered a lamp to her and Cook, as well as one to Miss Faith. Franchesca said to tell you that with the power out she would not be able to launder or dry young Master Eric's clothes and that the shirt and pants will have to be repaired, if they can be at all. The damage is extensive. Even if they can be, she advised that air drying in this weather could take days, Madame."
"Thank you, I just realized that myself." she admitted. Looking down at Eric, she noticed his eyes were vacant and hollow, not even seeming to care and hardly even noting he had nothing to wear and wouldn't until at least the next day. "Fredrick, please bring me the smallest things you have to wear. I don't care what they are, but he needs something!"
The butler arched an eyebrow. "Madame, I will do as you request, but I'm afraid it will do little good. He is much too small for anything I have. I will return shortly." At that he turned and left, walking quickly down the hallway toward his own room. Less than a minute later he returned once more with a pair of workout shorts, underwear, and a T-shirt. "As Madame requested."
"Thank you, Fredrick!" she smiled. "At least this way he'll have more than a towel." Handing them to her young charge, she helped him to stand again. "Take these into the bath and put them on, sweetie."
A glimmer of hope fought its way through his despair as he smiled weakly. "Thank you, Aunt Heather." he mumbled. Following her into the bathroom, his aunt placed one of the lamps on a shelf next to the door and left to let him dress. He quickly determined the futility of trying to get the shorts or underwear to stay up, carrying them and the lamp back out into the bedroom wearing only the T-shirt that hung off one shoulder, leaving it bare.
"Aunt Heather?" he almost cried as he handed the bottoms to her. "I... I couldn't get these to stay. They're way too big." He pulled up the baggy T-shirt at his neck with one hand to try and keep it over both shoulders. It was thankfully so big he could manage to wear it as an oversized nightshirt, but unfortunately it only came down to the middle of his thighs.
Heather sighed in frustration. Handing the unusable clothes back to her employee, she nodded. "Thank you for the effort, Fredrick. That will be all for the moment. Please see to the lights." Watching the giant man walk silently back out into the hall, she looked at Eric once again. "It's hardly better than the towel, is it?" she asked rhetorically.
Looking at the floor, he just shrugged. "Not really. It won't stay up unless I hold it." His head came up as he heard the sound of clicking approaching the door to his room, a light accompanying it.
"Mamma?" Faith asked tentatively as she stepped into the room carrying another lamp. "I'm getting pretty hungry. Can we eat soon?"
"Soon." her mother replied simply.
"Is Freddie going to light the lights again?" she asked with a smile.
"Yes, dear." Heather replied. Seeing the confusion on Eric's face, she explained. "Fredrick is turning on the gas for the old gaslight system that your uncle Richard restored after we bought this house. See, back when this house was built, electricity was new and most houses had lights that ran on gas, which is what people used before electric lights."
Remembering with a smile she added, "Richard wanted it for the practical benefit of having a source of light in power outages, but mostly for the pleasure of having a truly historical home that could stand as a testament to old world ingenuity and ideas of beauty." She looked back to Eric ruefully. "But enough of that. We need to get you dressed in something." she sighed, lightning flashing through the windows. "I would give you something of your uncle Richard's, but I gave those away years ago."
"What's the matter, Mamma?" Faith asked as thunder rolled over the building once more.. "Doesn't Eric have anything to wear?"
"Just one of Fredrick's T-shirts, dear." her mother answered. "His clothes are all damaged or missing, and I don't know what else to do."
Looking at Eric carefully, Faith saw he was just about her size. "He could wear something of mine, Mamma. I wouldn't mind sharing for tonight."
Heather looked up at her daughter and smiled sweetly. "Faith, that's very generous of you, but it wouldn't be appropriate. I'm not about to force him into a girl's dress." Mumbling to herself she added, "Jack would never forgive me!" She looked over at her departed friend's child who stood there apathetically, not seeming to even notice they were talking about him.
"Maybe you don't have to force him, Mamma." Faith opined. "Maybe he wouldn't care!" Looking at Eric she asked bluntly, "Would you like to borrow one of my dresses? Just to have something to wear for tonight? I think you would look nice as a girl!"
He stood numbly, almost unaware of the question. "Huh? Oh." He looked up at his aunt. "I... I don't think Aunt Heather thinks it's a good idea." He blushed heavily as he realized how little he had on and was suddenly grateful that the room was so dark.
Seeing him grip the T-shirt neck even tighter with his one hand and tug at the side with his other to try and make it longer, Heather put her hand to her brow and bit her lip. There was no way she was going to ever suggest putting Jack and Erica's son in a dress, even considering the situation, but she was running out of ideas. He can't stay up here all night! she reasoned.
Faith refused to accept the situation as hopeless. "Mamma! He's got to wear something, right? Besides, Freddie's T-shirt is basically a dress! It's even shorter than any of my dresses! What else can he do?"
"I don't know, Faith dear, but boys just don't wear dresses and that's that." she answered, almost snapping at her. "It's not appropriate. Do you know what would happen if it got out that I had dressed young Eric in girls' clothes? I'd simply die of embarrassment!"
Hearing her say she would die put Eric over the edge. He began to silently cry, tears falling down his cheeks, unable to stop them. He tried to pretend it wasn't happening and didn't even try to wipe them away in fear of calling attention to it while his aunt and cousin debated. He hoped that the darkness of the room would hide it, but his hopes were in vain.
Pausing in her argument, Faith looked at him. "Mamma! He's crying!" she said sympathetically.
Heather turned and saw his noiseless tears, misunderstanding the reason. Moving to her knees and taking him in her arms once more, she tried to comfort him. "Eric, I swear to you, I will not make you wear a dress! I promise, sweetie!" Looking over at her daughter, she shot her a stern look. "Faith! Don't you see how upset it makes him just to mention it?"
Shaking his head and trying to form words, the thought of seeing his last living relation die, just like everyone else in his life had... his father, his grandparents, and then his mother... couldn't be pushed from his mind. Death seemed to surround him and follow him like a gleeful tormenter, threatening to leave him utterly alone. "Everybody I know dies." he cried. "I'm gonna be all alone!"
Pulling away to regard him in surprise, Heather realized too late that she'd incorrectly assumed the cause of his distress and quickly hugged him again. "Oh, sweetie! I didn't mean that! It's just a figure of speech! I wouldn't really die from that! Even so, you'll never be alone! You'd still have Faith!"
Eric took his turn to cleverly misunderstand and got angry. "I don't!" he shouted, pulling away from her as lightning flashed through the rain-soaked window. "I hate God! He took away everyone from me! He left me alone! I'll never believe in Him ever again!" Overcome, he began to sob openly and ran to his aunt's arms as the thunder rolled by, the T-shirt falling off one shoulder again as he released it to hold her.
"No, sweetie!" she tried to comfort him, noticing that her daughter was starting to tear up as well. "I didn't mean it that way! I meant that you would have your cousin Faith!" She rocked him gently as Faith came up and held Heather across her back. "Besides, you shouldn't say that. God loves us, sweetheart!"
His tears beginning to abate, Eric slowly pulled away from her. "Th-then... w-why...." Unable to continue, he resumed crying as she pulled him back into her arms and held him once more.
Waiting until his tears slowed again, she asked his question for him. "Why does God let bad things happen to us? Oh, sweetie! That's a big question!" Smiling, she realized she might have an answer for him. "You know, your daddy Jack used to have an answer for that. He used to say, 'All the things that happen to us, good and bad, are what make us who we are. They need to happen or we would end up being someone else.'"
"I don't know if he was right, but what I do know is this. The bad things that happen, like people dying? That's not God's fault, sweetie. That's people's fault. Either because someone did something bad... like what happened to your father and your uncle Richard... or they didn't do something good that they should have... like not helping someone in need. God wants us to love each other and take care of one another. It's people that let bad things happen. He has to let people make their own decisions and live with the consequences. He can't make us love each other. Do you understand, sweetie?"
He listened and he understood what she was trying to say, but his pain wouldn't let him accept the answer. Not wanting to upset his aunt again though, he forced himself to stop crying and nod. "Sort of, I guess." he lied.
Knowing he wasn't convinced, she pressed the point. "Your mommy knew she was dying. Didn't she tell you she was going to go be with your daddy?"
Shrugging, he stifled another sob before nodding grudgingly.
"I know what it's like to lose your parents." Heather shared. "I lost mine when I was in college, shortly before I met your uncle. So I do understand, at least a little."
He sniffed and looked at his beautiful aunt's face smiling while talking about her own parents' deaths. "Don't you miss 'em?" he asked.
Smiling wistfully, Heather closed her eyes. "Of course, sweetie, but I know they're here with me, now and always. When I close my eyes and think about them, I can feel them with me." After a moment, she looked at him. "Close your eyes and remember your mother with the best memory you have of her!" When she saw him close his eyes, she continued. "Now see her in your mind, and feel her in your heart, and tell me what you see."
Eric smiled faintly. "I remember our last trip to the beach this Easter. April went with us. She's my best friend. We had so much fun! We collected shells, splashed in the ocean, made sand sculptures, and watched the sun set on the ocean." By the time he finished, he had stopped crying and his aunt was wiping away his tears.
"There! Feeling better, sweetie?" Heather asked.
Nodding, Eric wiped his eyes with his forearm. "Yeah. I just get really sad about it sometimes. I miss her so much!" Hearing his stomach growl, he fixed the T-shirt and gripped it again with a hand. Holding his stomach with the other, he looked up at her. "Aunt Heather? Can we go eat?" he asked, trying to change the subject.
Having a degree in psychology and being a licensed therapist, Heather could tell he was deflecting, but felt he probably needed to let the matter drop for now. "Well, you still have a problem."
"Oh yeah." he grumbled. "Clothes." Not wanting to leave the darkness of the room in only a T-shirt that barely covered him, Eric chose hunger over potential humiliation. He shrugged, glanced at Faith for a moment, and blushed. "That's OK. I can just go to bed. I can eat tomorrow when I have something to wear. I'm not really that hungry." he said as another stomach growl gave the truth to his lie. In reality, he hadn't eaten anything all day except a bag of peanuts on the plane.
Heather turned to her daughter. "Dear, would you please wait outside for a minute? I need to talk to Eric alone."
"Why?" she asked innocently.
"Faith." she answered impatiently. "Just wait in the hall with your lamp and close the door." Seeing her daughter close the door behind her, she turned to Eric. "Sit down, sweetie."
Eric shook his head. "I'd rather stand, Aunt Heather." he said meekly.
Seeing him tug on the T-shirt again, it was Heather's turn to blush slightly. "It hadn't occurred to me that if you sit down..."
He nodded shyly as he pulled on the T-shirt again, wishing he could make it stretch to his feet.
"Well, I would get you a robe to wear, but I don't believe Fredrick has one. Even if he did, it would be far too big." she thought out loud, hoping that the process might spark an idea she'd missed. "Any others I could give you would be one of Faith's or mine. At least a girl's robe isn't too inappropriate, given the circumstances. Alternatively I could just let you eat dinner up here and make sure you were left alone so no one would be around for you to get embarrassed. What do you think?"
Shrugging absently, he sniffed and held back tears. "I guess I should just eat up here alone. I... I guess I just need to get used to being alone."
Moving down to him and hugging him once more, her heart was breaking for him. "Oh, sweetie! You know I don't like it any more than you do! I... I just don't see any other options. I'll leave it up to you. What would you rather do?"
He thought about what it would be like eating in his room alone in the dark and almost started crying again. "I don't want to be alone!"
Rocking him gently, Heather petted his head and held him. "No, sweetheart! You'll never be alone again, if I can help it!" Letting go of him while still holding his shoulders, she smiled at him. "I'll tell you what. I'll get you something that can get you through dinner and bed, then in the morning we'll have Fredrick run into town and buy you enough things that we can take a trip down to Berlin to buy you all new clothes! I promise, no one will laugh or treat you mean... and you won't be alone. OK?"
Too numb with grief and despair to care, Eric nodded absently and trudged alongside his aunt toward the bedroom door. As it opened he saw his cousin Faith standing in a brightly illuminated hallway with a concerned look on her face.
"Did... did the power come back on?" Eric asked hopefully as his aunt blew out her lamp and set it next to Faith's on a small table along the hallway wall.
"No!" Faith laughed happily. "Freddie just turned on the gaslights! Aren't they pretty?"
"Why don't we go into Faith's room for something to cover up with?" the girl's mother suggested, noting that Eric had momentarily forgotten how exposed he was, even moreso in the bright light of the hallway.
Faith's eyes widened as she smiled. "Really?" She turned across the hall to her bedroom door and flung it open, racing in and to the right.
"Faith!" Heather shouted. "Wait just a minute!" She started towards Faith's room, already lit with its own gaslights, but stopped herself as she didn't want to leave Eric alone. "Come on, sweetie. Don't worry. I'll explain it to her." She held out her hand to him.
Taking her hand with his free one, the other still clutching the T-shirt's collar, he let her lead him into Faith's bedroom. Entering, he saw the room was similar to the one his aunt had given him, almost a mirror image, but decorated differently. The walls were a pale lavender with gray carpet, and the bed, a pink and white painted iron canopy instead of an oak poster bed, was on the adjacent wall to his left, the wall to the right instead occupied by two white painted wardrobes and an ornate dresser. There was a cluttered white vanity to his left that sat in the corner against the hallway wall alongside the bed and an ornate white nightstand and lamp between them with its twin on the opposite side.
He looked around further and counted three toy boxes, a My Little Pony changing screen, a dollhouse, and a small pink bookshelf, all scattered evenly and neatly around the room. There also appeared to be a doorway through the wall on the right between the dresser and the bookshelf that looked to be entry to another bathroom. Two large windows with lacy white curtains spotted with tiny red hearts were on the opposite wall. As they entered, his cousin had already opened one of the two wardrobes and was pulling out a pink and white satin dress that greatly resembled the one she wore. Turning to suggest it to her mother, Heather shook her head and stopped her suggestion before it even left her lips.
"Faith!" she said trying to keep her temper as she closed the bedroom door. "I did not say he was going to wear a dress, now did I?"
Once the door was closed, the room seemed even brighter than the hallway. He felt a sudden welling up of fear that made him want to run back to the darkness of his new room and hide, but he was even more afraid to be alone than of being exposed. In some ways the room reminded him of the room April had back in California, only bigger. His aunt's raised voice reminded him of the last time he'd seen his best friend.
April hugged Eric for the third time since they had entered the terminal. Red tear streaks marred her pretty young face as she kept having to push her long black hair out of her damp eyes knowing that her best friend was moving so far away, likely never to see him again. They’d been best friends since before either of them could remember; a permanent fixture in each of their lives. People almost never saw one without the other.
"It's just not fair, Eric!" she sobbed quietly in his ear as they hugged goodbye for the last time. "What am I going to do without you?"
Eric returned her hug tightly, never wanting to let go. April was the last constant in his young life marred by so much loss and change. Trying not to cry for April's sake, he steeled himself against the onslaught of sadness and the final loss that would end his life as he'd always known it. "It’ll be OK, April." he lied. "We have each other's e-mail and we can stay in touch that way. It won't be so bad. And you have lots of friends, still."
She sobbed quietly for a moment before replying, "But they aren't you, Eric!" Suddenly overcome with emotion, April pulled back slightly. Knowing how much she loved Eric, and only just recently beginning to realize she had feelings of more than friendship for him, she was overcome with the desire to give him his, and her, first real kiss. Just as she started to lean forward to kiss him, her mother pulled her away.
"Come on now, April. He needs to go and so do we!" she chided. "You've said your good-byes three times already!" Pulling on her daughter's arm, April went into hysterics.
"No! Mom! Just one more thing! No! Mom! Not yet! Eric!" April began to sob as she felt her fingertips leave Eric's outstretched hand.
Seeing April's mother pull her away crushed Eric's already breaking heart to dust. He wanted to run back into her arms and just let her hold him forever, but the look on her mother's face said very plainly, 'Don't!' Numbness suffused his being as April cried for him while all he could do was stand there.
Mr. Stone nodded forward. "Go on, boy. Your family's waiting for you. Good luck to you." Turning to his wife he muttered, "Get that girl under control and let's go home. I'm tired."
April's mother dragged her daughter by the arm and threatened her. "April! Stop embarrassing us or you'll regret it when we get home!"
Eric watched as his best friend was carted away, sobbing his name, as he turned towards the social worker there to see him boarded and safely on his way to his aunt.
"Eric?" Faith asked, the debate with her mother temporarily suspended as they noticed him silently crying once more for seemingly no reason.
"S-sorry." he said, wiping the tears away once more with his free hand as his voice remained even and unshaken, despite the tears. "I... I was just thinking about my best friend April and really missing her."
Handing him a tissue, Heather turned to Faith. "Now dear, let me explain. Eric doesn't want to play 'dress up'. He just needs something that will cover him while we eat. Please put the dress away." Seeing her daughter reluctantly obey, she turned to him. "Alright, sweetie. If you go in the bathroom there, you'll find a robe hanging on the back of the door. Go ahead and put it on and come back out when you're ready. I'll get you something for your feet so you won't get cold."
Nodding vacantly, his memories still threatening to drag him back down into the misery of pain and loneliness, he shuffled into the bathroom and closed the door as lightning flashed outside, another gaslight to the left of the door illuminating the room while the peal of thunder faded slowly away. Looking at the back of the door, he saw the robe and removed it from its hook.
It was white satin with a feminine floral pattern embroidered into it and puffy pink marabou cuffs, hem, and collar. Wrapping it around himself, he tied the knot as his cheeks burned with embarrassment knowing he was going to have to go out wearing it. Sighing in apathy, not even caring if they laughed at him, he opened the door and shambled back out again.
Seeing him wearing Faith's robe almost made Heather tell him to take it off and just make him go downstairs in the T-shirt, but she couldn't force him through the kind of humiliation he would endure if he exposed himself accidentally. Given the short length of the borrowed shirt, that eventuality was highly likely. His trauma was too fresh and too raw to force him into a potentially embarrassing situation, and his emotions were too fragile to leave him to eat alone. Sighing in acceptance, she bade him sit on Faith's bed as she slipped the matching slippers on his feet.
Eric tried to keep his legs together, but doing so prevented his aunt from putting on the slippers. "Sweetie, I need you to relax your leg for a moment so we can be done and go eat, OK?"
"Um... Aunt Heather?" he asked. "Could I at least wear my underwear? Even if they're wet?"
"I'm afraid they're more than just wet, Eric." she answered, finally getting one slipper on. "They would have been in the washing machine, so completely soaked, and full of soap. Even if we tried drying them over a fire, it would take hours before you could wear them. Are you that uncomfortable, sweetie?"
"Kinda, yeah." he admitted. "I'd wear them even soapy and dripping at this point, but I guess I'll just have to learn to do without." he finished with a defeated tone.
Faith intervened again. "Mamma, why don't you just let him wear a pair of mine? I mean, nobody will even see them!"
Heather closed her eyes and tried to control her reaction. She had a viscerally negative view of the idea, but Faith had made a valid point. No one would see them or even be able to tell they were there. The only legitimate reason to deny it would be if he didn't want to wear them. In the end, she turned to Eric. "Alright. Faith makes a valid point, but the choice must be yours." Coming up with an idea, she smiled at him as she headed for the bathroom. "Come with me, Eric."
Stopping at Faith's dresser as he followed her, she retrieved a pair of the plainest white underwear she could find and placed them on the bathroom counter. "You stay in here for two minutes then come out. Nobody will look to see if you put them on or not and the choice will then be completely yours. If you chose not to wear them, simply drop them in the hamper. Only you will know what your choice was."
Taking a breath, Heather continued. "If you wear them because it makes you more comfortable than nothing, you needn't feel any embarrassment over it because we won't know. If you don't wear them, you don't need to be embarrassed about not wearing underwear because we won't know that either. OK?" Seeing him shrug, she sighed and closed the door behind her.
Eric looked at the underwear as though they might jump off the counter and attack him. He didn't want to wear them, not even sure why he didn't, but not wearing anything was beginning to be unbearably uncomfortable. Using a variation of his aunt's idea, he closed his eyes and picked them up, putting them on by feel alone. He figured that if he didn't know what they looked like, he could pretend they were just another normal pair of briefs.
Once he was putting them on however, he quickly figured out that his idea was just wishful thinking. He could feel the lace around the waistband and leg holes and while he didn't know what it was made of, the material was defiantly not cotton.
Determining that it didn't matter anyway, he opened his eyes and pulled them on, standing in the T-shirt, robe, slippers, and undies until his aunt knocked on the door. "Coming." he said flatly. Exiting the bathroom, he at least felt more comfortably secure, but weird at the same time as every step made him know he was wearing girl's undies. The feminine robe and slippers didn't help matters.
When his aunt looked him over with his long and damp dirty-blonde hair combed back, it was all too easy for her to see him as a young girl, but she repressed the feeling. "I told you I would make it as easy as I could." Smiling reassuringly, she could tell by the way that his walk had changed what his choice had been. She didn't let her knowledge show, vowing to herself and his father Jack that she would make it up to him.
"It's fine, Aunt Heather." he mumbled "At least this is warmer than just the T-shirt."
She admonished Faith before they started toward the door. "Now Faith, you must remember we are to help young Eric feel comfortable in the necessity of the moment, not like he's a plaything for your amusement." Faith damped her excitement somewhat, but couldn't help but smile gaily. While she wasn't as sure as her mother was, she was fairly sure what he had chosen, and knowing made her happy. I was right!
Smiling weakly back at her, his every step was a ticklish reminder of his situation. While he'd never been a 'rough and tumble' boy and had always preferred the company of April, his mother, or the other girls at school to that of the boys, he couldn't shake the butterflies-in-the-stomach feeling that plagued him. Even knowing it was his aunt and Faith's idea, he had the idea that wearing girl's things was going to get him in trouble somehow. At the moment though, anything was preferable to the alternatives... hunger or the horrible loneliness that threatened to consume him.
"OK then. Shall we go eat?" Heather suggested.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
The three exited out into the hallway after Heather turned down the lights in Faith's bed and bath, showing Eric how to do it with a long stick made for that purpose for people not tall enough to reach them.
Near the stairway at the end of the hall the three saw Fredrick adjusting one of the wall-mounted gas lamps. Turning and seeing Eric wearing one of Faith's robes and her slippers, the huge man nearly broke the light's mantle. Composing himself, he calmly finished with the light, adjusted the flow, and replaced the chimney. Turning with his usual grace and dignity, he bowed slightly as the three approached him.
"Is Madame ready for dinner?"
Nodding she replied, "Yes, Fredrick. Please be so good as to advise Cook to serve at her convenience? Thank you." While Fredrick briskly preceded them, the three slowly started down the stairs.
His aunt and cousin descended fluidly, each holding the hem of their skirt to avoid tripping, and before he realized he needed to do something similar, he noticed he'd already been mimicking them with the robe he wore without even thinking.
"I hope you'll come to love Hargrave House, sweetie." Heather said as they came down the stairs. "The house itself is almost one hundred twenty years old. Back then, wealthy people were just starting to install electric lights in their houses. Some, like the people that built this house, had both electric and gas lights installed."
Reaching the lower landing and turning right, the three went down the few remaining steps into the entryway as Heather finished talking about the house. Turning left and entering the huge living room, Eric saw that a fire burned warmly in the fireplace set into the far left wall, illuminating the matching white couch, loveseats, and chair arranged in a semi-circle in the far right corner with an antique coffee table in the middle of them. A large ornate rug covered the highly polished hardwood floor of the closer half of the living room, while various shelves and cabinets filled with mementos and heirlooms decorated the walls.
Passing the grandfather clock that sat in a nook around the corner from the lower landing of the stairs, it's slow and even ticking echoing around the silent room, Fredrick emerged from the archway along the left wall. As the butler escorted them into the dining room, Eric looked at the enormous table that occupied it. Eight antique chairs surrounded it, but it could easily accommodate twice as many.
Gaslights lit the room from around the walls while an elaborate electric crystal chandelier hung over the table; the crystals in it refracting the glow of light from around the room making it sparkle even without electricity. A large window took up most of the far wall, beautiful white satin and lace curtains providing privacy, while a white swinging door could be seen in the right-hand wall near the archway.
Hearing the sound of a chair scrape across the polished dark wood flooring as Fredrick seated his aunt at the head of the table, he saw Faith standing next to the left side middle chair as though waiting for something. Moving to sit in the chair between Faith and his aunt, he stopped when Heather cleared her throat. "Yes, Aunt Heather?" he asked.
"A gentleman always seats a lady before taking one himself, sweetie." she answered. "You should also rise anytime a lady enters or leaves the room or when a guest enters or leaves."
"Oh." he replied shyly. "I... I didn't know that." Turning toward Faith, he clumsily pulled out her chair. She sat gracefully as he pushed it in, helping him push it the rest of the way. Then taking his seat with Fredrick's help, he looked over at his aunt. "Did I do that right?" he asked hesitantly.
"It was fine." Heather noted with a sad smile, remembering a similar incident with Eric's father Jack. Meanwhile, Cook brought out their meal of petite sirloin, garlic potatoes, and steamed vegetables.
Eric watched the older woman as she served his aunt first and then Faith. Her short gray hair sat in tight curls and framed her plump face; the gray nearly matching the color of the dress she wore, with a simple white apron tied around her ample waist. Returning to the kitchen she brought out his plate last, smiling at him with compassionate eyes that seemed to understand his fear and loneliness with just a look. Without a word, she returned to the kitchen as Fredrick stood by impassively. Picking up his fork to start eating, having finally remembered that he was hungry, he again heard his aunt clear her throat. Looking over at her he asked, "Yes, Aunt Heather?"
"In this house, we say a prayer of thanks before eating." she explained. "We would have nothing to eat, were it not for His gifts."
Watching her bow and clasp her hands in prayer, then turning to see Faith had done the same, he begrudgingly did likewise.
"Dear Lord, thank you for the blessings you have seen fit to bestow upon us, and make us truly thankful for them. In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen." she intoned respectfully.
"Amen." Faith echoed and finally Eric mumbled it as well, the entire time cursing God in his mind. While his family attended church on Easter, and he'd been taught to pray at bedtime, they had never prayed at dinner. He'd thought that was only something they did in old movies.
Heather opened her eyes and looked at her nephew, seeing the faintest hint of anger still visible in his expression as he opened his eyes and looked to her. Sighing and silently praying for his wounded soul, she picked up her fork and began to eat while the howl of wind outside could be heard mutedly through the walls. As Eric began wolfing his food down, she cleared her throat yet again, seeing that she had a lot of work to do to teach him proper manners. "Sweetie, please don't eat so quickly. No one is going to take it from you."
He looked over and watched Faith taking small bites carefully and slowly, smiling as she looked back at him. Slowing down, but taking larger bites than his cousin, he savored the flavor of the beef and managed to finish his plate while Faith had half of hers left. Still hungry, but not sure how to ask for seconds, or if seconds were even allowed, he sat back in his chair as despair once more threatened him.
"Sweetie? Would you like more to eat?" Heather asked after finishing a bite.
"Please?" he said as he sat forward, his face showing the faintest sign of hope. "Can I have another piece of that meat?"
"May you have another..." she corrected him sternly.
"Sorry." he blushed. "May I have another piece of the meat?" Eric saw her nod to Fredrick who disappeared into the kitchen for a moment before returning followed closely by Cook. Taking his empty plate and replacing it with a new plate holding only a petite sirloin, she smiled at him kindly and then hurried back to the kitchen.
Resuming his meal, he finished as the others did; the storm raging outside even more fiercely. The dimmer light of the gas lamps wavered slightly as he took his last drink of milk. Picking up his napkin and wiping his mouth, he turned to his aunt. "Thank you for dinner, Aunt Heather. It was very good." he said reservedly.
She smiled at him politely. "Thank you, Eric. You are most welcome." Just as Fredrick came up behind her chair to pull it back out, Eric remembered her admonitions at the start of dinner and quickly stood up when she did. Seeing the pleased look on his aunt's face made him feel the faintest trace of happiness. Following her as she exited the dining room, he was surprised when Faith came up next to him and took his hand, leading him out and into the living room, shyly smiling at him as they walked.
Heather glided into the living room, the fire warming it against the bitter cold outside, and sat graciously on the loveseat nearest the bay window that faced the fireplace and gestured to the couch that sat against the adjacent wall. Faith made her way there, Eric following in tow to sit next to her.
Turning toward the two, Heather took the moment to explain some things to Eric. "Since you're new sweetie, I should explain our rules and traditions. Breakfast is at seven each morning. When you are not in school, lunch will be at noon. Dinner is served promptly at six. If there is news of importance to share, it will be done after grace and before we eat. Any matters of lesser importance are to be discussed after dinner when we retire here to the living room. If nothing need be discussed, you may feel free to read here or go up to your room to play. Baths will be done and teeth brushed before nine when I will come to tuck you in and kiss you goodnight."
Continuing, Heather's tone turned ever so slightly stern. "I do not tolerate back-talk, interruption, whining, or any form of disrespectful behavior, to include neglecting your responsibilities such that it would require me to nag you." Looking at Eric, her voice softened slightly. "In exchange I will refrain from speaking harshly or yelling. You are both of an age that corporal punishment should no longer be necessary. I expect you to act accordingly."
"When I instruct you to do something, I expect immediate compliance, not a question about why you should have to." she added, glancing at Faith as that was her worst failing. "If, after you have complied, you feel the action requires explanation, I will do so at my convenience, not yours, but I will explain." Thinking for a moment she concluded, "I will permit one infraction of the household rules to allow for the fact that nobody is perfect, but further infractions will be punished. Do you understand why, Eric?"
"Because if you didn't, we'd just keep breaking the rule, which would mean it wasn't really a rule at all. That's what..." His voice trailed off and he sighed. "...that's what Mom used to say."
She smiled, knowing that it was Richard who had come up with the rules when he ran the household while she worked as a therapist. She was happy to see that his sister Erica had done likewise in her own home. "Good! Do you think it's a fair arrangement?" Seeing him nod absently, she shook her head, thinking that she may have to begin therapy sessions with him to help him through his grief and pain. He seemed so disconnected with life that it pained her to know this was her dear friend Jack's son; the man who had taught Richard to really live and laugh. "So, do either of you two have any questions or points you would like to bring up for discussion?"
"Yes, Mamma." Faith said respectfully. "Two questions and a point of discussion, actually."
"Go ahead, dear." her mother permitted.
"First I wanted to ask about school tomorrow. Is there going to be school with the weather this bad?" she nervously looked toward the window.
Shaking her head, Heather explained. "I don't believe so, dear. However, even if they do not cancel school, I'll be excusing you from it tomorrow as Eric's arrival will require you to be available. He'll need someone who can show him how we do things here, and I can think of no better example than you, dear. Your second question?"
"My second question is to ask if Eric could be allowed to sleep in my room with me tonight so he won't be lonely." she inquired. "That gets to the point I wanted to discuss. May we discuss it, Mamma?"
Heather had expected her to ask. Taking a breath, she turned to him. "Well, I know you're troubled to be alone, and I don't blame you, sweetie. You've been through more than many people could bear in such a short time, especially at such a young age. What do you want to do? Would you rather sleep in your own room tonight, or spend your first night here with Faith?"
Shocked she would even ask him, Eric shrugged. "Well, I don't want to be alone, but I can't sleep in the same room as Faith, right?"
"Why do you say that?" Heather asked, settling comfortably into her therapist's habits of answering a question with a question.
He blinked at her in confusion. Thinking that his aunt wanted him to say the obvious out loud to prove he knew it, he cleared his throat. "Because it isn't right for boys and girls to sleep in the same room together. Like, when I used to stay over at April's house sometimes when my mom would be out of town? Before we turned ten I used to sleep in her room. After that, April's parents made me sleep in her older brother's room that he wasn't using anymore since he went off to college."
Arching a brow, she answered honestly. "Well, April's parents were free to set whatever rules they wished in their home. I personally disagree with their opinion regarding age appropriateness, though. I see nothing wrong with young boys and girls sharing a room, even up to your age. You're children, not teenagers... and cousins, besides."
Using the opportunity to work out some of his repressed emotions, she covertly changed directions. "Family is different. If you had been raised here as our child, we would have put you two in the same room together growing up. As for Faith's request, I would leave that up to you since you seem to feel there's an issue." She laid the suggestion out specifically, watching for how he would react to it being his choice and presenting that it was his opinion, not that of April's parents, that he was stating.
He had been expecting she would disallow it due to their age, but since it was left entirely up to him, he bit his lower lip and tried to think. Whenever he tried to imagine sleeping in that big room by himself, so far from all he'd ever known, it left him feeling even more scared and lonely.
"Well, I really don't want to be alone." he pondered out loud. "If it were up to me, I would chose to stay with you or Faith... maybe just for tonight? I really didn't know if it's right or wrong. I was just repeating what April's parents told me, but you seem to think it's OK, so... may I, Aunt Heather?"
She nodded in understanding, happy that he'd asserted a choice of his own, a definite sign of improvement over the apathetic behavior she'd observed thus far. "Very well. You may go up to Faith's room with her. I'll be up in a while to turn down the lights."
Eric gingerly got up and followed his cousin. Seeing her pause to kiss her mother, he stepped up to his aunt and leaned forward to hug her. While she hugged him back, he felt warm and secure; a feeling of genuine affection like when his mother or April would hug him. Kissing her on the cheek as he'd seen Faith do, he stepped back and said, "Thank you for taking care of me, Aunt Heather."
She smiled at him. "Of course, sweetie. You're family! Now scoot on up to Faith's room! I'll be up soon."
Smiling weakly back, he turned to see Faith holding out her hand to him. Once he took it, Faith led them both to the stairs, Eric holding his robe again as he ascended to not trip on it. She led him by the hand all the way to her room. As they went inside, he watched Faith pick up the long metal stick and use it to turn each of the lights up until the lamps on the walls were lit brightly, giving a soft but warm light to the room.
Faith then stepped over to her dresser and removed some things. Closing the drawer and turning towards the bathroom she said, "I'll be out after my bath. You can play with any of my toys if you like! I promise I won't take too long!"
Just after she closed the door, it dawned on Eric that he had no toothbrush; his being lost in an airport somewhere. Wandering around the room aimlessly for a moment, he turned when he heard the bathroom door open.
"Eric?" Faith asked. "Could you help me please?" Going over to the door, he watched her turn away from him, showing him the back of her dress. "Would you unzip my dress for me, please?"
Reaching up, he unzipped the dress, seeing she was wearing another garment underneath it. Overcome with curiosity he asked, "What's that under your dress?"
Faith laughed lightly. "That's my slip, silly! Thank you for the help! I always have a hard time getting the zipper down! I just can't manage to reach that part of my back!" She gently shooed him back into her room and closed the door once more before he could even ask about a toothbrush.
Resuming his wandering, he looked at her dolls, the items on her vanity, and then went to the large toy chest on the opposite side of the room between the windows. He opened it to find several tea sets, more stuffed animals, many Barbie dolls, and a good-sized box marked 'Doll Clothes'. All were very neatly organized as though each one knew their place and had assumed it before he had lifted the lid.
Closing the box, he went to the toy chest at the foot of her bed and saw it contained a collection of board games and other boxed toys. He saw one that caught his interest, pulled it out, and examined it, not sure what it was. What's a Spirograph? he wondered. Figuring out quickly that it was some sort of drawing toy, he took it up on Faith's bed. Lying across the foot of her bed, he determined how it worked and idly started creating many different designs, serving as a distraction from his sorrow and loneliness.
Just as he was really getting into using different color combinations, Faith came out wearing a pale blue nightgown with a towel wrapped around her hair. Seeing her, he was suddenly reminded that he was in a girl's room and wearing girl's panties, robe, and slippers and began to blush. Watching her as she began brushing out her hair, he almost jumped when she noticed what he was playing with.
"Oh! My Spirograph! I love that!" Climbing on her bed to join him, she saw he seemed embarrassed. "What's wrong? I said you could play with my toys! I don't mind that you were using my Spirograph!"
Fidgeting, he blushed even more. "Oh. It's not that. I just..." He was too embarrassed to say the words and really didn't feel like a long conversation about it, but at the same time he was too polite not to answer. Taking a deep breath and closing his eyes, he let it all out. "It's just when I saw you I remembered that I was wearing your robe and slippers and stuff. I got so into drawing that I forgot for a while."
Faith dropped down on her elbows next to him. "I think you look pretty. Don't you like my robe? Doesn't it just make you feel all pretty inside?"
"I guess it's nice." Eric shrugged, running a finger over the satin. "It's really girly though." he pointed out.
Picking up a pencil, she started to draw little pink hearts on a free sheet of paper. "I guess I don't understand. What's wrong with being girly?"
"There isn't anything really wrong with being girly. It's just... Boys are supposed to be different."
She continued to draw as he resumed using the Spirograph, trying once more to distract himself. "Different how?" Faith interrogated.
He started to answer, came up blank, then thought of something. "OK. So my friend April? She likes unicorns. I like horses."
"I like both." Faith smiled wryly.
Sighing, he tried another approach. "OK, she likes playing house and Barbie dolls, I like video games and riding bikes."
She stopped to consider his comparison. After a moment she asked, "Did she ride bikes with you and play video games with you?"
Replying nonchalantly, he said, "Sure."
"Did you play house and Barbies with her?"
He stopped and remembered all the times they'd played house with April as his pretend wife. He used to make up long and elaborate stories about their life and problems and it was a lot of fun. He also remembered the many times they played with her Barbie dolls, again with him usually driving the narrative that established the direction of their play. "Well... yeah."
She jumped on his confession with a mischievous grin. "Was it fun?"
Thinking back, he admitted to himself that April never had to cajole him into playing the games she liked. He liked doing it because it made April happy and he had fun making up stories to go along with it. "Well, when you put it that way, I do have to admit it was fun most of the time, but I..."
Faith didn't give him a chance to rebut. "And did April like playing video games and riding bikes with you?"
Not really seeing what she was getting at, he replied, "Sure. She liked racing through the dirt lots at the end of our street."
"So then I don't get it." she unraveled his argument like an expert in debate. "You say boys like different things from girls, but you liked doing things April liked and she liked doing things you liked. She liked feeling boyish sometimes, and you liked being girly sometimes. So then, what's wrong with feeling pretty? You are pretty!"
Putting down his pencil, he tried to recover his position. "OK, I'll admit that, but I would never play Barbies if April didn't want to."
"Why not? Barbies are lots of fun! You said so yourself!" she grinned.
Dropping his head down on the bed, he sighed out heavily. Answering into the comforter he replied, "I don't know, OK? I just know that if April didn't like Barbies, I probably wouldn't have played with them on my own!"
Faith tapped him on the back of the head. When he raised his head to look at her he saw her smiling. In a matter-of-fact tone she quietly stated, "Now that you know Barbies are fun, why wouldn't you want to play with them?"
Dropping his face back into the comforter, he groaned loudly into the bed. Wanting to think of a good comeback, but now lacking the desire to even fight her on the issue, he raised back up and sighed. "OK. I give. I can't tell you why. I don't have any better reason than it just wouldn't be any fun if April didn't like it."
Going back to drawing she quipped, "Well of course! How could you have fun playing something if the person you're playing with doesn't like it? Duh!"
At that, Eric sat up, grabbed a pillow from the top of Faith's bed, and bonked her with it gently on the top of her head. Smiling and giggling like crazy, she grabbed another pillow, swinging it wildly at him. The two struggled for a better position to get each other, giggling happily, when the door slowly opened without either of them noticing. After a moment of watching the two, Heather cleared her throat.
The two children looked over at the door frozen mid-play in sudden shock. Faith quickly tossed the pillow back to the head of her bed and dismounted, standing silently next to her bedpost. Slowly Eric did the same until the two were standing next to one another.
Entering the room, her white satin nightgown and robe drifting around her, she crossed her arms. "Faith? You know rough play is not allowed after bath time and never in the house."
Hanging her head she admitted, "Yes, Mamma. I'm sorry. I forgot myself."
Looking over at Eric standing shyly in Faith's robe and slippers and looking very ashamed, she simply pursed her lips.
Fidgeting with the robe, he mumbled guiltily, "Please don't be mad at Faith, Aunt Heather. I started it. I'm sorry."
Seeing genuine remorse in his eyes, she uncrossed her arms, shook her head, and laughed lightly. Petting both on the top of their heads, Heather sighed. "Considering your ignorance, and seeing you genuinely happy for a moment, I'll let it pass this time, but please try to remember. This is not your old home. We have our own rules here. Not too many, and none without reason, but I do expect you to keep them. Alright?"
Guiltily, he looked down. "I will, Aunt Heather." Looking back up at her he added, "Aunt Heather? I don't have a toothbrush."
Thinking a moment, she realized she had not thought of that detail. "Well, we can get you one tomorrow, but in the mean time go in the bath and use one of Faith's. You'll find an unopened one in the bottom cabinet next to the sink. Please be quick about it. Faith? Please finish brushing out your hair. It's already well after nine."
Walking quickly into the bathroom as Faith obeyed her mother, he found one of her unopened pink Barbie toothbrushes. Repressing the feeling that using it was somehow bad, he pushed it aside and began brushing his teeth.
It was unnerving seeing his reflection in the ornate bathroom mirror. Faith's pink toothbrush in his mouth and the girly bathrobe he wore, along with his nearly dry long dirty-blonde hair combined with the feminine scent of the shampoo and soap he'd used earlier, making him see a girl reflected back at him. He didn't even try to fight it. At this point he was getting used to it and figured that there wasn't much of a choice in the matter anyway.
Tomorrow, he reasoned, things will be back to normal. He soon realized that they in fact would never be so for him, ever again. He would have to find a new normal, the realization undoing all his happiness from earlier. Rinsing his mouth absently, he padded back out into the bedroom and across to the right side of Faith's bed, she having already gotten in on the left side and sitting up waiting for him; the gaslights turned low.
He was about to climb in when his aunt cleared her throat. Stopping to stand next to the bed he asked, "Yes, Aunt Heather?"
"We do not sleep in robes and slippers, sweetie." she pointed out patiently.
"Oh." Flushing once more, he stepped out of the slippers and untied the robe, letting his aunt remove it for him as he clutched the neck of the oversized T-shirt once more.
Heather returned the robe to the bathroom before Faith asked, "Mamma? Couldn't he borrow a nightgown to sleep in? He could wear my favorite! Freddie's T-shirt is awfully short and too baggy to sleep in." she pointed out.
Returning from the bathroom, Heather considered her daughter's argument. She didn't want him to feel uncomfortable having to wear only a T-shirt and girl's underwear to bed, but she didn't want him to wear a girl's nightdress even more. Thinking he would simply reject the idea outright she asked, "Well, why don't we leave it up to him?" She looked at Eric and smiled. "Sweetie?"
His vacant expression had returned. Having already admitted to Faith that he enjoyed girly things conspired with his thoughts of how his life would never be normal to make him accept whatever Heather wanted. If that were him wearing a girl's nightgown, he would just accept it as his new normal. "It's fine, Aunt Heather." he shrugged. "Whatever you think is best."
Sighing, she was disappointed that he hadn't taken the initiative to say he didn't want to wear a nightgown. She knew Faith was right. Other than social convention, there really was no valid reason to prevent him from sleeping in a long nightgown that was his size and available versus a short ill-fitting T-shirt. Trying to slip one by her daughter, she changed tactics. "It would be silly to have him change when he doesn't have a preference, since a nightgown would only be a bit longer than the T-shirt anyway."
Shaking her head, Faith didn't buy it. "Mamma? My long nightgown? My favorite? It goes down to my feet! It would be way better than a T-shirt!"
"Possibly," she said, still trying to find a way out of it. Seeing Eric standing by the bed blankly, she shook her head. "I'm going to call it 'good enough' for tonight. We'll get you boy's pajamas tomorrow. Go ahead and climb into bed, sweetie." she ordered him.
Not really listening to their conversation, and no longer caring what he was wearing, Eric pulled back the comforter and sheet and climbed into Faith's bed. In doing so, the baggy shirt drooped open so that both Faith and her mother could easily see the borrowed undies he still wore. Heather avoided looking by going to the bathroom to dim the gaslights to minimum. Faith however, watched him avidly as he got into bed and adjusted the loose shirt repeatedly, trying to get it to stay on his shoulders.
Approaching the bed, Heather waited while Faith laced her fingers together and prayed silently, finishing with, "Amen." Once done, they looked to Eric.
Seeing them waiting for him to do likewise, he figured it was easier to just fake it rather than fight it, and didn't care either way. Closing his eyes, he pretended to pray for several seconds and then absently mumbled, "Amen."
As the two settled in for sleep, Heather kissed them both on the forehead and returned to the door. "Goodnight, you two. Pleasant dreams." she said softly as she closed the door behind her.
Eric started fidgeting almost immediately. The baggy shirt, as Faith had predicted, turned out to be very difficult to sleep in, making him move to adjust it over and over again.
"Eric? Are you alright?" Faith asked just above a whisper.
"Not really." he answered embarrassedly. "The T-shirt is so baggy it keeps bunching up every time I even breathe, but I'll be fine. Really."
Quietly slipping out of bed, she tiptoed across the room to her dresser. Coming back quickly, she handed him her favorite nightgown. "Here." she said sympathetically, keeping her voice low. "I don't care what Mamma says. I think you should sleep in this."
Shaking his head he whispered, "I don't wanna make Aunt Heather mad at me, Faith. She said to just sleep in the T-shirt."
"You're gonna fidget and fuss all night if you stay in that! Come on! Please? Mamma said it was up to you." she argued putting on her 'cute girl' look.
Seeing her hold it out to him again and knowing she was just going to keep insisting, and not really caring about anything at the moment, he sighed and reached out, taking the garment with his hand. "It's really soft." he mumbled.
Letting him take it, she stepped back and whispered, "I know! And super comfy! Well, come on then! Get up and put it on!"
Embarrassed for her to see him, the shirt having ridden up to the point it was exposing the underwear he'd borrowed, he shook his head. "Get back in bed and turn your back?" he stated as though it were a question.
"Why?" she asked innocently.
He was about to explain, but apathy and a desire to just escape reality with sleep made him give in. Getting out of bed, he lifted the T-shirt off with ease. Standing in front of Faith in nothing but the panties he'd borrowed, he quickly slipped into the pink satin polyester nightgown, dropping it over his head and pushing his arms through the elastic banded short sleeves.
Satisfied, she smiled and walked back to her side of the bed and climbed in, settling in facing him this time.
Wearily, he climbed back into bed, having to admit that wearing the fitting nightgown that came down to his ankles was far better than the loose T-shirt. It was soft and comfortable, but it felt funny wearing a satin nightie with lace edges and little flowers on the chest, every move reminding him of its presence. Settling in, all Eric could hear was the rain on the roof and the wind howling through the trees. Punctuated by occasional thunder and lightning flashes through the window, he found it difficult to get to sleep.
After a few minutes he heard Faith whisper, "Eric? Are you still awake?"
"Uh-huh." he replied turning to face her. "It's a little spooky here."
Scootching closer to him, she continued whispering. "If I tell you something, you promise not to get mad at me for it?"
"OK. I suppose so. What is it?"
She shook her head. "You have to promise first."
Rolling his eyes, he answered, "OK. I promise not to get mad. What is it?"
Faith lowered her voice even softer. "I think you look really pretty in my nightgown. And I'm glad you chose to sleep here with me tonight."
Blushing, he looked down at the top of the pink nightgown that he could still see above the covers. Seeing the little pink roses on his chest, he shrugged. "If I tell you something, do you promise to keep it a secret?"
Nodding she replied, "I promise! What is it?"
Eric sighed and closed his eyes, embarrassed to say it out loud. "It's not too bad really, not nearly as bad as I thought it would be. I thought I'd hate it, but it's actually really nice. It's super soft and gives me butterflies in my stomach, but in a good kind of way. I think I actually like it."
His cousin nodded and smiled, sliding close until he could hear her conspiratorial whisper. "Now you know why it's my favorite!"
"Remember you promised not to tell anyone... especially not your mom!"
A giggle escaped her lips before going back to whispering. "I promise! I'm really glad you like it though. It's not as pretty as some of my other ones, but it's a lot softer and more like some of Mamma's grown-up nightgowns. Doesn't it just make you feel all pretty inside even more than my robe?"
Gulping at the suggestion, he blinked nervously a few times before answering. "Um... I guess so. I... I don't really know what pretty feels like."
"Um... it feels like... well... pretty!" Faith stumbled over the words, realizing she couldn't describe it any better than Eric could. "I guess it is hard to describe. I bet that's what you're feeling though! Goodnight, Eric."
"Goodnight, Faith." he whispered. "See you in the morning." Rolling over with his back to Faith, he thought about what he was feeling, wondering if Faith was right, then tried not to think too much about anything, but the thoughts came unbidden. This has to be the worst day of my life. he mused. I wish April was here! She'd know what to do. His eyes closing, tears threatening to pour forth, he wondered, Could tomorrow be any worse?
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Awaking slowly in a dark room, his mind was groggy and dull. The satin pillow and distinctive sweet smell that screamed 'girl' told him he wasn't in his room at the Stone's house. That room still stank of teenage boy from its occupant before he'd taken it. Unable to remember where he was, he had a vague notion of going to sleep in someone else's bed and there being a storm. He reasoned that he must have sneaked into April's bedroom last night like he'd done a few times after his mother's hospitalization when he'd been especially scared. April would soothe away his fears and he would sleep on her floor, returning to his own room in the early morning. That's when he remembered he was in a bed and noticed he wasn't sleeping alone.
He felt a girl he assumed to be April snuggled up tightly behind him. He could tell it was a girl from the scent of her and the wonderfully gentle touch of her arm wrapped around his body, her delicate hand gripping the front of his nightgown. My nightgown? he started, finally awakening fully. Looking down and seeing it with his own eyes, Faith's hand gripping the front of the nightgown he wore, brought reality crashing down on him. His mother's death, the funeral, the tearful goodbye at LAX, his lost luggage, and lastly Faith insisting he wear her nightgown.
Afraid someone would see them sleeping so close and that it was bad, even though he couldn't explain why, he tried to scootch away from her. Her hand tightened its grip and she scooted even more tightly against his back, undoing all his progress. Seeing she would not be moved easily, and now feeling why he'd woken, he almost panicked. Reaching up with his hand, he started to pull her arm off of him when he heard her stir.
"Oh." Faith yawned as he tried to move away, snuggling up to him once more. "It's still dark out. Let's go back to sleep."
"Um, Faith?" he asked. "I have to use the bathroom!" he explained quietly.
"Huh? Oh! Sorry!" she said, releasing him.
Sliding out of bed, he quickly crossed the cold room into the bathroom, closing the door behind him. Returning a few minutes later, after learning that he could not relieve himself while wearing a nightgown except by sitting, he almost ran back to the warmth of the bed. "It's freezing in here!"
Waiting until he was fully settled back in bed, Faith scooted up close once more and spooned against his back, her arm slipping around his waist and gripping the top of his borrowed nightgown. "G'night, Eric." she yawned.
"Um, Faith?" he inquired to see if she was still awake. Hearing her acknowledge him wordlessly with a hum, he turned his head toward the ceiling so she could hear him more easily. "Y-you should go back to your side of the bed. If your mom saw us sleeping like this, she might get mad."
She picked up her head off the pillow and leaned over him, almost lying on the side of his body. Looking down at him, her face less than an inch from his and her blonde locks gently tickling his face, she furrowed her brow. "Why? It's cold! And you're warm!"
Feeling flustered with her lying on top of him, her face so close he could feel her breath on his lips, a lump rose in his throat that made it difficult to talk. Turning his head toward the far wall, he stammered, "N-never mind."
Shrugging, Faith lay her head on his shoulder, gripping him tighter than before and draping one leg over his. "G'nite."
Now fully awake and terrified of being thrown out into the cold, the feeling of her laying on him stirred feelings of comfort and affection. He felt as safe and comforted as the times he'd sneaked into April's room where she'd held him while he'd cried. Staring at the darkened window across the room, he apathetically accepted his role as human hot water bottle. Part of him wanted to make Faith to go sleep on her own side, while another part was very much enjoying the secure feeling it gave him. Apathy gave the tie to the latter as he just vacantly lay there, enjoying the feeling of closeness while his heart hammered like a rabbit's.
Pondering his new normal, he felt the rise and fall of Faith's breathing; her breath warm against his neck. Relaxing him, his mind began to drift. I should hate wearing Faith's nightgown... so why don't I? he wondered. Looking down at Faith's hand, he actually smiled at the sight of her fingers gripping the satin bodice. Floating in and out of consciousness, he would be awakened periodically as Faith would move slightly or sigh contentedly in her sleep. He was startled fully awake when the door to the room opened, a shrill voice filling the space with the sound of irritation.
"Alright, you two!" the woman barked. "Up! Up! Up! Faith? Time to get up and dressed. Your mother said to pick something warm, we're in for the first serious storm of the season!"
Rolling over and away from him, he heard Faith cheerily sing, "Good morning, Franchesca!" The bed shook as he felt her move off it, listening to the sound of her light footsteps heading for the bathroom. Closing his eyes to pretend he was still asleep, he hoped the woman would just go away.
"Alright, you!" Franchesca barked. "It's after six o'clock! Breakfast in less than an hour! Mrs. Hargrave wants to talk with you right away, so drag your lazy bones outta that bed!"
Eric, afraid to be seen wearing Faith's nightgown, pulled the covers tightly to himself. In a flash, the comforter and sheet were ripped from his grasp; the chill in the air assaulting his body. Looking up, he saw a middle-aged woman in an ankle-length black dress with a white half apron, her ebony hair drawn up in a tight bun, making her long narrow face more pronounced.
"Come on, you!" she ordered while holding out the borrowed robe he'd worn the night before. "Snap to it! I have a lot of work to get done and you're messing up my schedule, lazing about!" Believing Heather had told the boy to wear the nightgown out of necessity, she didn't pay it any mind.
Getting up tentatively, he let the woman put the robe on him, sat down, and watched her place the matching slippers over his feet; the marabou at the toes tickling nicely. Seeing her offer a hand up, he took it and smiled weakly, thankful that she seemed to be unaware he'd been told to sleep in the T-shirt.
"That's better!" she said, her voice less harsh. "Come along." Taking him by the hand, he had to jog to keep up as she led him out and down the hall to the last door on the right. Knocking gently but firmly, she opened the door after hearing a welcome. "Mrs. Hargrave?" she pushed Eric into the room. "If you won't be needing me, I'll be getting to my work, ma'am."
"That will be all, Franchesca." Heather intoned sweetly from her bed. Gesturing for Eric to approach she inquired, "Did you sleep well, sweetie?"
Scared that the robe might come open and show he was wearing Faith's nightgown, he pulled the robe tightly around him as he stepped a few feet from the door into the opulent room. "Y-yes, Aunt Heather." Seeing her gesture him forward again, he resumed slowly walking to her.
The center of her room was dominated by a huge bed made of dark stained oak with four large posts running up to within a foot of the ceiling, making them almost look like support beams rather than furniture. Wrapping around it was an ornately carved headboard with attached nightstands jutting forward from the sides, lovely electric lamps decorated them that, for the time being, served no purpose. The only light in the room came from the gaslights stationed at even intervals around the room's four walls. The large electric chandelier hung uselessly but beautifully from the middle of the room's ceiling and the windows showed no sign of the coming morning yet.
He looked around while making his way to his aunt's bedside, noticing all the furniture was similarly done in dark stained oak and appeared very old in style, like things you might see in a movie with some fabulously wealthy character. Two dressers, an armoire, three wardrobes, a vanity, and a desk decorated the rest of the room. Elegant wallpaper of deep burgundy with thin gold vine patterns leading to delicate rosebuds covered the upper half of the walls, while the lower half was finished in fine polished oak. The carpet was a deep mahogany, so thick his slippered feet sank into it with each step.
Reaching the side of the bed his aunt was on, she regarded him with concern. "I need to talk to you. If you like, you may sit on the bed while we talk."
Climbing up on the massive bed, he was careful not to let the nightgown he was wearing show, holding Faith's robe closed in front tightly and keeping the bottom pointed away from her. Sitting on his feet at the foot of the bed, he made sure the robe he wore covered his legs for warmth, modesty, and secrecy, he finally looked up toward her. "Yes, Aunt Heather?"
She smiled, but he could tell she was upset. "Sweetheart, I think you can see that the weather has taken a decided turn for the worse since last night. It's very cold out this morning. Freezing, in fact."
Thinking she'd been told how he and Faith had been cuddling together for warmth, he was terrified that she was going to eject him from her home for letting it happen. Looking down in fear of her, he was too ashamed to even look her in the eyes. "I... I'm sorry, Aunt Heather." he stammered. "I won't blame you if you send me away to live in a foster home."
"What?" she exclaimed in confusion. "Sweetie, what ever would make you think that! I would never send you away!"
His head snapping up at her confused reply, he furrowed his brow. "I... I thought..." Realizing he'd misjudged what she was getting at, it dawned on him that he had given too much away and now would have to tell her what he'd assumed she already knew. He looked away once more, taking a breath. "Um... I thought you were mad at me that Faith was snuggled up close to me this morning... like kinda almost laying on me?" He glanced back toward her, but couldn't keep eye contact. "I... I told her you'd be mad about it, but she just told me to go back to sleep. I know I should have just told her to move, but I didn't. I'm sorry, Aunt Heather."
Her confused look transformed into one of understanding and then mild irritation. "I see. I assume she was snuggling for warmth against the cold?" Seeing him nod silently and fearfully, she sighed. "It's alright, sweetheart. I am not mad at you, or Faith... though I'll have to have a talk with her about intruding on people's comfort and privacy. It's something she's terribly blasé about. However, that is not why I wanted to talk to you."
Looking up and feeling the burden of guilt released, he smiled weakly. "Oh. What is it you wanted to talk about, then?"
"I'm afraid I'm forced to break a promise I made to you yesterday." she said embarrassedly. "I... I told you that I would take you into town today to get you new clothes and the other things you need, but I'm afraid circumstances are going to force me to delay my promise." Seeing the dismay on his face and then the vacant look of apathy returning, she sighed in exasperation. "You see, the storm is getting worse by the hour and many of the roads are already closed due to ice. We won't be going anywhere until at least tomorrow at the soonest, more likely the next day."
Taking a moment before she told him the worse news, Heather steeled herself. "There is a further problem. The power is still out and the power company says that it may not be restored for days. Since we have firewood and gas lighting, we are the lowest priority for service in an outage. Right now, they're working to restore power to other people that are much less fortunate than we are... people that depend on electricity for warmth and light. Do you understand, sweetie?"
He nodded. "I understand. You mean we're lucky and should be grateful we have heat and light. It may be cold in the house, but it's warmer than it would be if we needed electricity for heat." Realizing what his aunt had been driving at, he gulped again and asked, "Does this mean my clothes still can't get cleaned?"
She nodded ruefully. "I'm afraid it does, sweetie. You see, while we have some amenities that run on gas, we don't have any way of cleaning clothes quickly without electricity. We can wash them by hand, I've instructed Franchesca to do so, but drying them with no electricity in this cold and wet weather could take a very long time. It could be days before even the few clothes you have here, such as they are, are wearable... and only if Franchesca can repair them, which is doubtful. She's a housemaid, not a seamstress. On top of the roads being closed, it means that, for the time being, what you're wearing is all there is."
Feeling guilty about what it was he was wearing, his despair at the situation led him right back to apathy and guilt that he'd disobeyed her instructions. He almost hoped she would be mad and punish him for changing into the nightgown, feeling he deserved it for going against her wishes.
"About that." he started. "After you left last night, I had trouble settling in to sleep. Faith was right. The T-shirt kept bunching up just like she said it would." He gulped in fear that he was going to get Faith in trouble, but he just had to tell her. "Faith gave me a nightgown to wear." he said with an embarrassed sigh. "I should say though that she was right. It was way more comfortable and I fell asleep almost right away. Also, you did say it was up to me, right? I... I just decided it was OK. Please don't be mad at Faith!"
His aunt sat for a moment in stunned silence. Not that Faith had done it, she could easily believe she had, but the fact that apparently he'd complied without a fight. "Well... um... OK." she said as she tried to think what to do about it. As she looked at him sitting apathetically at the foot of her bed, she reasoned that his pain and grief were so acute he'd lost the will to assert much of any opinion, even willing to wear a girl's nightgown at the slightest prodding. Slowly she began to grasp the depth of his despair.
She'd seen similar behavior from adults who'd gone through severe trauma, but never such depth of pain in a child outside of abusive homes. Normally she would try to encourage talking through the grief, but every time she'd tried it only seemed to worsen, indicating he wasn't ready to face it yet. What he needed was a distraction, an escape, but circumstances were making that difficult, if not impossible.
Trying to work the problem one step at a time, she lifted her chin. "Alright. Well, I don't see that any real harm has been done. I'm glad you were able to sleep well and be comfortable. I'm sorry my calling you in here didn't give you a chance to change first. Would you like to return to Faith's room to change back into the T-shirt now?" she asked hopefully.
He shrugged absently, not seeming to care. "It's fine, Aunt Heather. Whatever you think is best." A soft knock sounded from the ornate door.
"Come in?" she bade them.
Faith walked in happy and smiling, wearing an off-white dress that came down to her ankles. "Good morning, Mamma! Franchesca told me they did cancel school today and that it might be canceled the rest of the week, so I won't miss anything staying home!" Seeing Eric sitting on her mother's bed shyly, she slowed as her smile died. "Is everything OK, Mamma?"
"Everything is fine, dear." her mother answered frustratedly. "I was just talking with Eric about our plans for today. You see, I promised him we'd drive down to Berlin to get him new clothes, but the storm has the highway closed, so I have to delay my promise." She looked back at him apologetically. "I will keep my promise, sweetie. I just can't do it today."
"It's alright." he answered vacantly. "You don't have to. Eventually my luggage will get here and that's good enough for me." His emotions were spiraling downward rapidly, certain that soon his aunt would tire of all the problems he was causing and send him away. His only faint hope was that perhaps she would send him back to Newport Beach where he could be put in a foster home near April. Thinking of her again, his eyes went wide.
"Aunt Heather?" he asked looking up at her sadly. "I jus' realized I fergot ta' call April last night ta' tell her I got here OK. You gotta smartphone I can use real quick?"
Almost flinching at his abysmal use of language, she shook her head. "You forgot to notify April that you arrived safely, and do I have a cell phone you may borrow briefly." she corrected him. "However, the answer would be 'No' either way. There is no cell service here at the house, so I don't have a cell phone anymore, nor would it do you any good if I did have one."
"Oh." he answered dejectedly. Looking up at her once again he asked, "How about a com..." He stopped mid-question before answering it himself. "...puter, which wouldn't work since there's no power. Do you have a regular phone, Aunt Heather?"
"We do, sweetie." she answered, giving him fleeting hope. "However, it's only a quarter after three in the morning there. I'm afraid you'll have to wait until later in the day."
"That's right." he replied, hope evaporating quickly. "I forgot about the time difference, and April's parents don't let her take calls before school anyway, so I can't call her 'til six tonight when she gets home from school."
Faith stood by impassively as he and her mother talked. Noting the time, she waited until she would not interrupt. "Mamma? Breakfast is in less than forty-five minutes and Eric still doesn't have anything to wear." she pointed out. "What's he going to do today?"
"I really don't know, dear. His clothes won't be dry for a few days at least, and we have nothing for him to wear, except what he has on now. Speaking of which, I'm told you had him change after I put you two to bed."
"I had to, Mamma!" she defended her actions. "He was fidgeting around trying to get comfortable and couldn't, isn't that right, Eric? He would have kept us both awake for hours! Besides, he chose to wear it!"
Turning to the young boy, Heather could see the defeat in his eyes; willing to be led to almost anything so long as it distracted from the emptiness. "I find it hard to believe that a boy your age chose to wear a girl's nightshirt."
"Yes, Aunt Heather." He nodded shyly. "I really did. It's not like I had much of a choice. She was right. It's a lot better than that baggy T-shirt." Wrapping his arms around himself, he shivered. "Sorry. It's really cold. I'm not used to it ever getting this cold. Cold in Newport Beach is sixty, not six!"
Faith turned to her mother. "You didn't answer my question though, Mamma. What is he going to do today? It's cold enough that I didn't get warm until I got dressed. You always told me that 'I don't know' isn't an answer, right?"
"Don't be flippant, dear." she retorted. "No, it's not an answer, but I don't have one to give you. Sometimes even adults don't know what to do."
"Then why not have him wear one of my dresses?" she persisted. "I honestly don't see what the big deal is. Besides, what choice is there?"
"He could stay as he is, dear... that is a choice." she pointed out. "In fact he could go back to wearing Fredrick's T-shirt and we can try to find some way of getting a pair of pants to fit him."
"Mamma!" she said incredulously. "You saw him! He needed my robe to keep Freddie's T-shirt from falling off! I don't understand what's so terrible about him borrowing a dress! It's the only thing in the house that will fit!"
Eric looked over at his cousin. "Don't you have like jeans, or a T-shirt I could borrow? Even if they're girly, that would at least be warm... and maybe Aunt Heather wouldn't mind that so much."
Faith shook her head. "No, I hate pants! So Mamma doesn't make me have any. You could wear one of my skirts and a blouse instead of a dress!"
He shrugged defeatedly, his one thought of how to resolve the issue up in smoke. "Anything is fine with me, I guess. Whatever you think is best, Aunt Heather." he repeated as he shivered once more.
Now seriously concerned that he was falling deep into depression and apathy, enough that he may consider harming himself, Heather tried to think of a way to make him assert himself again. Shivering inwardly, she thought of a therapy technique that she felt might have the best chance at success; confrontation and transference.
She could not only allow Eric to borrow a dress from Faith, she could insist on it until he pushed back at her, transferring his anger with the world and God to her. She had used the technique before, but this was the first time she had actual authority over her patient, making it both easier and more difficult at the same time. It was also morally ambiguous and risky, but her training and experience told her that doing nothing would be far, far worse.
"Very well." Heather began. "Faith has made a point I cannot find fault with, nor can I think of any reasonable alternatives. Since without heat other than the fireplace, you can't very well run around the house all day in a bathrobe, and since you don't seem to care either way, you will borrow clothes from Faith until yours are dry. Please go take a bath in Faith's room. Use the toiletries she has available. She and I will be in shortly to help you change." She was almost abrasive in her tone.
"Really, Mamma?" Faith asked incredulously, hardly able to believe that her argument had changed her mother's usually unshakable mind.
Shrugging, Eric slid off her bed and headed toward her door. "Yes, Aunt Heather." was his only reply. Feeling completely cut off from himself, like a puppet on a string that he could only control indirectly, he simply obeyed. He had a fleeting impulse to shout at his aunt, tell her that he wouldn't do it, but his anger was born only out of habit, not any actual desire or preference. Walking down the hall and into Faith's room, he found it odd that he didn't really care, thinking he should more than he did.
Entering Faith's bathroom, he started the water running, warming it up while he undressed. In short order he was bathing using Faith's toiletries. Washing his hair thoroughly, he rinsed and picked up the bottle of Japanese Cherry Blossom body wash. Cleaning himself all over with it left him feeling heartbroken as soon as he recognized the scent.
Sitting on the curb in front of his house in Newport Beach, Eric fiddled with a rock under his shoe, barely noticing when April sat beside him. Finally he smelled something odd and looked to his left.
"What's that smell?" he asked curiously.
Leaning against her best friend, her head rested on his shoulder. "Soap."
"No. I use soap and that ain't it." Eric grimaced.
"OK, so it's girl's soap." April shrugged. "I ran out of my normal bath soap and had to use some of my cousin's that she left here last Christmas."
Nodding in understanding, he went back to rolling the rock under his shoe. "OK." After a span of silence he commented, "It smells nice."
She sighed, worried about him. "Thanks."
After another silent stretch he added, "I just didn't want you to think I thought you smelled bad is all."
Hooking her arm under his, her head never having left his shoulder, after another awkward silence she finally asked, "How's your mom?"
"Not good." he shook his head despairingly. "She told me this morning that she's going to have to go to the hospital and stay there for a while. Maybe even a few weeks. She's inside packing right now."
Sitting up quickly, April turned to look at him. "That bad? I thought her chemo was going well?"
Shrugging as he shot his foot forward, he made the tiny rock under his shoe roll out into the street. "That's what she told me last week, but I guess you just can't tell with these things."
April thought silently for a moment before asking the question she didn't really want to hear the answer to. "So... what's going to happen to you? I mean, if your mom is going to be stuck in the hospital for a while, you can't stay home alone, can you? You're not even twelve, yet."
Picking up another pebble, Eric flung this one out in the street with his free hand. "I guess I'll hafta go to a foster home. At least 'til Mom gets better."
She drew in a short breath. "A foster home? Isn't there any other option? Don't you have any other family?"
"Not really, no." Eric shook his head sadly. "I mean I have an aunt that lives someplace back east, my uncle Richard's widow, but I don't think she'd be very likely to want to take me in. I don't think I've ever even met her. Besides, I need to stick around so I can help Mom get better."
Leaning against his shoulder once more, April tried to figure out a way she wouldn't lose her best friend. Suddenly, she sat up. "Hey! I could ask my mom and dad if you could stay with us! I mean, you've stayed over lots of times when your mom was out of town for work! Why not just stay with us for a few weeks?"
"Do you think they would mind?" Eric perked up.
"Only one way to find out!" she exclaimed, standing quickly and extending her hand down to help Eric up.
As he stood, he caught the scent of her again and smiled a little. "That stuff's really pretty. Your cousin sure must like smelling like a girl, though." he quipped.
"What do you expect?" she retorted as they started walking the short distance to her house. "She's a girl!" After a moment of walking silently together, she added, "Oh, and in case you hadn't noticed, so am I."
Eric smiled at her as they walked up the walkway toward her front door, simply unable to resist the easy joke she'd handed him. "Yeah, but I won't hold that against you!"
His last remark earned him a slap on the arm just as he passed her while she held the screen door open for him, the two entering the house he would live in for the next six months.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Rinsing off the body wash as he remembered the happy exchange that now nearly brought him to tears, Eric's heart ached to see his best friend even though he knew he likely never would again. Draining the tub, he pulled in one of Faith's towels and dried. Stepping out, he pulled the towel around him tightly to ward off the bitter cold seeping in from the outside.
Noticing a small pile of clothes on the counter that weren't there when he entered, he realized his aunt must have placed them there while he was lost in his memories. After drying himself, he absently donned the second pair of panties he'd ever worn, this time pink, but there was also another article present that he recognized, which almost made him balk.
It was a training bra.
Warring within himself, he remembered his aunt's admonition to obey first and ask questions later and pulled it on over his head. Seeing the last garment she'd left for him, it looked like a very plain nightgown. Quickly figuring out it must be a slip like the one he'd seen Faith wearing the night before, he dropped it easily over his head to drape down his body. The war still raging inside him, he hesitated only a moment before opening the door.
Walking out, he saw his aunt, now fully dressed in a beautiful gown of blue and silver, standing next to the chair for Faith's vanity. Shuffling over to sit, he saw his cousin standing next to her bed smiling, her shocking blue eyes following his every move. Once seated, he watched his aunt crouch down and start to push what looked to him like a giant white sock up over his toes. "What's that?" he asked curiously, but with a hint of irritation that she was dressing him as though he were baby.
"Tights." his aunt said simply. "They'll help keep your legs warm." Pulling them up over his feet and calves, she stopped when she reached the bottom of the slip at his knees. "Stand and pull them the rest of the way up." she ordered, warring within herself whether or not she'd chosen the right therapy, as he didn't seem to be struggling against it nearly as much as she believed he should.
Vacantly, he did as he was told while Heather turned her back to give him a modicum of privacy. Faith on the other hand watched him avidly as he lifted the slip and pulled the tights up over his rump. "Done." he said as he let the slip fall back into place.
Holding out a thin pink petticoat, she lowered it down to the floor. "Step in."
"What's that for? Is it really necessary?" he asked with more than a hint of irritation in his voice as he stepped in, remembering the house rules.
Sliding it up to his waist over the slip she explained with a faint smile, seeing that he was, at least vaguely, beginning to resent being dressed as a girl. "It's called a petticoat, dear. It gives the dress the proper shape so it doesn't just hang loosely around the legs." Hoping that the next item would be the final straw that would break his anger out, she went to Faith's wardrobe and pulled out a dress that she was sure would push him too far.
Eric turned and nearly fainted as she lifted the pink satin dress up for him to see. It looked to be the same length and a similar style as the cotton dress Faith wore, but had shorter puffy sleeves, a bodice covered in a swirl of vines and little flowers in a brocade pattern, and tiny pink sequins scattered about it. The neckline was accented in a Peter Pan collar with lace trim and more tiny sequins. The very full skirt was made of pale pink bridal satin and edging around about an inch above the lace-trimmed hem was another band of lace, ribbon, and a floral patterned organza with even more of the tiny sequins scattered around. He also noticed two satin sashes attached to the sides of the dress at the waist.
It was the girliest thing he'd ever seen.
"Point your arms up, sweetie." Heather instructed, waiting for him to balk.
Afraid to say no for fear of being sent away, and not really wanting to say it, he lifted his arms straight up as instructed. He was soon feeling a zipper closing up his back, followed by a tightness around his waist as his aunt tied the sashes together at the small of his back in a perfect bow. Inside he felt conflicted. The thick satin warmed him quickly, for which he was thankful, but the satin and lace all over his skin gave him more of that feeling of butterflies in the stomach than the nightgown had.
Directing him to sit back down, his aunt proceeded to brush and comb out his long wet hair. Every stroke seemed to fill the room with more girlish scent, making the butterflies in his stomach change to little rubber balls, bouncing around inside him every time he thought, I smell like a girl! I'm dressed like a girl! which he repeated with each brush of his hair.
His conflicted feelings weren't over wearing the dress. He honestly didn't care one way or the other, accepted the necessity, and in fact enjoyed the feeling. It was the other things that bothered him. If his aunt had just told him he had to wear a dress for the day, even this one, he would have been fine with it and perhaps liked it even, though he wouldn't tell his aunt that. Insisting he wear a petticoat and bra he didn't really need, simply because they were things a girl would wear with the dress, made him feel things he didn't want, and wasn't prepared, to face. The war inside himself became a pitched battle, feeling that he must fight to stop his aunt from treating him like a girl, but being treated like a girl gave him a feeling that made him simply give in to the apathy and quietly obey.
"Well," she said after a few minutes, "we can't dry and style your hair properly without electricity, and brushing it out it just makes you look like a boy with long hair in a dress."
"Well aren't I?" Eric huffed.
Heather smiled sweetly, certain that he was about to lash out. "Yes sweetie, but I'm sure you don't want to feel that way, do you?"
"Mamma?" Faith asked. "He could wear one of my play wigs! The red one!"
Believing him to be close to breaking through the apathy and venting his anger out at her, she smiled. "Yes, dear! That would work, wouldn't it?" Pushing his boundaries to the breaking point, she coiled his damp hair on top of his head and pulled the auburn wig Faith brought her over it, seeing the anger in his eyes. "There!" she made herself say happily as she picked up a brush and did her best to make it look nice. "Take a look!" Heather ordered, preparing herself for the dam of emotion to finally break.
Furious that she'd added yet another unnecessary feminine article that made him look and feel even more like a girl, Eric angrily turned and regarded his image as instructed. Reflected back at him was someone who only looked vaguely like what he recognized in the mirror, but somehow seemed so very familiar. As the wind howled outside and the beating rain turned slowly to sleet and snow, he realized that he was watching an echo of the past; a ghost reflected back at him instead of his own image.
A chill ran down his spine unnerving him when he realized why the image in the looking glass appeared familiar; not because it was a reflection of him dressed as a girl, but because it wasn't. In desperation to escape his tormented life, his broken mind took the reflection that vaguely resembled pictures of his mother as a child and twisted it to make him actually see her image as a child reflected back at him. Mom?
Seeing his shocked reaction, his aunt readied herself for a full-scale rebellion. "Well?" she asked.
The traumatized child could scarcely speak. After a moment, his expression of anger and shock melted into one of fascination. He simply nodded and murmured, "It's... it's fine, Aunt Heather." causing her to visibly blanche.
Watching him, Heather had been certain he was seconds from pushing back; moments from the break that would finally see him pour out his pain, grief, and anger at her instead of the faceless world that had been so cruel to him. If he had, she would have been ready to take it all, begin working through his grief, and help him learn to cope with it. Instead, something she hadn't anticipated happened as he just stared at his reflection, mesmerized.
Bringing over a pair of pink patent leather Mary Janes still in their box, Faith handed them to her stunned mother. "You bought these for me for when I grow some, Mamma. I think they might fit her already."
Swallowing hard at hearing himself referred to as 'her', he wanted to turn toward his cousin, but was almost physically incapable of looking away from the vision of his mother as a young girl staring back at him.
Heather was about to correct Faith's gender switch, but it started a thought brewing. "Are you sure, dear? You haven't even had a chance to wear them yet. They might get ruined before you even get a chance."
Faith dismissed the idea. "Of course she won't ruin them! Will you Erica?"
Hearing his mother's name broke the spell and he snapped his head around, thinking that they could see her in the mirror as well. When he saw Faith looking back at him and mentally processing the conversation he'd heard but wasn't listening to, his shock slowly melted away and he shook his head, noticing the strange sensation of the long red curls tickling his neck. "N-no Faith. I promise I won't mess them up for you." he said softly.
Beaming happily, Faith handed the shoes to her mother, who slipped them on the stockinged feet without a word. They fit well and his aunt then bade him to stand and look at himself in Faith's full-length mirror, hoping that perhaps the full image would be too much for his male ego to handle.
Stepping in front of the oval freestanding mirror, he got another chill as he once more saw his young mother in the mirror trying to copy his movements, just out of sync enough that he could tell it was her and not his reflection. He no longer cared about the clothes he was wearing or the uneasy feeling looking like a girl gave him. All he cared about was seeing his mother, even managing to smile at the idea that she was here with him once more.
Coming to stand next to her cousin, Faith looked at their reflections, appearing to her, and anyone else who might see them, like a perfectly normal pair of young ladies.
Heather quietly opened the door. Turning in the doorway she said, "I'm going downstairs to let Cook know to start serving breakfast. Please don't dawdle." Closing the door behind her, she was in a near panic. It almost worked! she insisted to herself. It nearly did, but something changed in him. I wonder... Guessing what it might be, she spotted Fredrick dousing the gaslights in the hallway and approached her butler. "Fredrick?"
Turning to face her he asked, "Is there something you need, Madame?"
Blushing slightly, she steeled herself. "Please inform Cook that we will be down for breakfast shortly. Additionally, I want to let you know something so you don't react negatively. Lacking options, and with his consent, we have attired young Eric in one of Faith's dresses. He was quite unnerved by it, but we didn't have much choice in the matter, given circumstances."
Explaining further, she added, "He didn't want to feel like a boy in a dress, so Faith and I helped to make her look more the part, which helped, so please treat her as you would any young lady. Can you do that, Fredrick?"
Barely able to restrain his shock, after a moment Fredrick accepted it as simply what his employer, a trained therapist who knew more about these things, desired. "Very well, Madame. How shall I address the child?"
Sighing, she replied, "Miss Erica. This should only be for part of today, hopefully. I'm going to go talk with Franchesca. I want you two to figure some way of fixing and drying his clothes today. Once his clothes are dried and repaired, he will remain in them until the roads open... even at night. Please inform Cook of the situation."
Bowing slightly he stated, "Of course, Madame. I shall do my best to make... her... comfortable with the situation." At that he returned to extinguishing the gaslights while Heather went off to find her maid. She wasn't sure what was going on in Eric's mind, but she couldn't live with herself if she didn't do everything possible to ensure Jack and Erica's son remained their son.
"Mamma picked my prettiest dress!" Faith pointed out after Heather left. "You look gorgeous in it, Erica! Do you mind if I call you that?"
Looking back at Faith in the mirror, he shook his head. "I suppose not, Faith. I... I guess Eric wouldn't be right... for... for a... a girl." A feeling he didn't understand washed over him as he referred to herself as a girl for the first time; a calm unlike anything she'd ever experienced. The war inside her was over. All that remained was the blissful calm. Turning back to marvel at the image of her young mother in the mirror, Faith took her hand.
"We should be getting down to the dining room. Mamma doesn't like it when we're late and it's already seven-thirty... half an hour late."
Swallowing hard, she asked, "Can I tell you a secret, Faith?"
She turned and faced Erica's reflection. "Anything, Erica! I promise not to tell... unless it's something bad."
She shook her head, this time enjoying the tickle of the hair on her shoulders and neck. "It's not a bad secret. When I look at myself in the mirror dressed like this?" She paused and let go of Faith's hands, gathering the nerve to say it out loud and not cry. Closing her eyes and holding her breath a moment, she finally blurted it out. "When I see myself in the mirror like this, I... I see my mom when she was a little girl!"
Faith gasped and her eyes grew wide. "Oh, Erica!" She'd seen pictures her father had of his sister growing up and, looking closely, she realized that in the dress and red wig her cousin did resemble her somewhat. "Are you OK?"
She nodded in fascination as her mother nodded with her. "I... I never noticed how much I looked like her before because my mom has red hair, and I have dirty-blonde hair like my father did."
"So I was right to pick the red hair?" she smiled.
Erica nodded, watching the youthful image of her mother eerily shadowing her head movement. Fascinated, she turned only her body away from the mirror slowly, continuing to watch her youthful mother following her movements imperfectly. She could turn her body just enough to see the big pink satin bow at the small of her mother's back, its ends trailing down the back of the skirt as though the ghost were a giant present.
Taking her hand, Faith chirped, "Come on, Erica! Let's go have breakfast!"
Entering the hallway, they saw Fredrick waiting for them at the top of the stairs. Erica's cheeks flushed and she felt the urge to run back into Faith's room to strip the dress off, but the impulse to do so was small and distant, like a memory of a desire. Instead, she just let Faith continue to lead her, hearing the clacking of their short heels against the marble floor. It was an odd sensation for her, having never heard her own footsteps so prominently.
When the two reached the top of the stairs, Fredrick bowed. "Good morning, Miss Faith... Miss Erica. Breakfast is served. If you will accompany me?"
"Thank you, Freddie!" Faith said happily as she released Erica's hand and took his, descending the stairs with the perfection of royalty.
Following, Erica tried to descend the stairs as gracefully as Faith. Passing the framed paintings that hung along the stairway wall, she would occasionally catch sight of her mother in the glass and smile. Slowly, she formed a story in her mind unlike any she'd ever made up. Reaching the bottom, Fredrick held out his free hand and waited. Taking the offered hand gently, she held it the way she saw Faith doing, letting the butler escort them both to the dining room. Entering, they saw Heather already seated at the head of the table.
"Miss Faith and Miss Erica, Madame." Fredrick announced formally.
Nodding to him, Heather gestured to the same places they had occupied the night before. Realizing that she should wait to be seated like Faith, she stood beside her chair while Fredrick assisted her cousin. When the muscular man moved her seat out for her, she smoothed the back of the long skirt and mimicked how she'd seen Faith sit. Sliding into place, she again followed Faith's lead and placed her napkin across her lap.
Waiting patiently, she saw Cook come out with two plates. Serving her aunt first, she again served Faith second. The household cook then left and came back to place Erica's plate in front of her, smiling at her gently, if nervously, the whole time.
"Thank you." she muttered, her voice soft and meek.
"You're quite welcome, dearie!" Cook replied. "Just let Fredrick know if you want any more! There's plenty!"
Remembering dinner, she clasped her hands to pray and bowed her head while her aunt repeated the same prayer from dinner. During the prayer, the broken child imagined she was her own mother, praying as she must have done thousands of times before Erica was even born. It gave her a warm smile that lingered all the way through "Amen."
Throughout breakfast in fact, she was smiling. She hadn't played pretend, creating stories like she used to, since before her mother's hospitalization, but at that moment she was lost in a world where she was Erica Hargrave, a twelve-year-old girl visiting with her cousin Faith and her aunt Heather. Imagining it as she ate, she changed the back-story so she was living with her 'aunt' who was really her sister-in-law because Richard was her much older deceased brother. She just called her 'Aunt Heather' out of respect because she was old enough to be.
Watching the two eating, Heather noticed that Erica seemed happy, but lost in thought. Worried that she was in some kind of fugue state at the shock of seeing herself dressed as a girl, the therapist decided that she'd made the right decision in arranging to have the boy clothes cleaned, dried, and repaired as soon as possible. Whatever's going on in his mind seems to have broken through the apathy and depression, so it's done some good, but the sooner he's back in his own clothes, the better. I don't like this...
When at last the three finished breakfast, Fredrick helped each of them out of their seats in turn. Moving from the dining room into the living room where the large fireplace warmed the house, Heather sat once more on her usual loveseat while the two girls took seats on the other one facing her.
"Well!" she began. "Since there's no school today, and likely not for a few days at least, we needn't worry about getting Erica registered until likely next month." Looking at Erica's reaction, she noticed no change in expression over the use of her name in the feminine form. Needing to see just how badly damaged she was, Heather used her therapist's training and began engaging them in light conversation. "Do you two have any plans for today?" she asked.
Looking at one another, they shook their heads, Faith answering for them both. "Not really, Mamma. I've done all my homework, and Erica doesn't have any yet, so I guess there isn't anything we have to do. Could we just go upstairs and play for a while?"
Her mother shook her head. "I think we should sit here together and talk about a few things. Besides, it's much warmer in the living room than in your bedroom, don't you agree?" Turning to Erica, she asked, "Did you have anything you wanted to talk about? You must have a lot of questions."
"Not really, Aunt Heather." she said demurely.
"I noticed that during breakfast you seemed to be deep in thought." she probed. "What were you thinking about?"
"Well, I was thinking... um..." she began hesitantly, sure that her aunt would react badly to the idea that she was pretending to be her own mother. Deciding to just let her know some of her thoughts, she closed her eyes and took a breath, her way of making herself say something she didn't want to. "I noticed that I look an awful lot like... um... my mom... when she was younger. I was thinking about that." Still sorting out the details of her story, she justified her statement by separating Erica's life into two parts; her old life as a grown up and her new life, reborn in the body of her own child.
Faith looked at her surprised. "I thought you wanted me to keep it a secret?"
"It's alright, Faith." she sighed. "I couldn't very well lie to your mom, right?"
"I guess so." she replied. Turning to her mother, she asked, "I noticed I look a little like some of the pictures of you when you were little. Don't you think so, Mamma?"
Smiling, Heather turned to her daughter. "Somewhat, dear. I also agree, Erica... you do look somewhat like your mother at your age. How does that make you feel, seeing something of your mother reflected back at you?"
She shrugged absently. "Mostly I like it... like she's still here with me."
Looking at her intently, Heather nodded. "I understand. Well, I see no real harm in it for a while. Maybe it can help you cope with your feelings."
Smiling, Faith turned to her cousin. "Erica? Would you like to play pretend and your name can be Erica while my name can be Heather?"
Shaking her head slowly, she replied, "No, that's OK, Faith. I think you should just be yourself. You can still call me Erica, though. I like it." Even as the words came out of her mouth, she remembered that she was sitting across from her aunt. Looking over at her with eyes wide, she tried to stammer out a retraction. "Well, what I mean is... um..." Unable to come up with a convincing restatement of a meaning other than the truth, she finally sighed and looked down in her lap again, waiting for a lecture that she shouldn't be enjoying her predicament. The response she got surprised her.
"That very understandable, Erica." her aunt replied.
Looking up at her guardian, she asked, "It is?"
Heather laughed. "Yes, sweetie! You see, from a certain point of view, Eric is an orphan boy, uprooted from the life he's always known, and cast into a strange place with family he doesn't know with almost nothing to his name. Erica is a young lady with pretty dresses, lots of toys, a cousin just her age, and living with loving family and isn't missing anyone in her life, because she has no life other than what you want there to be. Do you see?"
She nodded as she began to see what her aunt meant. "I think so. It sounds like something I read in a psychology book once. I think it's called escapism. Is that right?"
Sitting forward, Heather was surprised by her degree of knowledge on the subject. "Very good, Erica! You seem to have a knack for psychology. Isn't that what your mother did for a living?"
Thinking about her mother Erica while being Erica was confusing and unsettling. If she was Erica Dunning, that meant her mother was also Eric's mother, therefore her mother was also dead, whereas if she was Erica Hargrave, her mother was alive again. Shaking free of that confusing and depressing line of thought, she answered her aunt's question distantly. "In a way, Aunt Heather. I think she was called a Human Resources Consultant."
Nodding, Heather already knew that her mother had gotten a degree in psychology; they'd both attended Stanford at the same time, Heather one year ahead of her. She also knew what her sister-in-law had done for a living after her husband Jack was killed overseas. It was all in the letter that the dying woman had written to her asking her to take 'Eric' in. "Well I'm impressed, young lady." she complimented.
Faith was bored with the conversation. "So then, can we play down here in the living room then, Mamma? If we promise to play quietly?"
"In a moment, dear." her mother replied absently. Turning back to her niece, she waited to see if the girl would volunteer anything more.
"Aunt Heather? If what you say is true, about me using escapism? Doesn't it mean I should stop? It's not healthy, right? Isn't it what crazy people do?"
"No, sweetheart. In fact a little escapism can be very healthy. Actually we do it all the time. Sometimes we need it the same way a pressure cooker needs an escape valve. When life gets too hard, or changes too quickly, the pressures it can cause can lead to very self-destructive behavior. A little escapism, like reading a book or watching a movie, is as healthy as a little wine; too much and you can't function in the real world... too little and you won't have much fun at all. Do you understand?"
Erica nodded. "So it's OK to be Erica?"
"For a while, yes." she nodded and smiled. With an almost laughing lilt in her voice, she added, "We'll see how you feel once your regular clothes are clean and dry and you have a choice!"
"Is it OK now, Mamma?" Faith sighed.
Her mother looked sternly back at her. "Now Faith, you know perfectly well that whining will not get you what you want. I think it would be good for you to be reminded of that by you two staying down here to read for a while. You may chose from any book in your library, so long as you read until ten. Is that clear, young lady?"
She'd regretted her impatient tone the moment it left her lips and knew that she'd blown any hope of getting to play downstairs any time soon. "Yes, Mamma." she replied apologetically. Standing up she extended her hand to her cousin, helping her stand in her unfamiliar outfit. "Come on, Erica. We really do have a very nice library. Would you like me to show it to you?"
She smiled at the idea as she'd always enjoyed reading. Pausing a moment, she realized she'd missed something. "Wait, you have your own library?"
"Well, I call it my library." Faith shrugged. "It's just one wall, though."
Her mother intervened, standing next to the two. "That's enough, Faith. Follow me, ladies."
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Stepping through the door to the right of the old grandfather clock in the living room, Erica walked into the library. Its dark interior illuminated only by the little light that managed to seep its way past the heavy curtains that covered the room's single massive window, she followed her aunt to the right; rows of bookshelves jutting out from the wall opposite the door.
Following the woman around the corner and further to the right, she determined it had to be directly below the room they'd given her, just as the living room was beneath Faith's and her aunt Heather's rooms. Slowly building a map of the house in her head, she looked around as Fredrick entered and drew back the heavy curtains, showering the room in the light managing to make its way through the heavy clouds and freezing rain.
She had never seen so many books outside a public library.
"This is our library, Erica." Heather said matter-of-factly, having come at last to the other end of the room near the window. "This far wall is Faith's library, and now yours as well. You may feel free to take any book on those shelves. If you want a book that is anywhere else, you need to ask my permission first. Do you understand?"
She nodded absently as she looked at the wide assortment of books available. "Yes, Aunt Heather." In doing so, she realized she'd mimicked the slight little curtsy she'd seen Faith do every time she said 'Yes, Mamma.' She hadn't actually thought to do it, it just seemed the natural thing to do.
"Richard expanded the library when we bought this house." she reminisced. "Originally, this part of the house was a separate room, a den, I believe. He combined them, then added the rows of shelves on the south wall to expand the library's capacity. Many of these books have been in my family for generations. The original library could never have contained them all. If you do request to use any of them, please be very careful. Some are quite old."
In awe of the number of books just in 'Faith's Library', she nodded and curtsied absently. "I will, Aunt Heather." Looking over the collection, she saw nearly every novel ever written for children from the mid-eighteenth century through the mid-twentieth, as well as several sets of encyclopedias.
While Erica perused the books, Faith came bounding up, happy as a lark, having completely forgotten her disappointment at being denied permission to play. "Erica! Have you ever read this one? It's one of my favorites!"
"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm?" she read the title. "No, but I've heard of it. I think they made it into a movie once." Taking the book graciously, she wandered up and down the shelves, looking for anything that seemed interesting.
"That should be enough time." Heather instructed after a few minutes. "Take what you have to the living room and read quietly until ten o'clock."
Not having found anything that had caught her interest, Erica simply took the book Faith had handed her and followed her cousin out to lay on the floor in front of the fire where Fredrick had put a blanket for them to keep warm while they read. The two lying down to read, Heather reading on her usual loveseat, she looked at Faith's book. "What did you pick?"
"Little Women. I like Beth the most, even though it's mostly about Jo."
Shrugging, Erica settled down on her elbows to read in front of the fire. A short time later she noticed that she was doing something she'd done for years without realizing. The two pre-teens were both lying on their stomachs with their feet toward the fire and at some point Faith had started kicking her feet up as she read, mimicking what Erica had been doing. Imagining how they must look, she thought how it really was a very girlish thing to do and giggled. Looking up, she saw her aunt steal a glance at them, making her smile melt as she looked down and resumed reading once more.
Not long after, she heard someone enter the living room from the archway into the dining room and kitchen. Looking around, she saw Fredrick holding some metal racks and standing next to a waiting Franchesca who was carrying a small basket.
"Madame?" Fredrick began. "Franchesca has hand laundered the soiled clothes, however the only place suitable for drying them quickly is in front of the fire. With your permission?"
Not relishing the thought of seeing Erica's boy clothes hanging to dry in her living room, she was however more eager than ever to see Erica returned to her old clothes, mistaking the behavior as Erica slipping too easily and happily into newly acquired girlish habits. "Proceed, Fredrick. Please make room." she directed toward the two youths.
Both children scooted away from the fireplace, leaving room for Fredrick, Franchesca, and the improvised drying rack Fredrick had made out of grills from the oven.
While Fredrick started setting up the racks for drying, Cook stormed in. "Mrs. Hargrave! Fredrick has taken all the racks out of my oven! Without 'em, I won't be able to prepare dinner or supper!"
Heather put down her book. "I see." Turning to Fredrick she sighed, "Is there no other option?"
"I'm afraid not, Madame." he shook his head solemnly. "I find we are quite unprepared for this circumstance. The fire is the only means of drying clothes quickly, and the oven racks are the only viable means of setting clothes in front of it to do so. The only alternative would be to hang them on lines in the library or spare room, which would take two to three days to dry."
Thinking a moment, willing to do whatever was necessary to get Erica back in pants, she nodded. "Very well, Fredrick." Turning to Cook she sighed, "You'll have to make do without them until later today at the soonest, Cook. Hopefully they'll be available in time to cook supper."
Scowling, she answered, "Yes ma'am! But just so you know, I don't like it!" Turning to leave, she glanced down at Erica with a pained expression.
Watching her leave for the kitchen once more, Erica wondered what the exchange was about before she looked over at Faith and for the first time saw her visibly upset. Leaning in close, she whispered, "What's wrong?"
Looking close to tears, she whispered back. "Once your clothes are dry, you might not want to be Erica anymore!"
"I think even if I have a chance to go back to... the way I was... I might not." she reached out a comforting hand to Faith.
Taking it, she smiled. "Really?"
"I really like being your cousin Erica." she smiled genuinely. "It's a lot more fun than when... when I... um... wasn't." Leaning in close to whisper even quieter, she added, "Your clothes are really nice and pretty!" Faith squeezed her hand happily before Heather interrupted the moment.
"That's enough whispering. Back to reading please."
Letting go of each other's hands, the two went back to their books. When the grandfather clock struck ten, Heather released them both to go upstairs and pick toys or a game they could quietly play in the living room to stay warm; the storm outside continuing to rage as the temperature plummeted.
Several minutes later, Erica stood patiently behind Faith as she rummaged through the toy box at the foot of her bed. "It's funny." Erica noted. "I didn't think I'd like Rebecca, but when your mom said we could go play, I was actually kind of disappointed that you didn't want to keep reading."
Looking back over her shoulder, Faith smiled. "It's a great book, isn't it?" Going back to her rummaging, she shortly pulled out a board game box and handed it to her slightly younger cousin. "Take this please, Erica?"
Taking the box, she watched Faith put all the other games back. More interested in the fascinating way the bubbly girl packed her toy box than the game she'd been handed, Erica watched as Faith neatly and carefully placed every object back in a specific place, finally dropping the lid when it was done to her satisfaction. Burning with curiosity, Erica asked, "Why do you put everything in a certain way? Doesn't that take a lot of extra time?"
Standing up, Faith shook her head. "Not really. When I want something I know just where to get it. Mamma taught me that being organized saves time in the long run because you don't waste time trying to find things and cleaning up messes that you wouldn't have if you were organized."
Walking over to her wardrobe, Faith opened it and revealed a huge assortment of dresses. "See? If I know what dress I want to wear, I know exactly where it is, saving time trying to find it. Plus, they don't wrinkle!"
While Faith talked for a few minutes about organization, Erica looked at her dresses. Only half listening, she was instead imagining what she would look like wearing each of them. Suddenly conscious of what she was doing, and remembering what was said while her ratty clothes were set out to dry, she chided herself.
Faith closed her wardrobe and took the game from her absent hands. Noticing her far away look, she asked, "Erica? Are you alright?"
Sighing, she stepped backwards until she felt Faith's bed against the back of her legs and sat down. "I really don't know, Faith."
She walked over and placed the game on her bed, sitting beside her. "What's wrong? Are you feeling ill? Do I need to get Mamma?"
"No, I'm not sick. I'm just... sad."
"Why?"
"I... I mean... Ugh!" Frustrated at her inability to express what she was feeling, she flopped back onto Faith's bed, staring up at Faith's pink canopy while her feet dangled from the edge. "I like being Erica, a lot... but I'm not supposed to."
Wrinkling her nose up in confusion, Faith asked. "Why do you think that?"
Closing her eyes, she tried to find the words that would make her understand. "Your mom really doesn't like me wearing your clothes or being Erica. I can tell. I think she's gonna make me stop... very soon... like as soon as lunch is over. I really like being Erica, but I think I can't like it. I... I don't want to make Aunt Heather mad at me." She left out the part she feared so much she dare not even speak it out loud, that if she displeased her aunt severely enough, Heather would send her away, just as the Stone's had.
Moving the game, she lay down on her side next to her cousin. "Didn't Mamma say it was good for you to be Erica for a while?"
"Yeah, but she doesn't like it." she mumbled. "She wants me to be a normal guy, and normal guys don't like dresses. Besides, I have to do whatever she says. She didn't have to take care of me, ya' know. I kinda owe her. So I'll hafta stop being Erica whenever she says to, even if I like being a girl."
Quietly, Faith mulled over the idea. "I guess I don't understand why she doesn't like you wearing my dresses. I mean, the way I see it, there's lots of girls I know that hate dresses. Some don't even like me wearing dresses! My old friend? Jennifer Wilks? She lives a little ways down the highway. She hates dresses! She told me that I should stop wearing them because she says they're... um.... de-grating? So it figures that since not all girls like dresses, then not all guys have to hate them, right?"
She opened her eyes and turned her head to face Faith. "If a boy likes to wear dresses, he gets teased by everyone and called names. If a girl doesn't like dresses, nobody cares. Girls can wear pants and guy stuff and it's fine, but boys can only like boy stuff... nothing else. It's just the way it is."
Faith sat up. "That's not fair!"
Sitting up, she leaned on one elbow and faced her. "No one ever said life was fair, Faith." she sighed depressingly. "If it was, we'd still have dads."
Sighing and lying back on her bed, Faith reluctantly agreed. "I suppose. I guess it's sort of like Mamma's friends, Aunt Brooke and Aunt Jenny? They live in a little house just north of here. Aunt Brooke was my daddy's best friend! She was in the war with him when he... um... when he died."
"My dad was killed in the war, too." Erica shared. Holding out her hand to Faith, she smiled when her cousin took it.
"I guess I see what you mean about life not being fair. When they got married last year, the ladies at church called them names I'm not allowed to say. Mamma stood up for them, then Pastor gave a sermon about having a splinter in your eye or something and everyone stopped calling them names. Aunt Brooke is really pretty, and Aunt Jenny is super nice! It wasn't fair that they got called names just because they're two married women."
Nodding in understanding, Erica sighed. "So anyway, that's what's wrong. I really like being Erica, and I love your dresses, but I can tell your mom isn't going to let me be Erica, or let me borrow your clothes, anymore." Pausing a moment, she began understanding herself. "I never really thought about it before this morning. I just assumed that because everyone told me to be a boy I had to be one, but it's like I was supposed to be a girl. That's what the doctor told my parents before I was born, that I was going to be a girl." Turning sullen, she looked down at her pretty dress. "But it doesn't matter. Even if your mom did let me be Erica, everyone would make fun of me."
Standing and stepping in front of Erica, Faith held out her hands to help her back up. Once she was standing again, Faith put her right hand over her heart. "Erica? I promise you that no matter what, I will never make fun of you liking to wear my dresses or for being a girl! I think you're prettier than anyone as a girl! I wish you could stay Erica forever and would never have to wear those ugly boy clothes ever again!"
Just as she finished speaking, both of them heard the smoke alarm sounding. Erica ran for the door to her room, but Faith stopped her from opening it.
"No! If there's a fire, we're supposed to get down on the floor!"
The two got down on their hands and knees and waited. When the noise stopped, Faith checked the door for heat. Feeling nothing, Erica reached up and opened the door as the two started crawling toward the stairway where they heard footsteps running up toward them. Looking up as her aunt rounded the corner, Erica wasn't sure what to do and just froze.
"What are you two doing?" she asked impatiently.
"What they taught us in school to do in a fire, Mamma." her daughter answered as though it was a silly question.
"You two! Get up and follow me!" Heather barked.
Getting off the floor and walking over to her, the irate woman started down the stairs, the two children following. On reaching the living room, it was obvious why the smoke alarm had sounded. There in front of the fireplace was a smoldering pile of cloth with Fredrick pouring water on it to put them out.
Swallowing hard, Erica looked at her aunt. "My clothes?"
She nodded. "Your clothes. Where were you two a few minutes ago?"
The two looked at one another, then back to her. "We were upstairs getting a game, Mamma." her daughter answered shyly. "You told us we could."
"It doesn't take twenty minutes to get a game and come back down." she said, trying to keep from shouting. "Who did it?"
"Did what?" Erica asked, a genuine look of confusion on her face.
Faith understood her mother's implication much sooner, her eyes opening wide in shock. "Mamma! You don't think..."
"Yes, I do!" Heather interrupted. "And now I have a good idea who and why!" Walking up to her daughter, Heather took a breath and calmed herself. Folding her arms, she looked down at her daughter. "Faith? Tell the truth and your punishment will be much less severe. You know that."
Scared that she was to be punished for something she didn't do, Faith was near to hysterics. "Mamma! I didn't! I swear I didn't!" Unfortunately, her thoughts drifted back to the wish she'd made, wondering if she had done it by wishing for it. It left enough doubt in her eyes that Heather could see it.
Wanting to help Faith, once she figured out what was going on, Erica got her aunt's attention. "Aunt Heather? Faith and I were together the whole time. She couldn't have done it. Maybe it was an accident?"
Seeing that Erica was showing no tell-tales of a lie and appeared to be answering honestly, she looked at Faith who had shown she was holding something back, sure now that Faith had sneaked away without Erica seeing. "I'll give you one more chance to come clean, Faith. The truth!"
Backing away, Faith started breathing heavily. "But... I..." She tried to find the words to make her mother believe her, but it was impossible to prove that she hadn't done it, especially since she thought she might have. Thinking fast, she equivocated. "I didn't touch them, Mamma! I promise!"
"Very well then." Heather said in a menacing tone, her experience letting her see the deception in Faith's body language. "Your punishment..."
"Stop!" Erica shouted. "I did it!"
Snapping her head around to look at her niece, she saw several tells that told her she was lying to protect Faith. Looking back at her daughter, she scowled. "Are you going to just stand there and let your cousin take the blame for it, Faith?" she tried shaming her.
"But I didn't, Mamma! And I know she didn't either!" Faith started to cry. "She couldn't have! She never left the room! I saw her the whole time! Erica! Tell her the truth!" she pleaded, but saw her cousin standing rigid as a board with a thousand-yard-stare in her eyes.
"Very well." Heather growled. "Both of you, go upstairs and wait in Faith's room. I'll be up in a few minutes to tell you what your punishments will be." Once they made their way up the stairs and were out of earshot, Heather turned back to Fredrick. "Can you tell what happened?" she asked.
Turning to her as he ran his fingers over a burnt shirt fragment, he nodded. "Indeed, Madame. I believe Cook could shed some light on the issue."
Theresa Cook stood defiantly at the entryway to the dining room. "Yes, I can, Mrs. Hargrave!" she snapped.
Quickly making her way to stand in front of her household cook of more than thirty years, Heather spoke in hushed tones. "Explain please."
Heading into the kitchen for privacy, Cook turned as her employer entered behind her. Once the door closed with Fredrick waiting nearby, she stared Heather down, despite her shorter stature. "I poured lamp oil on 'em!"
Heather was taken aback. After a moment of silence she asked, "But why?"
Theresa never flinched. "You know a lot about a lot of things Mrs. Hargrave, but what you don't know a lot about is grief." Seeing her employer about to object, she waved a dismissive hand. "Oh, you know enough about it to have some sense of it... as an adult. I know you still grieve the loss of Mr. Hargrave... and your parents... and you have your fancy degree, but you cannot understand the grief of a child who's lost what that child has!"
Stiffening at the accusation, Heather scoffed. "Just what gives you the right to say I know nothing of grief?"
The household cook stalwartly faced her down, wielding a wooden spoon like an accusing finger. "The right of an orphan, dearie! I lost my parents at the same age as that child! You were lucky enough to be an adult... with a sizable inheritance to get you through it! That child is suffering a profound grief that cannot be measured... losing your parents before you're ready to assume the responsibilities of adulthood. Then uprooted from all you've ever known, taken in by strangers! It makes a child feel unwanted and abandoned, no matter how many people she has telling her otherwise!"
She poked her wooden spoon towards her employer, coming within an inch of actually poking her with it and making Heather back away. "And you! So eager to resume a state of normalcy that you'd make extra efforts to see to it he can be put back in pauper's rags before suppertime! Pushed out of the only thing holding back his grief... his escape into a girl's world! Oh, you make grand statements about it being 'his choice' if he wants to play at being a girl for a while, but make no mistake! That child knows you don't like it and feels so indebted to you for taking him in, he'd rather endure the grief than go against you! You can fire me for doing it Mrs. Hargrave, but before you do, just know this! The deed is done and now you're stuck with it! So if you think getting rid of me will solve things, you better think again!"
Silence filled the room like a vapor, threatening to suffocate them. Finally, Cook stepped slowly up to her long time employer and lowered her voice to a caring tone. "You know me, Heather. I've been a part of this family since you were ten. You know I don't act rashly, but this child needs this. The idea of making the dear wear rags while the rest of us have fine clothes? That poor thing needs an escape from all that... and one that can be counted on for a while. At least until he can manage to swallow his grief and move on. Maybe a day... maybe a week... maybe a year. Eventually he'll go back to being himself, but forcing it for propriety's sake? I think you already know it's wrong Heather, but for once... put your pride and fancy education aside... and listen to your heart."
Heather had been about to fire her, consequences be damned, if for no other reason than for going behind her back, but the more she listened, the more of what Theresa said made sense. Clearing her throat and raising her chin up, Heather addressed her. "I should fire you for it, but you are right, Cook." Her eyes turning toward the floor, her pride evaporated and she took on the look of the ten-year-old girl Theresa once knew. "I have been stuffy and prideful. Richard would be so disappointed in me for that!"
Relaxing and taking a seat at the kitchen table, she continued. "Oh, I know it's no excuse, but Erica's death has affected me much more than I've let on. She... she was my last tie to Richard... and Jack... and I loved her as though she were my own sister. Now I'm afraid that she's entrusted me with her child and I've let her... and Jack... down! I wanted to help him, but it seems like all I've done is confuse him. Erica warned me that he wasn't very boyish and asked me to make sure he grew up into a good man like Jack, and I put him in a dress! And he liked it!" Looking over at Theresa, she shook her head in disbelief. "Lamp oil?"
"I wanted to make sure!" she smiled at back.
Fredrick, who had stood by impassively through the entire exchange, cleared his throat. "Madame? If I may, the children are upstairs awaiting your adjudication."
She covered her face with her hands. "Oh, the children! What'll I tell them?"
Cook walked over to her and rubbed her back gently. "Tell them the truth, dearie. I oiled the grills and some of it caught fire. It's a half truth, but one that does more good than harm." Heather looked up as she continued. "Sometimes the greater love is to take the sin onto one's self to ease the suffering of others. I'm sure He understands! As for Jack and Erica? The little I got to know them tells me that they would understand, dearie. Better to let their child be a girl for a time than to suffer needlessly."
Standing gracefully, Heather started out of the kitchen. Stopping just short of pushing the door open, she half turned and addressed the woman who'd taken such a great risk for her niece. "I'll deduct the cost of one set of boys clothing from your check..." Pausing a moment, she concluded, "...when Erica decides she's ready to be Eric once more and desires them." At that, she made her way up and to her daughter's room. Knocking gently, she opened the door after a moment to see both of them seated on Faith's bed, looking for all the world like convicted prisoners awaiting sentencing.
Walking into the room slowly, she cleared her throat. "Erica? Are you still intent on professing to be the one responsible for your clothes catching on fire?"
She sighed, gathered her nerve, and looked up at her aunt. "If it'll mean Faith isn't punished for something she didn't do, then yes, Aunt Heather. I did it. I burned up my old clothes."
Seeing the anguish on Faith's face, she walked over to the vanity and sat down. "I know that's not true, Erica. I'm afraid I owe you both an apology. I erred in accusing either of you. The fire was not your fault."
Both children looked up at her, astonished that a grown-up was apologizing to children. Finally, Faith asked, "What happened, Mamma?"
Her mother sighed before telling her half-truth. "It seems Cook got some inflammable oil on the oven grills. It became too hot and caught fire." Looking over at the two relieved children, she sighed apologetically. "Oh, girls! I'm so sorry I accused you falsely! Can you ever forgive me?"
Immediately, both got up and hugged her, each in turn offering their forgiveness. Faith cried, telling her mother about the wish she'd made, making her think she had done it. After a brief exchange of tears, hugs, and kisses on the cheek, Heather looked at her young charge.
"Erica? I want to ask you something and I expect you to tell me the truth." she intoned seriously. Gathering her nerve, Heather remembered what Cook said and just hoped to providence that this was the right course of action. "Do you want to stay living as Erica for a while? I mean a long while? Before you answer, I want you to know that I hope the answer is yes! I have to admit, you do look like your mother when she was your age, and it brings me great comfort to feel a little of her presence in my home again!"
Erica looked confused, unsure if the offer was some sort of trick. Taking a chance, she asked, "Do you mean it, Aunt Heather? It would be OK if I stayed Erica? Even once the roads are open?"
Heather smiled back at her genuinely. "Yes, Erica! I really mean it!"
Throwing her arms around her aunt, feeling jubilation at the idea of no longer being 'Eric the orphan boy' and becoming a kind of reincarnation of her own mother. "Yes, Aunt Heather! I would like to stay Erica!"
Hugging her new niece, she felt Faith hug them both while they hugged each other. "Oh, thank you, Mamma! I just know Erica will be happy here!"
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Erica awoke slowly, stretching her body and rubbing the sleep from her eyes. Next to her, Faith lay sleeping. The room had an odd quality to it as she unwrapped herself from Faith's warm clinginess. Sitting up, she dropped her feet into the slippers that Faith had given her the night before. Crossing the floor toward the window in her borrowed nightgown, she'd finally noticed that the howling wind had subsided leaving an eerie silence to sit over the house. She'd become so accustomed to the howl of the storm, its absence left a void in the perceptions of her surroundings. Peaking out the window, Erica saw something she'd never seen before. Awestruck, she stood in wonderment at the beauty of the sight before her.
Everywhere she looked glistened with the sparkle of fresh fallen snow from the light of the waning three-quarter moon still in the western sky. She'd seen pictures of snow and knew what it was, but never before had her own eyes beheld the beauty of a morning draped in crystal and moonlight. Behind her, Erica heard Faith's early morning groans of awakening.
"Faith! Come look!" she cried.
Faith sat up slowly, sleep still blurring her vision. She could see her cousin Erica standing in nothing but her nightgown and slippers next to the window, jumping up and down slightly. Closing her eyes a moment, she moved toward her side of the bed and opened them again as she slid into her own slippers and made her way over to look out the window.
"What is it, Erica?" she managed to get out around a yawn. "What's wrong?" Looking out the window, she saw nothing unusual. "What?"
Erica continued to jump up and down, giddy as a schoolgirl. "It's snow!"
"I know it's snow. What's wrong? You act like you've never seen snow before!" Faith said with a perplexed look.
She shook her head. "I haven't! Isn't it beautiful! I had no idea it could be so... pretty!"
Faith shook her head in disbelief. "How can you go your whole life and never see snow? Don't they have winter in California?"
Shaking her head, Erica looked back outside. "Not like this! Winter there is rainy and muggy! Winter here is... is..." The words escaped her as she tried to encapsulate the beauty of seeing her first snowfall. "...it's breathtaking!"
Her cousin smirked. "Just wait until you have to walk through half a mile of it to get to the bus stop! Then it'll just be cold and wet!"
Even as Faith finished speaking, Erica dashed for the bathroom, grabbed the robe Faith had given her off the back of the bathroom door, threw herself into it, and dashed out the door of their shared room while still tying it shut. Skidding to a stop at the top of the stairs, she went down the steps as fast as her feet could carry her. Reaching the bottom, Theresa intercepted her.
"Hold up there, girl! Where're you off to so fast?" As she spoke, she caught Erica's arm and slowed her race to the door to a stop.
"Oh, Cook! It's snow! Real snow!"
Refusing to release her arm, Cook nodded in understanding. "Yes, dearie... real snow, and it'll still be there after you put on some clothes! You'll catch your death if you go out there dressed in nothing but your nightshirt and slippers!" Looking down at the girl's desperate need to see it for herself, she sighed. "Alright, girl! Just wait a moment and I'll get you a coat and some proper boots and you can go out for just a minute or two, alright?"
Erica could hardly contain herself, but calmed enough to stop trying to pull away and rush to the door. Waiting at the marble bench while Cook went into the closet at the end of the entryway, she looked up to see Heather descending the stairs in a graceful glide of seafoam green chiffon, silk, and lace. Curtsying slightly, Erica turned to her. "Good morning, Aunt Heather! Did you see outside?"
Heather smiled sweetly. "Yes, sweetie. It snowed last night. The way you're taking on you'd think it snowed flakes of pure gold!"
She shook her head. "This is better! I've never seen real snow before!"
Her aunt blinked, then realized the girl never would have, growing up in southern California. Smiling wistfully, she remembered the day she and her husband had bought this home. You were right, Richard! When she saw Theresa bringing over one of Faith's winter coats and fur-lined winter boots, she laughed and asked, "What's all this, then?"
Cook waved her off. "The girl was so anxious to go out and see it for herself, she nearly ran out in nothing but her skivvies. It can do her no harm to see it for herself so long as she's at least a little better dressed for it." She slipped the coat on Erica's arms and started to button it.
Scoffing, Heather shook her head. "Oh, that's nonsense! She can certainly wait until after the sun is up and she's properly dressed and filled with a warm breakfast! The snow isn't going anywhere!"
"You don't understand, Miss. She needs to see it, now, while the wonder's still fresh." Cook continued explaining as she had the newest member of their household sit on the marble bench so she could put the boots on. "Remember when you told me about your first trip to Paris? How you couldn't wait to get out of the airport and set your own eyes on the Eiffel Tower? You nearly got arrested trying to skip the Customs line!"
Heather remembered it like it was yesterday. Smiling, she looked away at some distant place as though she could see right through the world and time itself and look at it once more. "Oh, yes! That was so foolish of me! I was just so excited I couldn't think straight until I'd seen it for myself!" Pausing, she looked over at Cook putting the second boot on Erica. "Oh, but that was different!"
Cook shook her head. "Not to Erica, it isn't. Snow is her Eiffel Tower ma'am, just as wondrous and mystical as that silly collection of iron was to you before you laid eyes on it."
Tilting her head to the side, she gave in. "Oh, very well." Walking over, she crouched and tied one bootlace while Cook tied the other. Smiling up at the giddy girl, she helped her to her feet and led her to the door. "Now just for a minute or two, alright sweetheart? I don't want you out in that cold too long without proper winter clothes to keep you warm and safe. Promise?"
"Yes, Aunt Heather! I promise!" Erica nodded vigorously.
Nodding in acceptance, her aunt opened the door.
Erica stepped out on the front porch, marveling at the awesome beauty of it all, gazing at the beauty of clear moonlight reflecting off every surface with a gleam like a million diamond flakes scattered as far as the eye could see. Hearing the door close behind her, she exhaled and watched her breath condense into a fog that drifted through the air like smoke rings.
A giddy feeling washed over her as she stepped gingerly out into the cold. She could feel the bitter chill of the air on her ankles and slightly up her nightgown, sending a shiver up her spine. Reaching the edge of the porch where the snow had only accumulated lightly, she knelt down until her fingers could touch it. Scooping some up, she felt the coldness of it bite into her delicate fingers, turning them red.
Rolling the snow over in her hand, she marveled at the simple beauty of it. A few flakes broke away and slipped between her fingers, while others melted against her warm skin. Gathering up another handful, she packed it together into a snowball, reared her arm back, and let fly with the first snowball of her life with a squeal of delight. Stretching her arms out, she spun around in the cold like a top, exhilarating in the feeling.
Remembering her promise, she drew her arms back in to cover her chest and slowed her spin until she was facing the door once more and slowly started back inside. The door opened for her and she stepped in to see Fredrick holding the door and everyone else smiling at her. Faith, her aunt Heather, Cook, and even grouchy Franchesca greeted her from her first foray into a winter wonderland.
"Welcome back, Miss Erica." Fredrick intoned with his usual grace and refined dignity as he closed the door. "May I take your coat?"
Letting Fredrick take the coat before walking over to her aunt, Erica flung her arms around the woman before standing on her tiptoes to plant a kiss on her cheek. "Oh thank you, Aunt Heather! It was wonderful! Cold, but wonderful!" As she turned, she saw Cook take a picture of her.
Grinning at Erica as the girl giggled, Cook nodded toward the housemaid. "Franchesca took a movie of you with this thing while you were outside. Lord knows how!"
Franchesca snatched her digital camera back from Theresa. "Fat lot you know! I'm surprised you knew how to take a picture with it!" Turning back to Erica, she almost smiled before returning to her natural grimace. "You just be grateful I took time out of my busy schedule to teach these fools that moments like this are why we invented cameras!"
Erica padded over to Franchesca, slipped her arms around her in a genuine hug, and said softly, "Thank you, Franchesca!"
Stunned, and unused to such overt affection, she stood there numbly for a moment, her arms spread in a wide circle around the new member of the family with her camera in one hand and a dumbfounded look on her face. Finally she closed her arms around Erica and returned the embrace. "You're quite welcome, dear." Releasing her hug, she stepped back, leaving Erica standing there grinning at her. Handing Erica the camera, she said in a snippish tone, "Now don't you go breaking that! You can look at the video and pictures, but then I want you to return it to me post haste! I'll get you a copy of them, when I have time!"
The girl smiled ever wider and said again, "Thank you, Franchesca!"
"You can thank me..." she quipped as she headed up the stairs, "...by keeping your room clean so I don't have to!"
Stepping up next to Erica, Faith joined her in watching Franchesca ascend the stairs. Once she'd disappeared around the corner of the upstairs landing, Faith said, "Wow! She hugged you? She must really like you!"
Everyone except Fredrick giggled at Faith's remark, and even he cracked a half smile, removing it before anyone noticed.
Heather directed Erica back to the bench to remove the boots, while the two young girls looked at the pictures on Franchesca's camera. Once done, Fredrick took the outerwear to put away while Heather directed both girls upstairs to change for breakfast. The two raced upstairs, ran to their now shared wardrobe, and flung the doors open to decide what they should wear.
Erica was torn. On the one hand, she wanted desperately to go out and play in the snow for the first time, which necessitated a warmer winter weight outfit. On the other hand, it would be the first time she could chose a dress to wear for herself and wanted it to be pretty.
Faith made several suggestions before Erica found one dress that she felt could fit both desires. It was a heavier broadcloth, so it was warm and soft to the touch. The design was a simple girl's A-line with mid-length eyelet sleeves, a scoop neck with a V-shaped lace fringed white eyelet collar with a thin pink ribbon woven though the eyelets at the edge. Darts at the waist of the skirt flared to a wide hemline trimmed in a floral lace that came down to mid-calf. The material was patterned in pink and white gingham, giving it an older but very pretty look with the accents. It also had a sash tie at the waist to draw in her figure, which helped to offset the child-like style that would otherwise make Erica look younger than her age.
Once the two girls had picked their outfits, Faith started to undress at her bedside as she always did. Erica blushed as she gathered up her things and started for the bathroom.
"Why are you taking your clothes in the bathroom?" Faith inquired. "I'm going to need that in a few minutes!"
Biting her lower lip, Erica was suddenly very self-conscious of stripping bare in front of her cousin. "Um... I just thought..."
Faith interrupted her stammering. "Just get dressed out here with me! It's warmer out here than in the bathroom!"
Trying to figure a way out of her predicament, Erica dropped the majority of her clothes on the bed except the bra, panties, and slip. Taking just those into the bathroom, she stated, "I'll be out in a minute or two!" and closed the door behind her. Undressing quickly and dropping her dirty clothes in the wicker hamper, she donned her undergarments as fast as she could manage. While struggling with the bra, a gentle knock came at the door.
"Are you almost done in there?" Faith asked.
Struggling with the training bra, she answered brokenly. "Just... give... me... another... minute!" she panted.
While Erica continued to struggle, the door cracked open. Seeing her cousin facing away from her and having so much trouble, Faith entered the bathroom and came up behind her. "Here, let me help." she said blandly.
Erica nearly jumped out of her skin as Faith spoke and suddenly, without any warning, started pulling at the straps of her borrowed training bra. "Yeeeaaahhhh!" she cried out.
Her eyes widened and Faith stepped back, startled at the reaction. "Erica! You scared me!"
Having nearly climbed the far wall over the pedestal sink, Erica slowly slid back down. "I scared you? You about scared the life out of me, Faith!"
Undaunted, Faith put her hands on Erica's shoulders, spun her around to face the sink, grabbed the back of the training bra, and pulled it down. Smoothing out the twists in the shoulder straps, she bade Erica turn around to face her. Seeing Erica blushing profusely as Faith straightened out the cups of the bra against Erica's non-existent breasts, she smiled shyly and tried to console her cousin. "I know you don't have anything up front, Erica. It's no secret! It's also nothing to be ashamed of! Lots of girls our age haven't started to develop yet! You're still the prettiest girl I know!"
Feeling her heart in her throat as Faith futzed with the bra overly long, Erica just stood there like a silly lump and let her do whatever she wanted.
"Take your slip out with you. I need the bathroom." she demanded. "I'll be out in a few minutes to help you get dressed!"
Erica grabbed the slip and stepped out sideways to avoid bumping into Faith, facing away from her the entire time. After stepping back into their shared room, she went over to the bed. Deciding to wait on the slip as it would make putting on tights more difficult, she picked up the white tights and sat at the vanity.
Following the example her aunt set the morning before, she started putting them on. She was just pulling them up over her rear when she heard the toilet flush and the sink faucet turn on. Hurrying, she dashed over to the bed and grabbed the slip, pulling it over her head just as the bathroom door opened and Faith returned to their bedroom.
Smiling as she passed Erica, Faith picked up Erica's dress, unzipped the back, and held it up as high as she could. "OK. Put your arms up and step in." she instructed.
Faith's shorter stature conspired with Erica's lack of experience at putting on dresses, making her lean too far forward trying to push her arms up the dress and into the sleeves. Losing her balance, Erica fell into her cousin, knocking Faith back and onto their bed while she slipped down the side.
Mortified, Erica could scarcely move, now trapped by her awkward position, the side of the bed, and Faith's legs. For her part, Faith found the entire situation hysterical and began giggling, which did nothing to help Erica's embarrassment. After a moment, Erica felt Faith's legs move off her back, finally freeing her to be able to stand once more, albeit with some difficulty as her arms were still trapped sticking straight up in the bodice.
"Here. Let me help." smiled Faith. Coming around behind Erica, she put her hands on Erica's waist, steadying her until she could stand on her own. Taking the sides of the hem in each hand, she tugged the dress down until it settled into place and Erica could lower her arms. After she closed the zipper up the back, Faith suggested, "Maybe next time we should just try having you step into the dress. You can't do that when you're wearing a petticoat, but this dress has crinoline built in, so you can just step into it."
"Why didn't you say that before?" Erica giggled lightly.
She paused in the middle of tying the sashes into a bow. "I guess I just didn't think of it. Can you grab the knot with your fingers so I can pull it tight?"
Reaching behind her back, Erica fumbled around until Faith directed her hand to where the loose knot was. Pinching it, Faith drew the sashes together, tightening the dress around Erica's waist and narrowing it like a corset. "Does it have to be so tight?" Erica begged.
"Yup." Tightening the bow in place Faith said, "OK, you can let go now." Fiddling with the bow for another minute she exclaimed, "There! All nice and pretty! Now you can help me, and then we'll do each other's hair!"
She followed Faith around to the side of the bed nearest the vanity, the one they agreed would be 'Faith's side'. Watching her cousin walk ahead of her in nothing but her undergarments gave Erica a funny feeling. The swish of her own dress's crinoline against her legs as she walked seemed to make it even more acute. Holding her belly she noted, "I wonder if I might be getting sick. I feel sort of queasy."
Faith immediately stopped and turned around to face Erica. Putting the back of her hand against Erica's brow, she waited a moment before putting a hand on Erica's left chest, just over the training bra. "Well, you sort of feel warm to me, your cheeks are flushed, and your heart is beating like a rabbit! You should tell Mamma."
Erica's eyes grew wide. "But she might make me stay inside! I just can't, Faith! Not today!"
"I guess I understand." Faith shrugged. "I think if I were in California and about to take my first trip to see the Pacific Ocean, I wouldn't want to tell Mamma I was feeling ill." Turning back to finish walking to her side of the bed, she picked up her tights, donned them in seconds standing in place, and then dropped her slip over her head. "What are you going to do?"
Erica noticed that once she was focused on the snow outside, her stomach quieted down, her cheeks felt cooler, and she couldn't feel her heartbeat in her neck anymore. "That's weird! It's OK! I'm starting to feel better."
Looking back at her cousin with a smirk, Faith picked up her own dress. "Uh-huh! Suuuure! I promise I won't tell!"
While Faith stepped into her dress, Erica came up behind her to help the same way Faith had. "No, seriously. Maybe it was falling down and getting frustrated that made me feel sick. I feel fine, now." Erica zipped up Faith's pale blue dress with Faith holding her long blonde curls away from the back of her neck. She watched as Faith spun in place and kissed her on the cheek with a giddy smile.
"Thanks, Erica!" she sung. Faith watched as Erica's cheeks, which just moments ago were indeed no longer flushed red, blushed again and she could almost see Erica's pulse rise on her thin neck. Puzzled, she cocked her head to one side again. "OK, that is weird! You did look fine for a second, then when I kissed you, you got all red and flustered..." Stopping mid-sentence, her eyes grew wide and a smile crept back across her pink lips. "Are you embarrassed that I kissed you?"
The slightly younger girl shook her head as she walked over to the vanity once more. "Not really embarrassed... it's just..." She searched for the right words as she took her seat. Faith came up behind her, picked up the brush, and started brushing out Erica's dirty-blonde hair.
An eternity passed while Faith waited for Erica to explain her reaction before Faith offered her own. "Come to think of it, you were like that when I was helping you get dressed. You got all red then too, which was before I kissed you."
Erica shrugged as Faith worked on a knot in her hair. "Like I said... it's not embarrassed... it's... something else. I don't know what it is, but it happens whenever I see a pretty girl."
Swallowing hard, Faith stopped brushing. "You... you think I'm pretty?"
Looking in the mirror at her cousin, Erica nodded. "Sure! You're more than pretty! You're beautiful!"
This time it was Faith's turn to blush and get a fluttery feeling. Looking down and feeling shy, she replied, "You're just saying that!"
Erica shook her head and turned to face Faith directly, looking up at the blonde girl with a slightly dreamy expression. "Oh no, Faith! I really mean it! I think you're about the most beautiful girl I've ever known! Even prettier than..." As she spoke, a wave of sadness crashed over her entire being as the memory of the night before came back into her mind.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
Clarification: The entire first part of this chapter is a traumatic flashback.
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Erica bounded into the living room, gay as a lark. It was just before six o'clock and she knew April would be home from school by now. "Aunt Heather? It's almost six. I know it will be time for dinner soon, but before dinner, can I call my friend April and let her know I'm OK?"
Her aunt Heather sighed. "May you call her..." she corrected.
She calmed herself and rephrased her request. "Before dinner, may I call my friend April and let her know I arrived safely?"
Still getting used to the bubbly little girl before her who stood in stark contrast to the broken and lifeless boy she'd met less than a full day earlier, Heather conceded. "Very well, but please keep it brief. This is not a cell phone. Long distance calls cost money, and I won't have you making dinner late."
"I promise, Aunt Heather! Just a quick word to say high and let her know I'm alright." Pausing she asked, "If I give April your phone number and tell when it's OK to call, she can call here and it won't cost anything, right?"
Heather disliked giving out her phone number to strangers, but she determined that giving it to a child could do little harm. "Very well, Erica. The number is on the telephone. Please tell her not to call during meal times or after eight thirty. Is that clear?"
Curtsying slightly, Erica replied with a smile. "Yes, Aunt Heather. May I call her now?"
With a simple nod from her aunt, Erica stopped herself from squealing and running across the room to the old style rotary telephone. She'd never seen one before and found its use charming and elegant. Over the last several hours, she'd reconciled the details of her life. She was Erica Hargrave, her own mother. After she died of leukemia, to keep her child from being alone, she'd been reborn into 'his' mind. Now they were simply one girl.
Making herself cross the room at a walk, she sat gently on the couch, lifted the receiver, and started to dial April's cell phone number. She was dismayed when it gave a message that the number was no longer in service. Hanging up, she dialed April's home number and waited as it began to ring. She waited nervously as the phone rang and was startled slightly when she heard the other end pick up.
"Hello?" April's mother said.
"H-hello Mrs. Stone. Is April there?" Erica asked nervously.
The voice on the phone seemed irritated. "Who's calling?" she asked.
Being her own mother, the 'boy' April only ever knew as Eric, and Erica, she wasn't sure how to answer. Barely managing to stammer out a reply, she said, "It's Eric...a Dunning."
Listening, she heard April's mother say, "It's that Dunning boy!" to someone, then the sound of the receiver being passed around, followed by a strong masculine voice.
"This is April's father, Eric." he boomed. "We don't think it would be a good idea for you to talk to April."
Erica felt her heart drop. "W-why, sir? Is she sick?" Thoughts of losing her best friend not only to distance but also illness or death flooded Erica's mind, nearly driving her mad at the thought of losing yet another part of her old life.
"Now listen here, boy." April's father growled as Erica listened in stunned silence. "We put up with your dead-beat butt for six months! Fed you, clothed you, paid for your school supplies, and we never even got half of that back from your mom's probate!"
As she listened in shock, she heard April's mother. "Dear! That's not the boy's fault! Just tell him what we talked about and hang up before April hears and comes down!"
Finally, he lowered the axe. "I know what happened isn't your fault boy, but April's been a wreck since you left! In time, she'll get over it and forget all about you. You talking to her will just drag it out longer. It's best if you just go about the rest of your life your own way and let April go hers. You'll never see each other again anyway, so best to make a clean break of it and stop ruining her future by making her cling to a wimp like you!"
Pausing a moment, there was some concealed conversation before he finished his cruel one-sided conversation. "Oh, and don't try emailing her, texting her, or calling her. We've had all that changed. So good riddance and don't call here again!"
Hearing the connection terminate, Erica dropped the receiver as tears began streaking down her shocked face.
Seeing the stunned and hurt look on Erica's face, Heather raced to her side. Returning the receiver to its cradle, she asked, "What happened, dear? Is she alright?" While she generally tried not to eavesdrop, she couldn't help but overhear Erica asking about April being ill.
Erica turned to her aunt and buried her face in her loving shoulder, the older woman taking the girl up in her arms as she began to cry like a baby.
Worried that the damaged child had been made to endure yet another trauma, all she could do was rock her in her arms and pet her head, telling her, "It'll be OK, sweetie! I'm here! Just let it all out!"
She cried for a full ten minutes, Faith standing in the living room the whole time, waiting to find out what happened. Fredrick merely stood impassively next to the entryway to the dining room, waiting for things to settle out before his employer would give the word for the delayed dinner to start. When the ordeal had begun, he'd taken it upon himself to tell Cook that dinner would be late and that something was terribly wrong with the newest member of their household.
As she sobbed, she whispered to herself, "I'm Erica Hargrave!" over and over, unaware that her aunt could hear her. Finally, the tears dried up and Erica was so numb she couldn't cry anymore. Leaning back, she eventually said between sobs, "I'm... s-sorry, Aunt H-Heather. I... I... didn't m-mean... to g-get... you... all w-wet... and m-make... dinner l-late!"
Heather consoled the devastated youth. "Oh, don't worry about that, sweetheart! You're much more important than my dress or dinner. Now, can you tell me what happened?"
While Erica told the tale, Faith just stood by in wide-eyed horror. Fredrick remained standing impassively, but was nearly overcome with the desire to find these heathens and teach the man of the house a lesson in what it feels like to have your heart broken by breaking a few of his ribs. Theresa had entered just as the story began and couldn't contain her tears. Even the frosty Franchesca, standing at the top of the stairs and listening, was moved so much that she couldn't bear to hear the whole thing and ran off before she could be seen crying her eyes out.
She managed to finish the tale just as the crying began anew. "And then he... he said n-never... to call back a-again... and h-hung up! I... I... I n-never... even g-got... to s-say g-goodbye... to h-her!" Resuming her place on her aunt's shoulder, she continued to cry for some time. Meanwhile, Faith slowly walked up to her mother and cousin and gently placed her hand on Erica's arm, just so the girl would know that she was there.
Eventually, the tears subsided once more and Fredrick was ready. Handing Mrs. Hargrave tissues for herself, Erica, and Faith, he returned to stand next to the doorway alongside Cook, handing a tissue to her as well so she would stop using her apron.
After the crying ebbed, Heather addressed Fredrick and Cook. "I'm afraid we'll have to postpone dinner once more. I apologize for the inconvenience it may cause you two."
Fredrick spoke for them both. "Think nothing of it, Madame. I took the liberty as I could see there were more important matters to deal with."
"Thank you, Fredrick." Heather replied. "Now, Erica. There's nothing I can say that will make this better right now. Just know that in time, you won't feel the hurt so badly anymore. It will never go away, but you will survive it and one day it will be bearable!"
She understood her aunt was trying to help, but nothing seemed to make the pain lessen. "I know, A-Aunt Heather. Th-Thank you. It just h-hurts so bad th-that I couldn't e-even t-tell her I w-was OK! She'll n-never know!"
Heather petted her head gently. "I know, sweetheart! I know! I wish I could fix it for you!"
Smiling weakly, Faith offered, "Couldn't you write her a letter?"
The devastated youth shook her head, her tear-soaked cheeks making her shiver. "No. Her parents would see who it was from before she ever got it."
Crestfallen, Faith's voice turned sullen. "Oh."
Eventually, after getting cleaned up, the three solemnly headed for the dining room. Erica was impassive and vacant, eating only when reminded to and even then just enough to satisfy her aunt. Finally, after Faith had been done for nearly ten minutes, Heather said, "Well, I guess that's enough for tonight. Maybe your appetite will return in the morning."
She looked down at her plate, feeling guilty that she failed to eat the meal given to her. I don't think I'll ever be hungry again! she mused. Not wanting to upset her kind and gracious aunt, she nodded weakly and said, "Yes, Aunt Heather. May I be excused?"
Erica felt her chair being pulled away from the table and then felt a heavy hand on her shoulder. Looking up at Fredrick's impassive face, she took the other offered hand and let him help her stand. Slowly, she followed her aunt back into the living room with Faith taking her hand as they walked side by side behind Heather.
Her aunt sat on the loveseat as usual and Faith let go of Erica's hand, hugged her mother, kissed her cheek, and said simply, " I love you, Mamma."
Returning the hug and kiss with much more care and affection than normal, she replied, "I love you too, Faith. Very much!"
Slowly shuffling up to her aunt, Erica resumed her place where she'd spent so long crying before dinner. Hugging her earnestly, as though she were the last person on Earth, Erica could hardly make herself let go. Finally, she released her aunt, kissed her on the cheek, and said with every good feeling she had left, "Thank you, Aunt Heather. I love you so much!"
Heather nearly burst into tears herself, seeing the desperate love, adoration, and gratitude young Erica showered on her. "Oh, sweetheart! I love you, too! I'll be up in a while to tuck you both in, OK?"
She bathed in the guest bathroom, just as she had the first night. Before the fateful call it had been decided, mostly by Faith, that Erica and she should share the girl's room from then on. Though her mother was hesitant to agree, Faith got her way by asking questions and refusing to accept an answer that was essentially, 'because you're not supposed to' or 'it's just not done that way'. Lacking any valid reason to keep the two separate, and since Faith's wardrobe was going to have to be shared by the two for a time, putting them in one room was just the logical choice.
The only concession Faith made was at bath time. Since both needed to bathe at the same time, it was decided that Erica would bathe in the guest bathroom, while Faith continued to use her own. Even Faith had to admit that seeing her cousin completely naked was 'bad', which itself took half an hour to get her to admit, without explicitly stating why.
While Erica finished washing, she noticed the hair on her legs was growing slightly noticeable. Taking the lady's razor, she shaved her legs for the first time, enjoying the smooth feel of them when she was done.
Pulling the plug on the tub, she stepped out and dried off, making sure to wrap her hair in a towel the way she'd seen her mother and Faith do. Her hair was just long enough to make it stay, and she felt quite grown up as she pulled on her fresh panties, nightgown, and robe. Slipping her feet into her slippers, she deposited the towels and dirty laundry in the hamper, the dress she'd worn that day having already been taken off in their bedroom where she'd donned her robe and slippers.
Shuffling her way to her shared bedroom, she was pleased to see Faith was only just then coming out of the bathroom herself. Concerned that she'd taken too long to get clean, she was content at least to know that she'd not dawdled. The two girls were solemn as they got into bed after drying their hair as best as they could and then brushing each other's hair out in silence. A few minutes after they got in bed, the door opened and Faith's mother again glided in to share prayers with her two girls.
Faith looked over at Erica sadly before saying her silent prayer. After she said "Amen.", she and her mother turned to Erica.
The girl simply sat there, impassively staring off into empty space, her pain acute and raw. She felt cold and alone, certain now that even if there was a God, He was a cruel and sadistic monster that enjoyed watching people suffer in torment.
Heather cleared her throat. Once Erica looked over at her she said, "Erica? Won't you say your prayers?"
She bridled at the suggestion that she bow in supplication to a God that would let her suffer so much pain and loss. "Why? So He can kick me in the teeth again?"
Faith's eyes widened as her mother shook her head solemnly. "So you're going to blame God for the actions of two foolish parents?"
Feeling the wind knocked out of her sails, Erica was prepared to fight her aunt, but she'd just made an unassailable point. I'm not really mad at God, I guess, not for this anyway. Directing her thoughts at the Creator, she shouted in her mind. Letting my mother die for no good reason is enough reason to hate You! I don't need to blame You for April's parents being cruel! Though You supposedly made them that way, right? You made everything!
Feeling guilty for shouting at God while her wonderfully kind aunt waited, she decided it would do no harm to please her, laced her fingers together, closed her eyes, and pretended to pray. After what she thought was enough time she simply said, "Amen." quietly, opened her eyes, and looked at her aunt while smiling weakly.
Sighing as she guessed that Erica was just humoring her, she accepted the old adage. Fake it 'till you make it. Smiling back, she bade both girls to lay down. Once they were settled, she kissed them on the forehead, first Faith and then Erica. Pausing as she sat on the bedside next to her niece, she tried to soothe the young girl's aching soul.
"You know, I remember when I went away to college, I had a best friend, too. Her name was Lydia and she and I did everything together, but her parents wanted her to go to Columbia, while I was headed to Stanford. I used to be so mad at them for breaking up our friendship, but it turned out for the best. When Lydia and I were together, we didn't need anyone else! If she had gone to Stanford with me, I would probably have never gone to the party where I met your uncle Richard."
Erica wasn't sure what her aunt was driving at. Finally she asked, "So now you're glad they split you up?"
The older woman shook her head in the dim light of the moon coming through the window. "No, not glad per say, but I'm not mad at them for it anymore. Because you see, we don't know why things have to happen the way they do. We just aren't smart enough to see the future and know what good things can come from the bad things." Pausing, she stood up and concluded, "And who are we to say that the bad outweighs the good? After all, if you hadn't needed to come here, we would never have been able to know and love you, Erica."
The devastated girl felt a tear roll down her cheek as her aunt kissed her on the forehead and walked to the door. As she looked over at her aunt silhouetted by the dim gaslights in the hallway, she heard her say, "Goodnight, girls. Pleasant dreams and may God bless."
"Erica?" Faith asked, wondering why her cousin had suddenly become so sullen. Going back over their conversation, Faith realized Erica had been about to say that she was prettier than April, reminding her cousin of the heartbreak of the previous evening. "Oh, Erica!" Moving around behind her again, Faith began to brush out her cousin's hair, still damp from the previous night's bath, until she was ready to put the wig on.
Thinking of how to cheer her up, Faith smiled. "Hey, Erica? I think you have really pretty hair. Maybe when we can get to town, Mamma can get your hair dyed and you can have your own hair just like your mamma's!"
Perking up and breaking from the depressing lows of the previous evening, Erica looked at her cousin's reflection. "What was that, Faith?"
She pulled the red play wig over Erica's head, settling it in place and tucking little strands of dirty-blonde hair out of sight before inserting the bobby pins to hold it in place. "I was saying that maybe once we can get to town, Mamma can get your hair dyed the same color as this hair."
Looking in the mirror, once more Erica saw the vision of her young mother. Smiling she tried to imagine her own hair the same shade of red as her mother's without having to wear it. "I would like that!" she purred.
Once Faith finished settling Erica's hair in place, they switched and Erica followed Faith's instructions as to how to brush and style her hair. She found the experience relaxing and fun. Faith's hair was very fine and naturally curly, so using only a curling brush, she managed to restore most of Faith's curls. As she was nearing completion, her aunt entered their shared room after a light knock on the door.
"Well!" she complimented. "You've done a very nice job, Erica! Now I don't have to tend to Faith's hair in the mornings!"
Her daughter stood as soon as Erica finished. "Mamma? I thought of a way to thank her!"
She smiled down suspiciously at her suddenly generous daughter. "And how is that, dear?"
Looking back at Erica she said, "I think we should get her hair colored the same as her mamma's was!"
Heather looked at Erica's reaction and saw her smile at the prospect. "Well, we'll see. Until the roads open once more, it's a moot point, though."
"I know." Faith nodded. "I just think she would look a lot better with her own hair that color. Don't you think so, Mamma?"
Her mother regarded her niece, not wanting to commit her to a change that would have lasting effects should she decide that she was ready to move on from her escape. "Yes, I think it would be most becoming, but then I think we can also do a lot with her natural hair color. Dark blonde hair with the proper style can be very pretty!" Walking up to Erica she asked, "What would you like, sweetie?"
Blushing, she looked down and fidgeted with her fingers. "I do like it most when my hair is this color, Aunt Heather." Toying with the hair tickling her neck she added, "But this wig can get awful itchy sometimes!"
Laughing lightly, she took both girls in her arms. "Come on you two! Lets go down for breakfast and afterward we'll get you two set up to go out and enjoy the first snow of the season!" Starting toward the door, she noticed Erica's dress. "That dress is lovely on you, sweetie. Did Faith pick it out?"
Erica shook her head as they entered the hall. "No, Aunt Heather. I did!"
Walking slowly toward the staircase, she smiled. "Well, I think it shows you have wonderful taste!" As they descended the stairs, she noted absently, "Once the roads are clear, our first priority will be to get you some new clothes, Erica. Have you thought about what you'd like?"
Slowing as she followed Faith and her aunt down the steps, after a moment of gathering her courage, she resumed their pace and replied. "I was thinking some dresses, not the same as Faith's, but different? I mean, Faith looks great in her dresses, and I don't think she should change her style at all, but I think I'd like some things that are... um... different, Aunt Heather. I don't know how to describe it. I guess I'll know it when I see it."
Reaching the base of the stairs, her aunt nodded. "Very well. I'll think on it."
After an uneventful breakfast, old music emanating from the restored Victrola in the kitchen, the three sat in the living room once more, her aunt seated on the loveseat and the two girls seated on the couch. After settling in, Heather asked, "So you think you will want to stay Erica for a while?" It was the first time since her aunt agreed to let her be a girl that she'd broached the subject of how long she wanted to stay that way.
Faith put her hands on her hips, giving her a furious look. "Mamma!"
Heather held up a hand to forestall Faith's objections. "Now dear, I have no intention of pushing Erica into anything, but she must get her own clothes. She cannot just continue to wear yours. True?"
She looked back at her mother suspiciously. "Yes, but..."
Once more she stopped her daughter's retort. "...but I must know Erica's intentions... not yours." She paused to let it sink in before returning to her sweet mothering tone. "Erica is not your plaything, Faith. Circumstances demanded Erica dress in your clothes, and she has decided to live with us as Erica... for now. I believe some good can come of it, and hope she decides to stay living as Erica... while it is helpful... but your desire to have a sister should not enter in to her decisions about what is best for her."
Pausing a moment, she collected her thoughts. "I can even say that my love for Erica as she was shouldn't sway her decisions." Heather admitted. "Erica must feel free to make that decision for herself, to determine on her own what she needs to do. I will not have you pushing her to be what you want her to be just to make you happy. Is that clear?"
Faith's anger at her mother for what she felt was pushing Erica to go back to being a boy melted in the face of her own desire to ensure Erica stayed a girl indefinitely. "Yes, Mamma. I'm sorry if I disrespected you. I'll try to do better."
She smiled at her daughter. "I know, dear. You always wanted a sister, and now here you are with a cousin and you want things to stay the way they are, but I must know what Erica's needs are and plan accordingly." Turning to face the girl who'd said nothing during the exchange, she motioned for Erica to come sit next to her.
Standing and gingerly walking over to the loveseat, Erica sat facing her aunt. "Yes, Aunt Heather?"
"Erica sweetheart," Heather began, taking both of Erica's hands in her own, "I know this is difficult, but soon the roads will open again and we'll go into town to buy the things you'll need to live here. I must know how long you want to live here as Erica." Glancing at her daughter she added, "With no pressure either way. Right Faith?"
Standing back up, Faith looked at her cousin solemnly. "Erica? You know I love you just the way you are, and I would love it if you stayed this way, but I'd still love you if you don't."
Her mother smiled and turned back to Erica. "And I'll love you just the same if you stay this way or not. What do you want to do?"
The new girl took a moment before answering. "I think I know, Aunt Heather. I know it's kind of escaping from my troubles, but if it would be alright, I'd like to live here as Erica."
Her aunt smiled. "I know sweetie, but I need to know for how long?"
"I really don't know, Aunt Heather." Erica admitted. "The way I feel right now, I can't see me wanting to ever go back to the way I was." Closing her eyes, she gave it serious thought. After a few moments she opened her eyes and said, "I know you need a time, but the best I can say is that I want stay Erica for as long as you'll let me. Does that help?"
She patted Erica's hand. "It helps enough, sweetheart. I'll plan accordingly. I think I know what you need. Will you trust me on that?"
"Yes, Aunt Heather!" Erica smiled. About to get back up, she sat down again and asked, "Aunt Heather? I know it may be asking a lot, but I really do want to have red hair. May I?"
Sighing, she gave in. "Very well. I'll look into it."
Leaping into the air, Faith cried, "Yippee!"
Her mother tried to be stern with her, ordering her to sit back down, but her jubilance was too infectious and could not be contained. Soon the three were laughing and, after a moment, Heather rose to her feet. "Well girls, I have some things to attend to, and you two have a field full of untouched snow waiting for you!"
This time it was Erica's turn to jump up, but in her case it was to head to the closet for her outerwear. About to run past her aunt, Erica doubled back and hugged her. "Thank you, Aunt Heather!" At that, she practically skipped over to the front door as Fredrick waited to assist with coats and boots.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Erica stepped out onto the front porch again, this time fully decked out in dress, tights, bloomers, coat, scarf, hat, mittens, boots, and a burning desire to run out into the front yard, plow through the knee-deep snow, and bury herself in it. Carefully making her way down the front steps, Faith by her side, she still couldn't help but giggle at the sense of wonder she felt experiencing her first snowfall.
Now that the sun was up, the magical beauty of the fresh snowfall was magnified a thousand times, turning every tree branch and rock into a dazzling display of twinkling brightness. Blinking against the blinding whiteness of the sun, Erica was awestruck with every step.
Reaching the bottom of the steps that Fredrick cleared before breakfast, Erica couldn't contain her excitement any longer and ran to the closest drift of snow she could find. Wading into it, she giggled as she flopped backwards into it, relishing the feel, even as cold as it was.
Right behind her cousin, Faith yelled, "Erica! Wait for me!" Watching Erica drop into the snow giggling, she giggled as well. "Oh, Erica! Now you're all snowy and wet!"
"I don't care!" she retorted between giggles. "This is like magic!"
Jogging up to stand next to her prone cousin, Faith held out a mittened hand. "Come on! Let's go make snow angels!"
Pulling herself up with the offered hand, she followed Faith around to the north side of the house opposite the garage where the lawn lay dormant beneath the untouched snow. Erica watched as Faith lay down and splayed her arms and legs out, wiping them back and forth until she had carved out a perfect snow angel. Helping Faith back up, Erica looked down at the pattern and smiled.
"That's pretty neat! Let me try!" she said through her smile. Finding a clear patch next to Faith's angel, she lay down just as Faith had done and repeated the process, getting up to admire the two patterns with their apparent hands joined together. Spending the next ten minutes making more, they finally looked back on their works of art.
Erica looked at her cousin. "That was so much fun! What else can we do?"
She shrugged. "We could build a snowman!"
Nodding vigorously, the two spent the next half-hour rolling snow and stacking it into a body and head. Using rocks for eyes and loose sticks for arms, Erica made a smile out of gravel from the driveway before taking off her scarf and wrapping it around the neck. The two girls laughed at the sight as it was barely half their height, lumpy, goofy looking, and not at all what you see in movies and TV shows, but so much better because they'd made it. They laughed so hard their sides ached when they noticed the rock eyes made it look cross-eyed.
Starting back to the house, Erica noticed how wet they both were. "Aunt Heather isn't going to be mad at us for getting wet, is she?" she chattered through cold lips.
Faith turned around and walked backwards through the snow toward their front door. "Mamma said we could go out in the snow, she knows that means getting wet, and cold. Cook will probably have hot cocoa for us to drink in front of the fire so we can get warm again!"
"It sure is cold! I bet it stays this cold until spring, huh?"
Her cousin turned back around to see where she was going. "It might not. Sometimes we get a snow like this and the next week it'll turn warm and melt everything, but we'll get more snow by Christmas, that's for sure."
Reaching the foot of the steps leading up to the front door, Erica watched Faith stamp her feet and wipe her arms and sides of her coat to remove the snow. Doing the same, she helped wipe snow off of parts of her cousin that she couldn't reach as Faith did the same in return.
"Hey, Erica?" Faith asked while she was getting brushed off. "Do you know what you want to be for Halloween? It's this Sunday, only three days away!"
Shrugging, Erica finished brushing Faith off. "Nothing, I guess. I haven't dressed up for Halloween in years. That's for little kids."
Turning, Faith looked at Erica with a hurt expression. "Oh. Never mind."
Seeing she'd accidentally hurt Faith's feelings, Erica apologized. "Faith? I'm sorry! I didn't mean to..." Even as she spoke, she watched Faith ascend the steps in a sullen waddle. "Faith! Come back! I'm sorry!"
Hurt turning to childish anger, Faith spun around, looked back at her cousin, and spat her reply. "Well, maybe in California it's for little kids, but here it's for everyone!"
Erica moved slowly up the steps towards her. "I'm really sorry, Faith! I didn't know you liked Halloween so much!"
"Erica, that was mean!" Faith crossed her arms. "I'm not a little kid and I love to dress up for Halloween! Even Mamma does, and we have lots of fun at the Halloween party!"
Hanging her head, Erica stopped on the steps. "Faith, I swear I didn't mean to make you feel bad! Back home, almost nobody does Trick-or-Treat... except little kids. They don't even go to people's houses anymore! They have Trick-or-Treat at the mall. I didn't know it was different here! Will you please forgive me?"
Looking at her cousin warily, Faith judged her explanation as if to search for hints of lies in it. Satisfied Erica was sincere, she uncrossed her arms and nodded. "Well, OK." Her sullen expression slowly breaking into a smile, Faith giggled. "I can't really stay mad at you anyway, Erica!"
She finished climbing the steps and hugged her slightly older cousin. "Thank you, Faith! I really am sorry. I'll try not to assume so much in the future. It's just... really different here."
They took each other's hands and walked up to the door, which opened for them as they approached.
"Welcome back, Miss Faith, Miss Erica." Fredrick greeted them. "Did you quite enjoy yourselves?"
"Quite!" Erica nodded with a grin. "Thank you, Fredrick!"
"You should call him Freddie, like I do, Erica." Faith offered as she sat down on the marble bench to take off her boots. "I think he likes it!"
She looked up at the huge man and noticed only the slightest remnants of a smile fading to his normally emotionless expression.
"As you like, Miss Faith." he replied. "However, I should say that Miss Erica should be free to refer to me as she prefers."
Thinking as Fredrick helped her out of her coat, Erica turned and looked up at him. "I'd like to call you whatever you like."
Fredrick raised an eyebrow in surprise, having never been asked what he liked to be called. Thinking honestly a moment, he looked down at the child before him. "I think I like you referring to me by my full first name, Miss Erica. It seems to suit you."
Smiling, Erica stood tall and tried to sound formal and dignified as best she could. "Then Fredrick it shall be. Thank you for helping me with my coat, Fredrick!"
"My pleasure, Miss Erica." he replied with only the slightest hint of a smile. He found it odd that he was actually beginning to think of Erica as a young girl, but he understood it was what she needed to be for now. Guiding her to the marble bench, he knelt and helped both girls off with their boots and mittens before helping them put on their indoor shoes. Looking around briefly, he asked, "What has happened to your scarf, Miss Erica?" The mention of its absence caused both girls to giggle at the memory of their ridiculous looking snowman that now wore it.
Making their way into the living room, the two saw pillows and a blanket placed in front of the fire. Rushing forward, stopping at the fireplace for a moment to warm their hands, they sat on the pillows just as Cook came out of the dining room with a tray. Lowering it down so they could each take a steaming cup of cocoa, she smiled at the girls.
"Did you have fun Erica?" Theresa asked.
Nodding, she smiled. "Don't you know it! I didn't know it could be so much fun to do something as simple as making a snowman!"
Leaning in next to her cousin, Faith bumped shoulders with her, giggling conspiratorially as she sipped her cocoa. Repeating the process over and over, she kept bumping shoulders with Erica as the girl described her first time playing in the snow to Cook and her aunt. Finally, she'd managed to irritate her cousin after five or six bumps.
"What?" Erica fumed, turning to look at her just as Faith crossed her eyes and grinned like an idiot, mimicking their snowman. Erica stifled a laugh, her ire loosing out to her funny bone. Finally, the two were forced to put their cups down, rolling on the floor and giggling like crazy.
Their giggle fit was infectious as both Cook and Heather couldn't help but chortle at the two of them, the room filled with the sound of giggling girls. Even the unflappable Fredrick couldn't help but let out a few repressed chuckles before composing himself as he entered the room.
When Heather saw Fredrick standing and waiting for her attention, she asked through her mirth, "What is it Fredrick?"
With only the faintest hint of a smile and a glance at the two laughing hyenas in front of the fire, he bowed slightly. "Madame, I wish to inform you that the main highway is open once more. I will have the driveway cleared within the next thirty minutes."
His news halted the laughter at once as Faith rolled over on her stomach to look back at him. "So soon?" she asked.
"Yes, Miss Faith." Fredrick nodded curtly. Knowing what the girl was thinking from experience, he added, "Though I do believe school is still unlikely to be resumed until Monday the first, at the soonest. Too many in the area are still snowbound."
"Thank you, Fredrick." Heather nodded in understanding. Turning to Erica, she could see mild fear in the girl's eyes. Having already considered how to proceed, she smiled at her niece. "Erica? Are you ready to come with me into town to get some clothes of your own?"
Faced with the prospect of leaving her safe and loving environment, Erica gulped as she shook her head slightly. "Do I have to, Aunt Heather?"
Looking at Cook, Fredrick, and then Faith, she cleared her throat. Without a word, all three knew at once that she wanted to be alone with her niece.
Erica watched as Faith stood up and grudgingly left for the kitchen with Cook and Fredrick. Standing, she walked over to her aunt where she beckoned Erica with a patting of the loveseat's cushion. Nervously, she sat down as Heather turned to face her.
"Erica, I know you're happy here, and you're happy being you." she began. "Is there something keeping you from wanting to go with me into town?"
Fidgeting with her fingers, Erica was terrified to say out loud what she was feeling. After a moment, her aunt took her hands to quiet their restlessness. Without a word, she looked into her aunt's vibrantly blue eyes and wished that Heather could read her mind so she didn't have to say it out loud.
"I see." her aunt said, knowingly. "You're scared that people will 'know' and that you'll be made fun of, aren't you?"
Tears welling up in her eyes were Erica's only response.
"Oh, sweetheart!" her aunt consoled, drawing her into a comforting hug. Holding her lovingly for a few minutes to quell her fears, she finally pulled back and regarded her niece. "How about this. Before we go shopping, I'll take you to a friend of mine who runs a beauty salon. Her name is Brooke Hathaway and she lives just a short way down the road. I can call her up and I'm sure she'll be happy to help you feel much more comfortable as Erica so no one will know. Would that be alright?"
Drying her eyes with a tissue, Erica nodded. Curious, she asked, "Did... did she used to be Uncle Richard's friend?"
Surprised by her niece's knowledge of Brooke's connection to her late husband, she was stunned speechless for a moment. Finally she asked, "How do you know about that?"
Sniffing, Erica shrugged. "Faith told me that a lady that lives nearby named Brooke was in the war with her daddy."
Heather smiled sadly. "Yes, she was in the service with Richard. She and your Uncle Richard were very close friends for many years! Brooke was also a very dear friend to your father and mother. In fact, she sort of introduced them to one another, from a certain point of view." Heather barely managed to hold back her tears as she remembered that day with a sad fondness.
Turning around, Heather smiled as she saw the three people she was waiting for enter. New Years Eve nineteen ninety-five just wouldn't be the same without her sweetheart to kiss at midnight. Making her way to the door, she saw him notice her approach and her heart fluttered with anticipation.
"Richard! I'm so glad you could make it!" she said as she got close enough for him to hear.
Richard Hargrave, a Sergeant in the United Stated Marine Corps, smiled his rugged smile as he saw her approaching. He removed his cover and ran his free hand through his short-cropped red hair. At just over six feet with classically handsome features and a muscular ex-football player's build, he was what most women would die for in a man. That he was also charming, witty, gracious, and kind made him the target of much of the female population around the college.
For his part, Richard couldn't believe he'd ever managed to attract the eye of Heather Moore, the most beautiful girl he'd ever known. She wasn't the most popular girl, nor the most outgoing, but in his eyes no woman could ever compete with her stunning beauty, quick wit, intelligent mind, and graceful charm. "Hey, beautiful! Couldn't leave you alone! You might come to your senses and realize you could do way better than me!"
Heather smiled coyly as she wound her arms around his waist. "Better than you? Who? Adonis? Apollo? John Wayne?"
Jack peered around his best friend's shoulder, having been standing next to him and being quietly ignored by the two lovebirds. "Ah, come on! This jarhead? I just don't get why you threw me over for that! What do you see in him when there's me to be had!"
Sergeant Brooke Hathaway tapped him on the shoulder. Jack turning to face her, the woman Marine looked him up and down, then likewise with Richard, shaking her head. "Sorry Charlie, but even I can tell he's got you beat."
Jack, ever the comedian, took off his cover and held it to his heart. "Brooke! My sweetness! Say it ain't so!"
Pushing past Jack and snaking around Richard, Brooke smiled and hugged Heather. "Hey, beautiful! Still sure I can't tear you away from this clown? I can really make it worth your while!" She arched her eyebrows at Heather in a comically seductive way.
While Heather was much more curvaceous, Brooke was no less attractive. At five foot eight, she stood taller than Jack even without the aid of her two-inch heels. Her legs long and muscular, her waist tapering nicely into rock-hard abdominals, her shoulder-length ebony hair curly and framing her face perfectly, and her lips full and beautiful.
"You make an awfully tempting offer, Brooke..." she said in her low throaty voice. Releasing her and returning to Richard, she hooked an arm through one of his. "...but alas my heart is already spoken for."
Jack turned to his best friend. "Say Rich, you wouldn't mind if Heather took a little break from you, would you? Just a short one? Like say for an hour? Oh, I don't mean for myself, but think of poor Brooke!"
Turning to his best friend, Richard smirked at him. "Yeah, I know who you're looking out for, Jack."
Pleading as the four made their way through the other guests, Jack begged, "Oh, come on Rich! Give a guy a break! Just let them go upstairs, alone, for ten minutes! I swear, you can even handcuff me to the front door! I just wanna know it happened!"
Brooke slugged Jack in the arm hard enough to bruise. "Can it, clown! I'm not your personal masturbation material."
"OK, OK. You know I was only kidding around." Turning to Heather Jack smiled sincerely. "So how've you been?"
She put her other arm through Jack's as they walked slowly. "Can't complain, Jack." Thinking of how to segue into what Brooke wanted to talk about, she asked innocently, "Seeing anyone?"
He jerked his thumb at Brooke and Richard. "No one but these two yahoos. Alas, you were my last and final hope. My heart can never love another!"
Smiling, Brooke hoped to not give too much away. "Well, that's too bad. I was hoping you could help me with a little problem."
His smile melted immediately. "What's her name?"
Laughing, Heather reached the end table where she'd put her drink and the ones she'd already gotten for the trio. "Oh, Jack! Here I thought I'd ruined you for all other women!"
He nodded. "True, true, but what's her name Brooke? Her name!"
Looking at him, Brooke smiled. "Her name's Erica. She's sweet, but shy. I met her while waiting for Heather at the campus library. I kind of got my signals crossed and thought she was hitting on me, but she was really just wanting to ask about my service. She was doing some psychology paper on the effect of women in predominantly male occupied professions."
Wincing as he picked up a beer bottle, he opened it and handed it to her. "Please! Not another she-woman man-hater! I don't care how cute she is, they're more trouble than they're worth! You sure she wasn't hitting on you?"
Taking a drink, Brooke shook her head. "Positive. And she's not a left-wing wacko feminist, either. Her professor probably is, so it's the assignment she got, but she's actually quite nice, loves the armed forces, and even thanked me for my service."
Shaking his head as he took his own beer, Jack swigged it. "Then her old man's probably a swabbie at the base."
While Brooke laughed, Richard, who'd not been listening to the conversation, asked, "What about swabbies?"
Taking another drink, Jack grinned. "Nothing, Rich. Just go back to ogling your girlfriend."
Picking up his own beer, Richard glared at his best friend since age fourteen. "I wasn't ogling her, I was admiring her beautiful eyes!"
Nudging him in the shoulder, Jack quipped, "Sure, sure, Rich. Increase your scanning elevation about twenty-five degrees to find her eyes."
His comment brought a laugh to the three and a blush to Heather's cheeks before Brooke turned and looked toward the door and checked her watch.
Noticing the action, Jack shook his head. "Oh, no! You didn't! Brooke! Say it ain't so! You set me up without even asking?"
She shrugged as she took another drink. "You'll love her, Jack. I swear."
He nodded. "Uh-huh. How many eyebrows does she have?"
"Three, one for each eye." Brooke smiled sweetly. "But you'll never notice because the hump on her back will draw all your attention." Almost sensing more than hearing the front door open over the clamor of conversations and the music, she turned and smiled when she saw Erica look into the throng of partygoers. Handing her beer over to Heather, she didn't even look back. "Excuse me." she said as she headed for the door.
Thinking she might've come to the wrong address before she spotted Brooke coming toward her, Erica smiled and embraced her. "Hi! I thought I got the wrong place. This is your party?"
Slinging her arm over Erica's shoulders, Brooke grimaced. "Not exactly my party, but I was invited, so the invitation is yours as well. Come on!" She leaned in close to whisper, "Keep calm, girl!"
Making their way through the crowd, Brooke walked toward the trio with her guest. Heather and Richard were looking at each other with stars in their eyes; Richard's back turned to their approach.
Jack was the only one who saw them coming. The two getting closer, his heart skipped a beat. Suddenly the room seemed very quiet, the noise and laughter seeming to fade into the background. He wasn't even seeing Brooke anymore, just the girl she was with. She was thin, but not skinny, with well-rounded hips and bust and a narrow tapering waist. The T-shirt she wore under a see-through white jacket emphasized her gracious curves, and her jeans covered long legs that Jack could tell were well formed and sexy. Her shoulder-length red hair bounced with every step, framing her beautiful face and haunting green eyes.
For her part, Erica saw Jack at the same moment and her breath caught. He was not ruggedly handsome, nor especially well built or tall. His dirty-blonde hair was almost non-existent, cropped short and spiked up out of his head like tiny porcupine quills. His face was neither exceptionally attractive nor homely, hands callused and scrawny. It wasn't his looks that had always taken her breath away. It was him. Most especially now, with a room full of half naked women surrounding her Jack, his eyes were locked on her and only her as though she, Erica Hargrave, were the best looking woman in the room.
Brooke stopped in front of him. "Jack? This is Erica." Seeing the two staring into each other's eyes and not even noticing her, Brooke pursed her lips. "Well, I can see you two don't have any further need of me." she said as she turned toward Richard and Heather, trying keep them distracted to give the two a moment alone in a crowded room.
Erica spoke first. "Hi!"
"Um... hi!" Jack swallowed hard. Gathering his composure, but still unable to tear his eyes away from hers, he stammered as he held out his hand. "Jack, Jack Dunning. Lance Corporal, USMC."
She smiled and took his hand gently, only just then realizing that he didn't know who she was. "Erica... Erica Hargrave. Student. Stanford." Her eyes smiled along with her lips and she could feel her hand nervously sweating in his.
Just then, Jack heard from behind him, "Erica!?"
The young woman's eyes were torn away from Jack's enchanting stare when she heard the one voice that had been catching her attention her entire life. Looking over Jack's shoulder, she saw her brother looking at her in sheer astonishment. "Richie!? Brooke didn't say you were going to be here!"
Jack was confused as her full name hadn't even processed in his mind yet. In point of fact, Jack hadn't done much actual thinking since he first saw her. Suddenly, it all dawned on him, his eyes grew wide, and he looked at her again. "Erica... Hargrave? But... Rich's Erica?" The last time he'd seen his best buddy's little sister was over five years earlier at Richard's nineteenth birthday. He'd only showed up long enough to gather up his buddy for a night on the town. What he remembered of her was the image of a little girl. Now before him stood a vision of lovely young womanhood.
Her brother pushed Jack aside. "What are you doing here, Erica? You're not twenty-one yet! You can't be here!"
Brooke halfway interposed between the siblings. "She's my guest, Rich! And she turns legal in like a week, so back off!"
"That's OK, Brooke." Erica's eyes flared. "I can see I'm not going to be allowed to have any fun here tonight. Maybe you can take me to another party? I can be your date!"
Pulling Richard aside, Jack tried to convince him to let her stay. "Listen! Rich! Come on, man! Let it be! If she stays here, you can keep an eye on her, and so can Heather, Brooke, and I, right? If she leaves, God knows what trouble she could get into! Think, man!"
Turning back to his sister, Richard lowered his gaze. "Look, Erica. I'm sorry. Just forget I said anything, OK? I... I overreacted. Please stay." He looked up at her as he finished his plea.
Her fury at still being treated like a child by her older brother melted quickly. Never one to carry a grudge long, she eyed him suspiciously. "Fine! But I don't want Sergeant Ramrod killing my good time, is that clear?" She poked him in the chest as she finished.
Raising his hands defensively, Richard backed away. "I give! I give! Why don't I get you a beer?"
"I'll get it!" Jack offered, his voice nearly cracking comically. Turning to Erica, he smiled. "Don't move a muscle, my angel! I'll be back to worship the ground you walk on in a flash!"
Erica looked to Brooke and her brother with a wistful smile as Jack ran to the bar. "Isn't he funny?"
Brooke tousled her hair. "Unfortunately, looks aren't everything."
"Don't let his outward clownish charm fool you, sis." Richard warned. "He's still the same Jack Dunning you've known for years."
Biting her lower lip, Erica swayed gently. "He always seemed really sweet to me."
"The word you're looking for is 'desperate'." Brooke said as she took another drink. "We call him Corporal Strikeout for a reason."
Erica shook her head, inwardly hopeful. "Doesn't do well with the ladies then?"
"He does fine at first." Heather interjected. "But once girls stop laughing at his jokes, his lack of things like a car or money, and thereby his ability to take them out, tends to make them lose interest quickly."
Furrowing her brow, Erica fumed. "Well that's awful shallow of them!" Pausing, she asked, "Is he very bad with money?"
"Not really." Brooke shook her head. "He's just overly generous. He sends most of his pay to the place that's taking care of his mom."
Her heart melted, remembering the few times she'd met Mary Dunning and how torn up Jack had been about moving her into a home before he'd left Pittsburgh. "Oh! That's so sweet!"
"Yeah, other girls think it's sweet too." Richard smiled. "Until it's time for their second date and he still can't afford to take them anywhere, let alone have a car to take them in."
She slapped her brother in the chest. "You know, you could be a little more generous with your dough back home, Sergeant! Daddy's not getting any younger, and he's about killing himself trying to put me through school!"
He nearly choked on his beer. "Hey! I send what I can! More than Jack!"
His sister crossed her arms. "But he makes less! I bet he leaves less to spend on himself than you do!"
"You're right, he does!" Heather nodded. Turning to Richard, she smiled as she draped her arms over his shoulders and around his neck. "You really should help your family more, Richard. Your money doesn't impress me!"
"Good lord!" Brooke rolled her eyes. "If this gets sweeter, I'm gonna barf!"
Nearly running back to the foursome, Jack handed Erica a beer and smiled. "Here! My treat, my beauty!"
Nodding at Erica, Brooke joked, "If she's Beauty that makes you The Beast."
Putting the drink down, Erica smiled. "That's very sweet of you, but you don't need to buy me drinks! I think I'd like to stay clear-headed." Slipping her arm into Jack's, she looked around. "Is there someplace quiet we could talk?"
"You could take him upstairs!" Brooke smirked.
"Brooke!" Richard barked as he nearly turned white, knowing what most couples went upstairs to do. "Over my dead body!"
Erica stiffened her back. "Is that so, Richie?"
Lowering his voice desperately, he leaned in toward his sister's ear. "Are you crazy? Do you know what Mom and Dad would do to me if they found out I let you 'go upstairs' with Jack?" he emphasized with air quotes. "I'd never live to see morning! Mom'd kill me over the phone!"
Erica tilted her nose up. "Well, Mom and Dad aren't here, Richie! So unless you want me to just leave and take Jack somewhere more private, he and I are going to go upstairs!" She paused to let her brother squirm. "...and talk!"
At that, Erica took her brother's beer, took a swig from it, handed it back to him, and practically dragged Jack toward the staircase.
Looking back at his best friend, Jack just shrugged. "What can I do, Rich? Buttons' got me hooked!" referring to the nickname he'd given her on the first day they'd met when she was only ten and he was almost fourteen.
Richard looked over at Brooke as the two disappeared up the stairs. "What the hell, Brooke? You set my sister up with Jack?"
"Would you rather I set her up with Corporal Strikeout, or have her end up with someone like you, Sergeant Trouser Snake?"
Heather turned his head to face her. "Relax, darling. I'm sure she's perfectly safe with Jack. Now would you mind not thinking about your sister and turn your attention back to me? It's kind of creepy if I kiss you while you're thinking about your sister."
"Ha!" Brooke busted out laughing. "Maybe that's why he's so protective!"
He pushed Brooke's shoulder. "Cram it, Brooke! That's not even funny! I'm just looking out for her is all!"
Once more, Heather turned his head back towards her. "I'm over here, dear!"
As he finally returned his focus back to his girlfriend, Brooke sighed and took another drink. "Great job, Brooke." she said to herself as she looked up the stairs where Jack and Erica had gone and then to Heather and Richard starting to dance. "You've managed to help find love for everyone but you."
Heather shook her head to clear it. "You see, Erica... Brooke, your father Jack, and your Uncle Richard were already good friends when I met them. Brooke was the one who set your parents up on their first date. A few months later they were married, and then two years later you were born!"
The girl weakly smiled, unnerved by her aunt's story that showed she wasn't actually Erica Hargrave. She finally understood that, as her mother had told her, there was so much about her family that she didn't know. Maybe this Brooke lady can tell me more about dad... and me. she thought. "I think that would be OK." she said after a brief pause.
Her aunt nodded. "You can join Faith in the kitchen for lunch, sweetie. I'll call Brooke up and see what she says."
Erica hugged her aunt before heading to the kitchen. "Thank you, Aunt Heather. I love you!"
She hugged the girl back. "I love you too, sweetheart. Now scoot!" Heather watched the girl head through the dining room toward the kitchen, moving over to the couch and picking up the receiver for the old phone. She hadn't told Brooke yet of Erica's death, not knowing how to break the news. Dialing quickly before she lost her nerve, she didn't have to wait long before it was answered.
"Hello?" Jenny Hathaway answered.
"Hello, Jenny? This is Heather. Is Brooke available?" she queried.
"Oh, hi Heather! Yes, just a moment!"
Heather listened silently to the woman on the other end of the line.
"Honey? Heather's on the phone for you!" Jenny called out.
After a short wait, she heard the phone being handed off with a murmured comment.
"Oh, stop it! Heather is not my girlfriend! Hello?" Brooke answered.
"I'm not your what?" Heather probed.
"Oh God, that wife of mine! Anytime you call lately, she's taken to saying, 'Your girlfriend's on the phone!' Honestly!"
Heather could hear Jenny in the background. "Well she calls you enough to be her girlfriend! I think you talk to her more than you do me!"
Brooke lowered her tone. "Honey, I do you way more than I talk to her! Ow!"
Listening to their exchange, Heather had second thoughts about breaking the news to her best friend. "Brooke, if this is a bad time..."
"Nonsense! What's up?" Brooke asked happily.
Sighing, Heather prepared herself to break her friend's heart. "It's about Erica. I... I have some bad news."
Knowing exactly who Heather was talking about without having to be told, Brooke was silent a moment while she sat down, hearing the pain in her voice. "What's happened?"
Heather took a deep breath. "I don't know how to put this any easier, Brooke. I'm just going to say it. Erica... died... of leukemia... a few weeks ago. Her and Jack's... child... has come here to live with us."
The woman on the other end of the phone couldn't breathe. Both Jack and Richard had been her best friends in the Marine Corps and afterwards. Their loss was hard to take, but Erica was Richard's sister, Jack's wife, and one of her best friends. "No!" she whispered. With the discipline of her Corps training, she cleared her throat and wiped away the escaped tear, pushing aside her pain. "Are... are you OK?"
"Thank you dear, but if anyone is hurt most by this, it's their... child. Before Erica died, shortly before your wedding, her parents Frank and Judith were killed in a car accident. Eric's life has been thrown into chaos. Now he's here, thousands of miles from the only home he's ever known, orphaned, scared, lonely. I tell you Brooke, he's traumatized. Badly."
"I can only imagine!" Brooke replied. The line went silent for a moment while Brooke explained to her wife what was going on. After a moment, Heather heard an extension pick up.
"Heather? This is Jenny! I'm so sorry to hear what's happened! Erica was such a nice woman! How can we help?"
Heather explained. "Well, Eric arrived Tuesday evening, a week early and with nothing but the soaked and ruined clothes on his back. He lost all his luggage when he changed planes. We tried laundering what little he had, but the power went out before they could be washed and when we tried to dry them near the fire, they were burned beyond use. He was effectively left with nothing from his old life. No clothes, no pictures, nothing. It seems the medical bills for Erica took everything Jack and Erica ever had."
She paused a moment to let the situation sink in before explaining further. "We just gave him one of Faith's robes to wear for lack of anything better. To make a long story short, he's sort of... escaped... into a fantasy world where he's a twelve-year-old incarnation of his own mother. He... he thinks he's Erica." Static filled the line as she waited until one of them responded.
"Well... that's... um..." Brooke broke the silence.
"What can we do to help?" Jenny repeated her earlier question.
"I was hoping to bring 'Erica' over to see you Brooke, so you could help her."
Brooke knitted her brow. "You mean like... snap him out of it?"
Disagreeing, Jenny caught on quickly. "I don't think that's what Heather had in mind, love. I think she means for you to give him a makeover."
"Her." Heather corrected her only slightly.
"Um... OK." Pausing, Brooke asked, "Are you sure that's the right thing to do, Heather? We're talking about Jack's son!"
Answering for her, Jenny insisted, "Of course it is! We'd be happy to help."
Smiling, Heather replied, "Thank you, Jenny. Brooke? From a psychological point of view, this kind of temporary escapism is healthy in the long term. After a while, she'll come to terms with her grief, give up the fantasy, and want to go back to being Eric. She just can't handle it right now. It's... it's too painful. What she needs now is to feel safe, and right now that means being more at ease with her identity, more like a girl. Will you help?"
"Of course she'll help, Heather." Jenny answered. "Won't you, love?"
Brooke growled at her wife. "I can answer for myself, love!" Pausing a moment, she finally did. "I'll help, Heather. If you really think this is in his best interests, I'll do what I can."
"Thank you, Brooke!" Heather beamed. "I really appreciate your help with this! We'll be over at your place in say, half an hour?"
"That's fine, Heather. I'll get things ready. Anything in particular?"
She ticked off each item with her fingers. "Hair... cut, color, and style. Nails and any makeup and styling advice you can give her."
Brooke took notes. "OK. Hair. What color?"
"Do you remember Erica's hair color? That shade of red?"
"Yeah. I remember." Brooke nodded once more and swallowed hard, holding back her tears as a hundred happy and painful memories flooded her mind. "Let me think. Yeah, I have something that can work for that. It won't be wash away though, it's permanent hair dye. It'll be staying until it grows out, say twelve to twenty weeks at minimum. Is that alright?"
"It will be fine, Brooke. I don't see her giving up this fantasy for at least that long. She's just... lost. She's even lost her faith in God. She's so angry with Him that before she retreated into her fantasy, she was cursing His name. She has a lot of pain and loss to work through."
Brooke frowned so strongly that Heather could hear it over the phone. "I see. Well, I should have everything ready by the time you get here. We'll see you soon."
"Thanks ever so much, Brooke! Love you and see you soon! And thank you too, Jenny!"
She listened as Brooke hung up, hearing Jenny say, "See? I knew she was your girlfriend! 'Love you, Broo...'"
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
--
Sitting in the back of her aunt's limousine, Heather across from her and Faith next to her, Erica's nerves were on edge knowing she was going to meet someone who knew her father... and her from her old life before she was reborn in the body of her son. The butterflies were gone, replaced with raging wildcats clamoring around inside her stomach.
Clearing her mind, she focused on who she 'really' was; Erica Hargrave. She was once more twelve years old, but living with her aunt Heather and cousin Faith. She now thought of her aunt as also her sister-in-law; that part of her fantasy shifting to adjust to her situation. She had actually joined with her own mother, Erica Hargrave, living her life over again, but was simultaneously still Erica Dunning, her own child.
When the car turned a corner, she felt the bump of leaving the paved road and making their way up a short, snowy, gravel driveway. Soon enough the car stopped and she waited while Fredrick got out and opened their door.
"Thank you, Fredrick." Heather said as she exited first.
"If you won't be needing me Madame, I'll wait in the car while you attend to your business with Mrs. Hathaway."
"No Fredrick, you head home. We'll be a few hours, so I'll call when we're ready to be picked up." Waiting as Faith followed her out, she watched a timid Erica slowly climb out of the car. Taking her hand, she led both girls up to the front door and rang the bell just as the car started to pull away.
Erica couldn't get her stomach to settle. While in the kitchen she'd eaten a PB and J sandwich that she was now thinking had been a mistake, certain it was going to come back up at any moment. After a moment's wait, she saw movement from within the small white two-story house. The door opened to reveal a lady dressed in a blue knee-length dress with a black waist panel. She was shorter than her aunt Heather, but still most of a foot taller than her or Faith. Curly brown shoulder-length hair framed her round face, which smiled down at her.
"Hi, Jenny!" her aunt greeted the lady. "Thanks for having us!"
"Come in! Come in!" she said quickly. "It's freezing out there!"
After the three ladies entered her home, she closed the door behind them. "Here, let me help you off with your coats." she offered, helping Erica with hers last. Once done, she crouched down and greeted her. "Well! You must be Erica! I've heard a lot about you!" She extended her hand to the girl. "I'm Jenny Hathaway, but you can just call me Aunt Jenny! I'm very pleased to meet you!"
Slowly taking Jenny's hand, Erica smiled shyly. "Pleased to meet you as well." she replied, almost too quiet to hear.
Once Heather hung up her and Faith's coats, the three followed Jenny into the kitchen where a taller woman waited. The woman smiled as they entered, her shoulder-length ebony hair falling in natural curls to stand in perfect contrast to her milky complexion. Wearing designer jeans that accentuated her athletic curves, a pretty white tank top partially covered by a simple cotton button-up blouse was left to hang open loosely in front.
"Good morning, Heather! Faith!" Brooke greeted them. "Pleased to meet you, Erica." She looked at the child standing before her and, seeing both her mother Erica and father Jack in the child, nearly brought her to tears. "Well... Erica, I... I understand you like your fun red hair so much you want your hair to look just like it? Why don't you come sit here and I'll see what we can do."
Erica smiled weakly as she sat in the chair and Brooke covered her with a cloth. "Thank you, Miss Hathaway."
"You can call me Aunt Brooke." she offered, gently pulling the play wig off Erica's head and examining the girl's natural hair color and length. My God! she thought. It's the exact same color as Jack's! Needing to compose herself, she turned to the girl's aunt. "Heather? I need to mix up the color. Can you give me a hand?"
Heather, having never touched hair color on her life, was stunned for a moment, but quickly caught on. "Oh! Sure, Brooke! I'd be happy to help! After all, you're helping me... and Erica!" She followed the brunette into her storage room where the Marine-turned-beautician kept all her salon products. After Brooke closed the door, she turned to her friend.
"Oh God, Heather!" she whispered, tears forming in her eyes. "I don't know if I can do this! He has Jack's hair!"
Taking both of Brooke's hands in hers, Heather tried to calm her down. "It's all right, Brooke! Calm down! Jack is not going to be mad at you, I swear! Erica needs this. She needs to feel comfortable living in this fantasy. She's hurting Brooke, far more than you or I, and she's much too young to handle it! I tried to fight it at first, tried to push her away from it, but she just can't handle being Eric right now. She can barely tolerate being Erica, but it makes her feel like her mother's still here with her. For now... it's enough."
Brooke ran her fingers through her hair, blowing out a breath through pursed lips. "You keep calling him her, even when he can't hear you!" she said angrily as a statement, but obviously intended as a question.
Her oldest friend frowned. "She already knows I want her to go back to being Jack and Erica's son, Brooke. I can't afford to slip up. If I do, it would be as though I were trying to tear down her fantasy before she's ready. She'd see it as an attack on her identity, so I have to think of her as though she's just a normal girl. If I think of her as Eric at all, I'll use 'him' by mistake and it will all come crashing down... with potentially disastrous results!"
Closing her eyes, Brooke took a deep breath. "You're sure this is the right thing to do? Won't this confuse him?"
Heather shook her head. "No. People can't be made to think they're another gender, Brooke. It's innate. So unless the potential for gender dysphoria was always in her, it's almost impossible to confuse her. Please, Brooke! If you can't do this, if you can't look at her and think of her as being a normal girl, as Jack and Erica's daughter, tell me now and I'll make an excuse as to why we have to leave. I can't let her face the kind of trauma challenging her fantasy would bring right now! Not this soon after... after Erica's death and being ripped away from the only life she's ever known!"
Turning away from Heather, Brooke crossed her arms to hold herself as though if she didn't she might fly apart. Steeling herself, she turned back toward her best friend's widow. "OK. I... I can do that. I can just think of her as Erica and Jack's daughter.... but you have to promise me that you won't allow this to get out of control. No turning hi... her... into a girl with hormones or anything like that!"
Putting her hands on Brooke's shoulders to help calm her, Heather nodded. "Brooke, I swear to you on my soul, I'll only let this continue while I think it's a healthy coping tool, not a minute longer. Even if she wants hormones or something more permanent, I won't allow it. I know that after a time she'll finally be able to process her pain, move on, and will want to be Eric again... but we can't push her to it! She has to return to it on her own."
Brooke sighed. "Alright, I'll trust you... for Jack's sake if nothing else. I still owe him one and I know it's gotta be killing him to see... her... hurting so badly." Composing herself, Brooke picked up the bottle of hair color. Taking a breath, she pasted a fake smile on her face and opened the door, heading back into her kitchen. "Sorry it took so long, Erica. I couldn't find the right color." Examining Erica's hair, she nodded to herself. "Yeah, I think this will take very nicely! Are you ready, sweetie?"
The girl nodded, eager but nervous. She watched Brooke mix the color into a bowl with a brush, then scoop some of the color onto it, and start painting it into her hair. After a short time, she felt a mild sting on her scalp.
"Aunt Brooke? Is it supposed to feel like this? Like a sunburn?"
The hairstylist nodded as she finished applying the color. "A little, sweetie. It might itch a little too, but you can't scratch it! Can you do that?" Seeing Erica nod slightly, Brooke finished the color and wrapped a plastic shower cap over the girl's hair. Then, coming around front, she looked at her and smiled. "How would you like pink nail polish to go with your dress?"
Erica smiled back genuinely and started to reflexively reach up to scratch her head that was starting to itch. Stopping herself, she was rewarded with another wide smile from Brooke, Jenny, and her aunt Heather.
While Brooke filed and shaped Erica's nails, Faith came up beside her. "Does it itch really bad?" she asked.
"Uh-huh!" Erica nodded vigorously. "I really wanna scratch it!"
"I bet you must have the most self control in the whole world! If I get an itch, I can't help but scratch... no matter what anyone says! Remember that time I got poison ivy, Mamma?"
Heather laughed. "Yes, dear! I do! I nearly had to tie your hands!"
Shaking her head in frustration, Erica twitched. "Can we talk about something else, please? All this itch talk is making it worse!"
Her aunt began talking to Jenny about the power outage and the hardships it was causing, heading out to the living room. Meanwhile, Faith wandered off to read the book she'd brought, bored with watching Brooke give her cousin a manicure. That left Erica alone with Brooke for the first time.
An awkward silence rose up between the two. Erica knew that the woman had known her father and wanted to ask questions about what he was like, but couldn't figure out how to broach the subject while she was herself the living spirit of Erica Hargrave, her father's wife.
For her part, Brooke simply bit her tongue, trying to keep herself from telling the child to 'man up' and go back to being Eric. After a short time, she could tell something was on Erica's mind, but was afraid to speak up.
"So, Erica. Did you know I knew your uncle Richard?" she asked as she buffed the girl's nails.
"Uh-huh." she nodded. "Aunt Heather told me. She said you also knew..." She struggled with the words, having difficulty coping with the concept that Jack Dunning was both her father and late husband to her older self.
Brooke looked up at the girl and realized she'd found a crack in Erica's fantasy and wanted to tear it open. "Yes, I also knew Jack. Jack Dunning. He married your uncle Richard's sister."
Erica's breath grew short, her fantasy threatening to fly apart at the seams and leave her bare and exposed. Trying to calm herself, she stammered out, "W-what was he l-like? J... Jack... D-Dunning."
Slowly, she stopped buffing Erica's nails. Looking at the child seated in front of her, she could see her shaking, close to a complete mental breakdown. Her heart ached to comfort her best friend's child, but she could see the emotional scars were too new; too raw to even touch, let alone begin to heal. Picking her words carefully, she smiled and resumed buffing her nails, trying to undo the damage she'd already done with just a few words.
"Well, I met your uncle Richard and Jack while we were all assigned to Alameda Naval Air Station back in the nineties. They'd been friends for years before that. They met in high school and went through Boot together. Richard was a born leader and Jack followed him! Richard was handsome and charming, Jack was quick-witted and funny. They made a good team. They both enlisted after high school, same as I did, to be able to afford college, but it ended up only Richard followed that dream." She switched to Erica's left hand before she continued. "After a four year cruise, Rich started at Menlo College because it was near Alameda and they had a business degree program."
"I think it was Labor Day in ninety-five when your uncle Richard met your aunt Heather. She was going to Stanford, that's close to Menlo, and there was a party Jack wanted to go to. Richard and I tagged along and your aunt Heather was there." She smiled and looked off into the distance. "Actually, Jack had already met Heather and found out she was going to that party, and was there to ask her out... but when Heather met Rich, it was all over."
She resumed buffing Erica's nails as she continued once more. "Jack was upset, but he loved Rich so much he was happy for them. Jack was always looking for the future Mrs. Dunning!" Brooke laughed. "But he had the worst luck with girls! Poor Jack! In fact, it was him that I met first. He was trying to ask me out, but then he asked out almost every girl he met... that is, until he saw Rich's sister all grown up."
Brooke finished buffing, picked up a milky white base coat, and started to cover the girl's nails. "I think she was the best thing to happen to Jack. She didn't care that he couldn't afford things. She only wanted to be with him. They used to spend time in the park feeding geese day-old bread and other silly and romantic things like that. I remember the last time Jack proposed to her. I say the last time because Jack proposed to her at the end of every date, including their first!" Brooke chuckled at the memory.
Jack walked out the door with Erica's arm hooked under his. It was three in the morning and the New Year's party had broken up nearly half an hour earlier. Richard and Heather were behind them, while Brooke waited at the bottom of the steps next to Richard's car.
"Come on Jack!" Brooke nagged. "We have to get back to The Bricks!"
He looked down at Brooke. "Will you be quiet for just a minute!" he barked. Turning to look back at Erica, Jack smiled. "I do have to go Buttons, but I want to ask you something first." He stopped and faced his best friend's sister, blocking the doorway.
Erica wore a smile that shone from her eyes. "What is it?"
"Will you marry me?" he grinned.
Richard shoved Jack's shoulder. "Come on Jack, quit fooling around! That's my sister!"
Clownishly, Jack stumbled sideways as Erica laughed. After her brother and Heather came out and walked between the two, Jack raced up to Erica as soon as they moved down the steps that led from the street to the door.
"I know it's sudden and all, but you've completely captivated my heart!" While he spoke, Jack exaggerated his every move to comic effect. Bending down on one knee, he took Erica's hand. "Please, my love! Marry me, and I'll take you away from all this!" Sweeping his hand in a great circle, he indicated the lavish grounds that surrounded them.
Erica snickered. "Why Jack! This is all so... so sudden!" she mimicked his comedic overacting. "However, I fear my father will not grant you my hand! I'm needed too much on the farm, what with my eighteen brothers and sisters to take care of! Not to mention my mother!"
He stood and looked at the ground, as if thinking. "That's right! Your mother... the dark fairy Maleficent! We'll elope, then!"
Coming up the steps, Richard grabbed his arm. "Come on, Casanova. You can propose to my sister tomorrow, after I tell her about you."
He jerked his arm free and stood in comic defiance. "Tell her what about me? I'm as good as anybody! Don't I need love, too?"
Erica moved up to Jack and took his arm again. "Oh, I think I already know what kind of man Jack is, Richie! The kind I like!"
Turning away, Richard walked back down the steps with Heather. "Great, just what the family needs... another mouth to feed!" As he reached the bottom, he turned to see his sister looking up at Jack with a giddy expression on her face as they followed. "Oh, Jack! Now look at what you've done! You've gone and made my sister all swoony!"
"Yeah?" Jack smiled. He looked down at Erica who was looking up at him. "What, over me?"
Nodding, Erica turned to face him. "Mmm hmm!" Putting her arms over his shoulders, she looked slightly up at him with stars in her eyes. "You know, I knew I was coming to meet you when Brooke 'introduced' us, right?" She smiled and lowered her voice, telling him of the same thing she'd told him when they were alone upstairs. "I have a confession to make. I've had a crush on you since I was ten!"
"Who? Me?" Jack answered back stupidly.
Richard tapped Jack on the shoulder while Brooke started Richard's car, then leaned over the roof. "Come on, lover boy. Tick-tock!" she shouted.
Pushing her brother away, Erica glared at him before turning back to Jack. "Back off a sec, Richie! I want to kiss my Jack goodnight!"
"Oh, Erica!" Richard groaned. "I don't want to see that!"
Never looking away from Jack, she shot back, "Then turn around!"
Heather pulled at his arm, turning him away from his sister and best friend. "Why don't you give me a proper goodnight as well and leave them be!"
Even as Heather pulled him down into a loving kiss, he tried to strain his neck sideways to watch over his little sister until Heather made him forget about his brotherly protectiveness.
Tilting her head sideways, Erica leaned up until her lips met Jack's. It was a simple kiss, neither passionate nor long, but one that made both of their hearts race.
Backing away from the kiss, Erica smiled. "Still better than I ever imagined it would be!"
Jack looked around, then pointed at his chest with his thumb. "Who, me?"
She nodded. "Keep asking me and I might surprise you!"
Stunned into idiocy, Jack stammered. "What? Who? Ask what?"
Erica laughed as she slowly pulled herself away from him. "You'll see! Goodnight, my handsome young knight!"
Unable to tear his eyes away from her as she turned to join Heather, walking towards Erica's car, Jack shook his head to clear it. "Wow!" he mumbled, watching Erica sway her hips as she walked away. Leaning slightly towards Richard, he spoke in a daze. "Rich? I know she's your sister, but I have to say it. She's hot!"
Grabbing Jack in a headlock, Richard dragged him toward the car where Brooke waited impatiently. "Don't get any ideas, Snuffy! I may face a General Court Martial, but I'll kill you where you stand if you mess with my little sister!"
Pulling free, Jack stumbled back and into a phony fighting stance. "Put 'em up! Put 'em up! I'll fight with one paw tied behind my back for her hand, even if it kills me, which I'm sure you'd be happy to do... again!" He bumped Richard's shoulder as he stopped his clowning and opened the rear passenger door and climbed in.
Brooke shook her head as she climbed into the driver's seat. "You know, I'm starting to regret setting you two up!"
She finished a child-appropriate version of her story and the base coat at the same time, putting Erica's right hand into a battery-powered nail dryer. While it dried, she began on the left hand. "Jack was always clowning, trying to make everybody laugh. He was great that way. If you were feeling down or upset, he'd go out of his way to help you forget for a moment."
Erica smiled, wishing she had the chance to know him. Slowly sadness crept over her face. "Aunt Brooke? Can I ask you something?"
Glancing up, Brooke didn't like the look on the girl's face, but just looked down at her nails again. "I'll do my best. What is it?"
Swallowing hard, Erica worked up the courage to ask her fateful question. "How... how did he die?"
Reliving the horrible memory of the day she found out, Brooke's voice turned clinical. "Jack and Richard were both killed when the HumVee they were in hit an IED... an explosive." Holding back the tears she added, "They were both killed instantly." Taking Erica's right hand out of the nail dryer, she put the left one in and started to apply the color coat, but her hands were shaking. Taking a breath, she cleared her mind and tried again, the shaking gone.
Several minutes passed without a word from either one. Finally Erica said quietly, "Thank you."
Looking up as Brooke finished the clear outer coat, she furrowed her brow. "For what, sweetie?"
"For telling me." Erica sighed. "No one would ever talk about it."
She smiled at the young girl. "Anytime, sweetie. Maybe someday, when you're ready, I'll tell you more about them." Brooke could barely maintain her composure. More than anything, she wanted to tell Erica about Jack; how he lived, what kind of man he was, and what her friendship with him had meant. She just couldn't figure out how to do it while Erica was lost in a fantasy world where she was her own mother.
"Done! Now we move to the sink and rinse out your hair." Brooke ordered. "Remember, don't let anything touch your nails. They're still a little wet."
Nodding, Erica followed the older woman to the sink. Stepping up onto a stool, she turned her head upside down over the sink and felt the warm water pour through her hair as Brooke's gloved fingers massaged out the coloring agent. Within a few minutes, Erica felt a towel wrap around her head and Brooke led her back to the chair.
After a while of clipping small amounts of hair to style it into a more feminine shape, Brooke picked up a curling iron and hairdryer and plugged them into a black box near her back door. "We have a generator, so we have some power. Not enough to run everything, but at least we aren't stuck in the dark ages!"
Erica sat and endured having her hair pulled, curled, brushed, and blown for fifteen minutes. Finally, Brooke gave Erica a hand mirror. "Well? What do you think?"
Once more the child was stunned by her mother's image reflected back at her, this time without the wig making her scalp itch. After a few minutes of getting some makeup advice and Brooke applying a minimal amount, the actual image that reflected back at her was nearly indistinguishable from that of her mother at that age. Looking up at Brooke, she smiled broadly. "Thank you, Aunt Brooke! It looks perfect!"
Brooke wiped a tear away, seeing for herself the remarkable resemblance between the twelve-year-old and photos of the young woman she knew as Erica Hargrave before becoming Erica Dunning. "You're very welcome, Erica! Now, let's go show everyone!"
Hopping down off the chair, Erica followed Brooke back out into the living room. Faith was the first to see and drew in a sharp breath.
"Erica! You look beautiful!" she exclaimed.
Her aunt Heather rose and examined the transformation. "Very nice work, Brooke! She looks lovely!"
Jenny was proud of her wife. "She is pretty amazing!" she remarked, coming up in front of her wife and wrapping her arms around her. Silently she mouthed, "Are you OK?" Brooke simply nodded and wiped another tear away.
After a call to let Fredrick know they were ready to be picked up, the five sat and talked, mostly the adults talking about old times. A short wait later, they heard the car pull up outside and the three thanked Brooke and Jenny for their hospitality.
Once the door was closed, Jenny took her wife once more in her arms. "I'm proud of you, love. I won't pretend to know what you're going through, but I do know that wasn't easy."
Brooke nodded. "It's fine. I'm just not sure it was the right thing to do. I mean... how can that be right? How..."
Jenny placed a finger on Brooke's lips, silencing her. "It was. I can't imagine the pain that girl's going through right now. If pretending to be her mom for a while helps her get through it, then it's for the best. I'm more worried about you, honey. Seeing her must have dredged up some serious feelings and terrible memories. I know how close you were to Jack... and Erica. I only got to meet them both at Heather's wedding, and again when they lost their second baby and found out she couldn't have any more, and then only Erica once more... at Arlington... but I know they meant so much to you."
She kissed Jenny delicately. "I'm OK... really. I just hope Jack isn't mad at me for helping to feminize his son. I... I pray he understands."
Jenny laid her head on Brooke's shoulder. "Probably a lot better than we do, love."
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Enjoying the ride in her aunt Heather's limousine, Erica was finally much more comfortable in her fantasy. Now fully immersed in being Erica Hargrave, she relished the view out the window, watching the countryside blanketed in snow glide by them. After a while she realized they'd been driving for far longer than the trip back to her aunt's home.
"Where are we going, Aunt Heather?" she asked innocently.
"Into town." she replied flatly. "I want to get you some things you'll need."
"Oh." the young girl responded. "Can I get my own toothbrush?"
Heather laughed. "Of course, sweetie! We'll also get you some clothes of your own so you don't have to keep borrowing Faith's."
"Mamma?" Faith asked. "What are you going to buy for her?"
Her mother answered nonchalantly. "Just some basics... underwear, day clothes, boots, a coat, toiletries... that sort of thing." Noticing the worried expression on her daughter's face, she shook her head and laughed lightly. "Oh, sweetie! Stop assuming the worst! They'll be nice... and pretty!"
A look of relief washed over Faith's countenance. Meanwhile, Erica felt like the butt of some joke she didn't get, her old life as Eric all but forgotten as her mind tried to blot out the numerous causes of pain that tormented her. Turning back to look out the window she smiled at the beauty surrounding her.
Driving for nearly an hour, the bare countryside started making way to more urban surroundings. Entering the city of Berlin, Erica noticed women wearing much more modern clothes and started to fret over her appearance. Looking over at her aunt Heather and Faith settled her nerves somewhat, seeing as they were as finely dressed as she was herself. "Aunt Heather? May I ask where we're going?"
Heather answered vaguely. "To a shop that does special order clothing, sweetie." Turning down another road finally led them to a small white building that looked more like someone's private residence than a business.
Faith finally brightened up. "Oh! We're going to Miss Fuller's shop!" she chirped. Looking over at Erica she smiled. "You'll like Miss Fuller! She's makes any clothes you can imagine!"
The car pulling to a stop, Heather corrected her daughter only slightly. "Well, she doesn't make everything, dear. She special orders many things. However, she does make special occasion dresses and other specialty items. She is, after all, a seamstress by trade."
Fredrick got out and opened their door, the three ladies exiting quickly. A cold breeze sent shivers up Erica's spine as they walked up to the front door, noticing a few people on the street giving them looks as they went in. Blushing, Erica entered last and was glad to be out of the cold, and the gaze of strangers. Looking around, it looked like the living room of someone's home, but with a front counter installed. Hand sketches of many different dresses, suits, and outfits decorated the walls, in addition to several large plants and a few chairs, giving the feel of a doctor's office or similar local.
She caught the sound of the small bell chime as the door closed, drawing the attention of the proprietress. "Just a minute!" she called out from somewhere upstairs. Footfalls coming down the steps, Erica finally saw the woman as she descended.
"Mrs. Hargrave! And Faith! So good to see you again!" The woman was marginally heavyset and round, but cheery and pleasant. She wore a simple dress of blue cotton with an apron draped around her neck that wasn't tied in back. Pins were stuck through the front of the apron in various places, and a pair of shears hung out from the front pocket. Her round face smiled at Heather, framed with brown curly hair pinned back behind her head.
Reaching the bottom of the steps, Janet Fuller noticed the third member of their party. "Well! Who is this, then?"
Heather pulled Erica in front of her. "This is my niece Erica, Miss Fuller. Her parents are both gone now, so she'll be staying with us for some time and I'll need to get her a proper wardrobe."
The seamstress examined Erica. "I recognize that dress she's got on. I made that for Faith just this spring!"
"Yes, she only arrived on Tuesday with almost nothing to her name. Her old clothes were... ruined, so Faith was kind enough to share. I want her to feel comfortable and see to it she wants for nothing from now on."
Janet looked at Erica closely. "My, she is pretty. That red hair really brings out the green in her eyes." Leaning down, she took a tape measure out of her apron. "Well let's see..." She measured Erica's height and other simple measurements before straightening up. "Well, she's very close to Faith's measurements. Do you want a style similar to what Faith prefers?"
"Not necessarily, Janet." Heather shook her head. "Erica is free to pick her own style, like Faith's or not. I just want her to have her own clothes and not feel like she's getting Faith's hand-me-downs. Do you see?"
Nodding, Janet Fuller looked up at the taller woman. "I understand. Well, lets get started then. Follow me, Erica." She turned and walked around behind the counter and led the girl into what appeared to be something like a den redecorated into a fitting room. When Heather and Faith started to enter, Janet stopped them. "You can wait here. I'm sure she'd like some privacy while she changes into a fitting gown." Drawing a curtain that gave them a sense of seclusion, she turned and faced the nervous girl. "Now then. Go behind that changing screen there, take off your dress, and put this on." she ordered kindly, handing the timid girl a fitting dress.
Nervously, Erica walked behind the changing screen and unzipped her dress while listening to Janet moving about the room. Finally down to just Faith's tights, undies, and training bra, she dropped the fitting gown over her head and it settled into place around her. Peaking out she murmured, "Done, Miss Fuller."
"Very well, child," she replied. "Come on out and step up onto the platform." Erica complied, nervously holding her arms across her chest. Stepping up, she watched as Miss Fuller knelt down in front of her and started pinning the simple gown.
While she pinned, the thinness of the fabric covering Erica allowed her to see things that confirmed her suspicions. In a soft tone, she started probing gently. "So, your name's Erica? Is that what you like to be called?" Seeing her nod, she continued. "Well Erica, I can tell you're a special girl." Dropping her voice to a whisper she added, "Don't worry! You're very pretty as a girl! No one will ever be able to tell!"
Erica's eyes grew wide as she realized that Miss Fuller somehow knew the secret of her former life.
Seeing fear in the girl's eyes, she smiled. "It's alright! I understand! You see, my younger sister is the same as you! We all used to think she was a boy, too. Do you like Faith's pretty dresses?"
Nodding some, she wasn't so much afraid as near to a mental breakdown at the challenge to her identity. Trying to shake off the distress, Erica followed it up with a shrug as she finally spoke. "I... I guess. I mean, she has a lot of really pretty dresses, but nothing like jeans or stuff that are easier to play in, ya know?"
A pin sticking between her teeth, Janet nodded back. "Yes, don't I know it! Now hold still a moment." She turned Erica in place and ran a tape measure around her waist, then up to circle her chest, then around her hips. "Well, you're a little larger around the middle than Faith, and I can see you haven't started getting your womanhood yet, but don't let that fret you, dear. Are you taking any pills yet?"
The girl's face scrunched up in confusion. "Pills?" she asked innocently.
"Never mind, dear." She waved a hand dismissively. "Your aunt would know about them. Maybe your doctor wants you to wait until you're older." Finishing with a measure around Erica's forehead, she tapped the girl on the butt. "OK, go and take that gown off and get back into your dress, sweetie. Bring the fitting gown back out with you when you're done. Careful not to pull any of the pins out or stick yourself!"
Tentatively going back behind the screen, she cautiously removed the gown and laid it aside. She could hear whispering near the door as she donned Faith's dress once more. Just as she was getting to the point of needing help, she overheard her aunt Heather.
"No, Janet. She won't be doing any of that. Her being Erica isn't permanent. Just a coping mechanism."
She stiffened her back as she realized they must have been talking about her. Not permanent? I am Erica Hargrave! I am! And I always will be! Anger rising, she came back around the changing screen. "I'm almost done, Miss Fuller. Would you help me with my dress?"
Moving quickly back to the girl, she smiled. "Sure, dear! Let me get that for you." Closing up the zipper, she quickly retied the sashes into a pretty bow. "There! All fixed again! So let's go out and look at some styles and we'll get you all situated. OK, sweetie?"
Raising her chin defiantly, she followed Janet back out to her office, sitting on a couch. Heather and Faith joined her a moment later; Erica moving slightly away from her aunt as she sat next to her.
While the seamstress was in the back getting her stylebooks, Heather could feel Erica's anger coming off the girl in waves. Realizing she must have overheard their hushed conversation, she closed her eyes and chastised herself for being so careless. Gathering her composure, she was more determined than ever to make Erica feel welcome in her home, however she needed to be at the moment.
Clearing her throat, she tapped Erica on the shoulder and tried to sound just as loving as though Erica was her own daughter. "Erica, sweetie? I've been thinking about school. Do you want to go to regular school, or would you prefer to be home-schooled? Whichever you chose would be fine with me."
Erica was still fuming, but slowly became conflicted. She talks about me like I'm going to change my mind about who I am, but she obviously loves me and wants me to be happy... She looked at herself in the mirror that made up the entire wall opposite her and once more was satisfied to see the ghost of her young mother staring back at her. Her new hairstyle perfected the image and made her anger toward her aunt melt away. Aunt Heather didn't have to treat me to a makeover. She must have done it because she loves me and wants me to be Erica... why else? Maybe I misunderstood. Clearing her throat, she smiled weakly up at her aunt. "Whichever you think is best, Aunt Heather. I trust you."
Hearing Erica put her fate in her hands, and seeing the anger wash away, Heather smiled back at her sweetly. "Alright. If you don't mind, I'd like you to stay as close to me as possible for a while. Would you mind being home-schooled? It means harder work than public school, and you won't meet many children to make friends with, but you'll learn a lot of things they won't teach in school; things you might enjoy more! I'll get you any material that interests you that isn't already in our library. Would you like that?"
Erica's weak smile was replaced with a happy one as she nodded. "I know Faith goes to regular school, but I think I would like to stay home with you for now." Pausing, her smile dropped as she built up the courage to ask her a question. "Aunt Heather? May I have a special dress just for school time? The kind girls wear in private schools? I know it's kind of silly, but I like the idea. I think it would help me stay focused on schoolwork more, even though I'll be at home."
Stunned, Heather's breath caught a moment before she smiled and took a tissue out of her purse to dry away the forming tears.
"Did I say something wrong?" Erica's eyes widened. "I don't have to get a school dress! Honest! I'm happy with anything you let me have!"
Her aunt shook her head in denial. "It's not that, sweetie. It's just that... that's the first time you've called this place 'home'! It just makes me happy to know that you can feel like this place is your home!"
Listening quietly to her cousin and mother, Faith saw a lull in their conversation and asked curiously, "Mamma? Do I have to keep going to regular school too? May I be home-schooled like Erica?"
Her mother finished dabbing at her eyes. "Well, I suppose it would be alright. Since I'll be setting up schooling for one of you, two wouldn't be any harder. I am worried that you won't get enough social interaction not going to school, but for the time being, and since you're both in the same grade, you can go to school with Erica at home until next year. We'll set up a part of the library for you two to study in. How does that sound?"
Faith smiled and hopped up and down in her seat. "Oh, thank you, Mamma! May I have a school dress, too?"
The two looking at her expectantly, Heather gave in. "I suppose it would be alright. We'll talk to Miss Fuller when she comes back in, alright?"
As if on cue, Janet came out from the back. "Well, I got a few stylebooks and we can go through them and see what you like, Erica!"
"I'll also want to see about some school uniforms. I'll want to order several for both of the girls."
Janet smiled a toothy grin, seeing that this was going to be a lucrative day with her best customer. "Alright then! Does the school have specific requirements and colors? They usually do."
She shook her head and explained what their plans were to Janet while Erica and Faith looked through the stylebooks. Within thirty minutes Erica was once more in the fitting room to try on a few off-the-rack dresses that Miss Fuller had on hand in her size. She was used to seeing girls wearing jeans and shorts, but now that she had the opportunity, she found them unappealing and in fact made her uneasy, too close to boy's wear.
Three hours later, after a trip to the local department store for nightgowns, undergarments, shoes, boots, jackets, a few skirts, matching blouses, and some clip-on earrings that Erica seemed to like, Faith tapped her mother on the elbow as they were making their way back out to the car.
"Mamma? Halloween is this Sunday and Erica's going to need something to wear. We're still going to the Halloween party, aren't we?"
"Why yes, dear." Heather nodded. "Honestly with all that's been going on it had slipped my mind." Turning to Erica she asked, "Is there something in particular you'd like to go as, sweetie?"
Erica fidgeted as they walked, unsure of her answer. "Well... what are you two going as?" she asked tentatively.
"I'm going as a nurse this year!" Faith beamed. "Mamma's going as Glinda, the Good Witch. I was gonna be Dorothy, but I changed my mind."
Looking over at her aunt, Erica blushed. "If it would be OK, could I be your Dorothy, Aunt Heather?"
She smiled as Fredrick opened the car door. "I would love for you to be my Dorothy, sweetheart! Fredrick? We'll need to go back to Miss Fuller's before we head home."
The three talked in the back of Heather's limousine while Fredrick drove them back to where they'd started. Janet was surprised to see them again, but thrilled when she learned that the Dorothy costume she'd made for Faith wasn't going to go to waste.
"I'll have to make a few adjustments to fit Erica's measurements, but the rest you can take with you now. I'll have the dress ready by Saturday."
Heather nodded. "That will be fine, Janet! I'll have Fredrick come get it when it's ready."
Her eyes bulged as she remembered something. "Oh! I wanted to tell you! I was able to order all the school dresses you wanted for Erica and Faith from the outlet I buy from! They'll be delivered Monday morning! My son will be running a few errands for me up that way, so I can just have them brought to you as soon as they get here and I've cleaned them! Now, let me go get the accessories for that costume!"
It took a few minutes to re-fit Erica for Ruby Slippers, the ones purchased for Faith being slightly too small. Janet had substitutes in many sizes, but they were all tap shoes. "It's really the only call for red glittery girl's shoes!" she commented.
"I guess they'll have to do." Heather shrugged. "We don't have time to order anything and get it by Sunday. Go ahead and put them on my bill, Janet."
She grinned at yet another sale. "Alright then. I'll see you girls later! And Erica? You look lovely, dear!"
Wearing one of the off-the-rack outfits that they'd bought from her earlier, Erica looked down at the pretty white long-sleeved blouse with lace around the high neckline and the long black pleated skirt and black ankle boots. "Thank you, Miss Fuller." Erica blushed.
Between herself, her aunt, and Miss Fuller, they had settled on a femininely conservative look for most of Erica's wardrobe. Mid-calf A-line dresses and skirts with a simple style and older cut would make Erica look a little older than her true age of twelve. It was what she told her aunt was the reason she liked them. That it was her mother's preferred style, the real reason Erica had pushed for it over Faith's objections, she'd kept to herself.
After they'd left and were headed home, Erica looked over at her aunt. "Would you mind if I ask you a personal question, Aunt Heather?"
Looking at her niece, she furrowed her brow. "You may ask, but I may not answer. What is it, sweetie?"
Erica looked down at her skirt. "I really love my new clothes and everything else Aunt Heather, but... isn't all this a little bit expensive?"
"My parents were very wealthy, Erica." Heather blushed. "While I never intended to need it, when they passed on, I inherited quite a lot of money from them." She looked out the window as she continued. "After I graduated college, I worked as a therapist. I helped people with their problems, overcoming their fears, and with getting over severe trauma. I enjoyed my work and continued it for years after Faith was born. Your uncle Richard loved being a 'stay-at-home father' and retired from his job."
Her tone turning melancholy, Heather continued after a short pause. "When he left for active duty again, I knew I had to make Faith my highest priority while he was away and took a sabbatical from work. That's a kind of long vacation." she explained on seeing Erica's confusion. "When he... when he didn't come home, I just never went back. I never needed or used any of the money I'd inherited, so it had grown to more than I would ever need, or even likely spend, in this lifetime."
Looking out the window, mirroring her aunt's posture, Erica's voice turned sorrowful. "I'm sorry if that made you feel sad, Aunt Heather."
She looked at her niece and smiled; her eyes damp with unshed tears. "It's fine, dear. I just miss your uncle Richard terribly at times. The point is, you need never worry or fret over what I decide to buy for you, sweetie. You let me worry about it!"
"Mamma is very generous." Faith added. "She gives a whole lot to people that need it. Don't you, Mamma?"
Her mother dried her eyes with a handkerchief. "It's not something to brag about, dear. If you give charitably, it should be private or anonymous. If people know how charitable you are, then the accolades become your reward. The real reward should be doing what you know to be right... helping people. My reward should be in the next life, not this one."
She flumped back in her seat. "I wasn't bragging, Mamma. It just makes me proud of you."
Heather explained to the two girls. "Yes dear, but I don't want you two to share that fact with others. I only tell you so you'll know how you should use your wealth when you grow up and it becomes your responsibility."
Faith conceded. "Yes, Mamma."
The remainder of their trip back was spent in near silence with only the hum of the engine and the road vibrations filling the void. Pulling up to the house just after five, the sun was getting low in the sky and the temperature was dropping quickly.
"Alright you two." Heather ordered as they got out. "I want you to help bring Erica's things in, go upstairs, get clean for dinner, and be down by six. Understood?"
The two practically ran to the trunk of the car as soon as the door was opened, eager to take everything upstairs even if they had to carry them all themselves. Making their way up the stairway to their room, Fredrick behind them carrying the majority of their things, Faith turned to Erica.
"I still think the dresses you picked were too grown up, Erica. I'll look like a little girl compared to you... and we're the same age!"
Erica shrugged as they reached the upper landing. "I just think I need my own style. If I wore dresses just like yours, everyone would think I don't have my own clothes. Besides, I like the dresses I picked! Yours are prettier, but I think mine are more... well... more me!"
Opening the door to their room, Faith waited while Fredrick placed the packages and bags on the bed and left, closing the door behind him. The two then spent the next twenty minutes unpacking everything and another half an hour re-organizing Faith's wardrobes to fit it all. When at last they finished, the sun having already set, they ran to wash up and barely made it down in time for dinner.
Cook brought out their dinner of lasagna and steamed vegetables while the three chatted about the upcoming holiday.
Faith fidgeted with her feet under the table. "Mamma? I think I want to change my nurse outfit a little. Can I change it to be a therapist costume?"
"Therapists don't wear anything special, dear. Just normal clothes."
Her daughter looked disappointed. "Oh."
Erica looked at her cousin. "I think nurses are just as important as doctors, Faith. Without nurses, doctors couldn't do their job."
The reinforcement cheered Faith up quite a bit. "I think so, too!"
"So... there's a Halloween Party?" Erica moved on as she turned once more to her aunt. "Where is it, Aunt Heather? Here?"
"It's at a neighbor's house." Heather answered as she placed her napkin on her lap. "The Dempsey Ranch. They have seventeen acres near Lake Francis. They have a lovely ranch house and barn near the lake and enough grazing area to keep a dozen ponies. Every year they throw a Halloween party for invited guests. Your uncle Richard was very good friends with Mr. Dempsey, and his wife Emma and I grew quite close in that time."
After Cook made her way back into the kitchen, the three bowed their heads in prayer. This time however, Erica found herself really praying; her anger at God feeling distant, as though it were part of a dream. When she said, "Amen." she smiled genuinely and waited for her aunt to begin before starting herself.
Making her way through dinner, she tried to remember why she'd been angry with God in the first place. I have a beautiful home, pretty clothes, and a family that loves me. Why was I mad at God? She wracked her brain, trying to remember, but it just wouldn't come to her. Finally shrugging her shoulders, she finished her dinner just as Faith was about to clear her plate.
Heather was even more worried than before. While she watched Erica eat, she noticed that her niece was different. She seems too happy... as though she's retreated so far into her fantasy that she doesn't even remember who she is or what her problems have been. After they finished, Heather waited while her daughter and Erica were unseated, then made her usual way to the loveseat. When the girls approached her, she motioned to the couch for them to sit. The firelight mingled with the gaslights to cast a somber mood over the room.
"What is it, Mamma?" Faith asked.
"Tomorrow is Friday." she began. "I'll be out of the house for some time, taking care of some things that need my attention." Looking at Erica, she watched her reactions. "I need to set up for you to begin home-schooling after the holiday, and I'll be gone until dinner time. In the interim..."
The lights came to life with a flicker, having never been switched off.
"Well, then!" Heather let out a relieved sigh. "Back from turn-of-the-century living!"
Faith jumped off the couch. "Hurray! The power's back!" she shouted gleefully.
While Fredrick began dowsing the gaslights, Heather resumed her discussion. "Please sit back down, dear. Thank you. Now as I was saying, in the interim I want you two to help Franchesca set up your study area in the library. Make sure you have plenty of workspace for books, papers, writing utensils, everything you would have at your desk at school."
"Faith? I'll be going to your school to collect your things and let your teachers and principal know not to expect you Monday. I want you both to be on your best behavior tomorrow. Do what Franchesca and Cook tell you to do and help out with whatever they need. Now that the power is back on, they'll be very busy trying to catch up on work they've not been able to do these last two days. Any questions?" she asked.
Erica raised her hand. "Aunt Heather? May I take some time to go on the internet tomorrow? I won't take too long. I promise."
Heather nodded and smiled. "Of course, sweetheart. Just ask Franchesca."
Smiling back, Erica said, "Thank you, Aunt Heather! I promise I'll be super helpful tomorrow!"
"Alright, give me a kiss and then off to your room. I'll be up in a while to tuck you in."
After the two girls kissed her, they practically ran upstairs, laughing and talking about the Halloween party. "You'll see, Erica! It's so much fun! They do dances, bobbing for apples, the apple sack race, pin the wart on the witch, and they tell ghost stories! They also have a pumpkin patch, a hayride, and you can feed apples to the ponies and even ride one!"
Erica smiled, but then had a thought as they reached their room. Her smile melting away, she asked hesitantly, "Faith? You said they do dances. That's just for the grown-ups, right?"
Shaking her head, Faith dropped onto her side of the bed. "No, it's for everyone!"
"Um... Faith? I... I don't know how to dance!"
Faith stood up again rapidly and looked at her with a stunned expression. "You're kidding! Everyone knows how to dance!"
Dropping onto her own side of their bed, Erica shook her head. "Not me. I never learned how. I was going to learn this summer because I knew there were school dances once I got into Middle School, but there weren't any in Elementary school, so I hadn't learned yet."
Half-forgotten memories of her mother Erica promising to teach her how to dance before she got sick flitted into and out of the child's mind. Unable to reconcile them with her life as Erica, she dismissed them quickly. One thing struck her as odd though. In her memories, her mother was telling that to her daughter, not her son.
"Oh... OK. Well, I can teach you! It's not that hard!" Getting up off the bed, Faith went around and practically dragged her cousin out into the middle of their room. "So you put your left hand on my shoulder and put your right hand out like this." Faith demonstrated the position and then waited for Erica to mimic it. Switching to lead, she took Erica's right hand in her left and gently placed the other on Erica's hip. "OK, now look down at our feet. We'll do a simple box step to start."
After a few minutes, and several instances of colliding feet, Erica smiled as Faith danced her in a square while singing 'Daddy's Little Girl', the song she'd learned to dance the box step to.
"This is fun!" Erica almost squealed.
Faith stopped. "OK, so that's the easiest step. Let's try the waltz, 'cuz they do that a lot at the party. Same basic idea, but you hold each other different and you turn as you go." Moving into the closed position, Faith slipped her arm fully around Erica's waist, making the younger girl blush at being so close. After a few false starts, Erica was following her cousin in circles around the room to Faith humming 'The Blue Danube'.
Sitting on her side of the bed, Erica was winded from the experience. "Dancing is hard work! I feel like I've just run the quarter mile!"
Her cousin dropped on the bed next to her. "Yeah, but you get used to it. We better get our baths going though, before Mamma comes up and sees we aren't ready for bed!"
After separating and taking her nightgown across the hall, Erica relaxed in the tub of the guest bathroom. Just as she started to scrub, she was imagining being at the party and someone asking her to dance. Suddenly her eyes shot open and she sat forward. Quietly, she whispered to herself, "Oh my God! It'll probably be a boy that wants to dance with me!" Her excitement at looking forward to dancing at the party vanished in a heartbeat. I just can't dance with a boy! she thought. It would be... gross!
Finishing her bath quickly, she dried and dressed, sullenly making her way back to her bedroom. Now terrified at the looming party, she considered asking her aunt if she could stay home and give out candy to trick-or-treaters, but realized that her aunt had already spent the money for her costume and it would be rude to back out now. Sitting at the vanity to brush out her hair, she tried to think of what she should do. Before she could formulate an idea, Faith came out and joined her.
"Are you OK, Erica?" Faith asked, seeing the worried look on her face.
Sighing, Erica turned around in the seat. "I thought of something in my bath. If I go to the party, boys will ask me to dance!"
Faith tilted her head in her usual way. "Of course! That's the whole idea!"
She resumed brushing her hair, this time rapidly in frustration at Faith's lack of understanding. "You don't get it Faith! I don't want to dance with a boy!"
About to say something, Faith closed her mouth and puzzled over the situation. "Oh. So you only like girls then? Like Aunts Jenny and Brooke?"
Blowing a breath out discouragingly, Erica looked off at nothing. "I think so? Maybe? I don't know though, ya know?"
Her cousin began combing through her own hair. "Hmmm. I think we should ask Mamma. She'll know what to do about it."
Standing and heading to the bathroom to brush her teeth, Erica sighed once more. "I guess you're right, but it's kind of embarrassing."
A short time later, just as the two started climbing into bed, the expected knock came from their door. Heather opened it slowly and drifted into the room, smiling at her girls. "All ready for bed?" she asked.
Faith looked to her mother. "Mamma? Erica has a problem, but she's embarrassed to talk about it."
"Faith!?" Erica growled through gritted teeth as she shot her cousin a glare.
Holding up her hand to forestall an argument, her aunt interrupted. "Now Erica, I'm glad Faith told me... and you should be, too. I can't help you with things if I don't know anything's wrong, now can I?" She then asked delicately, "Would you prefer to talk to me about it in private?"
Erica shrugged. "No, I guess it's fine. Faith already knows. It's just... well... Ugh!" Overcome with embarrassment, she dropped back onto her pillow and covered her face with her blanket and sheet.
Having none of that, Heather walked around the bed and pulled the blanket down, exposing her young niece's face once more. "Now Erica, you have nothing to be embarrassed about! You can talk to me about anything, sweetie! You know I love you and only want to help you, however I can. So tell me... what's bothering you?"
Pinching her eyes closed tightly, she took a deep breath and gathered her courage, venting out her problem in one rapid sentence. "Faith told me that there would be dancing at the party and I told her that I didn't know how to dance so she taught me how and it was a whole lot of fun so I was starting to really look forward to it but then when I was thinking about it I realized that it would be boys asking me to dance but I don't like boys that way and so now I don't even want to go but I know you already bought my costume and everything so I know I have to go and now I just don't know what to do!"
Her aunt mulled over the issue, taking a moment to parse out the whole of Erica's longwinded explanation. "I see. Well then, that is a problem, isn't it?" Looking at her niece, she then asked point blank, "So... you don't like boys. Do you like girls?"
Erica wanted to crawl under the floor to hide. Instead, she grabbed her pillow, turned on her stomach, pulled the pillow down tightly over the back of her head, and nodded vigorously enough that Heather could see her nodding, even through the pillow.
Smiling knowingly, Heather looked at her buried niece. "Oh! I see! Well that's nothing to be embarrassed about, sweetie! Come here." she ordered.
Slowly, Erica crawled out from under her pillow and turned to face her aunt. As Heather pulled her into a loving hug, she rocked her niece gently in her arms and stroked her hair. Seeing an opportunity to help the child through some of her trauma, she formulated an idea.
"You remember Aunt Brooke? Well, she was your father Jack and my husband Richard's best friend! Now, you know she doesn't like boys, right?" Feeling Erica nod, she continued. "Well, did you know she went to dances with them and would dance with them both? She especially liked dancing with your daddy, Jack. She danced with him after your daddy and mommy's wedding."
Unbelieving, Erica leaned back and regarded her aunt. "She did?"
"Yes!" her aunt smiled. "Just because you dance with someone, doesn't mean you have to like them a lot. Lots of people go dancing and end up dancing with total strangers, and they still have a good time!" Heather could almost see the girl's thoughts rolling around her head, the child not even aware that she had managed to sneak in the fact that Jack was her father, Erica was her mother, and the consequence of both; that she wasn't Erica Hargrave.
Something about what her aunt was telling her refused to compute. She understood the words, but the idea refused to gel. Shaking her head to clear out the confusion, she changed back to the original subject. "So... even if a boy asks me to dance, it's still OK, even if I don't like boys?"
Heather nodded. "Yes, sweetie. Dancing isn't an invitation to date, it's a harmless social activity. You're still very young. I'll keep an eye on you. Does that help?" She hoped that the thought of dancing with a boy and bringing up dating would start to force the child's natural masculinity to finally reject the notion of being a girl, thus starting to break down the fantasy of being her own mother.
Her niece started to shake her head, like she'd just eaten something she found revolting. "Alright, Aunt Heather. I guess, if you say so."
"See?" Faith beamed. "I told you Mamma would help!"
Her mother released Erica and stood. "Alright, prayers and bed, ladies." Seeing both of them close their eyes and pray silently, she watched her niece most closely. Seeing that she still had a worried look on her face, she felt she could almost guess what the young girl was praying for. God, please don't let any boys ask to dance with me! She smiled knowingly as she waited from them to finish.
Seeing them both open their eyes and say "Amen.", Heather waited while they lay down and covered up. Kissing her niece on the forehead, then going around the bed to kiss her daughter the same way, she finally moved to the doorway and clicked off the lights.
"Goodnight, girls. Sweet dreams." she said softly.
"Goodnight, Mamma." Faith said through a yawn.
"Goodnight, Aunt Heather." grumbled Erica.
As the door closed, Erica closed her eyes and started to imagine what she would do at the party if a boy did ask her to dance. Her first thoughts were to punch his lights out, but she made herself imagine dancing with him. All it did was leave a sick feeling in her stomach as though she'd just devoured a rancid lemon. No matter how she tried to see it, she just couldn't see herself enjoying a dance with a boy the way she had with Faith.
After a moment, her thoughts drifted and the boy was replaced with April. A smile crept across her lips as she imagined April dancing the whole night with her... sweeping her across the floor over and over with Erica following her lead.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Sitting at the vanity in her room, Erica watched the mirror while her aunt finished braiding her hair into two pigtails that came down the side of her head. The costume had been dropped off the day before and fit perfectly. With the shoes, dress, red braided pigtails, and a picnic basket with a small stuffed Cairn Terrier sticking up out of one side, she was the perfect image of Dorothy Gale. Watching her aunt tying off the blue ribbons at the end of her pigtails, she smiled at the reflection, still happy to see her young mother reflected back at her, even through her costume.
"There!" Heather exclaimed. "All perfect! Now don't pull on the ribbons or they'll come undone and your braids will come out, alright dear? I need to go change into my costume, so I'll be downstairs in a while."
"Yes, Aunt Heather!" Erica chirped. Picking up her basket, she practically skipped out into the hallway. As soon as she reached the marble hallway, she heard her footsteps louder than ever as each step was accompanied with a sharp double 'Click!' from her sparkly red shoes. The sound made her almost giddy, it made her feel so girly and feminine.
Walking toward the stairs, she met Franchesca coming the other way.
"Don't scrape your feet on the floor in those things, girl!" she barked. "If you scrape up the floor, it'll take me a week to buff it out!"
Lightening her step, she nodded her head at the maid. "Yes, Miss Franchesca." Erica watched as the grumbling woman sped her way past her to her aunt's bedroom, no doubt to assist with dressing her. Making her way down the stairs, she had to step carefully as she noticed that the shoes lacked any sort of tread and were a little slippery on the marble flooring.
Faith was adjusting her nurse's cap for the tenth time in the entryway mirror when she saw her cousin stepping carefully down the stairs. "Oh, Erica!" she cried. "You look beautiful! I'm so glad you're Mamma's Dorothy! You look way better in it than I did!"
Blushing as she reached the bottom step, Erica looked down. "Thanks Faith! I really do love the dress! And the shoes! They're just perfect!"
Looking at the basket, Faith giggled. "Miss Fuller did a great job with your Toto! It really looks like the dog from the movie!"
"Yeah, I think it really sells the whole costume!" Twirling around, Erica watched the skirt of her dress flare out before falling back to her legs. Looking at her cousin she remarked, "Your costume looks really neat! But should you have a stethoscope? I thought only doctors used those?"
"No, nurses use them, too." Faith answered with a shake of her head. "They use them before the doctor to take a patient's heart beat and blood pressure."
"I guess so." Erica shrugged. "Is that a real one or just a toy?"
"It's a real one! Mamma took it out of the first aid kit!" Faith put the ends in her ears and stepped up to her cousin. "OK, let me hear your heartbeat, Dorothy!" Placing the stethoscope on her cousin's upper left chest, she giggled. "I can hear it! Your heart beat's fast, Erica... I mean... Dorothy!"
Looking down shyly, she skipped her foot across the marble floor and marveled at the sound it made. "I guess I'm a little nervous. I'll be meeting lots of new people tonight."
The sun getting low in the sky, the two girls bantered back and forth for half an hour before they heard someone coming. Erica's eyes widened and her jaw dropped as she saw her aunt descending like Glinda in her bubble, as smooth as the silk in the woman's dress, which was an exact copy of the one worn by the Good Witch of the North in the classic movie.
"Wow!" Erica breathed out slowly. "Aunt Heather, you look beautiful!"
Heather blushed at the compliment as she reached the bottom of the stairs. "Thank you, Dorothy Gale!" she joked, waving her wand over her niece. "You are most definitely, a good witch!"
The comment made Faith giggle. "You do look very pretty, Mamma!"
"Thank you, dear." she hummed.
A moment later, Fredrick appeared from the kitchen, dressed in a fine chauffeur's jacket and cap. "Are you ready to depart, Madame? Miss Faith? Miss Dorothy?"
The girl in pigtails giggled and curtsied lightly. "Thank you, Fredrick! Is it time to follow the yellow brick road?"
He allowed himself a slight smile. "Indeed, Miss. However I believe that we shall not be going to Oz this evening. May I?" he asked, extending his hand to the young girl.
Taking the offered hand and blushing, she let him escort her out the door and to the waiting limousine, followed by her aunt and cousin. Just as Cook was about to close the door, Franchesca yelled from the staircase.
"Don't you three dare move a muscle!" she bellowed, racing down the stairs. "I swear, you people don't know nothin' about anythin'! Just wait there!" she ordered as she readied her camera. "Alright, now you girls stand in front of Mrs. Hargrave. Fredrick! You get yourself out of the picture! This is for them, not you!" she barked.
Moving to the side, he stood patiently while Franchesca snapped pictures in rapid succession. Then, having Faith move to the side, took several of Erica and her aunt by themselves. Once she seemed satisfied, Erica spoke up.
"Miss Franchesca? Could you take a picture with me and Fredrick?"
His eyebrows shot up in his faint note of surprise. "Me, Miss Erica?"
She proudly stepped over toward him. "Yes you, Fredrick! And it's Miss Dorothy, if you please! After all, you are our carriage driver for the evening, even if it isn't pulled by the Horse of a Different Color!" she smiled as she gestured toward the car.
A lump formed in Fredrick's throat. "I'd be honored, Miss Dorothy." he intoned formally as he stood ramrod straight.
With Erica standing in front of the huge man, he placed his hands protectively on her shoulders while Franchesca took a few pictures. Once done, the girl took Fredrick by the hand and pulled him toward the maid. "Now Fredrick, would you take one of me and Franchesca?"
Franchesca balked. "What, me? Looking like this? Are you out of your cotton picking mind, missy?"
Looking up at the maid with pleading eyes, Erica melted the maid's heart with one word. "Please?"
"Oh, alright!" she gave in. "But be quick about it, Fredrick! They don't have all night and it's getting cold out!"
Taking the camera while Erica turned and stood in front of the woman, Fredrick took a few pictures of Erica standing in front of a very stern looking Franchesca with the house in the background. When they finished, Erica turned to her and said, "Thank you, Aunt Em!"
Franchesca blinked rapidly in surprise; her mouth hanging open. "Aunt Em!? Why..." Her fury was lost in the sweetness of the sentiment. Huffing as she tried to be mad, eventually she just stormed back to the house, refusing to take the camera from Fredrick. "Keep it! You might think about taking some pictures with it tonight, if you can be bothered to remember!"
Theresa waited by the front door, smiling as Franchesca stomped her way up the steps. "Why, Francine! Are you tearing up?"
The middle-aged woman shook her head. "Of course not! It's just cold out! And don't call me that! My name's Franchesca, if you please!"
The two watched as Erica, Faith, and Heather climbed into the car, followed by Fredrick getting in the front seat. Cook waved at the three of them as they drove off. "I hope they have a good time." she wished.
While the trio rode to the party, Erica began to fidget with her braids.
"Careful sweetie, you don't want to pull them out." her aunt warned again.
Dropping her hands into her lap, she let out a deep breath, hoping it would take the nervousness out of her with it. "Yes, Aunt Heather. I guess I'm still a little nervous."
Her aunt smiled at her. "I'm sure you'll have a lovely time." Noticing her distracted daughter she asked, "Faith? Are you alright?"
Snapping her head around away from the window, Faith looked at her. "Huh?" she asked distractedly. "Oh, I'm fine, Mamma. Just thinking."
"About what, dear?"
Faith adjusted her nurse's cap once again. "Just wondering if anyone will think it's weird that you two are dressed for The Wizard of Oz and I'm just a plain old nurse." She adjusted the dark half-cape she wore that was now bunched up behind her back.
Her mother looked at her lovingly. "You look lovely, dear. Stop worrying! Your costume is perfect for you."
"Yes, Mamma." she replied uncertainly, turning to the window once more.
Erica tried to cheer her up. "Faith? I think you look prettier than I do. I almost wish we could trade!"
"Oh no, Erica!" she exclaimed as she turned back to face her cousin. "You look much better as Dorothy than I did! You don't even need a wig!"
Tugging at her braids, Erica sighed. "I wish my hair was a little longer, though. I guess I just need to be patient."
"You can be my patient!" Faith giggled.
The two others in the car groaned at the pun as they sped toward the party.
The car pulled off the highway, lurching down the dirt road toward the Dempsey's house. Erica could see lights around the outside of the barn, glowing in a thousand brilliant orange twinkling points. The huge doors were closed, but she could see light spilling out from every window, making the building shine on the scattered spots of snow surrounding it.
The sun had only gone down a few minutes before and several children were still roaming around the corral with the ponies. A small wagon could be seen pulling to a stop next to the barn, several teenagers clambering down from the back that was loaded with hay for them to sit on, while more waited beside it for their turn... each holding hands with another. A shriek penetrated the exterior of the car as they pulled to a stop, the shrill happy cry of one of the children running through the frosty pumpkin patch.
Once Fredrick opened the car door, Heather emerged first, followed by Faith. Erica suddenly found herself terrified to leave the security of the limousine and only started to exit after her aunt told her to come along. The cold air assaulted her nose, along with the scent of horses, hay, and wood smoke coming from the chimney of the main house. She could almost taste the pumpkin pie that lingered on the air as they approached the barn. She was vaguely aware of her aunt exchanging greetings with several people as they made their way, feeling the crunch of frozen dirt underneath her shoes.
She was also aware that their approach was garnering a lot of attention from those outside. She watched blankly as several groups of people turned to each other, obviously talking about the trio as they would huddle together and talk amongst themselves with occasional glances their way. Blushing and looking away, she moved closer to her aunt and took her free hand. She heard Faith greet several other children, making comments on their costumes and thanking them for their compliments on hers.
Following her aunt into the barn, Erica's eyes had to adjust to the bright atmosphere. Lights decorated every part of the building, lighting every corner and crevice in a cheery way. A long table covered in food sat along the wall to her right while a dance floor and speakers took up the area to her left, pumping out the lively recorded tune of an Irish fiddle. Ahead were tables and chairs, most empty, where guests could sit and enjoy the hospitality, while simple log benches lined the far wall.
Heather smiled brightly as one of their hosts approached. "Michael! It's so good of you to invite us again!"
Michael Dempsey approached the three, eating up the distance in a few broad steps. "Heather! Sure'n it's glad Ah am ye' could come!" Having emigrated from Ireland only twelve years earlier, his brogue was still thick, Erica straining to understand him. "So what's this, now? Two iníon? Ah could o' sworn ye' had only one las' time Ah checked!"
Laughing, Heather explained their third guest. "Michael, I'd like you to meet my niece, Erica. She's come to live with us." Pulling the girl out in front of herself, she watched as Mr. Dempsey lowered himself down to Erica's eye level.
"Erica, eh? Sure'n yer name won't be Katherine or Sinead? What part o' Eire do ye' come from? With hair like that, she's dotey and must be Gaelic! You wouldn't be chancin' me arm, now would ye'?"
Furrowing her brow, Erica stammered, "I... um... huh?"
Michael laughed merrily and slapped his knee. "S'alright, darlin'. Me name's Michael and Ah'll be happy ta' know ye', Erica." He extended his hand to the girl and shook it gently as she took his. Straightening up with a groan, he looked around at the guests. "Well, me Mot air back in th' Gaff fixin' up more ta' eat. That gal be up ta' ninety every year fir this!"
Having gotten used to his brogue, Heather understood and looked back toward the main house where his wife was preparing more food for their guests. "Will Emma be joining us later?" she asked, having to shout a little over the music that seemed to be getting louder by the minute.
"Ah should think so." Michael grinned before he looked at Faith. "Faith, me darlin'! Now don't ye' look deadly! You gun take care o' me in me old age, cailín óg? Sure I could use nursin' from a dote like you!" Lowering his voice so only she could hear him, he added, "Jus' dun be tellin' me Mot! She's fiery jealous o' pretty girseach makin' time wi' her fella!"
"Sure, Mr. Dempsey!" Faith blushed. "Do you really like my costume?"
The man patted her on the shoulder, not able to pat her head due to her cap. "Aye, girseach! Savage ta' be sure!" Looking back up at Heather, he nodded as his smile faded. "Well, if'n you be excusin' me, I need th' Jacks!"
As he made his way out of the barn, Erica turned to her aunt. "Aunt Heather? Did you understand anything he just said?"
"Yes, sweetie." she answered. "But I've known Michael for many years. His wife Emma and I are very good friends, so I've managed to learn a little Irish Gaelic over time. He asked you what part of Ireland you come from, said you were cute, and that your red hair means you must be from Ireland. Then he asked if you were trying to fool him."
Erica gulped. "Fool him?"
"Into thinking you weren't Irish, sweetie." she explained. "As for the rest... well... let's just say he's been enjoying the party a bit much!"
Leading the two girls to an empty bench alongside the far side of the barn, they were stopped and greeted several more times by other guests who all seemed enchanted by the shy new addition to Heather's family. Erica didn't say much, other than the occasional "Thank you." accompanied by blushing at their compliments in regards to her costume.
Sitting down on the log bench, its surface sanded and polished until it shone, less than a minute went by before Heather was approached once more. Erica saw the man walking up wearing a black tuxedo, complete with a cane, top hat, and a small black domino mask. He was tall and thin with dark wavy hair that was matched with a small but neat mustache.
"Heather?" he greeted her. "Would you care to join me?" indicating the dance floor.
She smiled politely and nodded, letting him help her back to her feet. "John? First I would like you to meet my niece, Erica. Erica? This is John William. He's an acquaintance of mine."
Erica only nodded to him shyly.
John bowed to her with perfection. "Charmed, I'm sure. Shall we, Heather?"
While he escorted her to the dance floor, Faith leaned in and whispered to Erica. "He's always wanting to take Mamma out on dates, but she won't go with him. She says he's too slick."
Looking over at the two of them dancing, Erica glowered. "So why is she dancing with him then?" she asked.
"Mamma says dancing is just for fun and he is a good dancer." Faith shrugged. "Besides, it's considered rude to refuse a request to dance." Just then, a preteen boy dressed as a vampire walked up in front of the girls.
"Hi, Greg." Faith greeted him nonchalantly before turning her attention back to Erica.
"H-Hi!" he nervously stammered out. "Faith? You wouldn't care to dance, would you?"
She turned back and smiled genuinely at him. "I'd be happy to, Greg!" she replied, extending her hand for him to help her up. Making her way to the dance floor, she looked back at her cousin and smiled.
Now sitting alone and watching her cousin and aunt dance, Erica's thoughts drifted to two days earlier when her cousin first taught her how to dance. She smiled at the memory of her dream about dancing with April, but it melted when she remembered the following day.
Erica almost ran up the stairs after eating breakfast and saying goodbye to her aunt. She knew Franchesca would want a lot of help, and she was determined to be as helpful as possible. Approaching her aunt's open bedroom door, she saw the maid inside making the bed.
"Good morning, Miss Franchesca." she greeted her cheerily. "Would you like help with anything?"
Franchesca looked at the girl standing in the doorway. Her brow furrowed in suspicion. "Just what are you up to, young lady?" she interrogated. "The only time anyone offers to help me around here is when they want something. So what is it?"
Clasping her hands in front of her skirt, Erica looked down at her feet. "Well, I was hoping, if you wouldn't mind later, after I help you, if you would let me use your computer to go online and check email and things?"
The maid nodded. "Ah ha! So that's it! I knew there had to be something!" She was finishing straightening the bed covers when she looked over at the hopeful girl waiting expectantly. "Well, don't just stand there, girl! Go into the bath, gather up the laundry, take it downstairs, and add it to the laundry pile! Sort it into light colors, darks, delicates, and bleachable whites. Got it? Oh, and make sure you set aside any hand wash items separate from the others."
Erica smiled and lightly bobbed. "Yes, Miss Franchesca!" Rushing into the bathroom, she did as instructed and was soon on her way down the stairs with her arms loaded with her aunt's laundry. Faith was sitting in the living room reading when she saw her cousin.
"Erica?" she inquired. "What are you doing?"
She paused and looked around the laundry bundle in her arms at her cousin. "Helping Franchesca. What does it look like I'm doing? Painting?"
Faith tilted her head. "But why?"
Pausing again after only taking one more step down the stairs, Erica sighed. "Because she needs help!"
Shaking her head slightly in confusion, Faith pointed out, "But you're doing her job."
Sighing frustratedly after one more step down, Erica turned to her again. "That's the point Faith! I'm helping her now so she can help me later."
"Help you with what?" Faith asked, still confused.
She didn't answer for a moment so she could get more than one step down per question, otherwise at the rate she was going it would be noon before she even reached the bottom step. Once at the bottom, Erica turned her body to the side to look at Faith around the clothes piled in her arms. "With getting online. I want to check email and stuff and Franchesca is the only one with a computer."
"Freddie has one, too." Faith advised.
Her cousin started toward the laundry room. "But Fredrick isn't here." she retorted, shaking her head as Faith finally shrugged and went back to her book. Carrying the bundle through the kitchen and into the laundry room, Erica began sorting it as instructed. Within half an hour she had all the loads sorted and felt very accomplished when Franchesca came in.
The maid inspected the piles and nodded in satisfaction. "That'll do. Now get into that library and start clearing out the desk in the northeast corner."
Erica started to leave, then stopped and turned back to the maid. "Which way is northeast?" she asked innocently.
Rolling her eyes, she pointed in the four cardinal directions. "South! West! North! East! Northeast is the corner that's around the corner and to the right when you go in the library door! Don't you know anything?"
Theresa barged in following her harsh instructions. "Now Francine, don't bark at the girl! She's only trying to be helpful! How in blue blazes should she know which way is north here? She's only lived here three days!"
"She knows which way the sun comes up doesn't she?" Franchesca barked at Cook. "She should since it comes in her bedroom window every morning! That's East the world around... and don't call me Francine!"
The cook waved a hand dismissively. "Oh, quiet! Go on, Erica. Tend to your task and I'll see to it Faith and Franchesca are in to help you shortly."
The maid put her hands on her hips defiantly as Erica left the laundry room and ran out the kitchen door to the dining room. "Oh? And who put you in charge of the household? You can just be in charge of that kitchen! Leave the rest of the house to me!"
Lifting her nose in the air, Theresa looked down her nose at the harsh maid. "In that case girlie, you can cook your own meals and find a way to do it that doesn't come into that kitchen!" Turning, she sashayed out of the laundry room haughtily.
Fuming as she pursued Cook, Franchesca wagged a finger at her. "Now listen here, you! Just because..." She was interrupted as she stepped through the open archway into the kitchen.
"Stop!" Theresa shouted. "Not one step further until you've helped that girl fix up the library! Don't think I was kidding when I said you could scrounge up your own food until you do! Now, out!" she yelled, wielded her wooden stirring spoon like a battle-axe, and chased the maid back into the laundry. "Out, out, out!"
"Well!" breathed Francesca in frustration. "Of all the... you can't... Ooooo!" She stomped her foot in frustration and charged back into the laundry to quickly start the first load.
Turning to the right as she entered the library, Erica found the desk and saw it was covered in books, papers, pens, boxes, and assorted office supplies. Sighing, she dived into the mess. Before anyone had made it into the room to assist, she'd emptied the entire desktop and returned every book to its proper place on the shelves. The boxes of office supplies sorted, she found places for them in the desk drawers and cleared the loose papers into a single pile. Erica had just sat down when Franchesca came in with Faith in tow.
"What are you doing missy! Loafing on the job?"
"Oh no, Miss Franchesca!" Erica stood quickly. "I just finished the desk! All that's left is this pile of papers I collected off of it. A grownup will have to decide what gets done with those."
She looked at the desk and started going through the drawers while Faith looked at her cousin in amazement.
"You did all that by yourself?" the older girl asked.
"Uh-huh!" Erica nodded. "I'm really good at organizing!" she joked, making reference to Faith's comments two days earlier.
The maid finished by wiping her finger across the desk. "Well, it's still dirty, but I'll take care of that. You two, clear out! I still have a lot of work to catch up on!"
Standing and waiting as Faith left the library, Erica looked at the woman. "Miss Franchesca?" she asked hopefully.
Looking up, she scowled. "What are you still doing here?" Realizing after a moment that the girl was waiting for an answer to her earlier request, she nodded knowingly. "Oh. Well, I'll come get you when I have time, girl."
She twisted back and forth in place slightly, twirling the hem of her skirt. "Is there anything else I can help you with, then?"
Losing patience, she leaned on the desk. "Yes! You can help me by skedaddling! Shoo!" She waved her hands at Erica dismissively.
Several hours passed while Erica sat and read 'Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm'. She was deep into the story when she heard from the top of the stairs, "Well? I thought you wanted to use my computer?" asked Franchesca. "Change your mind?"
Erica closed the book and stood quickly. "No, Miss Franchesca! Coming!" She walked quickly up the stairs and joined the maid as she walked past her and Faith's room.
"Now I want to make this clear. You can use my computer for twenty minutes! Got that? No more! I get a twenty minute break and I won't have you in my room when I'm not there!" As Franchesca spoke, the two made their way to the end of the hall near her aunt's bedroom door and turned left down a smaller hallway with four doors, two on each side. Franchesca opened the first one on the right and Erica followed her in.
The room was decently sized, about the size of most bedrooms Erica had lived in, but much smaller than her and Faith's shared room. The double bed took up most of the room, with cedar nightstands on either side of it. The room was immaculate with not a speck of dust anywhere and no clutter. The wall opposite the bed had a matching dresser, wardrobe, and a desk instead of a vanity. The only piece that looked out of place was the chair for the desk, which was more like an office chair than fine furniture.
"Alright!" Franchesca barked. "You can sit there and do what you need to do. I'll be watching from my bed while I relax... so no funny business! I don't want to see anything inappropriate on that screen, you hear?"
Erica nodded and smiled. "Yes, Miss Franchesca! I promise!" Quickly sitting and grabbing the mouse, she opened up a browser and entered in her email homepage. While April's parents could stop her from calling, texting, and emailing using her cell phone, they couldn't stop April from using her school email account. Checking her messages, she was worried that she hadn't gotten anything from April. Hoping that she would have found a way to reach out to her, she started drafting an email to go to April's school address.
"Dear April,
I am OK. I arrived in New Hampshire Tuesday afternoon and there was a long cab ride to my aunt's house, so I didn't get in until it was getting dark. Right after I got here, the power went out and stayed out until last night. There's no cell service here, so Internet and an old phone are the only ways I have to reach you. (and Internet doesn't work if the power's out) I tried calling you on Wednesday, but your parents wouldn't let me talk to you. They said you were sad and told me never to call you again because it would just make you sadder. They changed your cell number and email, but I know you can still get email from me at school. I miss you very much!
Things are OK here. I got to see snow yesterday! Real snow! My cousin Faith and I made snow angels and built a snowman! My aunt is nice and so are Fredrick, (he's the butler and chauffeur) Cook, (who does all the cooking) and Franchesca, too. (she does the cleaning and works really hard... she's strict, but I know she's nice)
I don't know how often I can write. I want to tell you SO much! Things are REALLY different here. We're going to a Halloween party on Sunday and everyone wears a costume. Even grown-ups! I'm going to be Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz! The house is really old and even when the power went out we still had lights because the house uses a light called a gaslight that works without electricity. They're all built into the walls like normal lights, but they get turned on and off like a camping lantern! It's kind of cool!
I hope you aren't sad when you get my message. I don't want you to be sad, but I know how you feel. I was so sad when I had to go and still hurt inside a lot from missing you. You're the best friend I ever had and always will be!
I don't have a lot of time. Franchesca was nice enough to let me use her computer on her break, but I don't want to take too much of her time. So I'll try to write you again soon.
Love,
Erica"
She smiled as she sent the email and glanced at the time. Erica saw she still had several minutes left, so she brought up Facebook and looked at her contact list, but April wasn't on it and there was a notification that she'd unfriended her. Crestfallen that April's parents had gotten to this too, she noticed a few odd things. Perplexed, she looked at the pictures of her old life on her homepage and felt a twinge of discomfort when she saw the death notice written by Eric and all the condolences for her loss from her grown up friends. Shaking her head dismissively, she took comfort in knowing that her email would get to April through the school.
Just as she was closing Facebook, she saw a notice in her email inbox. Excited, she switched to it and read the subject line. Her smile vanished when she saw it was a notice telling her that her email couldn't be delivered.
Franchesca had been watching the entire time, holding back tears at the girl's inability to reach out to her friend and take small comfort in that last connection to her life as it had been. Shaking herself, she got up off her bed and decided she would help in the only way she knew how, by eliminating the reminder of her sadness.
"Alright, missy! That's enough." she growled. "Close it down and get on with your own things. My break's almost over and I have a schedule to keep!"
Dejected, Erica stood up and started shuffling toward the door. "Yes, Miss Franchesca." she mumbled.
Exiting the room, Franchesca stopped the young girl and turned her around to face her. "Erica, I want you to know, I... well..." Unable to formulate the right words, she wrapped her arms around Erica and held her tightly while the child silently cried on the woman's shoulder. She soothed away her sadness with comforting pets on the girl's head. "It's alright, dear. I know. It's all confusing and it hurts, but it'll all be alright."
After a short time, Erica stopped crying and nodded at the older woman. "Th-thank you, Miss F-Franchesca. I... I'll be alright."
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Lost in the sorrow of her memories, Erica didn't even notice the boy who stood in front of her.
"Helloo?" he said for the third time, waving his hand in front of her sad and distant eyes.
Snapping out of her reverie, Erica finally looked up at the young man in front of her. He was heavyset, but not obese, and his short flame-red hair topped his round face, fitting with the outlandish hat he wore. His costume was The Mad Hatter from the live action film that had just been released earlier that year; a mad assortment of colors and patterns of cloth. "Um... hi." she responded shyly.
"Ah'm Mike Junior." he said, holding out his hand after wiping some cake crumbs off of it. "Mamaí and Daid air th' ones giving this party. Ah don't thin' Ah've seen ye' here a'fore. Are ye' new?"
His accent was an odd mixture of Irish brogue she'd heard from the boy's father earlier and the typical northeastern accent she'd started getting used to from the people she'd met since arriving. Taking his hand and giving it a soft shake, she replied, "My... my name's Erica... Hargrave." She pointed at her aunt, still dancing with John William. "That's my aunt Heather."
Mike sat next to her. "So ye' must be'n Faith's cousin, then. Ah heard Daid talkin' ta' Mamaí about ye'. He says ye' must be from Eire."
She shook her head, her short braids and ribbons tickling her shoulders. "Do you mean Ireland? No, I'm from Southern California."
His eyes widened. "Ya' mean like Hollywood? Did ye' ever see any famous TV or movie stars?"
Shaking her head once more, Erica giggled. "No! I'm from Newport Beach... that's fifty miles from Hollywood!"
The boy's face dropped. "Oh. S-sorry. Ah din' mean ta'..." His voice trailed off and he hung his head embarrassedly. "Ach! I kin be such a awful eejit! Ye' must be thinkin' Ah'm some kind o' thick!"
"Not at all!" Erica comforted him. "It's just a question!"
Anxiously, he looked over at the girl. "Say, would ye care ta' dance? Ah'm nay very good, but Ah won't be steppin' on yer feet!"
Stiffening, Erica remembered what Faith had told her about refusing a dance. Not wanting to hurt his feelings, she took a breath and nodded. "Alright, but I'm not very good, either. I just know the box step and waltz."
He stood and held out his hand to her. "Well then, we're matched!"
Taking his hand, Erica let him escort her to the dance floor. She assumed the position Faith had taught her, only to see Mike start to assume the lead position backwards.
"Ach! S'cuse me!" he mumbled as he reversed positions.
She smiled at his nervousness, comforted that he was as uncomfortable as she was, and waited for him to start. She watched him listening for the beat and counting to himself. At the start of the next measure, he began with a simple box step that fit the three-four beat of the song. Moving in a slow square, she could see he was focused on nothing but counting, his eyes looking down to the left and his lips counting silently. Trying to make him more comfortable, she tried distracting him.
"Hey, Mike! I bet we look weird! Dorothy dancing with the Mad Hatter?" she joked. "I bet some people might think I'm Alice!"
His concentration broken, he looked at his partner for the first time since they'd begun. "Huh? Ach! Ah suppose so!" Looking around at the other dancers, he nodded toward her cousin. "Get a load o' them, though... a vampire an' a nurse! Wot? She th' one what gets his meals fir 'im?"
Erica laughed and nodded toward another pair. "Look at them! A cowgirl and a zombie! Too weird!"
The two spent a minute pointing out odd pairings before Erica turned to look at him directly. "Hey, Mike? Did you notice something else?"
"Wot?" he looked back.
"You stopped counting, but we never stopped dancing!" she grinned.
Blushing, Mike looked down. "Aye, Ah told ya' Ah wasn't very good!"
"But you never stepped on my feet!" she giggled.
Eventually the music ended and most of the dancers made their way off the floor. The two were headed back to their bench talking about the Dempsey's ponies when they ran into a group of three older boys blocking their way.
"Well, if it isn't the little Mick-ey!" the tallest of them said in a snide tone. Turning to Erica he flashed a charming grin at her. "Is this oaf bothering you, Miss?"
Looking him over, Erica could tell he was handsome, athletic, and thought it made him irresistible. Furrowing her brow, she took Mike's hand, making her dance partner's eyes bug out. "No, he's not! Who are you to ask?"
The boy straightened up and looked at his buddies incredulously. "Who am I? I guess you must be new! I'm Chet... Chet Mansfield!" he stated as though that should mean something to the girl. His face turning cruel, he then glared down at Mike and lowered his tone. "And you were just leaving! Right, pipsqueak?"
Her grip on Mike's hand tightened and she put her other hand on his shoulder, just as she started to feel Mike start to move away. "If he is, then we both are, dork! Come on, Mike!" Erica pulled on his arm and almost dragged him toward the bench they'd been sitting at as the three boys stood stunned. Her blood boiling mad, she could feel the adrenaline pumping and the overwhelming desire to knock Chet's block off.
"Erica!" Mike hollered. "Ah thin' yer pullin' mah arm oot th' socket!"
She stopped and looked back at the three boys who started talking and then looking over their shoulders at the two. "Sorry, Mike." Erica said as she tried to calm herself. "I just can't stand smart aleck guys that think they're God's gift! Oooo! It burns me up! I wish April were here! She'd tear those wise guys up one side and down the other!"
Confused but curious, Mike asked, "April?"
She sighed as she turned her back to the boys and interposed herself between them and Mike. "She's my best friend back in Newport Beach. I really miss her and wish she was here right now! I'm not usually that brave! In fact, I've never stood up to a bully in my life!"
"Well, Ah thin' yer awesome!" Mike smiled at her. "No one tells off Chet like that! All th' girseach think he's dotey!"
She tilted her head the way she'd adopted from Faith as she resumed slowly leading him back to their bench where Faith and her aunt were sitting once again. "What's a girseach? And what's dotey?"
He trailed along, glad that she was no longer pulling on his arm, but very aware that she still held his hand. "Wot? Ach! Girseach is a girl and dotey means cute." Mike swallowed hard and gathered his nerve. "L-like you! A dotey girseach ta' be sure!"
Erica paused a moment as she slowly realized that she had managed to get this poor boy all wound up over her. "Oh!" she exclaimed. "You think I'm cute? No! I'm just ordinary. Faith is the cute one!"
"Nay, Erica!" he shook his head. "Ah thin' yer class! I know Chet'd sure like ya' ta' be his cailín!" Realizing she was about to ask, he explained. "If somthin' is class, it's really good, like awesome... and um... someone's cailín... is... um... their girlfriend." Mike blushed as he added, "Ah know Ah wish ye' ware mine." His eyes looked down as he finished, certain that this pretty new girl was about to laugh in his face.
What it did do was make Erica stop and cause her jaw to drop. No one, boy or girl, had ever shown her any interest that she knew of. While Erica knew she liked girls, it gave her pause as she tried to imagine dating this cute and interesting boy and had to repress a shudder. Closing her mouth, she tried to let him down gently. "Um, that's really sweet of you Mike. If I liked boys, I'd probably want to be your... um... cailín? Is that it?"
Mike nodded. "Aye, that it is." Sure that she was just trying to get rid of him, he asked point blank. "Do ye' not date boys, yet?"
"I don't date at all, yet." she shook her head. "But when I start dating, it won't be boys." she tried hinting a little more bluntly.
After a moment's contemplation, his eyes opened wide. "Oi! Yer aerach?" Seeing her confused look, he explained once more. "Um... ye' like girls?"
"Nothing personal." Erica nodded unashamedly.
Noticing she was still holding his hand, Mike looked down at them in confusion. "Then why did ye'..."
She laughed as they resumed their slow walk back. "Because I still like you! Better than that snob Chet, anyway! I just don't like like you! You're interesting and nice... for a guy." Finally reaching her aunt, she released his hand. "Aunt Heather? Faith? Do you know Mike?"
"Nice ta' be see'n ye again, Mrs. Hargrave. Faith." He bowed slightly to her aunt. Turning to Erica, he smiled. "Thank ye' fir th' dance, Erica. Kin Ah be gettin' ye' a drink? Or cake?"
Smiling as she sat by Heather, Faith on her aunt's other side, Erica answered, "Thank you, Mike. Punch would be... um... class!" Seeing the boy smile at her use of Irish slang, she watched him speed off to the refreshment table.
Watching the exchange with interest and more than a little concern, Heather turned to her niece. "So, did you enjoy dancing with Mike?"
"It was OK, I guess." Erica shrugged. "I more liked talking with him, though. He's a nice guy. He started teaching me a few Irish words, and he also likes some of the same things I do... horses in particular."
Her aunt leaned down and whispered a gentle warning into her ear. "He seems to be quite taken with you, Erica. How does that make you feel?"
"It's fine." she shrugged. "I know he does. He told me. I told him I don't like boys though, and he was fine with it. He didn't seem to care, anyway."
Still worried, Heather watched the Dempsey boy rushing back with Erica's punch. "I don't think he cares, sweetie. In fact, I think he doesn't care so much, he's still taken with you in spite of it! You need to be careful, dear. You could easily hurt his feelings."
Mike handed Erica a plastic cup with an orange punch in it. "Yer drink, m'lady!" he said while bowing to her with a toothy grin.
She took the drink with a shy, "Thank you." and sipped it, the flavor similar to orange soda and tickling her nose. When another song began, she saw Chet making his way up to the foursome. "Oh, no!" Erica mumbled.
The popular boy stopped in front of Faith and bowed to her, extending his hand. "May I have the pleasure?" he asked smoothly, glancing sideways to Erica who was trying to bore a hole in his head with her glare.
Smiling, completely unaware of Chet's earlier cruel remarks, Faith took his hand. "I'd be delighted, Chet!" she said as she stood.
Watching him with her head lowered, Erica's eyes were thin as slits as he escorted Faith to the dance floor. "Oily snake!" she muttered.
Heather looked from her daughter to her niece. "Who? Chet Mansfield? He's a fine boy, Erica!"
She glared at them starting to dance. "He's a two-faced, oily snake that thinks he's all that! He probably only asked Faith to dance to get under my skin... the jerk!"
"I'm sure you're mistaken." Heather scoffed. "Did something happen between you two?"
"Chet the Chump threatened Mike." Erica snarled as she crossed her arms angrily, her eyes never leaving the bully across the room. "Oh, not in a blatantly obvious way, but he made it clear that he wanted Mike to leave me alone with him! As if!" Mike only just taking a seat next to her, she turned to him. "Mike? Would you like to dance again?"
The boy turned white as a sheet as he stumbled back to his feet. "Um, sure Erica! Ah'd be happy ta'!" Extending a hand to her, his fingers were nearly crushed as Erica gripped them tightly and stood back up.
"Excuse me, Aunt Heather." she fumed as she took the lead in dragging the boy back to the dance floor. Assuming her position, she waited for Mike to take his, but was surprised when he stood there silently. "What's the matter, Mike?"
Shuffling, he looked at her. "Ah git th' fealin' tha' ye' don't sah much as want ta' dance wi' me as much as ye wan' ta' show up Chet."
Realizing he was right and how that must have made him feel, understanding how right her aunt was, Erica calmed down and looked at the floor. "You're right Mike, and I'm sorry. I actually would like to dance with you again... if you like... but I understand if you would rather just find someone else."
Mike smiled as he shook his head. "Nay, Erica. Ah wouldn't." He stepped up close and took her hand, letting his other slip around her back, starting to waltz with the others.
She seriously tried to keep her focus on Mike, but every time Faith and Chet moved into view she couldn't help but look over his shoulder at them. Realizing she was still being unfair to Mike, Erica made herself listen to what he was saying, mostly talking about his parent's ranch and their horses. After a while, she found it easier to listen and comment and wasn't even noticing her cousin any longer. When the dance ended, they started back to her aunt, but were stopped when Chet cut in front of them.
"Oh, sorry Mick-ey." Chet snidely faux-apologized. "You're so short and round, I thought you were one of the tables!"
Finally overcome with anger and loathing, Erica had reached her boiling point. Rearing back, she poured out all her pent-up emotions into one act, letting fly with an amazingly fast and strong right jab into Chet's lower abdomen that doubled him over. "Serves you right, jerk!" she screamed at him with all the fury in her heart pouring out freely.
Quickly, they were surrounded with adults trying to find out what had happened. Faith turned and watched her cousin descend into complete panic. She tried to make her way over to Erica, but couldn't reach her before the terrified girl ran for the barn door.
Just reaching the forming crowd to find out what was going on, Heather spotted her daughter. Grabbing Faith's arm, she pulled her aside. "What happened?"
"Erica punched Chet in the stomach! Laid him out, too!"
Closing her eyes, Heather tried to compose herself. Taking a deep breath, she looked around just in time to see Erica run out the barn door. "Wait here." her mother ordered as she hurried off after her niece.
Faith stood by numbly as her mother and Mike both ran after Erica.
His small size allowing him to move more easily through the crowd, Mike reached the door and was out and hot on Erica's heels before Heather had even made it halfway. "Erica!" he called out after her. "Slow up, girseach!"
Tears streamed down her cheeks as Erica ran through the cold evening air, not even caring if she drew attention. When she heard Mike's voice call out to her, she collapsed to the ground and began to cry in earnest. She wasn't hurt physically, no one had even laid a finger on her, but her stomach was balled up like a rock, as though she had been the one punched in the gut.
Running up to her, Mike quickly removed his multicolored coat and dropped it over her shoulders while she sat kneeling on her hands and knees in the frozen dirt. "Erica?" he asked concerned. "Air ye' a'right?"
She shook her head slowly. "No, Mike! I'm not! He just... he made me so mad when he insulted you! I don't even know why I did it! I just..." Tears began to flow once again just as her aunt approached.
Mike looked over at Heather as she crouched down next to her niece. "Sweetheart? Are you alright?" she woman asked concernedly.
Looking up at her, Erica shook her head. "Why does everyone keep asking me that? Chet was the one that got punched! By me! I punched someone!" she cried in stunned disbelief at her own actions.
Slowly, she helped Erica back to her feet. "Yes sweetie, but obviously something is wrong or it wouldn't have happened." Heather knew exactly what the problem was. Her niece had begun to see Chet, a boy that rubbed her the wrong way, as an object of all her pent up rage and frustration with the world. Just as she'd tried to transfer to herself the target of Eric's anger, Chet must have done something to cause Erica to pour it onto him instead. "Did he do something to you? Or to Mike? Did he say something?"
Beginning to shiver as she nodded, despite Mike's coat, Erica tried three times to answer, but it just wouldn't come out of her mouth, as though the ability to speak had somehow been robbed from her.
Shivering without his coat, Mike tapped Heather on the shoulder. "Ah thin' Ah kin explain, Mrs. Hargrave." he offered. "We ware makin' oor way off th' dance floor when Chet cut in front o' us an' made a rude remark... towards meself." He lowered his head ashamedly, thinking he was the cause of Erica's grief.
Heather gathered the two in her arms and started toward the main house. "I see. Why don't we go in and get warm. Then we'll talk. Alright, sweetie?" Erica nodded as she fought back another torrent of tears.
Entering his home, Mike ran to the kitchen. "Mamaí? I need some hot cider!"
Emma Dempsey stood up from crouching in front of the oven. "Where 'air yer' coat, boy!" she barked at him. "You'll catch yer death runnin' around out there half-naked!"
The twelve-year-old rolled his eyes at his mother's protectiveness. "Mamaí! First, Ah airn't half-naked! Second, Ah needed ta' give mah coat ta' Erica. Third, that's why Ah need th' hot cider. Where'd ye' put it?"
His mother put her fists on her hips. "Erica who? An' dun be givin' me none o' yer' lip, boyo!"
Seeing the cider bowl on the counter behind her, he grabbed three cups and tried to make his way around his mother while he explained. The more he talked, the more his mother's face melted from angry to concerned. "Mamaí! Kin Ah git by ye'? They'll be waitin'!"
Moving to the side, she was flustered. "So am Ah te' understand tha' the boyo insulted ye' and she's th' one tha' put him doon?" Mike nodded as he was about to scoop up a cup of cider when his mother's hand whacked him in the back of the head. "Eejit! Ware were ye'? Hidin' behind her skirt?" Taking the cups from him, she shook her head. "Git back in there an' see ta' oor guests. Ah'll be takin' these ta' Heather an' her niece!"
Running for the living room where the two went after coming in after him, he nodded towards his mother. "Ye' dun need ta' tell me twice!"
As Mike rejoined the two in front of the fire, he stood back and waited while Erica sobbed into her aunt's shoulder. It looked odd due to their costumes, but heartbreaking. For the life of him, he couldn't figure how such a small thing could cause so much anguish for her.
Emma entered and pushed past her son. "Heather? Here, take these." She offered the cups of hot cider. "Is th' girseach ta' be a'right?"
"She'll be fine." Heather nodded. "Just a stressful situation that released a lot of pent up anger and hurt." Seeing the confusion on Emma's face, she explained. "Erica's mother just died a month ago, and her father was killed with my Richard while serving. That's why she's come to live here with us."
The Irish immigrant's heart ached for Erica. "Th' poor girseach!" she exclaimed in a near whisper.
Just then, Michael came in from the cold along with an irate looking man. He nodded at his wife before approaching the two ladies huddling by the fire. "Mr. Mansfield is wantin' ta' talk wi' ya', Mrs. Hargrave." Pausing a moment he added, "If ye' can spare a tick."
Releasing the broken child, Heather rose graciously and turned to Chet's father. "I want to sincerely apologize for Erica's behavior, Mr. Mansfield."
Roger Mansfield stepped in front of Michael to confront her. "That heathen of yours made a laughing stock of my boy!"
Crossing arms, Emma scoffed. "Ha! 'Bout time someone did, ye' old fahrt!"
Flummoxed, he tried to respond, but Emma tore into him. "Tha' boyo air a brat, Mr. Mansfield! Ye' shoulda taken' him o'r yer knee a few times ta' beat th' cocky oot o' him! But what kin ye' expect... th' apple ne'r falls far from th' tree!"
Her husband's eyes widened. "Emma! Now look here..."
Emma glared at him, stopping him mid sentence.
"You have no right to tell me how to raise my son!" Roger stiffened.
Storming in front of him, Emma glared up at his frightened face. "Ah have every right ta' call em' like Ah see em' in mah own gaff! Yer' brat ware tormentin' mah boy! Erica stood up ta' him an' I say, 'good on her'! An' last Ah say, 'Git!' Ye nay be welcome in me gaff nay more! Oot!" She pointed past his shoulder toward the door making Roger flinch, sure that she was about to slap him out of her house.
Roger left in a huff before Michael turned to his wife. "Tha' ware nay hospitable, Emma!"
She grumped in return. "Some kinds o' loud-mouths ought not deserve hospitality, Mister Dempsey!" Turning to Heather, her voice softened to a hush. "How air she?"
"Upset, but really she'll be fine." Heather sighed. "I think it would be best if we were on our way, though. We don't want to disturb your other guests any further than we already have and you can't stay here all night. You have a party to see to."
"Now none o' that!" Emma shook her finger. "Ah'll grab th' roast, Michael kin take th' cider, an' we'll all go back ta' th' party ta'gether!"
Sitting in front of the fire, only dimly aware of her surroundings, Erica's thoughts were a cloud of jumbled memories, all conflicting with her assumed identity. Even as she kept telling herself, I'm Erica Hargrave! I am! memories of her mother's funeral and half remembered nights waking up crying at the death of her father clashed together with her new life, threatening to send her spiraling off into madness.
Slowly coming back into herself, Erica heard the last of the conversation. Finally, she calmed down and stood up. Turning to Mike, who never left her side, she slowly handed him his coat.
"Thank you, Mike. I hope I didn't embarrass you."
Taking his coat back, Mike shook his head. "Ach! Nay, Erica! 'Tis fine. If anythin', Ah'm grateful to ye' fir standin' up fir me."
"An' next time ye' kin stand up fir yerself!" Emma shot her son a glare. "Ah'll nay have a wee scared rabbit fir a Mack!"
Squaring her shoulders, Erica defended the boy. "It's not like that, Mrs. Dempsey!" Looking over at Mike, she smiled. "Mike was trying to avoid being rude to one of your guests. Chet really didn't do anything. It was just words. I shouldn't have overreacted. It's my fault."
She approached Erica and took her in her arms. "Thank ye' jus' th' same, girseach! Mike could be usin' more friends like you!"
While the four made their way back to the party, they talked about the ranch and how they'd gotten by during the power outage. Entering, a noticeable hush fell over the guests until Michael broke the tension.
"Air this a party air not!" he bellowed happily. Waiting for Emma to put down the roast, he took her by the hand and escorted her to the dance floor. In doing so, the mood shifted back to being light and entertaining.
Faith almost ran over to her mother. "Mamma! You should have seen Chet! His daddy took him out of here crying and holding his stomach!"
Lowering her gaze, Erica blushed. "I... um... I didn't punch him in the stomach, though."
Turning to her cousin, Faith's eyes widened. "You did so! I saw you!"
The embarrassed girl shook her head. "I hit lower than that." Looking up at the shocked faces around her, Erica held up her hands defensively. "I didn't mean to! It's just... well he's a lot taller than I am and... well..."
Heather had to restrain herself with every fiber of her being to keep from laughing out loud. Faith cocked her head, not understanding the subtle difference for a boy between a gut punch and one in the groin. Mike shrank back and crossed his legs, trying not to think about what had happened to poor Chet.
As the evening wore on, Erica noticed that while her aunt and Faith were asked to dance several times, all the boys avoided her like the plague and looked at her with a mild amount of fear in their eyes. She noticed too that the girls avoided her, casting dirty looks her way as though she'd committed some unpardonable sin by hitting the cutest boy around, making him leave early. Mike in contrast, doted on her all evening, getting her drinks, snacks, and even asking her to dance several more times.
When it came time for the games, Erica teamed with her aunt for most of them, their matching costumes making a cute pair. Other times she paired with Mike or sat them out while Mike would regale her with stories about his parents' lives in Ireland. She loved listening to him. His accent wasn't too thick, so she could follow his elaborate stories; sure that at most only half could be true.
Later, as people started telling ghost stories, the lights were turned down and Erica noticed that most of the younger guests started pairing up boy-girl. Unsure what to do, and seeing Mike alone and not wanting him to feel left out, she sat with him and held his hand. Innocently, she really started thinking of him as a good friend and only wanted him to be happy, and her presence seemed to make him quite happy. She never noticed the lovelorn looks he gave her as they sat in the dark close together, fingers intertwined.
At long last the evening came to an end and people started saying their good-byes and departing. When it was their turn, Heather smiled and hugged Emma warmly. "Thank you for a wonderful evening! I do want to apologize again for Erica's behavior. Just know that it's not typical for her."
Dismissing her apology with a wave of her hand, Emma snorted. "Ach! Go on then! It's fine! Perhaps it'll make th' brat think twice aboot bein' such a snot ta' others! I jes' wish it had been me own Mack who'd done th' deed!"
Erica hugged the elder Michael and thanked him for the food and games. Then turning to little Mike, she saw him shyly blushing and extending out his hand to shake hers. Steeling herself, she pushed past his hand and hugged him, making the boy unsure what to do about it. When she planted a kiss on his cheek, he turned three shades of red and stopped breathing, which made Erica giggle. Finally his father whacked him on his back, forcing the boy to resume breathing.
"Yer lettin' this girseach git ta' ya boy! Better be watchin' that!"
She smiled at Mike. "Thank you for showing me a good time, Mike." Dropping into a posture similar to Emma's when she was bawling out Mr. Mansfield and an Irish brogue she'd started picking up through the night, she added, "An din' be worrien' aboot gettin' ah cailín! Ye'll be havin' plenty o' time fir that, yet!" She was happy to see it made him laugh, along with his mother and father.
Starting toward the car, Heather took both girls in her arms as they walked. No words were exchanged, but Erica could tell that her aunt was pensive, which made Erica wonder what she might do to punish her for fighting, especially since she'd started it.
Fredrick held the car door for them as they climbed in and sat. Once they were underway, Erica looked across at her aunt and cleared her throat.
Heather stopped her musings and looked over at her niece. "Yes, sweetie?"
Gulping, Erica took a breath. "I know I'll need to be punished for hitting Chet, Aunt Heather. I'm ready."
"But I'm not, sweetheart." she shook her head. "I honestly don't know what to do about it." she added, looking out the window at the dark of the night.
Faith, who'd been uncharacteristically silent, finally spoke up. "So where did you punch him, then?"
Breaking the tension like an explosive, Heather couldn't stop herself from laughing out loud this time. Her laugher triggered the other two to start laughing and soon Heather found herself trying to explain to her daughter what it meant for a boy to be hit where Chet had been struck. By the time the three had reached their home, Erica was in much better spirits and her aunt was more sure than ever what she needed to do about her niece's unresolved anger and pain.
Franchesca was at the door and took Heather's coat while Fredrick parked in the garage. "Did you have a good time, ma'am?" she asked rotely.
Cocking her head, she nodded slightly. "Yes... we certainly had an interesting time. Thank you."
Helping Erica off with her coat, Cook saw the girl blush and turn away at her aunt's description of the night. "What happened?"
"Erica punched Chet Mansfield in the groin!" Faith blurted it out while Fredrick came in and took her coat. After a few minutes of explanation, mostly from Heather, the two girls ran upstairs to wash and change for bed, it being well after their normal bedtime.
Holding her hand out toward Fredrick, Franchesca inquired in a growl, "Well? Where's my camera?"
Handing her the device, he silently nodded at the maid.
"Did you get any good pictures?" she asked as she started to look at them.
"One of monumental importance and impact." he replied as he hung his own jacket and started putting on his butler's coat. "When you find it, you might consider just erasing it as it could be used in evidence against Miss Erica, should the Mansfields decide to sue."
Franchesca furrowed her brow and quickly started scanning through the photos, finally coming to a stop on a picture that made her draw in a breath. There in front of her, recorded for all time, was sweet little Erica with her fist buried in Chet's upper groin.
Looking over Franchesca's shoulder, Theresa nodded. "Good for her!" she shouted.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Sitting in the library, Erica stared out the window as the snow fell all around the house. She knew she needed to get back to her studies, but her mind just wouldn't settle. Her thoughts drifted as freely as the snowflakes that fell past the large window, taking her from one memory of the last few months to the next. Finally shaking her head to make herself focus, she re-read her essay on early New Hampshire history. Reviewing her notes, she finished the closing and set the papers aside, glad that her work was done before Christmas break.
Rising from her seat, she stretched like a cat and placed her work in the folder to give her aunt. Turning out the desk light, she was mildly jealous of Faith's ease with completing writing assignments. Over the last month, Faith had continually beaten Erica at finishing them, giving Faith more free time. She knew it was petty, so she dismissed the thought out of hand.
She'd also noticed how Faith had started changing as of late. Her moods were unpredictable and chaotic. Her aunt Heather had explained that it was just hormones, but Erica couldn't understand why her own moods were not as volatile and were instead more subdued. Slowly ascending the stairs to their shared room, she pondered the problem. Other than the one time I punched Chet, I haven't noticed me being like Faith gets!
Erica had tried her best to make up for her one serious lapse in judgement, doing chores, helping both Cook and Franchesca with as many things as she was able to between studies. Her aunt had never brought up the incident again, seeming to have completely dismissed it. Maybe she thinks I've done enough to make up for it.
Entering their room, she saw Faith sitting near the foot of their bed on Erica's side. "Hi." she greeted her cousin quietly.
Faith shot her cousin a look that could freeze air. "Hi." she barked back.
Sick of dancing around whatever it was that had gotten her cousin mad at her, Erica sat on Faith's side of the bed and faced her. "Can we talk?" she asked delicately.
Dropping onto her back, Faith looked up at the ceiling. "There's nothing to talk about." Silence sat between them like a drift of snow.
Mimicking her cousin, Erica sighed and lay back on the bed, her head next to Faith's. Unsure what else to say, she lay there silently.
Finally, her moody cousin broke the silence. "Maybe it's time you move to your room." she stated bluntly.
Too heartbroken at the idea to even put up a fight, Erica only noticed the tear after it fell from her eye. "If that's what you want." she said quietly.
"It is." Faith snipped as she rolled off the bed. "I'll tell Mamma." Without another word, Faith stormed out of the room, nearly slamming their door.
Able to do nothing but lay there, tears ran down into her ears as she slowly sank into apathy once more. Everything hurt too much and, no matter what, it seemed she couldn't escape the pain of her existence. Over the last six weeks Heather had worked with her several days a week, helping her cope with her sadness and anger, eventually discarding the notion that she was Erica Hargrave. Telling her aunt that she still wasn't ready to go back to being Eric, instead she became Erica Bella Dunning, her own person.
Slowly, she stood up and walked over to the vanity, taking a seat and looking at her reflection. She could still see her mother looking back at her, but somehow it looked hollow; vacant, like a shadow rather than a ghost or reflection. She watched the redness of her eyes deepen as more tears formed. Taking a tissue, she wiped them and started going through the drawers to take out the few things that were hers.
A gentle knock interrupted her busywork, making her look up to see her aunt entering. "Mind some company?" she asked delicately.
Shaking her head, Erica let out a ragged breath, trying to contain the sadness that consumed her. "It's fine, Aunt Heather." She stopped her task and watched her aunt move over to the bed and sit, patting the mattress. Moving over to the bed, Erica sat down next to her slowly and sadly, leaning in to rest her head against her aunt's shoulder.
Heather ran her fingers through Erica's pretty hair, it having grown out so much that Brooke had colored it once more. "Faith told me she wants a room to herself again. I wanted to talk with you about that."
"It's fine, I guess." she retorted with a shrug. "It's what Faith wants, so I guess it'll make her happy again."
Her aunt nodded. "Alright. Do you understand why?"
Shaking her head slowly, Erica dropped backwards onto the bed to stare at the ceiling as she'd done earlier. "Not really, Aunt Heather. It just seems like everything I do makes her mad. I don't understand it. She doesn't ever want to play with me anymore. I know it's snowy and has been for two weeks, but she seems like she doesn't want to do anything with me, even inside. I just wish I knew what I did wrong."
Heather pulled her niece up and hugged her gently. "You didn't do anything wrong, sweetie. Faith is just going through a hard time right now. Her body is changing and her mind is, too. She's starting to grow up."
She took comfort in holding her aunt. "So it'll happen to me too, someday?"
Dancing around the subject delicately, Heather gave only a half answer. "Not exactly the same way, dear. Everybody is different, so we all go through this part of life in a different way."
They sat there in silence while Heather petted her head to comfort her. Ever since the Halloween party, Heather had been steadily chipping away at Erica's vault of pain she'd locked behind her fantasy. Before Faith's recent moodiness, Heather even had hope that Erica might be nearing a time when she could finally fully face her grief and return to her life as Eric. Now with yet another trauma pounding on her delicate psyche, she seemed to be retreating further and further back into what Heather believed to be the child's fantasy of being a girl.
Out of nowhere, Faith stormed into the room. "So? Do I get my own room again or what?" she barked at her mother.
Looking sternly at her daughter, understanding her issues didn't excuse her rudeness. "Faith! You have to understand this is very hard for Erica. She's gotten used to having you around. Separating you will be difficult."
She rolled her eyes at her mother. "So... is that a yes?" she sniped.
"Faith!" Heather exclaimed. "Don't you dare take that tone with me!"
Seeing her mother angry wasn't something she was used to. It shocked Faith so much she jumped. Stubbornly pushing back, she sneered at her mother. "Just tell me when his stuff is out of my room so I can sleep in peace for once!" At that she stormed out.
Heather was stunned at Faith's callous outburst, but not nearly as much so as Erica. Heather looked down at the stricken girl, who looked to be in shock to the point she wasn't even breathing. Erica stared at the doorway as though it were a gaping maw about to consume her soul. Her aunt was torn between wanting to console Erica and chasing down Faith to make her apologize. Finally, she turned to Erica and looked her in the eyes.
"Erica? I love you, just the way you are. I don't care what Faith said, you are my niece and I love you. Do you understand me?"
Shaken from her state of shock, she nodded at her aunt as tears silently ran down her cheeks and she began breathing again. Moving forward, she hugged her aunt as though clinging to a life ring, the woman's loving embrace the only thing keeping her from drowning in a sea of pain.
Pulling back, she looked once more in the girl's eyes. "I need to go talk to Faith. What she said was inexcusable. Will you be OK for a minute without me?" Seeing a slight nod from the girl, she stood up and backed toward the door. "I'll be back soon." she added before turning to pursue her child.
Sitting in the lonely confines of what had been her room for the last two months, Erica looked at the things around her that gave her comfort. Their shared vanity, the neatly arranged row of stuffed animals along the toy box at the foot of their bed. As her eyes turned toward the box of dolls she started hearing yelling from downstairs. Her aunt's muffled and unintelligible voice, mixed with that of Faith's, rang through the building like echoes of the storm that had greeted her arrival at her new home.
After a short time, the yelling stopped and silence sat over the house once more, thick as fog. Erica knew she should get up to start collecting her things, but she couldn't make her body obey. Instead she just sat, unable to even rise. Sinking rapidly into a near catatonic state, she floated through memories that were some of the best of her life since coming to live with her aunt.
Turning as they tried to keep up, Faith shouted, "Come on slow-pokes!"
Erica held out her hand to Mike as they climbed over the log. Their hike through the woods to the north of her aunt Heather's house had taken them up a hill through thickly wooded forest. Faith knew the path well, having walked it many times, but Erica and Mike were lagging behind.
"Wait up!" Erica yelled. Turning toward Mike, she laughed as he flopped onto the ground into a pile of leaves that had been gathered together by the wind. The frost of the week before had melted into a warm Indian Summer. The three children had known that soon their outdoor activities would be confined to snowball fights and other winter activities for many months, so they took advantage of the temporary warm weather as much as possible, spending every weekend day out exploring nature.
Mike lay on the fallen leaves and panted for breath. "Tha' cousin... air yours... mus' be... part mountain goat!" he exclaimed.
Falling into the leaf pile beside him, Erica giggled. Finally she looked up at her cousin who had back-tracked and stood over them with her hands on her hips looking like Cook when Franchesca invaded her kitchen.
"Aren't you two coming?" she asked.
Erica laughed as she stood back up and gave her hand to Mike. "Yeah, we air comin' col ceathrar!" she said, imitating Mike's brogue.
Taking his best friend's hand, Mike pulled himself up. "Ye' sure'n ye aren't from Eire, girseach? Ye' sound like me mamaí!"
"Well, if you two are quite through, can we get moving?" Faith scowled at the two. "I'd like to get to the pond before it gets too late!"
"Yes, Faith." Erica sighed. "Lead the way!"
The three continued to hike up the hill while Erica and Mike lagged behind a bit. "So, you're going back to Eire for Christmas?" she asked, turning to him.
Mike nodded. "Aye. Mamaí misses her siúrs an' she wants ta' spend it back in 'er home town this year."
Erica nodded in understanding. "Well, I'll miss you while you're gone. Will you write me? I've never gotten a letter from another country before!"
"I will ya!" he laughed. Seeing her scowl at him for implying that he wouldn't, he swallowed hard and nodded, "Aye, I'll do that."
Cresting the slight rise, Faith stopped and finally smiled. "Here it is!" she yelled. "Come on, you two!"
The two friends jogged up the hill to stand next to Faith, breathing heavily from their run. Erica looked down at the pond that had formed in the slight depression from the melting snow. A few birds that had not flown south for the coming winter flew over the water, giving it a serene feeling that this place was untouched and pure.
The trio ran down the short hill to the edge of the water and took in the beauty of the view. Splitting up, Erica and Faith started walking around the pond to the left while Mike went to the right. It was small enough that they could yell across it to each other without difficulty, if needed.
While Faith walked along slowly with her cousin, she looked over at her. "Erica? Why did you invite Mike along? I wanted to show this to you."
She shrugged as she picked up a small rock and tossed it in the pond. "I don't know. I just thought he might like it, too."
"But I wanted to spend time with just us!" Faith whined. "You're always spending time with Mike! It's like he's your boyfriend!"
Stopping, Erica looked at her cousin. "He is not!" Lowering her voice she added, "You know I don't like boys that way! Yeah, I know he's got a crush on me, but so what? He's nice, sweet, and interesting to talk to, but he's not my boyfriend! I mean... eww!"
Faith turned and looked at her. "You're making him think he's got a chance, Erica."
"A chance at what?"
"Ugh!" Faith rolled her eyes. "A chance at you, nitwit! And that's another thing. You used to always talk about April being your best friend. Now it's Mike all the time!"
Lowering her head, Erica's voice turned melancholy. "I... I don't like to think about April. It hurts." She fiddled with her fingers as she tried not to think about the pain in her heart from missing the girl she'd gown up with.
Her cousin saw she was struggling and became impatient. "It's OK, Erica. You can just say it."
She looked back up. "Say what?"
"That you're in love with April." Faith said sadly as she turned back to their walk around the pond.
Erica felt her face flush at hearing the words. Starting to move again, she easily caught back up with her cousin. "How did you know?" she whispered after a moment.
Rolling her eyes again, Faith looked away. "It's so obvious, Erica! Every time you talk about her I can see little broken hearts around your head!"
"Oh." was her only reply. After a moment, she looked over at Faith. "I didn't know you knew."
Faith sighed. "It's just that I hate to see you so heartbroken over it, is all. I mean, I know that before you left you were just friends, and now that you're so far away from her you wanted it to be more. It's just all so sad."
Erica nodded silently. As the two reached the side of the pond, they both looked over at Mike who was shouting to them.
"Oi! Ah found a bone!" he cried.
Faith giggled as they waved at him. "I'll bet he did!" she murmured.
"Huh?" Erica looked at her confusedly.
Shaking her head, Faith dismissed the question. "Never mind. I guess it's only funny to me!"
Reaching the far side and meeting back up with Mike, he was very animated about his discovery. "Ah thin' it ware a deer! Look here!" He held out a piece of hoof.
Faith stepped back. "Eww! Put that away, Mike! God, boys are so gross!"
Disappointed, Erica had wanted to humor her friend and look at it. Trying to salvage a good time out of their walk, she made a suggestion. "Why don't we walk back around the way Mike came. That way he can show us where he found it and we can see the rest of the pond!"
Rolling her eyes once more Faith spat, "Fine!" and started walking ahead, but Erica quickly caught up to her.
Lowering her voice to a whisper she asked, "Is something bothering you?"
Faith stopped and turned to Mike. "Could you give us a moment?" she asked. "I promise we won't take long."
Mike smiled. "Sure! Ah'll jes walk oot th' other way a wee bit. Come ta' think o' it, Ah thin' Ah'd like ta see th' oo'r side. Ah'll meet ya back where'n we started, a'right?" He turned and headed back the way they had come.
When Faith was sure he was out of easy hearing range, she sighed and looked at Erica. "I guess I'm just jealous is all. I mean, when you got here, April was your best friend. Then Mike became your best friend. I guess I thought..." Her voice broke as it trailed off into silence.
Taking hold of Faith's hand, they started walking again and Erica turned to her. "Faith, you're the best friend I've ever had! You're always there for me, helping me, giving good advice. You know how much you mean to me."
She sighed and leaned her shoulder against Erica's. "I know, but you never want to spend time with just me. You did at first when you got here, but now it's like you're afraid to or something."
Her cousin shrugged as she tried to hedge her answer. "It's not that. It's just that... well... you and I are different about some things. Don't get me wrong, I think you're great! In fact I think you're just about perfect!" she said dreamily. Swallowing hard, Erica was worried that too much of her true feelings had shown through. "If I considered anyone my best friend, it would be you." she tried to recover.
Faith stopped and looked at her. "Do you mean that Erica? For real?"
"For real." Erica nodded shyly, glad that Faith had obviously not picked up on the real meaning of her expression of admiration for her cousin, that she'd grown to care for Faith far more than she should for them being cousins.
The two didn't say anything more as they made their way around the pond, just walking in companionable silence and holding hands. When they met up with Mike on the other side, Faith seemed much more at ease with having him around and even included him in their conversations. Erica was truly happy. Her two best friends were happily together with her; a true trio.
It was one of the best days of Erica's life.
Faith looked up at her mother. "What do you mean?" she asked.
Trying to explain, Heather sighed. While Faith was no longer shouting at her, she still wasn't listening. "Faith, you may well have undermined all of the last two months of therapy I've been doing with your cousin! Don't you see? You've broken her world... again, and just when she was getting ready to leave her fantasies of her own accord! Damn you, Faith!"
It shocked her to hear her mother swear. In fact she was sure it was the first time her mother had ever sworn in front of her. "Mamma!"
Heather was beyond frustrated. She had spent weeks getting Erica to admit she wasn't her own mother and felt certain she was close to giving up her feminine persona and return to being the boy he'd always been. Now her daughter, on an emotional whim with terrible timing, had undone almost all of her progress. Turning away from Faith, she struggled to figure out a way to undo the damage. At last she turned to her daughter and sat next to her.
"Dear, you know I understand how you feel lately, but don't you think you could set that aside for just a short while and try to help me? Otherwise I just don't know what may happen! Your cousin could end up hurting herself if she doesn't give up these fantasies of being a girl! It's already gone on far too long!"
Faith crossed her arms and looked away. "Seems like you care more about getting Eric back than you do your own daughter!" she quipped angrily.
Reaching out, Heather made Faith look at her. "Now you know that's not true, Faith! I love you both. You have to remember though just how hurt she is. How would you feel if you lost me the way she lost her mother?"
Her anger began to wane as she listened, but not her resolve. "Mamma, I do understand, but Erica is just... ugh!" She stood and walked away from her mother and crossed her arms again. "She's not a little girl anymore, Mamma. She's starting to grow up... and not into a woman! You're going to have to do something about that!" she hinted.
Standing, she crossed the room, walking up delicately behind her daughter. "Faith..." Heather made her turn around and face her. "Dear, has... has Erica done anything... inappropriate?"
Faith stiffened and stormed away from her mother. "Of course she hasn't!" she yelled. "How could you even think...!" Her voice trailed off as she lacked the words to express just how upset even the accusation made her.
Looking at Faith, Heather put her hands on her hips. "Well you made it sound as if..."
"Oh, Mamma, I did not!" Faith interrupted. "You just try to read into everything I say, even when I'm just saying something simple!"
Her mother shook her head. "You haven't said anything simple in weeks, dear... and don't interrupt!"
Closing her eyes, Faith mentally counted to ten, trying to keep from losing her temper again. "Mamma, that's just so unfair! You don't understand!"
"Mothers never do, dear." she shot back calmly. "That is, until you grow up and realize they understood everything, all too well."
Faith sat down, exhausted from fighting with her. "Mamma! Just give me a straight answer! Can I have my own room back, or are you going to do something about Erica?"
Slowly, Heather stepped in front of her daughter and went down to her knees to face her directly. "Faith darling, you know I want to give you everything you want or need. Why is this so important to you all of a sudden? Two months ago you were begging me to let her share your room! What's changed? What's happened that suddenly makes you want your cousin to be away from you?"
She couldn't look her mother in the eye. She looked down and then to the side. "I guess I've changed." Gathering her courage, she sighed and tried to force the issue. "I can't share a room with someone that's going to be a teenage boy soon, Mamma. Something has to be done." she hinted again.
After a few moments, Heather finally let out an exasperated sigh. "Alright, Faith." she relented. "I'll see to it Erica's things are moved to her room, but you know this is going to hurt her. Badly. What are you going to tell her?"
Faith looked at her mother's eyes, reflections of her own, with a stunned expression as she'd not been expecting this turn of events, nor for her mother to put the responsibility on her. "Me? You want me to tell her?"
She stood and started to leave. "Yes, Faith. You. If this is what you need, you need to make your cousin understand it." With nothing more to say, she left the room to find Franchesca and make preparations for the change.
Slowly, Faith opened the door to their room, knocking lightly as she did so. Seeing Erica sitting motionless on the bed, she cleared her throat and softly said, "Hi." When she'd pushed for separate rooms, the last thing she'd expected was to get what she said she wanted. To then have to hurt Erica on top of it was pouring salt in the wound. When Erica didn't even look her way, she quietly came in and stepped in front of her cousin, looking into Erica's green eyes that were glazed over as though she were blind. She didn't even seem to see Faith standing right in front of her.
After a moment, she moved around and sat on the bed next to her. Not seeing any sign that Erica was even aware of her presence, she truly understood how badly she'd hurt her cousin. It's like she's not even here... like she's lost inside herself. She tried to take Erica's hand, but even after doing so it sat limp in hers, the same as if she were asleep. Finally, she rested her head on Erica's shoulder and hooked her arm under the slightly younger girl's limp limb. Sitting like that for several minutes, she tried to come up with the words that would explain things. Finally giving up, she just started to talk about whatever came to her mind.
"I really liked the short story you wrote last week." she started. "It was really good. You don't write as fast as me, but you write a lot better." Not seeing any change, she just continued. "I think you have a real talent for writing." More silence filled the room until Faith couldn't stand it anymore. "Erica! I need to talk to you! Won't you please listen?"
Somewhere in her mind, Erica was vaguely aware of Faith's presence, but she just couldn't figure out how to reply. Faith? she thought, unable to make her thoughts reach her lips. Faith? I don't know what I did wrong, but can you forgive me? Please? Still unable to make her body respond, Erica started screaming the words in her mind, but to no avail. Nothing she did seemed to connect her mind with her body. Finally, she turned inward and began to pray... pray that she might find her way back... that she might be happy once more in her new home... that Faith wouldn't hate her for whatever it was she'd done wrong.
Starting to see tears forming in her cousin's eyes, but nothing else, no sign that she was there, Faith became frantic. "Erica! You're scaring me! Please! Just say something! Yell at me! I deserve it! Please! I'm sorry, OK? I didn't mean it! Please, just... just don't leave me!" she began to cry.
Erica's hand slowly responded, moving to take her cousin's, griping it lightly.
Faith's eyes widened at the first sign of life from her tormented cousin. "Erica?" Faith asked hopefully as her tears abated.
Two green eyes slowly tracked around to face Faith, her head gradually following them. Erica tried to speak, but words would still not come out. Her lips moved, but no sound came forth.
Practically tackling Erica in a hug, tears rolled down Faith's face. "Erica! I'm so sorry! I didn't mean what I said before! I swear! Please forgive me! I know you're not a boy, and I don't want you to go!"
Feeling her cousin's tears on her neck, Erica could only manage to hug her, words still not making it from her mind to her lips.
Babbling now, Faith tried to explain why she'd done what she'd done. "You've been such a Godsend to me, Erica! I never thought I'd ever need someone near me so much in all my life! It... it sacred me how much I need you to never go away! You're the best friend I could ever have!" Not ready to admit the full truth yet, she thought up an excuse. "I... I tried to push you away before you left me! I'm so sorry, Erica!"
Finally, words came loose of her tongue, words she'd been trying desperately to say since Faith entered the room. "I... I... I..."
"Yes? What is it, Erica?" Faith wiped her eyes. "Just say what you need to... it's OK. Even if you hate me, just please be OK!"
Erica took a breath and tried again. "I... understand... if... you... hate me, Faith, but..."
The smaller girl interrupted her. "I don't hate you Erica! I love you! So much! I... just..." She paused and made herself say part of what she felt. "I don't want you to ever leave me! I don't want you to ever go back to Southern California, or back to being Eric! I know that's terrible of me, but it's the truth! Please, Erica! Never go back? I know you want to because April is there and you love her, but please? Say you'll never go? That you'll never leave me?"
Erica smiled weakly and shook her head. "N.... never!"
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - cousin incest (non-sexual)
CAUTION - severe emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Christmas came with all the happiness, love, and family it's supposed to have. Faith had called off the move, but that was to be short lived. As the long winter wore on, Heather decided that, for Erica's own good, she needed to move into the guest room and make it her own. She offered to let the girl chose her own decor, but Erica sadly accepted the room as it was.
Her first night alone in Hargrave House came in April, just as the snow was giving way to rain. Erica hadn't even gotten to sleep when she felt that someone was in the room with her. Nervously, she looked up and saw Faith standing next to her bed.
"Faith? Are you OK?" she asked, rubbing her eyes.
The girl hugged herself and shook her head. "I... I can't sleep! Can I lay with you a while?"
Nodding, Erica was unable to say no to the girl. Lifting the covers, Faith quickly slid into her bed and snuggled her back up against Erica, almost shivering as though it were that first freezing cold night all over again.
After the two settled in, Faith rolled over to face her cousin. Whispering like they used to before they would fall asleep together, she needed to talk to her. "Erica? I... want you to know. I think I understand why you need to have your own room now. I turn thirteen next week and you turn thirteen in a few months. I think Mamma doesn't like the idea of two teenagers sharing the same room... and I think I understand why now."
Erica was tired, but listening to Faith was more important. "OK, so why?"
Biting her lip, Faith tried to figure out a way to say it without upsetting her cousin. "OK, do you remember that second morning after you got here, when we were getting dressed and you got all embarrassed when I kissed your cheek?" Seeing Erica nod shyly in remembrance, she continued. "Well, remember how you felt?" Erica's cheeks flushed and she nodded again. Seeing that she was going to have to spell it out, Faith took Erica's hand to steady herself. "I... I think, um... I think you were, um... getting..." She looked away and made herself say it out loud. "...turned on... by me." Looking back, she gazed into Erica's lovely eyes and her heart fluttered.
Eyes growing wide, Erica furrowed her brow and began yelling in a whisper, "Faith! No! I wouldn't! I... I couldn't! You're my cousin! That's just so... so... wrong! What do you think, I'm some sort of perv?"
Hearing Erica call herself a perv for being attracted to her cousin stung, but Faith shook her head. "No, Erica! Not at all! I know you weren't perving on me, but I think Mamma is afraid that we might... well... I mean now that we're getting older and I'm starting to get... developed... that we might... uh... you know!"
She recoiled from her cousin, the idea of giving in to her physical attraction toward her tying her stomach in a knot. "Faith! Is that what Aunt Heather thinks? That because I like girls that we might... um... you know... fool around? With each other?"
"I think so." she nodded. Faith paused a moment before asking the real question on her mind. "Would you want to?"
Erica shook her head in denial. "Are you kidding? I mean, I like girls, but you don't! Besides, we're cousins! This is New Hampshire, not Kentucky!"
The comment made Faith giggle. "You know, I think Mike would like to see if you go both ways!"
The girl's terrified look dissolved into one of mirth. "Don't I know it! God, he's so crushing on me! I feel bad for him though, because it's never gonna happen!"
Faith stopped giggling. "You mean, you aren't even curious to try? Just to see what it's like? I mean, with a boy?"
"Eww!" Erica stuck out her tongue. "No way! Boys are gross! Besides, I haven't even tried it with a girl yet, and I know I like girls!"
Gripping Erica's hand a little tighter, Faith admitted one of her truths. "I am. Curious, that is. About girls. About what it might be like."
Her cousin's smile disappeared as her heart hammered in her ears. "Faith, I love you... more than I could ever say... but..."
She let Erica's hand go and drew it up to herself. "I know. I knew before I came in here." After a moment's silence, she continued. "Did you know that day when we went up to the pond, I was planning on kissing you?"
Erica felt her heart beat rise quickly. "Um... no."
Her cousin nodded shyly. "Uh-huh. That's really why I was upset that you brought your boyfriend along!"
"He's not my boyfriend!" Erica almost laughed. "God, you're worse than Aunt Jenny is with Aunt Brooke!"
Giggling, Faith tried to quiet herself. Suddenly becoming serious, she looked Erica directly in the eyes. "I wanted you to know, I think I've had a crush on you since the first time I saw you. I know it's wrong, and nothing will ever happen, but I wanted you to know. I think, somehow, I needed you to know. That's all. I... I also wanted you to know that it's you that I'm crushing on. Erica."
Faith sighed as she admitted her worst failing. "That's why before Christmas when I could tell that Mamma was about to make it so you wouldn't have to be Erica anymore, I said those awful things to you. I... I wanted to force Mamma into either start giving you hormones so you could never go back to being Eric or else let you get hurt. I never thought she'd actually do it. Now, here you are in your own room anyway. I'm sorry."
Reaching out her hand to Faith, Erica took hers and smiled. "I think I understand." Her own worry now heavy on her mind, she needed to share just as openly as Faith had done. "Um... I've been thinking. I know I've kinda started puberty. I know that it's going to start changing me so I won't look like my mom so much anymore."
Taking a deep breath, she made herself say the words. "I'm going to start becoming a guy soon, and I hate it, but it seems there's nothing I can do about it. I never want to stop being Erica, but I think at some point I'm going to have to. Aunt Heather won't let me take hormones. I know because... I um... I asked her... a few weeks ago. It just seems... so unfair!"
Faith felt a tear roll down her cheek. "Life's not fair." she said simply, recalling the advice Erica had given her shortly after arriving.
The two sat in silence until finally sleep took them both. They lay like that, facing one another, holding hands, all through the night.
July came and they celebrated Erica's thirteenth birthday. Her aunt had surprised her with a computer of her own, plus one of the new tablets. While they still lacked cell service, it gave Erica a way to express her interest in writing by creating her own blog, submitting poetry to various places, and eventually getting a small following on social media with the website, 'newhampshire-vs-california.com'. She would write about the differences between Southern California and Northern New England, as well as their similarities.
On the first anniversary of her arrival at Hargrave House, Heather took Erica aside and spoke to her about her future.
"We need to talk." Heather started, sitting at Erica's vanity while the terrified girl sat on her bed. "I think you know what about, sweetie."
She nodded. Puberty was taking its toll on her and soon she wouldn't be able to pass as a young girl anymore. "I know, Aunt Heather."
Heather sighed and leaned forward to brush the girl's bangs out from in front of her eyes. "I... I've given this a lot of thought. I hate it, but it seems the only solution." Taking a breath, she said what she'd decided. "I know it's breaking my promise to you, but I think you should go away to school. Away somewhere where no one has ever heard of Erica. Somewhere you can be Eric Dunning again and it won't be socially awkward for you."
Feeling the tears coming, Erica knew that once again she was about to be ripped from the home and life she had known, this time to be completely alone. Trying to avoid it, she choked back the tears. "There's another way."
She knew what the young girl was implying and shook her head. "I'm sorry, sweetie! I know that right now you want so bad to be a girl and grow into a lovely young woman, and I know you would! You'd make me so proud! But I just... I can't! You don't understand what it means! You'd never be able to have children!" Now her aunt's turn to cry, tears traced down her face.
"I know it's hypocritical of me to deny you this when I was the first person to stand up for your aunt Brooke. Believe me, if there was any way to give you what you want without denying you your ability to have children someday, I would, but you're just too young to understand how this will change the rest of your life. I cannot in good conscience let you do that to yourself... any more than I could stand idly by while you used drugs or alcohol! You're just too... too damn young to know!"
Erica found herself in the strange position of comforting her aunt. After all the times over the past year that she'd been the one being comforted, her aunt now sobbed into her shoulder the same as Erica had sobbed into hers.
So it was a week later that Erica Dunning died a second time. She'd gotten to see Mike one last time at the annual Halloween party. Mike knew that she was going away to school, but not where or why. He'd wanted to see her off when the cab came for her, but Erica insisted he just let Halloween night be their last time together. When she left the party, she kissed him on the cheek just as she'd done the year before, this time as a parting gift for the boy who liked her far more than she could ever return.
Refusing to see off the person that would take Erica's place, Faith said her good-byes the night before in the privacy of Erica's bedroom.
While Erica brushed out her beautiful hair one last time, knowing it would all be gone the next day, she watched the last vestiges of her young mother in the mirror echoing her actions once more. Near to tears, she heard the knock on her door. "Come in." she said barely restraining her emotions.
Tiptoeing into Erica's room, Faith silently closed the door behind her. Her mother had already bid them both goodnight, so she knew they wouldn't be disturbed until the next terrible sunrise. "Mind some company?" Faith asked hopefully.
"You shouldn't be here, Faith." Erica warned as she resumed brushing. "Aunt Heather would be furious to know you're here instead of in bed."
"I don't care!" Faith grumbled quietly. "She can ground me for the rest of time and I'd still stay." Moving up close to Erica, she watched entranced as her cousin brushed out her hair, almost forgetting why she came in.
When Erica finished and put down the ornate wooden hairbrush, she watched her young mother staring back at her a moment. At last turning away from her personal ghost, Erica looked down at the floor and then up at Faith. "You really shouldn't be here." she said softly. "It... it's not a good idea, us being alone together like this."
Stepping closer, Faith took a breath and gathered her courage. "Erica? Would you do me a favor?"
Smiling sweetly, Erica nodded. "Of course, Faith! I'd do anything for you!"
Her heart skipping a beat, she pushed forward. Pulling her hands out from behind her back, she held out the same nightgown that she'd nearly forced Erica to wear her first night. "Would... um... would you wear this tonight?"
Noticing at last that Faith was wearing the same blue nightgown from that first night, Erica smiled wistfully. "For you? Anything!" she sighed. Looking at it, she cocked an eyebrow at Faith. "If I can get it on, that is! I've grown like four inches since last year!"
Giggling together a moment, Faith nodded. "I know. Will you try?" Getting up Erica started heading for her bathroom when Faith reached out and gently grabbed her elbow to stop her. "No. Change here. Please?"
Her mouth opening to say that she shouldn't, Erica knew exactly why Faith would ask and that saying no would take away part of the whole reason she'd asked. Biting her lip, she simply nodded as she wordlessly put the borrowed nightgown on her vanity. Slowly pulling her larger satin gown up her body, she at last pulled it over her head and stood nearly naked in front of her cousin with only a pair of white panties coving her. Pausing a moment, she let Faith look.
Flushed, and with her heart racing, Faith watched her slowly strip in front of her eyes. Her breath caught as Erica stood in front of her baring most of her lithe body. When at last Erica picked up the borrowed nightgown and pulled it over her head, she started to breath again as it covered her cousin's body one more time.
Pulling it tightly down over her skin, Erica finally exhaled as well. "There." she sighed. "It... it's a little tight."
Stepping even closer, Faith smiled. "You still look beautiful in it." she said breathily. "If anything, even more so than the first time!"
"Faith?" Erica said softly. "Why?"
"Don't you know?" she answered with another step closer, now less than a foot away. "I think you do, Erica."
"It's w-wrong." Erica stammered. "We're cousins, Faith."
"I don't care." Faith said with another half step closer. "I... I love you, Erica... and I think you love me."
Turning away, Erica felt a tear fall down her cheek. "I... I can't!" she sobbed. "I'm going away tomorrow, Faith!" she justified. "I... I'm going to... b... become... a... a man!" Tears streaming down her face, Erica tried to hold them back, but they came anyway. "How can you even look at me!"
Stepping up until she could wrap her arms around Erica, Faith pressed her growing body against her cousin's back and held her from behind. "Because right now, tonight, you're still my Erica." Turning her to face one another, she wiped Erica's tears away while one hand still held her. "Don't cry." she begged.
"I... I can't help it, Faith!" she quietly blubbered. Finally giving in, she reached out and wrapped her arms around Faith. "Oh, Faith! Hold me?"
As they held each other desperately, both cried onto each other's shoulders. After several minutes, their emotions spent, they backed away from each other as Erica grabbed some tissues off her vanity and handed one to Faith. "Here." she said simply.
"Thanks." Faith sniffed. Drying their eyes, they smiled weakly at one another. Gathering her courage once more, she asked, "Erica? Can... may I sleep with you tonight? Like we used to?"
Looking at her lovesick cousin, Erica shook her head. "We... we shouldn't, Faith." she sighed. "What if we... um... do... something we shouldn't?"
Stepping close, Faith looked hopeful at the suggestion. "We could... if you want to. I love you, Erica! Don't you love me?"
Restraining herself, Erica swallowed and nodded. "Yes. You know I do..."
Sighing, Faith stepped back away. "... but we're cousins." she admitted.
"Plus, we're still only thirteen!" Erica added.
"I could promise that we won't." she offered in compromise. "Just... one more night with you? Just to lay near you one more time before..." She couldn't bring herself to say what was about to happen to her the next day.
Desperate for the closeness she craved before being sent away, Erica nodded. "OK, but you promise? Just sleeping together? Nothing else?"
"If I can sleep." Faith sighed. "I don't want to. It'll make morning come that much sooner. But, yeah... I... I promise."
Sighing, she looked one last time at the vanity's mirror, but her mother's ghost was gone. In its place was her own reflection. After a year of living with her young mother looking back at her from every mirror, she was finally able to see only her true self.
Moving into bed, Erica settled onto her back while Faith joined her there. While the two settled in, Faith turned to face Erica.
"I meant what I said, Erica." she whispered. "I love you."
"I know." she replied. "More than you should." Hesitating, she turned and faced Faith. "I... I love you, too... much more than as just my cousin."
"I'll never love anyone else, Erica." Faith cried quietly. "Like Mamma will never love anyone but Daddy!" She moved closer and took Erica in her arms and held her. "I'll love you and only you forever! I promise!"
Erica held Faith in return, listening and nodding in response. She knew it wasn't true, Faith would move on and love someone who would be allowed to return her love, but it felt good just to hear it. "I love you, Faith!"
The night passed slowly as neither slept much. They simply held each other until dawn threatened to break. Just before the sun rose, Faith woke Erica from the restless sleep she'd slipped into.
"Erica?" she whispered. "It... it's time."
"No!" Erica cried. "I won't let you go!"
"You have to..." Faith admonished. The younger girl slowly pulled away before Faith leaned in closely. "...so I can do this." She tilted her head slightly and let her lips brush against Erica's. With a rush of fervor, and seeing Erica not pulling away, Faith poured all the love and affection that she'd built up over the past twelve months into that simple kiss.
Erica felt Faith's lips touch hers and, for that moment, all of her pain and anguish vanished and she felt whole again. Letting Faith continue, not wanting it to ever end, she reveled in the closeness and hated that it had come so late in their time together. When at last Faith slowly pulled away and the pain and loneliness in her heart returned, Erica began to weep for the life she longed for with all her heart, but knew she would never be allowed to have.
"Goodbye, my sweet Erica." Faith cried softly as she pulled away. Climbing out of Erica's bed, she made herself return to her own, there to cry alone until exhaustion claimed her.
Soon enough, the sun rose and Erica got up to go downstairs where her aunt waited with Brooke, there to cut away her beautiful hair. The girl hadn't packed anything as Erica wouldn't be taking any of her clothes. Her new ones had been ordered and sent on ahead to the school, sight unseen.
Erica didn't even want to see what they looked like. They wouldn't be her pretty dresses and outfits, so she didn't care. In that moment, she hated her aunt for sending her away, for destroying the beautiful home they'd had together and making her go back to being a boy for the sake of a future she didn't even want.
When she saw the anguish in Heather's eyes though, and even in Brooke's who, with unspoken words, had made clear that she disapproved of Erica's girlish nature, she couldn't stay angry though. She was just sad. Brooke cried silent tears together with the ones that fell from Erica's eyes as she sheared off the girl's beautiful hair down to a close-cropped boy's cut. She kept one perfect curl, as did her aunt, so they could have something to look at and remember the girl Erica was and the woman she might have been.
Cook and Franchesca couldn't watch, so they busied themselves with tasks and made themselves scarce. Franchesca angrily went about her work, while Theresa chose to imagine Erica leaving for a glamorous girl's school in one of her prettiest dresses. The reality was much more somber, witnessed only by the stoic Fredrick, Heather, and the cab driver there to take her away.
Standing and waiting as Fredrick put her essentials bag in the cab for her, the man never uttered a word as he placed a single hand on her shoulder, paused a moment without even looking down, and then walked back to the house. When the cab driver got in to wait for his passenger, the only ones left outside were Erica and Heather.
She walked up to the child she'd grown to love more than life itself, just as fiercely and completely as her own daughter. She looked utterly alien to Heather's eyes now, dressed in a fine tailored dark suit and boy's haircut. She could still see the girl standing there, tears held back by sheer willpower, but with a dead, vacant look in her eyes. Heather embraced her one more time, allowing the tears to flow from her eyes for the both of them.
Softly, Heather whispered as she held Erica so tight she threatened to squeeze the life out of her. "You will always be my daughter, Erica! No matter what! I love you, sweetheart!" Finally, releasing her to enter the cab, she could stand no more and ran into the house; tears falling like the threatening rain soon would.
Watching out the rear window of the cab as it started to pull away, she saw the drapes in the upstairs window part. She knew it was Faith's window, the same one from which she'd seen her first morning snow. She watched as Faith appeared, still wearing the same nightgown she'd worn the night before, her lovely face marred with tears. Faith hadn't seen her get in the cab. She didn't want to. She'd waited until she could only see the car pulling silently away into the gloomy afternoon light. Watching it depart, she could only utter a single word.
"Erica..."
The cab took her to the airport where she was escorted to the First Class section of the plane that would take her away from the life she'd loved. Met at her destination by a limousine, it swiftly carried her to the exclusive boarding school where no one would ever hear of Erica Dunning.
The next years were a blur. School and study filled her life and nothing else. No one came on holidays and she never went anywhere other than school functions. The school staff found it sad that this fine upstanding and studious 'boy' with a gift for the written word had no one to love and be loved by. However, they were paid the extra fees for year-round boarding, so did their best to at very least make the child comfortable. It was a hollow and empty existence.
Heather had seen to it that her charge would want for nothing. The finest tailored clothes, the best car for a sixteenth birthday present, gifts every Christmas and birthday, but things didn't matter to Erica. Her writing was all that mattered anymore. Heart and soul poured into every page, pages that could make her teachers cry at the heartbreak and depth of feeling they contained.
A therapist, a former collogue of Heather's, was available, and they spoke weekly. She made numerous notes and kept in contact with Heather so she would know that the child she so loved was at least getting by. Heather asked several times to come to the school to visit, but each time the offer was returned with a cold, "It's probably for the best that you didn't, Mrs. Hargrave." from the child she'd sent away.
Letters were delivered, read, and responded to... each with no name. She never signed her name to anything, just the valediction "Love,". For the lost and lonely child, names were just reminders of how much she'd lost.
School finally ended and graduation came, but none of her family attended. She'd coldly disinvited them. With a heart like an empty shell, a diploma was given and taken with the simple words, "Congratulations, Dunning." Over the years, the staff had learned not to ever use her legal first name. It was only ever "Good morning, Dunning" or "Good afternoon, Dunning." First names only led to silence. So the well-paid staff adapted and made do.
Five years passed after Erica left their lives. Heather went about her daily routine, as did Fredrick, Theresa, and Franchesca. Faith however, was another matter. She had totally closed herself off from everyone in her life. Gone was the happy girl, the sad girl, and the frustratingly unreasonable girl. All that was left was a shell; a body that did what she was told and showed no interest in anything.
Heather tried sending her back to school, but it only made her worse. She was given to crying for what seemed to be no reason at all. After patient questioning it would end up that something had been said or discussed that Erica had once said, talked about, or written. After less than a semester, Heather returned Faith to home-school where at least she would be close and she could be there for her when the tears fell, as they so very often did.
While life went on, Hargrave House was no longer the warm home it once had been. Theresa could barely speak to her employer. She knew Heather was doing what she felt was right, but couldn't stomach her employer's disregard for Erica's broken heart in sending her away. She took no joy in her job; joy that she knew was denied to the poor child who had made a year of their lives brighter than it had been since Richard's death.
Franchesca sat in her room and read Erica's letters to her from school over and over whenever she was not working. She'd made a point of keeping up Erica's 'New Hampshire vs. California' website, taking a pseudonym and writing new articles after long hours searching for new things to compare and contrast about the two states.
Fredrick seemed the most unchanged in his behavior, but the life was gone from his eyes. He continued to treat Heather with the respect of her position, but no more than absolutely necessary. His feelings were closed off and surrounded by a brick wall.
Faith stopped attending church once she turned sixteen and she was given the choice. Heather prayed every night for her daughter, as well as for guidance; some sign that what she'd done had been for the best and was in accordance with His will. Nothing ever came of it, but she knew that didn't mean anything. God had stopped burning bushes long ago.
Heather also stopped trying to make her daughter keep a schedule. She resigned herself to just let the girl be and hope that she would get past her pain. She asked the ex-collogue of hers who'd taken over her local practice to be Faith's therapist when it became clear that Heather was the last person Faith would talk to about her problems.
Each morning Faith would wake and lie in her bed, trying to get up the will to get dressed and go eat, resolving that this day would be better than the last, but would inevitably make her way down in ratty pajamas no sooner than ten or eleven. Long gone were her pretty dresses, replaced instead with off the shelf yoga pants and baggy sweatshirts.
She made herself stay fit, walking the woods often and visiting places she'd gone with Erica, but nothing she did brought joy to her. She tried dating to make a serious effort to get over her heartbreak, she even thought she might be in love with a girl she'd known from elementary school who'd come out earlier that last year, but everyone she dated, boy or girl, just made her feel worse. It was always as though she were cheating on Erica. She knew it wasn't logical, but she couldn't get over the feelings.
Heather's friends and acquaintances, especially those at their church, often asked about 'that adorable little precocious Erica' and wondered why she never came home from boarding school, even for holidays. Heather would always make excuses that Erica was far too busy and had declined all her invitations home; that her education had become her life, and Heather had no intention of letting anything, even a family holiday, stand in the way of her future. Eventually people stopped asking as rumors began to spread that Heather had never really cared for the orphaned niece who'd been thrust upon her, sending her away as soon as she could.
They stopped going to the annual Dempsey Halloween party after the first year without Erica. Faith refused to wear a costume that year, and turned down every request to dance. A lovesick Mike would barely speak to the Hargraves, leaving a cloud to hang over the celebration that year. While everyone knew why the mood was so somber, no one would talk about it openly. Heather made her apologies the following year, and advised the Dempseys that they would no longer attend the annual celebration as she had no desire to let Erica's absence darken what was supposed to be a happy and joyous occasion.
Mike grew into his own after they stopped coming and finally started dating, ending up in a serious relationship with Faith's old friend Jennifer Wilks. Everyone 'knew' they would get married as soon as they finished high school, but Jennifer left New Hampshire shortly after graduation to pursue a life in Boston, leaving a broken and rejected Mike alone to work his parents' ranch with no feeling left in him.
Brooke took it harder than any of them. She blamed herself that Erica was forced away; that her insistence at extracting the promise from Heather that 'Erica' would only ever be a coping tool and nothing more had driven Heather into taking the only other option; sending her away. Heather tried to convince her that the decision was only partly to do with the promise she'd made to Brooke, but she wouldn't hear it. She knew that Erica had been aware of her disapproval, and it drove her mad with guilt and regret.
The economic downturn didn't help matters. Brooke was forced to close her shop except for select appointments with regulars, and even they started drying up after a while. She started drinking to dull the emotional pain, and her relationship with Jenny became strained to the breaking point.
One morning after a severe bender, Jenny gave Brooke an ultimatum, quit drinking and join AA or she was leaving and filing for divorce. Brooke did as she asked, but their relationship was uneasy. They still loved each other, but the same cloud hung over their home as over Hargrave House.
Time sped past; their sleepy end of the country growing more and more sparse as an increasing number of Coös County residents either left to seek their fortunes elsewhere, or died where they'd lived. By the time Faith graduated, over a thousand people had left the area... one way or the other.
Life, while it had gone on, seemed to be slowly leaving them all behind.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
CAUTION - emotional pain/open emotional wounds
--
Waiting for her name to be called, Erica was nervous. Even though it was a simple outpatient procedure, she knew there was no going back. The money her aunt Heather had sent her every month had been squirreled away, invested, and turned into a tidy sum that was paying for her new life.
None of her teachers ever understood how she could write so eloquently on subjects that seemed so far beyond her years. She won writing contests that added to her growing sum and used that money to start her own business at sixteen; a publishing house with herself as sole author. Her main target audience were others like herself; boys and girls trapped in a body not their own. She wrote stories about it, about coming to terms with it, dealing with family, friends, loved ones, employers, doctors, lawyers...
She wrote tragedies about girls who tried to become men, not because they felt they were, but because 'men had it easy', until they got their first taste of male competitiveness and ruthlessness in the real world. Where being a man meant no one cared if you lived or starved, or were even openly discriminated against because they were now a man who had 'all the advantages'.
She wrote comedies about boys who had to spend their vacation pretending to be a girl because their older sister's clothes were the only ones packed.
She wrote love stories; romance novels centered around people like herself and the thrilling highs and terrible lows that came of trying to find true love when the obstacles seemed so impossibly insurmountable.
She wrote about it from every angle; the good, the bad, and the truly ugly. Rape, molestation, sex slavery, botched operations, regrets after transition and wanting to go back, ruined marriages, suicide, transitioning teens and pre-teens and the havoc their rash and youthful choice smote on the ruin of their later lives, murder, and lonely death by neglect. She wrote it all.
She also wrote of God's love for all people, including those like herself. How no one was too lost to be saved, and how everyone was precious in His sight. She wrote about her own loss of faith over the death of her parents, how through that loss she became part of a beautiful family that loved her, and how they guided her back to His love. She wrote how she reconciled the evil of the world... including the hate spread by false teachings of His word... with God's love for us, using a simple lesson passed on by Heather from her father. It was her only non-fiction book and became a best seller the month she graduated.
Through it all, she waited for her eighteenth birthday. The day it came, she started hormone therapy, having already taken care of the legal needs beforehand. She paid to bank her reproductive material against future need, then threw herself into transition with abandon. Now she sat waiting for her breast surgery, the one to feminize her facial structure like she'd had before testosterone had mangled it having been done months earlier.
That, along with a voice feminization surgery to return her voice to the soft strains of her past, and laser hair removal, had all served to bring a little peace to her tortured soul. Within only a few months she had made herself completely as she saw herself in her mind's eye; free to be the woman she'd ached to become since age twelve. Her name had also changed on her birthday. Legally and forever, she would be Erica Bella Dunning.
As she waited in the doctor's office, she received a text. Glancing at it, expecting it to be some message from her secretary June, her heart began to race when she saw it wasn't and who it was from. All the message said were three simple words.
"We found her."
Following the hyperlink, she read in horror the report from the private detective that she'd hired to find her long lost first love.
April Stone was diagnosed with clinical depression by her family doctor at age 13. She was prescribed anti-depressants, which led to a sleep disorder, for which she obtained tablets of Estazolam (a sleep aid that can worsen depression) from a street dealer.
She overdosed at age 15 and was committed to a psychiatric ward for observation. She was released under her parents' care 12 hours later when it was determined the overdose was accidental, not a suicide attempt. She continued psychiatric treatment until she reached the age of majority in January. At that point, she left home, moved to Flagstaff after getting her juvenile record sealed, and took a job as a waitress at a restaurant called Ed's Diner while she completed high school.
Miss Stone graduated on June 8th and is still living in Flagstaff in an apartment near her place of employment. She is unmarried and does not appear to be dating or seeing anyone socially. She has no apparent contact with her family, and maintains only a few social media accounts. She appears to intend to enroll in college at some point as she seems to have sent away for multiple pamphlets for many different institutions around the country. Her area of interest appears to be psychology.
She sees a volunteer therapist, Dr. Heart, one afternoon each week. We've determined by our own methods that she still suffers nightmares, depression, anxiety, and a fear of dying alone. Your previous name is mentioned repeatedly. A recent photo, taken July fourth, is attached in appendix A. Contact information, address, and location of employment are fully detailed in appendix B.
This concludes our investigation and we thank you for your business. Good luck!
Erica briefly considered rescheduling her procedure with this new information, but dismissed the idea and thought that if she were to go to April now it wouldn't be right. Knowing that April was working on fixing her issues, Erica knew she needed to do the same before seeing her. Making one concession to her need to connect as soon as possible, she texted a message to the cell number the detectives provided.
"I've missed you. I never really held it against you that you're a girl. -E"
Within seconds she got a reply.
"Eric?"
Blushing, she only sent a smiley followed by a heart.
"OMG! is it REALLY you?"
She tapped out a quick reply.
"It took me this long and a few private detectives to find you. I never stopped missing you."
Seconds passed before the reply came.
"how do I know it's really you?"
"'Me: You smell funny. You: It's just soap. Me: I use soap and that isn't it.' The day I moved in and my Mom went to the hospital. Convinced?"
"ERIC!!! where are you? your number is not one I know! 603? still New Hampshire?"
"Yes, but I don't live with my aunt anymore. I live on my own now. Long story. Maybe with a happy ending."
"I HAVE to see you! Tell me where you are and I'll find a way to book a flight!"
"I'd love to, but need time to get things sorted. I know all about what happened. Keep going to Dr. Heart. He sounds like he really wants to help you." Sending that, she quickly finished it. "Tied up the next few weeks. Can't get away! Sry! Next month I'll send a plane ticket. Round trip. I need to see you and for you to see me. You'll understand."
An interminable wait followed. Finally, she got her reply. "guess you got a good pvt eye! so embarrassed! made a mess of my life! month's a long wait, but so's 6 yrs. what's tying you up? working in a BDSM shop? ha ha"
Erica giggled as she replied, hoping now that they wouldn't call her name anytime soon. "Very funny! Tied up on business. Started it at 16 and it took off. Easy to do when you're heartbroken, no distractions like love to get in the way."
Hearing her name called, she quickly typed a goodbye. "They're calling me! Gotta run! Just got the P.I. report before I texted you, but had to tell you right away! Love you! -E"
Turning off her phone, she strode into the cosmetic surgeon's office.
Her mind drifted freely in a haze after the drugs put her to sleep. She saw memories of her life floating past her, both happy and terrible. It seemed to stretch off into eternity before she felt the sensation that she was no longer floating, but falling... falling helplessly into an abyss of darkness.
Erica stood in a dark place that felt like a dream, but at the same time didn't.
"It's no dream." he said.
Looking around for the person who spoke, she wondered who it was.
"Funny, I knew who it was... I just couldn't believe who it was." the man said, knowing her thoughts. "Let's save time. Yes, I can read your mind. If you want, just look for me and you can see me. Wish my old man had told me that! See Dad? No need to be all cryptic!"
Erica slowly found herself standing at the edge of a column of light surrounded by darkness with a vaguely familiar man opposite her.
"You look beautiful, Erica!" he said proudly.
She tilted her head like Faith used to. "Dad?"
"Yep!" Jack replied, looking down at the polo and khakis he seemed to be wearing. "Though I remember wearing BDUs the last time I had clothes."
"But you're..."
"Dead." Jack sighed and looked up at the darkness. "Damn, was I this thick-headed, Dad?" He looked back to her and smiled. "To answer the question that's just forming in your Grape, I'm here because you asked me to be here to answer the question that's been itching in the back of your brain-housing for six years. I don't want to ruin the moment for you, so I'll let you go ahead and ask."
She swallowed hard. "Um... well, I guess what I want to know is... will you still love me as your daughter instead of as your son?"
"Erica, I love you... daughter or son makes no difference." Jack half-smiled at her. "Though it was funny as hell watching you pretend to be Buttons!"
"Stop it, Jack!" his wife admonished. Beside him as though she'd been there all along, Erica's mother looked at their child. "Hi, sweetie! You look lovely! But then, I thought you did when I was your shadow that year, too."
"Mom?" Erica almost cried before she looked down at herself, seeing that she appeared exactly how she imagined her ideal self to be.
"Yes, sweetie. I'm sorry I had to leave you, but you'll understand why someday." she explained without explaining.
"I have to know!" Erica said stepping further into the light. "Am I making the right decision? Choosing to be a woman?"
Jack looked at his wife. "She thinks it was her choice!" he laughed and looked down. "Sorry, sweetie! You were submarined, same as everyone!"
"Jack," she growled. "She asked a serious question!" She looked back at their child. "To answer your question, as long as you're following your heart... yes. He loves us and wants us to be happy. Your book was right. You should listen to your own advice, sweetie."
The shaft of light began to slowly fade, Jack sighing and putting an arm around his wife. "Damn, that was fast! Wish you'd got the thousand-year treatment I got, just not how I got it. I'd love to spend a few lifetimes with you. Just remember that we love you... always."
"Forever, sweetie." her mother added. "Just the way you are, Erica..."
"Erica..."
"Erica?"
Her eyes fluttered opened to the sound of someone saying her name. Two hours had passed and her secretary June was standing over her calling out to her, there to pick her up and take her to her office where she could be watched for several more hours before finally going home.
Thinking as she sat in the back of her limousine, Erica pondered the odd dream. Was it a dream? she wondered before answering herself. Of course it was! Just my mind needing to feel like Mom and Dad would approve. Taking a pad, she jotted down some details for later use in a book.
Three weeks of on and off texting with April later, Erica felt up to meeting her face-to-face, but first she felt she had to tell April everything.
"You there A?" Erica texted her.
"for you, anytime E!"
"Can you talk on the phone right now? You're off work today, right?"
"sure, if you want to i'd love to hear your voice! probably sexy!"
"Some people think so. I'll call from this number so you know it's me."
"Did your voice change much?"
"In a way, yes. Calling."
Feeling the sweat on her hands as the phone rang, Erica felt like she was twelve all over again and going shopping in Berlin. After only one ring, it was answered.
"Eric?" April's voice sounded a little deeper to her ears, but Erica knew at once it was her.
"Yeah." she said in simple reply.
"You sound funny. Are you stuffed up?"
"No. April, I've been dying to tell you something... something big, but I've been afraid to." Erica closed her eyes and imagined April on the other end.
Shaking her head, April laughed. "Whatever it is, it can't be as bad as what I did! We must have a weird connection." Erica heard her giggle. "You almost sound like a woman!"
With her eyes still closed, Erica took a deep breath. "I am." she confessed. Dead air followed. A sinking feeling in her stomach threatened to consume her while she squeezed her eyes tighter shut.
April was confused. Sure that she'd misheard, or that something had been lost in the phone connection, she asked, "Sorry, you're what?"
Opening her eyes, Erica spoke plainly. "I'm a woman, April. It's a long story, but I'd like you to know all of it... if you'll let me share it with you."
"Eric? Is this some sort of joke? I mean, you were always doing things to make me smile or laugh, so... Eric don't BS me!"
Tears started to form in her eyes as she could see it all crumbling down. April would hate her. She'd despise her for destroying the boy she loved, replacing him with a freak. "It's no joke, April. I'm... I'm a woman. It's really me! Ask me anything! I can tell you what we had for lunch the first day of first grade! You had PB and J with a banana and a box of milk, and I had mustard tuna with pickle, chocolate milk, and three Oreos! I remember because that jerk Steve Reynolds tried to take my sandwich, but got grossed out by it! It's me, April! My... my name's Erica now... Erica Bella."
April almost dropped her phone. She had no doubt. No one but her best friend could know that level of detail. "Whoa! Did you say Erica? You took your mom's name?"
Tears started to roll down her cheek. Composing herself, she nodded her head. "Before I was born, Mom and Dad were going to call me that 'cause the doctor thought I was going to be a girl!" She sobbed into the phone before she pulled her emotions back enough to continue. "I guess the doctor was right after all! I... I just took the name I was supposed to have."
She was moving beyond stunned and directly into livid. "You son of a bitch! You jerked my heart strings for three weeks and you... you..."
Wiping her tears away, only to have them immediately replaced, Erica stammered her reply. "I... I tried not to! I... I just couldn't help myself! I fell in love with you when you tried to kiss me goodbye in LAX! I... I could see it in your eyes! You... you loved me!"
Pacing her living room like a caged tiger, April was fuming. "Of course I loved you! I nearly killed myself, I missed you so badly! You never called, you never wrote! What the actual hell... Eric!"
"I... I t-tried to call you, the day after I got there... b-but your p-parents..." she stammered, the pain from that day coming back as though it were yesterday.
Stopping, April remembered the afternoon the day after her best friend left. Shortly after she got home from school the phone had rung and she thought it might be 'Eric' based on her father's tone, but they had insisted that it wasn't. "Those bastards!" she fumed. "You know they made me unfriend you? They changed my cell number, made me delete my email... they even told the school I had to have a new email there, too! Claimed you were harassing me!"
"I... I know." Erica nodded through the tears. "I tried everything... but... Oh God, April! I'm so sorry!" She tried to stem the tide once more, but her tears kept falling. "You... you don't know what I went through! I lost everything! I lost Mom! You! I even lost what little luggage I had! When I got there I had nothing and because your parents sent me a week early, they weren't ready for me! Then the power went out for days... they had no cell service... no Internet... the roads were closed... I... I..."
Trying to explain, the more Erica did, the more upset she got. "I ended up having to wear my cousin Faith's clothes, and... oh God, April! That first time I looked in the mirror looking like a girl? I saw Mom looking back! It was like she was there! Alive again! I couldn't reach you, I was alone, and there was Mom!" Calming herself, she finished. "At first it was necessity, then it was an escape, then it was who I am... who I always was, really."
Her fury spent itself as April listened to the story of how Erica ended up so different. "Alright... Erica... so you've lived as a girl for the last six years?"
"No." Erica shook her head. "Just the first year, and again since I turned eighteen." She spent the next half hour detailing how she'd become known as Erica, how as she got older it was impossible to continue passing as a girl, and then how her aunt had sent her away to pretend to be Eric once more.
"When they sent me away, I was... dead, completely dead inside, April. I did what I had to, but nothing mattered anymore. I was forced to be 'Eric the orphan boy' and had no one who loved me. I... I hate them! My aunt... Faith... all of them." she continued, her voice hardening. "They didn't want me. I never went home after they sent me away and I refused visits from them. I wrote back out of respect for the letters they wrote to Eric, but since I wasn't him, I never signed them. As far as anyone was concerned then, Eric was a non-person... and Erica died when they sent her away. I was nobody."
April sat at her kitchen table to listen. "So... then what happened?"
"I started writing again." Erica sniffed. "It brought me back to myself. I was good, so I won some awards. I started my own publishing company using my prize money and my aunt's 'guilt money'." Erica laughed at the memory. "When I turned sixteen, she bought me a freaking Mercedes S-Class! Like I ever wanted her crap! That's what put me over the top, though. I sold it right back to the dealership, undriven, and used the money to publish my first book." Sighing, she looked around her office. "It was a hit, so now I'm a big-time independent publisher. Big deal."
Conflicted as she heard the boy she knew in the young woman that she was listening to, April shook her head in disbelief. "It is a big deal, Eric...a! I mean, aren't you a success now? You probably have like a million friends!"
"None." she shook her head solemnly. "Maybe one, if you count my secretary, June. She likes me, but like a good boss, not really like a friend. Success only brought me two things I ever wanted. The first was being able to become the woman I needed to be."
April paused a moment before asking, "And the second?"
"Your phone number." Erica practically sighed the last part out, unable to hide the sound a lovesick woman.
Smiling a little, she asked, "So you did all that, to... to find me?" April heard her old friend giggle over the phone.
"A little! I mean, you were like my goal. I needed to make enough money to hire enough detectives to find you, but I wanted to help people while doing it. I guess I have." Erica paused before finishing her thought, her voice dropping low and sad. "But none of that matters. I guess it was all for nothing."
"So I'm nothing then?" April barked. "What, because I'm just a waitress and you're some big-time publisher?"
"No!" Erica snapped back at her. "Because now that I found you, you don't want me!"
Slowly realizing how harsh she'd been, without even giving Erica a chance to explain, April took it down a notch. "Um... OK. Yeah, I was a bit of a bitch... but you can't just drop something like this on someone like that!"
"So how was I supposed to break it gently then?" Erica harrumphed.
"Well for starters you could..." Pausing, April tried to think of a gentle way to tell a long lost friend they changed sex. "Um... well... why were you hitting on me!?" she shouted.
"Because I love you!" Erica shouted back. "I think I've always loved you! Because I dream about you! Because I've never been with another woman because they aren't you!" She was angry, but glad to finally get those things out in the open.
April was dumbstruck. "Uh... really?"
Still fuming, Erica barked in reply. "Yes!" Making herself count to ten, she tried to be calm again. "Yes, April. I meant every word, and every word I texted you was right from my very fragile heart."
She tried to imagine what her twelve year old sweetheart would look like as an eighteen year old woman, but couldn't match the two. "So... what do you look like now?" she asked curiously.
Erica tried to be serious, but her friend had just left too much open to let the opportunity pass. "Like Bo Derek... only hotter!"
Laughing genuinely for the first time in a long while, April smiled. "Oh... very funny! If I wasn't sure before, I'd know now... it's still you! But come on... seriously. Did your private eye get you a picture of me? They do that in the movies."
She laughed with April and looked at the photo of her once more. "July fourth. You were on your way home from work. Cute uniform!"
"Oh, God! I remember that day! It was hot, windy, and I was dog-tired from working a double! I musta looked like a junky!"
"Not at all. Sure, you look tired, but I can still see the beautiful girl I once knew in the woman I see."
Feeling herself getting the same feelings she used to get when she would imagine being with Eric, she shook it off quickly. "Oh! You're smooth!"
Shaking her head, Erica leaned back in her chair. "Just being honest."
April felt a mild tingle run down her spine at the idea that she could still make her childhood sweetheart look past the physical and see her. "So, since you know what I look like, it's only fair that you tell me what you look like... for real, I mean!"
Unsure how she'd take it, Erica told her anyway. "I look a lot like my mom, but with dirty-blonde hair. I guess I always did."
She tried to remember Mrs. Dunning, but the memory was too clouded and vague. "I... I'm sorry, Eric. Erica! Damn it! Sorry! I... I can't remember her. Most of my memories from back then feel like another lifetime. The meds they had me on kinda messed with my head."
Grabbing the photo she'd had taken the previous week for book covers, she messaged it to April. "Sent you a pic." she said simply.
Hearing her phone chime, she swiped a finger and her memories of Erica's mother suddenly jelled into place. "My God, Erica! You do look just like her... except the hair!"
"I know." Erica murmured.
"Oh. Right. You just said that." April kept looking at the photo and then finally saw the boy she used to know so well in her eyes. "Oh, wow!"
"What's wrong?" Erica asked concernedly.
"No! Nothing!" she answered. "I just... I see you... I mean... I see the you that I remember. It's your eyes. They have that same look in them that I saw that day at the airport. You look so sad! Oh, Erica! I'm so confused!"
"If you like, I could come see you... or I could fly you out here if you still want your vacation. My treat!"
Biting her lip, she weighed her options, unsure if she really wanted to see in person the woman who'd taken the place of her first love. "Well, I... I already asked for the time off, and I could use a break from this weather! Are you sure you still want to see me? After what I said?"
"I could never stay mad at you, April. Remember?"
Recalling the number of times she'd shaken 'Eric' out of being mad with just a smile, she laughed lightly and smiled once more. "Yeah, I do."
Taking a deep breath, Erica closed her eyes and saw April smiling at her, her bitterness toward April melting like those first snowflakes in her hand. "Alright then, your round trip ticket should be delivered tomorrow morning and your return flight will be for next Sunday, but you can trade it in for a later flight if you want to stay the whole two weeks... or... an earlier flight if you.. um... want to cut it short. Sound good?"
She smiled wistfully. "Yeah, it really does." Catching herself having strong feelings for a woman she effectively barely knew, she re-focused herself. "Um, I mean it sounds OK. So then... Saturday?"
A feeling of hope spread through Erica like a wave. "Saturday... at the airport... almost where we left off!"
The day came and Erica sat waiting impatiently at Manchester-Boston. The only flight she could get for April was connected through Salt Lake, so she felt bad that April had been stuck on a plane for over five hours, but felt every second with trepidation. She busied herself with work, using her tablet, until June texted to tell her that April's flight was disembarking. Standing quickly, she checked her makeup and hair for the fifth time and straightened out her business suit, pulling the skirt down and blousing her top a little. Satisfied that the outfit would do, she waited as she started to see departing passengers.
Suddenly, through the crowd, she spotted April. Putting on her best smile, looking to be in her twenties instead of eighteen due to her smart suit, Erica waited until her childhood friend's eyes connected with hers. April looked older than her eighteen years in a completely different sort of way; tired, care-worn, and beaten down by life. A simple top and jeans showed her figure to be fit, but her face was thin, pale, drawn, and anemic-looking.
Approaching, feeling more than a little intimidated by the powerful businesswoman waiting for her, at first she thought that Erica had sent someone to pick her up; her secretary or someone similar. As soon as she could see Erica's eyes though, she knew it was her one-time best friend. The two stood in front of one another for an eternity lasting only a few breaths, not saying anything. Finally, Erica broke the silence.
"Do... do you have any bags to claim?" Seeing only a nod from her long lost love, she watched as April searched her, as though she were looking for the zipper in the woman-suit, waiting for her old friend to open it and climb out. "OK. Well, do you want me to go with you to get them, or..."
Still unable believe that the woman standing in front of her was the same 'boy' she'd lived with for six months and had known her entire young life, April was stunned. This was the same person she'd dreamt about, fantasized about, and loved. "Um... whatever is fine. If you want..." she said absently.
Erica closed her eyes and waited for the blow. Now that she's here and can see me with her own eyes... Erica was certain April just wanted to go home and move on.
Noticing the look, April knew it all too well. It was the same look she'd seen on Erica's face preparing to hear bad news as a child. "No!" she cried. "No, Erica! I didn't.... oh, shit!" She looked down at her feet absently.
Opening her eyes suddenly, Erica saw the same little girl who'd just flunked her math test and was afraid to tell her parents. "No, April! It's OK! It's... um... oh, to hell with this!" She stepped forward and hugged her oldest friend tightly. "I missed you so much!" she almost cried.
April was stunned, but quickly returned the hug, tears forming in the corners of her eyes. "You have no idea how much I missed you!" As the two separated, she wiped her eyes. "Well, maybe you do!"
Shaking her head to clear it, Erica tried to smile. "Well then, lets go get your bags and I'll drive you to your hotel. I got you a suite at a place not far from here. I hope you like it!"
They walked in silence for a time, still very unsure of each other. April led the way, grabbing her suitcases and dropping them on the luggage cart that Erica had brought to her. April found herself looking around at everything else but her oldest friend; the rental car booth, the ticket counter, the people coming and going, anything to distract her from the reality that was so different from her fantasy reunion with her one true love. There were no bells, no music in her heart, no electric thrill of the first touch. It was just... awkward. Heading to exit the airport, she started toward the parking garage escalator, but was stopped when Erica called to her.
"April? My car's right outside."
Following her out, the visitor from Arizona looked for a car, but couldn't see anything past a white limousine. "Where?" She watched as Erica stood next to the limo while the driver got out and waited patiently. Slowly approaching, she laughed a little. "You rented a limo?"
Furrowing her brow, Erica shook her head. "Of course not! Eddie? Would you get Miss Stone's bags please? April? This is my driver, Eddie."
She saw the large black man in the gray suit tip his hat at her with a smile. "Ma'am!" he said as he took her suitcases and dropped them in the trunk.
April stood next to the back of the car stunned. "You have your own limo? Jesus, Erica! I mean, you said you were doing well, but..."
Slowly approaching her only friend in the world, she sighed sadly. "You might say I got used to it." She lowered her head in sorrowful memory of the happy life she all-too-briefly knew. "My aunt Heather had a butler and chauffeur named Fredrick. He was such a wonderful man. I miss him."
Seeing Erica's sorrow made the powerful businesswoman look small and helpless. April made her way over to her as Eddie opened the door for them both. Climbing in, the newcomer settled on the far side of the car while Erica sat on the passenger side. There was enough room on her bench that she could have laid down and taken a nap. "I'm impressed!" she smiled. Sitting across from her, April seemed to be looking at everything but Erica.
"Th-thanks!" her long-lost love muttered. After the driver got in, the car slowly pulled away from the curb. Soon they were moving and a thick silence hung in the air. Erica closed her eyes and took a deep breath.
"Come on, E! Just spit it out." April said, recognizing the signs that Erica was trying to get up the nerve to say something.
Her breath fell out of her like someone had just popped a balloon. Smiling, she nodded. "You know me too well, April. I guess this was all just a big mistake. I know you're... disturbed... seeing me this way." Seeing her about to object, she held up a hand like her aunt Heather used to do to forestall an objection. "I know... it doesn't matter so long as I'm happy, right? You're fine with it, right? You and I both know that's not true."
Feeling insulted, April lashed out. "Where do you get off..."
Erica was hurting. Here she was, finally with the one girl she never stopped loving, and April couldn't even look at her. "Just stop!" she shouted. "Alright? Spare me the bullshit! I know it bothers you, April! You know me so well you can tell when I want to say something difficult? Well, I know you just as well! You're acting like that day that creepy guy followed us home from school! Like I'm some sort of perv out looking to score with little girls, or something! Just say it!"
"Alright!" she screamed back. "I admit it! It creeps me the hell out! Jesus, E! I can see you in there! I can hear you in the words you use. In the way you talk... in your eyes... hell, even the way you dress! You always were a conservative dresser, and here you still are!" She paused a moment before smiling a little mischievously. "You are hot, though!"
Her blood up to boiling, Erica couldn't help herself when April smirked. Before she realized it, Erica had started laughing. Soon, both of them were. After a moment, the laughter died and silence hung in the air again. Not wanting to let it linger, Erica looked at her oldest friend.
"I'm sorry." was all she could say.
April looked away, ashamed of herself. "What do you have to be sorry for? I'm the one with the problem! I should be happy for you..." Her voice trailed off, unable to give words to her feelings.
"...but?" Erica asked. Seeing April close her eyes and repress her tears, she knew the rest. "...but you wanted Eric, and I'm not him. I never was. See? That's why I'm sorry, April. I... I failed you. I... I can't be the way you can want me to be... and now... now..." She took another deep breath and said what they were both thinking. "I'm not the person you thought you loved."
April felt the tear escape her eye. "God damn it!" she yelled at herself for letting her feelings show. She learned before she turned fourteen that she needed to repress her feelings, to bury them so far down they didn't show. Now Erica was trying to dig them up again. Old scars of pain, loss, yearning, and guilt bubbled to the surface and she railed against it. "Yes! You killed my Eric! He's dead! Gone! You're just an imitation! God, my parents were right! I should have just moved on and forgotten about you! This was all just a huge mistake!"
Erica's heart shattered. With her family gone, her one hope for happiness left in the world was gone. In its place sat a void that couldn't be filled. Her heart ached for April's love, but she now understood it could never be. Too much time had passed and they were each so changed by the absence of the other that their former selves were simply gone. Any hope for reclaiming their lost love was futile. Erica had known it could happen; likely would happen. She'd written about this exact same situation time and again. She'd only hoped that somehow their love could overcome it.
The hurt welled up inside so powerfully that she wanted to cry it all away. She tried to stem the tide of sorrow as April obviously had done, to spare the woman she loved the pain of seeing her reduced to tears at the hateful words. Unfortunately, while April had been hardened by life to hide her feelings in order to get by, Erica had learned to cope by expressing them and letting them flow freely. She had no way of stopping the flood of tears; no cofferdam of anger to fall back on. She could never truly hate someone she cared about, even if they hated her. The once again lost orphan girl managed to hold her tears back just long enough to turn away before they began pouring down her face.
April couldn't watch as the wounds she'd inflicted tore her one-time best friend and first true love apart. Part of her despised Erica for being weak, for letting her feelings show and not burying them as she had done. She hated that Erica wasn't strong enough to spare her the knowledge that she had just destroyed her best friend's dreams. The rest of her was at war with the anger. You're a cruel, hard, and bitter woman that doesn't deserve someone like Erica! She tried to hold on to her anger, but the tide had turned. Her anger washed inward in a sea of guilt and remorse until all that was left was the pain of watching her dearest friend cry.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
--
It was a bright Wednesday morning, five days from Halloween. Heather sat in her loveseat reading Keats, while Faith was upstairs alone in her room, as usual. While Cook puttered in the kitchen and Franchesca updated Erica's website before starting the laundry, Fredrick busied himself with preventative maintenance on the limousine. It seemed like just another day.
It was. Just as was the day before, and the day before that. Just like the thousands of days that ran together in a seemingly indistinguishable string of sameness over the last five years. When at last the sun began to set, right as Heather was heading up the stairs to go and try and coax Faith down to dinner, she heard a car pull up their driveway.
Not expecting anyone, Heather's heart raced for a moment, hoping it might be who she longed to see driving up to her house, but the hope died in her quickly, knowing it never would be. He's never coming back. she accepted. I abandoned him and he hates me. I deserve no less. Still wondering who would be coming to see her though, she slowly started back down the steps just as Fredrick opened the front door in response to the gentle knocking.
As the door opened, she could see two ladies standing outside. From her perspective, she could only see them from the waist down. Stepping down the staircase, her view of the two slowly moved up their bodies until she saw their faces and her heart skipped a beat.
"Erica!?" she gasped as she began to run down the rest of the stairs and around the corner toward the door.
Standing just outside, her shoulder-length red hair curled to perfection, Erica had grown up, but not so much as to prevent her aunt from knowing it was her. She was taller, over five-foot ten, two of those inches aided by the heels she wore, and her outfit accentuated her very feminine curves, but she could still see the girl she once knew in the woman at her door.
Heather stood mutely as Cook, Franchesca, and Faith all started heading toward the door at hearing the name that hadn't been spoken openly in the house for almost five years. Not waiting for the others, her aunt finally gathered her composure. "Won't you come in, sweetheart?" She tried to say it with nothing but love and joy in her heart, but fear crowded its way into her voice. "Please?"
Looking at her aunt, Erica hardly recognized her. The once elegant lady who shone like a diamond had been turned into a middle-aged woman with gray hair slowly fading away her lovely blond coif and a pale complexion that was replacing her once healthy pink hue. Finally, she managed to squeak out, "Mamma?"
Overwhelmed with simultaneous grief and joy, Heather broke down. She fell to the floor, simply unable to keep her own feet.
Immediately, Erica and Fredrick moved to her just as all the others reached the entryway. Chaos ensued as five voices all vied for Heather's attention, trying to see if she was all right, needed a doctor, help to a chair, a glass of water, or to go lie down. The only one not speaking was Faith, who was mute with shock. She could only stand at the lower landing of the steps and stare at the girl she'd loved from the day they'd met... then at the young woman who'd so obviously taken her place at Erica's side.
Faith didn't need Erica to explain. She knew from the day Erica was forced to leave that she would find love. It was too easy to love her. She'd likely had a dozen girlfriends over the years. She'd never written home about any, but Faith knew in her bones with each letter what Erica must have left out. The girl next to her gave the proof that her feelings had been right all along. Erica didn't need her, had never needed her, the way she needed Erica. It hurt, but she wouldn't blame her. She couldn't. She loved her too much.
The chaos only died when a shrill whistle silenced them all. Everyone looked back at Faith as she took her fingers out of her mouth.
"Freddie? Get Mamma off the floor and take her to the loveseat. Cook? Get her a glass of water. In fact, bring a pitcher and glasses. Franchesca? Run and grab the first aid kit and bring it to me. Erica? Close the door and see your guest to the living room." When she saw the stunned faces looking back at her, shocked that Faith had said more in one minute than she'd said the entire previous week, she shouted to break the spell. "Move!"
At that, each went to their assigned tasks. Soon Heather was seated and recovering her composure as Cook poured her a glass of lemon water and handed it to her shakily. While Faith took a seat next to her mother and across from Erica and her guest, the woman of the house finally spoke up.
"Erica? W-What happened to you? We stopped getting letters from you months ago! My God! You called me Mamma! You don't hate me? Say something, sweetheart! Please!"
Holding up a hand for silence, Faith took out the same stethoscope she'd worn all those years ago as a prop, bidding everyone be quiet, including her mother, while she checked her mother's heart. In her efforts to get over the pain of losing her love, Faith had tried embracing nursing and had been studying it for years on her own. While she was not an RN, and couldn't be until she went to college and got her degree, she knew enough to identify a potential heart attack. Sighing with relief, she turned to everyone. "She's fine! Just an emotional shock." She leveled her gaze at her cousin.
"I... I'm sorry, Mamma." Erica blushed. "I didn't mean to... I mean... that is..." Tears welled up in her eyes as she looked around the room at all the people still in the world who she'd ever loved. Finally, she managed to almost whisper, "I'm home! Home!" Moving quickly, she crossed over to her aunt and hugged her as though she might vanish from in front of her eyes if she let go. "Oh God, Mamma! I missed you so much!"
Heather held her and rocked her just like she had when she was twelve. "Shhh! It's all right, sweetheart! I've got you!"
Wanting to touch Erica's arm, just like she had the night April's parents had broken her heart and severed the best friends' ties seemingly forever, Faith nervously glanced over at the woman sitting across from her and saw her smiling back. Taking that as a cue, she silently ran her hand along Erica's smooth arm, just to let her cousin know she was there.
Touching Erica frightened her, stirring feelings she'd long ago buried and tried to forget. Feelings that were now boiling to the surface with such strength it took all her will to keep from grabbing Erica and kissing her in front of God and everybody. She pushed them back down for her cousin's sake. She knew nothing good would come of it and quite a lot of bad likely would, most probably her and Erica never seeing each other again. Faith loved her too much to do that.
Finally, Erica released her aunt and settled back on her heels. Taking a silk hanky from her tiny black purse, she dabbed at her eyes and started to laugh. "God, I must look terrible! I wanted to look so perfect for you!"
Smiling, Heather touched Erica's lovely hair. "You look fine, sweetie! Better than I ever imagined!" Taking the tissue being offered by Fredrick, she smiled up at him with a simple "Thank you." and started drying her eyes. After a moment, she turned to Erica. "Please, sweetie! Sit down! You must be tired after that drive! Are either of you hungry? Cook was only throwing together some leftovers, but I'm sure she'd be happy to..."
Her niece held up a hand, stopping her aunt. "Leftovers... would be fine, Mamma." Erica's voice sounded light and happy. While Cook headed for the kitchen to prepare food for two more, Erica looked up. "Fredrick? I know I sort of disrupted tonight's schedule. I don't want to delay things further, so would you escort us to the dining room?"
He raised an eyebrow, briefly glanced at Heather, then bowed crisply. "Very well, Miss Erica." A smile crept over his lips, not even trying to hide it. Helping Erica and her guest up, he then did the same for Faith and Heather. Escorting them into the next room while Franchesca ran to the kitchen ahead of them to help Cook bring out plates and silverware, Fredrick bowed to her. "Apologies, Miss Erica. We have not been accustomed to eating in the dining room for some time. Most meals are served in the kitchen now." he stated with a hint of disdain, holding out the chair at the head of the table.
Heather raised her chin proudly, her manor at odds with her casual attire. "Thank you, Fredrick." Taking her seat at the head of the table, Erica paused while he pulled out a chair across from her usual seat for her guest before taking her usual place next to Faith, waiting for Fredrick to seat them.
"Well," her aunt began, "I guess we have a lot to catch up on! Erica sweetheart, would you please introduce your guest?"
Her smile melted at the realization that she'd never even made any introductions before being seated. "Oh! In all the excitement, I forgot!" Smiling once more, she giggled, "Everyone? I'd like you to meet April!"
Heather drew in a sharp breath. "Your friend from California? Good Lord, sweetie... how...?"
Taking a moment, Erica tried to explain. "A private detective found her for me. We reconnected a few months ago." She looked across the table to April and smiled shyly.
Looking from one to the other, her aunt sighed as she lay her napkin across her lap. "Well, that is good news! April? Welcome to Hargrave House! I do hope you'll both be staying for the evening? There's just so much to talk about!"
Cook came in carrying a steaming pot of stew, smiling at Erica as she sat it in the middle of the table. Turning toward the kitchen, she stopped when Erica grabbed her arm gently.
"Cook? When you're done, won't you please join us?" she asked.
Flabbergasted, Theresa could barely form words to reply. "No, dearie! You need to catch up with your family!"
"You all are my family!" Erica smiled. "You too, Franchesca! Fredrick?"
The two looked at one another, maid and butler. Finally, Franchesca turned and scowled. "That just wouldn't be proper! You know that, girl!"
Rising from her seat, Erica walked up to the maid, hugged her, and then took her by the hand and held out a chair for her. Making herself look serious, she intoned gracefully, "I insist!"
Blustering, Franchesca wagged her finger at the girl. "Why I! Why you! Now listen!" Seeing that none of her growling was even phasing the young woman, she flattened her face and narrowed her eyes, trying to make a dent, but Erica stood firm. After a moment she finally said, "Oooo!" and took the far-left seat from Heather, two chairs down from April.
Standing, April held out the chair next to her. "Please?" was all she said.
Slowly making her way around the table, Theresa sat in the offered chair. "Thank you, dearie!" Looking up at Fredrick, she could see him stiffen his back in resolve. "Fred? Sit!" she barked, pointing at the chair at the end of the table, opposite their employer.
Walking up to him, Erica's eyes were soft and pleading. "Please, Fredrick? I know you don't think it's proper, but... there are some things I need to tell you." She turned and looked at those already seated. "All of you." Turning back to him she begged, "Please? For me? Just this once?"
Fredrick knew before her plea that he was going to cave, but let her finish. "Very well, Miss Erica." he said evenly, his voice betraying his feelings as it quavered slightly when he spoke her name. Moving to Erica's chair, he held it for her until she was once more seated. He then moved to the end of the table and slowly sat himself. "How very odd." he noted.
Laughter broke around the table as the seven sat together for the first time. Erica watched Cook serve up stew into everyone's bowls, then retrieve a plate of rolls from the kitchen before she returned to her seat. Looking up towards her aunt, Erica cleared her throat as Heather nearly took a bite. "Mamma?" she asked confusedly.
Their tradition of saying grace having been abandoned years ago, Heather turned crimson. "Oh! You wouldn't mind? I just thought..." Heather then looked at her daughter pensively.
"It's alright, Mamma." Faith sighed. Bowing her head for the first time in years, she pretended to pray just as Erica had so long ago.
Looking around the table after saying grace, Heather sighed happily. "Well, everyone eat up!" Taking her own first bite, she watched as Erica and April began. Dear Lord! Thank you for bringing my Erica back to me! I was a fool! She fought back tears of joy as she joined the rest of the family.
While they ate, only light small talk interrupted the meal. Erica looked at Cook sitting next to April. "You have no idea how much I missed your cooking!" she complimented. "This is so good!"
"Why thank you, dearie!" Theresa blushed. "That's very thoughtful of you!"
Enjoying her first home-cooked meal in longer than she could remember, April's own mother not having made a full meal since before Erica had moved in with them, relying on frozen food and eating out, she listened to the family talk happily. It made her smile, but looking around the table, her eyes met Faith's stare. Their mutual gazes locked, April could see so much in the vibrant blue eyes across from her. Jealousy, pain, and longing, but also elation and happiness for her cousin. The two seemed to know each other's thoughts; each one knowing and aware of how obvious their own feelings about Erica were to one another. Finally, Faith looked down at her bowl in shame just as April did the same.
Faith was confused. She had looked into April's eyes, but she didn't see the joy she'd expected to find, knowing what she and Erica must have shared with one another. Instead she saw embarrassment, guilt, and the pain that Faith knew all too well. The moment Erica had introduced her, Faith had seen their loving reunion in her mind's eye as though she'd been there. Their soft embrace, the first kiss of their true love, romantic dinners by candlelight, and their frantic first night of passion. It had been all so clear to her, but she saw none of that in April's gaze; just that same dreadful emptiness she saw in her own reflection.
When at last the seven finished their simple meal together, Erica looked at each of them in turn. "I wanted to talk to you all about some things... some things that have happened to me." She turned to her aunt Heather and looked at her sorrowful expression. "I know what you did, sending me away, was probably the hardest thing you've ever done, Mamma. I want you to know it was the right thing to do."
Her aunt shook her head in dismay. "No, Erica! It... it was a mistake! I... I should never have sent you away!" She fought back her tears as the guilt nearly tore her to pieces.
Moving quickly, Erica stood and moved to her aunt, dropping to one knee beside her chair. "No, Mamma! It wasn't! It needed to be done! I needed that time to know myself! To be certain that this is what I wanted!" She lowered her gaze to the floor. "You took on yourself all the responsibility, blame, and anger that came from doing the right thing instead of the easy thing... and you did it for me." Looking back into Heather's tearful eyes, she repeated three words spoken so long ago. "No greater love..."
Faith stood up furiously. "Bullshit!" Silence washed over the room as she glared at Erica. "How can you say that? She sent you away! Abandoned you! Made you live like a boy! God, Erica! You should hate her!" She looked her mother dead in the eyes. "I know I do! She destroyed our home!"
Standing, Erica stared her cousin down. "I could hate her! I did for a while, but... I... I can't! Don't you understand Faith? She had to do it!"
Turning away from them, Faith was livid with Erica for not hating her mother, crossing her arms in defiant resolve. "There was another option!"
Shaking her head, Erica sighed. "No, Faith. There really wasn't. Not for me."
Turning her head slightly, the older girl huffed. "She could have put you on hormones! Let you become the woman you wanted to be! Then you could have stayed here!" Turning to face her forbidden love, her eyes swelled with tears as her voice dropped to a near whisper. "Stayed with me."
Her words went through the room like a shockwave. Each one of them at some point had suspected Faith harbored more feelings for Erica than she should, but her words gave their suspicions truth. Cook drew in a breath.
"Faith!" Heather gasped as she looked at her daughter with eyes wide.
"What, Mother?" Faith snapped. "You knew! Before you abandoned her, you knew! You all knew!" Her eyes scanned the room at the shocked faces looking back at her. Finally, she stormed out, increasing to a run as the six heard her steps go up the stairs, followed by the slam of her bedroom door.
Erica recovered quickly. "She's wrong." Looking at her stricken aunt, she continued. "I needed the time you sent me away, Mamma. I didn't know it then, and hated you for it, but I know now." She looked around the room at the others. "I know most of you have probably hated her too, at one time or another, but you really shouldn't. If Mamma had let me stay, put me on hormones or whatever, I never would have done the things I've done that helped so many... and helped me find April."
Her aunt blinked and looked up at her. "Whatever do you mean, dear?"
Returning to her seat, Erica explained the things she'd done with her time; her writing, her business, the books she'd published, and the hundreds of thousands of letters she'd received telling how her words had transformed lives, and in some cases, saved them. Finally, she looked back at her aunt. "None of that would have been possible if you hadn't done what you did... what I needed you to do because it was what was right for me."
April reached over and took Erica's hand, giving it a squeeze. Her aunt noticed and asked what everyone present was dying to know. "Sweetheart? Are you two..." Her voice trailed off, waiting for Erica to finish for her.
The two looked at each other shyly. April turned to Erica's aunt and smiled sweetly. "Not exactly, Mrs. Hargrave."
"What does 'not exactly' mean?" Franchesca scowled as usual. "You either are, or you aren't! Which is it?"
Erica held up a hand to forestall further confusion. "We're not, but we're open to the idea." she explained as she looked back at April.
Nodding in agreement, April looked at the others. "It was hard... I mean, coming to terms with Erica being a girl, but in the end she was still the same person I'd loved my whole life..." She looked back at Erica and squeezed her hand. "...and still do!"
Theresa shook her head. "So you are together, then?"
Shaking her head, Erica turned to her. "Only in the sense that we're spending time with one another and seeing where things go. No expectations, no commitments, just getting to know one another, all over again. If we still love each other after that, well then... we'll deal with that when we come to it." She looked at April. "After all, I just don't know if I can stand living with someone who picks her teeth at the dining room table!"
April pulled her fingers from her mouth. "What? I had some roast stuck between my teeth!"
It made everyone laugh, but soon Erica turned to each of them in turn. "Fredrick? I... I know you have your own ideas about what's right and proper, and I know my father was a wonderful man, but... I needed to tell you that you're the closest thing to a father I ever knew."
Standing solemnly and bowing slightly, Fredrick choked up at the sentiment. "Thank you, Madame Erica. I... I'm honored."
Rising and walking up to him, Erica wrapped him in her arms, still unable to reach all the way around his bulk. "I love you, Fredrick!"
Returning the embrace, his countenance softened, but he never spoke.
Turning to Franchesca, Erica smiled. "And you! You may fool most people, but I know just how caring you are! I've watched the website! You've done wonderfully at keeping that silly thing going all these years!"
"Silly!" Franchesca balked. "I'll have you know the newsletter alone has a hundred thousand subscriptions! Lots of people love that site!" Adjusting her seat, she looked at the people staring back at her. "Couldn't just leave it to rot!"
Coming up behind her, Erica hugged the neck of the maid from behind, still in her seat. "I love you, Franchesca! You're always taking care of me!"
"I... You're welcome. I love you too, dear." she replied, patting Erica's hands.
Straightening up once more, she looked over at Theresa. "Cook? You were looking out for me from the start, weren't you? It took me a while, but I finally figured out it was you that made it so I could stay Erica. You helped me find a part of myself I never knew was there all along. I'll always love you, for that alone!" She waited while Theresa stood, taking each other into a loving hug.
"I just wanted you to be happy, dearie!" Theresa sighed. "You were so lost! I just couldn't let you suffer! Not when there was something I could do about it! I love you, girl!" After a minute of holding one another, the woman resumed her seat, wiping her eyes while Erica turned to her aunt.
"Mamma?" she said quietly. "Do you know why I call you that now?"
Heather barely kept the tears from her eyes. "I... I think so." Blowing her nose, she laughed lightly as she hadn't done for years. "Tell me anyway?"
Kneeling down next to her, Erica placed her hands together on her aunt's lap. "When you saw me off that day, you told me I would always be your daughter. It was what I'd wanted to hear you say for so long! It may have started off as pretending, but I always knew I wasn't like any boys I knew. I... I just didn't know why." Wiping her own tears away, she smiled. "And don't worry! I think Mom and Dad still love you, almost as much as I do!"
Tears rolled down Heather's face. "Oh, baby!" she cried, hugging Erica as she stood. They held each other a while, no one daring to interrupt.
Finally, they released one another and Erica looked up toward Faith's room. "I... think I need to talk to Faith alone for a while." She looked around the room at her loved ones. "If you'll all excuse me?"
Everyone rose to their feet as April nodded and said, "Go on, E. Talk to her."
Smiling back, she looked around one more time before walking to the stairs.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Reaching the stairs and ascending, Erica recalled the first time she'd done so, scared and alone. Now as she went up them, she felt only the fear, this time that Faith was beyond reach. That of all the people she'd helped over the years, the one who needed it the most would be the one who she could help the least. Slowly walking down the all too familiar hallway, she reached the door to their once shared room. Knocking gently, she waited.
"Go away!" Faith shouted, not caring who was at the door.
Trying to open it, Erica found it locked. She sighed and turned her back to the door, leaning against it and sliding down until she was seated against it. "Faith? Please? Let me in. I... I need to talk to you. Don't make me do it through a door."
Sitting on her bed, Faith's legs were drawn up to her chest, her arms wrapped around them. Tears soaked her face as she looked up toward the door. "Go away, Erica! I don't want to talk to you!"
Closing her eyes, Erica held back the hurt. Becoming more determined, she lowered her tone. "Faith... I'm not leaving. I'm going to sit out here until you open the door so we can talk. And you know how stubborn I can be!"
Rolling her eyes, Faith remembered how Erica used to stubbornly insist on doing her own schoolwork, even when it took her hours longer and she'd offered to let her copy from her papers. The memory made her laugh, not because it was funny, but because it seemed so innocent and stupid now. Rolling off her bed, she padded over to the door and turned the lock, returning to her bed without a word.
Rising, Erica opened the door and stepped inside. Her eyes adjusted to the darkness, seeing that the room had changed so much it was unrecognizable. Gone were the toys, extra wardrobes, and their once-shared canopy bed. In their place were all new modern furniture and a disorganized assortment of books, clothes, and junk. It was as though the Faith she had known growing up had vanished and a stranger had taken her place. She slowly walked around the bed, looking at her cousin with concern and affection that only they two could understand. Taking a seat on what used to be her side of the bed, Erica half turned toward her. "I... I still love you."
Faith couldn't stand it. She began to sob into her knees. "How... how can you say that to me! How can you even look at me! I'm a disgusting perv that should be locked up!"
Climbing all the way up on the bed, Erica walked on her knees over to Faith, touching her shoulders from behind.
"Don't touch me!" Faith shouted, throwing off her cousin's arms with a shrug.
Determined, Erica grabbed her from behind and wrapped her arms around Faith's waist. Feeling her try to pull away, Erica locked her arms and grabbed her own elbows. "I won't, Faith! I won't let you chase me away!"
Panicking, Faith started to thrash, twisting and turning, trying to get Erica to release her. "No! Let go of me! Damn it Erica! Let me go!" She pushed down on Erica's locked arms, trying to force them apart. When that failed she started beating them with her fists. "Let! Me! Go!"
"No!" she shouted back. Erica held on for dear life and rested her head against Faith's back. Enduring the pain Faith was inflicting on both her arms and her heart, she held fast. "I'm not letting you go, Faith! Ever! Now stop it, damn it! You're hurting me!"
"Then let go!" she growled. Trying once more to force Erica's arms off of her, she pushed down on her cousin's hands, making them slip off her elbows. When Erica tried to re-fasten the grip, Faith grabbed Erica's wrists and pulled them out from around her.
Seeing that she was about to lose her grip, Erica reversed and grabbed Faith's wrists instead. Having been taught wrestling in school, she used it to her advantage and pulled Faith off balance, making the both of them tumble backwards onto the bed. Rolling over, Erica leapt on Faith's prone form and pinned her hands to either side of her head. Her skirt strained as she straddled her cousin and put her entire weight down on Faith's stomach. "Are you done now, Faith?" she asked.
"Get off of me!" Faith yelled. "Damn you! Get off me, Eric!"
Her cousin refused to budge. "No! And I don't care what names you call me! You're going to sit there and you're going to listen!"
Faith stopped struggling, seeing determined authority in Erica's beautiful green eyes. She half smiled and changed tactics, moving sensuously under her cousin, wrapping her legs around Erica's calves. "Well, we could always just not talk!" she purred.
She shook her head resolutely and lowered her tone to a hush. "That won't work either, Faith."
Desperately caught between hating that Erica had her immobilized and loving the fact that their bodies were pressed so close together, Faith started to cry. "Please, Erica! Please don't torture me like this!"
Erica lightened her grip slightly. "Will you talk to me?" Seeing a nod from her she added, "Promise?" When Faith just nodded, she shook her head. "No, you have to actually promise! Like we used to!"
Rolling her eyes, she relented. "Fine! I swear I'll talk to you! Alright?" The moment Erica started to release her, she quickly turned the tables and flipped her cousin over on her back. Now pinning Erica in place, Faith glared down at her. "So let's talk." She slid her body up and down Erica's in a slow undulating release of her long held passion. "Are you sleeping with her?"
Trying to dislodge Faith, she knew it was futile. Faith may not have taken wrestling, but she was a fast learner and Erica had just shown her how to pin someone so they were incapable of escape; especially on the soft mattress that gave no good leverage to push off against. "What are you talking about?"
"I'm talking about your girlfriend." Faith spat back. "Your precious April!"
Sighing and laying her head back, Erica looked up at the ceiling. "No, we aren't sleeping together. We're not even really dating, just... seeing where it goes! Now will you let me up?"
"No!" Faith shook her head. "Do you love her?"
She looked up in Faith's eyes. Knowing that lying would be a waste of time, she nodded. "Yes. I've always loved her. You know that."
Her breath only now starting to slow, Faith lowered her voice to a whisper. "Do you still love me? The way you love her?"
Closing her eyes, Erica held her breath. Letting it all out at once she uttered one fateful word in a whisper. "Yes."
"Then be with me! Here! Now! There's no law against it!" Faith pleaded. "I love you!" She started to lower her face toward Erica's, but stopped just short of kissing her. "I... I can't!" she cried. Rolling over and releasing her cousin, Faith covered her crying eyes with one hand while the other beat helplessly against the mattress. "Oh God, Erica! I want you so bad... but I... I just can't! I can't make you give up everything... the family, your life, April... just for me! Because I know you, and you would, wouldn't you?"
Erica quickly moved and pulled Faith up into her arms. Her cousin clung to her and poured her soul out on Erica's shoulder while she rocked Faith, held her, and just listened.
"I wish you'd never come back!" she cried. "I... I wish you'd just been Eric so I wouldn't love you! I wish... oh, God! I wish I didn't feel like this! I wish I could go back and change it! I wish Mamma hadn't sent you away!"
Faith cried on her shoulder while Erica just sat silently and waited. When at last her cousin's tears were spent, Erica pulled her away and looked Faith in her eyes. "I know. I know just how bad this hurts. You're still the only girl who's ever kissed me because I... I wouldn't let anyone else."
A shocked expression crossed Faith's countenance as she looked in Erica's eyes and saw how tortured she was, nearly sending her back to tears. "Oh, Erica! You... you never...?"
Slowly Erica shook her head, her colored curls bouncing lightly. "I had the opportunity, but..." She looked down at her lap. "...and then I just tried hating you. Hating you for loving me. For making me feel guilty for wanting love." She looked back up at Faith's horrified eyes. "But I couldn't. I could no more hate you for loving me than I could hate Mamma for sending me away. It's what had to be, Faith!"
Faith just backed away. "How can you not hate her for what she did? She abandoned you! She tore this family apart! It's been hell here without you!" She told her of all the hurt and anguish since her leaving; about Brooke and Jenny, Mike and Jennifer, and the hopeless atmosphere of Hargrave House. "So how can you sit there and tell me that what she did was for the best?"
Looking away, Erica tried to explain. "Faith, if Mamma had let me stay, she would have had to put me on hormones."
"What's so terrible about that?" Faith scoffed. "You're on them now, aren't you? What difference does it make?"
"Yes, but if she'd have done it then I never would have been able to have children. Now I have that option and I still get to be me! Don't you see? She took on all the responsibility of doing the hard thing, making the hard choice for the right reasons, and she did it for me... for my benefit. She let everyone hate her and think the worst of her so I could have a happier life! She sacrificed everything for me! Even her own happiness!"
Pausing she allowed the thought to sink in. "I know what people have been saying about her. That she got rid of me. That she saw me as a burden and resented having to take care of the 'poor orphan girl' who came to stay with her. Have you even once heard her deny it? She let everyone think the worst of her so they wouldn't think the worst of me!"
"So maybe she was right!" Faith shouted. "But was it worth it? Was it worth all the pain and suffering she caused just so you can maybe have kids?"
"It's more than that." Erica explained. She paced Faith's floor while telling her of the books she had written and the thousands of letters sent by people saying how their lives had been made better from them. Finally sitting on the bed once more, she turned to her cousin. "None of that would have been possible if I'd stayed here! So it's not just about me being able to have kids someday, Faith. It had to be this way! It's the way it was meant to be!"
Sniffing, Faith asked, "So... what... you went to a sperm bank or something?"
She tried to suppress it, but the giggle came out anyway. "Out of all that, that's your takeaway?"
The two stared at each other and both started to giggle like they were pre-teens all over again. Faith covered her face. "Oh, God! I can just see the look on the doctor's face when you went in to make a deposit instead of a withdrawal! Looking like that!"
Erica lost her balance and rolled onto her side laughing. Gathering her wits, she shook her head. "No! I didn't look like this, yet! I... had changed my name already though, which caused a bit of confusion!"
Suddenly Faith stopped laughing. "You mean, you looked like..." Erica simply nodded. "Oh, and you... so did you have surgery or something?"
"Something like that." she explained. "Cost me a lot, but I like the results! What do you think?" Erica spread her arms out as if to show herself off.
Looking up and down Erica's body, she could see nothing that would give away that the woman before her was anything but a natural born woman. Her hips and thighs were shapely, her legs smooth and sexy, a narrow waist tapering up to C-cup breasts, thin and delicate arms, a beautiful complexion, perfect teeth, nicely rounded jaw line, no Adam's Apple, and a voice like a songbird. "I think you're breathtakingly beautiful, just like you always were." she said eventually, her breath starting to grow ragged with desire.
Starting to move toward Erica, she stopped. Though her cousin showed no sign that she would stop her, Faith knew she had to stop herself. Looking away, she could only apologize. "I... Sorry, Erica. I didn't mean... I let myself get carried away. I'll try not to let it happen again." Clearing her throat, she made herself look back at Erica. "You do look beautiful, though." Laughing gently she added, "If Mike could only see you now! He'd flip!"
Erica rolled her eyes. "Oh, God! Mike! Ah swear, Ah thin' even if he'd a known, he'd still be wantin' me ta' be his Mot! I feel so bad for him though. Jennifer really did a number on him, huh?"
"I'm surprised he didn't leave for the city." Faith nodded. "A lot of the kids we knew back then did."
Their conversation stalling for a moment, the two just looked at each other. Eventually Erica broke the quiet. "You look good, by the way."
Smiling shyly, Faith shook her head. "In a baggy sweatshirt and yoga pants? I look like I'm pushing thirty!"
"No!" Erica denied. Waiting a moment she quipped, "Twenty-five tops!"
"Oh, yeah?" Faith shot back with a smile. She picked up a pillow and bopped Erica on the head with it.
"Oh... you've done it now, girl!" Erica grinned. Grabbing another pillow, she swung and missed.
Squaring off against Faith like they did her first day, each one looked for an opportunity to attack. Faith jumped off the back of the bed, shifting her weight back and forth between her feet. "Come on! Is that the best you got?"
Climbing down, Erica was careful never to break eye contact. "Oh, I've got lots more where that came from!" Moving sideways across the floor, the two circling each other, she waited until Faith was between herself and the bed. When Faith swung her pillow out to try and tag her, Erica ducked under it and moved in. Using her pillow like a battering ram, she pushed Faith back onto the foot of the bed, letting the pillow loose to free her hands. She was about to tickle her when she heard Faith stop laughing and gasp. "What's wrong?" she asked.
Faith had a wild look in her eyes. Her breath became ragged and her chest heaved with need. Looking up at Erica once more on top of her, she saw the concern in her eyes change to understanding, then desire, and finally guilt.
Starting to push herself up, Faith grabbed Erica's arms and held her in place. "Tell me you don't want me just as badly!"
Held fast, Erica closed her eyes. Opening them with a sincere and desperate look in them, she answered honestly. "Of course I do, Faith. But then what?"
Not ready to give up, Faith released her and watched as Erica backed away from the bed as though it would swallow her. "I could tell then... and I can tell now... you want me just as badly as I want you!"
Erica turned away and crossed her arms, holding herself. "I know! I admit it! I do!" She was near to tears at the thought of hurting either Faith or April, but she knew whichever course she chose, one of them would suffer. Turning to face Faith, she was surprised when she was no longer on the bed and was now standing less than a foot in front of her.
"Are you going to make me choose, Faith? Between you and April? Between you and Mamma? You know she wouldn't stand for it! She'd throw us both out and never speak to either of us again! What then? You go back with me to Concord? We can't get married there! Even if we went somewhere where it's legal, New Hampshire won't recognize it! We can't have children! Is that what you want, Faith? Half a life? Scandal? My business ruined? I'd end up resenting you for..." Her argument was interrupted by Faith's lips.
She had simply stepped forward and kissed Erica. She didn't even need to grab her. Within a second, Faith's right hand was behind Erica's head caressing the nape of her neck as her left drifted down her love's back to gently caress her rear. Erica's hands moved to Faith's hips, pulling the two of them tightly together. Their kiss opened as Faith parted her lips and gently let her tongue slip along Erica's teeth.
They stood together like that for several minutes, touching groping, kissing, and loving. Finally, Faith pulled away and stepped back to sit on the foot of her bed, leaving Erica standing alone. Looking down at the floor, Faith stammered, "I... I'm sorry. I just... I guess I just needed to know that I took the chance... that I knew... that..."
Moving quickly, Erica swept Faith into her arms, kissing her as she lifted her up off the bed. Once more they made out with reckless abandon, Erica kissing Faith all over her face, then down her neck. She held Erica's head against her, deeply inhaling the scent of her.
"Oh God, Erica! Please!" Feeling Erica's kisses slowing and moving lower toward her collar and forward toward her breasts, Faith gathered every shred of self-control she had and pushed Erica away. "No... I... I can't let you do this!"
The two teenagers looked into each other's fiery eyes, each seeing the passion for the other, but this time it was Faith who looked away.
Erica dropped to the floor on her knees. "So what is it then? You just wanted to make me admit I want you just as badly? And now that I have, you want to break my heart as much as yours has been broken? Is that it?"
Rolling over on her bed, Faith cried. "I'm sorry! I'm sorry! I'm sorry!" Sobbing for a time, she finally looked up to see Erica sitting on the floor with her legs tucked to the side of her. She had a vacant look on her face, like she had become catatonic once more. "Erica? You alright?"
Looking down at the floor she sat on, guilt washed over Erica like a tidal wave. "I... I think it would be best if we don't spend any time alone with each other. I... I can't trust myself."
Nodding, Faith agreed. "You're right." Wiping her eyes, then her lips and neck, she stood and went into her bathroom, cleaning herself up of any evidence of their passionate embrace. When she came out, she saw Erica still sitting in the same spot, not moving. Going over to her, she grabbed Erica's hands and made her stand up. "Come on, Erica! Get up!" When her cousin finally got her legs under her, Faith started leading her to the bathroom, grabbing Erica's purse on the way. "Come on, sweetie! Pull yourself together."
While Erica stood in front of the mirror, her makeup smeared by their necking, she looked at Faith in the mirror. "I would have let you have me." she said, finally looking down into her purse for her compact and lipstick. "I still would. Even now."
"I know." Faith nodded. "That's why I made us stop."
Taking a cleansing breath, Erica looked back at her reflection. "I... I understand. I think." She started to fix her makeup to leave no trace of their make-out session.
Faith looked down as Erica worked. "I just couldn't let you throw away your life... even if it meant I could finally... Oh, God! Life really isn't fair, is it?" Looking up to see a simple shake of the head from Erica, Faith walked up behind her and rested her head on Erica's right shoulder, her hands snaking around her cousin's waist in a not-so-platonic hug. It was intimate enough that Faith felt her cousin shiver with excitement, so she backed off again.
Once Erica was done to her own satisfaction, she turned and looked at Faith. Walking up to her, she took both of Faith's hands in hers, squeezed them, then kissed Faith on the cheek, slow and loving.
"Why'd you do that?" Faith asked, her hand moving to her cheek.
"Because you needed it." Erica replied sweetly. Taking Faith by the hand, she led her out of the bathroom to sit once more on Faith's bed. "Are we OK now?" she asked after a pensive moment.
"I think so." Faith sighed. "May I ask you some things? I mean, if anything makes you uncomfortable, you don't have to answer, but... I guess I just want to know some things before I'll be OK with everything. Alright?"
"I'm an open book to you, Faith." Erica agreed. "Ask away."
Getting a mischievous grin, Faith asked, "Are those real?" glancing down at Erica's chest.
Laughing, Erica quipped, "No! They're an illusion! I just use the right makeup and it only looks like I have a C cup!"
"Very funny!" Faith rolled her eyes in response. "I mean, did you have..."
"Uh-huh." Erica admitted. "I probably should have waited for some natural breast growth, but I just couldn't wait! Call it vanity if you like, but I'll get a reduction later as I grow in naturally."
"You better, or those puppies will be killing your back when you're forty!"
The two laughed earnestly before Faith moved to another question. "So anything else? Face? Lipo?" She glanced at Erica's skirt. "Down there?" Looking at Erica she grinned lustily and waggled her eyebrows.
Erica shook her head and laughed. "You're terrible! Face, yes... plus voice surgery... no lipo... and 'down there' has to wait a year. Most any reputable SRS surgeon won't do it until I've lived for at least a year as a woman."
"You lived a year as a girl here, didn't you?"
"Doesn't count." Erica noted. "It has to be a year under supervision as an adult. Oh, I could go to Thailand and get it done now, but I'm in no hurry." Looking over at her cousin, she tilted her head curiously. "Why?"
"Just fodder for fantasy, love." Faith admitted. "If I can't have you for real, I at least want to imagine you right when I'm..."
Blushing and turning away, Erica sighed. "Faith! I don't need to know that!"
"You asked!" Faith pointed out.
"Fair enough..." she admitted, "...but please, it's hard enough to control myself as it is without thinking of you..."
"...masturbating while thinking of you?" Faith finished her unspoken sentence seductively. "Honey, I've been doing that since I could!"
Erica took a deep breath again. "OK... so there's that. Anything else?"
Thinking for a moment she asked, "Have you ever... done the same thing? I mean, thought about me?"
Guiltily, Erica nodded. "A lot, actually. Probably more than I should have!"
"Is there a healthy amount of sexual fantasy to have about your cousin?"
"If there is, I bet Mamma would know!" Erica quipped. "But I sure won't be the one to ask her!"
"That's another thing." Faith noted. "Why are you calling her Mamma now instead of 'Aunt Heather'?"
Closing her eyes, Erica recounted the day she left. "From that moment on, she wasn't 'Aunt Heather' anymore. She was just 'Mamma'." Looking over at Faith she admitted, "I used to be so jealous of you! You were beautiful, happy..." Pausing a moment, she finally said the words. "...and a real girl with a real mother who was alive and not a figment of your imagination."
Standing up, Faith walked a distance away, her back to Erica and her hands in her back pockets. "I wasn't a very good daughter to her after she made you leave. I hated her so much for that! I don't know that I can fix the damage."
Rising and moving to Faith, Erica rested a hand lightly on Faith's shoulder. "You can! You know Mamma! She'll always forgive you!"
Shuddering at Erica's touch, she reached up and put her hand over Erica's, trapping it in place. She wanted to say something, and almost did, her mouth opening to speak, but knew no good would come of it, so she patted Erica's hand and slipped free of her touch. Walking over to her vanity chair, she sat and lowered her head.
Reaching a hand toward her, Erica smiled. "Come on. Let's go downstairs and talk it out."
Faith shook her head. "I... I can't face them. Not after admitting that I... I..."
"...that you love me?" Erica finished for her. "You said it yourself, it was hardly a secret." Moving closer, Erica still held her hand out. "Come on. You can't stay up here forever and there's no time like the present, right?"
Looking up at her smiling and devastatingly sexy cousin, Faith managed a false smile and took the offered hand. "I guess it's time to pay the piper." she said as she stood up.
Pulling Faith up into her arms, Erica held her warmly, affectionately, and longer than would be considered appropriate. Pulling back slightly, she looked into Faith's eyes. "One more for the road?" she offered, her smile genuine, warm, and inviting.
Leaning forward, desperate to feel Erica's lips on her own once more, Faith stopped herself. "I... I want to so much, but... if we did... I wouldn't be able to stop myself from wanting more, a lot more."
Sighing, Erica closed her eyes and looked down and away as she pulled back. "You're right. I guess I need to learn to check myself." Looking back to Faith, Erica asked, "Before we go down, can I ask what you think of April? I always wanted you to get to know her."
"She seems... nice." Faith lied. Really she hated the girl for being what she perceived as the biggest obstacle standing between her and Erica. She was certain that if April had never come back into Erica's life, she would have succumbed to their earlier passions and by now the two of them would have been basking in the afterglow of carnal bliss. She just couldn't ever tell Erica that.
Almost as though she could read Faith's mind, Erica laughed. "You know, if it wasn't for April coming into my life, I never would have come back."
Cocking her head in her typical way, Faith was surprised. "Really? Why?"
"April was the one that convinced me I needed to come back, that I had to see you all again and let you know that I was OK... and tell you all what you mean to me..." She paused and turned to look into Faith's eyes. "...and how much I love you."
Her cousin's eyes widened as she finally understood. "Did... did you tell April about... um... us? About 'the kiss' and my crush on you?"
Looking down, Erica nodded. "I had to. If she and I were to have any chance together, I needed to be completely honest with her." She looked back up into Faith's eyes. "No secrets."
Her cousin stepped back. "So... you came up here... and she knows how you feel about me... and me about you... and she was OK with that?"
"She loves me." Erica said simply.
Faith shook her head and looked away. "I don't know if I could have done that if I were in her place. I mean, I'd have been terrified that you would... that you might... give in."
Nodding, Erica grimaced. "I did. If you hadn't stopped me, I would have... well... I don't really know what I would have done... but we would have gone too far, for certain." she let out a sigh. "And now I'm going to have to tell her that, too. Well, later anyway."
Shaking her head vigorously, Faith tried to dissuade her. "No, Erica! Don't! She could leave you if you tell her!"
"She'll know the second she sees me, to be honest." Erica noted. "April could always see right through to the heart of me."
Faith started pacing the room. "Tell her I forced myself on you! Tell her... tell her you tried to stop me but I overpowered you and you only stopped..."
"Faith!" Erica interrupted. "I can't! Even if I could get away with it, I'd know I lied to her forever! It would taint everything between us from then on in the light of a lie! I'd spend the rest of my life in fear that she would learn the truth... that I... that I couldn't... resist you."
"Damn it, Erica! You have to! You have to tell her with such conviction that you believe it! Eventually it'll just become the truth! If you tell her you couldn't stop yourself, she'll never trust you around another woman again!"
Sighing, Erica ran her hand under her hair along the nape of her neck, massaging the muscles there. "I'm pretty sure she expected it. I think she wanted to see if you would stop it, which you did. She knows you're a special case for me... a once in a lifetime kind of love that I find irresistible. She knows I've never been tempted by anyone else, even when you two were both lost to me for what would seem to be the rest of our lives."
Sitting down again, Faith looked at Erica in a mild amount of awe. "You meant it when you said you've never... I mean... not even a one-night stand? Just for sex? Not even just to do it with someone?"
She shook her head slowly. "Not even a kiss."
Her cousin rose quickly, a look of hunger on her face. "Oh, God! Erica, that's so..." She leaned forward like she was about to move toward her, but stopped as a look crossed her face, almost as if Erica could see her thinking, What am I doing? Instead, Faith sighed and moved toward the door. "Sorry! Oh God, am I sorry! I... think it's time for us to go downstairs. You're right... I can't trust myself around you alone. It's too easy to give in to temptation."
"I think it's for the best." Erica nodded in agreement. She took a cleansing breath before opening her eyes and putting on a smile. "Shall we?"
As Faith opened the door, she turned and looked at Erica walking up behind her. "Erica? I... just want you to know... if... if you ever find yourself alone... I mean, if it doesn't work out with April, and... um... you need somebody..."
Smiling, Erica nodded quickly. "I know. And who knows, maybe someday I'll take you up on that offer!" Faith looked at her with longing, biting her lip as Erica winked at her seductively.
Shuddering, Faith quickly walked out of her room and out into the hallway. Taking a cleansing breath of her own, she heard Erica close the door behind her. "Alright, time to face the music." Looking over her shoulder, she smiled at Erica. "Together?"
Erica walked up beside her and took her hand. "Together!"
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Following her cousin down the stairs, Erica reached the bottom and looked out into the living room to see her aunt talking with April; Cook and Franchesca listening from the couch while Fredrick stood by the dining room entryway impassively. She smiled at the sight of April and her aunt, the two talking freely and seeming to enjoy each other's company.
Faith walking ahead of her, she saw April look at her cousin, then into her own eyes. Shame burned in them and Erica watched April's face cloud over. Trying to say so much without a word, Erica subtly shook her head. Her oldest friend's expression changed to a mild confusion, then smiling back at something Heather said, returning to look at the woman once more.
Stopping a short distance from her mother, Faith waited for a pause in the conversation. "Mamma? I want to apologize. I had no right to blame you or... or to... to hate you for doing what you knew had to be done." She looked at Erica who nodded encouragingly. Turning once more to her mother, she smiled weakly. "Erica told me about the things she's done, things that would've never happened if she'd stayed here." She looked down ashamed. "I... I was selfish for wanting her to stay."
Heather regarded her daughter, then Erica. She had figured out in a short time of Erica's arrival from California that Faith had an unfamilial affection for her cousin. It had been why she eventually made them sleep in separate rooms and part of why she had talked herself into sending Erica away. Her greatest fear had always been that as they matured they would end up sleeping together. While she wasn't sure of the damage it would do to Erica's mental health, or Faith's, she knew it couldn't have helped. "It's alright, dear." she answered.
Standing up, April looked at the three of them nervously. "I think I'll make myself scarce so you can talk freely. I know family issues can be a little uncomfortable to discuss when a stranger's around, so I'll just see my..."
"No! Please stay!" Faith interrupted her. "In a way, you've always been a part of this family! You've always been a part of Erica's life. So much so, that sometimes I feel as if I knew you myself!" Faith walked slowly into the living room and sat next to her mother once more. "I swear! Erica could spend hours talking about you! It... it sometimes made me a little jealous that you were such a big part of her growing up."
Smiling sweetly, April still searched Faith's eyes to try and puzzle out what had happened upstairs. She'd heard yelling, then moving around, then yelling again, and then that terrible silence. She had listened with one ear while trying to listen to Heather with the other, doing a poor job at both. Finally, she had to just ignore what could be happening upstairs and focus on getting to know Erica's family.
It was easy to see what Erica had fallen in love with in this home. Heather's intellect was keen, but she wasn't a braggart or stuck up about it. The fact that she employed three people to cook and clean for her said she had been born to money, but she had a very down-to-earth feel about her, and the 'help' seemed more like extended family than just hired workers.
"I feel the same way about all of you!" April replied. "You were such a big influence on her life, I wish I could have moved here with her!"
Stepping in, Erica took a seat next to her. She felt her first love shift slightly away from her, just enough to look like she was 'making room'. "April really had a hard time with her folks after I was gone." she explained.
Her aunt nodded, seeing the mild tension between the two. "So I understood, sweetie. I still can't fathom why they felt it necessary to cut you two off from one another so harshly. It wasn't necessary and certainly was an unhealthy situation for you both."
"At first they told me that if we kept in touch it would have just drawn out the hurt." April explained. "In the end, when I was leaving home, they finally admitted the truth. They never liked Erica... or her mother. I know they didn't like the gold star in the front window of Erica's house. They complained about it a lot. I think they were also afraid that I'd end up a teen mother." Looking over at Erica who sat shyly beside her, she smiled. "Who knows? Maybe they were right!"
"Ha!" Franchesca scoffed. "I know my little Erica! She's always been a good girl... and she loved you even then!"
Bumping shoulders with her, Theresa added, "I think that's exactly what they were afraid of, dearie!"
Heather turned to her guest. "I don't know them, but I know people. It sounds as if they were very controlling... more than parents need be."
Only half listening, Erica looked over at Faith seeing a distant look in her eyes. Thoughts of what they might have done had Erica stayed ran through her head, certain that Faith was thinking the same thing. Blushing, she looked to her aunt. "Mamma? I assume the guest room is still available?"
"Why, sweetie!" her aunt blinked. "That's not a guest room anymore! That's your room, and it always will be, as far as I'm concerned."
She glanced at her watch and looked to April. "I know you're pretty tired. Why don't you take my old bed. I can be fine down here on the couch."
"No, E! This is your home! If anyone sleeps on the couch, it should be me!"
Faith was about to make a suggestion when her mother held up a hand to end the debate. "Enough! We're all adults here. Erica? You and April are perfectly welcome to share your room."
Fidgeting slightly, Erica explained as best as she could manage. "That's very understanding of you Mamma, but April and I have never... that is, we don't share..." Her voice trailed off, letting everyone figure out for themselves what she was getting at.
Looking at the two of them, Heather raised a brow. "Oh! I had just naturally assumed... oh, I am sorry! I didn't mean to make you feel awkward!" She turned to April. "When you told me that you had moved in with Erica, I..."
Smiling, April took Erica's hand. "It's perfectly fine, Mrs. Hargrave..."
"Please!" she asked. "Call me Heather!"
"Alright... Heather." April corrected herself. "I was just saying, you shouldn't feel bad. After all, our relationship is a bit weird! We're taking things slowly. OK, glacier-like!" she joked. "We've spent most of the last month living together, and we aren't even actually dating yet. We're both living in Erica's apartment, but we sleep in different rooms and I have my own bathroom."
Franchesca stood up. "You two are too young to even know what dating is! Take my word for it, you're dating! You're just doing it wrong!" At that she headed toward the stairs. "I'm going to run a duster around Erica's room and check the toiletries. You all carry on!"
"And I have a kitchen to clean." Theresa said rising. "Fred? You're helping!"
Fredrick raised an eyebrow. "Me? Help in the kitchen? My, what an auspicious day this is!"
As the two left the living room, Erica, Faith and Heather laughed. April could only look on confusedly.
"You have to understand," Erica explained through her laughter, "Cook doesn't let anyone touch anything in her kitchen! I once tried to rinse my own breakfast bowl and nearly got beaten with a wooden spoon!"
Faith's eyes widened. "Oh! And remember that time you got up early and tried to surprise her by making breakfast for her? God! I thought she was going to have a coronary!"
"So what happened?" April smiled at the cute stories. "Did you make a disaster or something?"
Giggling, Erica recalled the incident.
Moving down the stairs as silently as she could, Erica could barely see as the winter overcast had blocked even the moon and starlight. Reaching the bottom step, she turned and saw the faint glow filtering in from the living room windows.
Creeping into the kitchen, the girl turned on the light once the door had swung shut. Proud that she'd managed to get up, sneak downstairs, and make it to the kitchen unseen and unheard, she knew the rest would be a cinch. She'd settled on eggs over easy, bacon, and toast when she learned that it was Cook's favorite breakfast. Working quickly, she knew that Cook would get up and come down to spoil the surprise in less than an hour.
It had taken her three weeks to get a look in Cook's purse and read her ID to learn when her birthday was. Now it was here, January sixteenth, and Erica was going to do something nice for her.
Within twenty minutes, she had the bacon frying and the eggs cooking up nicely. Feeling smugly proud of herself, she had finally stopped paying attention to every creak and groan from the old house that had caused her to jump with fright, each one making her think Cook had caught her before she was ready. Turning around, she nearly dropped the spatula and gasped in fright. "Faith! What are you doing up!" Erica whispered.
"I got cold!" she muttered. "You were gone! What are you doing, anyway?"
Slowing her breath, Erica laughed quietly. "Today is Cook's birthday! I'm making her breakfast in bed!"
Grinning sleepily, Faith asked, "May I help?"
"Shhh!" Erica scowled. "You'll wake her up before I'm ready!"
"Sorry!" Faith whispered. "So, may I?"
"Sure, just watch the bacon while I get the milk out." Erica ordered.
Faith looked at the bacon. "What am I watching for?" she asked innocently.
Having learned to make eggs and bacon for her mom, Erica rolled her eyes and looked sideways at her cousin. "It's a good thing you're rich!" she remarked. "'Cuz otherwise when you grow up you'd starve!"
Crossing her arms, Faith glared at her. "It's not my fault! No one will teach me how to cook!"
Seeing she was upset, Erica sighed. "I'm sorry, Faith. Here! I'll teach you!" She spent the next five minutes explaining what she was doing and why. "See? It's not really that hard!"
"It's actually kinda fun!" Faith giggled. "I wish Cook would teach me! I'll bet she knows about a million recipes!"
When the eggs finally finished cooking just right, Erica carefully scooped the two onto the fine china plate. Putting two pieces of bacon next to them while Faith buttered the toast, she smiled. "I wish we had a flower to put on the tray."
"Why?" Faith asked.
Erica explained as she placed a glass of milk next to the tumbler of orange juice. "It's sort of tradition. When you take someone breakfast in bed, you're supposed to put a flower on the tray, sometimes in a tiny vase."
Getting an idea, Faith smiled. "I'll be right back!" she whispered as she put down the half-buttered toast and took off through the house.
"Faith! Quiet or she'll hear you!" Erica yelled with a whisper. Grumbling, she finished the toast Faith had abandoned and, after putting it on the tray, picked it up and started toward the kitchen door. "Great! Now that I can actually use her help, Faith isn't here!" she said to herself. Turning around, she backed into the door and pushed it open slowly with her behind.
Making her way through the dining room and then the living room approaching the stairs, Faith came dashing out of the library and nearly ran into her. "Careful!" Erica barked, wincing at her own loudness.
"I made this real quick!" Holding something out, Erica could see it was an origami rose.
"That's perfect, Faith!" Erica smiled. "Put it on the tray next to the plate!" After she did, Erica started slowly stepping toward the stairs.
"Let me go ahead of you." Faith insisted. "That way I can open her door!"
"Good idea!" she whispered. Erica had to admit, having Faith's help made things easier and a lot more fun. When Erica reached the top of the steps, she whispered, "Go down the hall and see if her door is still closed." Watching Faith silently jog ahead of her, she carefully walked down the long hallway. Noticing the tray was starting to get heavy and not wanting to drop it, Erica put it down in the middle of the hallway to rest her arms.
"Erica? She's still asleep!" Faith whispered as she came jogging back down the hall.
She stopped Faith just inches from stepping into the middle of the tray. "No!"
Faith looked down, barely able to see the tray in the middle of the floor. "What's it doing there?" she whispered.
"It got heavy!" Erica explained. "I needed to rest."
"Oh." Faith smiled. "May I carry it the rest of the way?"
"Oh, sure!" Erica grumbled. "I do all the work and then you take it across the finish line!"
"Hey! I made the flower!"
"And I cooked it and carried it all the way up here!"
"So? Just 'cuz you're weak and out of shape and you can't finish the job!"
While the two stood arguing at full volume, the lights in the hallway clicked on. Immediately they stopped talking as Cook came out to see what the commotion was. "What in the world..." She looked down at the two pre-teens and the tray behind them. "Alright." she demanded. "What's this?"
Erica looked down at the floor and fidgeted with her fingers. "It's um... breakfast for you?" she answered.
Smiling broadly, Faith shouted, "Happy Birthday!"
Theresa was flummoxed into speechlessness as Fredrick, Franchesca, and Heather all ran out into the hallway to find out what was going on.
Dancing in the hallway, Faith sang 'Happy Birthday' while Erica turned red. "I... I made you breakfast in bed. I wanted it to be a surprise!"
The family's cook was touched, until realization set in. "You mean you've been fiddling around in my kitchen? Without supervision? You could have burned the house down!" Her shouting caused Faith to stop singing before reaching the end of the song.
Tying her robe as she approached, Heather tried to defuse the situation. "Cook, I think Erica was just wanting to show how much she cares for you." Looking down at the rapidly growing girl, her heart ached at the sight, knowing that far too soon her fantasy would have to come to an end... one way or another. "Erica sweetie, how did you know what to do?"
She stammered out a reply. "I... I... used... I used to... make it for my mom."
"I made the flower for you, Cook." Faith noted shyly.
Her mother smiled. "That's nice, dear. It's a lovely flower!"
"I helped cook the bacon, too!"
Theresa blustered. "Your mother may have taught you how to cook, but she didn't teach you how to cook in my kitchen!" Looking down at the tray, she saw its contents. "Is that eggs?" she barked.
"Y-yes ma'am." Erica half smiled. "I... I know they're your f-favorite... eggs over easy!"
"Yes, but what am I to do about eggs now that you've used them? I needed those for the soufflé tomorrow!" Seeing hurt in the girl's eyes, her anger melted instantly. "I'm sorry, dearie. It was a lovely thought. Thank you!"
Picking up the tray, Erica offered it to her. "H-happy Birthday... Theresa."
Taking it, she smiled down at the girl. "That's Cook to you, dearie! Now if you'll all excuse me, I have a breakfast to go eat!"
Erica smiled while Theresa headed back towards her own room, thinking about going downstairs to clean up the breakfast dishes when she heard Cook call out from down the hallway.
"And don't you dare touch those dishes!"
The three laughed along with April as they finished telling the story.
Wiping a tear of laughter out of her eye, Erica composed herself. "I swear, right when she said that, I was just thinking of doing the dishes for her! It was eerie! Like she could read my mind or something!"
When at last the laughter died down, Heather stood slowly. "Well, I think this would be a good time to turn in. I'll leave the sleeping arrangements up to you three. You're old enough to figure something out." Turning to her niece, she hugged Erica tightly. "I'm so glad you came home, sweetie! We've all missed you... very much!"
Returning the embrace, she felt like she was a little girl all over again. "Thank you, Mamma. For everything."
Releasing her, Heather turned to April. "I'm so glad you found one another, my dear. It is truly wonderful to finally meet you!"
Blushing, April smiled and, unsure, extended a hand. "It's lovely meeting you, too... Heather. Thank you for taking care of Erica growing up."
Still full of guilt for having sent the daughter of her heart away and not adopting her as she felt she should have done, Heather wiped a tear from her eye. Pushing April's hand aside, she took the young woman into a gentle hug before silently turning to the daughter of her body. "Faith?"
"Mamma?" she replied. Tears threatening to break free again, she ran into her mother's arms. "I'm sorry, Mamma! So sorry! I... I love you!"
Her mother cried with her. "It's OK, dear! I understand! I love you, too."
Handing a tissue to each of them once they'd separated, Erica let them dry their eyes before saying, "Goodnight, Mamma." While her aunt headed up the stairs, Erica looked at April, then Faith. "Well, what are we going to do?"
"I'm sleeping here." April took charge. "You two can go to your rooms!"
"I... I have an idea, if you two aren't comfortable sharing a room yet." Faith offered. When the two looked to her, she turned to Erica's guest. "You and I could share my room, April. It's a king with lots of space."
"It's up to you." Erica said, looking at April.
Unsure, she looked at Faith suspiciously. "I get the feeling you just want to keep an eye on me to make sure I don't sneak into Erica's bed tonight."
Shaking her head, Faith swallowed hard. "A-actually, I was thinking it would be for you to keep an eye on me." She looked at Erica longingly. "So you know that I won't." Looking at April once more, she gave her a hesitant hug and stepped back. "I... I'll leave it up to you two. Goodnight." Faith left quickly without even giving her cousin a goodnight hug.
The two now left alone, Erica sighed. "Well, it's your call."
She looked at Erica and smiled. "I could always follow your aunt's advice and sleep with you!" She put her arms around Erica's neck.
Pulling her down to sit on the couch with her once more, Erica took a breath. "April, about earlier. I... I need to tell you what happened."
"What did happen up there?" April looked at her quizzically. "When you two came down, you both looked... um..." She stopped and just let Erica explain.
Taking April's hands in hers, she sighed. "She... she kissed me. Like a serious kiss." she closed her eyes. "Like a lover's kiss."
"I see." April answered. "And you let her?" When Erica simply nodded in reply, she probed further. "Did you kiss her back?"
"Yes." Erica replied ashamedly. "She stopped it from going too far, though."
"How far did it get?" she asked, half not wanting to hear the answer.
"Just kissing... but..." Erica stammered out the rest. "...I couldn't... I tried..."
Using a finger, April lifted Erica's gaze up and placed it on her love's lips to still her stammering reply. "You don't have to say it. I know. You couldn't stop. You didn't want to. And you didn't want her to stop, either. Did you?"
She shook her head and screwed up her face, trying to hold back the tears. "No! I failed you! I don't know how she can do this to me... make me forget everything! Make me forget you." She took another breath, slowing the flow of shameful tears. "She just makes me feel so... beautiful."
April ran her fingers through Erica's hair, sighing in exasperation. "We talked about this, E. You need to work this out with her. You can't move forward until you know what you really want." She leaned in and kissed Erica's cheek sweetly. "You know I love you, and I know you love me. I can wait. I've waited six years... what's a few more days?"
"April... I... I know what you're saying, but I know what I want." Erica looked into her lovely gray eyes. "Faith and I don't trust each other alone. We can't resist the temptation." Looking away, she began justifying their agreement. "Besides, what kind of future could we have? Never able to live the lives we would want together? It just... it wouldn't work! We've decided to just never be alone... never let temptation have a chance to make us do something we'd all regret."
"You can say that all you want E," April lectured, "but the heart wants what the heart wants. What are you going to do if circumstances force you two to be alone with one another? Run away? What happens when your aunt passes? You'll have to spend a lot of time with her going over the details. Are you just going to forsake that and let Faith deal with it? Alone?"
Shaking her head, she sighed and looked at Erica. "You need to resolve this. I'll be here 'til it's settled. If that's only as a friend, then that's what I'll be." Pulling Erica up to stand next to her and embrace her lovingly she added, "And if it's as something more... I'll happily be there for that, too!"
"I love you, April." Erica smiled. "Always have and always will."
"And I love you, Erica." April sighed. "Always have and always will!"
The two hugged and started up the stairs together. Looking around, Erica shook her head as they did. "God, it's so funny. I only lived here a year, and it's like I never left... like I've always lived here."
Snaking her arm around Erica's waist, April smiled. "From a certain point of view, Erica never lived anywhere else. She was born and grew up here."
"I'm really messed up, aren't I?" Erica laughed and put her arm around April's shoulder.
"Most definitely!" April quipped.
Reaching the top of the stairs, Erica saw their bags in front of her bedroom door. "So then... where are you going to sleep?"
She spiraled out of Erica's arm and walked backwards toward the bedroom. "Where I'm sleeping isn't the question. Where you're sleeping is." Nodding toward Erica's bedroom door, she smiled. "Come on! We'll take the bags in your room, unpack, and then figure things out!"
Following April into her old room, even as Erica stepped in, it was as though time had turned in on itself. The room was the same as the first day she'd arrived, not a single thing different or out of place. Entering and closing the door behind her, Erica pointed up at the gaslights along the wall. "Those are what I was telling you about! Real gaslights! I remember how scared I was that first night when the power went out! Then Fredrick went around and lit all the lamps and it was like turning back the clock a century!"
Opening her suitcase, April took the contents out and opened a drawer. "Um... honey? I think your aunt forgot something."
Walking over, she looked inside and almost died of embarrassment. "Oh, Lord!" She withdrew a pair of panties she'd worn when she was thirteen. "I wonder..." Erica walked over to the wardrobe and drew the doors open.
"Is this the way to Narnia?" April joked as she looked at the dresses, skirts, and blouses in Erica's wardrobe. "Wow! You had good taste at thirteen!"
Erica pulled down one of her old school uniforms and showed it to April. "I asked Mamma to get me these for home-school. I wore them every day! It made me feel proper and elegant, like the daughter of a wealthy aristocrat!"
Nodding in approval, April raised an eyebrow. "Well weren't you?"
"I suppose I was, in a way." Erica admitted. Returning the dress, she closed the wardrobe. "There should be room in my bottom drawer. I almost never used it." Moving back to the dresser, she opened the drawer and froze.
Reaching in, she pulled out Faith's nightgown, the same one she'd worn her first and last nights in her adopted home. Smelling it brought back a flood of memories. "I forgot. I put this in here that last morning. I... I guess no one's been in the drawers since." She smiled wistfully and set it aside. "Here... there's plenty of room."
Starting to put her clothes in the drawer along with Erica, April saw her reaction to the child's nightgown. "It's Faith's, isn't it?"
Without pausing in putting away her things, Erica nodded. "I borrowed it from her that first night. It's the first nightgown I ever wore."
She picked it up and sniffed it and suddenly could see the best friend she once knew. "It smells like you... I mean, like the old you I remember."
Nodding without looking at April, Erica finished unpacking. "I know." Standing up with a fresh nightgown and underwear in hand, she walked over to her toiletries bag and retrieved her toothbrush, paste, and mouthwash. "Did you want a shower before or after me?"
Shaking her head, April got out her flannel pajamas. "No, I'm bushed. I'll take mine in the morning."
"Breakfast is at seven." Erica noted with a shrug as she headed for the bathroom. "Plan accordingly."
"Seven!" April shouted. "What is this, a farm?"
Turning and leaning out of the bathroom door smiling at her, Erica shook her head. "No. It's an estate."
"Oh!" April responded snootily. "Well then, We guess We shall rise at six to shower ourselves and get properly attired to dine!"
"To break our fast, April." Erica joked back. "If you're going to poke fun, at least do it right!"
Twenty minutes later, Erica entered her room once more, hair wrapped in a towel and a terrycloth robe covering her nightgown. "April?"
"Yea?"
Flipping her head over, Erica rubbed her hair. "Could I get a hand?"
"Sure, babe." April replied, setting aside the book she was reading and padding over to the vanity, pausing to stare at it as Erica took a seat. "Wow! she exclaimed. "Just how rich is your aunt, hun?"
Erica tossed her towel into the bathroom, shrugging. "I actually don't know. Very, I guess. The only thing she ever told me was that she had more than she could ever spend and not to worry about it."
"I guess!" April noted, antiques being a hobby of hers. "Honey, this vanity is worth more than my car!"
Shrugging, Erica just brushed out her hair. "She had it since before I came to live here. It might be part of the house's original furniture. I really don't know, though. It might be a family heirloom. Her parents were wealthy, too."
Picking up the brush, April took over. "And she let a twelve year old use it?"
"It's not like I was carving my initials into everything!" Erica giggled. "I was a good girl!" She smiled at April's reflection in her old vanity where she'd first and last seen her mother's youthful reflection.
Switching to a heated curling brush, April mused. "So what did twelve-year-old you do for fun around here? I know there's no cell service and you didn't get your computer 'til you were thirteen."
"In the fall we went on hikes a lot." Erica answered as April brushed and dried her hair. "Once winter set in, we played in the snow and inside, mostly with Faith's toys until I got some of my own for Christmas. By the time spring got here, I was moved into this room and mostly entertained myself with books and writing my first stories. Then summer came and Faith, Mike, and I spent a lot of time playing outside." Erica sighed as she remembered how wonderful that last summer had been. "When I turned thirteen, I spent a lot of time on my computer... looking for you."
"Summer five years ago?" April rolled her eyes. "God! I think I was in my Goth stage then! Can't you just see me, dressed in all black, brooding about everything? I think even if you had seen a picture of me, you wouldn't have recognized it!"
"I bet you were still adorable, though!" Erica flirted. Turning to look in April's eyes, she sighed. "I tried so hard for so long to find you and reach out to you. I... I really needed you. I wanted you to tell me what to do. I knew I wanted to be a girl... I guess I always was inside and just never knew what it was, but I couldn't keep it up much longer. I... I wanted you to tell me... tell me what was the right thing to do."
April turned Erica back around and continued brushing. "If you had asked me then, I would have told you to go take a long walk off a short pier! I was so angry with you then. I thought you'd forgotten about me. It's what my parents kept telling me... that that's why you never called or wrote. Done!"
She stood and wrapped her arms around April's neck. "Thank you! And I could never forget you, even if it took me a lifetime to find you!"
"Aww! Aren't you so sweet!" Kissing Erica on the nose, April sighed. "Now I think you should go across the hall and see what's what."
Terror crept across Erica's face. "I... I can't! April! I don't want to! I... I want to stay here, and I want you to stay here... with me!" Seeing April about to object she added, "We don't have to do anything! Not even kiss! I just... I want to be near you." Looking down at her feet, she sighed wistfully. "Maybe wake up in each other's arms?"
She shook her head. "That sounds really nice, but you're just not ready, E."
"We can just leave!" Erica suggested. "Just... just go back to the apartment! Eventually I'll get over it!"
April laughed. "It's not a cold, Erica! It's love! You can't just 'get over it'! You have to face it... learn from it... understand what it really is... and then you'll know what to do. I won't need to tell you. You'll just know. Then I'll know what I need to do."
"Can't I just wait a few years? It's probably just hormones!"
"For six years, Erica? Through puberty... twice?"
She nodded in grudging acceptance. "Right. 'You can't run from trouble..."
"...there ain't no place that far!'" they recited together.
"Right!" April nodded. "Now go! I'm going to take my book downstairs and relax on the couch. I'll see you in the morning."
Untying her robe, Erica slipped it off and started for the bath to hang it up.
"Whoa!" April cried looking at Erica's white satin nightgown. "You going in dressed like that? She'll jump your bones before you can close the door! Hell, I might!"
Blushing, Erica looked at her nightgown. "Too much?"
"Put the robe back on!" April ordered. "Jeez! Slut!"
"Runaway!"
"Tranny!"
"Junky!"
"Hey! Low blow, E!"
Slipping back into her robe, Erica tied it closed. "You wanna talk about low blows, I need to tell you about Chet Mansfield sometime!"
April shook her head. "Somehow I get the feeling I won't like this story..."
"Depends on your point of view." Erica noted. Turning around to show herself she asked, "Better?"
"Much." April kissed her nose again. Turning serious, she said, "Now go talk to her. If you need me, you know where I'll be."
After April left, Erica walked around her room for several minutes gathering her courage. Steeling herself, she opened her door. Looking across the hallway at the door that used to be her own, she froze in fear for a moment before she forced herself onward.
Erica was determined to face Faith, stand strong for April's sake, and prove that no matter how much her body craved her cousin, her heart could conquer the desire with April's love.
Unfortunately, her heart was on desire's side.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Faith heard a faint knock on the door. "Come in, April." she said dismissively, thinking that she had decided to keep an eye on her through the night after all. Walking back into her bathroom, she called back over her shoulder. "I'll be out in a few, alright?"
Entering as Faith closed the bathroom door, Erica waited patiently. First sitting at Faith's vanity, she decided that if she really wanted to test herself, she should sit on Faith's bed. Moving quickly, she sat down and waited again. As she lingered, she began to think that maybe it was too explicitly sexual to be sitting on Faith's bed in nothing but a robe and nightgown. She was about to move back to the vanity when Faith came out.
"April, I was hoping we'd get a chance to talk." Faith began as she came out, not looking at her guest. "I wanted to tell you that Erica and I..." Looking up, and seeing who was sitting on her bed, she jumped. "Erica!"
"What about us?" Erica asked shyly.
Quickly tiptoeing over to her, Faith lowered her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. "Erica! Are you crazy? What are you doing here!? I thought we agreed being alone together was a bad idea! What if April comes in?"
"She sent me here." Erica stated calmly. "What were you going to tell her?"
"I..." Faith moved closer to Erica, stopped, turned away, and wrapped her arms around herself. "I was going to tell her that you and I were OK and that she didn't have anything to worry about. Now I'm not so sure."
Erica slowly stood and walked up behind Faith. "Hold me?" she asked.
A tear of frustration rolled down Faith's cheek. "I... I can't! Don't you understand, Erica? If I do... I... I don't know what will happen!"
"Neither do I," Erica replied softly, "but I know I missed you, that I love you, and that I want to hold you and know that everything is going to be OK between us." She placed her hand on Faith's shoulder. "Please?"
She turned around slowly. They were still very close in height, Erica only half an inch taller. Looking up slightly into Erica's beautiful green eyes, Faith tried to speak, but words wouldn't form. Her mouth moved inarticulately as she was overcome with desire.
Erica slowly opened her arms and wrapped them around Faith, pulling her in tightly. "I... I missed you." she whispered.
Tears flowed down her cheeks like running water. "I missed you too, Erica! Oh God, did I miss you!"
They stood there holding one another for what seemed like hours. Neither of them speaking, they just reveled in the comfort of each other. Finally, Faith's tears stopped and she stepped back. "I... Erica I... I still want you." she warned. "You should go."
"Never." Erica replied. "I will always be here for you, Faith. As God is my witness, I will."
Pulling back, Faith's face hardened. "I... I don't believe in God." she said. "Not anymore."
She stepped back and sat on Faith's bed. "Why? Because life got hard?"
"No! Because if God was real and loved me, He wouldn't let me feel like this!" she nearly shouted.
"Really?" Erica challenged her point. "You think that God just goes around making people feel whatever He wants them to feel? If that were true the whole world would be one giant paradise! But it's not! It's messy, complicated, and full of mistakes! But they're our mistakes Faith! Not His! He doesn't condemn us... we condemn ourselves!"
"See? That's why I can't believe in Him! If He is real, he's a sadistic bastard that likes watching us suffer!"
Shaking her head sadly, Erica almost laughed at how similar Faith's words were to her own thoughts when she was twelve. "We make our own choices, Faith. You, me, Mamma, April... everyone. We chose to be kind or cruel, generous or greedy, hateful..." She paused to rise and walk over to Faith. "...or loving." She leaned in and kissed Faith tenderly.
Moaning as she felt Erica's lips once more, she slid her hands around her cousin's waist, then pulled back, carefully taking Erica's robe tie into her hands. Pulling slowly, she undid the knot and released it, letting Erica's robe fall open. Sliding her hands up over Erica's shoulders, she pushed the robe gently off, letting it pool at Erica's feet. Looking down, she drew in a breath at the stunning beauty before her. "Oh God, Erica! I... I don't think I can stop myself! I... I want you too badly!"
Erica took Faith's hands. "Then I will. Where you're weak, I'll be strong. Where I'm weak, you can be strong." Erica moved them over to sit on her bed. Looking into Faith's eyes, Erica smiled. "I love you, Faith. I want you to be happy, and God loves us both and wants us to be happy. If I have to let you take me tonight to prove it to you, I will. Gladly."
Looking at her cousin, the smile she saw warmed Faith's heart. She wanted desperately to just push Erica down on her bed and take her, use her, and love her. When she tried to move though, she found she couldn't. No matter how badly she wanted to, she just sat there and stared at Erica, frozen and powerless.
Tempted to leave, Erica paused and sat on Faith's bed, extending a hand to her. "I... I want to talk to you... about April."
Feeling a pang of jealousy, Faith pushed it aside and took Erica's hand. "Um... OK. What about her?"
Trying not to hurt Faith's easily bruised feelings, Erica chose her words carefully. "I... I love her, Faith... and she loves me. So much so that she risked losing me to you, made me come to you tonight, just so I could be sure of what I really want."
Swallowing against the fear, Faith looked at the beautiful girl sitting on her bed in nothing but a sexy nightgown. "So then... what do you want?"
"You." she began. "Your happiness, most of all. I... I couldn't stand if I hurt you... but... I love April, too. I know she loves me and don't want to hurt her either, but it seems that no matter what I chose, one of you gets hurt."
Sighing sympathetically, Faith looked down at her sadly. "It's OK, Erica. You should chose April. Mamma would never let us be together, anyway. I... I'll be alright. I mean, we'd still be family."
Gripping Faith's hand, Erica shook her head. "It's not that easy, Faith. I love you and want you, just as much as you do. That's not just going to just go away, for either of us. If it was, it would have happened years ago."
Tempted to drag Erica into bed to finish what they'd started earlier, to cross that line, Faith made herself pull her hand away. "No, Erica. You can't. We can't. You can have a future with April. A family. If we..." Collecting herself at the thought of Erica and her having a family of their own, Faith forcibly shook the image from her mind. "We just can't. I can't let you lose April! Not again! I love you too much to let you lose her!"
"Either way, I won't lose April." Erica shook her head happily. "She's already told me that she'd be there for me no matter what I decided, even if it was just as a friend. So really, it just comes down to what I really want... and if you still want me. I... I know being with me would make life harder, for us both, but if you're willing to endure the hardships, then so am I. We can move to another state! We could get married in nearly half the country where it's legal! I... well, I'm still legally male... for now... so even that can't stop us!"
"Erica!" Faith whined. "You're forgetting about Mamma! She'd never give us her blessing! We'd move out of state and never see her again! You just got her back! I can't do that to you!"
Sighing fatefully, Erica saw that Faith wasn't going to budge. Suddenly a thought that ran through her head that made her giggle slightly. Before she realized it, she found herself saying, "Too bad we..."
Faith sat next to her quickly. "Too bad we what?" she probed.
Shaking her head dismissively, Erica smiled. "Nothing. Just a stupid idea. It would never work... it never does."
Now almost begging, Faith began to insist. "Please! Just tell me!"
Rolling her eyes, she sighed. "OK, fine! I was thinking that if you could be happy with having me only when I visit, knowing the rest of the time that I'm with April, and if she could be happy that way, it would 'magically' solve everything. See? Stupid idea, huh? People try it all the time, but it never works out. Jealousy's a real thing!"
Without the slightest hesitation, Faith nodded. "OK. I agree."
Smiling at her, Erica sighed. "I'm glad you understand. I knew you would never seriously consider..."
"No." Faith interrupted. "I mean, I agree to the idea of sharing you with April... if she's willing, that is."
Stunned at the sudden reversal, Erica shook her head. "No, Faith! Weren't you listening? People have tried this before! It always ends badly! No! Besides, April would never agree to that!"
"How do you know?" Faith debated. "You thought I would disagree."
Thinking how to argue that point, Erica paused before answering. "Because she loves me and..."
"...wants you to be happy." Faith interrupted. "So much so she risked losing you to me by making you come here tonight. Sounds pretty selfless to me." Changing tactics, Faith pressed the point. "She obviously isn't freaked out at the idea of you and I being a couple, even though we're cousins. Do you think you picking me over her would make her stop loving you?"
"No." Erica answered hesitantly. "That's why..."
"So what makes you so sure she wouldn't agree?"
Unable to answer, Erica shook her head. "Faith... you know I love you. I know you love me, too. Do you still want me?"
"Of course I do!" Faith admitted freely.
"Then forget that stupid idea of mine and..."
"It's not a stupid idea, Erica!" Faith continued her argument. "It's a wonderful idea! We should do it! Don't you see? It's the only way you'll ever be truly happy! I can't let you give up April for me... but I couldn't stand the idea of hurting you by rejecting you... and I'd be happy to see you happy with her!"
"It won't work, Faith." Erica sighed. "Eventually you'd resent April's time with me... or April would resent my time with you."
Silence hung between them for almost long enough to become awkward. Eventually Faith asked, "Will you hold me like you used to?"
"Of course!" Erica smiled as she lay down on the bed and waited while Faith crawled up next to her so they were facing one another. Extending her hand until Faith took it, the two intertwined their fingers together and smiled back at each other happily, if somewhat nervously as though they were thirteen all over again and sharing their last night in bed together.
Lowering her voice to a whisper, Faith asked, "If I tell you something, do you promise not to get mad?" Seeing Erica nod and smile at the shared memory, Faith shook her head. "No you have to promise!"
"OK, I promise not to get mad!" Erica whispered.
"I think you're beautiful! I'm glad you came to me tonight!"
"Faith? If I tell you a secret, do you promise not to tell?"
"I promise! What is it?"
"It's really nice to be in bed with you again. You're kind, and beautiful, and you give me a feeling like I'm the most desirable woman in the world! But remember you promised not to tell anyone... especially not Mamma!"
"I wanted to tell you something." Faith continued. "I know why you needed to go away. I've wanted you almost the entire time I've known you. I've dreamed about you. Felt you taking me... loving me... and I you. Sometimes, before you got your own room, I would lie awake at night and hold you as you slept and pretended we were married. You've been the star of nearly every sexual fantasy I've ever had. I think that's the main reason why Mamma sent you away." Faith gripped Erica's hand a little tighter as she scootched closer. "I am. Curious, that is. About being with you. About what it might be like."
Erica's smile never faltered. "Faith, I love you. More than I could ever say."
Noticing that this time Erica didn't say 'But', Faith's breath caught. "Erica... please don't tease! I... I don't think I could stand it if you rejected me!"
"Who says I would, Faith?" Erica responded breathily. "I meant what I said. If you want me, and taking me is how you want me to show you how much I love you... and how much God loves us, then I'm yours to have."
Remembering something from the night her mother split them into separate rooms, Faith took on a serious tone and changed the subject slightly. "I've wanted to tell you something else for some time. Remember when I told you that I turned you on and you said you weren't a perv? It hurt that you said that... because I was turned on and it made me feel like a perv for it."
"Oh, Faith!" Erica sighed. "I'm sorry! I was a stupid little girl and thought that you'd hate me if I admitted the truth... that I was attracted to you... and still am. I was so scared that you'd get mad at me again!"
Scootching closer, Faith was now so close that their clasped hands were touching both of their breasts at the same time and their faces were only inches apart. "I remember that night you promised never to leave me."
"Sometimes I wish I hadn't." Erica admitted. "But then I never really left you... we were separated. I no more left you willingly than I left April willingly. Besides, I think in the end it was for the best. We both needed that time. To see if what we had was real or just..." She paused and leaned in until her lips were less than an inch from Faith's. "I think five years is long enough to tell that what we feel isn't just a childish crush."
Leaning forward to close the gap, Faith let their lips gently brush against one another. After a moment she smiled. "I like this! I... I think I could be happy just having you like this every once in a while. Just to know that you love me this much... trust me this much. That I could take you and nothing or no one could stop me. That for this moment, you're really my Erica. You have to ask April about your idea. The worst she can say is 'no'."
Sighing in resignation, Erica nodded. "OK... I'll ask." looking up with a smile, she added, "You know what?" Seeing Faith shake her head, Erica continued. "This... what we have right now? It was worth what it took to get us here. God does know best!"
Rolling Erica over, Faith cuddled up against her back, her arm draped over Erica's slender waist and her hand nestled between Erica's perfect breasts, gripping her nightgown like she used to do. After a short time they fell asleep like that, Faith waking several times just to see that it wasn't a dream, that Erica was really there and loved her. This is enough... and it was worth it! she realized, running her hands over Erica's smooth and perfect body. Relishing the sensuous way her cousin responded to her touch as she slept, Faith knew then that no matter what else she did in life, that loving Erica was not only right, but the way things were meant to be.
Just before six, Erica awoke out of habit. Faith was sound asleep and she didn't want to disturb her, but knew that their night had to end. She knew now what she wanted out of a relationship with Faith. It had never been just about sex; it was about intimacy. The closeness, shared affection, and love... the true romantic love they had for one another... sweet and beautiful. Turning over to face her, Erica luxuriated in the feel of Faith's arms wrapping around her waist and her legs intertwining with her own.
"Faith." she said just above a whisper.
Her eyes slowly fluttering open, she smiled and pulled Erica tightly against her, letting their bodies do what they yearned for. "Good morning, love!" she moaned before kissing Erica slowly and sensuously once more.
Closing her eyes, Erica relished the adoration Faith showered on her. Having had major body image issues for years, it was beyond flattering to have a beautiful young woman so desire her that even the fact that they were related couldn't stop her need to have her. When Faith's tongue slid past her lips, she yielded to the intrusion willingly, reveling in the feel of unbridled passion while Faith's hands roamed up and down her back delicately, making every nerve in her body tingle with desire.
Feeling her breasts press firmly but delicately against Erica's, Faith moaned through her nose and began running her hand down over the slightly younger woman's rear. Caressing the skin through the satin panties that were all that stood between her fingers and Erica's blissful release, the nightgown having ridden up in the night, she knew then how desperately she wanted Erica. More than ever in her life. Pulling her hips tightly up to Erica's with their intertwined legs, she was nearly overcome with the passion.
Suddenly aware of how serious they were getting, the two stopped and looked deeply in one another's eyes. Each seeing the desperate desire of the other so obviously, but knowing if they went any further they would cross an invisible line from cousins to lovers, they both made themselves turn away from the burning ache in their bodies that was screaming for them to cross that line, consequences be damned.
Backing off slowly, Faith continued to caress Erica's exposed skin and kissed her gently once more, letting the fire in her belly die down to a slow ember. When as last Faith's craving for Erica's body began to be sated, she slipped her legs free and pulled her arm back to herself. "I... I want more, but I can be happy with just this... for now!" she smiled.
Erica's breath was still deep and deliberate, each intake of air trying to stem the tide of need in her own body. "I know what you mean, Faith." she gasped. "I... I've never... never been so tempted to let someone have me as I am right now! I want you to take me! To use me for your pleasure!"
"But?" Faith intuited Erica's hesitancy.
"No... no buts, Faith." she smiled. "If you want to take me, you can. I'll... I'll let you. I love you that much, even though I want to wait."
Tempted nearly beyond her ability to resist, Faith began to move forward again, ready to roll Erica on her back, strip her naked, and spend a few hours learning every sensitive part of the woman's body. She would have too, had it not been for the voice in the back of her head screaming at her to stop... to not hurt her beloved Erica that way.
Sighing frustratedly, Faith moaned her need into submission. "No... I, I just can't do that... not yet, anyway. You... you're not ready." Smiling wickedly, Faith slipped her body up against Erica's sensuously once more, sliding her legs up and down Erica's smooth skin. "But the second you are, nothing is going to stop me!"
Smiling back at her, Erica loved the feel of Faith's tempting flesh against her own. "Good! I promise, you'll be the first to know!" Pausing a moment, the young woman's smile turned mirthful. "OK, maybe the second!" she giggled as she pressed her own body up against Faith's, letting the smooth satin of her nightgown that covered her breasts slide over Faith's chest once more, causing her cousin's body to shudder in need. Running her fingers through Faith's blonde curls slowly and seductively, Erica was barely able to make herself stop.
Disentangling from Faith's loving embrace, she slowly slipped out of the bed and retrieved the discarded robe from where Faith had let it drop to the floor. "I love you, Faith." she said just above a whisper. "More than words can ever express! When I'm ready, I fully intend to show you just how much!" At that, she slipped out the door and back to her own room.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Erica waited outside her bathroom door. "Hurry up, April! We're going to be late!" She heard the water turn off and the shower curtain open. Waiting a minute, she saw the door open as April exited, wrapped in a towel and smiling gaily as she pulled off the shower cap.
"There!" she said. "Bathroom's all yours!"
"Oh, thank you so very much, dear!" Erica quipped. "We have about five minutes to get downstairs and you still need to get dressed!" Entering the bathroom while April dressed, she brushed her teeth, rinsed, and ran out to the vanity to finish her makeup. "Hurry! They'll be here any minute!"
Hearing a knock at the front door made the two pause and look at one another. Racing furiously, April dashed into the rest of her clothes, giggling crazily, while Erica finished her face and touched up her hair.
Standing and heading for the bedroom door, Erica watched April drop her dress over her slender body. Giving her dark hair a flip, it settled into place perfectly, a quality Erica loved, and envied, about her. "Ready?" she asked as April slipped her shoes on.
"Ready!" she cried as she ran over to join Erica at the door.
Exiting into the upstairs hall, they linked hands and smiled at one another. Approaching the top of the stairs, Erica could feel April's arm tense.
"Nervous?" She asked as they started down the stairs.
"Just a lot!" April nodded vigorously.
Descending, Erica saw Brooke and Jenny just taking off their coats and handing them to Fredrick.
Brooke looked up at the two coming down the stairs together. "Erica!" she cried. Meeting the two at the bottom of the steps, she couldn't believe her eyes. She looks... happy! Brook smiled. Opening her arms, she took Erica into a quick hug. "Oh, girl! I missed you!"
Her honorary niece returned the sentiment. "I missed you, too!" Repeating the process with Jenny, she stood back a little. "Aunt Brooke? Aunt Jenny? I'd like you to meet April!"
The teen was hugged by them both before she had a chance to speak. Finally, she turned to Brooke. "I understand you knew Erica's father, Jack."
She nodded solemnly. "I did. He was a good man. My best friend."
Looking at Erica, April smiled. "He must have been. His daughter is amazing!"
Just then, Heather walked in from the living room. "Brooke! Jenny! I'm so glad you two could make it!" she greeted them.
Erica was happy to see the bright shine of the woman she'd known as a child once more. Gone were the sweatpants and simple top. Her aunt had dressed for dinner as she used to.
While Fredrick escorted the five ladies to the dining room, they were joined by Faith, who'd managed to find a simple but elegant black dress in her tangled mess of a room.
"Sorry I'm late, Mamma!" she apologized. "I... I had trouble finding something to wear!"
Taking her seat, Heather shook her head. "We'll have to fix that." she commented.
Hugging Faith, they kissed each other on the cheek. "You look great, Faith!" Erica complimented her.
"Please!" Faith rolled her eyes. "I look like I dragged this dress out of the bottom of my wardrobe... because I did! You two look lovely, though!"
She blushed and said, "Thanks!" while April just smiled.
After they were all seated, Cook came out twice, serving April, Erica, and Faith after Heather and their guests were served. When everyone but Faith looked up toward Heather to say grace, she just looked at Faith with sadness in her eyes.
Shyly, Faith lowered her head with the rest of the table. Then, just as Heather was about to speak, Faith shocked them all as she spoke. "Dear Lord, thank you for the blessings you have seen fit to bestow upon us, and make us truly thankful for them. In the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ, Amen."
Stunned silence followed until Heather smiled and repeated, "Amen!"
Slowly the others followed suit before Erica looked over at her cousin. "Faith! I'm... well... OK, that was a thing!"
Laughter erupted before Heather bade everyone enjoy their meal.
Making small talk through their shared meal, Brooke looked across the table at April sitting next to Erica, with Faith between Erica and her mother; the girls' usual places switched. She watched them for some time, eating and talking, obviously at ease with each other, and envied them their comfort. Finally, after being unable to tell just by looking, Brooke had to say something.
"Erica, I was wondering something. Are you and April..."
Looking at her father's best friend with a puzzled expression, Erica couldn't resist the temptation. "Are we... happy? ...healthy? ...boinking?"
Stunned as Erica cracked a half grin and everyone else laughed, it was then that Brooke finally saw so much of Jack in Erica, even though she looked nearly the same as the girl's mother did the day they'd met. "No, you clown! Are you a couple!?"
The two teens looked at one another smiling before they nodded together.
Dropping her fork, Heather had expected their typical long-winded explanation. "When did this happen? Last night you two wouldn't even admit you were dating!"
"This morning, Mamma." Erica said, turning to face her. "Try and keep up!" Seeing her aunt was not pleased with her flippant answer, Erica elaborated seriously. "Sorry, Mamma. This morning, April and I sat down together and talked about our future together... what we wanted... what we needed... and eventually we decided it was time to take the next step."
Heather dabbed her mouth with her napkin. "Well, what changed?"
"Coming here." Erica answered. "Seeing you all." She looked at Faith sitting next to her. "Settling some issues. It's one of the main reasons why April talked me into coming home. To find out where I stood, if I even still had a family, and what I really wanted out of life."
"Well, I guess I owe a debt of thanks to April then." her aunt remarked. "Didn't you want to come home, sweetie?"
"Frankly, I... I thought you didn't want me to come home." Erica answered nervously honest. "I thought that maybe you only wanted... um... Eric... to come home. I... uh... I thought he was the only one you would accept in your home."
"Are you happy?" Brooke interrupted bluntly.
Turning to her, Erica smiled. "So happy that I'm glad of every part of my life! I wouldn't change a thing that got me here!" She reached across the table with her hand to her father's best friend. "I... I wanted to thank you for all that you did for me while I was growing up here, Aunt Brooke. It meant more than you'll ever know... and I know it was really hard for you to do."
The girl's answer brought a chill to her spine, having come so very close to something Jack had told her often over the years that she'd known him.
Reaching under the table, Jenny took her wife's hand, squeezing it to get her attention. When Brooke turned to look at her, she said very simply, "Told you so!"
When at last the six finished dinner, they retired to the living room as usual. Faith took a seat next to her mother, while Erica and April took the couch. Brooke sat in the other loveseat with Jenny nearly sitting in her lap, smiling like a Cheshire cat.
Turning to Erica, Heather asked, "So, what are your plans you two? Will you be staying long?"
Looking at April, Erica then looked back to her aunt. "Well, we only have two weeks before we need to get back. I want to show April all the things around here that I remember so fondly. The town, the woods..." She perked up. "Do the Dempseys still have their annual Halloween party? That's only four days away!"
Faith and her mother looked at one another before Heather answered her. "Well sweetie, we haven't gone to any of them in the last four years. It... it just wasn't the same... without you. I honestly don't know if they still have them or not. I asked them to stop inviting us so we wouldn't have to keep declining."
"That's too bad." Erica sighed. "I really would have liked to see them and introduce them to April. They were all a pretty big part of my life here... almost a second family."
"I see Mike Dempsey every once in a while." Brooke offered. "Now that he's eighteen, he's running a lot of the ranch for his parents. They've been hard pressed to keep things going these last years, the economy hit everyone pretty hard around here, but I know they still have their yearly Halloween party." Seeing Erica's curious look, she explained. "I work at the market. Not enough customers to keep my salon running full time."
"Oh!" Erica exclaimed. "So he comes in to pick things up. How is he?"
"Getting along. Sad, but... keeping busy. Did you hear about he and the Wilks girl?"
"I told her." Faith noted.
Thinking a moment, Heather opined, "Erica dear, I'm sure that if you showed up at the party with April, the Dempseys would be happy to have you, costume or no!"
"Especially your boyfriend!" Faith smiled mischievously.
"Ugh!" Erica rolled her eyes. "Are you ever going to let that go, Faith?"
"No!" she replied exuberantly.
"Well, if we do go, we should get costumes." Erica noted. "Otherwise we'll look awfully out of place. Does Miss Fuller still have her shop?"
"Janet died last winter, dear." Heather answered, looking away. "She had a heart attack when she was alone in her shop. No one even knew for a few days. It was her son that found her, poor boy."
The mood threatening to turn somber, Faith got an idea. "Erica? Would you be willing to try something a little... unorthodox?"
"Probably not." April replied for her.
"Oh, come on!" Faith pressed the point. "You want to take April to the Halloween party, don't you?"
Her cousin nodded tentatively. "Yes... but you have a funny look in your eye... like that time you told me you saw an eagle's nest up in that tree and talked me into climbing it when you knew I wouldn't be able to get down!"
April turned to Faith. "Why on Earth would you do that?" she asked.
"She wouldn't tell me where she put my copy of 'Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm'!" Faith justified herself.
"Well you wouldn't stop calling me Rebecca!" Erica countered with a smile.
"Girls!" Heather interrupted. "That's enough! Faith? If you have an idea, then please share it so we can see if it's workable... and appropriate!"
Faith laid out her idea. After some disagreement and discussion, the four finally agreed how to proceed while Brooke and Jenny just listened.
Four days later, they rode together in Heather's limo and talked about events in Erica's life after she came to stay with her aunt. Some of it was reminiscing, the rest was telling April just how precocious young Erica could be.
"You hit him in the nuts?" April said shocked.
Hiding behind her hand, Erica answered embarrassedly. "For the hundredth time, I didn't mean to! He was like two feet taller than me!"
April stared at Erica, her mouth hanging open. "You stood up to a bully for him? So is that why this Mike guy was crushing on you?"
Shaking her head, Faith grinned. "No, he was doing that almost from the start! I still say she did it because Chet insulted her date!"
Wanting to crawl under the floorboard to hide, Erica blushed heavily. "I was never anything but polite to him!"
"Well, you must have done something to push his buttons, E!" April joked.
"She stood up to Chet for him, then wouldn't dance with anyone else... the tease!" Faith ribbed her cousin. "I warned her! He followed her around for the next year like a lovesick Irish Setter!"
The car pulled off the highway and onto the Dempsey's driveway, lurching and making Faith bump her head on the top of the car.
"Shit! My hat!" Faith exclaimed.
"Language, dear!" her mother warned.
"Sorry, Mamma!" she said as she tried to get it back on, not being helped by the car's jarring movements.
Finally, the vehicle came to rest behind others parked around the Dempsey's yard. Faith reached out her hand and waited for Erica to give over her cell phone. Dialing the number she got from Brooke, Faith waited while it rang.
"Michael? Oh, Mike! Hi! This is Faith... Faith Hargrave." A long pause went by, Faith mouthing the words, "I can't understand anything he's saying!" Finally, she interrupted. "Yes... Yes... Mike... hold on a sec." Handing the phone to Erica she whispered, "Talk!"
"No!" Erica mouthed back at her, eyes wide in surprise.
"Erica! You're the only one that can understand what the heck he's saying!"
Taking a deep breath as she heard him saying "Hello?" over and over, she closed her eyes. "Mike? No, this isn't Faith. It's... um... it's Erica."
The entire car heard him shouting over the phone.
"Yes!... It's... Yes?... Well I... huh? Mike! Take it doon, man! Let a bhean óg get ah word in!" Finally getting him to quiet down, Erica lowered her voice. "Yes, it's great to hear your voice too, Mike. I was wondering, are you having your Halloween Party tonight? Uh-huh... well... Mike! Will ye' let me talk? I was wondering... Mike! Mike, let me finish! I was wondering if I could drop by with Aunt Heather, Faith, and a guest. Yes... alright. We'll see you soon! Bye!" Closing the call, Erica glared at Faith. "This was your plan all along, wasn't it? You knew he couldn't say no to me!"
Faith pressed her fingers to her breast as her voice turned smooth as butter. "Who? Me? Really, Erica... you do have a suspicious mind!"
Letting Fredrick know they were ready, they waited for him to open the door. Erica got out first, looking around the ranch and smiling as she took in a breath. Hay, horses, pumpkin pie, wood smoke, and frost! Some things never change! As the rest followed her out, they made their way to the Dempsey's front door, knocking on it just after hanging up with Mike.
Mike Dempsey was frantic. "Mamaí! Do Ah look a'right?"
Emma looked at her son like he'd lost his mind. "Are ya daft now? Ya look th' same as ye' did when ye' got dressed! How good kin ah pirate look? Will you go help yer daid oot in th' barn now? Before he gets so steamin' that he kinna walk straight?"
"But ye' dun understand Mamaí..." he replied as he heard knocking.
She held up her hand, forestalling further debate. "Git th' door an' then ya kin explain!"
He grumbled while heading toward the door, figuring that someone had slipped on the ice near the pumpkin patch again and needed to come in and sit for a while by the fire. "Oi, mate! Quit yer bangin'!" he shouted as the person knocked a second time. Flinging the door open, he started in on the intruder immediately. "Go on then..." His voice stopped cold as he saw who'd been knocking. "Jaysus!"
His eyes looked her up and down. He would have known her no matter what costume she wore, but the blue gingham dress and her hair in braids made her look not much different than the day they'd met when she'd worn a similar costume.
"Dia duit, Mike. Would ya be mindin' some company?" Erica smiled through her acquired brogue as she pushed past him.
Standing clear of the door in shock, he watched Erica enter, only vaguely aware that she was followed closely by a woman he didn't know in a princess gown, Faith in a nurse's uniform, and Heather in a Glinda costume only slightly different from the one she'd worn six years earlier. Closing it after them, he was still stunned speechless when his mother came storming out.
"Who will it be now?" she asked as she came from the kitchen. When Emma looked up and saw her guests, she drew in a sharp breath. "Heather, Faith! Erica! How in th' name o' Jaysus air ya!?" She ran forward and hugged Erica briefly and then turned to Heather. "Kin ya' be stayin' a bit fir a céilí a'fore ye' be headin' fer th' party?"
Heather smiled warmly. "Certainly, Emma! A visit would be nice!"
While the five ladies headed for the living room to chat in front of the fire, Mike caught Erica's arm. "Sure it's grand ta' be seein' ya', girseach!"
"Aye! But Ah'm nay a girseach na more, Mike! Come set wi' us! Ah want ya ta' be meetin' someone!"
"Who's that now?" he asked, following Erica with a curious smile.
Heather, Faith, Emma, and April took their seats as Erica walked up to stand in front of April. "Mike? Mamaí? Ah'd like ya' ta' be meetin' April!"
A perplexed expression ran over his face as he looked from Erica to April and back. After a moment, he started to remember the girl Erica had always talked about and his eyes grew wide. "Ya mean yer April? Th' girseach ya' lost back in Cali?"
"The same!" Erica beamed. "We reconnected a few months back and Ah wanted ta show her where Ah call home! Ah couldn't very well do that wi'out showin' her yer place! Ah must'a spent more time here than anywhere else but mah own gaff!"
"It's good ta' be finally puttin' a face ta' th' name!" Mike extended a hand.
Tentatively, April took his hand and shook it gently. Looking to Erica she asked, "Girseach?"
Sitting beside her, Erica took her free hand. "It means 'young girl'." Turning back to Mike, she could see him eyeing their joined hands. "Mike? Why don't you set? April? Kin ya' scootch doon?" Making room, Mike sat next to her.
"Where ya' bin, cailín?" Emma stared at Erica. "Ah haven't seen ya since ya' ware a chiseler!"
"Away ta' scoil, Mamaí." she answered. Mike's mother had always been so sweet to her that she'd started calling her the Irish word for mother shortly before she left. "Ah went ta' study writin'. Aintín Heather made sure'n Ah had th' best oideachas Ah could be gettin'. It ware grand!"
The Irish woman looked next to her at Heather ashamedly. "Ah feel Ah be needin' ta' apologize ta' ye, Heather. Ah'm scarlet ta' say Ah was belivin' th' things that people ware sayin' aboot ya'."
Heather took Emma's hand. "Pay it no mind, Emma. I'm just glad Erica got the chance to do what she wanted with her life!"
Nervously, Mike tried to change the subject. "So... how ware scoil then?"
"Ah ware aduantas, but after a time it ware class! Ah learned sah much!"
Tapping her on the shoulder gently, April looked confused. "I feel like I'm missing most of the story here and getting more than a bit lost! What's 'oideachas' and 'aduantas', honey?"
"Oideachas is an education." she answered easily, but struggled to define the other term. "Aduantas is hard to explain. It doesn't really have a word in English. It's the nervous feeling you get when you're someplace new, like when I came here, or when you moved to Concord with me?"
"So will ye' be stayin' on, A stór?" Emma asked hesitantly.
Erica bit her lip and looked at April. "Ah be wishin' Ah could, Mamaí... but we kin only be stayin' a week. Ah have ta' be gettin' back."
"Ah see." Emma pursed her lips.
"Ah'll be comin' back more, though!" the girl smiled. "Ah been missin' me gaff somethin' fierce! Ah'll be back fir Nollaig, an mebe Thanksgivin'! Will ye' be here then?"
Smiling back weakly, she nodded. "Aye, we will, bhean óg, but Ah think Mike had been hopin'..." she looked to her son.
"Ach, Mamaí!" Mike blushed. "Ah always knew Ah had nay chance wi' her! I told ye tha' she ware aerach!" he looked at Erica. "An' it looks like she already found her A rúnsearc!"
Looking back and forth between Mike and April, Erica noticed April's confused look and blushed. "Beloved."
"Oi!" Mike exclaimed. "How did ya be knowin' that one, bhean? Ah never taught ye' that! Ah thought Ah had ye!"
"Ah ware at scoil, ya plank ya, nay kippin' down! Ah studied Gaelic!"
"Dun be cheesed off!" Mike was visibly impressed. "Ah ware jus' askin'!"
Smiling at the exchange, Faith glanced at her watch. "Shouldn't we be joining the party, though?"
Emma stood up quickly. "Ach! Ah nearly firgot! Mike? Will ya be takin' 'em over then?"
Nodding, Mike stood up. "Aye, Mamaí. That I'll do."
When the four ladies made their way to the door, Emma hugged each of them. When she got to April, she stopped and eyed her carefully. "Air ya good ta' mah Erica?" she asked.
April smiled shyly. "I... I'd like to think so, Mrs. Dempsey."
Taking her into a tight hug, Emma sighed. "Then Ah give mah blessings ta ya! An call me Mamaí!" Pulling back, she admired April's good looks. "Ya' certainly air a catch! Ach! I was wantin' ta ask ya... what air ya dressed as?"
Looking over at Erica, April smiled. "We got our costumes last minute. I'm supposed to be Princess Ozma, but I don't think anyone will get it!"
Erica smiled as she turned to follow Mike out the door. "That's OK, A rúnsearc! We get it!"
The five of them entered the barn, Erica looking around to see that nothing had changed much other than there not being as many people present as the last time she'd been here. That last Halloween had been bittersweet for Erica. She'd decided that if it were to be her last Halloween as a girl, she would go full out and dressed as a fairy princess. It had also been the last time Faith had worn a costume, choosing to go as pirate wench, while her mother had been a twenties flapper.
Mike at last spotted his father, drinking a glass of Guinness. "Daid!" he called out, waving his arm.
The older Michael turned and his face fell ashen. "Jaysus!" he whispered. Putting down his beer, he crossed the room, his face masking fury. "Mike!" he barked quietly as he stopped in front of his son. "What'r they doin' here!"
"Daid! Look again!" he retorted.
Michael looked once more at Faith and Heather standing with a strange girl, then noticed that someone else was standing behind them. Craning his neck, his eyes grew wide as Erica came out from between them.
"Dia duit, Dadaí!" Erica greeted him. "'Tis good ta be seein' ya!"
"Erica!?" Looking from her to his son, he could see that Mike was happy they were here. Gathering his wits, he swept the girl into his arms. "'Tis good ta see ye too, me girseach!" Standing back after putting her down, he regarded her. "But ye nay be me girseach na more, air ya? Ya've grown inta a fine and darlin' bhean óg, ya have! Deadly ta be sure! Ach! Ah bet ye broke aboot a million hearts ba noo! Not th' least o' which is me own Mack!"
"Daid!" Mike whined. "Didn't Ah tell ye..."
"Hush now!" his father chided. Straightening up, he regarded the four ladies. "Ah... Ach! Ah ware fiery cheesed at yer aintín Heather fir sendin' ye away!" He looked at Heather who looked away ashamedly, still embarrassed at the pain she'd caused.
The girl he'd known for a year touched his arm. "Don't be, Dadaí! She ware good ta me and got me th' best oideachas Ah could get!" Looking back at her aunt, she smiled. "Ah owe her everythin'!"
Michael ran his hand along the back of his neck. "Ah... Ah guess Ah be owe'n ya an apology, Heather. Seems... Ah... seems ye done a'right by th' bhean óg." He stuck his hand out toward her.
Smiling, Heather took his hand gently. "Forget it, Michael! All water under the bridge! I'm just glad to see my baby home again!"
Clearing a table for the four ladies, Michael returned to his guests, leaving them to re-connect with many of the people they'd once been fast friends with. As Erica sat next to April, her smile melted when she saw someone approaching she didn't expect to see. "Oh, good Lord." she said frostily.
Chet kept his distance and just nodded. "I... um... I just came to pay my respects, Mrs. Hargrave... Faith... Erica." His eyes drifted to April and he grinned. "I don't believe I know this young lady though." Stepping up to her, he extended his hand. "Chet Mansfield!"
Smiling, April regarded him cautiously as she shook his hand. When he tried to kiss it, she pulled it back sharply and smiled mischievously. "Careful, Chet! Erica might slug you again!"
Fuming at his attempt to pick up April, Erica glared. "Goodbye, Chet!"
His hands dropping down in front of him, he bowed slightly and wordlessly made his way back to his mother.
Heather looked at her niece. "Sweetie, you really should apologize to him."
Shaking her head as she took the cup of punch that Mike brought her, Erica refused. "No way, Mamma! Now I'm thinking I didn't hit him hard enough!"
"Since when did ye start callin' her Mamma?" Mike looked at her curiously.
"Since th' day Ah left fir scoil." she replied, April taking the cup of punch from Erica's hand. "She may not be ma mother, but she ware as good ta me as Mamaí is ta you." When the next song began, Erica smiled at him. "Shall we? Fir old time's sake?"
Mike smiled as he stood and offered to help her stand. "Surely!"
The two making their way to the dance floor, Faith wistfully watched Erica happily dancing with much greater skill than she'd shown the last time she was in the Dempsey's barn. Turning, she saw April doing the same until April looked back at her, making her blush and turn away. Feeling a tap on her hand, she looked over to see April smiling at her.
"I wanted to thank you." April said before taking a drink.
Faith blinked. "Me? For what?"
"For coming up with this idea, so Erica could show me this part of her life that I missed." She paused and took another drink. "And for everything else. You know? Not making her have to choose?"
Looking back toward Erica, who seemed to be truly enjoying her time with Mike, Faith sighed. "You'd better love her!" she warned. "Hurt her, and you'll regret it!"
"Always have... and always will." April replied simply.
As the evening wore on, Erica sat between April and Mike while his father told ghost stories, smiling, laughing, and basking in the glow one gets sharing time with those you love. When they left that night, Erica kissed both father and son on the cheek, with April and then Faith behind her.
Mike stopped Erica just as she was about to leave. "Um... Ah want ye' ta know, if'n ye' ever be needin' anythin'... well... Ah'll always be a friend ta' ye'." Looking over at April, he nodded. "An' tha' goes fir ye', too!"
"Ya be like mah deartháir, Mike!" Erica hugged Mike warmly. "Th' same goes ta' ya!"
Walking to the car together, April turned to Erica. Before she could even ask, Erica simply said, "Brother." and kept walking with a smile as April stopped and stood in stunned silence.
Turning as she continued walking backwards toward their car, Erica's smile showed more than a hint of a seductive grin.
April started walking toward her, tilting her head. "Oh! Somehow I think that this trip is going to be one to remember!"
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Sitting at her vanity, Erica brushed out her hair. She loved that the braids she'd taken out had given her hair a cute wavy look. She'd braided her hair before her shower, blown it dry, then taken the braids down and brushed it out, just like the night of the Halloween party. "April? What do you think?" she asked, turning to look toward the bathroom.
April stood up from the old fashioned sink, her toothbrush still in her mouth, and looked out the door at Erica. "'Bout what?" she asked innocently around a toothbrush and a mouth full of toothpaste.
"My hair!" Erica groused. "God! Don't you even notice?"
She turned back to the sink to finish brushing and spit. Once her mouth was clear, she retorted, "Honey, I think it looks beautiful! I just didn't know what you were talking about is all!" returning to the sink after.
Coming up behind her, Erica leaned against the opposite wall, looking at April in the mirror. "I was thinking about braiding my hair sometimes when we get back home, just overnight. I like the way it looks after I brush it out."
"I like it!" April noted. Turning around, she walked up to Erica and wrapped her arms around her waist. "But then, I like everything about you!"
Draping her arms over April's shoulders and around her neck, Erica smiled. "I hope you had a good time tonight!"
She nodded. "Uh-huh! It was nice having one last dinner with just Faith and Heather... just the four of us. I feel like this last week has been one giant string of family reunions after another!"
"Anxious to get back to Concord tomorrow?" she asked.
"Don't get me wrong," April explained. "I love your family, and I'll miss them, but I'm also looking forward to some time by ourselves for a while."
The woman she held tried to look innocent. "Oh? And why is that?"
Pursing her lips, April's eyes half closed into slits. "Oh, you think you're so funny, do you? Well..." At that her gentle hold on Erica's waist changed to a firm grip as she dug her fingertips into Erica's tender flesh.
Erica jumped and squealed as April began furiously tickling her. "No! Stop it! April!" Laughter rang out from their shared bathroom and into the bedroom as April pursued the fleeing teen. Turning to face her, Erica took a defensive stance. "No! April? No tickling! Now, stop it!" she said, still trying to keep the mirth from her voice.
She slowed and held her hands up. "Alright, I'll stop. In exchange..."
"In exchange for what?" Erica asked hesitantly as she dropped her guard.
"A kiss!" April demanded.
Blushing, Erica sat on her bed and lowered her voice to a whisper. "I thought you wanted to wait until we got back?"
She smiled wickedly as she closed in on Erica. "I changed my mind. I want our first real kiss to be right here... in your bedroom... with your cousin across the hall... your aunt just downstairs... and Cook, Franchesca, and Fredrick right next door!"
Laughing a little, Erica's blush deepened. "April! Mamma could walk in any second to say goodnight!"
"And?"
"You can be just terrible sometimes, April! I don't want Mamma to see that!" Her smile grew wider as April continued to get closer.
"So... you're telling me 'No', then?" she asked.
"No! I mean, no, I'm not telling you 'No'... I mean..." Erica rolled her eyes and glanced around the room as though someone were about to catch them.
Carefully lowering herself to sit on the bed next to Erica, April slid over until their hips were touching. Reaching out, she pulled gently on Erica's shoulders to turn Erica to her, a hand then drifting up to caress Erica's wavy auburn hair, gently pushing it out from in front of her face. Leaning in seductively, she let her fingers trace around Erica's ear and down her neck, making her oldest and best friend lean toward her. When their lips were less than an inch apart, April closed her eyes and sighed out, "I love you."
Erica melted at the words. She only managed to get out, "I love..." before their lips joined for the first time. Caught by surprise, Erica's eyes shot open wide as she drew in a sharp breath through her nose, letting it out in a nasal moan; her eyes gently closing.
She'd wanted to wait for Erica to return the sentiment, but the moment the girl's breath hit April's lips she couldn't hold back her desire any longer. Plunging forward, she savored the moment she'd been dreaming about for over half a decade, held back only by Erica's uncertainty, and then by her own desire to make their first kiss as memorable as possible.
While the kiss lingered, April opened her mouth and let the tip of her tongue slip out and tenderly caress Erica's lips into opening like the petals of a flower. She moaned at the deliciousness of their intimacy, delicately probing the feel of her love's lips, teeth, and tongue. Gently she slid her hand back around Erica's neck and ran her fingers through her tinted hair, trapping her love in an erotic embrace.
Erica's mind exploded with feeling. Fear at being walked in on, joy at finally getting to be with her long lost love, desire to make April feel just as good as she was making her feel, exhilaration to see just how far this first kiss would go, and lusting for it to go a lot farther than it probably would or should. She mirrored April's hand, running her own up and into her love's dark hair. Relishing the feel of it, she found her free hand being taken by April's, their fingers interlocking in a romantic expression of what their hearts desired... to be one.
Slowly April pulled back, letting their first of many kisses end, as all things must. Their eyes opened as their lips parted, a smile creeping across both their faces as Erica exhaled dreamily.
"Oh, April! That was..." She tried in vain to put a word to the perfection of the moment. Deciding that no one word sufficed, she strung together a collection of them. "Magical! Incredible! Beautiful! Hot! Breathtaking! Lovely!" She took a deep breath and sighed. "Perfect! I love you! Always have..."
"...and always will!" April finished with her. Pulling back, she looked at Erica who seemed to be lost in a dream world. "Hey! Are you OK? Do you need a breather? Smelling salts? Stiff drink?"
Laughing, Erica leaned forward, giving her another loving kiss just like their first, taking her time and relishing the feel of their intimacy. Finally pulling back, she answered, "No! I'm fine! More than fine! I'm..."
"...in love?" Heather asked. She smiled as she watched her niece turn toward the door in surprise and quickly move away from April.
"Mamma!" Erica yelled. "Wha... wha... we... um... that is, we..."
"It's alright, sweetie!" Heather laughed. "I knocked, but when no one answered, I let myself in. If you want privacy, you need to lock the door!"
"How long were you standing there, Mamma?" Erica asked as she started flushing red.
"Just a short time is all. I think I came in at 'Breathtaking'. I'm sorry, sweetie! I didn't mean to interrupt!" Heather started to move out the doorway to close it behind her. "Why don't I go wait downstairs a while..."
Jumping off the bed, Erica stood next to her bedpost. "No! It's fine Mamma! We were just... um... we were just finished!"
Still standing in the doorway, she looked at Erica and sighed. "It's OK, sweetheart! I know what it's like to be young and in love! Just... here. Give me a quick kiss goodnight and I'll head off to bed and then you two can get back to..."
Standing up, April grabbed a pillow and her book. "It's alright, Heather. I was just getting ready to go down and read for a while."
"Are you sure?" Heather looked at the two with concern. "I just want you to know that I really am OK if you want to stay together in Erica's room. She's an adult and this is her home. You don't have to keep pretending on my account! I may be a lady, but I'm a woman, too!"
"There's no need, Heather! It's fine! Really! I just..." April looked over at Erica who still stood by her bedpost turning beet red. "Right before you came in, Erica and I just shared our first real kiss. That's all!"
"What?" Heather blinked dumbly. "Your... but you've been here now for close to two weeks and I thought... well, since you were dating now..."
"What?" Erica looked up. "You thought we... Mamma! In my old room?"
"Well naturally, sweetie! I didn't think you'd be sneaking off out of the house..." Heather paused. "Well wait a minute. Do you mean to say that... April? You've been actually sleeping on that old couch every night for the last two weeks?"
"Well, naturally!" April echoed her. "Did you think I was sneaking up here and then sneaking back down every morning?"
Heather crossed her arms defensively. "Well... quite frankly... yes!"
"Mamma!" Erica exclaimed in shock.
"What did you think, sweetie? That your cousin was born by immaculate conception?" her aunt asked bluntly. Seeing Erica turn even redder and look away, her smile melted as she began to worry. Is this my fault? she wondered. Did making her leave cause her to have intimacy issues?
Gently pushing past the older woman, April went out the open door. "I'll leave you two alone. I think you need to talk about some things!" Turning to Erica, she kissed air at her. "Love you, honey! Goodnight!"
While April headed down the hall toward the stairs, Heather stepped into the room and closed the door behind her. Moving over to the bed, she patted the mattress and waited for an embarrassed Erica to grudgingly sit next to her. "Alright, well I know you know about the birds and the bees, sweetie." She saw Erica bury her face in her hands.
"Mamma! It's embarrassing!" she nearly cried. "You saw me kissing April!"
"I'd assumed you'd done that already, sweetie... and a lot more!"
"How much more do you think we would do, Mamma? April and I have been dating less than two weeks!"
"Yes dear, but you've been in love for much longer than that, haven't you?" Heather asked as gently as she could.
Confused, Erica stood up and paced in front of her. "Yes, but... I mean... a couple should wait until they're married, shouldn't they?"
"Is that what you believe, sweetie?"
"Of course, Mamma!" Erica answered with frustration. She was trying to keep her voice down, but found it increasingly difficult. "You taught Faith and me to follow The Word! It's pretty clear on that point, isn't it?"
"Yes, sweetie." Heather smiled. "It's also very clear that we are all human and all fall short of the glory of God."
"I just... I don't want you to be disappointed in me, Mamma! You're acting like you were expecting me to... to... I want to make you proud of me!"
She reached out and took her niece's hand, guiding her to sit back on the bed. "I am proud of you, sweetheart! Immensely! But I know you're not perfect!" Feeling Erica relax a little, she decided to broach the subject. "Erica, I want to ask you something, and I want you to be honest with me."
"Of course, Mamma. Always."
Taking a deep breath she asked, "Are you still a virgin, dear?"
Erica looked at her aunt with a stunned expression. "Of course I am, Mamma! I've only been eighteen for four months, so I haven't been married yet!"
"Do you think I was a virgin when I met your Uncle Richard at twenty-one? Or even at eighteen?"
From the way she asked it, it slowly dawned on Erica that she might not have been. "Well... I guess I never really thought about it. I just assumed... Weren't you?"
Laughing, Heather put her arm around Erica's shoulders. "Hardly! And there's nothing wrong with that! If you love April, and she loves you, then it's a gift from God! I wouldn't expect you to wait until you had a legal ceremony, unless that's what you both really want." She choked back a tear as she finished her thought. "I... I just don't want you to waste the time you have together. You never know when it will end. Everything does."
She looked at her aunt and nodded solemnly. "You mean, like you and Uncle Richard? Or Mom and Dad?"
"Exactly." she answered, wiping a tear away. "I want you to have all the happiness this world can give you. Don't waste a second of it, sweetheart! Before you know it, it'll all be gone. You can't know when or how you and April will part ways. Maybe tomorrow, maybe in fifty years. Enjoy it! Of course, if it's important to you two to wait, then don't let anyone push you to it." She turned and pressed her forehead to Erica's. "Not even me!"
Smiling, Erica hugged her aunt, feeling like a little girl all over again. "Thank you, Mamma! You're the most wonderful mother in the world!"
"I sincerely doubt that sweetie, but thank you for the compliment just the same!" She kissed Erica on the cheek, stood up, and slowly walked over to Erica's door. "Goodnight, sweetheart. Do you want me to send April up?" she asked, hoping that her talk had made Erica less inhibited.
Sighing, Erica shook her head. "That's alright, Mamma. I'll go down and talk to her for a little bit though, if you don't mind."
"It's fine, dear! I'll make myself scarce! Goodnight!" Leaving for her bedroom, she left Erica's door slightly open.
Standing and stretching, Erica made her way to the door, opening it fully and looking out just as she heard her aunt's bedroom close. Tip-toeing into the hallway, she started for the stairs when Faith's door opened.
"Oh!" Faith exclaimed. "I... I didn't know if you were... I thought you would be in bed already."
"I was just going down to talk with April for a few minutes." Erica smiled. "I'll be going to bed in a little bit."
"Oh, alright." she replied. "Tell her goodnight for me?"
Reaching the stairs as Faith closed her door once more, Erica started down. Quiet as a church mouse, she crept into the living room. Spotting April laying on the loveseat by the bay window, a blanket and quilt covered her legs while she sat up reading her book. The only light was coming from the tiny table lamp behind her right shoulder.
The teen could tell someone had come down the stairs, but didn't turn to look until she could almost feel them approaching. Turning around, she saw Erica smiling at her. "Hey you! I thought you would have gone to bed already." she whispered.
Sitting on the edge of the couch while April set the book aside, Erica took her hands and held them lovingly. "Mamma wanted to have a talk."
"I know." April smiled. "Was it the sex talk?" she joked.
Shrugging to one side, Erica arched an eyebrow. "Sort of, I guess."
Her eyes bulged out as she almost swallowed her words. "Really!? She never had it with you before?"
"No. Oh, I know about sex. Mamma had us do a report on it when Faith reached menarche, but we never talked about love or romance before."
"Oh." April looked distant as her mirth died on her lips. "My mother never had any kind of talk like that with me. Just the sex talk. You know, where they tell you if you get knocked up before you turn eighteen they'll kill you, so use birth control pills and protection?"
"Mamma thought you and I were... um..."
"Yeah, I figured that out!" April giggled. "Ya wanna?"
"Do you?" Erica demurred.
Nearly growling, April wrapped her arms around Erica. "Yeah! I really do!" She sat forward and kissed Erica eagerly on the lips. Smiling as she sat back, she shook her head. "I think we can wait though, for a bit longer. We can talk about it when we get home tomorrow. Maybe then!" She waggled her eyebrows seductively at her lifelong love.
Smiling, Erica found herself slightly frightened by April's libido, as well as her own. "I... I wanted to tell you, I'd always planned on waiting until my wedding night. You know, the whole purity thing? But I... I want you to know that I... um... if you don't want to wait, since I love you and um... I guess I see us eventually..."
April swallowed hard. "Are you saying you want to get married?"
"Well... not right away!" Erica looked away. "I mean... not if you don't want to, but I mean... like... eventually? Yeah... I want to. Don't you?"
Unsure how to answer, April stalled. "Well, I guess I see myself getting married someday... not at eighteen, though!"
Erica's heart raced, sure that she'd misunderstood April's intentions all along and, faced with admitting it, April had never seriously considered spending their whole lives together. Tears started to form as she felt hurt, even though April had only said she didn't want to marry her now. But she didn't say she wanted to marry me later, either. God! I must be crazy! she beat herself up. Why would April want to marry me? She's beautiful and wonderful... and I'm just... me... the crazy girl that thought she was her own mother!
Seeing the hurt in Erica's eyes, April reached out with a hand and turned her face to her. "Honey, I wasn't saying I don't think about it! I think about it a lot! I've been imagining it for years! I think I first did when I was eight and we were playing house, and I've been thinking about it ever since!"
Sniffing to hold back the tears, she looked down at April's lap. "But?"
"But now I understand that marriage is much more important than just a fantasy or a thing to do. Do I want to marry you? God, yes! But will I rush into it without being absolutely certain it's the right thing for us? No. When I marry, it'll be for life. One time, never again. Isn't that what you want?"
"I guess you're right." Erica nodded. "I'm sorry, love. I... it's just... I just wanted to wait to be... um... be intimate... I mean like... um... go all the way, I guess?... until I'm at least engaged. Do you understand? It's... it's important to me."
"Oh." April replied disappointedly. "Um... well, I guess we'll need to do a lot of talking then, because... well... I really want to!" Yawning she added, "But not tonight! You go up to bed. I'll see you in the morning, alright?"
They both leaned forward and kissed just as passionately as the first time. Erica couldn't help but think of wedding bells, white gowns, rice, rings, kissing at the altar, and a lifetime of memories to come with her sweet April. April in turn was thinking of nights full of passion, romance, candles, carnal bliss, and her beautiful Erica lost in ecstasy. Neither knew just how different their dreams were.
Parting once more, Erica sighed lovingly while April growled with desire. Standing slowly, their hands linked, Erica sighed happily and said, "G'night, mah A rúnsearc! Is ceol mo chroí thú! You're the music of my heart!"
Moaning, April smiled while her body squirmed with want. "Goodnight, pretty girl!"
Just as Erica started to walk away, she stopped and turned. "Oh! Faith said to say goodnight, too! I saw her in the hall on the way down here."
"Say goodnight to her from me too, will you honey?" April asked as she picked up her book again. "Love you!"
"Love you!" Erica silently padded up the stairs, stopping once more to turn and look at the beautiful woman who loved her so much before climbing the rest of the way toward her waiting bed.
Opening her door, she slipped in quietly, taking off her satin robe. Draping it over the back of her vanity chair, she crept to her bed and lowered herself into it, relishing the comfort of her white satin nightgown against the peach satin sheets. Scooting back, she lowered the sheet and blanket over herself. Resting her head comfortably against the feather-filled satin pillow that smelled faintly of Japanese Cherry Blossoms, Erica sighed as she closed her eyes and relaxed.
She felt the hand on her hair first, fingers running through it gently and lovingly. Smiling, she purred in contentedness. Slowly, she felt the soft and warm body press against her back, full and perfect breasts pressing against her, taught and firm nipples poking gently into her shoulder blades signaling their arousal. A hand sensuously wrapped slowly over her round hip, down her firm thighs, back up again, then down along her tender tummy.
Tracing small circles through the satin and onto her sensitive skin, the hand traveled lower, threatening to invade the delicate secret between her legs. Her breath caught momentarily, erotic sensations bringing a slight wetness below. Then back up again, the hand slid up between her breasts, gently caressing the soft mounds to either side before finally coming to rest between them.
"April said to say goodnight." Erica purred.
"She is a wonderful girl, Erica." Faith sighed. "I'm so happy for you! I'm also grateful that she said you could be mine whenever you're here."
Snuggling closer together, Erica giggled. "She kissed me, Faith! A real kiss! Beautiful and romantic and loving... It was perfect!"
"Mmmm!" Faith smiled.
"Then Mamma walked in on us!" her voice turning sardonic. "She was nice about it, but thought April was sneaking up to sleep with me and... um..."
"Make love to you?" Faith asked. Erica nodded. "Has she?"
"No. We've only kissed three times, and that was all tonight. I told Mamma I wanted to wait until my wedding night. She said I didn't have to."
"Good! You don't! In fact you probably shouldn't." Faith admonished as she ran a fingertip along Erica's left breast.
Giggling slightly, Erica smiled again. "I think I want to wait until I'm at least engaged. Mamma said that if that's what I want, I shouldn't let anyone tell me it's wrong, even her. Why do you think I shouldn't wait?"
Moaning slightly, Faith pressed her body more firmly against Erica's. "Because God loves us and wants us to be happy! Remember?"
Reaching over her head, Erica ran her fingers through Faith's luxurious blonde curls. "But what if waiting makes me happy?"
"Not waiting would make you happier... much, much happier!" Faith cooed.
"God, your hair is so sexy!" Erica commented. "Faith? Have you...?"
"Done it?" she finished the unspoken question. "Not with a guy... but um..." Suddenly embarrassed, she stopped caressing Erica and rolled over, separating them. "I... I was trying to get over you. I dated some. Two guys and a girl. I never did anything but kissing with the guys, but... um..."
Rolling over to be closer, Erica ran her fingertips along Faith's shoulder. "It's alright, Faith. Whatever you did, it doesn't make me mad or anything. I was gone and you were trying to move on. That's normal and healthy. I'm glad you did, and... um... I'll understand when you find someone you can love. Like I did with April? I'll be happy for you both! You deserve love, Faith. Someone who... deserves you. Tell me about her."
"Who?"
"The girl you dated." Erica said. "Was she pretty? Prettier than me?"
Faith giggled. "No one's as pretty as you, Erica... not even you!"
"Come on! Be serious! I... I wanna know... like... who she was... what you did together. Did you love her?"
She felt the pangs of regret at the memory of it. "I thought I did. Her name was Tamara. I knew her from school from before you moved here. She came out when she turned sixteen. She was sweet, pretty, soft, and gentle... a lot like you. I think that was the biggest problem. She was too much like you. I thought... if I dated a girl like you, it would help me get over you, but all it did was make things worse. She ended up reminding me of you all the time. It made me feel like I was cheating on you... because I told you I'd never love anyone else ever again."
Kissing Faith's shoulder gently, Erica reassured her. "I didn't expect you'd stick to that, Faith. We were thirteen. Back then six years was half a lifetime!"
"Don't I know it! I... don't know how you could stand it, being alone all that time. You didn't even date at all?"
"No." Erica shook her head sadly. "I was... ugly. Not like I am now, at all. Ugly and gross! I stank like a teenage boy no matter what I tried to do!"
Rolling back over to face her, Faith smiled. "You could never be ugly to me, Erica. Even dressed like a boy with short hair and pimples, I would know who you were inside. My beautiful Erica!" She reached out and took Erica's hand. "But you wanted to know about Tam. She invited me to her sixteenth birthday party. Not many people came because she'd come out, but I wanted to be supportive, so I went, we had fun, I asked her out, we went out a few times, and then a few weeks later we started fooling around. Just... touching, you know... intimately. One night we got carried away and she wanted to... um... 'go downtown'. I told her she was my first, so she went slow and it was nice, but..." Faith's voice trailed off shakily.
Squeezing her hand, Erica looked at her reassuringly. "It's alright. Go on."
Faith started to cry. "I... I kept imagining it was you! I let her take me, but in my mind it was you! Afterwards, I cried... a lot. Tam thought she'd hurt me somehow, but I... I broke up with her the next day. I felt so bad. It wasn't fair to her. I... I should have stopped her." Pausing to wipe away a tear, she sighed. "Maybe you're right. Maybe it's better to wait. I just... I want so much for you to be happy, and I know April won't be the same for you as Tam was for me."
"Don't be so sure." Erica whispered. "I... I think when April... I... I don't know that we ever will. I mean, she wants to now, but I want to wait until we're engaged... and I think we might not..."
"It'll be OK." Faith whispered back. She slowly extended a fingertip and ran it along Erica's right cheek. "I know when you two are together for the first time, it'll be beautiful, sweet, and fun. You two are so into one another! I... I doubt I'll even enter your mind... and that's OK. I think it's better that way. It should just be about you two."
"Faith?"
"Yeah?"
"You're a hopeless romantic!" The two teens giggled together before Erica leaned forward and let their lips touch for a moment before becoming more passionate. Letting their hands roam wherever they felt like, the two lost themselves in the sharp pleasures of simple touches and deep soulful kisses until they threatened once more to cross the line from making out to making love.
Mere moments away from crossing that line, the two slowly backed off, Erica sighing. "This is really nice Faith... being close like this... because it's you and sweet and beautiful! I couldn't imagine actual sex being better!"
"Thank you!" Faith said grinning as her breath slowed from nearly climaxing just from Erica's intimate touches. "Now roll over and lets cuddle for a while."
Doing as Faith asked, Erica turned toward her vanity as her cousin slipped up sensuously behind her and they wrapped their smooth legs around one another. Faith's hand once more drifted up over Erica's hip and delicately traced its way up to her cousin's soft bosom, Erica gasping in ecstasy as Faith's hand caressed her taught nipples.
"Cuddling, huh?" Erica giggled. "Seems like someone wants to cross a line."
Faith sighed, desperate for Erica to finish what she'd started. "I... I admit it... I do want to cross that line. Right here... right now! Erica, I want you so badly I ache for it!"
"You know I'll give you whatever you want of me, Faith." Erica admitted before loosing the ability to speak and gasping once more as Faith's hand drifted down her tummy, gently slipping her fingernail just under the elastic waistband of Erica's panties through the satin nightgown. Tracing back and forth without delving further downward, she teased Erica's skin.
"I know you will." Faith cooed in Erica's ear, sending shivers down the younger girl's spine. "Do you know how close you had me, Erica? Another few seconds and we would have become lovers. Did you know that?"
Shivering at Faith's breathy questioning in her ear and the exquisite torture of Faith's hand giving rise to own pleasure, Erica nodded. "Y-yesss... I... I knew! I l-love seeing you th-that happy, Faith!"
"Are you ready to cross that line?" Faith dared as her fingers dipped lower into Erica's silk panties, barely touching a few pubic hairs. "Are you ready to be lovers, my beautiful Erica? Still want to wait until you're engaged?"
Reaching behind her head, Erica ran her fingers once more through Faith's golden locks. "Oh, Faith! I... I want to so badly! You know I do! I love you!" As Faith pressed her breasts into Erica's back, she slid her leg up and down Erica's legs, causing the satin nightgown she wore to rise up while her fingers slid out of her panties and traced up over her hip, hooking a thumb and pushing the tiny garment downward. "Oh, Faith!"
Laughing gently, her cousin slowed her assault. "Still think actual sex can't be better?" she teased. "Want me to show you?"
Nodding slowly, Erica prepared herself for whatever Faith asked of her.
Sliding her hand back up to Erica's breasts, she teased them for a few more moments before sighing and slipping her hand between them as her body relaxed. "Thank you for showing me that I can have you if I want to, love." she sighed. "Fair warning for next time though... I'm not going to stop!"
Erica awoke early as usual, rousing Faith by slowly and sensuously kissing her. When their lips separated, Erica smiled. "I meant what I said last night, Faith. I really do hope you can find someone to love. It would make me so happy for you! Whoever gets you is going to be one lucky person!"
Giggling, Faith ran her hands over her love one more time. "I think I can now... truly love someone, that is. I... I'm really glad you came home... and I can't wait for you to come home again!" she sighed, reminding Erica that their next visit would have no boundaries. Her fingers drifted over Erica's chest, causing the redhead to twitch and moan in pleasure.
Waiting for the sweet torture to ebb, Erica shivered when it finally did. "We're going to try for Thanksgiving weekend, then a long stay over Christmas." Erica sighed as she recovered her composure and returned the favor, letting her fingers drift over the naked body lying next to her and prying moans of desire from Faith's luscious lips. "I'll miss you."
"I think two weeks will be tolerable... it's better than five years! God! April must have gone crazy living without you for six!"
"She did, a little." Erica replied, relenting in her erotic assault, leaving Faith gasping for more. "I think she had an even harder time than we did."
"You have that effect on some of us!" Faith said as she ran a finger along Erica's arm. Sighing, she sat up, the sheet and cover falling down to expose her naked body. Erica rose to kiss her goodbye one last time before she and Faith parted ways once more, Faith closing her eyes and relishing the feel of Erica's fresh young breasts against her own while their mouths and bodies said wordlessly what was in their hearts.
Smiling, Faith took Erica's breasts in her hands through the thin fabric of her nightgown, running her thumbs over the sensitive nipples, making Erica quietly cry out in pleasure. "Just remember. I won't stop the next time I have you in my bed. There will be no lines. I'm going to show you how much I love you... and you'll finally and truly be mine." Slipping silently out of Erica's bed, Faith picked up her robe and slipped it over her arms, tying it as she left her cousin alone once again.
Laying in bed awake for another hour in a waking dream of what might have been... of the road not taken... then in blissful memory of their joyous parting a short time earlier and the eager anticipation of their next meeting, Erica found herself wishing it was already Thanksgiving.
Hearing the household start to wake, she rose and quietly slipped into her bathroom. Taking her essentials with her, she brushed her teeth quickly before getting partially dressed and slipping her robe on. Heading back out into the bedroom, she smiled.
"Good morning, Franchesca!" she chirped. "Busy day!"
"You ain't kiddin', sister!" she replied. "Between you two leaving and Faith going into town with your aunt, I'll be left with a half dozen rooms to clean, not the least of which is her pigsty! At least she won't be moping around here all day in yoga pants, getting in my way anymore!"
Erica pulled out the outfit she had chosen for the return trip as she listened to Franchesca. "I'm sure the fans of 'New Hampshire vs. California' will understand if this week's article is late, Fran."
She stopped making the bed and put her hands on her hips. "What did you just call me, young lady?"
Turning and smiling, Erica headed for the bathroom once more. "Fran!"
When she closed the door quickly behind her, Franchesca huffed, blustered, and finally threw up her hands in frustration. "Well go on, then! Call me what you like!" As she finished making Erica's bed, she smiled wistfully at the diminutive her favorite little girl had given her.
Shortly after breakfast, April and Erica were once more in the entryway, this time saying goodbye as they parted ways with Hargrave House.
"Call when you get in?" Heather asked. "I just don't want to worry, is all!"
Erica hugged her and kissed her on the cheek. "I will, Mamma." She turned to Franchesca and hugged her quickly. "Try not to miss me too much, Fran. Love you!"
Returning the hug she only said, "You be careful, young lady!"
Enveloping Erica in a bear hug, Theresa threatened to squeeze the air from her lungs. "Bye, girlie! Hurry home again, soon!"
"Thanksgiving, barring natural disaster!" Erica laughed. "Love you!" Turning to Fredrick, she smiled shyly and closed in for a gentle hug. "Love you too, Fredrick! Try and stay out of trouble!"
"Me, Miss Erica?" he huffed. "I should think you would benefit from that advice!" As they parted, he genuinely smiled. "Do come back soon!"
While April made her way through the others, Erica stopped in front of Faith. Folding into each other's arms, it was a chaste hug, but both of them felt differently about it and wanted so badly to make it much more. "I love you, Faith!" Erica cried.
"I love you too, Erica!" Faith returned, trying to stem the tide of both tears and yearning.
Pulling back and just holding Faith's arms, Erica smiled. "Remember! God loves us and wants us to be happy! All of us!"
Nodding as she freed a hand, Faith wiped her eyes. "I will! You remember it, too! Drive careful!"
Erica laughed as they released one another. "She will!"
With good-byes done, she and her lifelong love headed for April's car. With a four-hour drive ahead and the weather taking a turn for the worse, Heather watched pensively as Erica climbed into the passenger seat. "Be safe!" she shouted. "Come home soon!"
Closing her door, Erica waved through the open window. "We will! Love you! See you at Thanksgiving!"
The car speeding off down the driveway, the rest started inside to leave Faith standing alone to watch Erica drive away once more. Her heart was sad at watching her go, but the tears that fell silently from her eyes were not of sorrow or grief, but happiness. Happiness for her sweet cousin who had managed the impossible; to find true love not once... but twice... and yet somehow managed to make it all work.
Turning to enter the house once more, the car long out of sight, she thought of her future optimistically for the first time in years. Walking in as Fredrick closed the door behind her, she smiled. "Mamma? I'll be ready to go in a little bit." To town today... then school in January... Erica was right! Nurses are just as important as doctors!
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Erica and April entered their shared apartment in Concord, having just driven the four hours from Hargrave House. Erica had barely put down her suitcase when she felt a hand turn her around quickly. Just as she was about to ask what April wanted she felt the girl's lips press into her own with an urgent need. Surrendering to her own passions, Erica responded in kind, pulling April in close and relishing the feel of their bodies pressed together.
Feeling Erica respond to her advances, April pushed her up against the front door, closing it and pinning the girl in place so she could press all the more urgently against her body. After several minutes of groping and passionate kisses, April's need partially sated, she at last pulled back and looked in Erica's eyes. "Sorry!" she giggled.
"For what?" Erica smiled back. "For showing me you love me?" Gently pulling April close again, she kissed her slowly and romantically. "It could have waited until we were at least unpacked, though!"
Laughing together, April ran her fingers over Erica's cheeks. "I... I just couldn't wait any longer." she admitted. Backing away, and self-conscious of Erica's sensibilities, she took a deep ragged breath as her smile evaporated. "But, you want to wait."
"April, I... we need to talk."
Fear spreading through her whole body at those words, April turned away. "You're... you're going to leave me for Faith. Aren't you? You changed your mind and only want her." she exhaled, hugging herself.
"No!" Erica exclaimed. "April! I could never leave you!"
Not really listening, April started picking up her suitcase. "It's alright." she lied. "I... I understand. We can still be friends! I told you that..."
"April!" Erica shouted as she stormed in front of her oldest friend. "I said I'm not leaving you! I'll never leave you! I love you!" Lowering her voice, she gently took April's suitcase in hand and lowered it to the floor before taking her love's hands. "I just meant that there's some things we need to talk about. I promise I do not want to break up with you! Ever!"
Nodding rapidly, April took a breath and calmed her emotions. "O... OK."
"But first," Erica asked with a smile, "can we unpack? I need a shower!"
Mirth slowly spread between them before they both started to laugh. After a moment, April looked away embarrassedly. "I'm sorry, Erica. I... I guess I'm just a little insecure about..." Her voice trailed off, knowing that Erica understood her meaning.
Nodding, she sighed and backed away. "Second thoughts?"
"No!" April denied. "I... Erica, I could never make you choose! I don't want you to have to!" Looking at their joined hands, April was near to tears.
Seeing the fear in April's eyes as she looked away, Erica smiled and leaned down until their eyes met once more. "Hey! I love you! Come here." Erica led them both to the large plush couch occupying the middle of the living room. Sitting down, she waited until April joined her.
When after a moment Erica didn't say anything, April finally looked up at her. "What?"
Smiling, Erica shook her head. "I... I want you to know something, OK?" Taking a moment as she watched April nod in understanding, Erica took a breath. "I want you to know that, if... if I had to make a choice, I would choose you. OK? I decided that on the way here. It's what I really want!"
Looking away and blushing, April smiled weakly. "I'm not so sure."
"Well I am!" Erica stated flatly. "April, I love Faith. She helped me see who I really am... and loves me for just being me! But you loved me before even I knew who I was... when I was 'orphan boy Eric'... and when you found out I was Erica, you still loved me, and I never stopped loving you!" Pausing to let that sink in, she concluded, "So you see, if I had to choose, it wouldn't even take a moment to decide. I'd... I choose you, April."
Smiling slowly and shyly, April looked into Erica's eyes and saw her lifelong friend was telling her the truth. She could always tell. Wrapping her arms around Erica, she nearly cried at the beauty of the girl's love. "I... I'm sorry, Erica!" she lightly sobbed. "I... I should never doubt you!" Holding each other a moment in silence, she eventually pulled away to look her in the eyes again. "You don't need to choose, Erica! I... I'm happy that you and Faith can find happiness with each other! You both need each other so badly, I could never stand in the way of that!"
Sighing happily, Erica looked into April's eyes and also saw the honesty in her oldest friend. "Thank you!" she murmured. "Um... I guess now is as good a time as any to talk about what I wanted to say." Gathering her nerve, she closed her eyes and took a breath, but opened them to look April in the eyes as she spoke. "Faith wants to... um... go all the way... the next time we see each other... at Thanksgiving."
Perplexed, April furrowed her brow. "I... I thought you wanted to wait."
Nodding and looking down at their still joined hands, Erica shrugged. "I do, but... well... I've been doing some thinking since my talk with Mamma last night." Suddenly looking up with eyes wide, she gasped. "Mamma! I forgot to call her and let her know we're home!"
Laughing, April shook her head. "OK, you get a reprieve! Call your mom! I'll go put my things in the laundry! But after that..."
"After that I promise to explain!" Erica smiled.
Faith was walking through the living room when she heard the phone ring. Moving to pick it up, she saw Fredrick heading her way. "That's alright, Freddy! I'll get it!"
"As you wish, Miss Faith." he intoned with a nod and a vague smile, glad that the family was whole once more.
Picking up the handset on the old rotary phone, Faith cleared her throat. "Hello?"
Smiling at the sound of her voice, Erica lit up. "Faith! It's Erica!"
"Hi!" she replied. "Couldn't stand to not hear my voice for two weeks?"
"Ha ha!" Erica retorted as she watched April eyeing her with a sly grin as the young woman carried her bags toward the laundry for the maid to do the next day. "No... well, that's not true! Yes, I can't stand missing you that long, but I was actually calling to let Mamma know we're home safe."
"Oh, I see." Faith smirked. "Well then, I'll let Mamma know."
"Let me know what, dear?" Heather asked as she entered the room.
"Oh!" Faith jumped in a start, her mind racing over her flirting with Erica, afraid that somehow her mother knew just what she was thinking at that moment; thoughts which were decidedly unfamilial toward her cousin. "Mamma! Oh! It's Erica! She called to let us know they're home!"
Looking at Faith, she could see the tells of deception. More certain than ever that Erica and Faith had become intimate following their reconciliation and they were hiding it behind Erica's apparently chaste relationship with April, she cocked an eyebrow before answering. "Oh good! May I talk to her a moment, dear?"
Handing her mother the phone, Faith gulped in fear. Does she know? she wondered. "Here." she almost stammered.
"Hello?" Heather began. "Erica, sweetheart?"
"Mamma!" Erica cried in surprise, about to say something sweet and romantic to Faith. "Faith and I were just... um..."
"Yes, sweetheart." she answered, not waiting for the lie. "I just wanted to let you know that I'm glad you're home safe and look forward to seeing you and April over Thanksgiving! We all are!" she emphasized, watching Faith blush.
Blushing herself, knowing what Faith wanted to do over the holiday, Erica swallowed hard. "Um... us too! Can... can't wait!"
"We can't wait to see you then, as well!" Heather echoed as she watched Faith shyly look away. "Did you want to talk to Faith before you go, dear?"
"N... no, Mamma." Erica stammered. "That's OK! We already said our good-byes!"
Cupping her hand over the mouthpiece, Heather looked at her daughter sympathetically. "Faith dear, is there anything else you'd like to say... to your cousin?" She intentionally added the last part as a reminder for her daughter as to just who Erica was to Faith.
Nodding almost shamefully, she desperately wanted to hear Erica's voice just once more.
"Faith wants to say goodbye, sweetheart." Heather said, giving the lie to Erica's last statement. "I love you, Erica! Give my best to April as well!"
"I love you too, Mamma." Erica said guiltily. "Bye."
"Goodbye, sweetheart." Heather answered lovingly before handing the receiver to Faith. "Here you are, dear."
Taking it, Faith tentatively put it up to her ear. "Erica?"
"Faith... I..." Thinking about her aunt standing there and watching Faith as they said goodbye, her desire to be sappy and romantic suddenly seemed like a bad idea. "I... um... I love you, Faith. I guess I'll see you... soon." She hoped that mentioning their next encounter would convey her feelings.
Seeing her mother's knowing look, Faith raised her chin almost defiantly. "I love you too, Erica. I look forward to seeing you at Thanksgiving, too."
"Goodbye, love." Erica nearly whispered, almost afraid Heather might hear.
"Goodbye." Faith said softly in return before hanging up. Turning to face her mother, she waited to see what she'd say.
"Faith, we need to talk." Heather said gently. "Shall we use your room?"
I knew it was too good to last. Faith mused hopelessly. "Alright, Mamma." she answered embarrassedly as they headed toward the stairs.
Erica hung up the phone slowly after hearing Faith's goodbye. Getting up, she followed April in getting her own bags unpacked and into the laundry. Her aunt's voice over the phone seemed almost too polite. Opening her suitcase, her thoughts darkened. She knows! My God! Mamma knows!
Entering the bedroom once shared by the two teens, Faith took a seat on her bed as her mother sat at the girl's vanity. Looking everywhere but at Heather, Faith waited for the lecture.
"So..." Heather began simply. "Why don't you start by telling me what's going on."
Faith fidgeted with her fingers idly. "I... I don't know what you mean, Mamma." she lied badly.
Sighing, Heather pressed her fingers against her temples. "Faith, please don't treat me as though I'm a fool. You already confessed, in front of the whole household, that you've had feelings for your cousin Erica. Don't compound that with lies, please."
Frustrated, Faith stood and paced her room. "What do you want me to say, Mamma? That I love her? That she loves me? We do, and it's not going to just go away! It's real!"
"I know that, dear." Heather said calmly. "What have you done about it?"
Stopping to face her mother, Faith took a breath. "Nothing!" she lied again before correcting herself. "Well... nothing much."
"I see." Heather replied as she tried to maintain her composure. "Have you two been sleeping together?"
Biting her lip, Faith looked away from her mother. "That depends on what you mean by sleeping together."
"Having sex." Heather stated impatiently. "Please don't equivocate."
"No!" Faith denied. "Just... you know... actually sleeping together!"
Closing her eyes, Heather looked away from her daughter. "I see." Pausing as her trained ear heard the unspoken, she added. "And?"
"Mamma!" Faith protested. "Do you really want all the details?"
Pursing her lips, Heather looked at the floor. "No, I guess I really don't." Looking up at Faith once more, she stood and moved cautiously toward her. "Faith... I... I'm not going to lecture you about morality. You're a grown woman now, and you've been of the age of consent since you were sixteen. I know you love her. I've known you were attracted to her almost from the first."
Looking away embarrassedly, Faith heard her mother move closer until the woman took her hand. Pulling gently, Heather turned Faith to face her.
"Faith. I love you and don't want to see you get hurt." Heather explained. "I... I know that sending Erica away was hard on you both. If I could take it back, I would. You two obviously have a depth of feeling toward one another that is not likely to go away anytime soon. I just..." she paused as she held her feelings in check. "I don't want you to do something you'd regret later, dear. You know you can't have a full and complete relationship with her, don't you? A marriage? Family? Children?"
"I know, Mamma." Faith sniffed. "It's just..."
Nodding slowly, Heather sighed. "It's just that the heart wants what the heart wants, and nothing anyone says or does will change it." Seeing Faith look up at her, Heather smiled gently once more. "I... I can't give my blessing to you two. You know that, don't you?"
Smiling weakly, Faith nodded. "I know, Mamma." she mumbled before turning to embrace her and beginning to cry.
"It's alright, sweetheart." Heather consoled her child. "I know. I know."
"Oh, Mamma!" the younger girl cried. "I just love her so much! I... I always have! From the day she got here I've loved her! Almost from the first moment I saw her! Why?"
"I don't know, dear." Heather admitted. "Lord knows why any of us love who we love. Erica's mother was the same. She fell in love with your uncle Jack at age ten, and loved him with all her heart the rest of her life, even after he was gone." Smiling wistfully, she almost laughed at herself. "Maybe it's something about the Dunning family! They're too easy for us Hargraves to love! Even your uncle Jack! I loved him almost as much as your father!"
Laughing with her through her own tears, Faith pulled away from her mother and retrieved a tissue from her vanity, blowing her nose and wiping her eyes. "Mamma? I want you to know that I tried not to love her."
"Oh, sweetheart!" Heather exclaimed as she pulled Faith to sit next to her on Faith's bed. "You can't choose not to love someone. That's not up to us."
Nodding in understanding, Faith exhaled heavily. "I know... it's up to God." Sighing again, she fiddled with her tissue. "But why did He make me have to love her? Someone I can't have!"
"I don't know, dear." Heather shrugged. "Maybe she needed that love to sustain her until she could find April." Pausing, Heather broached a delicate subject. "Faith... about April. Erica has a chance at a good life with her. Do you intend to stand in their way?"
Blushing, Faith tore the tissue in half. "No. I'm glad Erica has April! I just want her to be happy, and April makes her happy."
Nodding, she watched Faith's reaction and knew there was more. "Go on."
"Mamma!" Faith whined as she stood and paced her room again. "I don't think you want to know the rest."
"If you want me to understand, I think I need to know the rest." Heather retorted, "Whether I want to know or not, this... thing... between you and your cousin could lead to an end far worse than even my sending her away did. Besides, I think I'm a fair and open-minded woman. Just talk to me. You should trust me, dear."
Unsure, Faith tossed the remains of her tissue in her wastebasket and pulled out a fresh one, only to start tearing it up in her hands right away. "Um... well... see, Erica had an idea..."
Sighing as she relaxed on the couch in a nightgown and robe after a good shower, Erica closed her eyes. The next thing she knew, she was being awakened by a kiss. Smiling, she opened her eyes to see April leaning over her with a grin of her own. "Hi!" she purred. "Sorry I dozed off."
"That's OK." April grinned as she sat on the edge of the couch next to her. "I liked waking you up! I nearly fell asleep in my tub!"
Sitting up to try and shake off the sleepiness, Erica wiped her face with her hands. "Um... so anyway, I was going to tell you about my talk with Mamma."
"The sex talk?" April smiled seductively.
"Yeah..." Erica answered as she looked away shyly.
Laughing, April slipped her hand into Erica's. "You're so cute when you get all embarrassed!" she giggled.
Rolling her eyes, Erica giggled back. "So anyway... um... she asked me if I was a... um... a virgin. When I told her I was, she told me that since we love each other, you and I, that it's a gift from God so it would be... um... OK... if we... um..." Stammering, Erica couldn't make herself say it.
"Make love?" April finished for her. Seeing Erica nod, she smiled. "Your mom's a wise woman, Erica! You should always follow a mother's advice!"
Laughing together a moment, Erica looked away shyly. "I... um... so I was thinking, if you... I mean... do you... you know... still want to? With me? I mean... if you still want to, I would like it... um... if we..."
Pulling Erica to her feet, April wrapped her arms around her best friend. "With you? Yes! Always!" Leaning in to kiss her gently and lovingly, April sighed when they were done. "But not tonight. We're both pretty tired, which is a terrible state to be in for this kind of discussion!"
Nodding in understanding, Erica only briefly considered the idea that April was dodging being with her now that she was willing before dismissing the idea as nonsense. April loves me and wants me. Erica reminded herself.
"So why don't we go to bed and pick this up first thing tomorrow?" April suggested. "That way we're rested and thinking clearly."
"You're right." Erica agreed disappointedly. "We shouldn't be discussing it at this hour." she noted the large clock over the fireplace that showed it to be after eleven. Straightening her robe, she embraced April again happily. "I love you, April!" she sighed.
"Always have and always will!" she answered back. "Come on!" Heading to Erica's bedroom door, they stopped at the entrance.
"See you in the morning!" Erica smiled.
"Mmm hmm!" April wordlessly answered.
Opening her bedroom door, Erica headed in, but was surprised when the door wouldn't close due to April being in the way. "Was there something else you needed?" she asked curiously.
"No!" April smiled back.
"OK." Erica nodded to her. "Goodnight!" Waiting for April to step back out into the hallway, her smile slowly melted. "Um... are you sure there's nothing you need? Did you want to ask me something?"
"As a matter of fact, yes." April answered as she squeezed past Erica, her breasts pressing against the room's owner as she moved into it. Pulling off her robe to reveal that she was wearing a short and sexy red negligée, April looked back at the shocked girl. "Which side do you sleep on?"
Erica blinked several times before she stammered out, "Um... my right side."
Nodding happily, April nonchalantly walked up to the right side of Erica's bed, pulled down the covers, slid gracefully under them, and lay down on her right side. "Coming to bed?" she asked simply.
Slowly, Erica made her way over to the opposite side of her bed until she could look down and see the teen's eyes were closed. "Um... April?"
Opening her eyes and smiling at her confused girlfriend, April patted the space in front of her. "Remember to turn out the light, honey!"
Gulping, Erica absently switched off the light, took off her robe, and slid under the pulled back covers. When at last she lay down and rolled onto her right side, she felt the bed move and soon April was snuggled against her back. Scarcely able to breathe, Erica lay there wide-eyed for a few moments that seemed to take hours before April spoke.
"I love you." she stated breathily against Erica's neck as her free arm snaked around Erica's waist and pulled the girl tightly against her body.
"I love you, too." Erica replied as she slowly began to relax into the familiar comfort of having another girl sleep next to her and hold her throughout the night. Sighing contentedly after a few minutes, she soon drifted off into a soothing sleep filled with visions of April making love to her.
She awoke to a familiar feeling. Lying on her back, Erica opened her eyes to see the ceiling as April slid up the front her body, causing her to inhale sharply at the pleasure.
"Good morning, love!" April cooed, almost lying on Erica's prone form. "Ready to have the rest of that talk?"
Clearing her throat, Erica smiled and then gasped as she felt April's hand slide up her thigh. "Um... talk?" she asked, still not fully awake.
"Yes." April said through a smile. "About you and I? About what we might do with one another? Together? Alone?"
Slowly recalling the previous night's discussion, her mind was ripped apart by the exquisite sensations April was inflicting on her. "Oh, April!" she gasped. "That feels..." Gasping again, she couldn't finish her thought before April lowered her lips down to Erica's, kissing her passionately as she let her fingers glide gently and slowly all over Erica's sensitive skin.
"I know." April answered happily as she ended the kiss and her fingers drifted places no one other than Faith had ever touched. "I was thinking about what you were telling me last night... about Faith?" She paused a moment as Erica shuddered with pleasure. "Are you going to let her take you?" Giving the poor girl a chance, April slowed her sensual assault and just let her free hand come to rest on Erica's slender waist.
Recovering the use of her lungs, Erica gasped and breathed heavily for a moment before looking up at April. "Um... do you want to be discussing her now? While we're... um..."
"Making out?" April smiled.
"Yeah! I mean... yes, while we're making out." Erica stammered.
Kissing Erica again even more passionately, she felt the helpless girl's fingers comb through her dark naturally curly hair, sending shivers down her own spine. "Oh, yes!" she sighed. "Do you want me to stop?" she asked.
"No..." Erica admitted, "...but maybe you should, so I can actually think!"
Laughing throatily, April rolled off her captive and lay next to her smiling. "Alright, party pooper!" she jokingly grumbled. "You win! Admittedly, I was trying to fix the decision."
"What do you mean?" Erica asked, furrowing her brow.
"I mean..." April explained lovingly, "...that I was going to make love to you, so you can make love to Faith when you see her at Thanksgiving."
"What?" Erica squeaked. "Why?"
"Because I love you, stupid!" April giggled.
"You love me stupid?" she asked confusedly.
"Yes!" April agreed. "I love you so much you become stupid, apparently!" Giggling until Erica finally joined in, April was happy to feel Erica's hand slipping into her own. "Seriously though, I... I don't want you to have any hesitation when Faith wants to take things to the next level. I... I want you to." she admitted.
Again she asked, "Why?"
Exasperated, April groaned. "Why? Because I love you and want you to be happy! I want you to be able to feel the joy she can give you without feeling so... so guilty about it!"
Rolling away from April, Erica gave voice to her shame. "I should feel guilty. She's my cousin!"
"And you love each other." April added. "What else matters?"
"Why doesn't it bother you!" Erica snapped. "It should! Even if she wasn't my cousin, it should bother you that I want to make love to another woman!"
Sighing, April rolled onto her back. "I'll admit I'm a little jealous."
"See? So then why..."
"Because I'd rather have ninety-nine percent of you than none at all!" April shouted. Calming down, she rolled back to face Erica again. "Erica, you love Faith. Nothing is going to change that, and I know it. So I can either have part of you, or none of you. Some of someone as special, beautiful, and wonderful as you is better than none."
Caught off-guard by the depth of love April was demonstrating, Erica swallowed hard. "You really love me that much, April?" she asked.
"Yes." she answered quickly and simply.
"And Faith being my cousin..."
"...doesn't bother me one bit!" April smiled. "I know, at first I thought you were both pervs, but then I saw how much you actually love each other. It's... it's beautiful, Erica!"
Smiling lovingly, the moment was shattered with April's next statement.
"Actually it's kinda hot!" she added. "Taboo! Like... like incest porn only..."
"April!" Erica shouted with an indignant look on her face.
Cracking up, April began laughing so hard she soon had Erica's serious countenance cracking to a smile, then giggles, and finally full laughter at her side.
"You're sick!" Erica giggled.
"I know! I am!" April admitted through laughter. "I'm so demented!"
Slowly, their giggles faded as they looked into each other's eyes. April moved first, propping herself on one arm as the other hand reached out and caressed Erica's cheek. "Seriously, I just want you to be happy. She makes you happy. Nothing else matters."
"You matter." Erica corrected her. "I don't think I could ever deserve you."
Moving closer, April let her hands drift down across Erica's soft breasts before roaming lower. "You don't have to deserve me, honey. We deserve each other." At that, she leaned down and they resumed their passionate kissing as April at last got her heart's greatest desire.
They finally became one.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Opening the door the same as he'd done thousands of times before, this time Fredrick cracked a smile at the person greeting him. "Welcome home, Miss Erica!" he said almost joyfully.
Erica swept into the house with April close behind, Fredrick helping her off with her coat as their luggage was delivered to the front door. "Thanks, Eddie! Fredrick? This is Eddie, my chauffeur."
Looking the man up and down as if inspecting his worthiness to drive Erica around, he nodded respectfully. "Eddie?" he inquired.
"Edward Green!" the large man said happily, extending a hand to him once they were free. "So you're Fredrick! You're a hard act to follow!"
Raising an eyebrow at his familiarity, Fredrick nevertheless shook the man's hand formally. "Indeed, sir. Is there anything else for Miss Erica or Miss April?"
Coming up alongside the giant man, Erica hugged him. "Oh, Fredrick! No, that's all!" Turning to her own driver, she nodded. "Thanks, Eddie! I'll see you on Sunday at three! Have a good holiday!"
"I'll be here!" he answered with a smile as he tipped his hat to his employer. "Happy Thanksgiving to you as well, ma'am!"
After the heavy door closed, Erica turned around to see her aunt sweeping down the stairs with Faith, both dressed in fine gowns. While Heather's was a lovely pale-blue floor-length chiffon Empire line with a modest neckline and long sleeves, Faith's was a deep crimson satin strapless A-line with a tea-length skirt and bustled half-wrap train that just touched the floor as she moved. Caught breathless by her beauty, Erica had to tear her eyes away from her cousin to look to her aunt who'd said something.
"The drive up was fine, Heather!" April answered for Erica. Looking at her awestruck girlfriend, she shook her head dismissively. The green satin evening gown Erica wore was conservative, but the way Erica wore it was enough to make a eunuch yearn. Her own black satin gown that Erica had bought tailor-made to fit her helped her at least feel like she fit in.
"Mamma!" Erica ran up and hugged Heather warmly as she reached the bottom of the stairs. "You look beautiful!"
"Erica, love!" Heather returned the embrace. "I'm glad you're home again!"
"Me too, Mamma!" she nearly cried. Finally releasing her, she looked around. "Where's Cook and Fran?"
"Working!" Franchesca yelled invisibly from around the top of the stairs. "Some of us still work for a living, missy!"
Turning at last to Faith, she swallowed. "Faith." she said nervously, trying to keep the desire out of her voice. While April hugged Heather hello, the two cousins looked at one another with hunger barely masked behind their eyes. Slowly, they stepped toward one another and embraced chastely, holding it for just a moment longer than prudent. "You look stunning!" Erica finally said as they parted.
"You're breathtaking, Erica!" Faith intoned wantonly.
Just then, Theresa came out to greet the two, wiping her hands on her apron, Erica pulled away from Faith and went to hug her. "Cook!" she shouted gaily.
"Now, now! None of that, dearie!" she barked, making Erica freeze in her steps. "That's a lovely gown you've got on and I'm covered in turkey goop for tomorrow's dinner!"
Smiling, Erica approached. "I don't care!" she stated as she hugged the large woman from the side, still trying to be careful not to ruin her dress.
Patting the girl's bare arms, Theresa relented. "I missed you too, dearie!"
Welcomes concluded, while Fredrick took their bags to Erica's room, her aunt led them all to the living room where she took her usual place on the love seat with Faith, Erica and April taking their place on the opposite love seat. "So you're staying until Sunday afternoon then, sweetheart?" she asked.
"Yes, Mamma." Erica politely answered. "I have to be back Monday morning for a book signing."
Smiling, Heather looked at her lovingly. "I'm so proud of you, dear!"
Blushing, she turned to Faith. "She's the one to be proud of, Mamma! Starting nursing college in the spring! I just write mule-puke that people pay me way too much money for!"
"Thanks, Erica!" Faith said, taking her turn to blush.
"I'm proud of both my girls!" Heather said with satisfaction. Looking from Erica to Faith, she sighed and put off discussing the uncomfortable situation until later. "We should be going soon. You got here just in time!"
"Couldn't get here sooner unless we rented a helicopter!" Erica giggled. "We left as soon as Mavis finished our hair!"
"Mavis?" Heather inquired.
"My hairdresser." Erica explained. Stopping, she corrected herself. "Sorry, our hairdresser!" she smiled as she looked at April.
"That's better, honey!" April sniffed.
"It is time, Madame Hargrave." Fredrick informed his employer with the punctuality of a Swiss clock.
The four rose together and headed toward the door. "Thank you, Fredrick." Heather said gracefully.
"Have fun, you four!" Theresa waved to them, glad to have the evening off cooking dinner to prepare for the next day's holiday feast.
A short time later they'd arrived at a local up-scale steakhouse. It was a beautiful autumn evening, only just starting to turn cool before the heavy snows sure to fall within weeks or days. Entering, they were quickly seated and wine was poured for Heather.
"May I have a sip, Mamma?" Erica asked mischievously.
"No you may not!" Heather laughed lightly.
"Just kidding!" she laughed in return. While April told Heather about her college plans, the two sharing an interest in psychology, Erica turned to Faith. "You look captivating tonight!"
Looking at Erica with barely restrained lust, Faith bit her lip and smiled. "I missed you too, Erica!" she giggled. "So, a book signing?"
"Yeah." Erica looked down shyly at her glass of water. "Nothing special, just a romance novel. It sold over a hundred thousand, though."
"I'm happy for you, Erica!" Faith sighed. Careful not to let her guard down, she straightened up some. "So April wants to be a therapist like Mamma?"
Nodding dreamily, Erica caught herself staring at Faith. "Um... yes. She wants to help people the way she was helped."
"She's a lucky girl." Faith sighed. "I mean... to have such drive."
Erica melted back into a warm smile. "She's not the only girl who can get lucky here tonight!" she said softly enough not to carry beyond the two.
Her mouth falling open at the brazenness of Erica's flirting, Faith found herself to be the one blushing and turning away, her need for Erica ramping up with each passing second.
When at last they headed for home, the women sat together in silence. Furtive glances between Faith and Erica in stolen moments were undercut by April's closeness to Erica and Heather's dower expression. Finally not able to take any more, Heather did something she almost never did.
Reaching the controls above her, she closed the window to the front seat.
"Now then." Heather sighed. "We four are alone and are mature adults. I feel we can be frank with one another."
"Mamma, I don't..." Erica began to object.
"Erica, please!" she interrupted. "I'm not a stupid woman! Please don't insult my intelligence by pretending that I don't have eyes or ears!" Seeing the three cowed, she sighed and looked away. "You and Faith are in love."
"Yes, Mamma." Erica confessed.
"You're also in love with April?" she asked to confirm.
"Yes. We're in love, Mrs. Hargrave. Erica and I." April answered formally.
Closing her eyes, Heather repressed her instinct to immediately condemn the three. "And you all agreed to this... arrangement? No coercion? No ultimatums, threats, or pressuring?" At that she pointedly looked at Erica.
"No, Mamma." Erica answered shyly. "It... um... it was my stupid idea."
Immediately, Faith rushed to defend her cousin. "I was the one that made Erica tell me her idea and agreed to it first!"
"Mrs. Hargrave?" April likewise stood up for Erica. "I'd rather have Erica most of the time than never. I want her to be happy, so I just couldn't make her choose one of us over the other! It's just not fair!"
"Life is rarely fair, young lady." Heather admonished.
"But it can be this time!" April countered. "If we choose it to be."
Sighing in frustration, Heather shook her head. "I should put my foot down and insist that Erica and Faith have nothing to do with one another!" she nearly shouted. Calming herself, she added her caveat. "However, you three are all consenting adults and I cannot make you forget this notion."
Erica looked at her aunt with tears in her eyes. "Mamma? If you tell me not to see Faith, I'll do what you say."
"What!" Faith shouted. "Erica, no!"
"Erica!" April looked at her. "You can't do that! You love each other!"
"Mamma!" Faith turned to Heather. "Please! Don't say it!"
Heather looked sternly at Erica who sat silently crying across from her and next to April. She was moments from saying the words when she found herself utterly unable to speak them. I... I just can't hurt her like that! Not again! she admonished herself. Even as Faith and April both assailed her with objections and pleas, she simply raised her hand and waited for them to stop. The car at last silent once more, her eyes never looked away from her niece. "Erica? Why would you do this?"
Looking up at her aunt with wet cheeks, Erica took in a ragged breath. "Because I could never do anything that would make you disappointed in me, Mamma! I... I love you too much!"
Her heart melting at the sentiment, Heather felt the tear slide down her cheek and quickly wiped it away. "I... I could never do that, sweetheart. I've already caused enough pain in your life." Seeing Erica about to justify Heather's decision to send her away, she forestalled it with one final argument. "I know I did it for what I believed to be your own good, but it did cause you both quite a lot of pain, I nearly lost you forever, and this situation is no different. I won't take the same chance twice."
Softening her countenance, Heather smiled weakly. "I just... I don't want to see you hurt." Turning to Faith, she shook her head. "Either of you! You two are too precious to me! If either of you got hurt like that again, I... I don't think I could take it!"
"Oh, Mamma!" Faith cried as she flung her arms around Heather. "I love you! I promise we'll be fine!"
Returning the affection, Heather wept openly. "Faith? Are you sure this is what you want? I... I just don't want you to regret this, baby! If you two have a bad breakup, I... I just couldn't choose between my girls! It would kill me to even try!"
"You'll never have to, Mamma!" Faith promised. "I swear!"
Getting past the emotional trauma after several minutes, Heather collected her thoughts. "Very well. Before I can... well... be OK with this, for lack of a better word, arrangement, I do have a few requirements you'd have to agree to abide by. Nothing unreasonable for three adults, just some guidelines to help smooth things over for everyone's best interest. Alright?"
"Yes, Mamma." Erica agreed before even hearing them. "What are they?"
Looking at the girl, Heather took a breath. "First of all, no one may know about it outside we four. That's for everyone's protection, including mine. Not Fredrick, not Theresa, not Franchesca... no one! If word of this got out, it would not only wreak havoc on your lives, but mine as well for allowing it! Agreed?"
Hearing all three agree, Heather continued. "Erica? You know this could potentially destroy your company if it got out, don't you?" Seeing her nod, Heather laid down her second condition. "If it does, I won't help you save your company. This is your choice, so you'll have to live with whatever consequences there are! Faith? Same to you. It will be extremely difficult to get a nursing job with this kind of scandal. If it gets out, you'll have to accept the result and I won't help you save your career. You too, April. Few would trust a therapist with this in her background. You three wouldn't get any help from me, save that you'll always be welcome in my home. Agreed?"
Seeing their assent once more, Heather moved on to her third rule. "I expect you two to be discreet!" she admonished Erica and Faith. "No public displays like I saw tonight! I may have to tolerate the situation, but I don't want to see it or hear about it? Is that understood? April? I expect you to make sure they are discreet! If you're so willing to let Erica have this... tryst... with Faith, then you'll have to see to it they're being discreet and safe. Agreed?"
Once more they acquiesced, Heather handing out her final decree. "Lastly, if at any point, any of you wishes for this... relationship... to end, it must! You must all agree that anyone involved can end it at any time for any reason, without argument or recriminations from either of the other two." Looking at Faith and Erica pointedly, she added, "That means if April no longer wishes to help you maintain the secrecy of your relationship, you must end it... willingly. Can you all agree to that?"
Looking at Faith and then April and seeing them nod, Erica answered for all three of them. "Agreed, Mamma. We promise it will only continue as long as all of us agree it should."
Nervously, Heather looked out the window. "Very well, then. I... I won't try to stop it." It was as far as she was willing to go. Turning to Erica again, she blushed slightly. "Sweetheart? I... I hate to ask something so private, but I must know. Are you... well... fertile still?"
Turning crimson, Erica shrank away from her aunt, but forced herself to answer. "N-no, Mamma. I... I'm not." Explaining briefly about what she'd done after turning eighteen, she was barely audible above the road noise.
"Well, there's that at least." Heather consoled herself. "Understand girls, I just don't want either of you two to get hurt by this. Love is a wonderful thing, but a relationship is more than just about love or sex... it's about a commitment to one another, one not to be taken lightly. Erica's relationship with April, while non-traditional, is at least socially accepted now and can be fulfilling in all the ways any other can. This... relationship... between you two will be very difficult. One or the other of you might want more down the road, more than the other is willing or able to give."
Taking the momentary lull, April stepped in. "Mrs. Hargrave, that's all true, but isn't it also true of any couple? I mean, take that Mike guy and his ex."
Examining the logic of it, Heather nodded and sighed in resignation. "Of course. You're right, April. Every relationship is a danger. This one just has extra dangers. A falling out between them would have effects for the family. Holidays and get-togethers would be fraught with the lasting effects. As long as you three can abide by your agreements though, I... I suppose I can learn to live with it." I'll have to. Heather mused silently.
By the time Fredrick had driven them home, the excitement and anticipation between Erica and Faith had been buried in the practical arrangements they'd agreed to. When the household began to turn in for the evening, Erica just having gotten out of her shower, she sat at her vanity brushing and drying her hair absently.
"April?" she asked curiously. Seeing her through the vanity mirror looking over at her from the bed, Erica put down her hot curling brush. "Um... are... are you sure you're OK with this? I mean, once we cross this line..."
"Erica." April sighed as she got up and walked over to stand behind her oldest friend, "We talked this to death! I swear to you I am one hundred percent behind you on this!" Pausing a moment, her gentle smile melted. "That is, if this is still what you want..."
Shrugging absently, Erica looked at her lap. "I guess I do, it's just..."
"Scared?" April half finished for her. Smiling as Erica nodded, she picked up the brush idly and ran it through Erica's hair. "I know this is a big step for you two. I really am happy for you, though."
Closing her eyes as she luxuriated in the feeling of April brushing her hair, Erica let out a cleansing breath. "I... I think I'm ready." she sighed.
Hearing a gentle knock on her door, Faith nearly jumped out of her skin. "C... come in?" she asked. When the door opened to reveal her mother coming to say goodnight, Faith relaxed. "Hi, Mamma." she said nervously.
Heather glided into her daughter's bedroom, the clutter of only a month earlier having been replaced by neat organization, reminiscent of Faith's youth. Sitting on the satin comforter next to her baby girl, Heather reached out a comforting hand to Faith. "I just came in to say goodnight, dear. You seem upset." she asked without asking.
Looking away embarrassedly, Faith took the offered hand and fidgeted with her other. "Not really upset. Just more... um... nervous?"
Perplexed, Heather tilted her head slightly and furrowed her thin eyebrows. "Nervous?" she asked quizzically. "What on earth would you have to be..." Realization dawned on her slowly as she pulled her offered hand back and looked away. "Oh! I... um... Of course. Erica's here and you know I won't interfere, so naturally..." Her voice trailed off before she turned back to look at Faith. "I... I am trying, dear." she stammered. "Are... are you sure about this, sweetheart? About only being able to be with her as... well... as a mistress? What about your own future? Don't you want a family someday?"
"Mamma!" Faith whined. "Yes! It's enough for me! Just knowing that she's mine, even for only a little while!" Laughing lightly, she added, "Like April said... I... I'd rather have some of her heart than none of it." Looking back at Heather, it was her turn to extend a comforting hand. When her mother took it, she smiled. "As for a family, I'm only eighteen, still! Who knows what the future has in store? Shouldn't I enjoy this while it lasts?"
Hearing a piece of her own advice to Erica from less than a month earlier, Heather nodded and looked down. "Of course. You're right, Faith. You know your own heart and... and I do want you two to be happy! I just wish..." Her voice cracked as she tried to come to terms with their love.
"...that we hadn't fallen in love with each other?" Faith finished for her.
Nodding quickly, Heather hesitated, thought a moment, then shook her head slowly. "No. I... I wouldn't take that away from either of you for anything, Faith! It's a beautiful thing, being in love!" Wiping away a tear for her lost husband, Heather took a breath and smiled. "I love you two so much! I... I just... I worry... that... that you might pass up a more... well... a more acceptable love, one you could express openly and freely, trying to hold on to one that you have to keep hidden."
Seeing Faith about to object, Heather shook her head dismissively. "I know! Erica loves you too much to stand in the way of your happiness. You two... um... you three... will work something out. I'll let it go." At that she got up, kissed Faith on the forehead, petted her hair a moment, and sighed, "Have a good... um... good night, dear. I love you."
"I love you too, Mamma!" Faith nearly cried as Heather drifted gracefully out her bedroom door, leaving her alone with her mother's thoughts.
Waiting patiently for her aunt to come say goodnight, Erica lay fidgeting in bed next to April, who sat up reading a new book; having finished her last one while Erica was showering. She'd tried reading Erica's novels a few times, but her tastes ran in a different direction and she didn't enjoy them, so Erica tried not to take it personally that she was reading a competitor's novel.
"Still nervous?" April asked without even looking away from her book.
"Sorry." Erica mumbled as she laced her fingers together and sat up next to April. "Love? Are you sure..."
"Erica!" April laughed as she put her book down and looked at her. "Will you stop asking me that? Yes! I'm sure! OK? Positive! Absolutely certain! One hundred and fifty percent in favor of it!" By the end of her tirade, she was giggling so hard Erica could barely understand her.
"I just..." Erica looked away. "I couldn't stand it if I hurt you. I can't take it back once she and I... um... you know..."
"Believe me, Erica!" April comforted her. "I want this for you! You're my best friend and I love you! How could I not want to see you happy?"
Erica nodded and swallowed hard as she heard the gentle knock from the door. "Come in, Mamma." she said with a sigh as she settled back down to lay on her pillow while April picked up her book and resumed reading.
Entering quietly, Heather moved over to Erica's side of the bed nearest the vanity and sat next to the girl she loved as much as Faith. "Just came in to say goodnight, sweetheart." Bending over and kissing Erica's cheek, she absently pushed the girl's bangs away from her eyes. "Need anything?"
"No, Mamma." Erica said softly. "Goodnight to you, too."
Taking a breath, Heather nearly tried to talk Erica out of her very obvious plans, but bit her tongue and simply smiled down at her. "Very well, sweetie. Sleep well." Pausing a moment, she added, "I... I think I'll listen to some music tonight." Rising to leave, she paused and turned to April. "Goodnight to you too, dear."
"Night, Heather!" April smiled as she tore her eyes away from her story.
As the woman left and April went back to her book, Erica's heart pounded in fear. "Um... I, uh... I think Mamma knows."
"Duh!" April answered with a giggle. "She's not stupid, Erica! You two basically have the green light from her, and have the opportunity. I don't think she's going to listen to music tonight out of a sudden need for culture!" Elbowing Erica until she looked at her, April smiled and looked toward the door. "Well? What are you waiting for? Go! I'll see you in the morning!"
Climbing out of bed, Erica made her way around it and kissed April on the forehead. "I love you." she stated simply. "Goodnight!"
Smiling back, April gestured for Erica to lean in closer. Giving her a quick peck on the cheek, she smiled. "Goodnight, honey! Have fun!" she giggled.
Suddenly flushed, Erica swallowed and nodded. "Yes, dear. Goodnight." Nervously, she made her way to her door and slowly pried it open. Hearing the soft strains of Tchaikovsky coming from her aunt's room, she quickly crossed the hall and, without knocking, slipped into the room she'd slept in so many times before turning thirteen. Turning around, she gasped as she saw Faith laying in her bed with the sheets pulled up to her neck.
The two stared at each other for what seemed to be hours before Erica slowly started toward the bed they would share once again. "Um... I wanted to say that you looked really sexy tonight, Faith." she said barely above a whisper.
"You too, Erica." Faith answered nervously. "So, coming to bed?"
Erica nodded and slowly removed her satin robe, draping it over the back of their once shared vanity chair. Clasping her hands and twisting them in knots, she slowly approached the bed.
"We don't have to..." Faith began as she looked away ashamedly.
Quickly moving up to the bed, Erica shook her head vigorously. "No! I mean... yes... I mean... not if you don't want to..."
"But I do!" Faith interrupted. "I mean... if you still want to..."
"I do!" Erica insisted as she slowly pulled back the covers. Seeing Faith smile sweetly, Erica relaxed and slipped into the bed next to her. "It's a little weird being on this side." she noted apprehensively.
"Do you wanna switch?" Faith asked.
"Well, I'm already in bed." Erica opined anxiously. "It would be silly to get out again, just to move over to the other side."
"Here." Faith offered, slipping down low and close up to her. "You... you can just... sorta... just slide over me." The shake in her voice gave away her feelings, no matter how hard she'd tried to ignore them.
Gulping, Erica nodded and rolled over until she was positioned just over Faith. Looking down at her as Faith looked up into her eyes, both saw the same yearning, but also no small amount of fear. Pausing only a moment, Erica continued to roll over until she was once more on the right side of the bed where she'd slept for almost six months. Turning over onto her right side to face Faith, she saw that her cousin was still lying on her back and breathing heavily. "Are... are you OK, Faith?" she asked concernedly.
"No!" she whispered in answer. "I mean..." Rolling over to face away from Erica, she was almost crying. "You're here... we're free to do whatever we want..." Her voice cracked as tears began to fall down her cheek.
"Do... do you want me to go?" Erica asked sadly.
"No!" she sobbed. "I... I don't know what I want, Erica!" she admitted. "I've always wanted you! And now... now that I have you... that we can..."
"...cross that line?" Erica continued for her.
Nodding, Faith wiped away the tears. "Yeah... now that we can... I don't know if we should."
"I know what you mean." Erica sighed, a single tear dripping down her right cheek until it was soaked into the pillow. "Mamma wanted to stop us, but... she can't... but maybe we should stop ourselves."
Faith began to sob uncontrollably until she felt Erica slide up next to her and take her in her arms. Rolling over quickly, Faith snaked her arms around Erica and cried as they held each other. After several minutes and her fears had run their course, Faith looked at Erica. "Thanks." she sniffed.
"You're welcome." she smiled contentedly. "You know I'd do anything for you, Faith. I love you."
Slipping down to rest her head on Erica's shoulder, Faith sighed and closed her eyes. "I... I know I said I wanted to... to make love to you tonight Erica, but..." At a loss for words, Faith simply tightened her hold on her love.
"...but you changed your mind?" Erica finished for her as she gently petted Faith's soft blonde curls.
"No..." Faith rebutted. "Well, not exactly anyway. I mean, I want to... and I know we did all that stuff so we could be together, but... um... it's just that it feels like it's expected of us now... like..."
"...we don't have a choice." the two chorused.
Giggling, Faith lifted her eyes to look at Erica. "You too?"
Nodding, Erica sighed sadly. "Yeah. I mean, April was practically pushing me out the door! I felt like she didn't want me to be near her. I felt a little... um... rejected."
"April loves you, Erica!" Faith defended her. "I should know. I can see it in her eyes. She just wants you to be happy."
"What about you?" she asked, looking into Faith's eyes.
Looking toward the far wall, Faith sighed out a single word. "Mamma."
Continuing to gently run her fingers through Faith's hair, Erica nodded in understanding. "I know."
"It's just... um... she's so afraid that we'll regret it later, but she was so understanding to not try and stop us, and now, it's like... she just left it up to us and is hoping we make the right decision without her having to make us stop." Faith rambled. "It makes me feel guilty that I don't want to."
"Me too." Erica agreed. Sitting up as Faith did the same, the two sat next to each other, their hands joined, and looked into each other's eyes. "I still love you Faith. You can have me if you still want me."
With her free hand, Faith caressed Erica's cheek, prompting the younger girl to turn her head and kiss Faith's fingers, her eyes closing. "You are so beautiful, Erica." Faith nearly whispered. "And right now I do have you. You're mine and I could do anything I want with you."
When Faith's hand withdrew from her face, Erica opened her eyes and looked at her cousin. "So what do you want of me?"
Smiling, Faith lay back down with her head on her pillow. "Right now, I want you to turn around, lay down next to me, and let me hold you and feel you next to me all night."
Smiling, Erica turned to face the far wall and settled under the warm blankets and satin sheets. When Faith spooned up next to her, the feel of her body pressing against her back, Erica sighed contentedly. As Faith's arm wrapped around her waist and slid up her belly to rest her hand between Erica's breasts, she closed her eyes and relished the adoration. "Thank you!" she purred quietly.
With her nose buried in Erica's hair, Faith inhaled deeply and groaned with contented need. "Mmmm... for what?"
"For desiring me this much!" Erica sighed, putting her free hand on Faith's hip. "God, do you know how good it feels to have you this close?"
"Yes." Faith answered breathily. "I do."
Holding each other, the two spent hours luxuriating in their nearness before sleep took them.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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The two were startled awake by knocking on Faith's door.
"Up and at 'em, Faith!" Franchesca barked through the door. Trying the knob, she'd found it locked. "Open up! I need to get the laundry started early, girl!"
Sitting up, Erica's eyes were the size of saucers. "Shit!" she whispered.
"Be there in a sec!" Faith shouted. Giggling as Erica scrambled to get out of her bed, Faith slid out calmly and tossed Erica her robe. "Here!" she whispered.
Catching it and tiptoeing towards the bathroom just as the maid knocked again, she closed the door a moment before Faith unlocked her door.
"Good morning." Faith said calmly as Franchesca swept into the room, making a beeline to the hamper.
"Morning." the woman scowled as she transferred the previous day's dirty clothes to her own basket. "I'll be up to collect the linens after you head down to breakfast." Seeing the teen standing in her robe and fidgeting, she narrowed her eyes suspiciously. "What're you up to?"
"Nothing!" Faith shrugged. "Just not awake yet." she forced a yawn.
Examining her a moment, Franchesca started toward the bathroom door. "Alright, you stick to that story!"
"Franchesca!" Faith drew in a breath. "What do you need in the bathroom? I put all my laundry in the basket! I haven't left any of it in the bath for the last two weeks!"
Stopping short, she sighed. "I need to check the linens to see what you need!"
"Can you do that later?" Faith asked as she quickly headed for the bathroom. "I need to use it right away!"
Squinting at her as Faith ran in the bathroom and closed the door, Franchesca huffed. "I don't know what's gotten into you, but be quick about it! I'll be back in five minutes!"
Listening at the door, Faith heard the maid depart her room. Breathing a sigh of relief, she turned around to see the room empty. "Erica?" she whispered. She was startled for a moment when she saw the shadow move in her tub.
"I hid in here!" Erica whispered with a slight giggle as she climbed out. Running into one another's arms, the two held one another and shared a brief kiss before Erica started toward the door. "I... I need to get back."
"I know." Faith sighed.
"Faith..." Erica stammered, pausing a moment at the door. "I... I love you."
Closing her eyes, Faith took a slow deep breath. "I know. I love you, too."
Reaching the door to Faith's room, she cracked it open and saw the hallway clear. Quickly making her way across the hall, she closed her bedroom door behind her, sighing in relief that no one had seen her, until she turned around to see Franchesca staring at her. "Fran!"
Her normally stern face was cold and hard. "How could you!" she asked just above a whisper. "How could you cheat on April! With your own cousin!" About to storm out, she was stymied when the teen backed against the door.
"Fran! Please! I can explain!"
"Explain what?" she growled quietly. "I loved you and took care of you! And this is the result? You sneaking around behind April's back?"
"It's not behind my back." April said calmly as she came out of the bathroom wearing a terrycloth robe. "I knew where she was last night. Only you, Cook, and Fredrick weren't supposed to know." Looking at Erica, April sighed. "I'm sorry, honey. I forgot to set an alarm to make sure you were back here before six. By the time I realized it, Franchesca was knocking on our door."
"I fell asleep before setting mine." Erica sighed. "Not that it would have done any good. I left my phone here on the vanity. That's the first time I've slept past six in a couple years."
Stunned, Franchesca looked back and forth. "You... you knew about this?"
Shrugging, April stepped closer only to have the maid step back. "Actually, I encouraged it." she admitted. "They're in love. Have been for years."
Her mind racing, Franchesca tried to grasp it all. All those years she'd known that Faith was lovesick over the loss of Erica, but she'd never even suspected that the feelings were reciprocal. Looking at Erica, the girl's head hanging guiltily, she stepped closer to her and whispered, "Erica! She's your cousin! It's wrong! What if your aunt found out! It'd be the death of her!"
"She knows." Erica mumbled. "She's known since the day April and I went back to Concord." Looking up at the woman she loved like family, the teen took a ragged breath. "I... I can't help it!"
"You most certainly can!" Franchesca barked quietly. Turning to April, her eyes turned soft. "I... I've been where you are, miss. My George cheated on me right before Heather and Richard moved in here. That's why I moved with 'em instead of staying there and being a happily married woman!"
"Erica isn't cheating on me!" April insisted.
"What do you call it then?" Franchesca asked with a hand on her hip and a laundry basket under the other arm. "They aren't passing the time of day!"
"It's not like that!" April explained, stepping forward again. "Erica has my permission to be with Faith!"
Turning back to the girl blocking the door, Franchesca shook her head sadly. "I thought I knew you better. How could you have sex with your cousin?"
Swallowing hard, Erica looked away from April. "Well, we haven't actually done that. We just slept together... like when we were little."
"What?" April and Franchesca said together.
Confused, Franchesca stepped closer to the door. "Erica? Look at me." As the girl's head and eyes moved up to look back into her own, Franchesca scrutinized them. "Alright, maybe I don't know what's goin' on, and maybe I don't wanna know! You say nothing happened. Fine. You look awful guilty for a girl that did nothing, though." Taking a breath, the maid tightened her lips into a line. "Move out of the way of the door, girl! I got work ta' do!"
Stepping forward, Erica came up to the woman with a pleading look in her eyes. "Please, Fran! Don't say anything to anyone about this! It's private!"
"Say what?" Franchesca scoffed. "I don't know what goes on and I don't spread rumors! Until I do know something I don't have anything to say!" Moving around the girl, she opened the door. "Don't dawdle getting ready for breakfast!" she snapped before closing the door harshly.
"Erica?" April looked at her love standing near the door. "Are you OK?"
"No!" the girl answered through restrained tears.
Moving close, April took her hand and led her to the bed. Sitting together, April continued to hold it while petting Erica's head with the other to calm the hysterical girl down. "Do you want to talk about what happened?"
Nodding, Erica got up to get a tissue before sitting back down next to her. "We... um... we didn't... we just went to bed."
"Why?" April asked incredulously. "What happened?"
"I don't think we're ready to cross that line!" Erica explained. "I mean, we want to, but last night was just too... it felt... forced. Like we were expected to. It would have been all wrong."
Wrapping her arm around Erica, April sighed and shook her head. "I guess it's partly my fault. I... I was being pushy... like always!"
"You aren't always pushy!" Erica rebutted as she dried her eyes and sniffed. "Just when you want your way!"
"Oh, very funny!" April laughed.
Getting dressed, the rest of the day passed happily, if awkwardly on a few occasions. Franchesca didn't say anything, but just kept looking at the two. Meanwhile, Heather was trying to read their perplexing body language. She was sure Erica slept in Faith's room, but the way they moved, sat, stood, and talked only spoke of quiet frustration instead of the relaxed attitude of lovers.
After a brief trip down to the Dempsey ranch to visit, the four sat down to dinner with Brooke and Jenny, Heather saying the prayer of thanks before looking up to smile at the five seated at the table.
"Well, I know what I'm thankful for this year!" Heather sighed happily. "Having my girls back! Both of you! That, and getting to know April! These last few weeks have been wonderful, being a family again!" Turning to Faith, she waited expectantly.
"Well, I guess I'm thankful to have Erica back in my life, our lives I mean, that we're all still here to be a family again, to April for making Erica happy, for getting into nursing college, and... um... to you Mamma, for being so forgiving. I haven't been as good as I should have been."
"Forgiven and forgotten, Faith!" Heather smiled, still noticing the girl's pensiveness. "Erica?"
"Yes, Mamma." the visibly tense teen answered. "I'm thankful that you all still love me, unconditionally." Looking at those at the table with her before turning her attention around the room to Fredrick, Cook, and Franchesca last with a mildly embarrassed blush. "I'm also thankful to be here, to have April back in my life, and... to be me again." Turning to April, she waited.
Looking at the five others sitting at the table looking at her, it took the girl a moment to realize they were waiting on her. "Oh! Me? Um... I guess I'm thankful to have Erica back, too... don't get a swelled head though!" she laughed along with the others. "Um... I guess that and getting to meet you all, knowing that Erica was loved and cared for after she left. That's all."
Taking a cleansing breath, Brooke looked at the three teens sitting across from her. "I'm thankful for a lot of things, but I think the one that stands out is getting to have a chance to know Erica." Her voice faltering, the retired Marine looked down. "I... I have a lot to make up for. When she lived here, I didn't take the time to know her. I didn't want to know her. When I see him, your dad's gonna give me an a... he's gonna have some words for me!" Looking up as the others at the table giggled, Brooke smiled. "I'm thankful of the chance, anyway."
Beaming happily, Jenny looked at the assembled family. "I'm thankful to have all of you in my life! April? You're a doll! I'm glad you two found each other! I'm also thankful that tomorrow I get to see my parents! They're finally coming back home from Asia, this time to stay!" Turning to Brooke, she smirked. "You're coming with me this time, love! Mom and Dad missed you last time!"
Rolling her eyes, Brooke sighed resignedly. "Yes, dear."
"Well then!" Heather smiled. "Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!" Diving into the meal, the six chatted and ate until they at last retired to the living room.
Looking over at her best friend's only child, Brooke smiled. "You look so much like your mother, Erica. There are times though that you're just like your father! You have his sense of humor... and his wisdom."
Blushing as April squeezed her hand, Erica looked back at her. "I'll take that as a compliment, Aunt Brooke."
"I meant to tell you, I read your book." she continued. "It's good."
"Which one?" Erica asked curiously.
"Your autobiography."
"Oh." she said as she looked away with her cheeks flushing. "I... um... I wrote that when I thought you all hated me... the real me, I mean. I tried not to make anyone look bad, but..."
"It's OK!" Brooke smiled. "You were right, and you made us all look good in the end, better than we were, anyway. I know you made it so no one would recognize that the person you wrote about in chapter twelve was me, but I knew. I... I wasn't very nice to you, and not nearly as understanding as I should have been. You're a remarkable young woman, Erica. I... I should have seen that sooner."
"It's alright, Aunt Brooke." Erica consoled her. "It all turned out the way it needed to."
Listening to the two, Jenny spoke up. "Erica, I just want you to know that Brooke felt very bad about how she treated you when you lived here. It ate her up inside for years afterward." Looking at her wife, she took a deep breath and got a stern look on her face. "I told her that you didn't seem like any boy I ever knew, but she had a lot of trouble accepting it."
"If it's any consolation Brooke," April offered, "I had a lot of trouble at first, too." Turning to Erica, she sighed sadly. "The first time I saw her I made her cry, I hurt her so badly. I... I didn't even stay a week. I flew back to Arizona early and tried to forget her, but she... she didn't give up on me."
"How did you two reconcile?" Heather asked.
Smiling wistfully, April shrugged a shoulder. "When I got back, I found out my boss replaced me. I got a call from her the next day. Her detectives hadn't been called off the job yet, so they told her what happened. Erica didn't just offer me money like I thought she was going to do, she... she made some calls and got me a job interview. She said she knew I didn't want anything to do with her, but she had to help in some way. That's when I knew she was the same person I grew up with. She offered to 'lose' my contact info after helping, but I felt bad that I'd treated her so mean and then when I got in trouble she was right there for me. We kept talking, and after a few weeks I realized that I was still in love with her."
Brooke looked at April guiltily. "I appreciate you trying to make me feel better about my own problems accepting Erica, but I had a year to accept it and still refused to see what was right in front of me." Turning to Erica, she grimaced. "I... I wanted Erica to be just like Jack. I missed my best friend so much that hoped I could get some of him back in his son. I'm sorry, Erica." Smiling, she added, "Turns out that's exactly who she is anyway... a little bit Jack... a little bit her mother Erica... and a lot just herself!"
When the evening turned late, the Hathaways headed for their own home while Hargrave House wound down for the night. Once more, Erica sat at her vanity brushing out her hair with April reading on the bed when Heather knocked lightly. "Come in, Mamma."
Silently, Heather made her way across the room to her niece. "Just came in to say goodnight and say Happy Thanksgiving once more!" she said softly. Seeing Erica smile as she brushed herself, Heather remembered the many times she'd seen the child Erica doing the same thing. "Could I help you, sweetie?" she offered as she'd done so many times five years earlier.
"I'd love that, Mamma!" she smiled. When Heather took the brush and ran it through her auburn hair, Erica sighed contentedly. "That feels so nice!"
"I remember you used to love me brushing your hair!" Heather reminisced. "Unless you had a bad tangle!"
Laughing lightly, Erica closed her eyes. "Yeah! You always made it better though, Mamma. Faith brushed out my hair most nights though, until..." An uncomfortable silence sprang up between the two as they remembered when Heather had forced the two girls into separate rooms.
Hearing the awkwardness unspoken, April got up. "You'll have to excuse me. I... I need to use the restroom." she lied as she headed toward it, closing the door behind her.
After a moment alone, Heather broke the silence. "Erica, I couldn't help but notice you and Faith seemed a little... pensive... today. Is everything OK?"
Shrugging, Erica wasn't sure how to answer.
"You... you don't have to talk to me about it." her aunt offered. "If you want to though, just know that I'll try to be understanding."
When Heather began brushing her hair once more in silence, Erica gathered her nerve. "Um... I slept in Faith's room last night. You know that, right?" Seeing her aunt nod in the vanity mirror, Erica closed her eyes and took a breath. "We... um... we didn't do anything. Just slept next to each other... like when we were little. It was nice."
Listening, Heather tried to keep her feelings in check. "I see. Well, that's fairly harmless. I take it you wanted... well... more?"
"We both did." Erica admitted. "But we... um... we couldn't."
Hearing the unspoken, the older woman stopped brushing. "I... I made you two feel guilty about your feelings for one another, didn't I?"
"It's not just that." she noted. "It was like we were expected to, so it wasn't just because it was what we wanted. We just couldn't. It didn't seem... right."
Resuming her useful distraction, Heather nodded in understanding as she worked a tangle out gently. "That makes sense, sweetie. You know how I feel about it. It's dangerous. That having been said, I don't want you two to feel that you need to deny your feelings for one another, so long as you abide by your agreements. No one can know about it, I won't help if it does get out, you must be discreet, and everyone has to agree."
"About that." Erica offered shyly. "Um... Franchesca saw me come back to my room this morning. She knows and we haven't even done anything."
Stopping her brushing as she processed the information, Heather resumed after a moment. "Well, she didn't seem disturbed today and she didn't say anything, so she might not know as much as you think, but it would be best if you three call this whole thing off. If you can't keep it a secret a day, it's inevitable that it will get out, and you all agreed that no one would know."
Looking down sadly, Erica nodded as a tear fell. "You're right. I'll tell them."
Seeing her niece quietly crying and just giving in like a broken child, Heather nearly cried herself, from guilt. "No. I'm sorry, sweetheart. I... I let myself use the situation to push my own agenda. I never had the right to demand anything of you three. It was wrong of me to try. It must be your decision." Putting down the brush, Heather gently laid her hands on Erica's shoulders reassuringly. "Ignore your old and inflexible aunt! You're all adults. You should do what you think is best." Kissing the girl on the top of her head, she started toward the door. "Goodnight, Erica. I love you."
"Love you too, Mamma." the girl echoed confusedly. "Goodnight."
Fifteen minutes later, Faith's door opened and closed, Erica locking it behind her just like the night before. "Hi." she said timidly.
Faith smiled at her weakly from her side of the bed nearest the door. "Hi. I... I thought that maybe you might not come tonight."
Approaching slowly, Erica nodded. "I... I almost didn't. I... I need to tell you something." Sitting at the vanity, Erica looked away as she continued. "Franchesca knows." she said simply.
"Oh God!" Faith gasped. "How?"
"She... she caught me going into my room this morning. I told Mamma about it when she came to say goodnight. At first, she said that we had to call it all off, and then said we should do whatever we want. She released us from our promises. She said she didn't have the right to make us promise anything."
"Do... do you want to call it off?" Faith asked nervously.
"No." she answered with a shrug. "Do you?"
Faith shook her head slowly. "What about April? What did she say?"
Smirking, Erica looked away again bashfully. "What you'd expect from her! 'Not a chance!' I think she likes the idea more than we do!"
Giggling together, Faith nodded toward the far side of the bed. "Coming?"
Taking her phone out of her robe pocket, Erica put it on the nightstand next to her side of the bed before disrobing and climbing in. "No more chances!"
Snuggling up against one another, the two settled into a comfortable position before resuming their conversation.
"Erica?" Faith began, her hand nestled once more between the girl's breasts. "Do you think we'll ever..." Her voice trailed off, knowing that her cousin already knew the rest of her question unasked.
With a sigh and a shrug, Erica took a moment to answer. "I... I don't know, Faith. We can... if you want to. When I'm here, I'm yours... always."
Smiling, the older teen sighed contentedly as her naked body pressed more firmly against Erica's. "Just knowing that is almost enough to make me not even need it. Almost!" she giggled.
Giggling with her, Erica felt Faith's hand begin to wander. "Almost!"
The next two days were much more relaxed. Each night, Erica would go to Faith's room, returning to her own just before six. When Sunday morning came, Erica woke before her alarm as usual and turned it off.
"Faith?" she tried to rouse the girl. "Faith, it's time."
"No!" she grumbled as she pulled Erica in tighter. "Just a few more minutes?"
Prying Faith's arms from around her, Erica sighed sadly. "Sorry, love. I have to get back to my room before anyone gets up."
Groaning, Faith struggled weakly before giving up. "I know. It's just that Christmas is almost four weeks away! I'm spoiled by you, now! I don't want you to go!"
Slipping out of bed, Erica picked up her robe and slipped into it. "I know, but we'll be staying through New Years, so we'll get ten days together!"
Smiling wickedly, Faith reached out and took Erica's hand, pulling her back close again to wrap her arms around the girl's waist. "I'm looking forward to the ten nights together!"
Loving the feel of Faith so close, Erica sighed happily. "Mmm! Only eight nights though, love. Remember? April gets me on Christmas Eve and New Years Eve."
Pouting, Faith released her. "Not fair! She gets you all the rest of the time!"
"I promised her that our first Christmas and New Year would be ours, love. You agreed!"
"I wanna take it back!" she smirked.
"Sorry, love." Erica sighed. "See you at breakfast!" Leaning down, she kissed Faith lovingly and tenderly, letting it linger a moment before pulling away and heading toward the door.
Groaning, Faith flopped onto her bed. "Oh... I'm gonna miss that almost as much as you being next to me all night!"
Smiling from the door, Erica waited until Faith turned to face her. "I love you." she intoned seriously. "Remember, right now, I'm yours... always."
"Mine always." she sighed wantonly. "I love you, too!"
Erica slipped into her own bedroom, seeing April splayed out across the bed and giggling at the sight. Quietly, she made her way into the bathroom, showered, and was out just as April started rousing. "Good morning, dear!" she sang.
"That's debatable." April growled. "It's freezing in here!"
"Go get in the shower." Erica offered. "Water's warm for you!"
Smiling weakly, the older girl stumbled toward the bath. "Thanks." Stopping as she passed Erica, she wrapped her arms around the girl's waist, giving her a quick kiss on the cheek. "Have a good night?"
Shrugging, Erica smiled. "A lady doesn't kiss and tell!"
"Uh-huh!" April smiled back. "I'll want details later! No secrets, right?" Letting the girl go, she swatted Erica gently on the rear as she headed for the warmth of the bathroom.
After breakfast, the ladies sat in the living room chatting while Franchesca re-packed Erica and April's bags. When Erica's car showed up at a quarter to three, they moved to the entryway to say their good-byes.
Holding Erica tightly, Heather sighed in both happiness and sadness; happy to have had the time together, but sad to see it end and lose her niece again for four weeks. "I miss you already, sweetheart!"
"Me too, Mamma!" she nearly cried. "Four weeks isn't that long though, and we'll be here from the twenty-third until the second, so we'll have lots of time together!"
"Take care of April, sweetie!" she lightly lectured. "To paraphrase something that your father used to say, 'That girl still needs you!'"
While Heather and Erica said goodbye, Faith and April did as well. With a brief embrace, the two smiled at one another.
"Have a good weekend?" April probed quietly.
Nodding with a smile, Faith looked down shyly. "Very! Thank you!"
April shrugged. "I'm just happy for you two, whatever you did."
Blushing, Faith stepped back. "Looking forward to seeing you two over Christmas!" she said in a normal tone.
"Me too." April nodded. Switching places as Fredrick and Eddie loaded the bags into Erica's car, April hugged Heather fiercely. "Thanks for having us, Heather!"
Returning the hug, she was slightly taken aback by the girl's affection, a change from the previous visit. "You two are always welcome at Hargrave House, April! Anytime!" Breaking off the hug, she regarded the young woman that she'd come to hold dear. "You'll take care of her, won't you?"
"Always have and always will, Heather!" she promised.
Holding Erica as though her life depended on it, Faith didn't want to let go. "Four weeks. I can last four weeks." she whispered in her cousin's ear.
"You better!" Erica whispered back. "Because I still need you!"
"Mine!" Faith nearly cried, kissing Erica's cheek tenderly.
"Yours always." she answered back.
Link: Lost Faith Title Page and Description
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Typing furiously at her keyboard, tears poured down Erica's cheeks. The words she wrote were bittersweet, speaking of the love they could have had and the future denied by a single choice. The choice of one of them to give up on their love. They had overcome seemingly insurmountable odds. Torn apart so young, just as their love had begun to blossom, that they then found their way back to one another after so many years of pain apart was nothing short of a miracle.
She wrote of their stormy reunion, the words of anger back and forth, and then the faint glimmer of hope. Finally they'd kissed. Not much in itself, but the kisses after were so full of fire and passion that it threatened to consume them both. They'd wanted each other and admitted it, but it was doomed from the start. The things they wanted out of life just wouldn't mesh with the reality of one another. She'd been willing to give up everything and everyone for the girl she'd known her whole life, but it wasn't enough.
Standing at the doorway, a bag over her shoulder and a suitcase in her other hand, April's heart ached at the sight. "Erica? I..." She could see the tears flowing down the writer's face, landing in drops on her desk. She knew better than to try and say anything now, but she did anyway. "I... I'm going to take these down to my car. All packed." Erica didn't even seem to hear her. April turned and left, wishing there was some way to ease Erica's pain, but knew it would be futile. She would just have to work it out for herself.
Erica was only vaguely aware of April's departure. All there was in the world right then was her writing, and into this she buried herself. She continued to type away furiously, wiping tears from her cheeks as she went. Finally, she had said all there was to be said. She was done and it was done. There was nothing left but to hit send and move on.
A few minutes after she'd sent it, while Erica was wiping the tears away, her cell phone rang. The caller ID told her it was her aunt Heather. Grabbing a tissue, she blew her nose and tried to finish drying her eyes, answering the call as she did so.
"Hi, Mamma!" she said, barely able to hide the sound of her recent tears.
Heather knew her too well. "Sweetheart? Have you been crying? I got a message, well Franchesca got it on her computer. What's the problem? What's wrong?"
Suddenly April came back in, slamming the door behind her. "Erica!" she screamed, enough to make the weeping woman jump.
"Jaysus!" Erica exclaimed. "Hold on a second, Mamma! April! What?"
Her first love was fuming. "Erica! We're going to be late! It takes four hours to drive up to Mom's house! Your cousin will be there before we are if we don't leave now! You can finish that story of yours later! You only have one cousin and she only has one twenty-first birthday! I sent a message to your mom that we were leaving and you're making a liar out of me!"
Remembering that her aunt was on the phone, she put it back up to her ear. "Mamma? Sorry, April is champing at the bit to get us out of here. We're leaving right now! Love you!"
"Tell April to drive carefully, sweetie!" Heather sighed in exasperation. "I'd rather you be late than hurt... or worse!"
Erica stood and grabbed her purse. "Mamma says not to rush." She walked quickly up to April and kissed her. "Thank you for being patient with me!"
Grabbing Erica's phone out of her hand, April headed out the door. "Hello, Mom? We're just leaving now. I... I promise, Mom! We'll be fine! I can get us there on time and... Mom! I'm an excellent driver!" She shifted the heavy bundle in her hands again. Fast walking toward the car, she continued to listen to Heather as Erica took the things from her hands and put them in the back seat for her. "Yes, Mom! I... I know other drivers get crazy this time of year. What?... Oh Mom, she's fine! I swear! She was just writing! Look, I'm getting in the car right now. Here's Erica again." Shoving the phone back into Erica's hand, she ordered, "You talk to her!"
Heather listened as the daughter of her heart took the phone. "Erica! You tell that girl she needs to drive carefully! Precious cargo!"
"I will, Mamma." Erica replied as she sat in the passenger seat and looked in the back seat to check that everything was there and settled. "Good to go, love." Turning back to talk to her aunt, she sighed. "Mamma, don't worry! You know April! She wouldn't take any chances! She knows you'd kill her! OK, Mamma, I'm hanging up now so I can navigate for April. Love you! Call you when we're close! Bye!"
Disconnecting the call, she took a cleansing breath, closed her eyes, and slowly let it out.
While April headed for the freeway, she smiled at her wife. "Get it all out of your system, honey?"
"I'm sorry I made us run late, love. I was just so close to finishing..."
April finished for her. "Yeah, yeah... so close you just had to finish it right now! You have a tablet! You could have done the last of the work in the car and then sent it to editing!"
Erica shook her head. "I can't write in the car! I get carsick! You know that, love! Besides, I have other duties." She placed her hand on April's knee.
"Know what Mom would say if she saw you doing that while I'm driving?"
"Mmm, hmm!" Erica smiled. "But Mamma's not here!"
"Hands on your side, honey. I think they're needed elsewhere."
As if on cue, a cry arose from the back seat. "Sounds like she's hungry again." Erica noted.
"She's always hungry! I swear that kid can drink half my body weight every day!" April suddenly felt a familiar feeling. "Better give her the bottle quick or I'm gonna ruin my blouse!"
Erica rummaged through the diaper bag until she found the bottle of breast milk. Leaning over the back of her seat, she handed the screaming child what she wanted. "It's a'right." Erica soothed. "There ya go, babaí. Tá Mamaí anseo."
The baby girl settled down with her bottle and the sound of Erica's brogue, April waiting until she was turned back around. "You keep talking to her like that and everyone will think the Dempseys have a new daughter! You're going to ruin her speech patterns!"
"Hush now!" Erica chided. "An' what air wrong wi' a bit o' th' Irish tongue, A rúnsearc?"
Trying to be mad, April just couldn't stay that way when Erica was being so sweet. "You... are beautiful!" she replied.
Shaking her head, Erica looked out the window. "Matter of opinion." After a few moments, she turned to April. "Thank you, again."
"For what?"
"For putting up with my crazy hobby."
"I love you... all of you." she admitted. "Besides, that 'crazy hobby' puts meat on the table and a roof over our heads. Though sometimes I wish you could learn to settle back and let the other writers keep things going. You have enough of them now that you don't have to write anymore."
"See, that's where you're wrong dear." Erica shook her head. "I didn't create Reflection Publishing just to publish stories, I created it to publish my stories. The rest is just bonus. I write because I have to."
"But you get so emotional over them!" April whined. "Like this last one, you were pouring tears as you finished it! I thought I was going to have to take you to the hospital for severe dehydration!"
"I'm not that bad!" she looked away. "Besides, this hit really close to home."
"How close?" April asked, stealing a glance at her wife.
"Too close." Erica wiped a tear from her eye just thinking about it.
"Well... I hope you're taking a good long break this time. Having you hole up in your office for two weeks is murder on my sex life!"
Not listening, Erica turned back to look at her. "What, dear?"
"Never mind, honey. You still upset about your story?"
Sighing, Erica looked back out the window again. "Yeah. I hope it does some good for somebody."
"I'm sure it will, honey. It nearly always does."
Hours later as they got close to her mother's house, Erica called. "Mamma? We're about ten minutes out. Wanted to call before we lose service."
Heather breathed a sigh of relief. "Thank goodness! I'm glad you called, sweetie. I get so worried with you, April, and the baby on the road." Looking down at her watch, she scowled. "You made really good time. Too good! I wasn't expecting you for another twenty minutes! When April gets here I'm going to..."
"...tell her you love her, missed her, and are glad to see her. Right, Mamma?" Erica interrupted.
"Yes, sweetie." Taking a deep breath, she let it go. "I'll just be glad when you're all three here and safe at home! Oh... wait a minute... Alright. Sweetie? Franchesca just got a message from Faith. She's about ten minutes behind you."
"Faith is ten minutes behind us." she echoed to April.
"I'll stretch that to twelve before we get there." April replied, pressing the gas a little harder.
"Love, ten minutes is more than enough! Back off please? For the baby?"
"Alright, fine! We wouldn't be in this mess if..."
"...I could get out of the house on time. Yes... I know, love."
Heather listened to their exchange over the phone as it started to break up. "Sweetie? I think I'm losing you!"
Erica looked at her phone before putting it in her purse. "No signal."
Driving quietly for a minute, April realized something. "Hey, honey? How did Mom know Faith is ten minutes behind us?"
"She sent Franchesca a message."
"Well... how can she do that if she's driving?"
Erica paused a moment, considering the options. "Maybe she took a cab. It's been known to happen. We Hargraves are used to being driven around by our chauffeurs! The only reason Eddie isn't driving us is because this Sunday is Easter and he asked for the week off to be with his family in Philly... so you'll just have to do!"
"I am not your bloody chauffeur!" April shouted and laughed at the same time. "You just drive like my dead grandma! If you drove us instead of Eddie, we wouldn't be there until next week!"
Several minutes later they pulled up the driveway and stopped in front of the garage, Fredrick there waiting to open it as they pulled up. "Looks like Mamma wants us to park inside so Faith doesn't get suspicious."
"She was born suspicious!" April quipped.
"No, she was born stubborn, she learned suspicious from me!"
Pulling into the garage, April shut off the engine. "Can you get the baby and her things, honey? I'll get the rest."
Opening the rear passenger door, Erica saw their angel sleeping peacefully, an empty bottle crooked in her arm as though she was carrying it. Sighing with contentment, she lifted the entire car seat out and opened the handle, carrying it in along with the diaper bag and a small suitcase.
Coming through the front door, she paused a moment and smiled at all the people she knew who were there waiting for Faith. "Hi, everyone! Faith's just a few minutes behind us, so get ready!"
Mike walked up and took the diaper bag from her. "Here, let an expert git that, ya' ol' bean phósta!" Looking down at Erica and April's sleeping baby, he grinned before shaking his head in disbelief. "She shurin' takes after ya' both! Ah don't know how ye managed it deirfiúr, but Ah think she's grand!"
Smiling secretively, the twenty-year-old knew that Mike and the others had never known her as anything but Erica, and she had no intention of changing their perceptions. Unable to resist, she answered, "Careful selection at the sperm bank!"
"Ach!" Mike shuddered. "I dinna need ta be knowin' tha' much, eejit!"
Coming in with Fredrick, April was carrying their bags and presents for Faith. "Think you could stop gabbing and lend a hand, honey?"
She blushed and took one of the bags from April, carting them off to the library for the moment. When they finally joined the rest of the well-wishers, taking their newborn back from Mike so he could go back to his own child, Erica got a moment to take in the decorations. She smiled at the sign that read, 'Happy Birthday Faith!' and the one that hung under it saying, 'Happy Graduation!'
Noticing the signs as well, April tapped Erica on the shoulder. "Honey? I thought Faith got her Nursing Degree last semester?"
"She did, but she hasn't been home since then. Remember Thanksgiving and Christmas? Something about her being too busy. Nurses, you know."
Just then, they all heard a car pull up out front, making everyone get quiet. Sitting in the silence waiting, Erica looked at April and kissed her quickly. "I figured I should do that now. Faith might not give me a chance later!"
Faith stepped out of the car and went around to the trunk, waiting for it to be opened before pulling the suitcases out. Looking at her mother's house, she breathed a sigh of relief. "Home!" she sighed happily, if nervously.
Walking up to the door, she wasn't surprised when Fredrick opened it for her with his monotone, "Welcome home, Miss Faith." in the same even voice she'd been hearing her entire life.
"Thanks, Freddie!" she said as she walked in the door. "This..."
"Surprise!" everyone shouted. The cacophony of "Happy Birthday!"s mixed with "Happy Graduation!"s created a kind of bedlam that Faith could hardly understand any of the shouts. She stood in shock as a sea of family, friends, and loved ones smiled back at her gaping mouth.
Her mother was the first to reach her. "Happy Birthday, dear!" she said, hugging her tightly. "Were you surprised?"
Half-grinning, a quirk she'd picked up from Erica that she in turn inherited from her father Jack, Faith nodded. "You could say that, Mamma!"
Standing behind her aunt, Erica waited for Faith to see her, which took all of a single heartbeat. Suddenly the room seemed almost silent, Erica's heart beating as fast and hard as if she'd just run a marathon. April having taken the baby, Erica stepped forward and held Faith tightly. "Happy Birthday, love." she whispered in her ear. "I missed you so much!"
Near to tears at the sight of Erica, Faith held her desperately. It had been nearly nine months since they'd last seen each other over the Labor Day weekend. Since then, she'd not been able to get away to see Erica for several reasons; first on Thanksgiving with studying for finals, then with her new nursing job over Christmas. Now finally here, she was in Erica's arms and she had to hold back her desire in front of so many people.
She finally managed to squeak out, "Congratulations to you too... Mom!" When they'd last seen each other, April had just found out she was pregnant, and the two cousins had celebrated the news in their own private way.
Smiling, Erica corrected her slightly. "Uh-uh. April is Mom, I'm Mamaí!"
They held their embrace for just a moment longer than appropriate, finally separating so Faith could greet all her other guests. She immediately spotted Brooke and Jenny, Michael and Emma, Mike and his wife Marylyn, Greg and Betty, and a dozen others who she couldn't make out through the crowd. Turning to Erica, Faith took both her hands in her own. "Erica, I... I have something to tell you and it can't wait."
Even as she spoke, Erica looked over Faith's shoulder to see the timid girl still standing in the doorway. She was short, but trim and athletic looking. Her long dark hair seemed so black it took on an almost blue hue, her skin tan, but not dark, and her eyes seeming to be the darkest shade of brown Erica had ever seen. Looking back at Faith, she could see in her ever-vibrant blue eyes just who this young lady was to her love.
A lump rose in her throat at the thought that their relationship was now complicated by a fourth party; one who Erica didn't know and would likely spell the end of their time together. She found someone! Before that moment, Erica thought she knew what bittersweet meant, until she looked into Faith's elated and sad eyes reflecting the feeling of joy and sorrow in both of their hearts.
Taking Erica by the hand, Faith led her to the doorway as the crowd stopped shouting and cheering. "Erica? I'd like you to meet Cassey Walters. Cassey? This is my cousin, Erica!"
Cassey was more than nervous. She and Faith had been dating for six months and she'd gotten the idea that Erica was more than just a cousin to Faith. She seemed to be the girl's entire world until the two had met. It was always 'Erica says this' or 'Erica's done that', which started to make Cassey believe that Erica couldn't be a real person, or if she was she was some sort of angel descended from heaven.
Making her way over to the three standing in her open doorway, Heather stood next to Erica as Faith continued introductions. "And this is my mother, Heather Hargrave. Mamma? I'd like you to meet Cassey!"
Looking the young girl over, Heather guessed her to be younger than Faith, possibly only eighteen. Glancing at Faith, she saw a light in her daughter's eyes and smiled. Approaching Cassey to give her a warm welcome, she was shocked at the fear in Cassey's eyes, as though Heather were about to beat her with a yardstick. Gently extending her hand graciously, Heather waited for the girl to take it. "Welcome to Hargrave House, Cassey. Won't you come in?"
Over the next hour, Erica showed everyone but Faith and Cassey her and April's baby, the opportunity to introduce her cousin to her daughter never materializing. Frustrated and upset, she decided to take a short walk outside to clear her head. Walking around her 'mother's' front yard, she looked up at the stars with her hands shivering in her coat pockets.
The night was cold and completely clear. The first day of spring had come and gone nearly a month ago, but Coös County wouldn't know it for a few more weeks. While she gazed up at the crystal clear night sky, she heard the front door open and then close quickly. Turning, she saw Faith coming down the marble steps, walking slowly toward her with the sound of frosty gravel crunching beneath her feet. Turning back to look up at the stars, Erica shivered against the cold, as well as the empty feeling in her heart.
Cautiously, Faith walked up to the cousin who had become her sister in all but fact, and her love before that. Seeing no response, she just stood with her, staring into the night sky as Erica was doing, the frost tickling her nose. After a moment, Faith broke the silence.
"Sure is cold out tonight."
When Erica didn't respond, Faith looked down and sighed. "Erica? Please talk to me."
Erica sighed, mirroring Faith. "I've been trying for an hour. I never even got to say congratulations... for Cassey, I mean." Erica looked at her and tried her best to smile genuinely. "Does she make you happy?" Seeing Faith simply nod in reply, Erica did the same in return. "Well, then I can only wish all the best for you two. I... I truly mean that, Faith."
"Walk with me?"
The two started walking idly, looking at the yard, the stars, and everything except each other. Erica smiled as she saw the side yard where they'd made snow angels and their freakishly comical snowman so long ago. Laughing, she reminisced about it with Faith.
"I swear! I thought you were going to explode when you saw snow for the first time!" Faith laughed along with her.
"And that snowman! God! It was so pathetic looking!" Erica added.
Making their way through the side yard, their laughter slowed and Erica reached out a hand to Faith. Taking it, Faith walked hand in hand with her first love. "The baby looks adorable!" she commented. "She has your eyes!"
Erica stopped. "You saw the baby?"
"April showed her to me!" she nodded with a smile. "She's beautiful!"
"Oh." Erica started walking again.
"I'm sorry, Erica! You probably wanted to be the one to introduce me to my niece, didn't you?"
Nodding, Erica breathed out and watched her breath form a momentary cloud ahead of them. "It's alright. Today is your day. I just... I wanted... oh God, sometimes it's impossible to think around you! You have that effect on me!"
Giggling, Faith wrapped her arm around Erica's. "I know the feeling!"
Reaching the wooden bench in the corner of the yard, they sat and huddled together. "Look at us!" Erica mused. "House full of happy guests, happy about your birthday, happy about your graduation, April's baby, warmth and love everywhere, and where are we? Outside freezing in the cold!"
Looking at Erica warmly, Faith smiled contentedly. "Funny. It doesn't seem so cold when I look at you."
They sat back and held each other, looking at the stars. "I... I..." Erica sighed heavily in exasperation. "I was a little upset that you met someone and I didn't find out for so long."
Nodding, Faith clung to Erica tighter. "I know. I'm sorry. I... I just... I didn't know what to tell you at first, then I was too busy to tell you, then it was too late to tell you."
"It's alright, Faith. I understand. I really am happy for you! You deserve to be loved. May I ask something? Why does she seem so... timid? She acts like we're going to gang up on her at any minute and beat the tar out of her!"
Faith didn't answer right away. They sat in silence before she finally spoke.
"Cassey is... well, she comes from Florida. She came here to live with her uncle after her parents were killed in a car accident. She was in the car, but she survived with only minor injuries. Her uncle wasn't like Mamma was to you, though. He hated her... resented having her around. He... he did things to her, Erica. Bad things. Evil things."
"Oh God, Faith!"
"Yeah... I know. When we met, she'd just left home, a little like the way April did. She was taking night classes at the college and cleaning campus floors during the day. That's how I met her. She and I would talk occasionally, but she always ran off with some excuse when it got to asking about her. It took a while, but eventually I got her to open up."
"After a while, as we started to get closer, before I even knew it, I... I was falling in love with her." She looked away and laughed. "Was I relieved when she told me that she was, too!"
"You mean she was falling in love with herself, too?" Erica quipped.
Faith pushed against Erica's shoulder, laughing. "You know what I mean!"
Laughing along with Faith a moment, when at last their laughter died, Erica reached out and turned Faith to face her. "I still love you, Faith. I don't think that will ever change, but I know that this... changes things... between us."
Reaching out her cold hand, Faith ran her fingers across Erica's soft cheek. "I... I still love you too, Erica... and I don't think that will ever change either. I just... I don't want us to lose what we have with each other! So I'm afraid to tell her about us. About our... relationship. I'm afraid... afraid she'll..."
"Afraid she'll leave you?"
She shook her head sadly. "When you came back, I learned how to let you go, but you keep coming back to me! I'll always love you for that. I... I need it, maybe more than you know."
"But?"
"But that's not what I'm afraid of! I... I'm afraid that I'll lose you! I don't know what to do. I... I don't think I could stand to lose her... but... I don't want to lose you, either... and if I had to choose... I... I just couldn't!"
Erica held her hand, warming it with her own. "Well, you're going to have to tell her something eventually, right? Or were you planning on keeping this big of a secret from the woman you love for the rest of your lives?"
"One of the women I love, Erica."
"You know what I mean."
Faith took a deep breath and let it out slowly. "How... how did you tell April? About us, I mean."
"It wasn't easy." Erica explained. "I was telling her about my life at Hargrave House and... well... it just sort of came out. I told her about the day I left for school... and... um... the night before."
Swallowing hard, Faith asked, "How did she take it?"
"Not well." Erica answered. "At first she thought we were pervs, then she thought maybe just you were! It was why she went back to Arizona, but we kept talking. She kept asking about you, and I think eventually she realized that the heart wants what the heart wants and you just can't change it. That if after five years apart I was still in love with you, it probably was never going to go away and wasn't just physical attraction."
"In the end," Erica continued, "she accepted that you and I love each other and convinced me I had to come back, to find out what I really wanted."
"What if Cassey doesn't understand?"
"That's not really up to you, is it Faith? Unless you want to lie to your partner for the rest of your lives, she's going to either have to accept that there's a part of your heart that belongs to me, or move on to someone that suits her. Either that or you're going to have to choose. I... I don't envy you that. I know I never had to, but I got lucky. You and April never made me choose."
Shivering against the cold, Faith knew Erica was right.
"Come on. Let's go in the kitchen." Erica suggested. "I'll make you a warm cup of tea, and then you can figure out what you want to do."
Slowly, the two walked back to the house. "I love talking to you, Erica! You make everything make sense."
"Writer's gift. Everything's a story to me. My life, your life, all full of plots, subplots, foreshadowing, allusion, and subtext."
Sighing sadly as they approached the laundry room door that led to the kitchen, Faith's teeth chattered. "I miss Cook."
"Me too." Erica repressed a tear. "It must have been murder trying to find someone to replace her. I'm sorry I wasn't here for that part, that I couldn't be there for you and Mamma to help. The funeral was just... just too hard."
"We understood, love." Faith comforted. "She... she was the reason you got to stay who you are. She stood up for you, even against Mamma."
Erica wiped away a cold tear. "I just wish she could have lived to see the baby. She was so looking forward to it after April and I got married."
Suddenly, Faith stopped and gasped just outside the door. "The baby! I... April never told me her name! Or if she did, I missed it!"
Opening the door for her cousin, Erica laughed. "You couldn't have missed it Faith. Her name's Hope. Hope Theresa Dunning!"
Blushing, she smiled. "That's beautiful, Erica!"
Entering the kitchen, the sound of the party just beyond the swinging door, Faith warmed her hands at the sink while Erica readied two cups of tea. After a few minutes, they sat together at the kitchen table, just looking into each other's eyes, lovingly and wantonly, and sipping their tea while they warmed their hands on their cups.
Perking up, Faith exhaled her worries away. "So, any books coming out?"
Erica nodded and smiled. "A special one."
"Oh?" she asked curiously. "What's it about?"
Looking at her, she smiled and looked down at her cup. "It's a love story. About a girl who moves in with her distant relations, and falls desperately in love with her cousin. She risks everything to be with her."
Her eyes growing wide, Faith looked at Erica in shock. "Isn't that a little..."
"Risky?" she completed her thought. "Yes, but it needs to be told. It's different enough that no one could make the connection, but same enough that the story still gets told. April already gave her nod of approval, but I... I won't publish it if you say I can't. Of course, now I need to change the ending!"
Biting her lower lip, Faith looked away. "Why? How did it end?"
Reaching out, Erica took Faith's hand. "They loved happily ever after."
Looking back with a weak smile, Faith sighed. "I think they still might. One way or the other, her cousin just can't stop loving her back, even if it means losing... losing everything. I mean, they'll still love each other, even... even if they can't be together anymore." Looking toward the kitchen door, she then turned back to Erica. "I... I'm ready to tell Cassey. Would you get her for me?"
Standing slowly, Erica made her way around the table. Leaning down, she gently brushed her lips against Faith's. "For you, Faith? Anything!"
Heading back out into the party, Erica spotted Cassey standing next to her wife by the fireplace, April seeming to be almost standing guard over the young girl. Acknowledging a few congratulations, she made her way to the two. "Hey, love!" Erica said to April. "Having a good time?"
"Ha!" April nearly snorted. "Just keeping the jackals from scaring the life out of poor Cassey, here! This mob can be a little overwhelming at times!"
"Really, April!" Cassey insisted. "You don't need to concern yourself with me! You should go have a good time with Erica!" Turning to Faith's cousin, she managed to stammer out, "H-have you seen Faith, E-Erica?"
Nodding, she slipped an arm around April. "She's in the kitchen. She needed a break from the crowd, too. Just go right through the archway into the dining room, then through the swinging door on the right."
"Thanks!" Cassey looked relieved. "I... I think I'll join her! If... if you'll both excuse me?" Moving quickly, the girl not quite nineteen hurried out of the crowded living room as fast as possible.
"What's going on, honey?" April asked, half knowing already.
"Faith hasn't told her... about she and I, that is." Erica explained. "Faith's waiting in the kitchen to tell her." Erica's voice beginning to tremble, she lowered it to a near whisper. "Looks like you may be stuck with me all the time now! No more having to share!"
April shook her head and wrapped her arms around Erica's neck. "Don't be so sure! Cassey knows a lot more than Faith thinks. While you two were out shivering in the cold, Cassey told me quite a lot. I don't know if she's open to the idea or not, but it's not settled yet!"
Looking at April, Erica smiled. "Either way, I think it'll all work out the way it's supposed to. He knows best!"
--
If you have enjoyed this story, I would ask that you pay a small amount for the entertainment it has provided you. Nothing worthwhile in life is free. A one-time donation of $5 to the site makes it cost less than most paperbacks. Even if you regularly donate, this is the price I ask you to pay to see to it that this and stories like it can remain available.
Thank you and may God bless,
Roberta Elder
Jack Dunning was just a poor kid from Pittsburgh, no better or worse than any other. When he met Richard, it seemed to be a one-sided friendship; Jack needing Richard much more than the other way around. As the years passed however, it became clear to them both just how important their friendship was, eventually culminating in both learning the hardest lesson in life; that every day is a gift and you should treat each one as though it were your last.
Spanning half a dozen different locations throughout the United States and a few around the world, Every Day is Your Last follows the lives of two boys, their friends, and their families. Combining the elements of a 'buddy story' and romance novel in an exhaustively researched period piece covering twenty-five years, the story describes average American life in the latter part of the twentieth century through the beginning of the twenty-first. It's written as a companion story to the novel, Lost Faith.
Copyright © 2019, 2021 Roberta Elder - All Rights Reserved
122,995 words
This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the authors imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Though depicting some real-life events, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual firms or individual experiences is purely coincidental. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher.
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Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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Erica Bella Dunning sat in her office, typing a memo to one of her editors regarding changes to her publishing company's latest soon-to-be-released novel. Nearly done, her intercom buzzed.
"Miss Dunning?" June, her secretary interrupted. "Brooke Hathaway is here to see you."
"Send her right in, June." Erica said distractedly. While she finished typing her interoffice email, she put her pencil in her teeth to free her hands to type faster. Brooke came in through the main doors and walked over to the other side of Erica's large oak desk.
"Jus' a schec." Erica mumbled around the worn wooden instrument. Taking it from her mouth and setting it aside, she suggested, "Go ahead and make yourself comfortable, Aunt Brooke. I'll be right with you!" Typing quickly while Brooke sank into the chair in front of her desk, she finally hit send and smiled, turning to one of her father's dearest friends. She was no blood relation at all, but she still was 'Aunt Brooke' to Erica.
Standing and circling around the desk, she watched the older woman stand back up wearily. Embracing her and kissing her cheek, Erica greeted her properly. "Hi! I'm so glad you could come see me! Can I get you anything? Coffee? Tea? Rum and Coke?" Erica knew full well that Brooke was in AA.
Brooke smiled, her dark hair only just beginning to show the edges of gray. "Hi, sweetie! No, nothing for me! How's the family?"
Erica sat in a chair next to Brooke rather than talk to her over the huge desk. "Mamma's good." she said, referring to her aunt Heather, her mother in all but the legal sense. "Same for April and everyone... except me."
"Not you?" Brooke asked. "What's wrong?"
"Between my work schedule and trying to find the time to spend at home..." Erica looked at her with a blasé expression of exhaustion. "I'm pooped!" The two laughed together a moment before Erica continued. "I haven't even had time to write in a month, which for me is a long time!"
Glad to catch up with her best friend's daughter, Brooke frowned teasingly. "Aww! Having to live in that penthouse must be dreadful!"
"Very funny!" Erica laughed with her. "My 'poor, rich lifestyle'! It's not the money, it's the cost to my sanity! I'm going nuts!"
"So? How can I help?" she asked seriously.
"I don't need help! I'm going crazy just fine on my own, thank you!" Erica teased.
"Oh God, Erica!" Brooke said through her chuckles. "You sound so much like Jack, sometimes!"
"Funny you should mention Dad, Aunt Brooke." Erica segued. "He's the reason I wanted to talk to you. Do you remember the day we met and you told me you'd tell me about him and Uncle Richard someday?"
"Wow! That was nine years ago!" Brooke commented. "But to answer your question, yeah... I remember."
"Well, I was hoping to take you up on your offer."
Brooke balked. "What, did you want to talk about him right now? I thought you were really busy?"
"I am, but I had an idea, and I was hoping you could help. I want to write my father's story, and Uncle Richard's... as told by you!"
The retired Marine scoffed at the suggestion. "Erica! I'm no writer!"
"But I am!" Erica retorted. "See, I got this idea to tell their story as a novel. Since you were there for most of it, it would also be your story... and my mother's, and Mamma's. You tell me things that happened to my father and uncle and yourself and Mamma and my mom, and I write it in story form. I think it's a story that would really help a lot of people, especially Vets. To see two of their own, depicted realistically and respectfully, as told by one of their own... you!"
Brooke looked askance at her honorary niece. "So, you want war stories? I don't think..."
"No! Not at all, Aunt Brooke!" she interrupted to prevent confusion. "I want to tell the story of two average guys who also happen to be patriots. I... I want the world to know my father's story Aunt Brooke, and Uncle Richard's. I want to tell the story of how they met, how they lived, how they loved, how they felt... everything!"
Brooke was stunned. She moved her mouth in an effort to respond, but she couldn't manage to find the words. Finally, she gathered her wits. "Erica, that's a lot to ask! I don't know that you can capture the essence of those two in a simple novel. It's... it's..."
"...it's the job of a storyteller." she interrupted. "And that's what I am! Aunt Brooke, I've been making up stories since I was three years old! I'm pretty good at it too, if I do say so myself, at least my readers seem to agree. Now I want to tell Dad's story, and Uncle Richard's, yours, Mom's, and Mamma's! Trust me, Aunt Brooke. This story will be good!"
Seeing that she was still skeptical, she tried once more. "I'll tell you what. If after I'm done, if you don't like it, I won't publish it. I'll just keep it as a family heirloom. At least then their grandchildren and great grandchildren will know their stories... and that'll be good enough."
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
I met Jack and Rich when we were all three posted at Alameda Naval Air Station just across the bay from San Francisco. Jack was a total clown who hit on everything with breasts! We called him Corporal Strikeout because he couldn't get a date to save his life, but just kept right on swinging! From what everyone told me, it'd always been that way, too. Rich, on the other hand, was attractive, smooth, and never lacked for female attention. I would have hated him, except he was just so nice! They both grew up in the suburbs of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, which is funny when you consider that later Rich would move into a house near Pittsberg, New Hampshire, but I'm getting ahead of myself! Rich used to tell this funny story about how he met Jack. Of course, Jack being Jack, he had to add his own twist to it every time Rich would tell it. Rich's story would always be the same, but Jack added bits that were always different. Not that he would change his story mind you, but it was like each time Rich told it, Jack would remember some new little tidbit to add to it. So this is how it all began.
---
Richard Hargrave was standing in line for lunch as usual. It was the first week of his freshman year in High School and he was starting to really like it. It wasn't as though he was always serious about school before, but he did get decent enough grades. To his mind though, the school's sports were more important, and he'd developed well from many years of football, baseball, and hockey. His natural athleticism and youthful good looks, as well as his above-average five-foot ten height, made him popular and a natural leader.
While waiting, he spotted a scrawny kid sitting at a table trying to eat while three jocks were standing over him. Ox, a nickname the boy had gotten due to his heavy and extremely muscular physique, yelled down at the poor kid.
"Move it or lose it, dork!"
The small boy just kept eating as though Ox wasn't there. Getting impatient, his tormenter shoved him and Richard just couldn't stand by and do nothing. Jumping out of line, he hurried over next to the kid, plopping down right next to him as though they knew each other.
"Hey, Ox! How was your summer?"
The bully was flummoxed. He knew Richard. They played football together and had been casual friends growing up, so Ox looked at him and shrugged. "Summer was OK, Rich... but fall is shaping up to be a problem. We have a severe case of loose leaves. This one fell onto our table and it doesn't seem to realize that it's gonna get squashed if it doesn't... leave!"
"Who, this guy? Ox! You got your signals crossed! This is my buddy! My buddy..." Richard patted him discretely on the shoulder and looked at him in that way that says, 'Insert blank'.
"Jack." he said flatly.
"Jack! Jack's cool, Ox! Come on and sit with us!"
The jock wasn't totally stupid. He knew Richard was joking, but he couldn't figure why he was hanging around a kid that looked like he'd never even seen a football, let alone played. After a moment he shrugged and said, "Uh, I think we'll go sit over there for a change." indicating a table over by the windows. "Better light. Come on, guys. See you at practice, Rich."
After they left, Richard found himself sitting next to Jack alone. Finally, the boy stopped eating, turned to him and said, "Ya know, if you sit there next to me, not even having a lunch, people are gonna think you're hitting on me."
Richard busted up laughing, turned to him, and held out his hand. "I'm Rich."
"So I gathered from what lum-Ox said." the scrawny boy rolled his eyes toward the departing bully. "How rich? 'Cuz I could use a loan."
The pun made him chuckle a little and he found he was starting to like this funny little guy. Slapping him gently on the back, Richard stood and started back to the lunch line saying, "Catch ya' 'round then, Jack. Try to stay out of trouble. I might not be there next time to get you out of it!"
The next day he was in line again when he felt a tap on his shoulder. Turning around, he saw Jack there, this time in line behind him.
"So I was thinking..." Jack started in as though resuming the conversation from the day before. "Since you seem to have an influence over the muscle-for-brains set, it would be good for me to stick around you."
Turning forward again, Richard asked, "What makes you think I want you hanging around me?"
"Isn't it obvious?" Jack replied condescendingly. "You need me because I need you! You can't help yourself! I'm all weak and helpless and you're the strong hero type. So, you need me to stick around you so you have someone to be a hero for. What good's a hero without someone to save? Besides, I have many other fine qualities that don't relate to the physical, as I'm sure you noticed that I'm quite lacking in that department."
"I did." he smirked. "So what're these qualities you have that defy detection?"
"I'm funny!" he answered quickly. "I can bust a gut on a gutless toad! I got a quick wit and naturally perfect comic timing!"
"Anything else?" he said, chuckling.
"I'm reliable! You can always rely on having to get me out of a jam. I seem to be a jam-magnet at times. See? You need me! What's your next class?"
As Richard took a tray, he looked over his shoulder at Jack, who stood easily a foot and a half shorter than him. "R.O.T.C.. You?"
Taking his own tray, Jack looked down. "Phys Ed. I'm thinking I should see the counselor and transfer to R.O.T.C.. It might be good for me!"
Filling his tray, Richard shook his head and laughed. "Why? Because I'm in R.O.?"
"Not entirely. After the last few days I can tell that I'm just not cut out for the type of activities they do in Phys Ed. I seem to lack the qualities the coaches are looking for, namely any sort of muscle tone."
"You should stay in Phys Ed. It'll build you up. You need it!" Richard moved down the line.
"What! And ruin this fine physique with bulgy muscles?" He gestured to his thin frame as he moved along the line behind Richard before pushing his blonde hair that needed a trim out of his hazel eyes. "Surely you jest! That's like saying the Mona Lisa could use a makeover and Madonna's wardrobe! How can I deny the girls of this world the beauty that is this body?"
Looking down at the scrawny boy next to him, Richard finished filling his tray. "So, you've actually gotten a girl to date you before?"
"Not as such." Jack responded as he followed Richard to a table. "Girls our age are flighty, finicky, and too easily swayed by peer pressure. They want me, but they let their girlfriends talk them out of it so they can have me for themselves. It's obvious!"
After Richard sat and stuffed part of a roll in his mouth, he chewed it and shook his head. "Sounds perfect. They want you, but you never have to be bothered with things like dates or stuff."
"Exactly, my boy! It's the perfect set up! I know they find me irresistible, but I never have to settle down!" Taking a bite, Jack stopped eating as he saw a group of four girls walk close by their table looking at the two of them before giggling to each other and walking toward an empty table.
Swallowing quickly, he stood up and tapped Richard on the shoulder. "Just watch." Striding over to the where the girls had taken their seats, Jack leaned on it with one arm and smiled. "Ladies! I couldn't help but notice you back there."
The girls sat and looked at each other in stunned silence. Beth, a cute blonde who seemed to be the spokesperson of the bunch, looked over at the table where Jack had been sitting. "Do you know Richard? He's cute! Can you introduce me?"
Jack looked over at Richard, who seemed to be trying to ignore the whole situation. "Who, Rich? Sure! We're old buddies!" Turning back to the girls, he sat on the edge of their table. "But as I was saying..." As he sat, his weight tipped the surface off balance and it toppled over, sending most the girls' lunches down on him as he hit the floor with an earsplitting crash.
"You idiot!" Beth screamed at him, her skirt covered in her own soup. "Now look at what you've done!" Running off in tears, the other girls followed as everyone around Jack started to applaud his clumsiness.
Richard shook his head and stood up, walking over to the mess as the kids around Jack were laughing and clapping.
Jumping up, Jack smiled and bowed to the kids around him as though he'd done it all on purpose to entertain them. "Thank you! Thank you! No! No more! You've been a great crowd! Tip your waitresses, but not your tables!"
"Well, I can admit when I'm wrong. It seems you certainly do have a way with the ladies, Jack." Richard said sarcastically as he picked a shredded lettuce leaf off Jack's shoulder. "One thing's for certain, they're sure never to forget you!"
The scrawny boy smiled, still covered in scattered and spattered food. "You see? It's perfect!"
After the janitor came up dragging his cart, the three spent several minutes cleaning up the mess. Soon the two boys were back at their own table.
Chewing on a french fry, Richard got a grossed out look on his face. "You know, I think you may be right. I do need you around. Who else could ruin my appetite so fast?" tossing the half-eaten fry back onto his plate.
Meanwhile, Jack ate with gusto, seemingly unfazed by the gross mix of odors emanating from his food-stained shirt and pants. "See? I knew you'd come around to my way of seeing things! You eat too much, anyway. I noticed it yesterday. With my help, I'll have you down to fighting trim in no time! So, can I have your fries then?"
When the two finished and dropped their trays off, Richard headed for the JROTC building with Jack following. Noticing his shadow, he shook his head. "Don't you have Phys Ed to get to?"
"First, I wanna see what all the fuss is about. We have fifteen minutes 'til lunch is over. Why are you in so much of a hurry to get to class?"
"Because I like school!" Richard replied. "R.O. especially. I think I'm gonna join up after high school."
"Join up what?" Jack scoffed. "Two ends of a broken pencil? Surely you don't mean the military!"
"Why not?" he asked. "It's an honorable profession! Sergeant Egman, my instructor, was in the Marine Corps. So was my dad. Sergeant's been telling us all the basics of the military and it seems like a really good idea. They'll pay for college ya' know."
Jack furrowed his brow. "But you could end up someplace like Vietnam or something!"
"We're not fighting in Vietnam anymore, Jack!" Richard barked. "Jeez! It's nineteen eighty-five for crying out loud, not nineteen sixty-five! We're not in any wars! Only war we have to worry about involves someone pushing a button and then... Boom! So it doesn't matter anyway!"
Biting his lower lip, Jack puzzled the issue out. "Well, I guess it could be OK. I mean, I should at least check it out, right?"
"Suit yourself, dumpster top. If I were you, I'd get cleaned up before next period, though."
"Oh, yeah. Can I meet you after school then? I wanna talk about this some more. Takes a lot of thought to commit to something like this!"
Richard rolled his eyes. "Look Jack, if you wanna join R.O., fine. Maybe it'll do you some good, but it's not like you're signing up to get shipped out next week! It's friggin' High School R.O.T.C., not the Army! Anyway, I have football practice after school."
"Alright, I'll see you there then!"
Stopping just outside the ROTC building, Richard turned to the boy. "You? At football practice? As what? The football?"
"Moral support!" Jack cried out as he slugged Richard's shoulder. Shaking his hand, he murmured, "Ow!"
A single chuckle escaped Richard's lips. "That's why we have cheerleaders!"
Jack's head perked up. "Do they come to the practices?"
"Sure, but they're busy doing their own thing. Anyway, I gotta go. See ya' 'round Jack."
His eyes widened and a half-smile crept across his face as Jack turned to head for his locker. "Yeah! Cheerleader! I could do that! They have male cheerleaders! How hard could it be?"
That afternoon, Jack sat on the bleachers watching football practice as well as the cheerleaders. He'd always considered sports to be a waste of time practiced by dullards who couldn't think beyond 'smash geek', but he was beginning to see the benefits, especially the company jocks got to keep. He'd quickly disabused himself of any idea of becoming a male cheerleader when he saw how much actual physical work was involved, but he had definitely enjoyed the show. When he saw Richard starting to gather up his things, he headed down the benches and ran up to him.
"Hiya, Rich! Say, you looked good out there!"
Richard laughed as the two walked together. "So good of you to say! So now you're some kind of football expert as opposed to just a professional victim?"
"So, about this R.O.T.C. thing." Jack changed the subject. "I talked to my counselor and he switched me starting tomorrow. We're in the same period!"
"Wonderful." Richard said deadpan as he started to walk off the practice field. "Just what I needed."
"You do! Soon, you won't be able to function without me." Jack handed him the helmet that he'd forgotten on the bench. "See? You need me!"
"Well, how about coming over to my house for a snack then? You any good at math?"
Jack laughed maniacally. "Are you kidding? Why, last year I turned down the Nobel Prize for mathematics!"
"There is no Nobel Prize for math, dummy!" Richard pointed out.
"Of course there isn't, not anymore. They already did all the math there is. To answer your question though, it's an absolute unmodified negative, but I'm a quick learner and can be a great study partner. You taking Algebra?"
"Yeah. Maybe we can help each other. Hi, Anne." Richard raised his helmet toward one of the cheerleaders who was walking past them.
"Hi, Rich!" she replied bubblingly. "Looking good out there!"
Jack turned and walked backwards to face her as he continued along with Richard. "See? That's what I told him, but he wouldn't believe me!"
Anne stopped and looked back at Jack, looking him up and down like she was examining an insect. "I can see why!" At that she turned and jogged to a group of other girls.
Jack turned around and sighed. "Ah! What is this power I have over ladies! Did you see they way she looked me over? And you said I should bulk up!"
"She probably couldn't believe her eyes!" Richard shot back with a sly grin.
After changing in the locker room and a short walk, Richard walked in his front door a short distance from the school, Jack still tagging along behind him. "Mom! I'm home!" he shouted as he dropped his helmet off at the door before walking toward the kitchen. "I brought company over!"
Judith Hargrave met her son at the entrance to the kitchen. "Welcome home, sweetie. Who's your new friend?"
Richard gestured between the two. "Jack, this is my mom, Judith Hargrave. Mom? This is Jack, Jack...?"
"Dunning!" Jack replied wiping his hand on his faded jeans before he held it out to her. "Pleasure to meet you, Mrs. Hargrave! My, you have a lovely home! Must be hard work for such a young lady for it to look so nice!"
The woman blushed almost as red as her hair as she shook the boy's hand. "Oh, stop it! You better keep an eye on this boy, Richard. He's a little Eddie Haskell! Would you two like a snack?"
Grabbing a handful of cookies from the jar, Richard headed back out of the kitchen. "Sure, Mom. Jack and I are going to go study Algebra. Could you bring it in my room? Thanks!"
"It was a pleasure meeting you, Mrs. Hargrave!" Jack bowed at the waist, folding one arm under his belly and the other behind his back before he ran to catch up with Richard. "Hey, Rich! Wait up!"
Running up the hallway toward the room that he'd seen Richard enter, a girl came out of another doorway. "Richie? Could you... AH!"
Jack ran straight into her. As he began to stumble, his left foot caught on her right, twisting him in place and making Jack grab for her instinctually to try and prevent his fall. However, he only succeeded in dragging her down with him, such that as he hit the floor, she landed on top of him. Her notebook full of papers flew into the air to come flittering down around them both like leaves in autumn.
Erica Hargrave looked down at the strange boy who she was laying on top of and who was holding her waist. Shock turned to fury inside her toward this boy who not only ran right into her and made her fall, but also had just ruined her carefully organized folder. "Will you let go of me!" she yelled.
Immediately, Jack released the girl. "S-sorry!" he exclaimed as she got up off of him. Crab-walking backwards to get away quickly, he turned as he stood up and ran into the room he'd seen Richard duck into.
"You could at least help me pick up the mess!" Erica yelled down the hall as Richard closed the door behind Jack.
"Sorry." Richard explained as he dropped heavily onto his bed. "That's my ten-year-old sister, Erica. She can be sort of a pain sometimes, all the time pestering me for something. Anyway, we should get started."
A pounding sounded on Richard's door a moment later. From behind it they heard, "Richie! Your clumsy friend just ruined all my homework! Fix it!"
Richard rolled his eyes and got back up. "If we don't help, she'll just keep pounding!"
"Sorry!" Jack shrugged. "Just for the record though, she walked right out in front of me!"
Opening the door, Richard saw his sister standing with her hands on her hips and full of indignation. Storming down the hall she stood by her bedroom door, folded her arms, and waited for Richard to pick up her scattered papers.
While he started picking up the papers closest to him, Jack stuck his hands in his front pockets and turned on the charm. "Well, Erica! It's nice to meet you! Sorry we had to meet under these circumstances, but you know how it is!"
"I know how it is." Richard grumbled. "I'm cleaning up your mess again, Jack. You wanna help?"
"Oh! Certainly, Rich!" Jack said apologetically as he picked up a few papers and stepped over the others that were scattered around to hand them to Erica. "Here you go! Nice penmanship, by the way!"
"Jack!" Richard nagged, dragging out his name.
Sighing, Jack started gathering papers while Erica stood and waited. Shortly, they had them all gathered up and handed back to Richard's sister. Jack bowed to her and smiled his half-smile. "Why don't you let me straighten those out for you, Erica! It's the least I can do!"
She eyed him suspiciously, even as his smile turned her knees to jelly. "Well, OK. I suppose you should. It's your fault they got all messed up!"
Looking at her, Richard again tried to rescue Jack from his own disasters. "Erica! We need to study! Jack can't waste his time on this kid stuff!"
Gallantly, Jack held up a hand toward Richard. "Now-now, Rich! I owe it to her! It'll just take a sec!" Ten minutes later, Erica sat on her bed as he sat at her desk and finished sorting out the mess. "There! All fixed, Buttons!"
Erica sighed. "Took you long enough! Why did you call me Buttons?"
The boy turned and smiled at her with his cute half-smile, making the girl's heart flutter. "Red hair? Red Buttons? Plus cute-as-a... Buttons!"
She almost smiled giddily at him saying she was cute, but stopped herself. "Fine. Now get out of my room!"
He turned and bowed at her once more as he left. Erica couldn't figure this boy out. He was cute and funny, and he'd even made her laugh a few times while he fixed her papers with his little jokes. She'd tried to stay mad at him, but somehow she just couldn't. Once gone, she finally allowed herself to smile at his compliment as she moved to her desk and started her homework, completely forgetting the question that she was going to ask her brother.
Entering Richard's room, Jack let out a breath. "Whew! Your sister can really be a grouch, Rich! Remind me never to cross her!"
"No worries, Jack. Come on, Mom brought us some sandwiches. We can eat while we go over this stuff."
After Jack had gone home, Erica knocked on her brother's open door. "So, Richie? That boy that was here. His name's Jack?"
Richard turned a page of his comic book. "Yeah. Jack Dunning."
Leaning against his doorway, Erica fidgeted with her fingers. "He's kinda small for high school. How old is he? Is he really smart or something? Did he skip grades?"
"Who? Jack?" he asked as he put his comic down. "Really smart? No! He's just small for his age. He turns fourteen next week. Why?"
She shrugged and looked at the floor. "No reason. He's kinda weird! Why is he your friend? There's no way he plays football!"
"He could, if he wanted to." Richard noted, picking up his comic again. "He could be a running back or slot back. Guy that small could be hard to catch, but I don't think he likes football."
"So why is he your friend, then?" she persisted.
Putting down his comic once more, Richard sighed. "'Cuz he's funny and fun to hang out with! Plus he's kinda smart, in his own way. Jeez, Erica! What's with you today? Why the third degree? You still mad at him for an honest mistake? He fixed all your papers, didn't he?"
"It's just that he's so different from your other friends!" she scowled at him. "I mean, usually you hang out with guys like Hank or Ox. Jack is just..." she sighed almost wistfully. "...so different!" she repeated herself. "He is funny, but you've never had a friend like him before."
"What, so I can only hang out with jocks? I have a few brains too, ya' know. Someday, I'm gonna go to college and study business like Dad."
Wandering into his room, Erica sat at the desk where Jack was earlier. She looked at her brother on his bed. "Is that why you play football? So you can go to college?"
Putting down the comic again, he rolled over and looked at her. "No, I'm not good enough for like a scholarship or something. I think I might join the Marines like Dad did. They'll pay for college if you serve long enough. I play football because it's fun and I know Dad did when he was my age."
"Oh." Erica replied, seeming disappointed over something. "I'd miss you if you went away a long time."
Her brother laughed. "I'm not leaving tomorrow, ya' goof!"
Standing up suddenly, Erica felt insulted. "Fine! I won't miss you then!" At that she stormed out of his room.
Picking up his comic once more, Richard shook his head dismissively and sighed. "Girls are weird!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
When Jack used to talk about high school, it was always on the same subject. Girls! Jack would say he took a different girl to every school dance or party, but then Rich would point out that it was because he could never get a girl to say yes twice! Poor Jack! He tried so hard to fit in with the popular kids that Rich hung out with, and Rich would always make sure that Jack was included. See, pretty soon, the other kids figured out that if you wanted Rich to come to your party, Jack had to be invited, too. Rich would say Jack never held him back though... he still was invited to all the parties and dances and they still hung out with his regular crowd, so you can't say Jack hurt Rich's social life, but Rich's friendship almost certainly helped Jack's, immensely. I remember this story that Jack used to tell about their Junior Prom. Rich denied parts of it, but I think Jack was telling the truth. I could always tell when Jack was BSing his way through a story. Erica told me a lot of things about that night that tell me it was Jack that was being honest. It started a chain of events that would have life-changing effects, but then Jack would say that was true about everything that happens to a person.
---
Jack tried once more to knot his bow tie. He loved getting dressed up nicely and he wore it well, in the last two-and-a-half years having grown over a foot. Giving up on tying it himself, he headed out of his room.
"Mom! Can you help me please? I can't get this stupid thing to cooperate!"
Mary Dunning walked over to her sixteen-year-old son. "Here, let me get that for you. Put your hands down, dear!" Her old fingers tied the knot easily and quickly, smiling as she did so. "You look so much like your father in this!" she said wistfully. "I remember when he took me to our Senior Prom! It was right before the War. He looked so handsome!" she said, looking off in the distance. Returning from her memory, she looked back at Jack. "And now here you are! You're growing up so fast!"
Jack sighed as he waited for his widowed mother to finish. "Hurry, Mom! I need to get over to Rich's before five! We still need to make it to Anne's to pick up her and Wendy, then to dinner, and then the Prom! We don't wanna be late!"
Mary finished futzing with her son's tie and smoothed his jacket down with a smile. "There! All done! You're such a catch!"
He dismissed his mother's compliment out of hand. "Ah! Wendy's just going with me because Anne is going with Rich, and Anne and Wendy are best friends. It's just a date of convenience. Pity date, really."
"Don't you like her?" she asked concernedly.
"Oh, she's nice and all, but she's just too flighty and fickle for me. All the popular girls are, Mom."
"She might like you, Jack. Girls don't usually go to a dance with a boy just because it's convenient. I noticed her looking at you when I saw her last month at the store. Oh, never mind! You do what you think is best! If you say it's just friends going together, then that's what it is. You have lots of options... maybe more than you think!"
"Mom!" he dragged out the word. "Stop it already! Look, I gotta run! I'll see you tomorrow, OK? Don't wait up!" Jack kissed his mother goodbye and ran out the door yelling, "Love you!" as he left.
Mary stood at the screen door, watching him jog down the street. Finally she went to her chair and sat down. Looking at her black and white wedding photo sitting on the end table next to her, the youth it captured long gone, she sighed. I miss you, Danny. Watch over our boy tonight? I know it's silly, but I worry about him. I love you!
Jack ran part of the way from his house in North Oakland to Richard's house in Squirrel Hill. It was only a few blocks away, but was a much more upscale suburb of Pittsburgh. As he reached the border between the two, he slowed to a walk, noting the almost unmistakable line that separated his own poorer neighborhood from Richard's wealthier one. Finally reaching his best friend's house, he rang the bell and waited, thankful that the afternoon weather was not too warm.
After a moment, the door opened and he saw Erica behind the screen looking up at him with an expression of irritation. Opening the screen, Jack waited for her to move. "Well? Aren't I allowed in, Buttons? I got dressed up nice and everything! Just tell Rich his date is here!"
Erica rolled her eyes and stalked away from the open door.
"Who is it?" Judith called from somewhere down the hallway.
"It's Jack!" Erica yelled back as she dropped onto the couch and crossed her arms.
Frank Hargrave came out into the living room from his den, fiddling with his camera. "Oh, hi Jack!" he said, his teeth clenching his pipe. Removing it, he smiled at the boy. "Big night, eh?"
Nodding, Jack looked at his feet. "I suppose so, Mr. Hargrave. I sure hope Rich is ready soon. Anne and Wendy won't want to be kept waiting!"
His friend's father sat in the big leather recliner and tapped his pipe against a large glass ashtray. "Oh, don't worry about that. They'll leave you two cooling your heels while they finish primping! Got my camera ready! You sure you know how to use a Nikon?"
He nodded and took the offered camera. "Yes, sir! I took Photography last year, remember?"
"That's right!" he mentioned. "You took a lot of the yearbook photos last year, didn't you?"
"Not that many sir, only a few dozen, but they were the best ones!" Jack smirked.
Erica rolled her eyes and huffed. "Excuse me, I think I'm gonna go barf or something!" she groaned as she got up and stormed off to her room.
Watching her leave, Jack finally turned to look at her father. "What's up with her? She's been acting weird lately."
Shrugging his shoulders, Frank re-lit his pipe. "Who knows the mind of a thirteen-year-old girl?" he asked rhetorically.
A moment later, Judith came down the hall, looking back toward Erica's door. Shaking her head, she smiled when she saw Jack. "You look great, Jack! You and Wendy are going to have a lot of fun tonight! Richard will be out in a minute!"
Lifting a foot, Jack shined his shoe on the back of his pant leg. "Thank you, Mrs. Hargrave! I'll try not to disappoint!" He noticed Judith look at Frank sternly, glance at him, then she turned and disappeared into the kitchen.
Frank cleared his throat. "Sit down, Jack. Take a load off." When Jack sat on the arm of the couch, he scowled. "The arm isn't for sitting on, boy!"
"Oh! Sorry, sir!" he apologized as he moved to the couch seat.
Tapping his pipe again, Frank scraped out the ash, looked up at Jack, and sighed. "Look, son. I know your old man passed on quite a few years back, and... well... I guess these last years I've felt like a sort of surrogate father to you." He looked down as he nervously re-stuffed his pipe. "If you have any questions... you know... the things a young man wants to know about that he usually asks his father?" He looked up at Jack with just his eyes, his head still looking down.
Jack almost laughed. "Um... no! It's fine, sir... Mr. Hargrave. I... I'm good!"
The older man leaned forward. "Look here, boy. There are some things you need to know and it's my responsibility to make sure you know them! Do you know what I'm getting at? You treat your date right! No funny business! Even if she says she wants to, it's your responsibility to say no for the both of you! Got it? I don't wanna hear about you causing her any embarrassment! You're a fine boy, so I don't think it'll be a problem, but it needed to be said. Now that I've said my piece, you got any questions?"
"N-no, sir!" Jack stammered. "I'll do just as you say!"
Frank sat back and re-lit his pipe. "Good! Now I want you to have a good time tonight, so I want to give you this." Reaching into his pocket, he pulled out a twenty dollar bill from his wallet and held it out it toward Jack.
Jack looked at the money as though it were some sort of a trick. "No... it's OK, sir. You don't have to..."
"Damn it, boy! I know I don't have to! I want to! Now take it!" Once Jack got up and took the money, Frank sat back and grimaced. Lowering his voice to a conspiratorial tone, he added, "Besides, if I didn't give you that talk and some money, Judy would throttle me!"
Richard came out, dressed in his tuxedo. "Well? How do I look?"
Frank nodded as he puffed his pipe. "Very smart, boy! Looking good! You have the corsages?"
He looked toward the kitchen and then back to his father. "Oh! Mom put 'em in the fridge so they'd keep better!"
Jack smiled. "I'll get 'em, sport! Just leave it ta' ol' Jack!" Heading into the kitchen, he saw Judith doing dishes. "Hi again, Mrs. H! I'm just getting the corsages and we'll..." He saw her shoulders shake and knew something was wrong. "Mrs. Hargrave? You alright?"
Judith shook her head, forcing the guilty tears to stop. "No, I'm fine Jack. It's just..." She paused, thinking what to say. "It's just hard to watch Richard going off to Prom is all. I know next year you two'll be seniors, and then..." Her voice trailed off.
"Oh, it'll be fine, Mrs. H!" Jack tried to comfort her. "That's a whole year away! Lots of time until then!" He opened the fridge and took out the two corsages. "Don't worry! I'll take good care of him for ya' tonight! That boy still needs me, ya' know!"
She laughed and sniffed, wiping away a tear. "Thank you, Jack! Here." She walked over to him, straightened his tie some, and smiled at him. "You're like a brother to Richard. I'm glad he has you around! Wendy's a lucky girl to be getting someone like you, too! You might be just the right sort of young man she needs to... to be happy! I know any girl your age that gets you will be very blessed!" She reached into the pocket of her housedress and pulled out another twenty. "Here. Take this and have fun tonight!"
Jack tried to refuse it. "Oh no, Mrs. H! Mr. Hargrave already..."
She put her finger up. "Shush! I know he did, but he thinks twenty dollars is still a lot of money!" She smiled at him and took a breath. "Now, let's get you two on your way! Tonight's a big night for you... and Richard!"
They headed back out into the living room where Richard was talking with his father. "So anyway, Hank fades back and he's about to pass when... Oh! Hey, Jack! Took you long enough! Get lost somewhere between here and the fridge?"
Jack half-grinned. "Nah! I was just telling your mom all the things I do for you! You know, like remembering your date's name, warning you when you have bad breath, distracting the sales clerk while you lift our dates' corsages... things like that!"
"Jack! That's terrible!" Judith said feigning shock as though she wasn't used to his quirky humor. She looked at her husband. "Frank?"
"What? Oh, yes dear... terrible!" Frank commented absently.
"No dear, your son is about to leave?" she hinted.
"Oh! Yes... um... here, Rich. Your mother and I want you to have a good time so..." He handed Richard forty dollars. "Don't stay out too late!"
Richard took the offered money and smiled at him. "Thanks, Dad! Come on, Jack. The girls might be waiting already! Night, Mom!"
"Now you be careful, dears!" she called after them from the porch as they headed down the short walkway in front of the house. "Watch out for drunk drivers!" Watching the boys get into their family's station wagon, she sighed. Turning back toward the house, she spotted Erica watching from behind the screen door, only to duck away when she saw that her mother had caught her watching them leave.
Sitting in the passenger seat while Richard drove them to Anne's house, Jack looked over at his best friend. "So how much did your mom give you on top of what your dad knows about?"
"Twenty, on top of the fifty that you and I saved from mowing lawns. How about you?"
"The same... plus your old man gave me twenty. That gives us a hundred and fifty bucks! What do you want to do with it?"
"Us! Why should I share? I have eighty-five and you only have sixty-five!"
"Because you're bad with money! That's why. You know I can make it go farther for the four of us than you can make yours go for just you and Anne!"
Richard stopped at a light. "I am not bad with money! You just want your hooks in my eighty bucks!"
"Look, when we were at the movies last month, how much did you spend on snacks? Ten bucks? I spent three fifty at the store and just snuck 'em in! Come on! You know me, Rich!"
Pulling through the intersection, Richard shook his head. "Yeah, I do know you, Jack. I should probably get my head examined for listening to you, but OK. We'll pool our funds and ask the girls what they want to do, then you figure out what we can afford. Alright?"
"Don't worry! I've got it all planned out!" Jack said smugly.
They pulled in front of Anne's house and parked on the curb just after five. Climbing out, Jack grabbed the corsages and tossed one to Richard as they headed up the walkway.
"Not your best throw Jack, but you didn't send it into the bushes."
"So I've never been a football player... or baseball... or basketball... or hockey..."
"...or table tennis!" Richard finished for him as he rang the bell. "Is there anything your good at?"
"I seem to be good at weaseling money out of my friend!" Jack shot back.
The door opened and the two boys were shown in by Anne's mother Lydia. Standing at the foot of the stairs and waiting for their dates to come down, Richard could feel Anne's father John burning a hole in the back of his head with his eyes. Clearing his throat nervously, he adjusted his tie.
Jack could see his friend's nervousness, so he thought he'd help defuse the tension, or at very least take the attention off Richard. He turned and faced the older man who was standing in the hallway behind them. "Hi, sir! I'm Jack, Wendy's date. Your daughter Anne is in good hands tonight, sir! My buddy Rich is the safest driver in Pittsburgh! Modest and upstanding, too! The girls all call him 'Respectful Richard'! You won't hear stories about ol' Rich embarrassing any young ladies or taking any advantages! No, sir!"
Anne's father just stared at Jack unblinking.
Not to be intimidated, Jack flew into his second line of defense. "Oh, you'll also note that I have a camera with me to fully document the evening! So afterwards, you can look at the pictures and see for yourself that Anne had a good time and was always safe, secure, and well taken care of!"
He looked at the man who in turn returned his gaze with cold, dead eyes.
Falling back to his final line of defense, Jack cleared his throat. "We have a hundred fifty dollars that Rich and I saved from work we did over the year! Yes, sir! Rich is a responsible young man! Why, everything I know about being a good responsible citizen is due to his good influence on me! I bet if it weren't for Rich, I'd probably be making bad decisions! Doing the drugs and... um... stuff."
Finally, he saw the man crack a smile. Unfortunately it was more menacing than friendly or jovial before the man turned and walked down the hallway away from the two teens.
Breathing a sigh of relief, Jack turned back around to face the stairs again. "Told you! I got you covered! You need me!"
"My hero!" Richard mumbled sarcastically.
Half a minute later, Anne's father came back into the living room carrying a cleaning kit and a holstered Colt Forty-five. After he sat on the couch, he opened the kit on the coffee table, unholstered and unloaded the weapon, and started cleaning it right there.
Glancing at the man's activities, Jack turned back around, lowering his voice to a whisper. "OK, don't freak out. Her dad has a gun and he's cleaning it right now! So don't freak when you see it, OK? See? You need me!"
After a short wait longer, Anne came down the stairs wearing a white off the shoulder drop-lace gown with an empire waist that hugged her tightly, while the skirt flared to emphasize her nearly perfect figure. Her hair hung down and loose, her natural curl flattened to let it fall just behind her shoulders. It was simple and elegant, and Richard was stunned at how beautifully grown-up she looked.
Wendy followed her down, dressed in a hot pink satin-lame dress with off the shoulder sleeves, a low cut neckline, an even lower back, and a flirty knee-length hemline that dropped to just above her ankles in the back. Her curly strawberry-blonde hair was sprayed up to leave her neck and shoulders bare. She smiled seductively at Jack as she reached the bottom of the stairs, making him unusually speechless for a moment. Just about to recover, they were interrupted.
"Daddy!" Anne yelled. "Put that stupid thing away!"
"What, pumpkin? I'm just cleaning it!" her father said innocently.
"I know what you're doing, Daddy! Now stop it! I'm almost seventeen!"
Just then, Anne's mother came back into the room. "Oh, for heaven's sake, John! Take that out of here this instant!" Turning to Anne, she smiled. "You look beautiful, darling! Here, I want you to take this for tonight!" She turned Anne around and wrapped a beautiful set of pearls around her neck. "There! It's perfect!"
The boys both gave their dates their corsages, Anne having asked for a wrist corsage and Wendy a pin-on type.
"Jack? Would you pin mine on me, please?" Wendy asked boldly.
"Well... uh... maybe Anne's mom should do it. I... I might pin it on wrong or stick you with it! Besides, I have a job to do!" he excused himself, holding up the camera. Her smile dropped as he turned toward Richard.
Clearing his throat, Jack got Richard's attention. "Rich? Why don't you and Anne stand in front of the fireplace and I'll get your picture!" he suggested as Wendy pinned her own corsage in place.
Afterwards, Richard returned the favor and took pictures of Jack and Wendy. While Jack smiled happily, Wendy only smiled vacantly, still upset that Jack hadn't taken the invitation to pin her corsage next to her exposed chest.
When the four finally headed for the car, Wendy's mood seemed to lift as she spoke up. "Anne? Why don't you ride up front with Rich. Jack and I can take the back seat!"
Jack cleared his throat nervously. "Sounds good to me! Oh! Rich and I were wondering what you'd like to do this evening. I mean, before the Prom, of course! Dinner? Movies? You name it!"
Anne looked at Wendy, who only smiled back and shrugged. "Well, dinner sounds nice! Can we go someplace fancy?"
"It just so happens I already made reservations at a very fine establishment!" Jack grinned his usual half-smile. "I think it just might fit the bill!"
Riding in the back to a local upscale restaurant after telling Richard where to go, Jack noticed Wendy's hand move to his knee. Making him nervous, he put his hand on hers, looked over at her, and smiled. When he noticed the mischievous grin on her face, it made him certain that one way or another he was in for a memorable evening.
Judith knocked on Erica's door, opening it slowly into the darkened room. Entering quietly, she could hear her daughter crying on her bed. Closing the door behind her, she silently crossed the room and sat next to her youngest child, rubbing her back until Erica got up and hugged her, still crying.
"Want to talk, dear?" she asked gently, already knowing what was wrong.
"Boys are stupid!" Erica said between sobs.
She laughed lightly. "Sometimes, yes they are! That's why we women have to push them in the right direction most of the time!" Waiting for her to stop crying, Judith held her and rubbed her back like she'd done when Erica was little. It worked, as it wasn't long before Erica was sniffing back tears. "Let me guess. Jack?"
Erica nodded shyly. "I... I wanted to go to the Prom with him, but... I'm just a little girl to him. He doesn't even notice me!"
"Oh! It's alright! You may be a little girl now, but soon you'll be all grown up. I'll bet lots of nice boys will notice you then!"
"But... but what if it's too late?" Erica nearly began to sob again. "What... what if... what if Jack falls in love with some other girl before I can finish growing up?"
"Well dear, you'll just have to trust that it'll work out the way it's supposed to. You'll meet another boy that you'll like even better than Jack!"
Her daughter shook her head slowly and sadly. "I can't imagine liking any boy better than Jack, Mom!" she sighed lovingly as she spoke his name. Suddenly, she got an angry look on her face and her tone turned cold. "And tonight he's taking that floozy Wendy to the Prom!"
"Erica!" Judith chided her. "That's not a very nice thing to say about anyone! She's Jack's date. If they like each other and decide to date, well then that's just that. They're nearly grown adults." Cautiously she asked, "Why did you say that about Wendy, dear?"
"All the girls say so, Mom!" the girl rolled her eyes. "Her younger sister Ruth is in my music class and she told me that Wendy flirts with all the boys all the time... and kisses them and does other things, too! Things I'm too young to talk about."
Judith swallowed hard. "It can't be that bad, dear!"
"She puts out and then she dumps 'em." Erica said sadly. "She broke Jimmy Mason's heart last year! Now she's gonna do the same thing to Jack!"
"Now stop that!" Judith admonished. "It's a sin to circulate rumors like that! Now you forget all about Jack! I know it hurts a little now, but soon this will all be behind you!"
Perturbed, Jack stood by the punch bowl getting his and Wendy's second cup. Richard stood next to him just shaking his head. All around them their class talked, laughed, and danced to 'I've Had the Time of My Life'.
"I don't get it, Jack! Wendy's hot, and for some strange reason known only to her seems to think you're... well... not repulsive. What's the problem?"
"It's too easy, Rich!" Jack griped. "It makes me suspicious, like she's up to something. It's like shooting fish in a barrel! Like fishing with a grenade! Like..."
"I get it!" Richard rolled his eyes. "So... what're you gonna do about it?"
Jack smiled as he picked up the cups. "Go fishing!" he replied. "Hey, just 'cuz it's easy, doesn't make it any less fun! I mean, I know I'm irresistible, but it's just a little... boring! No challenge to it! Plus it makes me wonder what she's really after!"
When they returned to their dates, Jack handed Wendy her punch. She took it and eyed him like a hungry animal, making Jack sweat like he'd just run the half mile. As the song ended and the next one started, Wendy stood and walked over to him, putting down her cup.
"Dance with me?" she said to make him understand it was not a request.
As Madonna's 'Crazy for You' played, they reached the dance floor and he nervously took her into his arms. "Are you having a good time?" he asked looking into her eyes, their height the same with Wendy's three-inch heels.
Slowly swaying to the music, she pressed her curvaceous body against his. "Mmm-hmm!" she replied with a smile. "Jack? Can I ask you something?"
"S-sure! Anything you like!"
"Do I make you nervous?"
"W-who? Me? Don't be silly!" He paused. "Why? Do I seem nervous?"
She laughed and lowered her head against his shoulder, pressing her ample chest against his. "Yes! And I think it's adorable!"
Closing his eyes, Jack tried to steady his breathing. As they danced though, his mind would not let go of the question that he had been dying to know for over a month; ever since Wendy had not so subtly hinted that he should ask her to the Prom. "Can... can I ask you a question?"
"Mmm-hmm!" she replied, breathing on his neck.
Jack breathed heavily for a moment, trying to keep his mind clear. Finally his need to know overpowered his teenage hormones and angst. "Why me? I mean, don't get me wrong, I... I'm grateful! You're easily one of the prettiest girls in school, probably thee prettiest! You must have had a literal ton of guys asking you to go, so... so why did you want me to ask you?"
"Why not you?" she countered.
"Well... OK, can we just be honest for a second?" Jack sighed. "I know the only reason I get to go anywhere near the parties and stuff that you all have is because of Rich. And he's great! He never makes me feel like he's... well... propping me up, but I know he is, and so does everyone else. I have like, no doubt that if I weren't his friend you probably wouldn't even know my name, let alone consider going to the Prom with me. I... I know you know all this, but I think it's important that I say it. I talk big and all, but I think you know I'm just a geek with a really nice popular friend. So, all that said, why me?"
Having raised her head up to really listen as Jack admitted what they both knew to be true, Wendy took a moment before answering. "Well, I... I guess I just wanted to know... I wanted to go out with a guy who was different. I..." She leaned her head against his shoulder again.
"Oh. OK. I just... Well, I was afraid that maybe you only came with me 'cuz you lost a bet or something... or were planning something Carrie-like!"
Wendy laughed. "No, Jack! I didn't lose a bet! In fact, I think I might have won! You make me feel like you respect me! Like... like I'm safe."
Jack felt simultaneously flattered and insulted; flattered that she trusted him to be a gentleman, and insulted for the same reason. A moment later, all he felt was lucky, her hands sliding up his back to hook onto his shoulders as she pressed tightly against him, contentedly humming the tune they danced to. Closing his eyes, he just enjoyed the moment.
Suddenly Jack felt Wendy pull away from him. Just as he opened his eyes, he doubled over as a fist slammed into his belly.
"Stay away from my girl, twerp!" Ox snarled. "Come on, Wendy!" Pulling the shocked girl to the side of the dance floor, he held up his hands. "Look, I know! I blew off asking you 'til the last minute, but come on! I have a big game coming up! You don't have to pity date Rich's 'help the needy' project to show me I messed up! Lets just forget all this and spend the rest of the night making up!" At that he started to reach out for her.
Richard shoved himself between Ox and Wendy. "She's not your date, Ox! Now beat it before I do to you what you just did to my friend!"
"Rich!" Ox scoffed. "Don't be such a goodie-two-shoes, man! Haven't you had enough of playing 'fairy godmother' to the kid from North Oakland? Come on! He doesn't belong! You know it, I know it, everyone knows it!"
Just then, Vice-Principal Ford walked his heavy form up to them. "Alright, Oscar. I saw that. You're done." He waved his chubby hand toward the door and smiled. "You're suspended!"
Grinning, Ox tried to smooth-talk his way out of it. "No, see here's the thing, Mr. F! See, this loser was horn-dogging on my date so..."
At last coming to her senses again, Wendy stormed up to him. "You're not my date, Ox! Nor are you ever going to be again! Don't call me anymore, don't even bother talking to me!"
Holding his hands up again in mock surrender, his voice turned patronizing. "OK! I get it! You're mad! You want me to apologize to the little dork?"
"No, you big oaf!" she yelled. "I want you to drop dead!"
Ox's expression turned sour. "Fine! Who needs an easy lay like you anyway! I'm outta here! Bunch a' wimps!"
While Ox was escorted from the room, Wendy ran to Jack and helped him to their table. "Are you alright, Jack?"
Holding his stomach, he nodded. "I'm fine! Nothing a little internal surgery and new kidneys won't fix! Oh!" He winced as he sat.
"Jack!" Wendy giggled. "You're such a clown!"
He smiled, the pain slowly subsiding. "I'm sorry we're going to miss a few dances tonight, Wendy. I don't think I can do any fast ones! Might sprain my spleen! You can dance with someone else if you want. I don't mind."
Scooting her chair over until it was right up next to Jack's, Wendy shook her head dismissively. "But I don't want to dance with anyone else! So, we'll just dance to the slow songs!" she said seductively.
At once Jack felt very little pain as her hand sensuously caressed his inner thigh. "Uh... Wendy? I... I thought you came with me because I was... um... safe... because I respected you and wouldn't want to... ya' know..."
"True, I know you won't pressure me!" she admitted. Leaning in close to his ear, she whispered, "That doesn't mean that I can't pressure you!"
After the song ended came the crowning of the King and Queen and other events. Later, when they announced the final song of the evening, Wendy looked over at Jack. "Do you feel up to one more?" she asked.
"If you had to pull me around the floor in a wheelchair I'd be ready!" Jack quipped. "Just... Can you give me a hand up?"
While everyone made their way to the floor, 'Take My Breath Away' started playing. Wendy groaned, "Oh no! Not this one!"
Jack looked at her in surprise. "What's wrong?"
Wendy draped her arms over Jack's shoulders. "Like getting a punch in the gut! Take my breath away? Get it?" She smiled a goofy open mouth smile as she pressed her forehead against his.
Laughter wracked Jack's bruised body, causing him to wince. "Ow! Don't make me laugh, Wendy! Ow!"
After the two started dancing to the song, their mood changed dramatically. Swaying slowly and feeling each other, Jack knew that the night would end soon and their time together would come to a close.
"Jack? Can I ask you something?"
"Anything, Wendy." he almost purred.
"After the dance, would you want to... I mean... oh, shoot!" She buried her face in his shoulder.
Jack was confused. "What is it? You can ask me anything you like, Wendy. You don't have to be embarrassed!"
Wendy looked at him. "Well, as you put it, can we just be honest for a sec? I... I originally agreed to go with you because I wanted you to be my first... um... virgin." She was quiet for a moment, but then continued. "I... I've never been a guy's first before... and... um... I wanted... I wanted to know what it was like to be a guy's... God! You must think I'm a slut!"
Stunned, Jack stared off in the distance. She wanted to... Oh, Wow! Pulling himself together, he reached up with a hand and lifted her chin so he could look in her eyes. "I kinda figured it had to be something. I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm flattered that you would want to with me, but... I... uh... wow!" He held her close as he tried to think. "I really want to, more than you know!"
"Wanna bet?" she asked, smiling knowingly.
"Oh!" Jack backed up so his hips weren't pressed into hers anymore. "Sorry!"
Closing the gap, Wendy pressed herself against him, still smiling. "Don't be!"
Jack's head was spinning and he felt like he might faint. Taking a deep breath he let it out slowly. "I... I want to Wendy, a lot! But... I... I want something else more. I... I want... Would you be my girlfriend? I mean, after tonight? You don't have to decide right now. I mean, take your time! But if... if I had the choice of having you tonight, or seeing you tomorrow? I... I'd wait."
The song ending, she looked at him softly. "Who says you can't have both?" She pulled her body tightly against his, pressing her soft lips to his mouth, opening hers as she did, prompting him to do the same. It wasn't anything more than an open mouth kiss, but it was his first and enough to send Jack's head spinning again.
After a moment, their kiss and the song ended and she smiled. "I like you, Jack. You're more than just sweet! You're funny, smart, cute, and I... Yes!"
Shaking his head, he tried to regain his ability to think. "Yes? Yes, what?"
She laughed. "Yes, I'll be your girlfriend!"
Jack's eyes bulged out. "Really? I think I feel like dancing!"
She looked around at the other kids leaving the floor. "But the dance is over!"
Slowly, they started to walk back to their table, hand in hand. Seeing Richard and Anne there gathering their things, Jack half-smiled. "You guys ready?"
Nodding, Richard smirked. "Hey, Jack? Your lipstick's smudged! You might wanna touch up!"
Jack blushed and picked up a napkin, wiping his mouth. "Sorry! Good one though, Rich! You're getting better, but you're still just a straight man! Leave the real comedy to the professionals!" He looked at his watch. "Well, it's only eleven. What would you girls like to do?"
Grinning happily, Anne looked at Wendy. "Beth's parents are throwing an after-party!" Looking at Jack, her grin vanished. "Beth still doesn't like you though, and I think even you would agree she has a good reason not to, so you'd have to bow out gracefully!"
Her friend shrugged. "No, I'd be happy just going someplace like Frick Park. It's a beautiful night for a walk!"
Anne glared at her for not taking the hint. "Wendy! You may be willing to blow off your social obligations, but I'm not! The dance is over, so he's not your date anymore! Maybe you might find a guy to replace Ox at the party!"
Glaring back, Wendy growled. "It's not like that, Anne!" She looked at her date. "Jack and I are dating!"
Her eyes slowly widened. "Like... dating, dating? Like after tonight? Like for all summer?"
Sighing as she turned back to look at Anne, Wendy's arms held Jack tightly. "Maybe longer, if I'm lucky!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
I think Jack was really in love with Wendy. They dated almost four months before she ended it. Rich said that he thought Jack would never recover. It absolutely destroyed him. Jack just never talked about it. I think... I think it just hurt too much, even years later. He never would say her name, even when he would talk about it. Rich told me what happened though. Wendy dated Jack through the rest of May and June and into July. Then her parents took her on a month-long trip to Florida. When she got back, right before school started, she told him that she'd found someone else and broke up with him. Rich said she was cruel about it, telling him that he was too much of a wimp for her and she needed a strong man. I don't know if it's true or not. Rich hated her for hurting him, so he might have just been bitter and wanted to say mean things about her. I guess now only one person knows the truth... and she'll never tell. So Jack and Rich started their senior year of high school on a bad note, and it just kept getting worse from there.
---
Richard knocked on Jack's door for the third time. Inside he could hear the muffled strains of 'Take My Breath Away' playing.
"Jack! Come on, dang it! Open the door!"
"Go away, Rich. Just leave me alone!"
Trying the knob, he found it locked. Pulling his keys out, he flipped until he got to his screwdriver and shoved it in the hole in the doorknob. Twisting until he felt the tip slide into the tiny screw end slot, he turned it and the knob came loose. Opening the door, he looked around the room, taking a moment for his eyes to adjust to the darkness. Seeing Jack lying on his bed still in his pajamas, his shades drawn, Richard stepped over and stopped the tape player, throwing up the shades before turning back to his miserable friend.
"Alright, Jack. Enough moping. You missed the first day of school! I won't let you miss the second!" He ripped the sheets down and saw his best friend lying there with the eight-by-ten Prom photo of him and Wendy held to his chest. His eyes looked puffy and swollen, as though Ox had finished what he'd started; his body drawn and weak. "Damn, Jack! Come on! Get a hold of yourself!"
While he just lay there, Mary Dunning came in and stood next to the older teen. "I... I don't know what to do, Richard! He's not eating! He never gets up except to use the bathroom! He won't talk! He just lays here and keeps playing that awful song!" She turned and buried her face in Richard's chest.
Trying his best to console her, he led her out of the room and into the front room. "Uh... I have an idea, but there may be some... difficulties."
Drying her eyes, she looked at him cautiously. "Like what?"
"Nothing that isn't worth seeing him up and moving again. Will you trust me? I'll... I'll have to yell and use some harsh language. It's the only way to get through to him right now."
Mary nodded fervently. "I... I trust you Richard! You're a good and smart young man and I know you only want to help. Do what you have to."
With a nod, Richard walked back into Jack's room, stormed up to his bed, snatched the photo from his grasp, and quickly tore it in half.
Up in a flash, Jack's puffy eyes were full of rage. "You son of a bitch!"
Richard smirked. "Well! Lover boy lives! What's the matter, little man! Did the mean girl break you wittle heart? Too fucking bad! Deal with it! The bitch dumped you like a bad habit and you sit here pining for her like a dog that runs back to its master for another kick! I bet if she called you, you'd be back up and running to her in no time flat, huh? I thought girls were too fickle and flighty, so that's why you never let any get to you! What a sad and sick little wimp you turned out to be! Oh, I don't mean your muscles, I mean your heart, maggot!" At the final word, he poked Jack in the chest.
"Fuck you, asshole!" Jack growled as he tried to throw a punch, but Richard caught it mid-throw. He tried to throw his other fist, but Richard caught it as well, now restraining Jack by his hands.
"Let me go, muscle head!" Jack screamed.
"No!" Richard shouted back. "Damn it, Jack! I'm your friend! You wouldn't let me help, so I'm doing what I have to do!" He let Jack go and pushed him backward. "Listen up, half-pint! Yeah, Wendy broke your heart! Well guess what? Anne broke mine! She dumped me while you were still writing love letters to your cheating girlfriend in Florida! But do you care? No! You wanna know why she dumped me? Because of you!"
Jack furrowed his brow. "What the hell are you talking about!"
"Anne! Dumping me! Because of you!"
Confused, Jack flopped back to sit on his bed. "I... I don't get it!"
Richard looked down at his friend. "She dumped me because she wanted me to do things like going to parties or movies without you and I wouldn't!"
"Well that's normal!" Jack screwed up his face. "Jesus, Rich! You could do those things without me sometimes! Anne probably just..."
"No, you idiot!" he interrupted. "She wanted you out! Completely gone from my life! She didn't even want me to hang around you when she wasn't there! She said you were a leach, just using me to make rich friends and get to Wendy! She thinks Wendy made a mistake when she didn't just dump you at the Prom and take Ox back after he laid you out with one punch!"
"So... she dumped you because..."
"Because I wouldn't dump you as a friend! She gave me an ultimatum... you or her!"
Jack looked up at Rich. "And you picked me?"
Richard nodded. "Yeah!"
"Why?"
He leaned back against the wall. "Right now I couldn't tell you. You're a self-centered jerk who's just feeling sorry for himself and doesn't give a rat's ass about anyone else! Your mom was about to call the cops, or the ambulance, or the guys from the nut hut to come and pump fluids in you! You've got her scared shitless and you don't even care! So right now I figure you can just go to hell! I guess I made the wrong choice!"
Jack looked at the torn photo on the floor. "Thanks." he mumbled.
"For what?" Richard yelled.
"For being a good friend... my best friend... my only real friend."
Looking down at Jack, he felt tears well up. Taking a breath, he blew it out slowly and brought down his anger. "You're welcome. And thank you."
"For what?" Jack looked up at him.
"For always getting into jams so I can be the hero and get you out of them!"
"Yeah!" Jack chuckled. "That's what I'm here for! Make you look good and keep your date's name straight!"
"Don't forget about warning me when I have bad breath and distracting the sales clerk while I lift our dates' corsages!"
The two young men laughed together. Richard sat on Jack's bed and put an arm around him. "Feeling better?"
Nodding, Jack shrugged Richard's arm off. "Yeah, but it's creepy as hell you puttin' your arm around me while we're sitting on my bed!"
Grinning, Richard helped Jack to his feet. "Jeez, dude! You weigh like eighty pounds wet! You need to eat something!"
Jack patted his empty stomach and lowered his voice. "Yeah, first I need to go apologize to Mom, though. I shouldn't worry her like that. You know, I don't think I ever said, I know it's sorta obvious, but she and Dad had me when they were old, like almost fifty! They were told she couldn't have kids, so I was kind of a surprise! That's why she's a lot older than most moms. I shouldn't stress her out this way. She might have a stroke or something."
The two came out talking about Richard's first day at school as a senior when they heard a gasp.
"Jack! You're up! Oh, thank God!" She ran to her only child and hugged him, then surprising Richard, she hugged and kissed him on the cheek. "Thank you! Thank you, Richard!"
He blushed and nodded to her. "It's fine, Mrs. Dunning! Sorry about the rude language."
She wiped her tears away. "No! You did what you had to do. Men know these things about each other. Now, let me get you boys something to eat. You look half starved, baby! Richard, you're welcome, too! It's the very least I can do!"
He thought about refusing, knowing that Mary was a single mother working a low-skill job as a cashier at the local supermarket for even lower wages, but thought better of it and sat with the Dunnings for dinner.
The next day when Jack came to school, he noticed a lot of the other kids were whispering and giggling to each other as he walked by. Confused, he quickly walked to his locker. There he found, spray-painted across it, the words 'Couldn't Score With Slut Wendy!' Squaring his shoulders as the kids around him laughed, he opened his locker as usual, put in everything but his first period books, and closed it. When he turned to walk away, he saw that Wendy had moved up to stand behind him.
He was just about to say something when she slapped him, her face a mask of rage. "How could you write that!? Don't ever speak to me again, jerk!" She turned and stormed off, close to tears.
As she did so, Jack saw Ox grinning, wiping his hands clean, and nodding before the football player turned and walked away.
He didn't see Richard until lunch. When the two sat down together, Jack asked, "So... did you see it?"
"Yeah." Richard nodded. "I know it wasn't you. You know who?"
He shook his head as they started eating. "Ox."
Nodding around a fry, Richard's voice turned cold. "Figures. Something will have to be done."
"No use. Damage is done." A long silence followed before Jack continued. "Still... it would feel really good!"
"Come to practice this afternoon." Richard smiled.
That was all that was spoken of it beforehand. That afternoon, Jack was sitting in the bleachers again watching Richard. He also saw Ox, and then Wendy at cheerleader practice. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary until practice ended. When the players started gathering up their things, Ox ran up to Wendy. She only talked to him for a few seconds, for when he took off his helmet, she suddenly slapped him and stormed off; Ox standing there dumbfounded.
Turning toward his friends, he held out his hands in a wide shrug, only to see them laughing. Ox looked around confusedly before Jerry ran up to him. Ox put his hands on his forehead, then along his cheeks, wiping like mad. When Richard climbed the bleachers, he was smiling and chuckling.
With a confused look, Jack shrugged. "What gives?"
Laughing as he sat next to Jack, Richard calmed himself down enough to talk. "I have art for last period. While there, I grabbed some indelible black ink and painted the inside of Ox's helmet!"
Jack half-smiled. "OK, so he's in black-face for a few days. Why'd Wendy..."
His laughter growing, Richard put his hand on Jack's shoulder. "I painted words..."
"Well? What did it say?"
"On his forehead were the words 'Locker Artist'... that's what got Wendy! She knows who did it, and soon everyone else will, too! Then... on each cheek..." He couldn't stop giggling as he added, "I drew limp-dicks!"
Jack started laughing along with Richard before he noticed Ox coming and several others standing back on the field watching. Tapping Richard on the shoulder as the younger boy's laughter died, they both got up quickly to face his wrath.
"You little weasel!" he screamed as he got close to the bleachers. "You're dead! Dead meat when I get up there!"
"I did it, Ox!" Richard barked back at him. "Serves you right! I hope you never live it down! You wanna take it out on me?"
"How long are you gonna keep standing up for this little nobody, Rich! The rest of your life? Why don't you let him fight his own battles!"
"Oh, I do!" Richard replied. "He fights his own battles... and mine... and I fight my own battles... and his! It's called teamwork, you Neanderthal! You should try it! You might be a better player!"
"What're you queer for this little dork, Rich? Is that it? Is that why Anne dumped you? 'Cuz you can only get it up for your boyfriend?"
"No, but I'd rather be queer for Jack than be as sick and sad as your lard ass!"
"You think this is over? Tomorrow it'll just be worse! I'll spray-paint the whole fucking school if I have to! And your queer little boyfriend will take the blame!"
While the two exchanged words, Ox was slowly climbing the bleachers while Richard was holding fast. He knew if Ox tried to start something, he and Jack had the advantage.
"Go ahead, Lum-Ox! Start something with someone that is in your own weight class! The two of us combined ought to match your fat ass! But fair warning, we've got the high ground and two-to-one odds! Just walk away!"
Ox looked at the two, both in a defensive stance. Surveying his surroundings, he realized he didn't stand a chance against both of them there. Grinning, he turned his face slightly. "Jerry? Mike? Brad? You guys go around in behind 'em! We'll squeeze 'em though the bleachers into paste!" He turned his head to look and saw that the only one standing behind him was their coach.
"I don't think so, Ox!" Coach Greg shouted up. "Get your fat ass down here!"
Defeated, Ox slumped his shoulders and slowly descended the bleachers. "Yes, Coach."
As the two smiled at each other, Coach Greg called them down while Ox walked toward the locker room. "Rich, I hate to do this, but I'm gonna have to drop you from the team. What you did, even if you had a good reason, can't be tolerated. I'm sorry."
Rich sighed. "It's OK, Coach. I was thinking of dropping this year anyway. Football isn't in my future, I think we both know that."
The two reached the field, Coach Greg nodding in agreement. "I think I understand. Look, I'll need to report this incident, but it means we know who the vandal was, so Ox won't get away scott-free. You can grab your stuff tomorrow. I don't want you in the locker room with Ox. Is that clear?"
"Yes, Coach." Richard said. "I know it's against some rule somewhere, but I just need you to know it was the right thing to do. Do you? Know, I mean?"
He reseated his cap before answering. "Well, I don't know if it was the right thing to do, but it sure was damn funny! See you 'round, Rich!"
After that Richard and Jack headed home. When they arrived at Richard's house, he asked, "Jack? Could you come in with me? I... I don't wanna tell Dad alone."
Jack smiled. "I keep telling you! You need me!"
They walked in smiling as Richard called out, "Mom! I'm home! Jack's with me!"
Judith came out from the hallway. "Richard! I just got off the phone with your coach! He called me to tell me you've been cut?"
"Yeah." Richard nodded. "It's OK, though. I've had enough of football."
She turned to Jack. "Oh, and I heard about you and Wendy, Jack! I'm sorry! Still, there's lots of other girls at your school!"
"It's fine, Mrs. Hargrave." Jack half-smiled. "I'll get over it. Can I use your phone? I wanna call my mom and let her know I'm here so she won't worry."
"That's fine, dear. Use the one in Richard's room. Come with me, dear. Tell me what happened."
As Jack headed down the hall, he saw Erica looking out at him from her bedroom door.
"I... I'm sorry you got hurt, Jack." she offered as he passed her.
"Thanks, Buttons." Jack replied sadly. "I... I gotta call my mom."
Erica watched him go into her brother's room through eyes that were starting to wet with tears, her heart breaking for Jack's sake.
"You what?" Judith asked.
Richard sighed as he paced the kitchen. "You don't understand, Mom! You don't know what he did!"
"What could Oscar have possibly done to deserve that!" she demanded.
"I'll tell you what! He spray-painted Jack's locker with the words, 'Couldn't Score With Slut Wendy!' So it makes it look like Jack wrote it to spite her by calling her a slut and frigid at the same time! Plus it makes him look like a looser! When Wendy saw it, she slapped Jack!"
Judith sat back down. "Oh, Richard! That's too bad about them, but what does that have to do with you?"
"His heart's broken and the whole school was laughing at him, Mom! I had to do something to even things up! So I set Ox up... made it so he would confess to the spray-painting in front of coach, plus get even with Wendy!"
"I can't conscience anything against the Evans girl, dear!" Judith shouted. "What's her comeuppance supposed to be for?"
"She dumped Jack for another guy, Mom! She filled his head with her lies, wrapped him around her little finger, made him fall for her, then dumped him when it got boring! She deserves to be called a slut!"
"She is a slut, Mom! I told you!" Erica growled from the kitchen entryway.
Judith was shocked. "Erica! Don't you dare use such language in this house! And you either, young man!"
The seventeen-year-old looked at his mother with a shocked expression, his voice dropping to a hush. "You knew?"
Their mother was struck speechless. "I... wh... a... What? Of course not! How could anybody know what would happen?"
Erica crossed her arms. "Because I told you it would, Mom! I told you on their Prom night!"
Judith stood up. "That's enough! I will not be spoken to in such a way! Now Erica you did no such thing! You repeated a rumor, which is bad enough! I want you to go to your room and stay there until Jack goes home and your father gets here!"
"Mom! I told you it was Wendy's sister who told me! She should know! She lives with her!"
"That's beside the point!" she defended her actions. "Nobody knew it would happen! I thought Jack would be good for the Evans girl, and her for him! Help settle her down and give him someone to date so..." She glanced at Erica and paused a moment to think of an excuse. "...so he wouldn't be alone! So, I put a bug in her ear about Jack and said that if she settled down with him, I'd see to it she had money for the summer to spend on their dates! You know her family goes to our church and I told them I'd help..."
"What?" Jack said, standing at the kitchen entrance next to Erica.
"Jack!" Judith gasped. "Oh, dear! I..." She tried to come up with another excuse, but Jack ran out their door before anyone could say another word.
Glaring at his mother, Richard's voice dropped to a growl. "My eighteenth birthday is in six weeks. I'll be out in seven." At that he stormed out of the house to catch up with Jack.
Erica just glared at her mother. "You already knew, didn't you? Before I even told you that night! You knew and you let Jack go months thinking Wendy really liked him!" She shook her head and quickly stomped to her room, slammed the door, and began to cry for Jack, thoughts flitting through her mind and wondering if her mother had not interfered if he might have asked her to go with him to the Prom.
Richard ran toward Jack's house as fast as he could move. When he caught sight of him, he yelled out, "Jack! Wait up!"
Slowing his pace, Jack's whole worldview had exploded and all he wanted to do was go home and stay there.
"Jack!" Richard caught up with him and stood in front of him. "Please stop!"
"Get out of my way, Rich! You can all just go to hell!"
"You're right!" he agreed. Seeing that it had the effect he wanted, confusion, he waited a moment until he could catch his breath. "Mom... Mom knew! She knew... Wendy... was a flirt... and God!... She didn't... say anything... I don't... think I can... ever... forgive her for that!"
Jack started to understand more of the half conversation he'd overheard. "So, she... she tried to use me? To help Wendy's mom not be embarrassed at church?"
"Yeah." Richard nodded. "Erica knows Wendy's sister, Ruth. Ruth told her, and Erica told Mom... on Prom Night, Jack! She knew all along! When you came over? She could have told you then! She could have warned you, but she didn't... to help Wendy's parents be less embarrassed at church! She used you!"
Taking another moment to try and slow his breathing, Richard continued. "I... I told her that after my birthday, I'm moving out. They can't stop me once I'm eighteen. I'll be a legal adult."
"You... you're leaving home while still in school?"
Looking over his shoulder at Jack's house just down the block, he asked, "Why don't we go to your place?"
"Sure. Come on." Jack sighed.
The two walking in the door, Mary looked up at them as she sat crocheting in the front room. "Jack, baby? Are you OK? You sounded so upset over the phone! I thought you were going to be at Richard's for a while."
Jack shrugged. "I was, but then something... happened. I... I don't know if I can go back there again."
Mary looked at Richard for some explanation.
"It seems my mom knew that Wendy was a flighty slut, pardon the language Mrs. Dunning, and she could have warned Jack or me, but she goes to church with Wendy's parents and wanted to help them not be so embarrassed by their slutty daughter. So she set Jack up to date her by bribing Wendy, hoping Jack would make her settle down. It's like Mom didn't even care that it would hurt him if she dumped him like she did a lot of guys before!"
Slowly, Jack realized the context of the talk he'd had with Judith in her kitchen on Prom Night and just what was really going on. Just why she'd been so generous to make sure they had a good time, and why she had made Frank give him 'the talk' and all that extra money.
"Son of a..." Jack stopped himself. "Sorry, Mom." Going to the kitchen table, they sat while Jack explained everything that had gone on that night.
"I can't believe it!" Mary said. "Judith? Are you certain, sweetie?"
Jack nodded. "Positive. I remember that night perfectly. Every detail perfectly stored in my big, stupid head!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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Richard moved out of his parent's house in October of eighty-eight, just a few days after his eighteenth birthday while he still had most of his senior year left. He moved into Jack's house and got a part-time job after school to help with money. Jack used to say that after they moved in together was when their friendship saw its first real test. It was a really hard time for them. Rich was working, Jack was depressed a lot of the time, and Rich's parents were calling him every day asking him to come home. Rich told me that by Christmas break things had hit their lowest point. Most of the details though I got from Jack and Erica. High school is supposed to be about learning to deal with real life. Jack and Richard only got three years of that before they had to start living it. That year seemed to be a living hell that nearly ruined their friendship, and more.
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Jack was brooding on the couch again. The last day before Christmas break he'd learned that Wendy was changing classes and she would be moved to his Government class at the start of the last semester. To make matters worse, his teacher Mr. Anderson always paired students for study and discussion. The first semester had been great. He'd been the odd student out, so he was solo and didn't have a partner. With Wendy joining the class, Mr. Anderson wouldn't want to split any of the existing study pairs, so he was certain he would end up being assigned as her partner.
"So much for graduating!" Jack grumbled.
Shaking his head, Richard was finishing getting ready for work at a local tire store. "Look, Jack. Why borrow trouble? If you end up being assigned together, there's nothing you can do about it! You'll just have to learn to live with it. It's only for a few months, then you'll never have to see her again."
"How would you like it if you got paired with Anne? Sound like a picnic?"
"Damn it, Jack! Quit sulking and grow up! I gotta go! See you tomorrow!" Richard barked before slamming the front door on his way out.
Mary quietly came out of her bedroom. Since her schedule had changed to swing shift, she usually slept while the boys were at school. "Good afternoon, dear. I hear school was bad. Is there anything I can do?"
"No, Mom. I guess I just have to suck it up if I want to graduate in June."
"Are you still looking at joining the Marines with Richard after graduation?"
Jack stared at the living room ceiling. "I don't know anymore, Mom. I don't even know if Rich will stick around that long. I've sort of been getting on his nerves lately. I know I should try harder, but..." Jack sighed. "...I just... I don't care about anything anymore."
Sitting next to him, her voice trembled. "Sit up, Jack. I want to talk to you."
Without much enthusiasm, he slowly sat up. "OK, Mom. Let me have it."
"No, dear. This isn't a lecture. I want to talk to you about when your father died. Do you remember that?"
"How could I ever forget." he replied sarcastically.
Looking away from her son, Mary swallowed hard. "After the funeral, I... I knew I had to get a job, but I just couldn't seem to get out of the house to do it. It was... just too hard! I... I couldn't see the point. Why face that hardship? What made it worthwhile?" She looked back at him. "Sound familiar?"
"Vaguely." he quipped. "So how'd you do it, Mom? What magic gave you a purpose?"
"You." she said simply.
"Oh. So, you saw I needed to be taken care of and did what you had to do?"
"No, I saw you needed the same thing I did... purpose. You were just as lost as I was. So I left the house so you had to do things for yourself."
"I don't see how this helps." Jack sat back. "I mean, I get it. I was important enough to you that you had to make me find a purpose, which gave you a purpose, but how can I do the same thing?"
Mary's voice quivered again. "Jack, I'm not as young as I used to be. I... I'm getting old dear. I... I can't keep working much longer."
Sitting up, Jack really looked at his mother for the first time in many years. Intellectually, he knew she was sixty-five, but he'd never seen her look it so much as she did now. "Mom? I... I'm sorry! Sorry that I was ever even born! You shouldn't have had to put up with a baby at your age!"
"No, dear!" she cried. "I wouldn't trade being your mother for all the youth in the world! You were a true gift from God! Your father and I loved every second we had together with you! Don't ever think otherwise!"
Taking a deep breath, Jack began trying not to care about his own problems. All that mattered was his mother and seeing to it she was taken care of. "I... I'm sorry, Mom. I'm really glad you and Dad got to have your baby, and by lucky coincidence, it's was me!"
"Oh, Jack!" Mary laughed. "You always could make me smile! It's your gift. You know just what to say to put a little laughter in people's lives when they need it!"
"Comes from watching all those old TV shows with you and Dad! Comedy hasn't been the same since they took Uncle Miltie off the air!"
"So that's where you get it!" she joked.
"OK, Mom. I get it. Turn that frown upside down, make lemons into lemon pie, make my smile my umbrella, put my shoulder to the wheel, get those high apple pie in the sky hopes, and so on, and so on." Taking another deep breath, he stood up, stretched, and headed for his room. "I have semester finals to study for, so I better get cracking!"
Mary smiled as she heard his door close. Danny? He's hurting so badly. If there's anything you can do for our boy, he surely could use it soon!
Jack dropped into his desk chair, his false optimism spent in his display for his mother's benefit. Thinking how he could help her with Wendy about to become his study partner only led to one conclusion. I'm not gonna graduate anyway, so I might as well drop out and get a full time job so she can finally retire. Failing to graduate was a huge blow to his ego. If there was a certainty in his life, it was that he would get his diploma and see Mary sitting there proud of him, but that was gone. They needed money and she couldn't earn it much longer. Richard's part time job only offset the higher cost of food and utilities he'd added to the household, so they were no better off than before.
Doing some quick math, he determined that the start of the spring semester should be his target for having a full time job that paid at least ten dollars per hour. Any less and they wouldn't be able to get by, let alone deal with emergencies. Jack then spotted the discrepancy. There's no way for a high school dropout to get a ten-dollar job!
A new despair straddled his shoulders. Nice little catch-twenty-two! If I quit school, I can't get a good enough job for her to retire. If she doesn't retire, then I don't need to quit high school, but if I don't quit high school, I'll flunk out anyway and Mom can't retire.
Now even more depressed, he sank into an apathy that would take a near catastrophe to shake him from it.
Richard walked in the front door to the Dunning home at eleven. Bone tired, he dragged his body down the dark hallway to the room he and Jack shared. When he opened the door and saw Jack passed out on his bed, not Jack's, it was the final straw. He kicked his bed.
"Get up!" he shouted. "Jack! Get your lazy ass out of my bed!" He reached down and jerked his friend up by the hair.
Jack was awake in the blink of an eye. "What the hell! Let go! That hurts!"
"That's it!" he yelled. "I've had it! I'm moving out of this shit hole and into somewhere decent enough to shower and sleep in!"
Only vaguely aware of his surroundings, Jack only knew that Richard was pulling his hair. Fighting back, he elbowed Richard in the kidneys, making him let go. The two boys stumbled in the mess of their room for a minute, each trying to punch the other's lights out. The only advantage Jack had was familiarity. He knew where to step in the clutter, while Richard scrambled for footing. The outcome was inevitable though.
Jack felt Richard's fist connect as he tried to escape over his bed. He had a feeling of falling, then he noticed that he really was falling. The last thing he saw was the corner of his nightstand racing towards his head.
Richard watched himself deck his best friend as if it were a scene in a movie that he was idly watching. When the blood splattered out of Jack's nose and he fell face first into the nightstand, Richard felt a moment of terror. The two blows had to have killed his only true friend.
He backed away from the body, every instinct in his brain telling him to run away as far and as fast as he could. Back to his parent's house, steal their car since it would have more than the five gallons of gas in his own used vehicle, drive all night, then just before they got up in the morning, abandon it somewhere out of sight and run until he dropped from exhaustion.
The only thing that stopped his flight was the desperate need to stand up to the worst enemy his best friend had ever faced; him. Looking down at his bloody fist and then his friend's apparently lifeless body, he saw Jack move. Just a ragged breath, but it told him that Jack was still alive and needed help.
Carefully, he moved Jack to the floor while supporting his neck and head. Remembering the first aid training they'd both received in ROTC, he knew what to do, making an improvised cervical collar by tearing up his pillow. Once Jack's neck was immobilized, he checked all his vital signs. He was breathing and he had a pulse, but he was unconscious; probably with a severe concussion.
He lifted Jack up off the floor gently, making sure to keep his neck and back straight, and carried him out to the station wagon he'd bought from his father the previous year for five hundred dollars. Sliding him carefully into the back seat, he buckled him down and got behind the wheel. Driving as fast as he could, he got Jack to the hospital in less than five minutes. The story he told them was the truth; they'd been fighting and he'd knocked Jack out. Confused by the obvious concern that Richard was showing to his alleged victim, they nevertheless followed procedure and called the police.
When Jack woke up, he knew something was wrong. His room was never this bright. The world now just consisted of a blanket of whiteness with nothing visible, not even himself. He vaguely recalled the nightmare he'd had of fighting Richard. He knew it couldn't have been real because if he ever fought his best friend, it wouldn't have lasted that long. Slowly, he became aware that his nightmare had turned into reality.
Or is this still part of the nightmare? he wondered.
He existed nowhere for an unknown amount of time with minutes seeming to stretch on for centuries. It let him think. He thought about his father, his mother, Richard, Buttons, Frank, Judith, Wendy... everyone. He seemed to have all the time in the world with nothing to do but think. He went over all the things that had led him to that fatal point in his life where he'd driven his best friend to turn against him.
After spending a seeming eternity mulling it over, he eventually saw clearly that his entire life had turned on a single point; the day Richard stopped Ox from pummeling him in the lunchroom. Remove that one event and the entire thread of his life came apart. Then it was joined by millions of other events, each just as important as the rest.
He thought about God, his mind drifting aimlessly through scripture, some of which he was sure he'd never read before. He thought about his problems; school, work, and his mother's retirement. Then oddly enough, his thoughts drifted back to Buttons. Always around, always underfoot, always... there. She seemed one of the few constants in his life, as constant as his mother, Richard, or sunrise. Sometimes he could almost hear her voice, but then he would drift again and be thinking about Wendy or his mom.
When he thought about God, he wondered what He was waiting for. If this nightmare was real, then he must be in limbo waiting God's judgement. But I've already been waiting forever. How much longer will it be? he wondered. He tried talking to God. He asked questions that received no answers. He asked for an end to his unending nothing of an existence, but it never came. He thought about his life and all the bad things he'd ever done to anyone, and then he thought about all the good things he could have done and didn't. And his bodiless life wept.
Once during his eternal drifting, he thought he heard a voice. Not really a voice, but a half-remembered dream of a voice. It spoke nonsense, but it was definitely there. When it went away he drifted once more. Then it came back and it sounded somehow familiar, like remembering the voice of a person that only exists in your dreams. The words were audible, but too faint to understand. Listening to it, he tried moving towards it. Lacking anything to move, he tried just drifting towards it. It got clearer the more he did, but then the voice stopped and he would drift for another eternity.
When he'd almost convinced himself that the voice had never really been there, suddenly it was back again, but different... smaller... like he'd drifted too far away to hear it clearly anymore. So he tried again. He was sure that if he found the voice it would end his torment of eternity, but every time he tried to follow it, the voice would vanish once more.
The next time he heard it he ignored it. Then again... and again. When he couldn't stand it anymore, he begged for help from anybody that could, but nothing changed. Drifting once more, things became fainter... darker... and the voices disappeared. He figured that finally his eternity of torment was coming to an end and he was going to be allowed to drift off into oblivion; a fitting end for a boy who had cared so little for anyone but himself.
Eventually, the darkness took him and he was no more.
Jack stood in emptiness. It was different this time. It wasn't eternal drifting. It was more like a dream. He wasn't sure if the dead ever dreamed, but here he was, so they must.
"It's not a dream, son. And you're not dead!" the man's voice said.
Looking around, Jack couldn't see him. He couldn't even hear him. It was as though he just knew what the man was saying.
"You can." the voice said.
He tried to speak, but nothing worked. He was a nothing; not even a drifting consciousness.
"You can wake up, ya' know."
Finally able to recognize the voice of his dead father, he wanted to ask how to wake up, but didn't know how to even ask how.
"You just did."
Before he could even formulate the idea of a question, the answer was there.
"I told you! You're not dead, ya' igit! Don't you wanna wake up, Jack?"
"Yes." his thoughts formed.
"Then do it!"
"How?"
"Want to!"
"I do."
"Horsefeathers! If you did, you would!"
Suddenly, Jack saw his father, but it wasn't as he remembered him. It was more like an idealized version of him. He wasn't sure when the man appeared in front of him. It was almost as though he'd always been there, but he'd just failed to notice him.
"So what's holding you back, son?"
"Pain." Jack replied.
"So what! Push through it and it'll be behind you."
"Dad? Are you sure this isn't a dream? It feels like one... and you're dead."
"So? You think that matters, Jack?"
"You're saying I can wake up anytime I want to?"
"Yup."
"So that means I don't want to."
"Now you've got it!"
The distant voice returned. It was small again.
"It's people." his father told him, looking upward at the darkness as though he could see someone who wasn't there.
"Real ones?"
"Yep... and no, not dead ones!"
"So if I can..."
"You can't will it boy! You have to want it!"
"What if I want to be here with you?"
"Then eventually you'll die, and your life will have been a waste. That's not what I raised ya' for, Jack!"
"What did..."
"To live, dag nabbit! You did, for a while, but then you got hurt and you died again! People think living and dying are something ya' do only once, but there are a whole heap of people that're dead inside that walk around every day! They forgot how ta' live! Damn walking corpses with not a shred of life in 'em!"
"Will waking up and living hurt?"
"Like the dickens, kid! But it'll be worth it! 'Sides, you got things ta' do! So git!"
Jack listened to the voice again and for the first time, wanted to be with it.
"so... ... ... school... ... ... mom... ... Richie... ... ... trouble. I guess... love... ... never know."
Jack opened his eyes and they were stabbed with a light that cut like a knife. He quickly shut them again to try and stop the pain.
"Jack?"
He tried to speak, felt his tongue move, and was stabbed again by a knife, this time in his throat.
"I'll go get the doctor!"
With the voice gone and the light too painful to look at, Jack thought he'd drifted to the nothing place again. Then he heard footsteps and the voice.
"See? Look! He's moving!"
A sea of sounds assaulted his ears and he couldn't stop them. He wanted desperately to have the ability to close his ears the way he'd closed his eyes. The sounds blasted his eardrums until he thought he'd gone deaf. Then he noticed he hadn't. The sounds were just finally tolerable and sounded normal once more.
"BP?"
"One hundred over sixty."
"He's trying to talk. Jack? I'm Doctor Marks. You're in the hospital. You've suffered a severe concussion and neck injury. If you can understand me, try to open your eyes."
Jack tried to shake his head no, that he didn't want to open his eyes because of the pain, but his head wouldn't budge.
"He's getting agitated, Doctor. Pulse one fifty."
"Very well. Administer five CCs morphine."
Knowing that would knock him out, he forced himself to calm down.
"His rate's dropping."
Gathering all his nerve, he opened his eyes.
"Jack!" the small voice cried out. He was finally able to recognize that it was Erica Hargrave. Buttons!
"Nurse! Get her out of here, please!" the man's voice spat harshly.
Terrified that if Erica left he'd lose her voice and fall back into the nothing, Jack began to panic.
"Pulse rising rapidly, doctor. One forty."
"Wait! Nurse, bring her back."
"Pulse dropping."
"You want her to stay?"
He tried to nod, to no avail. He blinked.
"OK, once for yes, twice for no. Do you want the girl to stay?"
Blink.
"The girl has a name!" Erica snapped.
Blink.
"Do you know her name?" the doctor asked probingly.
Blink.
"Do you know who you are."
Blink.
"Do you know how you got here?"
Blink... blink.
"Do you know the date?"
Blink... blink.
"Alright he's breathing on his own. Let's remove the breathing tube. Nurse? Alright... hold his head steady..."
The knife was carving into his throat again, and then just as suddenly it was gone. He moved his mouth ineffectually, trying to form words, but they wouldn't come out.
"Is... is Jack trying to talk?" Erica asked.
"Yes sweetie, but his throat is sore... very, very sore!"
Jack looked down with his eyes and for the first time could see something. Not exactly faces, but the sort of images that you think are faces but are just random patterns in things. Then the faces started clearing and Jack could make out details. Glasses over eyes. The one on the right was a woman. There was another face... smaller and farther away.
"Try to make a sound with your mouth. Whisper. Not your speaking voice."
"Ouch!" Jack whispered.
"Jack!" Erica giggled.
Smiling, Jack knew he'd used his gift the way God had intended him to. Becoming very tired, his eyes closed.
Some time later he woke up to the sound of his mother's voice.
"Thou hast set our iniquities before thee, our secret sins in the light of thy countenance. For all our days are passed away in thy wrath: we spend our years as a tale that is told."
"Thirsty." Jack whispered.
"Jack!? Here..."
Wetness touched his tongue again, slowly loosening it. "Thanks."
"Jack baby, do you know where you are?"
"Hospital."
"Do you know what happened?"
"Rich."
"Yes." she said, her voice hard. "He's under arrest for attempted murder."
"No!" he almost spoke.
"Jack, he tried to kill you!"
"No!"
"Well, what happened then?"
"Me."
"You?" she asked confusedly.
"My fault. Selfish."
"Jack, someone being selfish isn't a reason to..."
"Both... fighting."
"You... you hit him?"
"Poorly." he smiled.
Hearing his mother laugh brought tears to his eyes. "Jack!"
He tried nodding, but couldn't. "Can't move."
"You're immobilized, dear. Your neck was nearly broken. Richard... he immobilized you before bringing you to the hospital."
"Good thinking." Once more exhaustion overcame him and he fell asleep.
When Jack next awoke, he was alone. When he tried to move he found this time he was able to, lifting his head and looking around his room. Seeing he was in a private room with the second bed empty, he looked down and saw a remote control with a red button on it. He chuckled when it made him think of Erica. Reaching slowly, he grasped it and pressed, hoping that it was a nurse call button and not a trigger for an infusion pump. When he didn't fall asleep, he waited until the nurse came.
"Good afternoon!" she said cheerily. "I'm Maggie. You need something?"
"Water." he whispered. Once she'd handed him a cup, he tried swallowing. It hurt badly, but he endured it and it went away. "Thank you."
"You're welcome..." she paused and looked at the foot of his bed. "Jack!"
"Where's my mom?"
"I believe your mother's gone home to rest. She's spent a lot of time here. A lot of people have."
"Phone?"
Maggie retrieved it for him and set it next to his right hand. It was an older phone with a rotary dial instead of touch-tone buttons. "Dial nine to get an outside line. Anything else?"
"No, thank you." he whispered.
After she left, he tried dialing his mother's phone number. It rang until he'd figured if anyone was home that they would have answered. Hanging up, he tried the Hargrave's house. This time, it connected.
"Hello?" Erica answered.
"Buttons!" he croaked.
"Jack! Dad! It's Jack! You're all the way awake?" she asked.
"Ouch!" he croaked again.
Hearing her giggle was like the ringing of angelic bells, until they stopped.
"Jack? This is Frank. You alright, boy?"
"Hurting. Where's Rich?"
"He... uh... he's in jail, Jack. Under arrest for attempted murder."
"Not true. He saved me."
"Jack, he confessed!"
"He lied."
"Listen, Jack. I know you two had a row about something. That's none of my business, but he says he tried to kill you and was going to flee prosecution. He's being held without bail."
"But he didn't. He lied when he confessed. I hit him first."
"Where? The police found no marks on him except on his right knuckles where he... well... bashed your face in."
"Elbow... kidney..."
"Hmm... he's been hit there so many times I doubt a single hit would show. Jack, are you saying it was self defense?"
"Yes... and an accident. Hit nightstand. Rich saved me."
"I'm going to talk with our lawyer. Would you swear to what you're saying?"
"Not polite to swear!"
"Alright, boy." Frank laughed. "I have to go. Do you need anything?"
"Mom? No answer."
"Oh. I... I think she's down in the chapel, there at the hospital. She spends a lot of time there. Anything else?"
"Buttons."
"You want what? Oh! Erica! Jack wants to talk to you, sweetie. Daddy's gonna make a phone call in the office. Talk to Jack."
"Jack?" she asked.
"Hey ya, Buttons. Wanted to ask you something."
"What?"
"Did you come in my hospital room and talk to me a lot?"
Silence filled the space between them. "Yeah." she finally said shyly.
"You helped."
"I did?"
"Uh-huh! You're my miracle girl! I heard you."
Again dead air filled the void. "Um... all of it?"
"No, just pieces. Couldn't tell it was you, at first. I think I heard Mom talking once, and a doctor... I think. Who all came to see me?"
"Um... a lot of people. Dad, Mom, me, your mom, they let Richie in once before he went to jail, and that Wendy twice, I think."
He heard the disdain in her voice at the mention of Wendy. "Don't like her?"
"She... she hurt you, Jack! Maybe even worse than Richie did!"
"Richie didn't mean to hurt me, Buttons. I told your dad that. He's calling his lawyer to try and get your brother out of jail."
"But Richie told me..."
"He lied. I hit him and then fell. Rich saved me."
"Jack, I... I told Richie that I hated him and never wanted to see him again because of what he told me he did to you."
"He'll forgive you, Buttons. He always will." Jack coughed painfully. Taking a sip of water, he said, "Can't talk much longer. How's everyone?"
"Mom moved out. Her and Dad had a big fight. She's staying with Aunt Edina. I... I think she went a little crazy after you got hurt."
"OK. I hope she's better soon."
"I thought you hated her, after she let Wendy hurt you."
"I want to forgive her. She didn't mean for me to get hurt."
"I don't know if I can. I warned her, and she let you date Wendy anyway."
"Buttons, I know you may not understand this now, but someday you will understand, I... I had to get hurt."
"Why?"
"I don't know. I just know I had to."
"Oh. Alright. If you say so. Doesn't mean I have to like it!"
"That's OK. I have to go, Buttons. Thanks again for helping me get better."
"Jack?"
"Yeah?"
"Can you just call me Erica from now on? Buttons is so... childish. After all, I'm fourteen now."
Jack did an unconscious double take. "Wait, what?"
"Could you just call me..."
"No! You're how old?"
"Fourteen. You were asleep through my birthday."
Afraid to ask, but more afraid of not knowing, he forced himself to ask the question. "How long... what day is it?"
"It's Sunday... um... February twelfth."
Slowly it came to him that he'd missed nearly two months of his life. "Gotta go, B... Erica. Bye." At that he hung up.
Erica heard him hang up before she dared say it. "I love you, Jack. I'll always love you! Bye."
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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Rich didn't ever tell me much about the time he spent in jail. He just would say, 'It wasn't that bad, really.' and change the subject. When Jack told the police that he hit Rich first and refused to press charges on the assault, the DA dropped the pending charges. Jack told me he was contacted by the DA while in the hospital saying they had filed assault charges against him, but Rich pled the fifth because testifying against Jack would incriminate himself, leaving no witnesses and a really weak case. So in the end, the whole matter was dropped and neither one was convicted of anything. Jack spent the next three months in physical therapy. The only thing that kept them afloat was the money that Frank Hargrave gave them to help out. Rich said his dad felt responsible for the whole thing because he did nothing to stop Judith from playing matchmaker with the neighborhood floozy, not caring if Jack got hurt in the process. He took classes between therapy sessions by state appointed tutor until he was able to come back to school, but by then it was early April and there was less than ten weeks of school left. Richard had classes to make up from his jail time, so he had to quit his job and go back home to have any chance of graduating with his class. Rich told me the most about when Jack finally was able to go back to school. Jack didn't like talking about it, but he had the best stories about the things going on outside of school.
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Richard waited in his car. If we don't leave soon we're gonna be late. He was just about to go back in and check on Jack when he came hobbling out on his cane. The neck injury damaged some nerves and it was taking extra effort to get full mobility back in his legs, but the prognosis was good that he would be able to walk down the aisle for his diploma unassisted.
Richard got out and opened the car door for him.
"You don't need to do that, Rich. I'm not an invalid! Just a cripple!"
"I do if we want to make it on time. Hurry up!"
Jack slowly lowered himself into the seat of Richard's station wagon. Pulling the cane in, Richard slammed the door and ran to the other side. Jumping in, he sped off down the road toward their school.
"I know you're the criminal type, but I would like to get there in one piece!"
"Fine, grandma!" Richard smiled as he slowed to the posted speed and turned to look at Jack. "Better?"
"Great! Now just watch where you're going."
Parking in one of the school's handicapped spaces, Richard jumped out and helped Jack up on his feet and stayed with him until he reached the office.
"Are you OK from here?" he asked.
"Yeah, Rich! Go on! You don't want to be late, too! See you at lunch."
Waiting in the office to be admitted back into school, the recently promoted Principal Ford came out to greet him.
"Welcome back, son. Getting around OK?"
"Good as can be expected, sir. Had a little trouble getting ready this morning, so I'm running behind. Well, not running..."
Harry Ford laughed, his obese form shaking slightly. It was a simple deep laugh that was barely noticeable, but sincere. "That's OK, Jack. We'll see to it you get where you need to go." He turned and snapped his bulky fingers. "Angie! Get Mr. Dunning here his re-admittance papers." He nodded slightly to Jack before slowly returning to his office.
Angie Green had been the school secretary for more years than anyone could remember. She quickly found the file and walked over to the desk. "Here's the form. Do you have your notice from the school district for your missed time?"
Slowly, Jack pulled it out of his pocket and handed it to her. "Sorry." he said as she impatiently snatched it from his fingers.
She looked him over. "You seem healthy enough. No casts."
Jack slowly shook his head. "Nerve damage, Ms. Green."
"What, were you hit by a speeding car?"
"Nightstand." Jack retorted with a smile.
She almost just accepted the answer, but then did a double take. "You were hit by a speeding nightstand?"
"Fell on it. Almost broke my neck." he answered seriously.
"Oh." she replied. "Well, give me a minute and I'll get your pass and you can run off to class."
"Nice trick if you can manage it!" Jack yelled after her.
The rest of the morning passed uneventfully. Getting around was slow, but Jack had gotten used to that. He was beginning to wonder if he would ever be fully mobile again as he made his way to the lunchroom, finally seeing Richard sitting at their usual table with three trays.
"Jack! I already have your lunch!" he yelled.
Lowering himself into his seat, he looked at the trays. "Hungry much, Rich? I know I can't eat all that! You need me to do something to curb your appetite again?"
"No." Richard looked down. "I got you your usual and this tray's mine."
Jack looked at the third tray curiously. "Will our mystery guest enter, and sign in, please?" he said, quoting a line from an old TV show.
"Jack?"
Turning slowly to look behind him, Jack's heart fluttered. "Wendy." he said coolly, turning back to his tray.
The girl sat down with space between them, not wanting to sit too close. "Jack, I... I wanted to talk to you. I hope you don't mind. I asked Rich to arrange it."
"Well, I seem to be a captive audience, seeing as I can't outrun either of you two." He picked up a fry and slowly chewed it.
She laughed a little, but soon the awkwardness started to build.
"Jack, I wanted to tell you I'm sorry." she began. "I... I was really upset when I heard you got hurt. I went to the hospital a couple times to see you. I've been doing a lot of soul searching and... well... I was really unfair to you! When I got back from my vacation last year, I... I lied to you. I never found anyone in Florida. I let Anne and Beth talk me into dumping you."
Jack dropped his half-eaten fry. "Anne. Figures. That girl is like Typhoid Mary. Everywhere she goes she spreads just a little ray of her particular brand of sunshine."
Richard sighed. "I know you have a lot of reasons to hate her Jack, but..."
"I don't hate her." he said emotionlessly as he resumed eating.
"Well it sure sounds like it! Typhoid Mary?"
"I'm out of practice. I'll come up with a funnier joke on next week's show."
"Jack, I... I wouldn't blame you if you hated me." Wendy looked down ashamedly. "I guess I was just too willing to go along with whatever other people think, but I hope someday you can forgive me for being so stupid."
"You're forgiven, Wendy. And I don't hate you." Jack said around a fry. "I don't have the strength to be carrying around all the grudges I could. I... I owe you an apology, too."
She looked at Jack in surprise. "You have nothing to apologize for, Jack! You didn't do anything to deserve the way I treated you!"
"It's not about what you did, it's about what I did, and what I didn't do that I should have." Jack sighed. "When I asked you to be my girlfriend, I knew you only said yes to go along, but I didn't try and stop you. I let it happen when I knew I shouldn't because I wanted to believe it. Then when you broke up with me, I took a grotesque amount of joy at you being humiliated by Ox. I hope you can forgive me."
Wendy was taken aback. "Well, I... uh... I guess I can forgive that. I hurt you pretty bad, so I understand. I thought some pretty horrible things about you too, and I... um... well... I said some pretty bad things, too."
"Anything I can't live down?"
"Probably." she answered honestly. "I don't think you'll be getting a date for Senior Prom, and that's my fault, too."
"That's OK, I probably won't be able to dance by then anyway." he joked.
Deciding it was his turn to speak, Richard was much less forgiving. "Wendy, he may forgive you, but I don't. I don't think I ever will. I had to sit by and watch as Jack spiraled down into the worst state of depression possible and not be looking to eat a bullet. First of all, I don't believe you when you say you're sorry. If you really were, you'd ask for him back. I think you were just bored with Jack because he didn't have a fancy car or lots of dough to throw at your feet after my Mom stopped paying you to date him."
He took a moment to let what he was saying sink in. "Second, even if what you say is true, your inability to just tell Anne to 'ef off' like I did when she made me chose between her and Jack caused him so much pain and suffering that I don't think there's enough forgiveness in the world for you. I honestly hope you rot in Hell for what you did to him!"
Wendy held back her tears. "I... I understand. I don't blame you. You're right. I'm still letting her tell me what to do. Why did you even set this up for me?"
He stared across the table at her with boiling anger in his eyes. Keeping his voice low, Richard practically growled his response. "Because this isn't about you, Wendy! It's about Jack! He needed closure and told me last week that he wanted to apologize to you for giving you what I think you deserved! I may think he's crazy for wanting to apologize, but I'll be damned if I was gonna stand in his way! He deserved it!"
Standing slowly, Wendy picked up her tray. "I... I guess I deserved that, too." Turning to Jack, she smiled slightly. "I do honestly wish you all the best, Jack. Just for the record though, I said yes because I really wanted to. It... it was the one time I did something because it was what I wanted to do, not because someone else did, and not just because Mrs. Hargrave offered to pay me. I... I know I took her money, and then broke up when she stopped, but I really did want to like you. I won't bother you anymore." Carrying her tray away, she dumped it in the trash uneaten, running from the cafeteria in tears.
"You should forgive her, Rich. If not for her sake then for yours." Jack said.
"I don't get it!" Richard answered back. "You spend four months in misery because she flakes on you, and now you're all philosophical about it?"
"A little thing called perspective." he answered, pushing his pizza around with a fry. "When I was out, I was still thinking. I could even sometimes hear people. Couldn't understand them for shit, but I heard them. It was like a hundred eternities there. You can do a lot of thinking in that much time."
"So, Dali Lama. What's the word from on high then?"
"Drop your baggage. A laugh is worth more than gold. Forgiveness isn't for the person that screwed with you, it's for you. When you see a chance to do some good, don't pass it up. When you have the chance to get even, don't."
Richard shook his head. "Sounds easy, but also sounds impossible."
"That's when you forgive yourself, for the crime of being an imperfect and flawed human being." Jack smiled. "To boil it all down, cut yourself and everyone else some slack!"
As time wore on however, Jack started to find it harder and harder to keep his new outlook. It seemed the stronger his body got, the weaker his new attitude became. He became increasingly agitated over a very short time, and after six weeks Richard sat with him to talk again.
Hearing a knock on the garage door, Jack turned to look and saw Richard smirking at him.
"What's so damn funny?" Jack asked as he put down the five-pound weight.
"You! That's what. Working out? Aren't you afraid you're going to ruin that marvelously gelatinous physique of yours?"
Jack shook his head. "Can it, Rich! I need to do my P.T. if I ever wanna be normal again."
"Bull!" Richard laughed as he walked into the garage that had become Jack's physical therapy room. "You're doing way more than the therapist required. Free-weights? Who do you think you're kidding?"
"OK! So I want to be more than a ninety pound weakling my entire life! Is that so terrible? Besides, I need to be in some sort of decent shape to pass MEPS." Jack said between breaths. Wrapping a towel around his neck, he walked over to the weight machine that Richard's father had bought him.
Richard stood and walked around the garage, seemingly at random. "No, I suppose it's fine, but your attitude is changing with your newly discovered muscles. Just a few weeks ago you were all Zen and peaceful. Now you bite my head off for a simple question."
Lying down, Jack started leg lifts. "You want to talk about my attitude? Fine. Lets talk about yours while we're at it. Don't you think you're about done walking on eggshells around me all the time?"
"Fine!" Richard barked. "Let's drag it all out then! I nearly killed you, Jack! Over you falling asleep on my bed! What does that say about me?"
He stopped lifting and looked at Richard. "Well, for starters it says no one should ever screw with your sleeping arrangements!"
"Knock it off, Jack! I'm being serious! Can't you be? Does everything always have to be one big freaking joke to you?"
Jack stood up slowly. "OK, lets be serious. You nearly killed me. OK. So now what? What to you want me to do, Rich? Hate you for it? Yell at you? Punch you? I was being a self-centered bum and you know it!"
"Alright fine, Jack! Yes! I want you to hate me! I want you to yell at me! Hell, take a free punch! You owe me one! But your Zen halo is slipping and that self-centered jerk is starting to come back!"
"Bum, not jerk." Jack nit-picked.
"Whatever! God! Jack, you can't turn it off, can you? Always the comedian! Always need to go for the quick laugh!"
"It's who I am, Rich! Haven't you figured that out by now?"
"What are you hiding from, Jack!?"
"What? Now what are you going on about?" Jack looked at him perplexed.
"I'm talking about you! About your always-on comedy routine! You're hiding, Jack! Hiding from something that's been scaring you since before I even met you! Now the comedy bit isn't enough! You're hiding in this room! Hiding behind physical therapy! Hiding behind your near-death experience that seemed to put you at peace for a while, but now you act like you've totally forgotten about it!"
"Hard to forget an eternity floating around with nothing to do but think."
"So talk to me about it!"
Jack laughed. "Sure, pull up a chair! Have ya got a few thousand years to spare? That'll cover the beginning."
"It was an illusion, Jack! Drugs messing with your head and sense of time!"
He stormed up to Richard, his eyes burning with anger. "No it wasn't, Rich! Drugs can't let you contemplate your life a few hundred times! It was real!" He stared at his friend a moment before turning away. "It was terrifying."
"What was so damn scary?"
"Me! That's what! I looked my life over a hundred ways and it all added up to one thing! Nothing! Just a big waste of time!"
Sitting down on the free weight bench, Richard looked at Jack. "What did you expect? You're only seventeen, dude! What, you thought by now you'd have cured cancer or something?"
"It's not just that!" Jack snapped back. "It's like my whole life is just some big joke! Joke of the universe! The world's biggest situation comedy! God wanted to see what would happen if he gave an old infertile couple a baby! Hilarity ensues! Ha! Ha!"
Sighing, Richard stood up. "So that's it? That's what's been eating you up? You were born to an old couple?"
"Mom's sick, Rich!" Jack barked. "She won't tell me what's wrong, but I can see it in her eyes! She's dying! Dying of old age or something and her only child isn't even out of high school yet!"
Silence hung in the air while the two friends looked at one another, whole volumes being spoken without a word.
Walking over to Jack, Richard put a hand on his shoulder. "I... I'm sorry, Jack." He wrapped his arms around his buddy and hugged him. "Is there anything I can do?"
Jack strained just trying to not cry. "No. I don't even know what can be done. Like I said, she won't talk to me about it." Jack let Richard go and walked around the room like a caged animal. "I just feel so... so useless! On top of all that, I have no outlet! Nothing fun to look forward to! Ever!" Jack sat and looked at the floor. "So anyway, how've you been?"
"Can't complain." Richard shot back. "Oh, there's the usual things. Money, girls, school, girls, graduation..."
"...girls!" they said together.
"Have a date for the Prom?" Jack wondered.
"No." Richard shook his head. "Doesn't seem to be in the cards, anyway. Ah! It's not important. Just the end-all be-all that everyone and their mother has been hammering on for weeks about. Nothing too important, though."
"Yammering, not hammering. Don't corrupt the language." Jack half-smiled.
"No, I mean hammering! After the thousandth time someone asks you 'Have a date for the Prom?' the words start to feel like a hammer beating into your skull!"
"Guess I'm lucky." Jack commented. "No one has even brought it up to me."
"Think they're afraid how you'll react. You tend to have a viscerally negative response to any and all mention of the word 'Prom', for some reason."
"Gee, can't imagine why! My last one ended just marvelously, didn't it?"
"You seemed to think so at the time, gut punches excluded, of course."
"Hindsight, my boy. Hindsight. If I had to do it all over again... Ah, hell! Who am I kidding? I wouldn't change a thing!" he laughed.
"Really? Why not?"
"Part of my eternal self analysis." Jack looked over at Richard. "I figured out that every part of my life was important, especially the bad stuff. I need it or else I wouldn't be me, I'd be someone else... and I like me."
"Wow, Jack! That's... profound!"
"I'll try not to make a habit of it. The wear and tear on my poor bruised body to get me there is murder!"
"So then... not going?" Richard asked nonchalantly.
"Going?"
"To... the... Prom!" Richard sounded out each word slowly.
Flinching like he'd just been slapped, Jack looked away. "Oh, that! Well let's see... I don't have a date, I don't have a tux, I don't have tickets, I don't have money to get tickets, don't have a way to get there or back... There's literally no end to the list of things I don't have in order to go to this clam bake, so... maybe?"
"I was talking to your mom the other day and she's worried about you. She seems to think you should go."
Picking up the five-pound weight again, Jack started exercising his other arm. "I really don't want to disappoint her, but I just don't see it happening, Rich. I would have had to start preparing for it a while ago. Days even!" He stopped working out and looked at Richard. "You're driving at something."
"Who? Me?" Richard looked astonished.
"OK, let's start with who."
"What who?"
"You expect me to go stag to this thing? Who? You obviously have someone in mind or you wouldn't have brought it up. A name! I assume this girl has one." Jack looked sideways at Richard. "It is a girl, isn't it?"
"If you asked her, I bet your dear Wendy would go with you." Richard's voice dripped with loathing as he spoke her name.
"Ugh! No more pity dates! You don't have to say her name like it's 'Hitler', either. You gotta let that go, man. It'll eat ya' up inside."
"Fine. Is there anyone you want to go with?"
Jack sighed as he put the weight down once more and stretched his arm. "I'm sorta out of the loop. I don't know who's available to turn me down. So... no, but like I said, I know you, Rich. You already have someone in mind, don't you."
"You wouldn't consider a blind date would you?"
"Oh, that would be great! I can see it now. 'Daddy? Who did you take to the Senior Prom?' 'Well, I never really caught her name, sweetie.' I don't think so."
"And stag's right out?"
"With the trash." Jack answered as he started to put away the weights.
"You could always go with my sister!" Richard joked.
"Buttons! Don't be grotesque, Rich! She's not a girl! Not one someone my age should be staying out late with, anyway. Or any age really until she's at least eighteen! I'd get arrested for violating her curfew or contributing to the delinquency of a minor or something! I mean, don't get me wrong... I love Buttons... but she's your sister! Taking Buttons would make me one of those creepy guys! Besides, she just thinks I'm her brother's weirdo friend! Next?"
"Hmm... it does present a problem. I don't suppose you could, ya know, trust me or anything." Richard asked.
"Of course I would!" Jack stated obviously. "Who is the hero in this story? You! I'm just your professional victim, remember?"
"So that's it then. You're going to the Prom and I'll take care of everything."
"With a date, that's not a blind date, and actually wants to go with me?"
"Yep."
"Tickets? Dinner? Money?"
"Yep, yep, and yep."
"Transportation? That clunker of yours won't cut it. If you are so fired up for me to go to this dog and pony show, I want a nice ride. Go in style for once!" Jack walked toward the door to the garage.
"Doable. So it's settled, then?"
"One other thing..."
"Oh, here it comes! The caveat. I knew you wouldn't make it that easy."
Jack stood next to the door, blocking it. "Nothing like that. It's just..."
"Spit it out, boy!"
"When is Prom? Honestly, I don't know! I've been a little... preoccupied." Jack gestured to the collection of weight machines.
"Oh! It's tomorrow night." Richard said nonchalantly.
Jack chuckled. "Pushing it a little aren't you? What if I'd said no?"
"Never would have happened." he dismissed the idea. "What? You think I didn't know I could needle you into it when I came in here?"
"I suppose you're right. After all, you did!"
After a Saturday afternoon trip to the barber, Jack was pleasantly surprised that by four Richard had brought him his tuxedo. By five Jack was sitting in his living room ready to be picked up. He found himself wishing Mary was up, knowing she would be getting more out of this than he was, but she'd been in her bedroom all day, only coming out to have breakfast. She seemed tired, distracted, and unfocused. Jack wondered how long it would be before she wouldn't even be able to take care of herself, let alone him.
Hearing a car pull up, he looked out the window to see a black limousine parked in front of his house. Richard had come though so far and now Jack found himself anxious to find out who his 'not a blind date' was. He figured it must be a girl he knew, but had never considered, but he quickly dismissed that idea as he believed there was no such thing as a girl he didn't consider.
When he heard Richard knock, he quickly opened the door. "Rich! Looking good! Where's the girl? We need to go pick her up?"
"Anxious much, Jack?" Richard shook his head. "And no, we don't need to go get her. She's here."
"Well, why didn't you ask her in?" Jack scowled at him.
"Because you need to ask her out, dear!"
Jack turned at his mother's voice and was stunned by the sight that greeted him. His mother was wearing a beautiful pink satin gown. It was obviously not a modern design, one that was more reminiscent of the fifties than the eighties. Gone was the gray of her hair, now tinted the blonde he'd seen in pictures of her from before he was old enough to remember, and she'd done her makeup beautifully. Altogether she looked twenty-five years younger, and she looked stunning.
"Well, dear? How do I look?" she asked, turning in place.
Jack smiled his half-smile and turned to Richard. "My mother. My mother. My mother! No matter how I say it, it keeps coming out the same!"
Mary frowned, thinking that she'd made a horrible mistake in agreeing to this with Richard. "Dear, if you'd..."
Jack turned around and looked at her. "It keeps coming out 'wonderful'! Mom, you look beautiful!"
"Thank you, dear." she smiled, blushing at the compliment. "So you wouldn't mind taking your Senior Mom to the Senior Prom?"
"Oh, Mom! You need to quit stealing my jokes! You keep this up and I'll have to start stealing Berl's stolen material to impress you! Where did you get the dress?"
"Do you like it? I haven't worn this since my fifteenth high school reunion! I know it's sort of old-fashioned. Will it do?"
"It looks beautiful on you, Mom! Don't you think so, Rich?"
He nodded. "So you two about ready?"
Slipping her arm around her son's, Mary nodded. "Whenever you are, dear."
The three made their way to the waiting limo. Climbing in and waiting to be taken to the dance, Jack turned to his mother. "Well, I won't have a girl I can make out with, but I think I'd rather be going with you than anyone I know." He sighed sadly. At least I know she won't break my heart.
"You better not try anything!" his mother joked, nodding toward Richard. "Our chaperone would be quite put out!"
"To say the least!" Richard added. "You two start kissing and I might just blow a gasket!"
"No worries there, Rich." Jack chuckled. "Don't get me wrong Mom, you look gorgeous tonight, but I just don't think I could look past the whole Mom thing. Oedipus, I ain't!"
"Can we change the subject, please?" Richard begged.
Arriving at the two teens' Prom, the three were shown to their table, each guest being grouped by request for the dinner that would precede the dance. Several of Richard's friends came by, offering for him to join them, but he kept refusing, choosing instead to stay with Jack and Mary no matter what.
After dinner, when Richard declined a dance for the third time, Jack scooted over to him and lowered his voice. "Look Rich, it's OK to have fun without me. This is your Senior Prom, too! You should enjoy it! After all, you're paying for it!"
"It fine, Jack." Richard insisted. "I just wanna make sure you're having a good time, is all."
"Richard?" Mary interrupted. "Go tell that pretty brunette that was just here that you've changed your mind and would love a dance." When the two of them looked at her surprised, she blinked back at them. "What? You two aren't nearly as sly as you think you are!"
After Richard got up and left to ask Sherry for a dance, Mary looked at her son. "You know, it's OK for you to ask someone to dance, too. Don't let me being here stop you from having a good time. I think you deserve it after all you've been through."
"Mom," Jack began. "I'm glad you're here! I want to spend time with you, not these jerks. Besides, I've wanted to talk to you for a while now." Taking a breath, he let it out slowly. "When I was in the coma, I... I saw Dad."
Mary drew in a sharp breath. "Jack! Why didn't you tell me?"
"Because I didn't want you to think your son had stripped his gears, Mom!"
"Nonsense!" she slapped his hand lightly with her gloved hand. "I would never think that!" Sighing, she looked at him. "Did he say anything?"
"Sorta." he replied shyly. "He... he helped me get back to you. I was lost, for a really long time. It... it felt like forever a dozen times over. I did a lot of thinking, not much else to do for eternity, and I... I learned a lot about myself. I haven't been a very good son to you over the years. I... I was... embarrassed... by you. I feel so ashamed for even admitting that."
"Jack, it's alright." she said, taking his hand in hers. "I... I understand. Your father and I were a lot older than your classmates' parents. It's part of the reason we never got involved in your school activities. We didn't... didn't want to embarrass you. So we let you do your own thing. I was so happy when you became friends with Richard! Your father and I were worried that we'd raised you such that you wouldn't be able to relate to your peers."
"You don't need to worry about it, Mom. I don't relate to them, but I don't care! I don't want to dance with any of these girls! They're all vapid and as shallow as a sidewalk puddle! I'm happy being me, and I wouldn't change it for anything! I think you and Dad did a great job of raising me, and even after Dad..." Pausing, he cleared his throat. "Well anyway, you're the perfect mother!" Hearing 'Songbird' begin, he stood and extended his hand to her. "And I would love a dance with my perfect mom!"
"Are you sure, dear?" she asked concerned. "I... I wouldn't want you to hurt yourself. I know even walking is still hard for you."
Jack looked at the dance floor. "I think I can manage a dance or two, so long as it's slow like this!" He looked back at her. "Please?"
Taking his hand, Mary rose graciously. "I'd be delighted, young man!" she sighed as she followed him out onto the dance floor. As they danced together simply, she sighed. "You're a fine dancer, dear. How did you get to be so good? I know I didn't teach it to you! I'm terrible!"
"You're a great dancer, Mom!" Jack said defensively. "Are you having a good time? I know the songs they're playing aren't exactly off the Hit Parade, but some are kinda nice, don't you think?"
"Well, I like this one!" she smiled. "Reminds me of Benny Goodman!"
Continuing to dance, Jack laughed. "You know it's funny? I feel more at home with Benny Goodman, Uncle Miltie, Burns and Allan, Bing Crosby, Bob Cummings, and those people than anyone today. It's like I can relate to them better!"
Smiling, Mary shrugged. "Well then, I guess it was right when your father and I named you Jack! Did we ever tell you who you're named for?" Seeing him shake his head curiously, she laughed. "It was your father's idea! You're named after Jack Benny!"
"Funny, I feel more like Jack Lemon!" he chuckled, making Mary laugh along.
Swaying slowly to the tenor sax, Mary's smile slowly melted. "Thank you for tonight, Jack! I... I really wasn't sure about Richard's idea to have me be your Prom date, but I'm glad he talked us into it! I... I think we both needed it more than either of us will ever admit, each for our own reasons."
Furrowing his brow, Jack looked at her quizzically. "OK, I'll bite. I know why I'm happy to be here with you. Why did you need tonight?"
Gulping, Mary couldn't look her son in the eyes as she said it. "I... I saw the doctor a few days ago, Jack. I... I'm in the early stages of Alzheimer's, dear. Very soon, I... I won't be able to do things like this anymore. I just hope I can still remember tonight! It's been wonderful, Jack!"
Stunned at the revelation, Jack stopped dancing a moment before picking up again. "OK, Mom. Did... did the doctor give you any sort of idea how long before..." stammering to a stop, he couldn't ask without breaking down.
"It's OK, Jack!" Mary comforted him. "I have a while left! Years, with any luck! I might still be able to see my grandchildren, if you hurry!"
"Fat chance of that, Mom!" Jack chuckled. "Not with these girls, anyway! I'd have to meet someone really special. Someone who gets me and doesn't have any ulterior motives. I... I just want a girl that loves me... not what they can get out of me or who thinks they can make me better. None of the girls my age fit the bill."
"Then maybe you need to broaden your horizons, Jack." Mary offered.
"What?" he asked with a half-grin. "Date older women? No offense Mom, but I need to stick to girls between the ages of fifteen and twenty! You don't want your son to be accused of cradle robbing or falling for Mrs. Robinson, would you?"
"That's not what I mean, dear." she admonished his jumping to conclusions. "I mean, maybe there's someone for you that you've never considered, for one reason or another. Men often think a girl is unattainable or uninterested, even when all she wants is him. Your father was that way. I practically had to club him over the head before he realized I was in love with him!"
"OK, Mom!" Jack conceded. "I promise I won't put any girl on my 'out of bounds' list!"
When the song ended, they made their way back to the table, seeing Richard there with Sherry. Jack's benefactor stood for Mary as she sat back down, noting his friend's limp. "Do you need me to run back home and get your cane, Jack?"
Shaking his head, Jack grimaced as he sat back down. "It's fine, Rich. I don't know that I'll be dancing much more tonight, though."
"Oh, by the way." Richard noted. "This is Sherry. Sherry? Jack and Mary."
"Mary and Sherry," Jack commented. "Sounds like a vaudeville team!"
Sherry looked at him with a puzzled expression as Mary laughed. "A... huh?"
"Never mind." Jack shook his head. "Before your time."
"Yours too, dear." his mother added mirthfully.
"Not in my heart, Mom."
When the next song began, Richard and Sherry headed for the dance floor once more. Dancing together, Sherry asked, "So why is Jack here with his grandmother? Isn't that a little... odd?"
Defensive of Jack, Richard stopped dancing. "No it's not. And she's his mom, not grandmother." Taking a moment, he started dancing again and tried to explain. "Jack was in the hospital from December until last month, so he never got a chance to ask anyone. Besides, his mom isn't doing well. She... well, let's just say this might be her last chance at a fun night out."
"Oh! I didn't mean... oh, shoot!" Sherry admonished herself.
"Don't beat yourself up over it. You're new. Jack and I have been friends all through high school. He's a good guy."
"He seems sort of... well... different. I don't mean in a bad way, just... kind of... geeky!"
"He's just Jack." Richard shrugged. He spent the rest of the dance telling her how they'd become friends, Jack's unusual upbringing, and by the time they were heading back to the table, had just explained about Wendy.
"He must be pretty torn up." Sherry commented as they stopped near their table. She looked over at her other new friends. "Say, listen. I... I need to spend some time with the girls, but I'd like to get together sometime, if you would."
Jack smirked. "He says 'Yes'! Right, Rich?"
Turning from Sherry to Jack, Richard scowled. "I can answer for myself, thank you!" Looking back at her, he nodded and smiled. "I'd like that!"
While Sherry left to join her friends and Richard started to sit down, Mary stopped him. "Richard, you should go with her."
"But..."
With an exasperated sigh, Mary explained things to him. "Richard, when a girl says she wants to spend time with you, then leaves, she wants you to follow her! Trust me on this! I used to be a girl!"
"Get lost, Rich!" Jack smiled. "Go on! Who needs ya'!"
"You do, remember?" Richard shot back. "Who else is going to bail you out of trouble all the time?" he quipped before turning to follow her.
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
Jack told me a story once about things that he said happened later that night, but Rich insisted that he was exaggerating, so I don't know what happened after that, really. Jack says Anne made a scene, trying to tell Jack to leave and quit embarrassing himself by taking his mother to the Prom, but Rich says she only wanted to make peace now that school was ending. I don't know what the truth is, but I suspect Rich was just defending her out of his sense of loyalty. He could be like that sometimes. Besides, he still put almost all the blame on Wendy and his mom. He never said so, but I think he always believed that Wendy broke up he and Anne, not vice versa. Their graduation was apparently as uneventful as they usually are. There was apparently a party afterwards, but both of them said it was boring and not worthy of a story. Just things that happened, but then I think a lot of life is that way... just things that happen. In the weeks that followed, Jack was working at his physical therapy. He said he was concerned that the Corps wouldn't take him due to his injury, but in the end, with Rich's help, he passed MEPS and, with his mother's signature, headed off to Paris Island in July while he was still seventeen. Boot is Boot, so telling you what it would have been like for them isn't really telling you about them. It wasn't until they came home after MCRD and before heading out for SOI that things got interesting.
---
Jack walked in the front door of his mother's home, shuddering from the cold October morning. He was in his uniform and wanted Mary to see him since she couldn't be there for his graduation from Boot Camp. "Mom! I'm home!"
Mary walked out from her bedroom in a state of confusion. "Danny? Is that you?"
His smile disappeared in a heartbeat. "Mom? It's me. Jack."
She looked at him as though he were a stranger, then realization came to her. "Oh... Oh, Jack! My, you look handsome! Are... are you staying long? You... you went into the military, didn't you? At least, I think I remember you doing that." She looked at him with terrified eyes. "I... I don't remember!"
"It's alright, Mom." Jack hugged her comfortingly. "I... I was looking for a place that can take care of you while I'm deployed. I'd like to take you there to see it, if that's alright."
She looked at him with terror. "I don't want to go anywhere else, Jack! I... I want to stay here at home!"
"Tell you what, Mom. I'll take you to see it and if you don't like it you don't have to stay. Is that fair?"
"Well, I suppose that's only fair, but... why bother? Why can't we just stay here?" she asked confusedly.
"You have Alzheimer's, Mom. Pretty soon you won't be able to remember if you ate a few minutes ago. You're going to need people to help you."
"Can't... can't you help me, Jack?"
"I'm going in the service. I won't be back for a few years at least. Who'll take care of you until then?"
"I don't need anyone to take care of me, Jack! I've taken care of the both of us for years!"
Resignedly, Jack finally accepted that she just couldn't understand. "I know, Mom. Say, I was thinking. You need a nicer place to live! Now that I can afford it, I want us to move into a nice apartment! Someplace where you don't have to cook and clean all the time! No yard to weed, no bad plumbing to fix! How does that sound?"
Mary smiled. "That sounds wonderful, Jack! Where is it?"
He barely was able to hold back the tears as he lied to her. "Not far, just east of here. I think we'll love it! Come on, let's pack a bag and I'll show it to you! It's fully furnished! If you want, we can even stay there tonight to try it out!"
She patted him on the cheek. "You're such a good boy, Jack! I'll go pack an overnight bag!" She started down the hall and Jack followed.
"Let me give you a hand, Mom." he said, wiping a tear away.
That night, as Jack drove Richard's borrowed station wagon back home, he felt like he'd betrayed his mother; abandoning her in a strange place with people she didn't know. Intellectually, he knew it was what she needed. He'd talked with the staff for a good long time and liked them. This was his third trip out there, the first two just to see if he could trust them with Mary.
Pulling up out in front of the Hargrave's home, he sighed and walked up the few steps, beating himself up inside for the tenth time. Letting himself in, he flopped on their couch, emotionally exhausted.
"Jack? Are you alright?" Erica asked from the hallway.
"Huh? Oh, hey Bu.... um... Erica. No, but I will be."
She walked into the living room and sat down across from him in the smaller loveseat that faced the couch. "Richie told me you had to take your mom to an old-age home. I'm sorry, Jack. You must feel awful!"
Sighing, he just stared at the ceiling. "Well, it wasn't a trip to Cedar Point, that's for sure, but it's what she needs now. Even if she doesn't understand it, she needs people that can take care of her, and I just can't. I feel like an absolute heel!"
Moving to the couch, Erica took his hand. "No! I know you, Jack! You love your mom more than anything! I don't think you have any reason to feel bad! I bet the place she's staying is awesome!" She desperately wanted to soothe his troubles however she could.
Jack patted her hand. "Yeah, it's a great jail. Twenty-four hour security so she doesn't wander off somewhere she wants to go, doctors available at all hours to pump her full of drugs, orderlies to boss her around when she wants to do something they don't feel like putting up with, and every one of them a total stranger to her so she'll feel like she's been kidnapped! It's perfect!"
"I don't think you'd let your mom stay there if it was like that, Jack." she challenged him.
"No. It's not. It really is a great place. The staff are all nice, dedicated, and really want to help her as much as they can. Maybe in a few years I can get a long-term posting and move her in with me so I can take care of her myself, but for now, it's a good place. At least I don't have to worry about her being all alone."
Erica loved sitting this close to him, sharing in his troubles, and helping to ease his suffering, even if only a little. Her heart raced as she fought the urge to lean over and kiss him, unleashing four years worth of built-up yearning, but it was about the hardest thing she'd ever had to do. She knew she had bad news to deliver. "I... I need to tell you something, Jack. Mom's back."
"Brilliant! What a perfect capper for a day of absolute betrayal." He stood up and dropped Richard's car keys on the coffee table. "Tell Rich I'll be by Sunday at four to take him out for his birthday. I don't think I'll be coming to his party, though. Not with her here. Can you tell him I'm sorry I'm going to miss it?"
"Sure thing, Jack." she accepted, rising to stand close next to him. "I'll tell him anything you like. I'll miss you not being there. I mean, Richie is sure to miss you."
Giving her a one-armed hug, he smiled down at her. "Thanks, Erica. I... I appreciate that."
His smile had her completely undone. She decided in that moment to throw caution to the wind and follow her heart. Just as she was about to grab the back of his neck and pull him down to kiss her, he pulled away and walked out the door, oblivious of her aborted intents. Near to tears, she composed herself and decided that by Sunday she was going to get his attention and show him that she wasn't a little girl anymore.
The day of Richard's nineteenth birthday came and, as his guests started to arrive, he found himself completely bored. Going into the house, he sat in his room and started going through things to select what he would take with him and what could be packed away. All his crowd of high school friends wished him their best, but without Jack the party seemed dull and lifeless. Worst of all was his mother. Judith had come back and picked up her role as though no time had passed; like the entire ordeal had been nothing more than a bad dream.
"Richard! You're neglecting your guests!" Judith admonished him from his doorway.
"So?" he said harshly. "I'll be out in a while, but I need to get this done before four. I need to be ready to leave tomorrow, first thing."
"Oh, nonsense! You can do all this after the party! You're not doing anything tonight, so you'll have time later! Now put that down and come along."
"No!" he growled, continuing to go through his things. "Jack's taking me out tonight! That's what I'm looking forward to, not those idiots you invited."
"But they're your friends, Richard! Besides, you can't go out tonight, dear. You spend too much time with Jack as it is, and you'll have plenty of time together after you leave! I've not had a chance to spend any time with you!"
Stopping for a moment, Richard walked to his door and glared down at his mother. "That's because I've been avoiding you! Take a hint! As for those yahoos you invited, they aren't my friends. Jack is my friend, and the only reason he's not here is because you are! I'll waste time with them once I've made damn sure I'm not losing any time with Jack tonight! Now if you'll excuse me... Judith... I have things to do!" He then slammed the door in his mother's face and returned to his task.
"Well of all the...! Richard! You apologize to me at once or so help me I'll... I'll..."
"You'll what, Mom?" Erica said snidely from her doorway. "Throw him out? He's leaving tomorrow! Forever!"
Judith turned to face her daughter to see that Erica was wearing a skirt and a cute sweater; her hair nicely styled with her usual curls mostly flattened and makeup in a style that made her look seventeen rather than three months shy of her fifteenth birthday.
"This is none of your concern, young lady! Your brother is behaving very disrespectfully and I will not have it! I'm glad to see you looking presentable, though. Go and play hostess for our guests while I deal with your brother."
"The way you dealt with Jack, Mom? What? You gonna try and set Richie up with a hooker to make an honest woman of her?" She rolled her eyes and stormed out of the house.
Judith was speechless. "Why, I... I... I..." Finally overcome with emotion, she broke down and sobbed.
She was collapsed on the floor in front of Richard's door crying when Frank walked up. "Come on, Judy. Let me help you up."
"I... I don't know what to do, Frank! Richard won't talk to me, and Erica hates me!" she sobbed as she was pulled to her feet.
Leading her into the living room, he sighed and shook his head. "Judy, you have a lot of apologizing to do before either of them will forgive you."
"What do I have to apologize for? I've done nothing wrong! Oh, Frank!" She fell into his arms sobbing once more. "I... I... Frank? Am I a bad woman for wanting to help the Evans girl? I... I just don't understand why Richard hates me so much for it!" Sitting her down on the couch, her husband patiently tried to calm her down. "You just don't understand, Frank! I... I had to!"
While she resumed sobbing, Erica walked back in the house. When she saw her parents sitting on the couch together, her mother crying and father consoling her, her anger intensified. "Pardon the interruption, but Hank just threw up on the back lawn. I think he's drunk."
Frank shook his head. "I'll be out in a sec, sweet pea." Once she'd left, he stood up and looked down at his wife. "I don't know what you can do, but apologizing to Jack would be a good start, if he'll let you. I'll be outside if you need me, hun."
Having finished sorting everything, Richard had managed to reduce his 'must take' things down to just one seabag. The rest he didn't care about. Sighing in satisfaction, he glanced at his watch and saw that Jack would be there in about half an hour. "Just enough time to make a sociable appearance and then go have some actual fun!"
Going out into the back yard, he saw Hank, the quarterback of the football team, passed out face-first on the lawn. Shaking his head, he pasted a smile on and made small talk, continually glancing at his watch.
Erica brought him a paper plate with a hamburger, hot dog, and chips just about the time he was checking it for the third time. "When's Jack supposed to get here?" she asked almost desperately.
"Four. Thanks, sis." he said, taking the plate. When he did, he noticed she was dressed a lot nicer than her usual jeans and top. "Did Mom make you wear that? You can go change and be yourself if you want to. This is my birthday, not hers."
"Don't I look nice?" she asked, self-consciously.
He looked at her again. "Oh, sure! I just figured..." Realizing he'd goofed, he lowered his head and laughed. "Sorry, sis! I thought... You look great!" Seeing her smile and walk away happy, he shook his head, thinking Erica had gotten dressed up just for his birthday. "Goofy kid!" he said to himself.
While he could tell she was going for 'grown up', and if he'd looked with unbiased eyes he would have seen just how well she'd pulled it off, all he could see was his baby sister, but he wouldn't dare tell her. I already have enough trouble with women in this family without starting a fight with Erica!
Jack walked up to the Hargrave's home promptly at four. He'd spent most of the last few days getting his mother's power of attorney turned over to himself, then listing their home on the market, and finally getting as many personal effects moved to his mother's nursing home as possible. Seeing her there so many times, starting to settle in, made him feel easier about his decision. He still didn't like it, but he'd quit beating himself up over it. She actually looked happier and healthier than she had in a while.
Walking around through the side gate, he let himself in and slapped a smile on his face for Richard's sake. "Hey, bud!" he shouted.
Genuinely smiling as Jack came walking into his back yard, Richard ran up to him. "Jack! Get things taken care of?"
"Yeah, all done. You?" Jack asked as he stopped next to Richard, looking at the lawn.
"Junk on the Bunk!" Richard replied before he took another bite of hot dog. Talking around a mouthful, he asked, "Wan' some?"
"No thanks, Rich. I'll have this though." he said, grabbing Richard's burger off his plate. "Mmm! Charcoal burger!"
"Mom didn't make these." Richard joked. "Dad did."
Taking a bite, Jack nodded in appreciation. "I can tell. They're edible. You about done here? I've got the whole evening planned!"
Richard nodded as well, swallowing another bite of hotdog. "Just about. Already did cake and stuff. Sorry you missed it."
"Ah! You know me! I'd have just ended up falling in the cake or something to make you have to get me out of another mess." He looked around at the guests and shook his head. "Don't know how soft they got it, do they?"
Shrugging, Richard finished his last bite and wiped his hands. "Yeah. Well, let me make polite and then we'll get outta here."
Going around, Richard thanking and saying goodbye to their guests, Jack stood behind him the whole way. He nodded as people he never liked, and who he knew had never liked him, gave him backhanded compliments and congratulations for getting through Boot Camp; their every word screaming that the only things they knew about it came out of Hollywood. About halfway done, Frank stopped Jack at the grill.
"I... I wanted to say, I'm proud of you, boy." he said earnestly. "The Corps will do good things for you, and you for the Corps." he spoke through gritted teeth; his pipe clenched tightly out of the corner of his mouth.
Jack smiled genuinely. "Thanks, Mr. H.! That means a lot coming from you. I... You're a good dad. Rich is lucky to have ya'."
Slapping him on the back firmly, Frank genuinely smiled. "Call me Frank! You're a man now. You've earned the right."
He shook his head and chuckled. "I dunno. You once said you were like a surrogate father to me! Maybe I should call you Dad!" When he saw the older man glare at him, he cleared his throat. "Frank it is!"
Erica came up to her father and he wrapped an arm around her shoulders. "Hey, sweet pea! You had a chance to say hi to your brother or Jack yet?"
Shaking her head, she looked over at Jack, batting her eyes. "Hi, Jack! It's really good to see you! Can I get you anything? A drink? Some food?" Me? she wanted to add.
Jack smiled down at her. "That's OK, Bu... um... Erica. I'm good. Rich and I'll be stepping out in a few." He noticed she was dressed up and realized he ought to say something. "You look nice!" he complimented her.
Blushing as her heart raced at the thought that Jack had finally noticed her as more than just a little girl, she looked down. "Thank you... Jack!" she said coyly. When she looked up again however, he was gone. Looking around, she saw him next to her brother once more, smiling and talking to a few other people.
Noticing her unusual behavior, Frank was finally starting to understand some of what was going on. "Listen, sweet pea. You think you could run to the fridge and get me a beer? Thanks!"
About to go over to Jack and ask to speak to him privately, she was irritated with her father for interfering in her attempts at catching Jack's eye. "Fine!" she scowled at him. Storming off toward the house, she simply had to get back before Jack left. When she did a minute later, handing her father his beer bottle, she looked around. "Where's Jack... and um... Richie?" she asked him, adding her brother as an afterthought.
"They left for the evening, sweetie." he answered flatly. "Don't worry, you can still see your brother off tomorrow morning."
"But..." She paused, reformulating how to ask without being obvious. "Is Jack coming over tomorrow? I know he and Richie are leaving together."
He shook his head. "Rich is heading over to his place and pick him up after Rich leaves from here. I... I don't think Jack wants to see your mother and she'll be unavoidable tomorrow morning." He poured some of his beer over a burger, causing the flames to flare up.
"Oh." she said sadly, unable to hide her disappointment as tears began to form in her eyes. "I... I never even got a chance to say goodbye."
Nodding, Frank saw he was going to have to have a talk with his daughter.
Jack drove while Richard sat next to him in the passenger seat. "So, what's the plan?" the nineteen-year-old asked curiously.
"The plan is we're going to Ohio." Jack stated mater-of-factly.
"So what's in Ohio?" Richard asked suspiciously. "I mean, besides cows and Cleveland."
"The Keaton Family Bar and Grill." Jack answered as he drove down the highway, smiling. "Remember Doug from Boot? Well, his old man owns the place. Doug invited us to stop by."
Only vaguely remembering the other Marine recruit, Richard shrugged. "Oh. Sounds like it could be fun, I guess."
After driving for just over an hour, the two pulled up in front of a building out in the middle of nowhere.
"Jack, we can't go in there." Richard warned wide-eyed.
"Why not? We were invited!"
"That's not a grill, Jack!" Richard said obviously as he looked at the building. "That's a strip club!"
"So? They have food! Doug says their steaks are the best in the state!" Jack pointed out.
"Jack! We could get arrested! We're both under twenty-one!"
The younger Marine looked at his best friend as he opened his car door and climbed out. "Come on, Rich! No one but Doug knows us here and we both look over twenty-one! Live a little!"
He shook his head as he opened the car door and climbed out. "I should have my head examined for ever listening to you!"
As the two walked up to the front door, a large man stopped them. "IDs?"
Jack clapped his hand on the man's shoulder. "We're here to see Doug! Can you tell him Jack and Rich are here to see him?"
Eyeing the two youths suspiciously, he grumbled, "Wait here." Going in the building, music poured out the door as he entered, Jack rubbing his hands together.
"You'll see! Tonight's gonna be a blast!"
An hour later, Jack sat with Richard and Doug in the restaurant side of the establishment, the thump of music from the next room ever present. "Doug, I have to admit, that was the best steak I've ever eaten!" Jack grinned as their barely clothed waitress dropped off another beer for Richard and a soda for him, watching her every move. "I think it's the service!" he said distractedly, noting her smile at his compliment.
Doug Keaton shrugged. "Not the best. It was a little off tonight. Pete must be having a bad day in the kitchen. You two still planning on driving down to Geiger?"
Noticing the way Richard was eyeing their waitress, Jack smiled. "Yeah, we leave tomorrow morning. Say, Doug. Seeing as it's Rich's birthday and our last night home, I was hoping to treat him to a really good time tonight. Alright if I take him next door?"
He shrugged. "None of my business. I just invited you over for a good steak dinner. What you do after that... well... I can't be blamed for anything you two get into on your own. No one'll be calling the cops on you, if that's what you're asking." He winked at Jack as he stood up. "Well, Dad'll be wanting me to help behind the bar tonight. He don't care that I'm leaving in a few days. He's just miffed he's losing a bartender that works for free. Catch you guys later!"
Jack half-grinned as he stood up, dropping a twenty on the table. "Come on, Rich! Let's see if we can find you a nice girl your mom would approve of!"
Richard awoke the next morning slowly, the pounding in his head so loud he was sure Jack could hear it from his house. Starting to roll out of bed, he noticed he wasn't alone, and that he wasn't in his bed. Looking around, he determined he must be in a hotel; the queen bed taking up most of the small space while the only doors appeared to be for a bathroom and the door to the outside. He held his head, trying to keep it from falling off as he slowly stood up and headed for the bathroom.
When he came out a minute later, he saw a vaguely familiar looking woman sitting up in the middle of the bed. "Um... need the restroom?" he asked nonchalantly.
She shook her head slowly, her frizzy light brown hair twisting freely. "I was hoping I could coax you back into bed!" she said seductively.
Looking at her naked body, her firm muscle tone and long luscious legs gave her away as a dancer. He had vague recollections of her undulating body against his and her legs wrapped around him. One thing he wished he could remember that he couldn't though was her name. Looking at his watch, he saw it was only six in the morning, explaining why the only light in the room was from the dim light of a street lamp filtering in through a curtain.
"I... uh... I feel bad!" he said looking down at the grungy and cheep carpet covering the floor. "I... uh... I can't remember... well, much of anything from last night! I hope you're not mad at me for that!"
She smiled at him and knee-walked to the edge of the bed, sliding off to walk up to him. "I appreciate your honesty, Richard. I'm Cindi... with an i."
Seeing her intent, he asked, "I take it you had as much fun as I apparently did last night?" As she nodded slowly, he smiled and said, "I think I can spare some time!" while she wrapped her arms around him once more.
Jack pounded on the door as the sun was rising. "Rich! Reveille, buddy! It's oh-seven thirty and we have an hour's drive ahead!" He started knocking continuously until Richard flung the door open.
"Jack! Can you give me a minute?" Richard barked at him.
Looking at his best friend standing at the door wearing nothing but a sheet held at his waist, he half-smiled. "Good morning?" he asked inquisitively.
"It will be if you come back in about ten minutes!" Richard said, pushing his friend away from the door and slamming it in his face.
"If you're done that quick, you really should see a doctor about it!" he yelled through the door with a half-grin. Returning to Richard's station wagon, he sat in the driver's seat and spent the next fifteen minutes looking over the map of their nine-hour drive to Camp Geiger in North Carolina where they would spend sixty days going through Marine School of Infantry. They had two more days to arrive and report, and intended to make the most of it.
Just as he was about to go up and knock again, Richard came running out, tucking his shirt in as he left. As the hung-over young Marine opened the car door and climbed in, Jack saw Cindi standing in the doorway, a smile on her face and a sheet wrapped around her, waving goodbye to his best friend.
Pulling out of the parking lot, he glanced over at Richard. "So, you gonna see her again?"
"Nope!" he replied. "I offered gallantly, she rejected politely, we're cool."
Glancing once more at his watch, Jack started going over their plan. "It's oh-seven fifty. We'll be home by oh-nine hundred, stop at my place, you drop me off so I can pack my gear while you head home to do likewise, then come get me by oh-nine thirty and we'll only be running ninety minutes behind schedule. Plan?"
"Plan." he replied absently. "Thanks." he added after a moment of silence between the two.
"For what? Getting you plastered and hooking you up with Cindi with an i? What else are best friends for?"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
I came out of MCRD Paris Island in January of ninety-one, days before the start of Operation Desert Storm. From there I went to Camp Geiger for MCT and Lejeune for MOS. By the time I got my first posting later that year, the war was over and the country had a different attitude toward the military. Before the Gulf, most people looked down on a military career, leftover crap from Vietnam, I guess. After the Gulf though, the country almost seemed to be on overkill trying to apologize to every service member for the treatment of Vets after Vietnam by being overly proud of them. I hadn't even gotten a posting outside the US yet and I had people thanking me for my service! It was bizarre when you think that just a year earlier I had every friend I ever knew telling me what a mistake it was to join up. I was posted to The Bricks... Marine Barracks, Alameda Naval Air Station as an eleven forty-two, Electrical Equipment Repair Specialist, about July of that year. I met Jack about a week later. At first I thought he was rude, boisterous, pigheaded, and inconsiderate. Later I found out he was all that and so much more!
---
Jack cocked his half-smile at the Electronics Specialist as she examined his handheld radio. "I just don't get it. Every time it gets jostled I get static. Goes away if I tap it on the bottom." He bit his lower lip to make himself not make an inappropriate joke.
PFC Brooke Hathaway cocked her eyebrow at the Lance Corporal. It was the third time this week he'd come in to the Ground Equipment Maintenance Shop with the exact same radio, and she'd yet to find anything wrong with it. She started to believe he was just building up the nerve to ask her out. "Well, I still can't find anything wrong with it, Corporal Dunning. You sure you're using it right?"
Somewhat insulted, he took the radio back. "Here! Watch!" He clipped the radio to his belt and started jumping in place.
Just when she was about to tell him off, she heard the horrible static emanate from the radio. "OK, Corporal! Hand it over!" she shouted over the noise.
Half-smiling at her again, Jack handed it to her. "See? Told you! Now if you just tap it on the bottom..." He reached his hand toward the radio to silence it, when she slapped it away. "Hey!"
"Now that it's in a fault condition I can diagnose it, Corporal! If you fix it, I still won't know what's wrong!" With the static blaring through the shop, she carefully removed the back cover as though the noise didn't exist.
"How can you stand letting it blare like that!?" Jack shouted.
Touching a probe to a few places, she smiled. "Got it!" she shouted. Pressing on a spot, the noise vanished. "Cold solder joint. I can fix this right here."
"Thanks." Jack said, sticking a finger in his ear and shaking it around. "I think I was about to go deaf!" Watching her press the soldering gun to the joint, smoke streaming up away from it and into her face and around her safety glasses unnoticed, he admired her focus.
"Done." she said proudly. Blowing on the joint to cool it without creating a new fracture, she touched the joint and used her finger to soak away the last of the heat. Closing the cover, she shook her head. "I was starting to doubt your veracity, Corporal." she admitted.
Jack pressed his fingertips to his chest. "Moi? Dishonest? Skating? Epithets! Rude ones, even!" He finished with his fists on his hips.
She couldn't help herself as she started to laugh, a snort coming out before she could prevent it. Suddenly very self-conscious, she covered her mouth with one hand. "Stop it!" she said just above a whisper. Handing him back the radio, she couldn't restrain the smirk.
"Say listen, we have Liberty this weekend and I was thinking, since you're new and all, that maybe you might want to..." His voice trailed off as he saw her shaking her head. "No?"
"No." she replied with a smile.
Jack took on an offended expression. "Look, if you think I was just trying to get you alone and in a compromising position, well then..." He blew out a breath exasperatedly. "...you... you... you'd be right! But I only have the lowest of expectations! Hand-holding is a big deal for me!"
Brooke tried to be angry with him, but his comical response was insidious. "Look, Corporal Dunning..."
"Jack!" he replied happily.
"Jack... you look like a nice guy and all, but I've made it my policy not to date at all while I'm in."
He stood slowly, having started to lean on her desk. "Not at all?" he said slowly. Watching her head shake slowly, a smile barely restrained on her lips, he whistled low. "Lady, that's just not normal! You're in for what, four years minimum?" She nodded just as slowly. "Well that's just... uh... it's just wrong! How can you deny mankind a beauty like yours for that long?"
"Mankind will just have to do without! My ass belongs to the Corps!" she stated boldly as she handed him the paperwork she'd signed off on. "Here you are. The door is that way." she said emphatically as she pointed off to her right. "Goodbye, Corporal Jack Dunning!" she finished with a wicked smile and a wave.
Sitting on Richard's rack later that evening, Jack looked distracted. Richard noticed and nudged his arm. "Hey? You awake?"
"Huh?" Jack snapped out of his thoughts. "No, I just was thinking. Say, Rich. You ever hear of someone not dating for their entire cruise?"
Richard smirked as he pulled out a fresh uniform blouse. "Yeah, you! People are starting to talk."
Jack waved his hand dismissively. "Ah! You think you're so funny! I date! I just... I haven't met the right girl yet."
"So, now you found some new woman to bother? What's her name?" he asked impatiently.
"Brooke! She's this POG at the electronics shop! Man, Rich! You oughta see this girl! Long dark hair, luscious lips, great figure, trim, athletic... I tell you, she can't do it!"
"Do what?" he asked as he continued to dress.
"This girl is intent on not dating for her entire active duty cruise, Rich!" he said as though he were reporting a crime. "I tell you, she can't do this to me! It's unhuman!"
"Inhuman, Jack." he corrected as he slammed his locker shut. "So what's it to you, anyway? She can do her own thing if she wants."
"True, but... jeez, Rich! You should see this girl! She's a total knockout! A ten! Perfect!"
"Then you have nothing to worry about!" Richard quipped. "You never stood a chance anyway! Leg it! Fire Watch in three minutes!"
The next six weeks saw Jack volunteering to run equipment to and from the electronics shop as often as possible, each time trying to befriend the woman who had him so mystified. Finally, while waiting to pick up PFC Rogers' night vision equipment, Brooke spoke to him first for once.
"Say, Jack. You have Liberty this weekend?"
Seeing a crack in her armor, Jack smiled. "Oh! Uh... yeah. How'd you know? You been checkin' up on me?" She started to answer when he rapped her desk. "I knew it! You can't stand it, can you? Oh, Jack! What is this power you have over women? No, but seriously. Yeah I have Liberty, you?" He leaned on her desk nonchalantly.
The woman Marine nearly changed her mind, but something told her to take a chance. "Yeah. I haven't taken any since I got stationed, and this weekend my CO is making me take it. Says I'll burn out if I don't. I'm too gung-ho or something, as if there were such a thing." Looking up at Jack who looked overly interested, she shook her head. "Maybe this is a bad idea."
He stood up and straightened his uniform blouse. "No! No! Not at all! I think he's right! You can be too gung-ho! What did you have in mind?" he said, trying to act only vaguely interested.
"Anything's fine. What were you planning?"
"Not much. Usually my buddy Rich and me go see a movie or something, or a party if there's one he knows about. He's hooked in with the college set around here, but I can find out!"
Sighing, Brooke shook her head amusedly. "Alright. Well, I'll meet you guys at Main Gate then." She looked up at him. "You do have a car, right?"
"No." he said bashfully, but recovered quickly. "But Rich does! We drove The Beast, that's what he calls it, here from our last posting with the First MEF at Pendleton, after driving it there from Geiger, and there all the way from Pittsburgh. That's where we're from, Rich and me."
"Oklahoma City." she replied simply.
Jack picked up the night vision goggles, walking slowly backwards toward the door. "OK, then! See you Saturday!" He backed into a table and slapped it before turning to leave, like it was the table's fault for getting in his way.
Brooke shook her head and sighed once more. "Somehow, I get the feeling I'm in for a weird evening."
Saturday came and Richard sat behind the wheel of his old station wagon with Jack in the back seat. Checking his watch as they continued to wait, he looked over at Jack. "I think she was jerking your chain, Jack."
"You'll see Rich! She'll be..." Without warning, he reached over Richard's shoulder and honked the horn twice.
"Hey! I can do that!" Richard said, pushing Jack back into his seat. Looking out the windshield, he shook his head. "I don't frigging believe it! Jack, you don't stand a chance!"
"Why not?" he answered defensively. "She asked me out!"
"I don't care if she got down on her knees and begged you, Jack! You aren't gonna get this girl!"
"What makes you so sure?" he asked.
"Because I'm going to!" he said as he jumped out of the car and ran around to open the front passenger door for her.
"Hey! Rich! Don't... Rich!" he was flummoxed while Brooke got in.
"So where're we off to?" she asked, turning in her seat to look at Jack while Richard went around to get back in.
"Someplace to hide a body." Jack retorted as Richard got behind the wheel.
Brooke looked confused as she turned and sat facing forward. "Hi, I'm..."
"...Brooke, Brooke Hathaway from Oklahoma City." Richard finished for her. "Richard Hargrave, and it's a pleasure to meet you!" he said as he pulled out into traffic. "Jack told me a lot about you already! It's great to put a face to all that stammering."
"Stammering!?" Jack said defensively. "Maybe gushing a little bit, but not stammering! I'm like a rock, Brooke! This guy is just trying to make me look bad so he looks better by comparison! But to answer your question, we're headed to a party at a friend's place just outside of Oakland."
"Sounds fun!" Brooke smiled at the two. "I guess I really did need a break."
"Of course you did!" Jack exclaimed. "Recharges the ol' batteries!"
"In your case, I think it's time for an overhaul, Jack." Richard quipped as he pulled onto the freeway. "Yours are looking awfully worn out, what with all the girls you've been seeing."
"What girls? The ones you keep setting me up with so you can date their friend?" Jack shot back. "The last one was a real piece of work! She spent the entire time harping about the terrible state of women in the military!"
Brooke turned her head toward Jack. "And you would be some sort of expert in that area? What do you know about it?"
Jack blinked at her. "Well, I know a little! More than she ever could! She's a civilian!"
While the two debated about women in the military, Richard shook his head with a smile. After driving for fifteen minutes, he pulled up in front of a large house, the two still going at it. "We're here!" he interrupted Jack.
"Oh!" Jumping from his seat, he ran out and held the car door for Brooke just as she was climbing out. Closing it behind her, he gently escorted her toward the house. "This way, lovely lady!"
Looking at her, Richard smiled. "You know, if he gets to be a bother, just let me know! Jack has a way of getting on a girl's nerves after a while... say after about five minutes!"
"I can take care of myself, thank you." Brooke admonished.
Standing next to Richard some time later, Jack got a beer while he looked over at Brooke. "I don't know about this girl, Rich. She doesn't seem to find me nearly as witty, charming, and irresistible as she should!"
"Maybe she has good taste." Richard quipped wryly. "Maybe you should make yourself scarce for about fifteen minutes while you let me have a crack at her. You keep horning in on my best stories!"
"You've dozens of girls dying to go out with you! Whadaya want with mine?"
"She isn't yours until she says so." Richard said taking a swig of his beer. Looking over his shoulder at Brooke, he saw she was talking with Fern, the girl who's house they were in. While watching, one of the college boys came up to Brooke, tried to talk to her, and Richard smiled when she gave him the brush off. "Well, good news is she's not into college boys!"
Jack nodded. "Good thing, too. I was about to get rid of him for her."
"Sure you were, Jack. What were you gonna do? Threaten to tire him out from beating you to a pulp? You gonna back off and give me a shot?"
"Not a chance, Rich! I'm sticking to you like rubber cement! Come on!"
As the evening wore on, the two shared a few of their stories with Brooke. She liked their camaraderie, making her a little jealous of it at times. They talked about their deployment with the First Marine Expeditionary Force to the Gulf, sharing some stories, but it was their time back home that she found most interesting.
"So did you get even?" she asked.
"I don't get even." Jack shook his head. "I live a more elevated existence, but that didn't stop Rich! God! You shoulda seen what he did!"
Looking down as he sat across from Brooke, Richard blushed embarrassedly. "Jack! I was a stupid kid and I regret it now, so can we just drop it?"
"Alright, alright. Suffice it to say, Rich gave Ox what he thought was coming to him." Taking a drink, he looked at Brooke. "So how about you? Got any interesting and colorful people you wanna talk badly about? Ex-boyfriends, current boyfriends, anything like that?"
"Subtle, Jack!" she laughed as she shook her head. "No, no boyfriends, ex or otherwise. Dad was a Corps lifer, so we bounced from base to base a lot. Okinawa, Germany, all over stateside. Folks moved back to their hometown when he got transferred to the First Couch Company. Now he's in the sheet metal business. He'll probably retire pretty soon, though."
Richard nodded. "You never had a steady boyfriend then. Understandable. Any temporary ones of note? You know, the one that got away?"
"Rich!" Jack admonished his friend. "No need to bring up her past mistakes! You've done enough of that already tonight. Don't make me bring up Cindi with an i!"
Groaning as he leaned back, Richard flopped onto the back of the couch. "Oh, Jack! Please don't!"
"Don't worry, buddy. I won't... for now." he jokingly threatened. "Besides, you know where all my bodies are buried! But all that doesn't matter now, now that I've found true beauty in my life!" He turned and looked at Brooke with a grin, making her look away.
"Look, guys. I'm flattered and all, I can tell you're both interested, but I meant it when I said I'm not dating while I'm in the Corps. I... I can't." She looked back at them, one to the other, hoping they would back off.
Jack furrowed his brow. "Of course you can, beautiful! There are no regs against Enlisted dating each other!"
Looking at Brooke carefully, Richard could see that she was intentionally not saying something. After a moment, he sat up and looked at her curiously.
Brooke only nodded imperceptibly in response. Glancing at Jack, she shook her head toward Richard just as subtly.
"Now if you were an officer, it would be different, but we're not even NCOs yet!" Jack continued, not having noticed their exchange of looks. Seeing neither of them listening, he looked over at Brooke, then to Richard before he shrugged. "Did I miss something?" Pausing a moment, he looked hard at Richard. "Rich! Come on, man! Cut me a break! You owe me! You can't be taking every girl I like!"
Standing up slowly, Richard shook his head. "No, Jack. Not this time. I'm gonna head out for a breath of fresh air."
Watching Richard walk toward the back door, Jack smiled. "Well I'll be a... That Rich sure can be a heck of a guy, sometimes! Ya' know, for a minute there I thought you two were..." Even as he spoke, he watched Brooke get up and follow him out the door, not even hearing what he was saying. "Son of a..." Jack sat on the couch, fuming that even when Richard stepped aside, the girls still wanted his best friend more.
Leaning forward against the railing of the second story back porch, Richard looked at the skyline across the bay. The salt air filled his nostrils, clearing his thoughts and helping him to re-center. He heard her follow behind him, closing the sliding glass door as the sound of the party grew and then faded. Dropping his head to look over the rail, he picked it back up and took a drink from his beer.
Coming up alongside of him, Brooke leaned on the railing as he had done. "You won't say anything, will you?" she begged.
"I'm supposed to, if I know, but then I don't actually know, do I?" he shook his head. "You didn't say anything, and I haven't seen you do anything, so..." He took another drink and turned around smiling, shaking his head and leaning back. "Poor Jack!"
Mimicking his turn, she leaned on her elbows. "Poor Jack! Just can't win with the ladies, can he?" Laughing, she shook her head. "Look who's talking!"
"Not much luck there?" he asked.
"No, but that's OK." Brooke shook her head. "I'm a patient girl." she sighed before taking another drink. "You seem to do alright."
"I suppose." Richard shrugged. "About average, I guess... but I've had my share of heartbreak, just like everyone else."
"Cindi with an i?" she probed.
"No!" he laughed. "She was just a lady that shared a good time with me!" His laughter died slowly, thinking of Anne. "But there were times..."
She looked back toward the party inside. "Would Jack say anything if he knew?"
Looking over at her, Richard shook his head and turned to face the water again. "No. Jack won't say anything. He'd lie his ass of for you! He's like that. Don't get me wrong, he can be a pain, but when push comes to shove, I don't think he has it in him to be vindictive or mean, to anyone. He won't hold it against you." Taking a drink, he chuckled. "He might spend the next three years trying to get you to change your mind, though!"
Laughing, Brooke looked away. "I can see that he just might!" Glancing back in, she sighed. "Would you ask him to come out here for me? I... I want to break it to him without a crowd."
Letting out a breath, Richard turned to her. "You don't have to, you know. I could do it. That way you have deniability. You still haven't actually said anything to either of us. If you like, it can stay that way."
"No. I... I think he might believe me more easily. He might think you're just trying to throw him off me so you could have a shot!"
"You're not wrong!" Richard chuckled. "I'll get him and see to it you two are left alone for a bit." Going back in, Brooke turned towards the bay.
"Jack!" Richard shouted when he saw his best friend brooding just where he'd left him. Making his way through the crowd, he sat next to him. "Jack, Brooke wanted me to tell you..."
"It's fine, Rich!" Jack interrupted. "I know how it is. She likes you and that's all there is to it."
"Jack..."
"You can't help it! You're the hero type who gets all the girls!"
"Jack..." he dragged the name out.
"It's just how the story always goes! I mean, look at you! And then look at me! You, with all those bulging..."
"Jack!" Richard shouted.
"What?"
"Brooke wants you to go out on the porch to talk to her... alone. I swear to you, I have zero chance with her!"
"Huh? Really?" Jack perked up, looking at the back door and then back at Richard. Seeing his best friend nod toward the door, he practically leapt up to run outside.
Rising slowly, Richard stretched his body as he did so. "Poor Jack!" he said as he went to stand watch over the door, ensuring they would be left alone.
Slowing to a cool pace as he came out, Jack quietly closed the sliding glass door behind him and turned to see Brooke leaning against the rail, looking upset. Clearing his throat, he came up along beside her, just as she had done earlier with Richard. "I... uh... Rich said you wanted to talk to me."
Nodding, Brooke wiped a fearful tear away. "Yeah. Listen, Jack. I..."
"You don't need to explain!" he interrupted. "I understand! You've never had a serious boyfriend! So what!"
"Jack..."
"Lots of girls your age haven't! That's OK!"
"Jack...!" she dragged his name out the same way Richard had done.
"I don't think it's anything to be ashamed of! In fact, I think it's sort of..."
"Jack! Will you shut up a minute!" Brooke yelled.
Shocked into silence once more, Jack turned and looked out over the rail. "Well, I could offer to jump if you like..."
She couldn't help but laugh. "Jack, I... I need to tell you something, OK? I just... I don't want you to freak out or anything, alright? I like you, and I..."
Whipping his head around, Jack looked at her. "You like me?" he interrupted.
"Jack!" she growled through gritted teeth.
Turning back towards the water, flinching at her verbal assault, he held up his hands in mock surrender. "OK! OK! Shutting up!"
Frustrated, Brooke started pacing along the porch. "As I was saying, I like you and I don't want to lose you as a friend, but there's something you have to understand about me."
Jack turned around and saw she was seriously agitated and scared. "Hey! It's OK!" He reached out a hand to her, Brooke looking at it like it was an animal about to attack. Seeing her reaction, he held up his hands defensively once more. "It's fine! I wasn't going to try anything! I just wanted to help ease whatever it is that's making you so nervous is all. It can't be that bad! What, are you an escapee from a mental institution or something?" Then his smile melted. "You didn't used to be a dude, did you?"
She laughed once more at his disarming humor. "No!" Brooke looked at his perplexed expression. "Um... well... You know how you're always looking for the right girl?" Seeing him nod curiously, she took a breath. "Well, I understand that, really well."
Puzzled at first, after a moment his expression turned rapidly from confusion, to realization, and finally to shock. "What you? A..." He paused, unable to bring himself to say the word out loud. "No!" he dismissed the idea. "You're too pretty!" he said absently. "I mean..." Looking over at her and seeing her cross her arms indignantly, he arched a brow. "Really?"
"What?" Brooke countered, offendedly. "Let me guess. My hair's too long, I'm wearing too much makeup, and there's not enough flannel, right?"
Swallowing hard, Jack looked her up and down. Realizing he had hurt her feelings unintentionally, he lowered his voice. "Look, Brooke. I... I didn't mean to offend you or anything! I just... I thought you were joking!" Seeing her attitude shift, she suddenly looked small and helpless. "Seriously, I... just ignore me! I was just trying for a laugh is all. You... are we OK?"
Nodding shyly, Brooke looked at her fingers as they twisted themselves in knots. "I'm trusting that you won't say anything!" she looked up at him. "So you see, that's why I can't date while I'm in! Being in the Corps is much too important to me! I... I can't risk getting thrown out!"
Straightening himself up, Jack stepped over and hugged her, noticing for the first time how much taller she was than he; at least two inches.
When she finally relaxed into the friendly hug, she let out a relieved sigh. "I just... I wanted you to understand why I won't go out with you. You're nice and I didn't want you thinking it was because of you, OK? I hope you don't think any less of me."
Holding her at arm's length, Jack turned serious. "You don't ever have to worry about that, Brooke. I think you're great! I think it's a crying shame what you're denying to all mankind, but who am I to say it's wrong or a sin or something!" Wrapping an arm around her shoulder, he walked her over to the railing. "I... uh... I think I might even be able to help you."
Brooke looked over at him suspiciously. "Jack, don't even think about trying to kiss me! It's not a phase I'm going through!"
"No! No! No!" he stopped her. "Nothing like that! I was just... I think it's unrealistic of you to say you're not going to see anyone for the next four years, is all. You'll go bananas!" He paused a moment to let his thoughts sink in. "I... I could cover for you. We let everyone think we're dating, you can go out with Rich and me, and if you have a date, either Rich or I can say she's with one of us if anyone sees anything."
She shook her head and turned out toward the sea. "No. I can't risk it. It's not worth it!"
Mimicking her posture, he shook his head. "See, that's where you're wrong. I went through hell over that girl we were telling you about, more than you know, but you know what? It was worth it! Four months where I truly felt alive, against a year of misery? I... I wouldn't trade it for anything!" His voice trailed off as he remembered how happy he'd been with Wendy.
"I don't know, Jack." she sighed. "The Old Man would have a coronary if I got caught!"
"Then we make sure you never get caught!" Jack held out his arm. "We can start with me being your beard tonight! Come on! At least the guys inside will leave you alone for the rest of the night!"
Turning, Brooke slipped her arm in his. "Alright, but don't get any ideas! I'm bigger than you and could easily kick your skinny ass all the way back to The Bricks!"
Gulping, Jack nodded at her. "Yes, ma'am!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
After that day, Jack, Rich, and I were inseparable. There were rumors that I was dating Jack while sleeping with Rich, but we didn't care. Rich about killed PFC Ricks the one time he called Jack a cuck and wasn't just shitting around. We had lots of fun and I never got caught. Jack made sure of that. Not that I was sleeping around a lot, mind you, but I went on a few dates, mostly with college girls. I never risked dating a fellow W-M. While Rich and Jack were running cover for me, I couldn't count on any of them having similar arrangements. We also never went anywhere that was near the base. If I had a date, which was rare, it was always somewhere remote and out of the way... never any of the usual places the Hellcats or anchor-clankers might go. The only times we'd go places like the Warf or any place we could get seen it was the three of us, sometimes with a girl Rich was seeing, but never with a girl Jack was seeing. That wasn't often and never the same girl more than once, for any of us! By ninety-four, things got easier with 'don't ask, don't tell', but we kept up the pretense of Jack being my boyfriend because it just made things easier. For me, anyway. Most W-Ms got hit on all the time, but once it got around that Jack and I were an item, I was off limits. Grunts had no qualms about hitting on W-Ms if they we're seeing a civi or were even married to one, but they'd rarely turn on a fellow member of the Corps. I felt bad for Jack, though. It made his success rate with the ladies track nearly to zero. Even when it looked like maybe Jack had a shot at a terrific girl, something would always screw it up.
---
Jack was bored, waiting in the quiet of the library as Richard got yet another book on business management. Ever since he'd enrolled in Menlo Collage, Richard had spent all his free time studying for his night classes, which was why they were wasting the Saturday before Labor Day weekend in a library. Jack didn't care when Brooke was available, but today she had duty and he was bored out of his mind.
"Come on, Rich!" he whispered. "Haven't you found what you need yet?"
"No." Richard whispered back. "If you hate it here, why did you come?"
"Because you have the car!" he retorted quietly. Raising his voice to a low talk, he grumbled. "I'd get my own if I had any dough, but..."
"Shhhhhh!" the old man sitting across from them shushed him angrily.
Glaring back at the man with eyes crossed and lips pursed, Jack lowered to a whisper again. "Rich, this is no way to spend Liberty! Do you know how long it's been since we did something fun? Saw a movie? Went clubbing? On a date? You remember dates, right? With girls? Those soft, round, luscious things you want to earn all your riches for?"
Rolling his eyes, Richard tried to keep from laughing. "Jack, why don't you find a nice book and read for once." he whispered.
"They don't have nice books here! Only knowledge!" Jack quipped. Seeing that he was getting nowhere, he wandered through the library. After fifteen minutes of poking at books and putting them back, he turned a corner and literally bumped into a girl, sending the books she had loudly to the floor.
"Sorry!" he said, prompting people around them to shush him. Shushing them right back, he started to help pick up the books she'd been carrying that were now scattered around their feet. "Sorry!" he whispered. "Let me help!" As he did so, he got his first real look at the girl. She was blonde and uncommonly beautiful. Her hauntingly vibrant blue eyes caught him by such surprise that he stopped helping and just stared.
Taking the book that he held loosely in his hands as he crouched numbly, she glared at him. "Thanks!" she whispered. "But I can get it myself!"
Shaken back to awareness, Jack grabbed the last book and stood up. "Um... here!" he whispered, handing her the book as she stood and snatched it from his fingers. "Fancy meeting you here!" he joked. "You may not remember me, but I remember you!" he whispered to her as she tried to walk away, Jack following closely. "The name's Jack! Jack Dunning!" he held his hand out as she stopped and glared at him.
With her arms full of books, she was quite incapable of returning the offered hand. Instead she just glared at his hand until he lowered it. Whispering, she asked as she started toward her table again, "Well, Jack... Jack Dunning. Where was it we supposedly met?"
"My dreams!" he answered. "Only every one since the day I was born!"
Rolling her eyes at his bad pickup line, she looked askance at the seemingly crazy young man. "Then what's my name?"
Thinking quickly, he guessed, "Beauty? No, too obvious! Uh..."
She stopped and turned to stand in front of him. "Tell you what, lover boy." she whispered. "You tell me my name and I'll go out with you. Until then..." Leaving her sentence unfinished, she turned and walked away smartly.
Watching her depart, Jack was entranced. "Wow!" he whispered. Running off back to Richard, he skidded to a stop next to him. "Rich! Rich! You gotta check this out! I think I'm in love!" he whispered.
Not even looking up, Richard sighed. "So what's new?" he whispered back.
Undeterred, Jack started tugging on Richard's sleeve. "No seriously, Rich! This girl! She's..." His voice having raised to a low talk again, the old man once more shushed him. Turning to him, Jack whispered angrily, "Oh, hush yourself!" As the man moved to another table, Jack continued to pester his best friend. "Rich! Won't you at least come over and look? I need to figure out her name!"
"No!" Richard shouted quietly. "Now beat it, Jack! I have to get this down before Monday night or I'm gonna flunk!"
Frustrated by Richard's total lack of interest, he looked around helplessly and sighed. Finally sitting down next to him again, he leaned an elbow on the table with his fist against his cheek, trying to think of what her name might be. Realizing there was no way to know, he formulated a new plan. Tapping Richard on the shoulder as he stared off in the distance, a smile forming on his lips, he rose and whispered, "I'll see ya' 'round, Rich!" and quickly left.
Shaking his head, Richard tried to go back to his book. "He's gonna need me to rescue him again!" he said absently to no one, looking up embarrassedly when several people nearby shushed him.
Not seeing his best friend for the rest of the weekend, Richard was worried. When he got back to the Barracks on Sunday night, Jack was finally there. "Jack! Where you been? I was starting to think you went U-A!"
Jack had a smile on his face. "Naw! I'd never do that! Too easy to get caught and you never get good dates in Leavenworth."
"So where you been all weekend?" he asked, already having a good idea.
"Research, my boy! Research!" Jack smiled as he turned a chair around and straddled it backwards. "Remember that girl?"
"The one you're in love with this week?" he needled.
"That's the one!" he answered. "I followed her. Subtly! She's a Stanford girl!"
Looking up at Jack from shining his brass, Richard was stunned. "You... you followed her? Isn't that a little creepy, Jack?"
"No! See, here's the thing. She told me that if I can tell her what her name is, she'll go out with me! She invited me to look into her! It's fine!"
"Ask Brooke if she thinks it's fine. If she says it is, I'll agree." Richard said as he went back to his polishing.
"Here's the kicker, Rich!" he beamed. "I know her name! It's Heather Moore! She's a psych major in her junior year, twenty, five-five, one-ten, blonde, and has the bluest eyes you've ever seen!"
Looking up at Jack, Richard paused his work. "So? You make it sound like she's the greatest thing since sliced bread. What's the catch?"
"There is no catch!" Jack shook his head. "She's smart, beautiful, and I have a guaranteed date with her! I'm so confident, I think I'll let you tag along! There's a party she's going to on the fourth and I ganked an invitation. Wanna go? You can bring Brooke!"
"Speaking of Brooke, isn't it going to be a little hard dating Ms. Wonderful if you're already 'dating' Brooke?" he said in a more hushed tone.
"You're up, Rich!" Jack said slapping him on the back. "She's all yours! I've been keeping myself out of the game for three years. It's your turn to keep the field clear for Brooke while I take a turn at romance!"
"Jack?" Richard looked at his friend. "Have you even considered what you're gonna do in a couple years? I mean, we've already shipped over twice. You thinking of lifeing or are you a Terminal Lance?"
"Nah!" Jack shook his head dismissively. "I'm done after this cruise. When I didn't make the cutting score, I decided then. They might not even offer it. Nope, it's back to Pittsburgh for me! Only reason I haven't moved Mom close is that I knew I'd be going back soon. How about you?"
"Me? I've been busting my rump getting my degree!" he bragged. "After I graduate, I'm transferring to the First-Civ-Div and get me a nice cushy office job somewhere, maybe someplace like New York or LA! Something where the heaviest thing I have to hump is my checkbook!"
The two looked at each other, for the first time aware that in two years they would be going their separate ways after practically living in each other's pockets half their lives. Neither one said anything, but they both knew what the other was thinking. Finally, Richard broke the silence.
"Look Jack, you haven't done anything with your GI bill. Don't you want to go to college? Make something of yourself?"
"Me? Joe College?" Jack shook his head. "Please! I'll be twenty-five by the time I'm Outside! After college I'd be pushing thirty!"
"Forty, the way you study." Richard quipped.
"Ha, ha!" Jack stood up and paced the room. "Besides, what would I get a degree in? Women's Studies? No. No, I see myself maybe starting my own business. Maybe a car lot, or something."
"You? Run a car lot? You've never even owned a car!"
"Or a dry-cleaning place! That's what my old man did after the war!" He paused, his back to Richard. "I might just marry money." Jack smirked as he looked over his shoulder with a mischievous grin.
"So I take it then that this Heather Moore, or should I say the future Mrs. Heather Dunning, isn't hurting?"
"That's what people say." Jack resumed his seat next to Richard. "Story is, her folks were old money with a mansion in New Hampshire or Vermont or something and they both passed a year or so ago. I don't know the details yet, but..."
"What happened to your research? Or did you stop your investigation when you found out she was loaded?"
"Rich!" Jack stood up. "I'm insulted! I just felt that knowing too much would be bad! Wouldn't leave us anything to talk about on our first date!"
"And you know she's interested?" he asked dubiously.
"Rich, she told me to learn about her, and guaranteed me a date if I did! It's a sure thing!" he said, spreading his arms wide.
"Alright. I'll go along with the gag." Richard shook his head. "Just remember, you invited me, so I don't wanna hear it from you when she embarrasses you with Brooke and I there to witness it, or she passes on you to go for me!"
Jack patted Richard on the shoulder. "You're a good man, Rich! I'll name my second boy after you! The first will be Jack Junior, of course!"
"Of course!" Richard rolled his eyes and resumed his work.
Monday the fifth of September came and the three Marines managed to get a day of Leave together. When at last they parked in front of the strange house, Jack practically ran inside, leaving his friends to their own devices.
"Rich? You said this girl told him to look into her, and that if he did she'd date him?" Brooke asked. "Doesn't that sound a little..."
"...impossible? Weird? Crazy?" Richard finished for her. Laughing, he shook his head as he opened his car door. "Yeah. Something tells me I'm gonna be pulling his butt out of the fire again! No woman invites a guy to become her stalker!"
Brooke opened her door and the two climbed out. "Well, it is your turn to rescue him, Rich. Remember last time? I kept that thug from ripping Jack's throat out for hitting on his girlfriend!"
"I know." he said walking toward the door. "It'd be nice if Jack returned the favor once in a while, though!"
"You never need it, and he's always doing me the biggest favor anyone ever has, so I figure I owe him."
"Then you can take a double-turn." Richard suggested, opening the door for her. "Shall we see if he needs rescuing already?"
Brooke shook her head as she entered the room filled with loud music and louder people. Shouting, she answered, "It's early yet! He can't possibly have screwed it up this fast!"
Heather Moore slapped Jack as hard as she could, fury burning in her eyes. "You've been spying on me?" she shouted, seemingly loud enough that he thought Richard and Brooke might hear her from over by the front door.
Jack was dumbfounded. What he had thought was a sure thing had instantly dissolved into a disaster. "Look, Heather. I... I thought you wanted me to..."
She reached her hand back to slap him again when Jack stopped explaining and backed away. "OK! OK! I can take a hint!"
"Obviously not, you cretin!" she growled, this time her voice not carrying far. "I was politely brushing you off! So brush off!" As Jack walked away sadly and so obviously hurt, Heather genuinely felt sorry for him. Taken literally, she saw how her words could have been mistaken for a veiled offer, but the thought that he'd pried into her life enough to know she'd been raised in New Hampshire left her feeling she was better off without her dejected harasser.
Seeing Jack heading back towards him and Brooke, having heard the end of the all-too-brief conversation between he and Heather, Richard tried to console his best friend. "Hey, Jack..."
"Save it!" he shot back as he reached them. "Let's just get outta here!"
Determined to try and earn his buddy a second chance, Richard stopped him. "Hang on, Jack. Let me talk to her."
Jack waved at him dismissively. "Fine! You want her, be my guest!"
"No!" he replied, grabbing Jack's arm to stop his retreat again. "I mean for you! Lemme see if I can get you a second shot at her, a fair shake! You at least deserve that much!"
"Yeah?" he smiled at his best friend. "You think she might?"
"Only one way to find out!" he said, heading off towards where he saw she was sitting with a group of girls.
Heather was trying to put the whole thing out of her mind when she saw a man approaching her who took her breath away at first sight. Now this is more like it! she was thinking as he sat next to her. "Hi!" she said coyly, glad that she'd gotten rid of Jack just in time.
Coming over to her with the best of intentions, when Richard looked at her though, her deep gaze penetrating through to his bones, he sat beside her and smiled; Jack a distant memory. "Hi! I'm Richard, Richard Hargrave." He held out a hand and almost kissed hers when she took it daintily.
Feeling the heat flushing to her cheeks as he spoke, Heather's pulse pounded in her throat as he took her hand. "I... I don't think I've seen you around the college. Are you taking your post-grad?"
Shaking his head, Richard laughed lightly. "No! I don't go to Stanford! I'm studying business at Menlo while stationed at The Barracks in Alameda."
"Oh?" she inquired breathily. "I don't think I've ever met a sailor before!"
Richard's smile melted instantly. "I'm a Marine! Not a squid!"
"Oh! I... I'm sorry!" Heather flushed embarrassedly. "I think that's even more interesting!" she said, trying to salvage her faux pax.
Finding himself utterly unable to be angered at her ignorance, Richard's smile returned quickly. "That's OK! It's an honest mistake!"
"You're too kind!" she said demurely. Looking back up at him slowly, she couldn't help but return his smile. "So, how do you know Melody?"
"Who?" Richard asked innocently.
"Melody? The girl who's party this is?" Seeing his confusion, she smiled wickedly and asked, "Did you just crash or are you somebody's guest?"
Suddenly remembering how he'd gotten here and why, he was overcome with guilt. "Huh? Oh! Um... well..." He laughed, trying to find something funny about the situation. "Well... uh... see, here's the thing..."
Standing next to Brooke by the bar, Jack took a drink from his scotch and soda. "So how's it look?" he asked her. He'd asked Brooke to watch Heather and Richard for him so he wouldn't look too desperate. "Does it look like it's going the same way it did earlier?"
She didn't have the heart to tell him. "Well, no. It... it's going... um... OK." Sighing, she decided that the news was better told to him elsewhere. "Come with me!" she said, grabbing his hand and dragging him out the front door.
"So that's why I came over to talk to you." Richard sighed. "To... uh... see if you'd give him a second chance." he smiled at her.
The college girl bit her lower lip, uncertain what to do about it. "So, Jack got an invitation from Eddie, who got one from Melody, and you and your friend are here with him for...?"
"Moral support?" Richard half-answered. "Honestly, Jack is about as good a guy as they come. He and I have been best friends since high school." He sighed heavily. "And that's why I feel so bad."
She furrowed her brow at him. "Why?"
Scooting closer, he looked deeply in her eyes. "Because I don't think he's going to get a second chance. Is he?"
Her breath caught as she felt his knee touch hers. Flushing, she suddenly felt dizzy and out of breath. Almost giddy, she giggled, "Um... I... I don't think so!"
"Poor Jack!" Richard laughed lightly.
She nodded. "Poor Jack!"
"God damn, son-of-a-bitching, cock-sucking, mother..." Jack fumed around the front yard next to Richard's car. "I'm gonna kill that son-of-a-..."
"Jack!" Brooke tried to steady him. "You have to calm down! You're gonna cause a scene! There are kids in this neighborhood! Ease it down!"
Pacing like a caged animal, he fumed. "Some best friend! Every time I like someone, boom! There he is trying to take her for himself! God damn..." he censored himself and took a breath. "OK! Alright! Fine! He can have her! He deserves the stuck-up....! Ugh! I'm outta here!" Jack spat, starting to walk back down the street they'd come up.
"Jack!" Brooke called after him, but he only waved her off and kept walking. "Damn it, Rich! Why did you have to..." She put her hand on her forehead, trying to think what to do to salvage their nearly life-long friendship. Finally, she ran back in the house to look for Richard. She found him happily talking and holding Heather's hand when she came running up.
"Rich! You gotta come! Jack took off! I think he might go U-A! For real this time!"
Standing quickly as Heather did, he looked at the door. "Oh, crap! Jack!" Turning to her, he stammered, "Um... I... I gotta... uh..."
Practically dragging him to the front door, Heather didn't need explanation. "Come on! Let's go find your friend!"
The three piled into Richard's station wagon, Brooke sitting in the front with Richard behind the wheel. Heather took a seat in the back just as Brooke pointed back down the street. "He took off that way!"
Turning the car around, Richard sped down the street quickly.
"Richard!" Heather warned. "This is a residential street! Slow down!"
Backing off his pursuit, Richard slowed to the legal limit. "Sorry, I..."
"...you just want to find Jack. We know." Brooke finished for him. "So do I, but let's not kill anyone in the process! Ourselves included!"
Making their way down the street, Heather and Brooke looked down side streets while Richard drove a search pattern. After looking for half an hour, Richard returned to the party.
"Look, I'm sorry for all this." Heather apologized. "I... I guess I was sort of cruel to him."
"He has that effect on people." Richard excused as he parked out in front of the house again. "It's fine." Taking a breath, he got out and opened Heather's door for her.
Climbing out, she looked up at him. "Are you sure you wouldn't like my help to keep looking for him?"
"No." Richard shook his head slowly. "Jack'll do what he needs to do to cool off. He'll be back at The Bricks on time. I'm sure of that." He looked around the neighborhood. "I'm just worried about him is all. I've been doing it so long it's become a habit!" he laughed.
Laughing with him a moment before their mirth died, Heather took a chance. Reaching up, she pulled him into a kiss. Making it quick, she backed off and sighed. "Call me?" she asked. "Let me know he's alright?"
Collecting himself from the kiss, he smiled at her as he got back in the car. "I will. Promise."
After he got in, she came up to the window. "You'll give him my message?"
He nodded before he pulled away from the house, leaving Heather to watch them disappear into the distance.
Jack walked for hours. Eventually his anger melted away, replaced with a sick feeling, the same as the day Ox sucker-punched him or the day Wendy dumped him. He felt betrayed, but knew he had nothing to blame but his own hubris this time. Eventually, he found he'd walked back to the Barracks while not even being aware of it. By nine he was walking in through the front gate and headed toward his rack.
He undressed and hit the bed like a hammer, his body shaking it as he came to rest with a shudder. Closing his eyes, he heard movement from the foot of his rack. Turning in place, he looked down to see Richard standing there.
"Come to rub it in?" he growled.
"Nope." Richard said earnestly. "To apologize, and deliver a message. Two, actually, one from Brooke and one from Heather."
Turning over in his bed, he looked up at Richard. "Well?"
He stopped pacing and faced Jack. "Well, Brooke said to say you're an a-hole and she hopes you rot in the brig when they drag your sorry carcass in here tomorrow morning. You can tell her she lost our bet."
Jack chuckled once, then twice. "She should know better than to bet against you when it's about me! And the other?"
"Heather said to tell you that her offer still stands, the one she made to you in the library. She also said to tell you that she's sorry she reacted so badly, that she's willing to make it up to you, and to give you her phone number."
Sitting up in his rack so quickly he nearly bounced out of it, Jack looked at him in confusion. "Really? I mean, you and she didn't...?"
Richard looked his friend straight in the eyes. "Yeah, we did! We hit it off! Marvelously! But she still wants to give you your shot. I do, too."
Sitting back, Jack thought about it a moment. "Whoa! Dude! That's..." His words failed him as he considered what Richard was saying.
"It's a serious offer, Jack." he said. "She means it, and so do I. I honestly wish you the best. She... she'd be a lucky girl if she ended up with you. I mean it." He stuffed his hands in his front pockets, biting off the desire to push his friend aside and take Heather for himself. He'd never fallen so completely in love with a woman so quickly before; not like this. He'd swallow it and risk losing her for Jack's sake, though.
Looking deep within himself, Jack knew what he should do. "No." he said, turning over and lying back down in his rack.
"Jack! I mean it!" Richard half laughed. "I'm serious, bud! She's willing to give you a chance and I want you to take it!"
"Nope!" Jack said, turning back over to face the man standing over him. "No thanks. Call her and give her my regards."
Insulted that Jack would turn down the woman he found so alluring, Richard nearly barked back at him. "Why not? This afternoon you were..."
"This afternoon you weren't in love with her." Jack interrupted him.
Stepping back, almost as though Jack had slugged him, Richard was shocked. "In what?" he asked incredulously.
Standing up, Jack faced him. "You! In Love! With Heather! This afternoon! Do I need to draw you a logic diagram? Get you a sign language interpreter?"
"No!" Richard balked. "What in God's name makes you think..."
Walking up in front of Richard, Jack started ticking off his fingers. "One, you have never offered to step aside for me before, because you always knew the girl wasn't serious and I'd end up getting my heart broken all over again, which means Heather's the real deal, at least as far as you can see. Two, you spent enough time with her, I'd guess looking for me, that she got to know me enough through you that she's willing to give me another shot. Three..." he paused, his voice lowering. "I... I can see it in your eyes. You fell for her hard. Didn't you?"
Stunned, Richard nodded and looked down. "Yeah, I kinda did. And I feel like a total jerk for it!"
Turning away, Jack wandered. "Oh, and four, your lipstick's smudged."
Reaching up, Richard wiped his lips and looked at his fingers unconsciously.
Turning in place, Jack faced him. "Ah, ha! She did kiss you! Five! She feels the same way about you!" Seeing Richard's shocked expression, Jack smiled and pointed it him. "Gotcha!"
He couldn't help it. Richard burst out laughing and walked over to Jack. "You a-hole!" he said, wrapping him in a bear hug. Slapping Jack on the back, he backed off and shook his head. "I guess you know me pretty well. Better than me sometimes."
"I keep telling you, but you never listen." Jack shrugged. "You need me!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
The next day Rich called Heather and told her that Jack stepped aside, but Heather wouldn't have it. She insisted on a date with Jack and wouldn't take no for an answer. Jack said it was good, friendly and warm, but they quickly learned that he and Heather would never have worked out in the end. She was made for Rich and Jack could already see she was in love with him. Heather and Rich were inseparable after that. For about six weeks, every minute of Liberty Rich had was spent with her, leaving Jack and I to fumble around on our own. It wasn't until Rich's twenty-fourth birthday that Jack and I got to spend any time with him again, but by then it was a foursome. Rich was done dating and Jack was stuck as my 'boyfriend' for the interim. We went on a triple date once. Rich and Heather, Jack and... Marie I think her name was... and me and Julie. It was awkward because they were first dates for Jack and me, but Heather and Rich were a permanent couple, so I think it made our dates a little uncomfortable. We never did it again. By the end of the following year, Jack was in a bit of a depression. He was happy for Rich and Heather, but he'd begun to feel like he was never going to find anyone that would love him. It was shortly before Christmas ninety-five that I found myself in a position to repay all the help Jack had ever given me, plus interest.
---
Brooke leaned against a rack of cards while Heather was crouched next to another rack. "Come on, Heather! Just pick something and get it over with!"
Heather wouldn't be rushed. She wanted to get the perfect card to go with her gift of a Rolex this year. She'd decided on something sweet and loving, but nothing said just what she felt. "Brooke, if you want to speed things up, help me find a Christmas card for Richard!"
Standing up, she stretched and wandered around. "Heather, I can't pick your card to Rich! It would be... weird! And gross!"
Laughing at her commentary, Heather stood back up and stopped suddenly. Picking up a card, she read it quickly and smiled. "Found it!" she gushed, running over to Brooke with it.
Reading the card, Brooke stuck out her tongue. "Blech! Disgustingly sappy! It's perfect for you two! Can we go now?"
"Jealous, much?" Heather teased. "Come on! I still need a ride to the library so I can get the book I need for French Literature."
Driving Heather to the campus library, Brooke enjoyed driving her white Firebird she'd bought new the previous fall. Even though it was the first day of winter, she had the top down and they both enjoyed the sunny weather; a significant improvement from the devastating storm only ten days earlier.
When they got to the campus, Brooke opted to wait in the car while Heather went in search of her book. Some time later, while lying back in the reclined driver's seat, she heard a woman clearing her throat. Opening her eyes and peering over her sunglasses at her intruder, she smiled. "Can I help you?" Brooke asked, sitting her head up slightly.
"Possibly." the girl replied. "I... I don't mean to be overly inquisitive, but I couldn't help but notice your car has a military base sticker on it. Are you from the Naval Base or is this someone else's car? Your boyfriend's, maybe?"
Brooke had thought she'd heard it all when it came to subtle inquiries about her availability and sexuality, but this one took the cake. "No, it's mine. I'm a Marine stationed at Alameda NAS. Why do you ask?" She shifted in her seat to get more comfortable and expose a little more cleavage to the college girl.
"I... I was just wondering, could I ask you a few questions?" the girl asked. "I'm a psychology major and I have to do a dumb report on women in male-dominated occupations. Would it be alright? It would only take about ten minutes or so. It won't include your name or anything! Just an anonymous set of answers!"
Taking a deep breath, Brooke watched the girl's body language. She was shy, but cute. Her wavy red hair, green eyes, and fair complexion made for a sexy combination. Clearing her throat, she sat up. "Sure. Take a seat... I'm just waiting for a friend of mine to get a book."
She came around the car, opened the passenger door, and sat with her legs outside. "Thanks! Who's your friend? Are they a student here?"
"Her name's Heather, Heather Moore. Maybe you know her? She's a psych major, too."
Shaking her head, she looked down at her paper. "The name sounds familiar, but I can't place it. I'm new! Alright, first question. 'Are you ever made to feel inferior by any of the men in your occupation?'"
Laughing, Brooke tossed her head back. "That's half their job description, honey! I'm an Enlisted Marine, not a Girl Scout! But to answer simply, yes. My superiors, most of whom are male, make me feel inferior. I don't think it could work any other way, though!"
"Good point." she replied. Jotting down some notes, she sighed. "Alright, question two. 'Have you ever been sexually harassed in the workplace?' It means only in your current occupation where men are prevalent, not any previous job."
Brooke shook her head. "No, but I know it's happened to other W-Ms. Just not to me personally."
"W-Ms?" she asked innocently.
"Women Marines. Sorry, the jargon is unavoidable. I'm a third-gen Marine."
"I see." Taking more notes, she sighed heavily as she read the next question to herself before asking it. "Some of the questions are a little leading!" she commented. "Alright, question three. 'How often have you been passed over for advancement due to your gender?'"
Brooke nodded. "Just a little leading, but I can still answer it. Never. Next?"
The girl made notes and pressed on. "Question four. 'On the occasions you were passed over, were you offered the opportunity to advance if...'" She sat back. "OK, this is stupid! This isn't applicable to you! They just assume the answer to three is yes! We'll skip it!"
Noting that the girl was getting frustrated, Brooke reached over and touched her shoulder. Seeing her reaction, the Marine realized that maybe her first impression of the girl was incorrect. "It's fine, really!" she said, drawing her hand back. "If you want, you can continue. I know you have to do the paper, so maybe with my help you can still do it, just with a twist your professor wasn't expecting!"
The girl shook her head. "You're very nice, but... Ugh! They expect that every woman is being sexually harassed all the time! Half these won't even apply to you! There's one that asks if you could ever feel physically threatened in the normal course of your work!"
Brooke laughed loudly, the girl joining her after a moment. Finally, Brooke managed to get out, "It goes with the territory! Warning! If you become a Marine, people may try to kill you!" The two ladies were laughing so hard that neither saw Heather walk up.
"Is this a private joke?" she asked, making the two laugh even harder.
Finally getting control of herself, Brooke wiped a tear of laughter from her eye. "Sorry, Heather! You had to be there!" She turned to the girl. "Heather? This is..." Pausing, she stopped laughing. "Oh! I don't believe you ever said your name!"
The girl stood up, closing her notebook. "It's Erica, Erica Hargrave! Are you her... um... girlfriend?" She'd had suspicions about Brooke from her body language and the way the Marine had looked at her.
Siting up in her car, Brooke stopped laughing. "Wait a minute! Did you say Erica Hargrave? You wouldn't be Richard Hargrave's sister, would you?" she asked, stepping out and around her car.
Looking at the two women nervously, Erica stepped back. "Um... yes? Do you two know Richie?" She paused a moment and looked at Brooke. "He... When he's home for holidays, he's told us about a woman he serves with. Your name wouldn't be Brooke, would it?"
"Last I checked!" she answered. "Damn! This is just too wild!"
Erica slowly turned at look at the other woman with Brooke. "Wait a minute! H-Heather? Heather Moore?" Her eyes widened in sudden realization as she nodded with a smile. "Oh... my... God! Richie wrote me about you! He... he doesn't know that I got into Stanford or that Daddy's paying for my college yet! I only transferred here this semester!"
Heather looked at her and smiled. "Well this will be a big surprise for him, then! I've heard so much about you, Erica! I've been looking forward to meeting you for over a year!"
Leaning on her car, Brooke nodded. "I've been hearing about you for over four years! I expected you to be some mousy little girl! Rich talks about you like you're still twelve!"
Rolling her eyes, she looked at Brooke. "You know big brothers! They think little sisters are children forever!" Looking down, she cleared her throat and lowered her voice to just above a whisper. "Is... is Jack still around? I haven't seen him in years. When he gets vacation time, he never comes to visit with Richie."
"Marines get Leave, not vacation." Brooke corrected. "But yeah, Jack's still around. We hang out all the time! Doesn't Rich tell you about him?"
"Richie never talks about him at home." Erica shook her head sadly. "Jack and Mom don't get along, so Richie stopped talking about him years ago." She looked up at the two. "Is he doing OK? Does... does he have a... a girl?"
Heather and Brooke looked at each other with a knowing glance. Finally, Brooke suggested, "Why don't we go somewhere and talk a bit. It's about lunch time and I could use a few thousand Calories."
Nodding, Heather turned to Erica. "Do you have time? We don't want to get in the way of your class work."
"Oh, no!" Erica shook her head. "I can do this anytime! I have until middle of January to get it done, and lunch sounds divine!"
The three decided on a restaurant in walking distance, so very shortly they had a table and were sitting around and chatting like old friends.
Brooke looked down at her half-eaten burger, trying to formulate how to ask Erica what was on her mind. She'd been telling the girl about Jack for an hour and Erica never seemed to get enough, with hardly a word asked about her own brother. "Um... Erica? Can I ask you something?"
"Anything, Brooke!" Erica answered, taking a bite of her Caesar salad.
"Um... do you like Jack?" she asked delicately.
Erica flushed with embarrassment. She swallowed her bite hard and nodded shyly. "I... I've been in love with Jack for over ten years!" Turning sad, she sighed forlornly. "But he never noticed me. To him I'm just..." she sighed again, "...just Buttons!"
"Buttons?" they both asked together.
"Jack's old nickname for me." she answered with a wistful smile. When she saw they didn't get it, she explained. "Red hair? Red Buttons? Cute-as-a-button? It's OK, I didn't get it at first, either. But see? It's just like Richie! Jack will only ever see me as... as just a little girl!"
Looking Erica over, Brooke shook her head. "Speaking as an expert in the attractiveness of women, if you'll pardon me saying so Erica, if Jack saw you now?" She wolf whistled quietly. "You're no little girl anymore!"
Nodding, Heather agreed. "I may not be so inclined, but I can tell that you would be serious competition if you and I were both interested in Jack!"
Perking up, Erica smiled gaily. "Really? Do you think Jack..." Swiftly, she dismissed the idea. "No! It's stupid! Why should someone like Jack want someone like me?" speaking Jack's name almost reverently.
"Would you like a chance, though?" Brooke asked before she took a bite.
"If you think it would be alright! When can I see him? Is he busy tonight?"
"Slow down!" Heather advised with a laugh. "First of all, you need to appear not so anxious. All men get suspicious when a woman takes too much of an interest. They think she wants something out of him."
Brooke shoved a half-eaten bite of her burger into her cheek. "Besides, Jack doesn't have Liberty coming until New Years Eve, and that's only a forty-eight with the first half covering for Rogers." Seeing Erica's confusion she explained, "He has the weekend off, but Saturday he's covering for Corporal Rogers, so all he gets is Sunday."
"Oh." Erica said disappointedly, but she perked up quickly. "Does he have plans for New Years, do you know?"
Looking at Erica, Brooke swallowed. "Jack and I will be at our New Years party that night. You can come if you like!" She noticed Heather giving her a look, but Brooke shook her head subtly.
"Alright! Is it formal or casual?" Erica was hoping for something romantic.
"Casual... Jeans and shirt kind of thing." Brooke answered. "Whatever's comfortable. It's just a New Years house party. You twenty-one?"
Erica slumped back in her seat. "I... I won't be until January ninth."
Brooke shrugged. "Close enough!" she smiled. Glancing at her watch, she winced. "Damn! It's already fourteen hundred! I gotta get back! Look, call me and I'll give you the details." She grabbed Erica's notebook, scribbling her number in one of the margins. "Sorry, Heather! You're gonna have to bum a ride from someone else or cab-it back to your place!" Heading for her car, she heard Erica running after her. Stopping just outside the restaurant, she was surprised when Erica hugged her and kissed her on the cheek.
"Thank you so much, Brooke! Oh, and thank you for your service, too!"
Stunned for a moment, she cocked an eyebrow at Erica. "You know, when you first came up to me, I was sure you were hitting on me. I was actually a little disappointed when I figured out you weren't." She smiled at the girl after a moment. "Now I'm glad you weren't! See, I couldn't figure what to get Jack for Christmas this year. He's in so much trouble when he sees you!"
"Why?" Erica asked innocently.
"Because, he doesn't stand a chance against you! You being at the party is gonna be my present to you both! Merry Christmas!"
"Merry Christmas..." Erica replied confusedly as Brooke ran for her car.
With New Years Eve approaching, Erica was franticly trying to pick the perfect outfit. "Too casual, too obvious, too dressy... Ugh!" she screamed. Dialing Brooke's number, she waited for her to answer.
"Maintenance Shop, Hathaway." Brooke answered.
"Brooke? This is Erica. Is this a bad time?"
"No!" she replied happily. "What can I do for you?"
"Do you have time to come over and help me pick something for Sunday? I can't figure out what to wear and it's driving me crazy!"
Laughing, it took a moment for Brooke to compose herself. "Look, whatever you wear will be fine! He won't be looking at your clothes!"
"Brooke!" she whined. "I need your help! Please? This is really important to me! I just have to get it right!"
"Alright! Alright! I can't come over until Saturday, though." She heard the young woman squeal with delight. "So I'll see you then!"
When Brooke finally arrived Saturday afternoon, Erica had narrowed her choices down to three outfits: a green satin evening gown, a little black dress, and tight jeans with a T-shirt and white see through jacket.
Holding each up to herself, Erica looked at Brooke. "OK, so which one? The green dress, the black one, or just jeans?"
Pursing her lips, Brooke thought about it seriously, using everything she new about Jack and her own sense of attractiveness, she nodded. "OK, the green dress is right out. You'd look beautiful in it, but this isn't Prom, it's a house party. That leaves the dress or the jeans."
"OK, so which one makes me look hotter?" Erica asked directly.
Laughing, Brooke shook her head. "Jack isn't looking for hot! He probably won't even notice your outfit. All he'll see is you! Of course, I'm also biased. I don't care for dresses, but I know Jack and..." Looking at the two options, she pointed at the coordinate set. "Jeans! Don't get me wrong, you'd look smokin' in that dress, but the casual look will draw more attention to your face and..." She trailed off and blushed slightly.
"My chest?" Erica finished for her.
"Yeah! That!" she said, glad to not have to say it out loud about Richard's sister. "Seriously though, with an outfit like that you really need to hit your hair out of the park to dress it up." Picking at Erica's hair, Brooke hummed quietly. "Well, you could hit it with highlights, really bring out the color, use a curling solution and set and spray, light hold since you got fine hair, Yeah!" She looked at Erica. "I don't think any of the salons around town will have any openings this close to New Years, though."
Erica's hopes sagged. "You're right! I... I didn't think to make an appointment for one!" She dropped onto her bed feeling hopeless.
"So that's why I'm going to do you up myself!" Brooke smiled.
Erica sat up eagerly, but with a confused look. "You?"
"Don't act so surprised!" Brooke said defensively. "Mom was a beautician! She taught me everything she knows about it and I even worked in her salon as a beautician myself for most of a year. She figured someday it might come in handy, and it looks like today's the day!" Brooke sat next to Erica on her bed. "Between you and me, I think she figured it would give me a backup career because she didn't think I could 'Pack the Gear' in the Corps!"
Leaning over, she hugged Brooke. "You're the best!" After a moment, she felt the older woman stiffen. "Oh! I'm sorry!" she said embarrassedly.
Brooke took a breath and stood up. "It's fine, Erica! It's nothing! It's just... I haven't had a date in a while is all, and... well... you're cute, OK?" Letting out a breath, she turned to her. "...and taken. Very taken if I read you right! Are you sure that we're talking about the same Jack? Jack Dunning? Short guy? Skinny? Thinks he's funny?"
"He is funny!" Erica laughed. "He's been making me laugh since the first day I met him!" Turning sullen, Erica looked at the floor. "I think the only time he didn't make me laugh was the time he was in the hospital when I thought he was going to die." Her smile returning, she looked up at Brooke. "Then he woke up and the first thing he did was to make me laugh again!"
"Don't think I've heard this story." Brooke noted as she sat back down. "What happened to him?"
Erica started to tell a brief version, then found herself needing to backtrack through it, finally just telling the whole thing. "So I went to see him every day. Daddy told me that talking to him might help, so I did. I talked to him about school, about my friends, about everything I could think of! I even did my homework out loud next to him! And every day before I went home, I... I'd tell him I loved him, even though he would probably never know it."
Her mind a jumble of thoughts, Brooke found the story finally filled in some missing pieces to the puzzle that was Jack Dunning.
Taking a breath, Erica smiled. "And then on the last day, just after I said 'I love you', I saw him move! Eight weeks of talking to him every day and I finally saw him move! Oh, Brooke! You know what the first thing he said was? He told me, 'Ouch!' so it would make me laugh! I wanted to kiss him right then!"
Laughing, she looked at the younger girl. "Wait, how old would you have been then? Thirteen?"
"Fourteen." Erica blushed. "I... I tried to kiss him twice more before he left home. By then I was almost fifteen, and after my sixteenth birthday I wanted so much to just run away to California, find him, and marry him!"
"What stopped you?"
"Daddy." Erica said sadly. "Mom knew for longer, ever since I was thirteen, but Daddy figured it out the day Richie left home. He... after they left... he took me aside and I told him how I felt about Jack, how I've always felt about him. He held me and let me cry in his shoulder because I didn't get to say goodbye to him. Daddy told me if I ran away to be with him, I'd be on my own, but if I worked hard in school and got into college, he'd pay to send me to a college that was close enough to Jack that I would have my chance!"
She stood up proudly. "So here I am! I wasn't in a rush though, I wanted to do it right. I graduated, got accepted to Stanford, but I went to two years of Community College first. Getting a lot of core classes out of the way there meant Daddy could afford two years at Stanford! Pretty smart, huh?"
Brooke nodded. "Smarter than me! I won't get started with college until I'm Outside in two years!"
Sighing at the thought of seeing Jack the next day, Erica's expression became dreamy and far away.
"Wow! You've got it bad, girl!"
"Don't I know it!" she giggled. "I love him so much, Brooke! I just have to try! So you'll help me?"
She smiled. "When I get through with you, Jack won't know what hit him!"
Turning around, Heather smiled as she saw the three people she was waiting for enter. Making her way to the door, she saw Richard notice her approach and her heart fluttered with anticipation.
"Richard! I'm so glad you could make it!" she said as she got close enough for him to hear.
He smiled as he saw her approaching. Removing his cover, Richard ran his free hand through his short-cropped red hair. "Hey, beautiful! Couldn't leave you alone! You might come to your senses and realize you could do way better than me!"
Heather smiled coyly as she wound her arms around his waist. "Better than you? Who? Adonis? Apollo? John Wayne?"
Jack peered around him, having been standing next to him and being quietly ignored by the two lovebirds. "Ah, come on! This jarhead? I just don't get why you threw me over for that! What do you see in him when there's me to be had!"
Brooke tapped him on the shoulder. When Jack turned and faced her, she looked him up and down, then did the same with Richard, and simply shook her head. "Sorry Charlie, but even I can tell he's got you beat."
Jack, ever the comedian, took off his cover and held it to his heart. "Brooke! My sweetness! Say it ain't so!"
Pushing past Jack and snaking around Richard, Brooke smiled and hugged Heather. "Hey, beautiful! Still sure I can't tear you away from this clown? I can really make it worth your while!" She arched her eyebrows at Heather in a comically seductive way.
"You make an awfully tempting offer, Brooke..." she said in her low throaty voice. Releasing her and returning to Richard, she hooked an arm through one of his. "...but alas my heart is already spoken for."
Jack turned to his best friend. "Say Rich, you wouldn't mind if Heather took a little break from you, would you? Just a short one? Like say for an hour? Oh, I don't mean for myself, but think of poor Brooke!"
Turning to his best friend, Richard smirked at him. "Yeah, I know who you're looking out for, Jack."
Pleading as the four made their way through the other guests, Jack begged, "Oh, come on, Rich! Give a guy a break! Just let them go upstairs, alone, for ten minutes! I swear, you can even handcuff me to the front door! I just wanna know it happened!"
Brooke slugged Jack in the arm hard enough to bruise. "Can it, clown! I'm not your personal masturbation material."
"OK, OK. You know I was only kidding around." Turning to Heather, Jack smiled sincerely. "So how've you been?"
She put her other arm through Jack's as they walked slowly. "Can't complain, Jack." Thinking of how to segue into what Brooke wanted to talk about, she asked innocently, "Seeing anyone?"
He jerked his thumb at Brooke and Richard. "No one but these two yahoos. Alas, you were my last and final hope. My heart can never love another!"
Smiling, Brooke hoped to not give too much away. "Well, that's too bad. I was hoping you could help me with a little problem."
His smile melted immediately. "What's her name?"
Laughing, Heather reached the end table where she'd put her drink and the ones she'd already gotten for the trio. "Oh, Jack! Here I thought I'd ruined you for all other women!"
He nodded. "True, true, but what's her name, Brooke? Her name!"
Looking at him, Brooke smiled. "Her name's Erica. She's sweet, but shy. I met her while waiting for Heather at the campus library. I kind of got my signals crossed and thought she was hitting on me, but she was really just wanting to ask about my service. She was doing some psychology paper on the effect of women in predominantly male occupied professions."
Wincing as he picked up a beer bottle, he opened it, and handed it to her. "Please! Not another she-woman man-hater! I don't care how cute she is, they're more trouble than they're worth! You sure she wasn't hitting on you?"
Taking a drink, Brooke shook her head. "Positive. And she's not a left-wing wacko feminist, either. Her professor probably is, so it's the assignment she got, but she's actually quite nice, loves the armed forces, and even thanked me for my service."
Shaking his head as he took his own beer, Jack swigged it. "Then her old man's probably a swabbie at the base."
While Brooke laughed, Richard, who'd not been listening to the conversation, asked, "What about swabbies?"
Taking another drink, Jack grinned. "Nothing, Rich. Just go back to ogling your girlfriend."
Picking up his own beer, Richard glared at him. "I wasn't ogling her, I was admiring her beautiful eyes!"
Nudging him in the shoulder, Jack quipped, "Sure, sure, Rich. Increase your scanning elevation about twenty-five degrees to find her eyes."
His comment brought a laugh to the three and a blush to Heather's cheeks before Brooke turned and looked toward the door and checked her watch.
Noticing the action, Jack shook his head. "Oh, no! You didn't! Brooke! Say it ain't so! You set me up without even asking?"
She shrugged as she took another drink. "You'll love her, Jack. I swear."
He nodded. "Uh-huh. How many eyebrows does she have?"
"Three, one for each eye." Brooke smiled sweetly. "But you'll never notice because the hump on her back will draw all your attention." Almost sensing more than hearing the front door open over the clamor of conversations and the music, she turned and smiled when she saw Erica look into the throng of partygoers. Handing her beer over to Heather, she didn't even look back. "Excuse me." she said as she headed for the door.
Thinking she might've come to the wrong address before she spotted Brooke coming toward her, Erica smiled and embraced her. "Hi! I thought I got the wrong place. This is your party?"
Slinging her arm over Erica's shoulders, Brooke grimaced. "Not exactly my party, but I was invited, so the invitation is yours as well. Come on!" She leaned in close to whisper, "Keep calm, girl!"
Making their way through the crowd, Brooke walked toward the trio with her guest. Heather and Richard were looking at each other with stars in their eyes; Richard's back turned to their approach.
Jack was the only one who saw them coming. The two getting closer, his heart skipped a beat. Suddenly the room seemed very quiet, the noise and laughter seeming to fade into the background. He wasn't even seeing Brooke anymore, just the girl she was with. She was thin, but not skinny, with well-rounded hips and bust and a narrow tapering waist. The T-shirt she wore under a see-through white jacket emphasized her gracious curves, and her jeans covered long legs that Jack could tell were well formed and sexy. Her shoulder-length red hair bounced with every step, framing her beautiful face and haunting green eyes.
For her part, Erica saw Jack at the same moment and her breath caught. It wasn't his looks that had always taken her breath away. It was him. Most especially now, with a room full of half naked women surrounding her Jack, his eyes were locked on her and only her as though she, Erica Hargrave, were the best looking woman in the room.
Brooke stopped in front of him. "Jack? This is Erica." Seeing the two staring into each other's eyes and not even noticing her, Brooke pursed her lips. "Well, I can see you two don't have any further need of me." she said as she turned toward Richard and Heather, trying keep them distracted to give the two a moment alone in a crowded room.
Erica spoke first. "Hi."
"Um... hi!" Jack swallowed hard. Gathering his composure, but still unable to tear his eyes away from hers, he stammered as he held out his hand. "Jack, Jack Dunning. Lance Corporal, USMC."
She smiled and took his hand gently, only just then realizing that he didn't know who she was. "Erica, Erica Hargrave. Student. Stanford." Her eyes smiled along with her lips, but she could feel her hand nervously sweating in his.
Just then Jack heard from behind him, "Erica!?"
The young woman's eyes were torn away from Jack's enchanting stare when she heard the one voice that had been catching her attention her entire life. Looking over Jack's shoulder, she saw her brother looking at her in sheer astonishment. "Richie!? Brooke didn't say you were going to be here!"
Jack was confused as her full name hadn't even processed in his mind yet. In point of fact, Jack hadn't done much actual thinking since he first saw her. Suddenly, it all dawned on him, his eyes grew wide, and he looked at her again. "Erica... Hargrave? But... Rich's Erica?" What he remembered of her was the image of a little girl. Now before him stood a vision of lovely young womanhood.
Her brother pushed Jack aside. "What are you doing here, Erica? You're not twenty-one yet! You can't be here!"
Brooke halfway interposed between the siblings. "She's my guest, Rich! And she turns legal in like a week, so back off!"
"That's OK, Brooke." Erica's eyes flared. "I can see I'm not going to be allowed to have any fun here tonight. Maybe you can take me to another party! I can be your date!"
Pulling Richard aside, Jack tried to convince him to let her stay. "Listen, Rich! Come on, man! Let it be! If she stays here, you can keep an eye on her, and so can Heather, Brooke, and I, right? If she leaves, God knows what trouble she could get into! Think, man!"
Turning back to his sister, Richard lowered his gaze. "Look, Erica. I'm sorry. Just forget I said anything, OK? I... I overreacted. Please stay." He looked up at her as he finished his plea.
Her fury at still being treated like a child by her older brother melted quickly. Never one to carry a grudge long, she eyed him suspiciously. "Fine! But I don't want Sergeant Ramrod killing my good time, is that clear?" She poked him in the chest as she finished.
Raising his hands defensively, Richard backed away. "I give! I give! Why don't I get you a beer?"
"I'll get it!" Jack offered, his voice nearly cracking comically. Turning to Erica, he smiled. "Don't move a muscle, my angel! I'll be back to worship the ground you walk on in a flash!"
Erica looked to Brooke and her brother with a wistful smile as Jack ran to the bar. "Isn't he funny?"
Brooke tousled her hair. "Unfortunately, looks aren't everything."
"Don't let his outward clownish charm fool you, sis." Richard warned. "He's still the same Jack Dunning you've known for years."
Biting her lower lip, Erica swayed gently. "He always seemed really sweet to me."
"The word you're looking for is 'desperate'." Brooke said as she took another drink. "We call him Corporal Strikeout for a reason."
Erica shook her head, inwardly hopeful. "Doesn't do well with the ladies then?"
"He does fine at first." Heather interjected. "But once girls stop laughing at his jokes, his lack of things like a car or money, and thereby his ability to take them out, tends to make them lose interest quickly."
Furrowing her brow, Erica fumed. "Well that's awfully shallow of them!" Pausing, she asked, "Is he very bad with money?"
"Not really." Brooke shook her head. "He's just overly generous. He sends most of his pay to the place that's taking care of his mom."
Her heart melted, remembering the few times she'd met Mary Dunning and how torn up Jack had been about moving her into a home before he'd left Pittsburgh. "Oh! That's so sweet!"
"Yeah, other girls think its sweet too." Richard smiled. "Until it's time for their second date and he still can't afford to take them anywhere, let alone have a car to take them in."
She slapped her brother in the chest. "You know, you could be a little more generous with your dough back home, Sergeant! Daddy's not getting any younger, and he's about killing himself trying to put me through school!"
He nearly choked on his beer. "Hey! I send what I can! More than Jack!"
His sister crossed her arms. "But he makes less! I bet he leaves less to spend on himself than you do!"
"You're right, he does!" Heather nodded. Turning to Richard, she smiled as she draped her arms over his shoulders and around his neck. "You really should help your family more, Richard. Your money doesn't impress me!"
"Good lord!" Brooke rolled her eyes. "If this gets sweeter, I'm gonna barf!"
Nearly running back to the foursome, Jack handed Erica a beer and smiled. "Here! My treat, my beauty!"
Nodding at Erica, Brooke joked, "If she's Beauty that makes you The Beast."
Putting the drink down, Erica smiled. "That's very sweet of you, but you don't need to buy me drinks! I think I'd like to stay clear-headed." Slipping her arm into Jack's, she looked around. "Is there someplace quiet we could talk?"
"You could take him upstairs!" Brooke smirked.
"Brooke!" Richard barked as he nearly turned white, knowing what most couples went upstairs to do. "Over my dead body!"
Erica stiffened her back. "Is that so, Richie?"
Lowering his voice desperately, he leaned in toward his sister's ear. "Are you crazy? Do you know what Mom and Dad would do to me if they found out I let you 'go upstairs' with Jack?" he emphasized with air quotes. "I'd never live to see morning! Mom'd kill me over the phone!"
Erica tilted her nose up. "Well, Mom and Dad aren't here, Richie! So unless you want me to just leave and take Jack somewhere more private, he and I are going to go upstairs!" She paused to let her brother squirm. "...and talk!"
At that, Erica took her brother's beer, took a swig from it, handed it back to him, and practically dragged Jack toward the staircase.
Looking back at his best friend, Jack just shrugged. "What can I do, Rich? Buttons' got me hooked!"
Richard looked over at Brooke as the two disappeared up the stairs. "What the hell, Brooke? You set my sister up with Jack?"
"Would you rather I set her up with Corporal Strikeout, or have her end up with someone like you, Sergeant Trouser Snake?"
Heather turned his head to face her. "Relax, darling. I'm sure she's perfectly safe with Jack. Now would you mind not thinking about your sister and turn your attention back to me? It's kind of creepy if I kiss you while you're thinking about your sister."
"Ha!" Brooke busted out laughing. "Maybe that's why he's so protective!"
He pushed Brooke's shoulder. "Cram it, Brooke! That's not even funny! I'm just looking out for her is all!"
Once more Heather turned his head back towards her. "I'm over here, dear!"
As he finally returned his focus back to his girlfriend, Brooke sighed and took another drink. "Great job, Brooke." she said to herself as she looked up the stairs where Jack and Erica had gone and then to Heather and Richard starting to dance. "You've managed to help find love for everyone but you."
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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I spent my next Liberty with Erica. She talked while I listened and messed with her hair. I learned a lot about Jack, things he never told me. I understand why he'd kept it to himself, though. He'd endured so much pain, it's amazing he was only as nuts as he seemed to be! No one want's that to show. I learned a lot about Rich, too. She didn't talk as animatedly about him as she did Jack, but she knew all his secrets! I don't know what it is about being a beautician, but women will bear their souls to us the way guys do with a bartender. They tell us things they won't even tell their shrink! For Jack's part, he was just so damnably, blissfully, innocently, ignorant of Erica's feelings toward him it was hard to watch! It wasn't that Jack didn't see her that way because she was younger, but because of something much more basic. She was his best friend's sister, and that made her almost like his own. It's a little creepy if you think too hard about it! Jack wasn't one to look a gift horse in the mouth, though. Erica loved him, and had loved him through some of the worst times of his life. He wasn't about to let that get away, no matter who she was.
---
Following Erica up the stairs, Jack was in a bit of a daze. He had a hard time reconciling that the girl ahead of him was 'Buttons'; the girl who was always there. Heading into an empty bedroom, she turned on a light and pulled him in, closing and locking the door behind her. Jack gulped nervously as she did.
"Do you know how long I've waited for this, Jack?" she asked, moving to him slowly as he tried backing away anxiously.
Smiling weakly with a quiver in his voice, Jack tried to humor his way out of whatever it was he'd gotten himself into. "Few minutes? An hour? What exactly are we talking about, here?" Downstairs he'd been happy to make Richard squirm by hitting on her, and honestly that's all he thought it was, Erica messing with her brother, but when he hadn't known who it was that Brooke had set him up with, he'd been mesmerized by her. Now that they were alone and he knew who she was, there was no one to impress but her, and he realized she knew him too well for false bravado. His knees hit the back of the bed as he continued to back away from her, causing him to fall back and sit.
Slowly, Erica walked to him, her hips swaying to draw his attention. Smiling that she could make him this nervous, she settled her mind and desires and stopped in front of him. "First, there's one thing I want more than anything, Jack. Something I've waited years to do!" Pulling him up to stand again, she wrapped her arms around him and tucked her chin over his shoulder. "I've missed you!" she almost cried.
Relief washed over him as he hugged his Buttons in return. "I... I missed you too, Buttons! Erica! Sorry!"
"It's OK, Jack!" she laughed. "You can call me Buttons! I don't mind much, anymore!" She pulled back from her hug and regarded him. "I've grown up, though!"
"So I noticed!" Jack complimented her. He still could hardly believe that the stunning woman in front of him was the same girl he'd nearly trampled more than a decade ago. Half laughing, he couldn't take his eyes off of her. "You look, amazing!"
Guiding the both of them to sit next to each other on the stranger's bed, Erica smiled and blushed. "Thanks! That means a lot coming from you!"
"Me?" he asked confusedly. "What's so important about my opinion?"
"You really don't know, do you?" she sighed lovingly.
Trying to figure out what she meant, the words she'd said sparked a memory of the day he'd woken up from the coma. His eyes wrinkled up in memory of the pain. He'd slowly begun to regain consciousness, following the sound of the voice, and after all this time the words finally started to make sense.
"So anyway, that's all I've been doing in school. Just trying to get through each day while Mom's at Aunt Edina's is hard enough without all the kids in my classes asking me how Richie got put in jail. I hate him for what he did to you, but even so, I don't like him being in so much trouble. I... I guess that's all. I love you so much, Jack. You really don't know, do you? I wish I could tell you, but I guess you'll never know."
"You were in the room with me, when I woke up." he commented. "I heard a voice, I mean, before I was really awake." He paused and his eyes went wide. "It said... No! No, you said, 'I love you'!" Even as he said the words, a thousand memories flooded his brain. Every time he'd seen Erica, from the first day they met all the way up until the day before he and Richard had left for North Carolina, and it all started to make sense.
"Erica, how long..." he began to ask.
"Since forever!" she interrupted with a happy note in her voice.
"I... I wish I'd..." He stopped as Erica put a finger on his lips.
"It wouldn't have mattered, Jack. Back then I was too young for you." She looked down as she spoke, then looked into his eyes. "But not anymore!" she smiled.
Swallowing hard, Jack looked into her happy eyes. "Erica, I... I care for you, a lot! Hell! I love you! You're my Buttons! My miracle girl! But... but you're Rich's sister!"
Scooting next to him until their hips touched, she lowered her voice to a sultry whisper. "But I'm not your sister, Jack. I love Rich, don't get me wrong, but..." She gathered her courage to say the words she'd spoken so many times, but never to his face. "I... I love you, Jack! I think I always have! From that first day you knocked me down! I think I always will!"
Stunned at hearing the words spoken out loud, Jack could feel his heart race. His ears rang with an overload of emotions. He felt lightheaded, dizzy, and just like he was thirteen all over again and lying in a pile of spilled papers. "Erica..." was all he managed before he could no longer formulate words.
Wrapping her arms around his shoulders and leaning forward around in front of him, she pulled him to her. Wanting this moment to last, she moved so slowly that at times she felt like she could hear her muscles contracting. Her lips quivered as she anticipated what she'd wanted for so long.
Slowly, tenderly, she touched her lips to his. A wave of feelings washed over her, threatening to drown her in them. Desire, happiness, longing, hope, fear, need, joy, and dread all jumbled into a tangle of emotions that made her cry both tears of joy and sadness at the same time.
Jack was so overcome with mixed emotions he didn't know what to do. He wanted to kiss her more deeply, but he also wanted her to stop. He wanted to push her back on the bed and ravage her, but he also wanted to run. He wanted to hold her and feel her body against his, but he also wanted to push her away. He wanted to see her in the throes of passion, but he also wanted to see her running from him. In the end he decided that all he could do was sit there and let her do what she needed, but before he realized it, he found himself kissing her in return, and liking it far more than he felt he should.
Slowly pulling away, ending their kiss, she sighed in a tearful whisper full of hope and dread. "So long! I've wanted to do that, for so long, Jack! I... I love you!"
Seeing the tears running down her face, he reached up, cupped her face in his hand, and wiped them away with his thumb. She turned her head slightly and kissed his hand gently, her eyes closed as tears fell. She sobbed; crying into his hand with all the pent up emotion in her heart until she felt it would never end. He in turn drew her to him, softly tucking her eyes against his neck and shoulder as she wrapped her arms around him so tight she felt she might crush the life out of him. Holding her gently, Jack just ran his hands along her back, trying to comfort her.
When at last her emotions were spent, she pulled back and wiped her face soaked with tears. "S-Sorry, J-Jack. I..."
"Shhhhhh." he quieted her. "It's alright!" Pulling her back into his arms, he just held her. "I've got you, and I'm never letting you go."
Erica slowly pulled away from him with shock in her eyes and her mouth hanging open speechlessly.
Finally, he half-smiled at her. "Well, until I gotta go to the bathroom that is!"
Her look of shock at his words melted into a grin of pure joy. "Jack!" she laughed. "You...! You...!"
He looked at her with a dumb expression. "Well what do you expect! You fell in love with me, didn't you?" he said smiling. "You think I was gonna let comedy gold like that slip by unused?"
She threw her head back in utter hilarious joy. "Jack! God, I love you!" She closed on him again, this time kissing him hard, needfully, and passionately. Her hands wound up through the short crop of hair at the base of his neck, pulling him into her with a ferocious desire. Her lips parting, she felt his do the same, their tongues touching and sending spikes of pleasure through her with such strength that she jumped in fright of their intensity.
Their kiss slowed until finally she felt the hunger ebb. She knew it would return, so she basked in the happiness of the moment. Smiling, she pressed her forehead against his. "Thank you!" was all she could say.
Chuckling giddily, Jack felt like he'd just inhaled a tank full of laughing gas. "My God, Buttons! That was intense!"
Nodding against his brow, she composed herself and slid away from him knowing she needed the space to have coherent thought.
Feeling her move away, it suddenly felt like someone was ripping him in half. He started to move towards her again until he felt her outstretched hand stop him. Looking at her with a look that was equal parts pain, desire, and confusion, he forced himself to back away until she lowered her hand.
"Whew!" she breathed out. "You have no idea how hard it was to stop you, Jack! Do you know how badly I want you right now? How long I've ached for this day?"
Composing himself, he drew a breath and exhaled slowly. "Right. Thinking. I can do that!" He looked up at her and grinned his half-smile, forcing her to wince as though she'd been pricked by a needle.
"Jack!" she begged. "Now stop it! Please? I... We need to talk, OK?"
Standing up, Jack walked the room slowly. "OK. I... I know we do. I can do that."
"Can you be serious? Just for a little while?" she asked hopefully.
"That's a pretty tall order, Buttons..." he joked. Forcing himself to push aside his humor, he grabbed the chair that sat in front of the stranger's desk and straddled it backwards. "OK. So let's talk. Seriously."
Erica took a breath again and looked at him. Seeing his funny face bent into seriousness almost hurt her physically, but she needed to know. "Jack, I... I've been in love with you a long time. I... I need to know if you... if you feel anything towards me. If you ever have."
"I love you, Erica." Jack sighed. "I have for years, but, I... I never thought..." He hated himself for not seeing it all sooner. Standing quickly, he threw the chair to the floor and screamed at the ceiling. "God, why! You had the chance to clue me in! Why'd you let us suffer!?"
Coming down from his rage, he remembered his eternal drifting and his self reflection; the millions upon millions of things that happened to him that had brought him to this point in his life where he could feel the utter elation of Erica's love for him. His fury spent, he chided himself for challenging God's wisdom, for presuming to think he could see all ends, and for thinking that he knew better than God that things would have been better if he'd known sooner.
We still would have been just as separated. The needs of our lives dictated that. he realized. I would have known, and she would have known that I knew. Who knows how that knowledge, too soon in our lives, would have twisted our love into something it was never supposed to be? Full of angst, longing, despair, anger, and hate towards one another for not throwing our futures away and running into one another's arms. Finally, he just laughed and fell to his knees.
Erica didn't know what to make of Jack's outburst. Seeing him fall made her run to his side in spite of her fear. "Jack! Are you..."
Unable to help himself, he laughed. He laughed until he cried, and then he just cried. Feeling Erica take him in her arms the way he had done for her, he cried like never in his life. The pain and anguish of a lifetime poured out through his eyes, and he held on to her for dear life.
After it was his turn to be emotionally spent, he wiped his eyes and laughed at the idiocy of the situation. "Sorry! I know you want me to be serious. It's just... I feel ridiculous! A grown man, a Marine, bawling like a baby!"
She smiled at him and caressed his cheek, taking her turn to wipe away his tears. "I don't think it's silly, Jack! I think it's beautiful!" She sat on the floor with him until he regained his composure. "You alright now, love?"
Nodding, Jack stood up, helping her to stand next to him. "Well, now that that's out of the way." He gestured toward the bed and picked up the chair, resuming his seat. "You asked me a question, if I ever felt the way you do. Not until today." he admitted. Seeing her disappointment, he held up his hand. "It had nothing to do with you, Buttons! Not your age, your beauty, not anything you could have done. I swear!"
Seeing he was being completely serious, she just nodded and accepted his answer at face value and waited for him to explain.
"It was Rich." he sighed. "He's why I couldn't see you. It's not his fault, but you were his sister and, to guys anyway, that means 'Hands off! This isn't a girl, this is a sister!' Do you understand? It's not even something we think about. It's just something we do, instinctually, I guess. There was nothing you could have done or not done to make me see it!"
"I could have told you I loved you to your face." Erica pointed out guiltily, looking at her lap. Looking up at him, she nearly started crying again. "Then you would have known, but I was too scared! Too afraid you'd reject me because I... I was just a little girl to you!"
"Hey!" Jack comforted. "It's alright!" He sighed and tried to explain. "Do you remember when I told you I had to get hurt? That I needed it? And you didn't understand why?"
Erica nodded, looking up at him.
"Do you understand now?"
She thought seriously for a moment, trying to justify the pain he'd endured and why it was needed. Her mind rebelled at the idea, wanting to spare him every pain of his life. "No!"
"You love me, right? Just as I am? Good and bad, strength and faults, right?" Seeing her nod enthusiastically, he continued. "I wouldn't be me, the person you love, if it weren't for those things! Would you still love someone who looked like me, but wasn't me?"
"No!" Erica cried. "I don't love you for the way you look! I love you for who you are! The man..." Her own reply finally brought understanding of what it was he'd been trying to tell her. She paused, unable to formulate the words she needed to say. Slowly she looked at him with new eyes, and smiled. "I'm a foolish little girl sometimes, Jack!" she admitted.
Standing up, Jack pulled her to her feet, the two embracing where they stood. "I wouldn't change a thing in my life, Buttons! Because of this moment, right here, right now! Being able to hold you, touch you, kiss you..." He pulled back to look her in her eyes. "...to love you? It's worth all the pain, sadness, loneliness, and heartache of a hundred lifetimes!" He pulled her close to him and kissed her. "I love you, Buttons!" he said with a smile. "Is that enough?"
Erica nodded through tears of joy. "Yes, Jack! It's enough!" Pulling him into another passionate kiss, they heard yelling and horns from below.
When their kiss ended, Jack smiled at her. "Happy New Year, Buttons!"
"Happy New Year, Jack!" she replied through her own smile.
Kissing slowly and tenderly once more, the two reveled in the moment of the New Year before parting. Hearing the crowd below quiet down, the two sat back down together to talk.
"So, you say you've always loved me?" Jack asked incredulously.
Erica nodded. "I have a confession to make. I've had a crush on you since I was ten!"
"Who me?" Jack laughed. "I don't think I'll ever get tired of hearing that!"
"Then I'll remind you of it often!" she laughed back at him. "Something to hold over your head when we're fighting about money or kids!"
"Kids!" Jack yelped. "When did we have kids?"
Slapping his arm playfully, Erica pursed her lips. "When we do! Someday, maybe. I don't know, maybe you've changed in six years! Maybe I won't want to spend the rest of my life with you now!" Her humor dying down, she looked at him. "Seriously though, I... I want to take it slow. I think we should get to know one another all over again, as we are now."
"I think that's prudent." Jack nodded. "After all, I need to stop thinking of you as just Buttons and start thinking of you as a woman." His eyes drifted over her body. "A really, really, gorgeous woman!"
Blushing, Erica looked away. "Jeez, Jack! You're too much, sometimes!"
"I'm serious!" he defended his opinion. "I think you're just about the most beautiful woman..." He sighed and paused for effect. "...on the second floor!"
Grabbing a pillow, Erica smacked him with it playfully. "You're gonna pay for that someday!" she threatened.
Jack took hold the pillow and pulled her over to him with it slowly. "I want another kiss!" he said mater-of-factly. "It'll help me get used to seeing you as a woman! Honest! It's strictly for my own self-improvement!"
"Oh?" she asked. "What'll you give me for it?"
"The same in return!" he replied.
Moving closer, Erica could feel his breath on her lips, making the hunger inside her rise once more. She pushed forward into him, wrapping her arms around him and relishing the feel of his lips and tongue against hers. She found her hands clinging to him, groping and grasping, trying desperately to pull him tighter into her. Her lithe legs wrapped around his waist as she moved to sit on his lap, their lips never separating for a moment. With her arms wrapped around his neck, she pulled their bodies tightly against each other, a moan of need escaping.
They stayed like that for a time unknown to either of them, lost in one long moment that never seemed to end. Finally, with the hunger abated once more, she stopped and could only pant in a further need that she knew she wasn't ready for. "Jack?" she gasped. "I... I need to stop! Please?"
Groaning with unfulfilled desire, his love for her outweighed his need for her, and he slowed his kisses just as they'd begun trailing down her neck to stop just below the collarbone. "OK." he relented, making his body just be satisfied with holding her.
After a few ragged breaths, Erica could think again. Lifting Jack's chin up, she looked him in the eyes with a wild desperation. "Make no mistake, Jack! I want you! All of you! Right now!" She smiled and kissed his cheek before turning shy. "But... um... there's something... something I need to tell you. I... I've loved you since before... I mean, I never could..." She tried to make the words come out, but she just couldn't find them.
Slowly, Jack realized what she was saying. "Oh! You mean, you mean you've never..." It dawned on him then just how deep and powerful Erica's love for him had burned. "Never?"
She shyly shook her head. "I've never even kissed a boy before tonight! I... I couldn't! I never gave up hoping that..." She looked into his eyes. "I only ever wanted you, Jack! No one else! Ever!"
Jack cleared his throat. "Well, alright then. We'll..."
"...take it slowly!" they said together, ending in laughter.
Pulling herself up off his lap, Erica flopped back on the bed even as her body screamed for more. "I'm sorry if I... well... If it's any consolation, you got me... um..."
Looking at her, Jack waggled his eyebrows. "Ready for beddy?"
Erica burst out laughing. "God, Jack! You are perfect! Don't ever change!"
"I'll try, but I remember my old man, Buttons. Don't get too attached to this hair!" he joked, making them both laugh uncontrollably.
Their mirth slowing, Erica moved off the bed and held out a hand to him. "Talk done! Now fun!" she giggled, pulling him to his feet. Passing a mirror on the way to the door, Erica stopped and gasped. "My God, Jack! I look like shit!" Quickly, she opened her purse and took out some cotton swabs and started removing mascara from under her eyes and off of her cheeks. "How can you even look at me like this?"
Coming up behind her, he put his hands on her waist and kissed her head while looking at her in the mirror. "You look beautiful to me."
Grimacing, Erica nudged an elbow into his ribs, causing him to fade back defensively. "That's for lying! It's a beautiful lie, but if I look this bad, I want you to tell me!"
"OK, Buttons!" Jack chuckled. "I'll tell you if you look fat in those jeans!"
She looked down at her hips in the mirror. "Do I?"
"God, no!" Jack yelled. "Good Lord, woman! Don't you eat?"
After Erica finished touching up, she turned to Jack and smiled. "There! Now how do I look?"
Looking at her earnestly, he surveyed her face for flaws. "You have a speck of something black in the corner of your left eye." he pointed out.
Turning and looking in the mirror, she retrieved another swab and cleaned it out. "Mascara." she noted. Turning back she asked, "Better?"
Kissing her quickly and gently, he smiled. "Perfect!"
Coming out of the bedroom door, they both saw Richard and Heather sitting glumly at the top of the stairs.
Waving a hand at them, Jack couldn't resist. "Look! Chaperones! I didn't think college parties had those anymore!" he said loud enough that the two could easily hear him. When Richard stood up and walked over to them, he smiled at his perturbed best friend. "Don't you know parties are for having fun, Rich? You're killing Heather's good time!"
"Jack!" Richard wanted to throttle him. "What the hell have you two been doing in there!? You were in there for over two hours!"
Erica tried to get between the two. "Richie! It's none of your business what we were doing! Get away from him!"
"Buttons?" Jack said softly. "Will you please let your brother and I handle this like men?"
She turned to him. "You are not going to fight over this!" she insisted.
"No one said anything about fighting, Buttons." Jack said calmly. Looking Richard directly in the eyes, he nodded. "We just need to talk."
"We'll see what needs doing, Jack!" Richard spat. "So let's have it then! Got anything to say for yourself, funny man?"
Closing his eyes, Jack exhaled. Opening them again, he once more stared Richard down from below. "Rich? Do you know me at all? Have you ever known me to be anything but civil to a lady, even alone?"
Feeling his outrage start to shrink like an ice cube in a microwave, Richard was at a loss. "Um... well, no..." Re-gathering the anger he felt was justified, he glared back at the smaller man. "...but there's always a first time, Jack!"
Unfazed, Jack took a breath. "We talked, Rich. And cried. Both of us."
The anger he felt was suddenly replaced with confusion. "Huh?" Turning around to face the two ladies, he pushed open the door to the bedroom Jack and Erica had just come from and shoved Jack back in. "We'll be a few!" he said to them, following Jack in and slamming the door behind him. Scanning the room for evidence of anything untoward, when he found none he turned at last to his best friend. "Jack!? What the hell goes on?" His face turning ashen, he asked, "Did something happen to Mom or Dad?"
"No! No! Nothing like that!" Jack said, waving his arms dismissively. "It's Buttons!"
"What's wrong with Erica!?" he demanded, closing with him, ready to wring the truth out of him, if needed.
"Nothing's wrong with her, Rich!" Jack sighed happily. "She's just in love with me!"
Richard felt numb as his heart skipped a beat. "She's what?"
Pacing the room away from Richard, Jack flung his hands up in confusion. "She's in love with me, Rich! And this isn't a new thing, either!" He turned and faced his oldest friend. "Rich, she's been in love with me for years! Since before we left home! Since before Wendy! Since... Hell, according to her, since the day we met!" He stopped, letting his arms fall to his sides. "Well, not since the day we met, I mean the day you and I met, that was a full day before Buttons and I even knew..."
"Jack!" Richard barked.
"What do you want, Rich? It's still me! Still Jack! Same guy!"
"I want you to be serious for a minute, damn it!" he shouted. He looked at Jack with murder in his eyes. "Jack, did you ever..." his voice trailed off menacingly.
Jack's eyes bulged at the unspoken accusation. "Rich! No! God, no! That's... What the hell's the matter with you! Jesus! She was a little girl!"
"Well, she got it in her head to like you somehow, Jack!"
"Love, Rich!" he forcefully corrected Richard. "Not like, love! She loves me! She loves me! She loves me! No matter how you say it, it keeps coming out the same!" He lowered his voice before finishing his thought. "Wonderful."
Richard's anger broke under the strain of Jack's re-spoken words.
"Rich, she's not a little girl." Jack pointed out. "She's a grown woman, and she loves me." he laughed.
"How long have you known?" Richard asked seriously.
Jack checked his watch. "Uh... pfft! About two hours. Why? You wanna make an anniversary of it?"
"Jack!"
"Sorry!" he held his hands up defensively.
Richard forced himself to be calm. "So you had no idea about this before tonight?" Seeing Jack shake his head seriously, Richard almost collapsed as he sat on the bed. "Shit!"
"Now what!" Jack asked defensively. "I didn't do anything!"
"Not you, ya jarhead!" Richard spat back. "What are we gonna do about this? How can we make her snap out of it?"
"It's not a hypnotic trance, Rich!" Jack retorted. "She's in love!" He braced himself as he said the rest. "And I don't want her to stop."
Richard looked at Jack as though he'd gone mad. "What? Are you nuts? We have to fix this! You're..."
"I'm what, Rich!" Jack snapped at him, stepping forward. "What? Unlovable? Unworthy? Too low a station for your sister? What, is it because Mom and I were so poor we could never afford a nice house? Or a car? Or cable TV? Is that it?" He lowered his voice as he looked at the shocked expression on Richard's face. Sighing, he parted his hands and dropped them down to his sides again. "Rich, don't I deserve to be loved, too?"
He hung his head, ashamed of what Jack had stopped him from thoughtlessly saying. Shaking his head, he bit his lower lip and sighed. "Jack, this can't work. You and Mom hate each other!"
"Last I checked, Erica's an adult and this is almost the twenty-first century." Jack stated simply. "She doesn't need anyone's permission to love me." He paused briefly before letting the other shoe drop. "And I don't need anyone's permission for me to love her back."
Richard looked up at him perplexedly. "How can you love her, Jack?" he asked. "She..."
"How can I not, Rich!" Jack shouted. "I've known her most my life! She's too wonderful not to fall in love with! I'm surprised she doesn't have a hundred broken hearts pining for her!"
"But she's my sister, Jack!"
"And I love her!" he shot back.
Silence sat between them like a thick blanket. Finally, Jack turned away from his best friend. "Rich, we're not asking your permission. We don't have to. We don't need anyone's! Not your mother's, your father's, yours, Heather's, Brooke's... anyone's!" He turned and faced his greatest friend and protector. "But I would like your understanding. It's not like we're gonna go out and get married next month, Rich! She wants to take it slow, and so do I. We need to... to find each other. We've been apart six years!"
"How long have you been in love with her?" he asked quietly.
"I've loved her for years, Rich. She's my miracle girl! My Buttons! It's not the way she loved me, but the way I love you, ya' jarhead!"
"So, how long have you been in love with her?" he asked more directly.
"Since the moment I knew who Brooke's mystery guest was, Rich. That the beautiful woman who came as my 'not a blind date' was my Buttons!"
Richard chuckled at the memory of setting up his mother as his Prom 'not a blind date'. "Nice callback, leatherneck!"
"Dillweed!"
"Seabag!"
"Woah! Low blow! That's a penalty! One more and you're disqualified!"
Richard laughed low and slow. "Look, Jack. I... I'm sorry, alright? You're right. You do deserve to be loved. And if Erica... well... loves you, then... then that's just the way it is."
"Well!" he scoffed. "Why don't you make sound like she's just been stricken with some disease or something, Rich!"
"No! I didn't..." he stopped as Jack started to laugh. "Oh, you son of a..."
Running from the room laughing, Jack pulled the door closed behind him, holding it shut. While Richard tried to pull it open, Jack looked over toward Heather, Brooke, and Erica who were standing nearby and looking stunned. "Don't worry! Everything's fine!" he assured them.
"What'd you say that set him off?" Brooke asked as Erica ran up to him.
Her eyes growing wide at the memory of just how intimate they'd almost gotten, Erica whispered, "Did you tell him what we almost did in there?
"Nope!" Jack said, straining to hold the door. "Just made a smart ass remark is all!" Quickly letting go of the knob, Richard tumbled backwards into the room as the door flew open.
Heather took up a place in the doorway, blocking Richard's mad dash out to the hallway to clobber Jack. As he came running up, she cleared her throat.
"What?" he asked, breathing heavily and wanting desperately to get to Jack.
"I was wondering if it was as good for you as it apparently was for Jack!" she asked nonchalantly. "He certainly came out all smiles!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Sex / Sexual Scenes
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
--
Erica once told me that the night she and Jack talked upstairs was one of the most romantic experiences of her life. Sounds great when you say it, but if you think about it you come to realize that the logical corollary to that is that it must have been all worse after that! Luckily for her, Jack was only getting started. Besides, Erica had a tendency to exaggerate! Jack told me that they talked, cried, kissed a few times, and professed their love for one another. That and a bunch of stuff about living in contentment with pain and such. Blah, blah, blah. Richard was a wreck. He hid it well, but I knew him better than anyone except Jack, even better than Heather. He was torn between wanting to see Jack happy against his protectiveness of Erica. I guess that means protecting her from ever growing up, having fun, sex, a marriage, children... etc. Men are idiots! The rest of New Years morning was uneventful, unless of course you count Jack's proposal to Erica, but then I'm pretty sure they both knew it was only Jack being Jack. I told you that story already, though. The next few weeks were hard on them. Jack had no Liberty and Erica was swamped with school. Richard and Heather had gotten to the 'comfortable' part of being a couple, so they were used to the separation. Plus, they were sleeping together, which took off a lot of the tension. Jack and Erica... well... Erica told me what they weren't doing. It got difficult for them to go slowly after only six weeks. Their needs pushed them father and faster than they'd planned to go, but sometimes you realize you gotta to take hold of life fast, and live it while you still have the chance.
---
Just as Jack closed the door to her apartment, Erica was on him. Wrapping her legs around his waist, she could feel the hunger inside smoldering like a fever as she showered him in kisses all over his face. "Jack!" she panted between kisses, "I know... I said... I wanted... to go... go slow... but..." She covered his mouth with hers as he tried to move towards the couch. "Jack! Please?" she mumbled against his lips.
Aching with desire, Jack didn't know how much longer he could put off the inevitable. "Erica!" He had to stop her or else he was going to lose control, and he knew it would end badly if he did. Returning her kisses, he was able to lower her down to the couch, their lips still searching for more pleasurable contact even as he did. Stepping back, he struggled for breath as he forced them to stop their passionate assault. Even being in top physical condition, her sensuous attack had left him with difficulty breathing.
Yearning for him badly, Erica wanted to cry. "Jack!" she whined. Tucking her knees up to her chest, she wrapped her arms around her legs. Rocking back and forth while Jack gasped, she lost control as tears began to flow.
Not being able to stand seeing her so distraught, Jack knelt on the floor in front of her. "Buttons? I... I don't think our original plan is going to work!" he stated, referring to the six-month 'getting to know you' time they'd agreed on, to be followed by whatever they felt comfortable with after that. It was to be discussed beforehand all neat and tidy. Unfortunately for their plans, their bodies craved more, and love is neither neat nor tidy.
She nodded, trying to stop her tears. "I know, Jack! It's just so hard! I never get to see you! It's been weeks! I can't stop thinking about you! I dream about you! I can't focus in class! I don't know what to do!" She buried her eyes in her knees, letting her jeans soak up her tears as she vented her frustration.
Knowing they were fighting a hopeless battle, Jack hung his head in defeat. They either had to take the next step, or never see each other again. Their hearts and bodies gave them little other choice. "Erica?" He looked at her longingly. "I... I want you to know, I love you more than life itself! I can't breathe without you near me! I... I want to make you happy, content..." He paused, taking a breath. "...pleasured."
His words nearly made her take him there in the living room. Controlling her need for him by only the smallest of margins, she let out a ragged breath. "God, do I want you, Jack! You have no idea!" She chucked a little. "OK, so maybe you have some idea!"
Closing her eyes and taking a long slow breath, she forced herself to calm down. When she opened them, she looked at him kneeling in front of her smiling sweetly; almost shyly. She moved to him slowly, uncurling her legs until her feet were on the floor by his knees. Helping him to stand as she did, she took him by the hands and led him to her bedroom.
He followed Erica helplessly into her room and stood numbly as she closed the door. Walking up to him slowly and carefully, as though too quick of a movement would scare him off, at last she stood in front of him. Her hands reached up and started undoing the buttons on his uniform blouse.
Slowly, she worked her way down until she reached his belt, her eyes never looking away from his returning gaze. Pulling his top up to free the last two buttons, she undid them just as slowly until she could push the shirt off his shoulders without more than the slightest touch, which she provided with a smile and listened as it rustled to the floor behind him.
"Erica..." he started to say, but her finger moved over his lips, staying his words. Her hands drifting down to his belt, she pulled the strap to loosen the buckle, letting the strap glide freely through and out. Not done, she started undoing his uniform trousers, unzipping them and letting them fall to the floor with a satisfying sigh.
Guiding him to her bed silently, not a word spoken nor a sound made until her bedsprings creaked with his weight, she stepped back slightly and began to unbutton her own blouse while he watched, almost frozen with a hunger for more. She removed her light green blouse, exposing her naked abdomen and leaving her lacy bra the only thing between Jack's eyes and her breasts. Undoing the buttons on her jeans, her smile seemed contented and peaceful. She knew exactly what she wanted, and this time nothing was going to stop her. When her jeans fell to the floor, she stepped out of them and her flats, leaving her almost completely bare to him.
Scanning the curve of her body, he tried to memorize every millimeter. When she lowered herself down to her knees, she at last pulled his shoes, socks, and trousers off, tossing each one over her shoulder with an almost wicked smile. Moving up, she sat on the bed beside him and reached for his T-shirt, letting her fingertips brush the flesh of his belly. Jack's eyes rolled back in his head, overcome with sensation. Slowly tugging it up his chest, she let her fingers drift gently along his sides, forcing a low moan from his lips.
Just as she started to push him backward to lie on her bed, Jack caught her hand; his breath ragged. "Erica!" he gasped. "I need you to stop for a just minute!" he begged. Trying to move his hand away, he wouldn't release it, moving around her wrist until their fingers were joined together. When his emotions slowly gave way to his thoughts, he looked at her desperately. "I... I don't want you to stop..." he began.
"Then don't stop me." she interrupted. Trying to untangle her hand from his, she found he wouldn't let go. "Jack..."
"Buttons, please!" he begged. "I... I need to tell you something, first! I... I've never... I mean, I don't really know what I'm doing." Just as she couldn't say the words on New Years Eve regarding their passionate reunion, he too was having difficulty finding the same ones. He'd said enough, though.
Leaning back, she regarded him confusedly. "But... Didn't you and Wendy..."
He shook his head as a smile crept over his lips. "The only thing Ox ever got right in his entire life!"
Looking at him in astonishment, she couldn't help but join in his mirth after a moment. Soon the two were rolling on the bed, both in just their underwear, holding their stomachs from laughing so hard. Eventually, as their giggles faded, they lay next to each other looking into each other's eyes.
Jack reached out a hand and watched as Erica intertwined her fingers with his. Their delicate touch seemed to satisfy more need than anything else they could have been doing at that moment. Gone was the hunger from both of them, their love for each other having taken its place.
"Jack?" she smiled. "Tonight. Now, if you'll let me. I want you." she looked at him expectantly. "Do you still want me?"
He sighed, lost in the green of her eyes. "Yeah. I do."
She moved gently, rolling over his body and letting her bare stomach press into his. Her lips found his and they kissed delicately, slowly, and lovingly as their hands roamed freely over each other.
Rising up, Erica's legs straddled his hips as she reached around behind her back with one hand, unclasping her bra. "I love you, Jack." she whispered. "I have a confession to make. I've had a crush on you since I was ten!"
"Who me?" he replied routinely with a smile.
She giggled as she slipped her arms free. "Just remember who loved who first!" she teased, the only thing holding her bra in place being her free hand. Shyly, she let it slip down until she finally dropped it to the floor. Leaning forward, she lowered her bare bosom to his nearly hairless chest, pressing her open mouth to his once more. She moaned with pleasure as he ran his fingertips along the side of her naked breasts.
Slowly, she slid her body upward until she was straddling his stomach, and gasped when the tip of his tongue flicked over her taut nipple. Now certain she was ready, Erica slipped a hand down and hooked a thumb into Jack's boxers, pushing them lower until she could grab them with the toes of her right foot; stretching her leg out and dragging them down his legs until they slipped off his feet.
Feeling Erica remove his last bit of clothing, Jack felt a burning need in him to see her lost in pleasure. Rolling them both over so that she was below him, he supported his thin but athletic form on his arms as he kissed his way down her body. Reveling in her lusciously sensuous movements, every kiss seemed to make her squirm with pleasure. He kissed lower and lower until he at last came to her own final garment. Feeling her hips lift off the bed, Jack slowly slid the panties down her thighs, kissing the skin below them as if preparing it for their passage.
When at last the two were completely bare to one another, Jack slid up her legs, using his hands to caress the smoothness of them and causing her to part them on instinct. In no hurry toward his own fulfillment, and desperate to make her happy, he leaned down and began kissing the inside of her thighs, working his way slowly toward the place the two limbs joined.
Erica's breath became ragged and heavy, her head thrown backward against her pillow as she arched her back. When Jack stopped just before reaching the center of her desire, she looked down at him wantonly.
"It... it's not too late to stop." Jack pointed out, offering more than wanting.
Shaking her head, her breath came rapid and deep until a smile crept over her lips. "You do, so help me God Jack, I'll throw you down and rape you!"
They laughed together, both reveling in each other's passionate desire for one another.
Slowing his chuckles, Jack looked up Erica's body as it lay before him and into her eyes. "I love you." he said softly, his breath just barely reaching her highly sensitive skin and making her tremble.
"I... I love you, Jack!" she panted. "Please?" she moaned beggingly.
Certain of her desire, he lowered his open mouth until it covered the lips of her womanhood and made her gasp, her entire body tensing up in desperate need. His tongue pressing forward, she felt it enter her, making her eyes snap open widely as she stopped being able to even breathe. After nearly a decade of fantasy, the reality was so intense that her mind almost couldn't handle it. She'd utterly underestimated the effect actually having him touch and taste her would have on her body as she convulsed.
"Jack!?" she almost screamed as her first orgasm ripped through her body at so simple an intimacy, her pent-up need breaking through every part of her as her hands gripped the back of his head and her legs wrapped around his back. She forced her mouth closed, screaming through her nose in an effort to hide the enormity of the pleasure from her neighbors.
Sitting perfectly still, he looked up her naked body in awe of her pleasure. Even as she convulsed, he could feel the muscles of her entire body tense and contract, the flesh of her sensitive womanhood pulsing against his tongue and her moisture wetting it further as she continued to grip him in place. Her loss of control almost scared him, it was so powerful.
When at last her first wave of pleasure passed and her limbs started to relax, he pulled his mouth away from her. "Are... are you OK?" he asked, concern making his voice shake.
"I... I'm fine, Jack!" Erica managed after a moment as her body vibrated with the pleasure coursing through her. "Please... please don't stop!"
Returning to his ministrations, he explored her. Using his tongue and fingers, he learned every part of her, memorizing every inch of her as though it was the most important thing in his life to know. When his fingertip brushed the nub of her pleasure, her sudden gasp made him pull back. "Did... did I hurt you?" he asked concernedly.
She shook her head vigorously. "N-no! Th-that was... Ungh!" Her words left her as his tongue took the place of his fingertip, sending waves of ecstasy through her and threatening to push her rapidly to climax once more. Guttural sounds escaped her lips as his tongue slowly circled her pleasure, rocketing her skyward in an ever-expanding burst of bliss. She screamed once more, this time incapable of holding back her vocalizations as the most powerful orgasm of her young life tore her mind apart. No longer caring who heard, for several minutes she only cared about Jack and the ultimate pleasure he was giving her. Nothing else in the entire world mattered at that moment.
Her mind returning to her, after Jack slowly ended their first frenzied time as one, she covered her mouth with a hand as she started to laugh. A languid feeling washed over her while her body slowly shook from her giggle fit. Moving her hand up to cover her eyes, a smile shone across her entire face.
"What's so funny?" Jack asked confused.
Erica shook her head, her hand still over her eyes. "Me! That's what!" she answered in a hushed throaty voice between giggles. "My God, Jack! That was... that was the most intense experience of my life!" She tried to move, to pull him up to her, but her body was as weak as a newborn kitten and she could barely move her limbs. "Come here, Jack!" she purred.
Moving up alongside her naked form, one hand propped his head up while the other rested on her belly. Her giggles still shaking her, he couldn't help himself. "You know, I've made people laugh before, but this is humiliating!"
His humor only intensified her giggles into fits of full laughter as her love for him and who he was poured through her. She rolled over to push him flat on his back, snuggling up next to him and laying her head on his chest as she continued to laugh. "I... I'm sorry, love!" she giggled. "I just... I can't help it! You make me so happy it... it just comes bubbling out like this! I love you so much!"
Running his fingers through her soft red hair, he smiled. "A guy could get a complex, ya' know! I thought women were all hot and wanton afterwards, not chuckling like they just got done watching 'Your Show of Shows'!"
Continuing to giggle, she enjoyed the feel of her skin against his. "I have no idea what that is, Jack! I love that about you!"
"Sid Caesar? Imogene Coca? No?" he inquired. "Oh, well. I guess I'll have to show you sometime. You have a lot of catching up to do!" He wrapped his arms around her, holding her until her laughter was spent.
At last, she was able to stop her guffaws and looked up at him libidinously. "What about you, love?"
"Me?" Jack shrugged. "I've seen 'Show of Shows'!"
She lightly slapped him on the chest. "No, you goofball! You know what I mean!" She slowly slid her body against his sensually and started running her fingers down his side.
His breath caught as she touched him, raising gooseflesh everywhere her fingers roamed. "Oh." he moaned. "Y-you mean..." his voice trailed off as she moved on top of him, straddling his belly. "Y-you know, you don't h-have to...."
"I know I don't." Erica shook her head slowly. "I want to, Jack. No, I need to! I need to make you feel just as good as you just made me feel!" Lowering down until their lips met once more, kissing him slowly and seductively, she moved her hips toward his. When she felt his manhood press between her legs, it raised a need in her unlike any she'd ever felt before, the need to feel him inside her seeming to overwhelm her senses. She raised her hips slightly, feeling him press against the outside of her wetness. Ever so slowly, she pushed down, relishing the feeling as he slipped inside her, forcing a moan to escape her lips as she closed her eyes.
Gasping as he felt it, Jack's eyes went wide and his hands found her hips all on their own, a desire burning in him to push her more forcefully onto him. Not wanting to rush her or force it though, he fought the urge and just let his hands follow her hips slowly down, the warmth and wetness of her on him threatening to send him over the edge at any moment. "Oh God, Erica! You... You're incredible!"
When he felt their hips meet in conjoined ecstasy, his eyes fluttered and his grip on her hips strengthened, pulling them tightly together. They sat there like that, unmoving, for what seemed to be an eternity. Erica looked down at him with eyes wide and her lovely face contorted into an expression of almost pain.
"Does... does it hurt?" he asked concernedly.
"N-No." she stammered. "Well... o-only a little." She smiled at him, their faces only inches apart. "It mostly just feels wonderful!" Slowly, she began to rock. Small movements, both patient and deliberate, she loved how her slightest move would send him into absolute fits of pleasure. Soon, much sooner than she would have liked, she saw his eyes tighten.
"E-Erica! I... I'm..." he mumbled.
Slipping a hand under his head, she ran her fingers through his short-cropped hair. "Good! I want you to, love. Take your pleasure from me!" Hearing her words sent him flying, his body trembling as she gripped his hips with her legs; her feet wrapping around his knees to pin her in place on top of him. Pulling him into a kiss, she felt his pleasure explode in her, Erica gripping against him and holding him tightly to her as they finally consummated their love for one another.
His breath rapid and shallow, he pulled slightly away from her lips as his desire peaked. "I... I love you, Erica!"
She lay on him as his body slowly calmed from their lovemaking. Feeling his entire body grow languid against hers, his hands slipping off her hips to flop lifelessly against her bed, but his pleasure still buried inside her, she looked him in the eyes once more, smiled, and said, "Yes!"
Laughing, he knew at last what she must have felt earlier, the giddiness of love and passion commingled. Slowly comprehending that she'd spoken, his eyes tightened in confusion. "Huh? Yes, what?"
"Yes, I'll marry you!" she replied. "You've only asked me five times. Did you want to make it six?"
He looked at her in awe. "I thought you wanted to wait! We've only been dating a month and a half, I thought you wanted to go slow to be sure?"
"Oh, I'm sure!" she smiled. "I knew before I saw you again!" She leaned down and whispered seductively in his ear. "I just didn't want to scare you away! I was going slow for your benefit, love!" She pulled slightly back from him so she could look at his whole face. "I never doubted for a second that you're the one man in this entire world meant for me! Seeing you again just meant I didn't have to wait anymore! I love you, Jack! I've always loved you, and I want to spend the rest of my life loving you and making you happy!"
"You are... amazing, Buttons!" he looked up at her in awe. "I don't think I could imagine life without you now!" His hands reached up and pulled her face close to his. "I love you, too... and I'm going to spend the rest of my life doing whatever it takes to deserve the love you have for me." He pulled her into a loving kiss, their bodies still joined together.
An hour later, they sat across from one another eating the spaghetti dinner that Erica had prepared before Jack arrived for their Valentines Day meal. The holiday was actually two days earlier, but they'd had to wait until that Friday to celebrate it. She smiled and giggled at seemingly nothing as they ate wordlessly.
"What's so funny?" Jack asked before taking another bite. "Do I have sauce on my nose or something?"
"No!" she giggled as she looked away from him embarrassedly. She stared at the candles that lighted their meal. "I was just thinking about how different tonight went from the way I planned it. We were supposed to have dinner, a little wine afterwards, and then I was going to drag you into the bedroom and have my way with you, even if I had to club you over the head!"
Jack nodded as he finished a bite. "Ug! No, me club you! Drag you!" he grunted. "Don't you know how these things are supposed to work, Buttons?"
His reply only made her laugh harder. After settling herself back down, she looked across her small table at him lovingly. "So, we still have the rest of the weekend before you have to head back. What would you like to do with it?" she asked seductively.
"I have a feeling I know what you would like to do with it!" he commented knowingly. "Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see the second reel, but I think we should talk."
Nervous that she'd jumped the gun and scared him away, she took a large drink from her wineglass. "Alright. Anything in particular?"
Shrugging, Jack looked over at her. "Well, there's the fact that you accepted my proposal. Understand, I'm elated that you did, but don't you think we'll need a new plan, now? The old one was kinda ripped to shreds earlier when you were clawing at my back!"
She chuckled as relief washed over her. "Well yeah, I guess we do need to figure things out! I have a year and a half of school left, but you only have four more months of service, right?" Seeing him nod through a bite, she took another drink and sighed. "Can you move in here while you finish up?"
"Only after we're married." Jack informed her, leaning back from his empty plate. "It's a violation of the UCMJ to cohabitate with a member of the opposite sex outside of marriage. I can't even leave a pair of socks here!"
"Well then, there's only one thing we can do." she sighed in a defeated tone. "We're just going to have to get married right away!"
He laughed a deep full laugh. "Oh, God! Rich is so going to kill me! I'm a dead man!"
Standing up, Erica walked around the table. Sitting on his lap, she wrapped her arms around him. "He touches you? He dies!"
"So how do you want to do this, then?" he asked, wrapping his arms around her waist. "Justice of the Peace? A church wedding will take time, but I want you to have your dream come true. I'm told it's something a girl imagines her whole life and I don't want to deny you anything!"
"Jack, darling. I have everything that I ever dreamed of right here!" she said before she kissed him slowly and lovingly. "Whatever you want to do is fine with me! I just want to be Mrs. Jack Dunning for the rest of my life!"
"OK. You want me to plan it then? I will, if that's what you want, Buttons."
Running her fingers through his close-cropped hair, she smiled contentedly. "Yeah! I think I'd like that!" Running her fingers down the side of his face and neck until her hand came to his chest, she pressed the palm of her hand against him. Pushing herself up, she captured his hand as it slipped off her waist and pulled him to his feet. Walking backward as she looked him lustily in his eyes, she led him once more toward her bedroom. "In the mean time love, I think I'm ready for a second course of the meal that you brought!"
"Well, if your reaction earlier was any measure, it certainly was a happy meal!" Their humorous journey to the bedroom was halted when the phone rang. He looked at Erica longingly and sighed as he started to pull away from her towards it.
"Jack! Let the machine get it! Come with me!" she begged.
"Can't, Buttons." he groaned. "I'm just on Liberty and I left your number at the base for a contact. Someone has to answer!" He released her hand and jogged over to the phone, picking it up before the answering machine did. "Hargrave residence. Dunning."
"Jack? It's Rich. I... I have some bad news for you."
Gritting his teeth, Jack punched the wall lightly. "Let me guess... Liberty's canceled?" he presumed. He saw Erica's shoulders slump and a pout cross her disappointed face.
"No, it's not that, Jack. We... we got a call from the home where your Mom lives." Richard had a hard time finishing the message.
"Rich? What's wrong? Is she OK?" Jack's mind raced with the possibilities; that she'd gotten lost, she'd run away, she fell and broke a bone...
"She... uh... she's in a coma, Jack. She won't wake up."
Seeing Jack drop the phone, Erica ran to him, grabbing him as he collapsed to the floor. "What is it, Jack? What's wrong?" Hearing her brother shouting from the dropped receiver, picking it up, she answered for him. "Richie?"
"Erica! It's Jack's mom. She's in a coma. She's... she's not expected to wake up. You need to get him back here right away so he can put in for Emergency Leave. The hospital told me she's not expected to survive the weekend."
"I'll get him there, Richie! Love you!" she said, hanging up the phone and hugging Jack as tight as she could. "Oh, Jack! I'm so sorry! I... I need to get you to the base right away! You can get Emergency Leave, and then we'll get a plane back to Pittsburgh. We need to hurry, Jack!"
Only numbly aware of his surroundings, he responded idly. "Emergency Leave. Right." His thoughts suddenly rushing back to him as the shock wore off, he looked at Erica. "We'll get a plane?"
"Of course!" she stated, heading to her room to pack. "I'm going with you! You don't think for one minute I'd let you do this alone do you?"
"Thanks." he smiled at her. "I... I think I may need you there, Buttons."
Four hours later, the two were taking off on a non-stop flight to Pittsburgh International. By seven the next morning, they were in a rental car driving towards Mary's nursing home. Jogging into the lobby half an hour later, they were greeted by one of the nurses.
"I'm sorry, visiting hours don't begin until..."
"I... I'm Jack Dunning!" he interrupted her. "Mary... Mary Dunning's son! This is my fiancée, Erica. We came as soon as we could!"
She nodded in understanding. "I see. Well, her condition is unchanged. She's not expected to wake up. You... you can go see her if you like. I'm sorry."
Jack and Erica walked somberly to her room. Entering slowly, he saw her lying in a hospital bed, monitors next to her showing that she was still alive. Creeping quietly into the room, Erica holding his hand, he carefully moved up to her bedside. "Mom? It's Jack. I came to see you. You've got the place buzzing! They all think... well... I know what you're going through!" He knelt down next to her bed, taking her frail fingers in his free hand.
"I... I have some news, Mom! You remember Erica? Rich's sister? We're getting married, Mom!" He squeezed her fingers gently, trying to coax a response from her, but none came. "She loves me, Mom! Always has, it seems!" He looked back at Erica only to see tears streaking down her face. He stood and held Erica as she cried into his shoulder, her heart breaking for Jack's sake once again.
When at last Erica stopped crying, regaining her composure, Jack returned to his mother. "Mom! I know you can hear me!" he almost shouted, not quite loud enough to be a disturbance. "Look, just... just follow my voice, Mom! You have to want to come back! You can't will it, you have to want it! Come on, Mom!" He was near to tears and heard Erica begin sobbing behind him again while he watched his mother for any sign, any indication of her return. When none came, he pulled up a chair. "Alright, then. I'll talk."
He talked for hours. He talked to her about his work, about Erica, about their plans, about Richard, about Brooke, about Heather; he talked until he ran out of things to talk about. Then he just started remembering things, telling her stories about when he and Richard were young and the things they'd gotten away with without her ever knowing. He talked the entire day. When Erica left to get lunch, he talked. He even talked while they ate, never stopping. He kept at it until the sun was going down and still he talked. He knew if he kept it up long enough she could find his voice and return to the land of the living. He just wanted one more moment.
When the nurse came to tell them they'd have to leave in five minutes at the end of visiting hours, he told the nurse he wasn't leaving, that he was staying with her until the end or she woke up, whichever came first. When the nurse called security, he demanded to speak to the facility administrator, insisting on staying with his mother and not even leaving to go talk to him until Erica finally spoke up.
"Jack? Go! Talk to him and get it straightened out. I'll stay and talk to her. I promise. I won't ever stop! Not for a second! Not until she wakes up or you tell me to stop!"
He looked at her with exhausted eyes, having been up for two days with only the short nap on the plane. "Alright. You promise?" Seeing her nod, he left with the security officer while the nurse stood by at the door as Erica turned to face his mother.
"She's not going to wake." the nurse explained. "He's just making it harder on himself."
"Jack knows what he's doing!" Erica defended him. "I'm staying and I'll talk all night if I have to!" She mumbled under her breath, "Why not? It worked before!" Walking over to Mary's bed, she started talking. She talked about Jack almost exclusively, how much she loved him, every memory she had of him, watching his successes and heartbreaks, and her own heartbreak at his leaving. She had just gotten to their wedding plans when she saw Mary's eyes move.
"Mary?" she asked hopefully. "Mary, it's Erica. Erica Hargrave! Richie's sister! Mary?"
"Jack?" Mary mumbled. "Where's Jack?" Her eyes were still closed, almost as if she were talking in her sleep.
Erica ran for the nurse. "She's waking up! Go get Jack! Now!" she shouted. Seeing the nurse nod in astonishment and head towards the administrator's office, Erica ran back to Mary's bed. "Mary? Mary, wake up! Jack's here! He's here to see you!"
She lolled her head over and opened her old and worn eyes, trying to focus on who was talking to her. "Who're you?" she asked groggily.
"I'm Erica!" she laughed. "Erica Hargrave, Mrs. Dunning! Richie's sister! Jack's here with me! He just stepped out for a few minutes! He'll be right back, OK? He's been with you all day!"
"Hargrave? Richard's sister? No! You can't be her! She's a little girl!"
Laughing through tears of joy and heartache, she nodded. "I'm all grown up now, Mrs. Dunning!"
"Grown up? Where... where am I? Where's Jack? I'm... I'm supposed to be getting ready. I... I'm taking him to the dance."
"He'll be here any minute, Mrs. Dunning! You... you look beautiful! He's going to have such a good time with you!"
Mary smiled. "I hope so! He... he's been hurt so bad! Poor Jack!" she laughed slightly. "Poor funny Jack! I hope he's not embarrassed by his... his old mom going with him!"
"He won't be, Mrs. Dunning! He's going to have so much fun! I... I have to admit, though. I'm pretty jealous of you! You see, I wanted Jack to take me to the dance!"
His mother looked at her hard. "You?" she asked incredulously. "That's right! You like my Jack."
She wiped the tears from her eyes. "No, Mrs. Dunning! I love your Jack! I always have! Ever since I was ten! I want to marry him!"
Mary's eyes cleared and Erica could see she'd subtly changed. "You're Erica Hargrave, all grown up." Becoming lucid and seeing Erica nod, she squinted. "You're still in love with my Jack? You want to marry him?"
"Yes, Ma'am!" she answered as she wiped another tear away. "I'd do anything to be Mrs. Jack Dunning! I've always loved him!"
"I know." Mary nodded. Waving Erica closer, she took the girl's hands in both of hers. "I've known you liked Jack a long time, dear. A woman can see it. I'm old dear. I think I might be going to see my Danny soon. Does... does Jack know you love him? He's never mentioned that he knew."
"I was afraid to tell him, Mrs. Dunning." Erica explained sadly. "I... because I was so much younger than he was, just a little girl, but now..."
"Now you're a woman, and you still love my Jack." she looked at her sternly. "You promise you'll take care of him? Stay with him always? Never hurt him? Never leave him?"
"I'd sooner die myself than live without him, Mrs. Dunning!" Erica sobbed.
"Good girl!" she cackled and patted her hand. "I knew you'd be good to him. He'll need all the love you can give! Dunning men can be that way! You'll see!" she laughed.
"I will, Mrs. Dunning!" she laughed along with her.
"And call me Mary or Mom! If you want to be my Jack's wife, we can be on a first name basis!"
"OK... Mom!" Erica laughed as Jack came running into the room.
"Mom! You're awake! Thank God!"
"Jack!" Mary growled. "Good! Get over here! Siddown, boy!" she barked.
Gulping, he slowed to a walk, crossed the room, sat next to his mother, and looked over at Erica. "Thank you! I don't know how you do it!"
"Do what?" Erica asked.
"My miracle girl! Something about your voice just helps!" he said with a half smile before they both started laughing together.
Seeing them laugh made Mary smile before her face turned serious. "Jack? I want to talk to you. Alone." She looked at Erica and the nurse. "If you two wouldn't mind?"
Erica practically had to drag the nurse from the room. "We'll be right outside if you need us." she promised.
Once the door was closed, Mary looked at Jack sternly. "That Hargrave girl. She loves you, Jack. Has for a very long time, you know. Do you love her?"
"Yeah, Mom! I do!" he nodded. "I asked her to marry me and she said yes!"
His mother smiled and clasped his hand in both of hers as her entire body seemed to relax with the release of decades of worry. "That's good! I told you that you just needed to look where you weren't expecting. I was thinking I'd never live to see you two get together. She promised me she'd take care of you, and I know she will. Love that lasts that long isn't going anywhere!" She looked sternly at him. "I didn't see a ring!"
Swallowing hard, Jack looked at the floor. "I... I couldn't afford one, Mom. I'll have one before we get married, though. I promise!"
Pulling at the ring surrounding the third finger of her left hand, when at last it came loose, she held it out to him in her wrinkled and barely functional fingers. "Here. Take this. Your father's ring is in the shoebox in my closet there. Take that, too. Sell 'em and get her a real pretty one!"
"Mom! I... I can't sell your and Dad's rings!" he almost cried.
Sighing, she sat back exhausted. "Then if she likes it, you can give it to her! Girl's got to have a ring or she won't feel properly engaged!" Beginning to feel drowsy, her mind started slipping back into the light that she'd drifted away from to come back here. "Jack? You know you're my gift, right? My precious gift from God? He blessed us, me and Danny, with you!"
Tears rolled down his cheeks. "Yes, Mom! I know! And I... I love you! When you see Dad, tell him... tell him I'm alive! I'm alive again! And I'll see to it Erica and I spend the rest of our days together alive, too!" Pausing a moment, something she'd said finally clicked. "Wait... Erica... you knew?"
"'Course I did!" Mary furrowed her brow. "I've got eyes, don't I? Every time I saw that girl I could see it, the way she watched you, hung on your every word. You'd have to be blind to have missed it!" Looking at him carefully, she grinned. "Didn't have a clue, did you baby?"
"Not one." he admitted bashfully.
Cackling, Mary looked at the ceiling. "Same as your father."
"Is it alright if she comes in again?"
"That's fine, dear." she said wearily. "I said what I needed."
Calling her back in, Erica came and stood next to Jack. "Mom?" she asked delicately.
Mary Dunning reached out a hand to her. When she felt the young, fresh fingers against hers, she guided Erica's hand to Jack's. "There!" she sighed contentedly, her words beginning to slur. "That's where it belongs! Where it's always belonged and always will! Don't you two ever forget it!"
"We won't, Mom!" Jack cried happily and sorrowfully, "Ever!" but she was already unconscious again, this time never to awake.
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
They buried Mary in the plot next to his father Danny there in Pittsburgh the following Saturday. It was just the two of them and Erica's father Frank there to say goodbye. They flew back the next day and Jack went to work on his big plan. Jack told me about his plan for the weekend of March twenty-third, ninety-six. He'd thought of everything, but needed Heather and me to help pull it off. So we spent four weeks between Jack burying his mom and the weekend of the twenty-third plotting, scheming, and basically having a blast planning the surprise of a lifetime for both Erica and Richard. Rich almost caught us once. He walked into the shop while I had stuff out he shouldn't see, but he could be a bit oblivious at times. He never had a clue! Rich once told me that he thought Jack didn't know how to plan ahead... that he seemed incapable of thinking more than five minutes into the future. He thought Jack was wasting his time and opportunities by not going to college on the government dime. We'd earned it, so why not take advantage? The truth is Jack did have a plan for what he wanted to do, he just had different priorities than Rich. He thought love and happiness, even in total poverty, were better than living in the lap of luxury... ...but Jack did know how to plan.
---
When Richard walked into Jack's room the Friday before he was scheduled for a week's leave, he looked at his friend with a puzzled expression. "You're up to something, Jack." he said accusingly as he leaned on Jack's locker.
He looked up at Richard as he changed into his Civies with his usual half-smile. "Yep. I am."
Surprised at his candor, Richard pushed off the locker. "You admit it? Come on, Jack! Tell me what's up! You've been acting weird for weeks! Weird for you, I mean, I know you lost Mary, and you seem to be alright with that, but you're definitely up to something! Usually you can't help but brag to me over and over about whatever it is you have scheming, but this last month you've been button-lips!"
Jack chuckled at Richard's choice of words, nearly having to actually bite his tongue trying to keep from turning it into a crude joke. "I ain't gonna tell ya', Rich! Might as well drop it!" He laced his shoes as he talked. "Hey, change of subject, I was thinking. What do you think about a road trip with the girls this weekend? Say run up to Reno and drop some cash?"
"I guess that could be fun." Richard shrugged, secretly glad of the suggestion as it meant he could keep an eye on Jack and Erica.
"Thanks, Rich! We still meeting the girls at Erica's place for dinner?"
"That's the plan." he replied, seeming to forget all about Jack's odd behavior. "I'll see you two out front at eighteen hundred, alright?"
Smiling, Jack nodded. "See you then!"
Just as Jack, Richard, and Brooke walked in the front door of Erica's apartment, they saw Heather and Erica sitting at her dining room table talking. Moving away from each other as the trio entered, Heather ran up to Richard and threw her arms around him, planting a quick kiss with a smile.
"Richard? Have I told you lately what a wonderful man you are?" she asked.
Suspicious, he nodded. "Whadda you want? Don't get me wrong, whatever it is, the answer's yes, but I'd kinda like to know!"
Heather wrapped her arms around his chest. "Jack called earlier and said we were headed up to Reno this weekend. Would you mind if we spent some time alone while we're there? Just the two of us? I was thinking maybe a romantic evening at one of the casinos? Dinner, dancing..." She looked in his eyes. "...a room for just the two of us?"
"Sounds great for us," he commented happily, "but what about Brooke, Jack, and Erica? What'll they do while we're off on our own?"
Brooke laughed as she walked by him, patting him on the shoulder. "Don't worry about us! You two have a good time! We'll figure something out!"
Shrugging, Richard smiled back at her. "Alright! If everyone's agreeable!" He planned to take a moment alone with Brooke to ask her to keep an eye on Jack and his sister and make sure they didn't get too carried away with each other. He took comfort in the idea that Reno was the divorce capital of the U.S. and that Las Vegas was where people got quickie marriages.
Jack spoke up as he wrapped an arm around Erica. "That's OK, I was kinda thinking we could spend some time up at Tahoe. They have this cruise and dinner around the lake that's supposed to be really great!"
"I think I should drive up in my own car." Brooke added. "That way when we split up, no one's left without a car. Sound good?"
The five sat in the living room, talking about their weekend plans and other things, Richard noticing that Heather and Erica occasionally would give each other knowing glances, as if the two of them knew something the rest didn't.
They headed off the next morning, Richard driving Jack, Heather, and Erica up in his station wagon, and Brooke in her car, packed to overflowing, full of all the things that they needed in order to carry out Jack's greatest gag of all time.
Richard followed the four of them through the casino. They'd checked into their hotel at a little after two in the afternoon taking two rooms; one for Jack and himself, the other for the girls. That surprised him. Not that they'd split rooms that way, but that he didn't have to suggest it... Jack had. He knew that Jack was conscious of Richard's feelings when it came to him and his sister being alone together, so he chalked it up to Jack trying to make him more at ease. It was fine, so long as Richard didn't know what they were doing. If Jack hadn't suggested the arrangement though, he would have insisted on it.
Still, he couldn't shake the funny feeling that there was something amiss. The way Heather had been behaving had bordered on schizophrenic; secretive and quick to anger one moment, sweet and romantic the next. Erica was even more perplexing. She seemed to know something he didn't about their plans, but at the same time kept asking Jack what they were doing as though she were lost.
"Hey, Rich?" Jack asked as they stopped at the top of an escalator leading down to the gaming floor. "Erica wanted to take a walk down by the river, but Brooke wants to play the tables. You wanna come with, or stay?"
"I did?" Erica asked with a puzzled look. "Oh! That's right! I did!"
Her brother had little interest in walking more than they already had. It had seemed they'd done little else for two hours. "I think I'd like to stick around and sit for a while." He turned to Heather. "You wanna join them, honey?"
Clutching his arm, Heather smiled up at him. "Not a chance! Where thou goest! I don't trust some of the ladies here not to see you looking fine and sharp and try to pick you up!" Heather had asked Richard to wear his dress blues as they walked the casino floor, saying it made her proud to be seen with him. That prompted Erica to insist the same of Jack, which the younger Marine griped endlessly about the entire time that they were getting ready for the evening.
While Erica and Jack walked off on their own, Erica's arm in his, Richard took comfort in knowing that they couldn't do much in public, kissing at the worst. Following Brooke down the escalator, they walked past the fake mine shaft in the middle of the gaming floor and sat at a Blackjack table, enjoying the 'free' drinks as they slowly lost money. He didn't mind as it was fun, and Brooke seemed to be having a good time and won almost as much as he lost.
After a while, he noticed Heather checking her watch repeatedly. Eventually, she sighed and tugged on his arm. "Richard! Can't we go do something else now? I feel like we got dressed up for nothing!" A smile slowly crept across her face. "Let's go dancing at that place Jack talked about!"
"Fine by me." Richard shrugged. "Brooke's the only one winning. Well, her and the casino!" He dropped a twenty-five dollar chip in front of the dealer as he got off the stool. "Thanks!" he told the casino worker.
Walking away from the tables, he felt Brooke tap him on the shoulder. "We should go down to the river and find Jack and Erica. If we go without them, Jack'll get pretty steamed! After all, he's the one that suggested the place!"
He nodded, starting to get uncomfortable with how long they'd been gone, anyway. "Good idea. They shouldn't be too hard to spot, a Marine in dress blues with a girl in a white dress? They looked like salt and pepper shakers!"
Walking out onto the city's main street, they saw people coming and going. Richard kept his eyes open looking for Jack and wasn't really watching where they were going, just following Brooke while Heather held his arm.
Passing over the tiny river that cut the town down the middle, he looked up the sidewalk that ran alongside it, but still couldn't see Jack or his sister. They turned down the river walk, crossed the street, then turned down a side street, finally turning again to start coming back the way they'd come. By the time Richard noticed to look, he'd become completely lost.
"Hey, where are we, anyway?"
Brooke turned her head and pointed forward. "The main street is ahead, right by that little white house on the corner. See?"
Coming alongside the building, he heard Jack before he'd seen him. "Rich!" Looking around, he saw Jack peering from around the corner of the house.
"Jack! We've been looking all over for you! Where's Erica?" he asked as the three got closer to him.
"She's inside! I think she hurt her ankle or something! The people here let her sit down for a minute!"
Rushing ahead, Richard was worried about his sister. "Damn it, Jack! You were supposed to take care of her!" He turned the corner, ran up the short walkway, and up the few steps, not even looking at his surroundings as he stopped to knock on the door; Jack, Brooke, and Heather coming up behind.
An older man opened the door, smiling. "Come in!" he offered, stepping aside as he did.
Rushing into the house, Richard looked around. Instead of a living room, it seemed to be the front reception area of an office of some kind. Suddenly, he felt Jack behind him, pushing him forward and around the counter.
"This way!" he directed Richard. "Right down the hall and to the right!"
Confused, Richard walked into the room and saw Erica holding a bouquet and standing next to their father, Frank. Stunned, he stopped a moment until Jack pushed him the rest of the way into the room.
"Time's wasting, Rich! We're on the clock!" Jack said as he pushed Richard up to stand next to a podium.
"What's going on?" he asked. "Dad? What..." Suddenly it became clear to him, washing over him like a storm.
"Here. Hold these." Jack said, stuffing something in his hand. Richard looked down and opened his fingers numbly and saw two gold rings.
"Jack?"
Taking his place next to Richard as Brooke and Heather walked slowly to them, turning to the opposite side of the podium, Jack let a out a sigh and smiled toward Erica and her father. "You'll do fine, Rich! Just stand there and hand me those when the guy says to. Easy as pie!"
Richard looked around in a daze as the old man who'd let them in walked up to the podium carrying a bible. Setting it down, he opened it and nodded to Erica; Richard only just then noticing that she had added a beautiful floral ring veil to her dress, completing the look of a bride to perfection.
As Frank walked Erica up the aisle, the Wedding March playing softly in the background, he turned to his daughter and whispered, "You know, when I said I'd pay to send you to a school near him, I didn't think we'd be jumping to this so quickly! Are you sure, sweet pea?"
Nodding, Erica looked up the aisle at Jack, standing and waiting for her. "I always have been, Daddy! When it comes to Jack, I'm sure of everything!"
Coming up to stand next to Jack, Erica turned to her father and blushed as he partially lifted her veil and kissed her on the cheek before stepping back.
Richard was so dazed, he hardly noticed when Jack started nudging him a few minutes later when the man asked for the rings. "Huh? Oh." Wanting to refuse to give them over, drag Jack out of the building, and beat the tar out of him, Richard just sighed and accepted fate, handing them over.
"The couple have decided to write their own vows, so as you exchange rings, exchange vows." the officiant instructed.
Turning to Erica, Jack gave her his half grin. "I don't think I'll ever deserve the love you've given me over the years, Buttons. I intend to spend however many I've got left trying to be worthy of it, though!" Holding up the ring, he nearly cried. "Mom... Mom gave me this. It's been on her hand since the day she and Dad were married back in forty-five after the war. She wanted you to have it, and so do I." He slipped his mother's ring over her finger, fitting perfectly. "I love you, Erica. Now and forever!"
Trying to hold back her tears while she held Jack's father's ring, Erica took a ragged breath. "I have a confession to make, Jack! I've had a crush on you since I was ten!" she repeated to him, the words signifying their happiness together. "You make me laugh! You're the reason I smile! You've been my friend, and now I want you to always and forever be my love." She slipped the ring on his finger. "I love you, Jack! I always have!"
Nodding with a smile, the officiant stated, "If anyone can show cause why these two should not be wed, let them speak now or forever hold their peace."
Watching as everyone turned to him, almost daring him to say something, Richard shrugged. "What? Now? I'd lose a head I'm fond of! I'm good!"
Shaking his head, the minister took a breath. "Then by the power vested in me by God and the State of Nevada, I now pronounce you Man and Wife." He leaned forward slightly to finish with a smile. "You may kiss the bride!"
Jack turned and lifted her veil, laying it gently over the back of her head. Leaning down slightly, they tilted and kissed, simply and quickly.
When they all started exchanging hugs and congratulations, Richard found a moment and dragged his father aside. "Dad, I have to know. You're OK with this? I mean, I assume you are! You're here, you gave her away, but..."
Nodding, Frank clapped Richard on the shoulder. "Yes, son. I've known about your sister being in love with Jack for a long time. I figure if after this long she's still in love with him, then there's nothing more to say. You can't fight a woman's heart, boy. Remember that!"
Sighing, Richard nodded and turned to his best friend. "Jack, you son of a..." His words were interrupted as Jack hugged him tightly.
"Thanks, Rich! I know you could have said something, stopped the whole thing, but you didn't! I'll love you forever for that!"
Stepping back, he looked down at his new brother-in-law. "I meant what I said before, Jack. You know perfectly well that if I'd said one bloody word, Heather, Brooke, and Erica would have all thrown me into that creek they call a river here!"
Jack looked at him seriously. "For what it's worth Rich, I really do love her, and I'll be good to her. I meant what I said in my vows. I'm gonna spend the rest of my life trying to deserve how much she's always loved me."
Grabbing him in a hug, Richard sighed, "You damn well better, Jack!"
The two separating, Frank came over and took Jack's hand. "Congratulations, boy. Welcome to the club. Just remember the most important words in any marriage."
"I love you?" Jack guessed.
"Nope! It's 'Yes, dear.'" his father-in-law advised. "You'll see!"
When the six walked out of the building after paying the fees and signing the license, Richard and Heather signing as witnesses, Richard took a look at the outside of the building, wondering how he'd been fooled. "I could of sworn this was a house when we walked up!" he said as he looked at it.
"It used to be one!" Jack pointed out. "That's what made it so easy! Well, that and you're an all day sucker, Rich!" he added. "Gotcha!"
Richard tried to grab him, but Jack slipped loose and backed away; his cover falling to the pavement. Quickly grabbing it again, Jack ran in a large circle, keeping Richard at a good distance and laughing the entire time.
"Will you two children act your age!" Heather barked at them.
Leaning back, Jack howled like a coyote as Richard caught up to him, nearly tackling him.
Starting to walk back toward the casinos, Frank pulled his daughter aside. "I can't stay, sweetie. I've got a nine o'clock flight back to Pittsburgh, but I wanted to tell you something first."
"I'm sorry you have to go home so soon, Daddy. What is it?"
"Well, your mother and I are moving to Newport Beach, California in May. I retire in a month, and I'm sick of shoveling snow, dealing with rain half of the year, and never seeing the sun. We've sold the house and bought a place there, so we'll be closer when you want to visit."
"I notice Mother didn't come." she stated disappointedly. "Why not?"
Exhaling heavily, Frank started to walk with her behind the other four. "Jack invited her, that's one of the main reasons I'm here. He swallowed his pride and showed me what kind of a man he was. He offered to pay for both our tickets, round trip, too." Pulling out his pipe, he struck a match, puffing on it until it lit. "Your mother wouldn't accept it, sweet pea. Keeps insisting that if we cut off your tuition and threaten to disown you, you'll forget all about Jack. She even threatened to leave me just for coming to give you away, but I called her bluff."
"I think she's been trying to push Jack and I apart for a while, Daddy." she stated sadly as they started to cross the bridge over the tiny river. "When I first told her how I felt about Jack, the first thing she did was to try and push me toward someone else, anyone else! I got so sick of her trying to set me up on dates with boys that go to our church!"
Looking at the pavement as they walked up the street and toward the casinos, Frank grimaced while the other four ahead of them talked and laughed. "I... I need to tell you something else, sweetie. I don't know if it's a good idea to let Jack know this. I'll leave that to your judgement."
Swallowing hard, Erica knew that whatever he had to say was going to be bad. "OK, Daddy."
He let out a sigh. "See, your mother knew you had a crush on Jack longer than you think." he explained. "She told me after Jack invited us here to your wedding that she knew how you felt about him almost a year before she set him up with that Wendy girl."
She stopped on the sidewalk on the side of the bridge over the river. "Mom was always trying to get Jack away from me?" Suddenly her mother's erratic behavior regarding Jack all made sense. "But why, Daddy?"
"Your mother thinks Jack is a 'bad influence'." Frank huffed as he puffed on his pipe. "She wanted you to marry a rich boy who could take care of you, the way I took care of her. Jack grew up poor, so she thinks he'll always be poor. She just won't ever admit that love beats money. I'm sorry, sweet pea."
"Daddy? I know this sounds terrible, but..." Erica sighed and looked out onto the small river flowing under their feet. "Why don't you just leave Mother in Pittsburgh and marry some busty actress!"
"Can't." he replied. "Despite it all, I still love her. Besides, I didn't promise your mother I'd stay with her the rest of our lives, I promised God."
They started walking again, Erica seeing that the other four had stopped at the north side of the bridge. "I can understand that, Daddy."
His arm hugging her shoulder while he puffed his pipe, he nodded toward the group that waited for them. "You gonna tell him?"
"I don't think I can keep it from him." Erica sighed. "I love him so much I just can't! I spent so long hiding how I felt from him, I don't think I could hide anything from him ever again. I don't want to." She looked at him as they slowly walked together. "Do you understand?"
Frank nodded as his pipe went out again. "Yeah. I get it, sweetie."
"What's with the long faces?" Jack asked. "Second thoughts, Buttons?"
She laughed at the suggestion. "No, Jack! No second thoughts! No regrets, no going back!" She separated from her father and flowed into his arms. "Daddy can't stay. He's flying home in just over an hour."
"Yeah, I know." Jack nodded. "I bought him his ticket, even after he tried to insist on paying for it himself! You sure you can't stay, Frank? You're more than welcome! You can still get your ticket traded for a later flight."
He clapped his hand on Jack's shoulder. "I'd love to son, but I gotta get home. Lots to do! Your wife can fill you in on the details!"
"My wife!" his expression brightened. "God, I love the sound of that!" He kissed Erica on the forehead quickly and sweetly before extending his hand to her father. "Have a good flight then, Frank!"
Taking it, he gave a firm grip back. "Oh, and you can call me Dad, now! It's official! You're family!"
"Jack's been family for a long time, Daddy." Erica cooed.
"No. Good thing too, or else you two would be in serious trouble!" he replied jokingly. "So long, sweet pea!" He bent and kissed her cheek before hailing a cab to take him back to the airport.
After the five watched him depart, they turned toward the casinos once more, Richard suddenly remembering something. "Oh! We were supposed to be looking for you! Heather wanted to go dance!" he looked at the conspirators. "Or was all that just a part of the ambush?"
Smiling, Heather wrapped an arm through his. "A little of both, dear!"
Jack grinned as the three walked into the club, music playing loudly while video screens all over showed re-runs of 'American Bandstand'. Leading the way to the bar, he ordered drinks for all of them. "You're looking at a married man!" he told the bartender.
"Congratulations!" the man said as he poured, eyeing Richard and Heather. "Them too?"
Turning to look up at Richard, his girlfriend smiled. "We could if you want to, dear! Nothing stopping us!"
Sweating, Richard shook his head. "Oh, no! You're not getting off that easy, lady! You're getting a wedding in a proper church with a proper reception and the whole nine yards!"
"So what?" Jack interrupted angrily. "You think my wedding wasn't good enough?" He scowled at his oldest friend; all humor gone from his face.
Pushing between them, Brooke put a hand on the both of their chests. "Don't either of you even think about starting anything, or else I'll kick the shit out of both your asses! Stand down!" she ordered them. Turning to Richard, she poked him in the chest. "And don't you ever belittle Jack and Erica's wedding ever again!"
Seeing he was completely outnumbered, including Heather, he dropped his head. "Look, I didn't mean... I..." He looked up at his sister who was staring daggers at him. "Erica, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to make fun of your wedding! It was beautiful, really! It's just... it's not us is all. OK?"
Heather softened her ire some. "I'd be happy with any wedding, Richard!"
Moving closely to her so he could talk more privately, Richard lowered his voice. "I thought you wanted to wait until you graduated and I got out?"
"I still do, dear." she said softly and pulling herself close to him. "But I don't care how we do it!"
"I want to give you the wedding you always dreamed of!" He felt someone bump against him as they pushed past, trying to make their way into the club. Pulling her aside and out of the way of the entrance, he took her hands in his. "I love you. You know that, don't you?" he asked.
"Of course I do, Richard dear, and I love you. I think it's adorable of you that you want me to have a big wedding with all the ceremony! So if that's what you want, then that's what we'll do!" She wrapped her arms around him and kissed him deeply, not caring who was watching or if it was proper.
When their kiss ended, they were greeted with a round of cheers and catcalls. Richard could only blush and nod his head in a slight bow.
"Here!" Jack said, almost shoving a drink in his hand. "Drink it, jarhead!" His face was still serious until a moment after he raised his own glass against Richard's, then slipped into his half-grin. "You are such an easy mark, Rich!" he gloated.
After Jack downed his drink in one gulp and started to laugh, it dawned on Richard that his best friend had gotten him yet again. "You are so gonna pay for that later, Jack!" he chuckled as he downed his own drink.
"Rich! How many times are you gonna fall for it!?" Jack laughed. "You are such an all-day sucker! See? This is yet another reason why you need me!" He took Richard's glass and slapped it back down on the bar for a refill.
"He's not the only one that needs you, Jack." Erica said, slipping her arms around his waist. Pulling him down into an even more passionate kiss than the one her brother and Heather had just shared, she didn't end it until both of them were gasping for breath.
They didn't notice the whoops and cheers for their kiss until it was over and Jack found himself taking his turn at bows, in his case more flamboyantly and in grandiose style, bowing deeply at the waist. "Thank you! Thank you! No! Please! You're too much! It was nothing! Thank you!"
Grabbing his arm to halt his bows, Richard pointed at Brooke, who'd snagged a table for them while they'd gotten drinks and applause. Making their way over to her, they all sat and enjoyed the music, slowing their drinking to a reasonable pace. In the middle of a funny story that Jack was telling, Richard stopped him. "Wait a minute! What about our rooms? We only have two and... well... I guess you two will want... um... your own now." He looked at Brooke sadly, noticing she was still the odd girl out.
Brooke shrugged. "Don't sweat it, Rich. Jack and Erica aren't staying in either one tonight. He already reserved a suite for them before we even got here! As for me, well now I get a room to myself! You two can have our room..." She indicated Heather and Richard. "...and I'll get yours!" Hearing a song come on that she liked, her eyes got wide. "Oh! Jack! Come on! You're with me!" She grabbed his hand and almost jerked him to the dance floor.
While Heather laughed at Jack and Brooke hamming up the place to 'Heart of Glass', Richard scooted over to his sister. "Erica, I just wanted... well... I wanted to say I'm happy for you, for both of you!" he shouted over the music. "I can tell you make each other happy, and I guess that matters a lot to me."
"Thanks, Richie!" she shouted back. "Same for you and Heather! She's a great girl!"
"She is. Sometimes I worry that she's too good for me, ya' know? Like I don't deserve her and one day she's gonna wake up and realize that she's dating down?"
"I'll be the judge of that!" Heather interrupted with a shout, leaning against him happily.
When Jack and Brooke returned to the table, he sat next to his new wife and exhaled heavily. "Woo! Brooke, I don't know where you get the energy! That about wore me out!"
Erica leaned against him happily and took his hand. "None of that! I need you healthy and rested for later!"
Finally leaving the club for their rooms after one in the morning, the five stumbled, staggered, and laughed the whole way there. When the elevator stopped at their floor, Jack and Erica didn't get out.
"Aren't you coming?" Richard mumbled.
"Not our floor!" Erica answered, while Jack pushed another button. Seeing her brother disappear between the closing doors, she waved. "Goodnight!"
Slowly Richard sobered to the thought that Jack and his sister were about to celebrate their wedding night. He sighed as Heather led him to their room with Brooke already ahead of them and grabbing her things to take them to the room he and Jack had shared that afternoon.
Walking in, Brooke tapped him on the shoulder. "Key, please?" Seeing him fumble for it, she grabbed his wallet and removed his room key, dropping the wallet in his hand once she had it. "Goodnight, you two!" she shouted.
Heather undressed him, Richard being too sauced to know how. Shaking her head, she tsked. "This will be the last time I do this, Richard! Promise?"
He nodded his head, the room spinning as he did. "Promise. I jus' wanted ta' celeb... celeb... ah, shit! I just didn't wanna think about Jack an' my sis doin'... stuff!"
"She's his wife now, Richard. You're just going to have to put it out of your head!" When she heard a snore emanate from her fiancé, she shook her head, finished undressing him, and tucked him into bed; staying up half the night to make sure he didn't vomit and choke in his sleep.
Walking slowly along the sidewalk next to the tiny river that ran through the middle of the city, giving it life, Brooke tried to settle her emotions. She'd gotten restless after moving her things to Jack and Richard's room, so she decided to take a walk. Leaning against the railing along the riverside, she sighed wistfully as the water ran by her; its soothing natural sounds helping to distract from the loneliness that threatened to overwhelm her.
Even as she tried to escape the feeling, she would see couples roaming along the walkway, each one a hot knife to her aching heart. "Shit!" she exclaimed to nobody. I know I should be happy for them, but... Her thoughts filled with self-loathing, she was angry with herself for her jealousy of the happiness that both Jack and Richard had found that continued to elude her.
"Damn it!" she swore. Stalking back to her hotel room, she passed a laughing group of teens going the opposite way, sure that they were far too young to be out so late, even for a Saturday. "Patience has its limits!" she grumbled absently. "I know I'll find her someday, but someday better get here pretty damn soon!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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When Rich, Heather, and I drove back to the bay area in his car, mine stayed with Jack and Erica after we three had properly 'decorated' it. By then I was feeling a little better about things, but not much. I think I did a pretty good job of keeping the boys blissfully unaware, but not Heather. She knew I was upset, and why, without me saying a word. That week was hell for me. Once word got around that Jack and Erica had gotten married, I had every single serviceman at that base 'dropping by' the shop to give their condolences on the breakup of our relationship, and not too casually expressing their interest at taking his fictional place in my bed. I managed to duck out of them all that week by saying how I was still kind of heartbroken over the whole thing and just wanted to take time away from dating anyone, but I knew they'd be back. I never realized before that week just how much Jack had helped my time in the Corps be as enjoyable as it was. After he got married, it was a chore. Just work... and I had eighteen months left in my cruise. When Jack finally returned the next weekend, I got to hear all the details of their Honeymoon. Romantic evenings, dinners at the lake, feeding ducks at some park, I wanted to puke it was so sweet! I'll admit it. I was bitter. Bitter, jealous, and angry with Jack for taking away my protective cloak. I think that's why he did what he did.
---
Signing his release papers, Jack then handed them back to his commanding officer. Sighing, he dropped the pen on the desk. Without another word, he saluted and left, knowing that today would be his last day of active duty. He had enough Leave saved up that he would be taking the rest of his cruise on Leave starting the next day and ending on the anniversary of his joining up. Smiling as he returned to start packing up his things, most of them already at the apartment he and Erica shared, he knew that his entire life was about to change.
"Jack!" Richard called out to him, running down the hall to catch up. "All out?"
He nodded silently. After walking a bit, he looked at his friend. "You?"
"Signed off, but I have three weeks left before I can take Terminal Leave." he replied. "So what're your plans now?"
Jack stopped in the hall and leaned against the cold bricks shrugging. "Well, Erica still has a year left on her degree. I'm thinking of getting a job around locally so I can keep things moving toward us buying that place when she's done. Dad's still paying her tuition and housing for her, so we don't need to worry about that. Makes me feel guilty, though."
"Don't sweat Dad's help, Jack." Richard advised. "Soon you'll be missing it! Badly!"
Starting down the hall once more, this time Jack was slow and methodical. "Well, I had a thought about what to do after she's done with school. With Mom gone and your folks living in SoCal, there really isn't any reason to go back to P-A. No one there to want to go back to. So I was thinking, maybe Erica and I'll move down south so she can be close to your folks."
Stopping in his tracks, Richard grabbed Jack's arm. "Jack, you're willing to live that close to Mother? Not afraid she's gonna poison you or anything?"
"Nah!" Jack shook his head. "I just won't ever eat her cooking! She's got to get used to me being her son-in-law eventually, right? Right? Rich!?"
Laughing, Richard shook his head. "I dunno, Jack! I wouldn't be surprised if you bring your wife over for dinner at their house one night and find that Mom happened to invite some single guy friend over, someone she thinks Erica might like better than you!"
"I got no worries about that, Rich! Buttons would sooner gnaw off her own arm than leave me! Poor girl! She's a hopeless case, Rich!"
He patted Jack's shoulder. "I don't get it. I don't think I ever will, but you're right! She's totally gone for you!" After a moment, he gently grabbed Jack's shoulder to pull him to a stop again. "Um... you talked to Brooke?"
"Brooke!" Jack sighed. "See, I don't get it! She was all happy to help me with the wedding and almost giddy at tricking you into being my Best Man, but then as soon as I got back... Bam! It's like a freezer got left open anytime she sees me! I can feel the temperature drop twenty degrees!"
"You know she's getting hit on like thirty times a day?" Richard pointed out.
"No! How could I know! She hardly speaks to me!" Jack lightly punched the wall. "What does she expect? She want me to get a divorce just to keep the guys off her back?"
"Just cut her some slack, Jack! She's having a hard time adjusting to things! She got used to you keeping the field clear and now it's like every guy here is trying to make up for lost time! Swabbies included!"
"Ouch!" Jack winced. "Oh, that's gotta hurt! Well what can I do? Put out the word that she's frigid or something? Bad in bed?"
"Have Erica invite her over for dinner more often! At least if you keep her social calendar full, she'll have handy excuses for turning them down!"
"Great! Just what I want! Brooke crashing my romantic dinners at home just when I get time to be there myself? No, Brooke's just gonna have to man-up and turn them away on her own. If she's pissed off at me for marrying Erica, then... well... then she's on her own! See ya, Rich!" At that, Jack took off down the hall, intending to make the rest of his final day at The Barracks less uncomfortable.
Watching his friend leave, Richard sighed. "Damn it, Jack!"
Erica lit the second candle at the dining room table, shaking the match out before turning the lights down low. Any minute Jack would be home to stay, and she intended to make the most of their first of many evenings to come. Checking her makeup once more, she smoothed her hair away from her face, smiling at her reflection. With a gratified sigh, she waited.
Hauling the seabag out of the cab, Jack pulled it over his shoulder, vaulting up the steps by twos towards their apartment. Opening the door, he noticed the dark lighting immediately, despite the late afternoon sun. The smell of pasta and bread wafted out the door as he entered; his seabag dropping off his shoulder as he saw her standing next to the couch.
"Welcome home, Jack!" she purred.
Not even bothering to close the door, he rushed up to her and lifted her in the air, making her shriek with laughter. "I'm free!" he shouted, spinning her around. Putting her down gently, he kept his arms around her. "How was school, little girl?"
Laughing, Erica relaxed into his embrace. "Boring! This makes up for it!"
Returning to and closing the door after picking up his bag, he carried it off to their room, dropping it unceremoniously in their cluttered closet. "Dinner smells wonderful!" he complimented her. "How do you find the time?"
"I made the time!" she replied from the kitchen. "Go wash up!"
"Yes, dear." he surrendered. "Want me to change to a suit and tie?"
"No, just wash your hands!" Erica laughed. "And shave, you Neanderthal!"
"Ug! Me scrape face! Then club head!" he grunted, drawing another fit of laughter from his wife.
Coming out freshly shaven and clean, he leaned against the wall next to the kitchen, his smile at watching Erica stir spaghetti almost made her laugh for that alone. Coming up behind her, he wrapped his arms around her and kissed her neck. "Anything I can help with?"
"Just go sit and I'll bring it out. You can help later with the dishes! I cooked, you're cleaning up!"
"Deal!" he agreed, poking her sides with his fingers and making her jump.
"Ah! Jack! No!" she laughed.
While they sat and ate silently, the two kept looking at each other smiling, sometimes breaking out into giddy laughter at nothing but the other's smile. Once Jack finished his plate, he sat back and held his stomach. "Now that I'm Outside, I'm gonna need to watch that. You keep stuffing me like this, and I'm gonna bloat up like Principal Ford!"
"I'll make sure you get plenty of physical activity to keep you in top fighting shape!" she joked seductively. "You can start with the dishes!"
"Ah! The bliss of married life! You're bossing me around already! I love it!" Getting up, he made his way to the kitchen, kissing her cheek on the way.
"So did you see Richie before you left today?" Erica asked as she gathered their dishes and brought them into the kitchen.
"Yep. Just a quick word in the hallway, though. Got too busy after that." Jack started running hot water over the pans.
"How about Brooke? I haven't heard from her in weeks! How's she doing?" She leaned against the refrigerator to listen.
"Um... well, Brooke's been a little... distant... lately. Downright frosty, to be honest." He talked as he washed. "Apparently, since I'm not available to run interference for her anymore, she has like half the base beating a path to her rack. Poor kid! Still, she acts like it's my fault."
Twisting her fingers in knots, Erica looked down. "I... I feel for her. It's sort of my fault that you're not around to keep the guys away. If I didn't..."
Jack stopped washing and hugged her. "No, Buttons! This is not your fault! It's just... just the way it is." Stroking her hair and comforting her, he decided that it would be a good time to tell her about his idea. "I was thinking, after you graduate next spring, what would you think about moving south to be close to your folks? I mean, I just want you to be happy, and I know being able to be near Dad would help."
"Oh, Jack!" she cried, wrapping her arms around his neck and pulling him into a deep and loving kiss. "That sounds wonderful!" She stopped and her smile vanished. "But we have another year until then. What'll you do in the mean time?"
"Well, I... I saved a lot of money from the sale of my mom's house. Between my pay and that, Mom's care and funeral only used about half of it, so I have a bit left. If I get a temp job around here I can add to it, so by the time we're ready to move south we can afford a pretty decent house. So long as Dad keeps paying your apartment rent now that we're married, that is. Otherwise, I'll have to make enough to cover expenses and the money we have saved will have to do for a down payment. Either way, I should get some kind of job around here."
"What were you thinking of doing?" she asked.
He returned to washing dishes as he answered. "Well, I know a lot about the dry-cleaning business from my old man. I figure I could get my foot in the door to start, then work up to management pretty quick. Good enough for temp work anyway. Once we get to SoCal, I'm thinking about opening my own place. 'Jack's Jiffy Dry-Clean'! How's that sound?"
"Corny!" she laughed. "Still, I think you could do anything sometimes! If that's what makes you happy, then I'm right there with you!"
He finished scrubbing dishes and loaded them in the dishwasher. "Sometimes I feel like that, too! Usually after you tell me!" He added the soap and started the appliance. Turning to dry his hands on a dishtowel, he wrapped his arms around his wife. "So any other plans for the evening?"
She looked up at him coyly. "I just might have one or two!"
Three weeks later, Richard joined Jack in leaving the service, using the last of his Leave time to get out early. Carrying a box of Richard's clothes out the door to the old station wagon, Jack met Brooke coming in. The two looked at each other, almost daring the other to say something. When Brooke slowly looked away and cleared the doorway, Jack sighed and carried his load out without a word.
"You two ever gonna work this out?" Richard asked idly as he taped another box shut.
She shrugged as she looked for the next thing to take out. "Nothing to say, really."
"Oh? How come you keep staring daggers at him every time he so much as breathes in your presence, then?"
Brooke paced the room, her task forgotten. "You just don't get it, Rich! OK, so he fell in love and got married! Where does that leave me? I can't even use the head without three grunts and a squid asking me out!" She moved over close to him so she could lower her voice. "I can't even think about going on a date! If I got caught, I don't have Jack around to cover for me!"
"That's not Jack's fault, Brooke. You know that." Richard pointed out. "I don't see why you're pissed at him for it."
"It's because... Rrrg! You just don't get it, do you!" she growled. "I know, I've had it easy the last five years. No one bugging me for a date because I was Jack's girl. Now it's ten times worse than the other W-Ms get though, 'cause all the guys know I'm 'straight', available, supposedly willing to date grunts, and some of them have years of pent up desire to act on it! I'm scared one of these thugs is gonna drag my ass in a closet and rape me 'cause I dated Jack and won't date them, Rich! What am I supposed to do!? I... I don't think I can finish my cruise like this! It would have been better if Genius Jack had never helped me in the first place!"
"Sorry to have been so much trouble." Jack snidely remarked as he came in for another box. "OK, Brooke. What do you want me to do? Divorce Erica so I can go back to 'dating' you for the next sixteen months? Huh? Tell me how to fix it! What do you want from me?"
Brooke stared at Jack as though she could burn him with her eyes. "Nothing, Jack! You've done enough! Why don't you run back home to your little girl and play House some more!"
"Hey!" Richard barked. "So you're pissed at my sister, too?"
She nearly cried in frustration. "Rrrg! You two are impossible!" She started for the doorway that Jack still stood in. "Make a hole, maggot!"
"Gladly!" Jack snapped as he stepped back out into the hallway. As Brooke stormed away, he saw Corporal Rogers intercept her in the hall.
"Brooke! Hey look, I was thinking, since you're available and all, if you'd like to..."
She turned on him with fire in her eyes, her voice a low growl so it wouldn't carry. "Let me break this down Bert and Ernie-style, shit-brick! Finish that sentence and they'll be collecting shards of your nuts from the floor for the next month! I'm no fucking Barracks Bunny! And even if I was, I'd sooner stand naked in the middle of Mess Hall at noon than go out with a broke-dick maggot like you! Do I make myself clear!?"
He escaped down the hall away from her and towards Jack as she went the other way. "I can see why you dumped her, Dunning! What a bit..."
Lunging, Jack pinned him to the opposite wall with his forearm against his throat, interrupting his insult. "Don't even say it Rogers, or I'll do to you what she threatened!" He leaned in and lowered his voice to a low growl. "Spread the word! Leave! Her! Alone!" Pausing he added, "She's still not available, get me?" As Corporal Rogers tried to struggle away, Jack leaned harder, threatening to break the other Marine's neck.
Richard pulled Jack off the hapless Marine. "Back off! You're on Terminal Leave, so don't screw it up!" Turning to Jack's victim, he hooked a thumb over his shoulder. "Beat it, Rogers!" Looking back to Jack, he ran his fingers through his hair and exhaled heavily. "And you, ya' double-digit midget! Help me get this stuff out of here, will ya'?"
Calming himself from his rage, Jack nodded. "Alright, Rich. I'll behave."
Between the two of them, they managed to pack out Richard's things by the end of the day. Getting ready to leave for the last time, Richard saw Brooke approaching. Nodding to her, he got Jack's attention. "We have company."
Brooke walked up to her two best friends almost shyly. "Listen, I wanted to say..." She paused and stopped next to the rear hatch of the old car, looking at the two men who had been her best friends, but were about to get in and never return. "Shit!"
"Really?" Jack said with surprise. "That's your parting words for us?"
"Jack! You..." Brooke fumed before she couldn't help herself and began to laugh along with the two others. "I hate you!" she said jokingly.
Straightening up, having doubled over laughing at Brooke's reaction, Jack shook his head. "Brooke! You know you love me! Come here!" She walked over and they hugged, their laughter fading. "Just so you know, I straightened out Rogers and told him to spread the word that you're still off limits."
Brooke pulled back and looked at him with an astonished expression. "Jack! Won't that make people think..."
"Who gives a shit what these jarheads think!" he interrupted. "They wanna think we're having an affair? Let 'em! It's harmless and will keep you outta their scopes. What? You afraid you'll get hit with Article one-thirty-four? I'm out, and Erica isn't going to lodge a complaint!"
"Jack, if that gets back to Dad," Richard pointed out, "he'll kill you where you stand, on rumor alone!"
"It's a risk I'm willing to take, and I know Buttons will back me up on this!"
Erica stared at him. "You did what?"
"Look, I didn't actually say anything, honey!" Jack defended his actions. "I just implied it! It'll keep the guys off her back until she's out!"
She paced the living room floor almost yelling at him. "Jack! I don't want anyone thinking things like that about you! Why didn't you talk to me about it first?"
"Is that it?" he accused. "Or is it you'll be embarrassed if people think that your husband..."
"Jack!" she screamed at him. "I don't care what people think of me! I... I just couldn't stand it if someone like Daddy were to think... think so badly of you! It would make Mother look like she was right and break my heart!"
Looking at his wife, he saw the tears streaming down her face, melting his defenses. "Oh God, Erica! I... I'm sorry!" He closed to her and wrapped her in his arms. "Honestly, I didn't plan it. It... it just popped out of my mouth! I couldn't let that idiot badmouth her, and when I saw that my defending her could be taken to mean... well... I added just enough to put the idea in his head. I... I'm sorry, but I wouldn't take it back, even if I could. Brooke is one of my best friends. I just... I couldn't sit by and do nothing while she went through hell!"
Erica held him tightly, terrified. "I guess there's nothing to be done about it now. I'm just scared that your solution to Brooke's problem will backfire on us, somehow! I... I really hope it turns out for the best!"
The following Saturday Jack was out job hunting when Erica heard a knock at the door. Looking through the peephole, she opened up with a worried expression. "Brooke? Is everything alright?"
Her husband's best friend couldn't look at her. "Um... can I talk to Jack?"
She opened the door for her. "Come on in." The Marine walked into their living room as Erica explained. "Jack's not here, but you can stay until he gets back." She closed the door and watched Brooke start toward it again.
"No, I... I think I should go and try to talk to him later. I..."
"Brooke! It's alright! Please? How about a nice cup of coffee?" Erica smiled, trying to ease her discomfort.
Forcing a smile, she still couldn't look at Erica. "I... I suppose that would be alright." While Erica warmed up their drinks in the microwave, Brooke took a seat at their table. "Maybe I should just go until Jack gets back."
"Really, Brooke! It's fine! Whatever it is, I..." she said as she sat down at the table with her. "I don't want you to feel uncomfortable around us."
Brooke sighed. "It's just... well... Jack's been really easy to talk to about some things over the years, and I... I was hoping he could help me with... well... with a problem."
Hearing the microwave, Erica got back up to retrieve their drinks. "Well, you could talk to me. I know I'm not Jack, you and he have a lot more in common, but I'd like to think I know Jack pretty well. Maybe I can help!" She sat a warm cup of coffee in front of her guest and returned to the seat next to her. "Try me!"
Staring at the cup in front of her, Brooke shook her head and laughed lightly. "It's stupid, really! I... I'm just used to Jack being around to help me. Guess I'm gonna have to find a new normal." She looked at Erica and smiled. "I really am happy for you two, but also just a tiny bit jealous!"
"A tiny bit?" Erica retorted. "You look like I've felt for the last six years!"
"How's that?"
"Pining!" Erica replied empathetically. "Is there... um... someone special?"
Brooke pushed her cup around in a circle with the handle. "No, and... well... that's the jealous part! I see you and Jack, Rich and Heather, and... ugh! It just makes me think I'm never..."
"Hold it!" Erica interrupted. "Just stop right there! I know there's someone out there for you, Brooke! You just haven't found her yet!" She took another drink before asking, "I mean, how long has it been since you even went on a date?"
Rolling her eyes, Brooke chuckled uneasily. "Too long! Not since last year! Um... November. God! What a disaster that turned out to be! But, it's... it's harder now that I can't fake-double with Jack."
"Can't Richie help?"
Brooke stuck her tongue out. "Blech! Sorry, I love your brother, but doubling with he and Heather is like swimming in a syrup vat! They're so damn cute and into each other it's like they aren't even there with you sometimes! Even when they are, it makes any date I have uncomfortable. It's so obvious they're gonna spend the rest of their lives together, it makes them start thinking the same thing about me! That's dangerous territory!"
"Don't you want a long term relationship?"
"Of course!" Brooke said defensively. "But it's kind of a turn-off for a first date! Besides, you start talking long-term commitments with a lesbian and you might get them showing up the next day at your house with a U-Haul!"
The two laughed together for a bit before Erica asked, "So, what was it you wanted to talk to Jack about?"
Smiling embarrassedly, Brooke looked into her cup. "Um... well, I was kinda hoping he would... um... take me out? Running as my wingman? That way if I bump into anyone from the base I can just say I was out with him and not raise any ticklish questions."
Pondering Brooke's situation, and wanting to get closer to the woman that helped her get Jack, Erica shrugged. "Well, I suppose it would be alright with me, but what would you think about going out with the both of us? I swear, I wouldn't be too much of a drag!"
"I don't think that would work." Brooke said shaking her head. "I mean, if I was out with the both of you..." She stopped and reconsidered her objections. "Actually, come to think of it, I don't see why it couldn't work!" She looked up at Erica, concerned that she didn't trust her with Jack alone. "I hope you know that there's never been anything between Jack and me, and there never could be! I love Jack, but like a brother! You have nothing to worry about!" She was surprised when Erica began to laugh. "What's so funny?"
Unable to help herself, she tried to calm down and explain. "Oh, Brooke! It's just... I tried to see you and Jack being romantic in any way and... Oh God, no! It was almost comical! Honestly, I have no idea how you've pulled off being a couple for so long!"
They were still laughing together when Jack came in the front door. "Well this doesn't bode well! You two? Laughing and conspiring while I'm out there slaving to get a job?" He looked at Brooke. "You're not trying to take my Buttons to the dark side are you?"
Erica rose and hugged him, still laughing. "No, love! Just you and I taking her out tonight for some fun and looking for a date! Nothing to worry about!"
"So what? You need two wingmen again?" Jack half smiled as he sat down at the table. "Now that Rich is living up the whole 'unwed couple' bit, you need to horn in on my Saturday nights?"
"Hey! I was just gonna ask you to fly CAS for me like you used to, but she insisted!" Brooke said defensively.
Coming up behind him, Erica wrapped her arms around his chest. "Don't worry, love! It'll be fun!"
Ordering three more drinks at the bar, Jack stood and waited uncomfortably. The bartender gave him a dirty look as he took the drinks and dropped a ten on the counter. "Keep the rest for the wonderful service." he quipped. Taking their drinks back to their table, he rejoined Brooke and his wife. "Ya' know, I get the distinct impression that the bartender might have spit in my drink."
Shaking her head, Erica took a sip. "She's just jealous that you're with us!"
Sitting back in her chair, Brooke stirred her drink absently. "I'm starting to think going out with you is part of my problem, Jack! Heck, Erica's gotten hit on more times than I have tonight! Maybe I'd do better if she and I left you at home!"
Blushing, his wife shook her head again. "I think that last girl really wanted to ask you to dance, but she chickened out at the last second and asked 'the ugly friend' instead!"
"You take that back!" Jack almost barked. "No bad-mouthing my Buttons!" He took another drink before leaning over to Brooke. "Hey. End of the bar. The tall blonde with the cropped hair? I think she was just eyeing you."
Glancing over at where Jack had indicated, she shook her head subtly. "No, and if she was it was to shoot me a dirty look. I'm not her type. She's the type that thinks that you're not a real lesbian unless you look like a man."
"How can you possibly know that from here?" Jack asked in disbelief.
"The same way you can tell when..." She paused and looked at the couple sitting with her. "Oh, wait. I forgot who I was talking to. Mister Oblivious who couldn't figure out that his wife was in love with him for over a decade! Never mind. You wouldn't understand. Suffice it to say I can just tell!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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That established the pattern. Jack and Erica would go out with me when I had Liberty and I'd trawl for Ms. Right. Never really got anywhere, but the three of us sure had fun trying! We got together with Rich and Heather a few times for dinner, but it was becoming clear that the guys started getting too busy with their own things to spend any real time together. Jack got a job managing a dry-cleaners in Palo Alto, meanwhile Rich was busy finishing his degree. With Heather and Rich graduating shortly after he and Jack were officially shifted to the Reserves, a full year ahead of Erica's graduation and sixteen months before the end of my cruise, we all knew it meant big changes were coming in our lives. Rich had talked about taking an office job somewhere in LA so he could be close to Jack, Erica, and his parents, but he never got into any details. I guess he was just stalling. I remember the last dinner we had all together that summer. It was at Heather and Rich's apartment because it was bigger. I'm pretty sure Jack knew what was coming, but it didn't make it any easier to take.
---
Richard was hiding in the kitchen cooking when Heather came in to check on him. "Everything alright, Richard dear?" she asked.
"Sure! The roast is almost done!" he answered with a false smile. "We can sit down soon."
"Richard." Heather intoned knowingly. "You have been in here for over an hour. Are you avoiding Jack?"
He sighed, letting his head hang. "Yeah, kinda. I... I just didn't want to ruin dinner is all. I know Jack's going to take it hard."
"You're going to have to tell him sooner or later, and we're running out of time, Richard!" she told him. Taking his hands in hers, she smiled at him. "It's what we both want and Jack loves you! You'll see! He'll be fine!"
"I've been watching Jack's back so long it's hard to stop." Richard laughed. "I guess he was always right. I do need him!"
She wrapped her arms around him and hugged him gently. "I know, dear. I know you do."
They came out into the living room several minutes later, Richard carrying the roast. "Chow time!" he called to the three.
Jack intercepted him before he even made it to the table. "Good! I was about to start gnawing on your table leg, Rich!"
"Hands off!" Richard shouted as he tried to hold the tray out of Jack's reach. "What? You can't wait until we sit down?"
"I might faint!" Jack rolled his eyes and staggered back. "Food!" he dragged out the word like a starving man.
While the girls laughed at his antics, Richard shook his head and put down the roast. Once they'd all started eating, the conversation trailed off.
Jack couldn't help but notice that Richard was continually looking at Heather expectantly, as though waiting for her to say something. "OK. Rich, you're about a subtle as a brick to the side of the head. What's going on?"
Putting his fork down, Richard sighed and looked at his oldest friend. "Well, we were going to wait until after dinner to tell you three, but I guess there's no use putting it off." He looked over at Heather who nodded and smiled at him encouragingly. Looking to the others, he let it out in one breath. "I've been offered a job, but it's not in LA. It's in Concord... New Hampshire."
Silence cut through the room as Erica lightly gasped. Finally, Jack smiled at him. "Congratulations, Rich. I uh... I assume you accepted it. Otherwise we're all in shock for nothing and this was a pretty terrible joke!"
"I did." he replied seriously. "It... uh... I start next week. Heather and I'll be moving to a place in Concord by the end of this week. We'll be looking to buy a place pretty soon, though." He resumed eating as he finished talking.
"What about LA?" Erica almost cried. "I... I thought you were going to..." Her voice faltered as she worked on keeping her tears from spilling out.
"I have some news, too!" Heather offered cheerily. "I got a position interning as a psychotherapist with a medical group not far from Richard's new job!" She looked across the table at Richard's stricken sister. "It... it really is a good opportunity, for us both. We were worried that we might end up with jobs that split us up."
"Well, we can't let that happen!" Jack broke the somber mood. "After all the work I put in getting you two together? So when's the wedding?"
"Jack!" Erica laughed as she wiped a tear away, the other three chuckling and giggling as well. "You goofball! It is a good question, though. I can assume you're going to have one eventually, right Richie?"
"Well, we were planning on getting settled in first and then plan a big thing for the fall, say around Thanksgiving? That way Brooke can build up a long enough Leave." He looked over at the only person yet to comment.
Brooke set her glass of wine down, trying to steady her nerves. "That's nice of you two, but you shouldn't have to wait on account of me."
"But we have to, Brooke!" Heather explained. "I can't get married without my Maid of Honor!"
"Who? Me?" Brooke looked at her in shock.
"Well, it's your turn!" Erica commented. "Then it'll be my turn when you get married!"
"Yeah, right!" Brooke laughed. "Figure some way to pull that off!"
Taking a drink before answering, Erica looked at her seriously. "Well, even if you can't make it legal, you can still have a wedding ceremony, right? We'll do it, even if I have to get Jack ordained!"
"Woah!" Jack nearly choked as he heard his wife. "You want me to do what now? Try it and I don't think anyone would be able to stop laughing long enough to say 'I do'!"
Finishing dinner as they talked, Richard could see that Jack was putting up a front. It was painful to see his best and oldest friend hurting as bad as he was, but in the end it was inevitable. They had both known for some time that life would push them in different directions, but now that it was here, Richard couldn't help but feel like he was abandoning Jack, and Erica.
"So, we'll keep in touch and set up the plans for the wedding while you two get settled in." Jack went over everything. "Then in November when Brooke arranges her Leave, we'll be all set for the wedding on November thirtieth. That's the date, right?"
"Yup." Richard responded with a nod. "If it works for you, honey." he asked, turning to Heather.
"I don't care when or how, Richard! So long as we get there!" she said gaily, a smile covering her face that shone through the undertone of sadness that permeated their occasion.
Erica and Jack rose together. "We should be getting back to our place."
"And I have a long drive ahead." Brooke pointed out, grabbing her jacket and looking over at Jack. "See you guys on Saturday like usual?"
He nodded absently. "Yeah, sure." Turning to Richard he asked, "So, when do you two fly out?"
"Friday morning." he answered, one arm around Heather.
"So soon?" Erica asked disappointedly.
Her brother nodded glumly. "Our flight leaves at nine. The movers will have everything out by end of day Thursday though, only day they were available, so we're planning on staying in a hotel near the airport Thursday night." He laughed a little. "We'll have to call a cab to get there! The guy who bought my old wagon will be picking that up Thursday, too!"
"You sold The Beast?" Jack said in shock. "I wish I'd have known! I would have taken it off your hands!"
"Yeah, but the guy buying it paid me money for it!" Richard needled him.
"What? You think I don't have anything?" he replied with mock hurt. "I'll have you know I've got forty grand saved for the house Erica and I are buying in Newport Beach!"
"You'll need every penny of it!" Richard replied.
Erica shook her head. "No way you two are going to take a cab and sleep in a hotel on your last night in town! Don't think you're getting out of it, either! You two are staying at our place Thursday night and we're driving you to the airport on Friday!"
"Oh, Erica!" Heather intoned as she shook her head. "We can't put you out like that! Besides, don't you two have work and classes Friday?"
"I can get the first few hours off." Jack answered as he looked at Erica.
"And I haven't missed any classes this semester. I think I deserve one day of hooky! I just couldn't imagine not being there to see you two off!"
"Well, I can't be there!" Brooke shook her head. "Unless I come up with the most fabulous excuse in the history of excuses, I'll be in the shop all day!" Pushing past Jack and Erica, she gave Heather a hug. "I'm gonna miss you two! You take care of Rich for us, girl!"
Returning the hug, Heather nodded and choked back a tear. "I will, Brooke dear!" With a mirthful tone, she added, "I'm looking forward to seeing you this fall!"
The Marine slowly stood back and looked at Heather in shock. "Oh, God! You're gonna make me wear... a dress! Aren't you!?"
Nodding, Heather smiled wickedly. "Why of course! It goes with the job description, dear!"
Seeing Brooke turn to her pleadingly, Erica shook her head slowly. "Not a chance! You're up!"
Jack half-smiled when Brooke looked toward him, desperate for an escape. "Don't look at me, Brooke! I'd look terrible in a dress!"
"How do you know? Weirdo!" she retorted. "I bet you have nicer legs than I do!"
Getting a laugh and trying to change the subject, hoping to talk Heather out of it sometime before November, she turned and hugged Richard in a tight bear hug. "You take care too, jarhead! Stay clean!" As she pulled back, she flung her jacket over her shoulder and waved at the four as she headed for the stairs. "Catch you all later!"
"We do really need to get going." Erica apologized. Wrapping her brother in a warm embrace, she leaned her head on his shoulder. "We'll see you on Thursday, alright?"
Giving Heather a friendly one-arm hug, Jack smiled at her wryly. "See if I ever trust you again! First you toss me over for this chump, then you drag him two thousand miles away! I guess I can see why. Guess you need that distance to not run back to me! What is this power I have over the ladies?"
"It's called BO!" Richard replied to his rhetorical question. "New Hampshire might be far enough that we won't smell you!" Grabbing his best friend in a firm hug, he slapped Jack's back. "We'll see you Thursday."
Pulling back and surreptitiously wiping his eyes, Jack nodded and looked away. "If you're lucky!" As he and Erica made their way to the stairwell, he managed to maintain his half-grin until their door closed.
Thursday evening, Jack opened the front door to his and Erica's apartment after picking up Richard and Heather at their vacated apartment. "Entrez-vous!" he shouted, carrying in Richard's suitcase. "We just cleaned up the place, so the whips and leather harnesses are tucked away! Make yourselves at home! Well, for tonight anyway, you traitors!"
"Traitors!?" Richard declared as he put his carry-on bag down by the door. "Why? Just because we worked hard and found jobs? You make it sound like we're skipping the country!"
"You might as well be!" Jack shot back as he turned on the living room light. "New Hampshire! What's in New Hampshire, anyway? Snow? Didn't you get enough of that stuff back in Pittsburgh, Rich?"
"Well, for starters there's my family home!" Heather noted as she came in following Erica. "It really is a fine place. You'll see it when you come out for the wedding!"
"Wait a minute!" Jack said stopping to turn back. "You have a house there? Why in the heck are you getting an apartment then? What, do you need a summer home and winter home? What're you, birds?"
"No!" Heather laughed. "The house is in central New Hampshire! We'll be working in Concord, twenty miles away. I was thinking of just selling it, but until Richard and I have a place of our own, I don't have anywhere to put the family heirlooms, so we'll just hang on to it until we do."
"Oh!" Jack sniffed as he raised his voice an octave. "The family heirlooms? My, what was I thinking!" Dropping his tone back to normal, he scoffed and waved her off dismissively. "Bah! Twenty miles! You think twenty miles is to too far to drive to work to save on renting an apartment? Just how good do these jobs pay? Might think of charging you a night's rent!"
"Don't even joke about it!" Erica chided him. "My brother is welcome in my home, free of charge, anytime!"
"Great!" Jack sighed. "He's got brother-in-law Roger privileges!" he joked, referencing a running gag from the Burns and Allen TV show. "Just don't be coming over all the time to raid the fridge and gank my stuff, Rich!"
"I'll try not to make it a habit, Jack! The airfare puts a damper on the profit margin, anyway!" He carried his and Heather's suitcases into the spare room. "I've been meaning to ask, sis. Why'd you rent a two bed apartment when you moved out here?"
"I used to have a roommate." she answered. "A girl that went to school with me. She flaked on me after two months. Never even came back for her share of the deposit! I guess it's fair. I never got her last month's share of rent!"
Coming back out, he leaned on the wall by the bedroom door. "So Dad has been footing the whole bill ever since? Our father?"
Erica smiled as she headed to the kitchen. "Well, at least he loves one of us!"
"Ooh! Ouch!" he laughed as he and Heather moved to the sofa. "So Jack, you're living off my old man now?"
"He wouldn't take 'I suppose we shouldn't' for an answer!" Jack answered as he followed Erica into the kitchen. "Make yourselves at home. Dinner'll be in about half an hour. Feel free to use the Head to get clean!"
Enjoying their final meal together before going their separate ways, Jack kept the mood up by telling embarrassing stories that he hadn't gotten around to telling Heather yet about their lives back in Pittsburgh.
"So anyway," Jack said between laughs, "I'm banging on the door, saying we need to get moving, and he flings the door open, wearing nothing but a sheet, tells me to come back in ten minutes, and slams the door in my face! So I yell at him..."
"If you're done that quick, you really should see a doctor about it!" Richard said along with him as he shook his head in shame. "God, Jack! You're never gonna let me live that down, are you? It's your fault anyway! Dragging me to Doug's Dad's place! At nineteen! You are a bad influence on me!"
Fisting him in the ribs gently, Heather looked at him in mock anger. "Makes me wonder about poor Erica! What stories she doesn't know about Jack!"
"Ah! I got no stories like that!" Jack almost blushed. "Never could get a girl to take me serious! Not that I didn't look!"
"Ugh!" Erica groaned. "I do not want to know!"
Finishing the casserole as Jack kept them entertained, the two couples split into their separate rooms that evening, finally getting to bed by eleven. The next morning was a flurry of activity. Re-packing after laundering Richard and Heather's clothes from the previous day, Jack saw to it they were ready and at the airport by eight-fifteen.
After the four went through the lax security, Jack and Erica walked the two to their gate, still laughing and trying to keep their feelings at bay until the last minute. When the call came announcing the boarding of their flight, their moods shifted; the fun and laughter finally giving way to the seriousness of their parting. They got up and started heading toward the gate slowly, none wanting their years together to finally come to an end.
Richard wrapped his arms around his sister as she started to sob. "I'll miss you, kiddo! Seems like just yesterday we were doing this out in front of the house in Pittsburgh!"
"I... I know!" she cried. Wiping her eyes as she stepped back, she shook her head. "Seems like we're always saying goodbye!"
"It won't be long until November!" he pointed out. "I can't wait to see you!"
Nodding, Erica wiped her eyes again before hugging him once more, this time more fiercely. "November! You take care, Richie!"
Meanwhile, Jack and Heather hugged almost as tightly.
"Jack, I... I don't ever think I'll ever be able to tell you just how wonderful a man you are!" Heather intoned, keeping her emotions in check. "I owe you for the love of my life! If you ever need anything, you need only ask! You and your family will always have a place in our home!"
Sighing at what might have been, but glad of how things had turned out, Jack shook his head with a smile. "I still don't know what you see in that muscle-headed brother-in-law of mine, but I'm glad you make each other happy! I'm sure gonna miss you two! Who else can I bum rides off of?"
Heather laughed as they separated. "I love you, Jack! I really do!"
"So dump this creep and run off with me!" he joked, only to have Erica slap him in the arm. "Ouch! I was only kidding, love!"
"Not even funny!" she growled at him as they switched places. Hugging her future sister-in-law, Erica almost started crying all over again. "You have a good flight!" she sniffed as she tried not to cry. "Call us when you get in?"
"We will!" Heather promised. "And you take good care of Jack! He's going to need you more now than he'll ever admit."
"I know." Erica nodded as they separated. "I'll take care of him, and you keep Richie out of trouble!"
"I think that will be easier without Jack around!" she stated with a feigned serious tone and a faint smile on her face, making Erica laugh.
While his wife and Heather hugged and talked, Jack stuck his hand out to Richard. "Well, figures! After all this time you're finally getting rid of me! I knew you were just a fair-weather friend!"
Grabbing Jack's hand, Richard yanked him into a hug. "Jerk!" he said as they slapped each other on the back. Feeling the tears edge into the corners of his eyes, he shook off the feeling and laughed. "You always told me I needed you! Now look at who needs who!"
Hugging him back, Jack suddenly felt the same as the day Wendy broke his heart. "You still need me, muscle-head!" He paused a moment before adding in almost a whisper, "And I always needed you, Rich!" Pulling apart before he started to actually cry, he stepped back and wiped his eyes. "Aww! Now look what you've gone and done, Rich! You've made me get all misty!"
"Softy!" he needled his friend as he pushed on Jack's shoulder.
"Jock!" Jack shot back with a shove.
"Dork!" Richard fisted him in the ribs.
"Jarhead!" he countered with a jab toward Richard's gut.
"Leatherneck!" he joked as he grabbed Jack's fist and pulled him into another quick hug. "Love you, man!"
"You too, Rich!" Jack said before stepping back again and putting an arm around Erica, her arms wrapping around his waist.
Mimicking the other two, one arm around Heather and backing toward the gate, Richard looked sadly at his best friend and his sister. "Take good care of Brooke, Jack. Tell her we'll see her in November!" Right before turning to the boarding ramp, he tossed a sloppy salute to Jack. "Catch you 'round Jack! Try to keep out of trouble! I might not be around to get you out of it next time!"
After Jack and Erica watched them board their flight, they stayed until the plane pulled away from the terminal, holding each other as Jack kept his tears at bay through strict discipline while Erica freely cried for them both.
"It's alright." Jack consoled her as they turned to leave the concourse. "The wedding in November will be here sooner than you think!"
"I know!" Erica said, trying to dry her tears. "I just miss them already!" She looked at Jack's stoic countenance. "And you don't fool me, mister! I know you miss them already, too!"
"Yeah, I do." he sighed as they walked through the airport and back to their car. Letting the silence speak for him, the two walked out together feeling the sorrow of the end of one part of their lives wrap all around them like a blanket, threatening to smother them. After Jack started the car and pulled out of the parking lot, he looked over at his wife and half-smiled. "Of course, you know what this means, don't you?"
Looking over at him, Erica shook her head after wiping away her tears again. "What, what means?" she asked innocently.
"Well, with Rich and Heather getting married soon, we have a job to do!" he explained. "We need to get Brooke hooked up by November so she doesn't have to go stag to the wedding!"
She furrowed her brow at him. "Why is it so important now?"
"You know what they say about the Maid of Honor and Best Man! We need to get her hooked-up so she doesn't get any ideas about me!"
Erica burst out laughing at the ridiculous thought of Jack and Brooke. "I... I think I can only see it if you're the Maid of Honor!" she laughed.
"Oh, Ha! Ha! Very funny! Sometimes I may feel like Jack Lemon, but I am not pulling a 'Some Like it Hot'! Just forget it!"
By the time they pulled up to Jack's work, Erica was feeling a little better about things. Jack had continued to clown around until he pulled to a stop. "OK, your man needs to go and win some bread." he said before he leaned over and kissed her quickly. "And you need to get to class! I'll see you after work. Pick me up about five?"
She nodded and smiled. "You always know how to make me happy, Jack! I love you!" She leaned over and kissed him much more deeply before he got out and closed his door. Sliding over to get behind the wheel, she waved at Jack as he walked around the car and into work almost two hours late. As she pulled away from the curb, she sighed; her vaguely sad smile not wanting to leave her lips.
Weeks passed while the trio were getting used to Richard and Heather not being around. They settled into a comfortable pattern. Brooke would spend Liberty at their place, more often than not sleeping in the guest bedroom if they had a little too much fun. She also wasn't getting hit on at the base as often; Jack's warning having spread. It was nearly forgotten by August, so Brooke was taken by complete surprise when she was asked to go see her commanding officer one Friday afternoon.
Jack half-heard the pounding on their door through his sleepiness. Looking over at the clock, he stumbled out of bed. "Who in God's name could that be at nearly midnight?" he asked nobody.
"As if you didn't know." Erica yawned. "I bet you anything it's Brooke." She looked at the clock and tried to think. "She's not supposed to be here until tomorrow afternoon, though."
Opening the door in nothing but boxers, Jack strained his eyes at his intruder. "Brooke? It's late! Did they kick everyone out of The Bricks already?"
Ignoring his near nakedness and bad joke about the pending closure of the naval base, she pushed into his apartment and quickly sat on his couch. "I... I needed to talk to you right away!" she said, her voice obviously shaken.
"Well they have these things called phones you know!" Jack quipped as he closed the door and walked up to her. "You want anything? Coffee? Tea? Hard liquor? You look like you've seen a ghost!"
"I couldn't use a base phone, Jack!" She looked up at him. "I'm in trouble!"
Sitting next to her, he shook his head to clear the cobwebs. "Well, whoever she is, we'll get a shotgun and make an honest woman of you!"
"Jack!" she yelled. "Be serious! I got called in for Office Hours today!"
Suddenly wide-awake and serious, he leaned forward. "What's the beef?"
"Someone anonymously filed a complaint, Jack! Article one-thirty-four!"
Jack furrowed his brow. "Adultery? Seriously? Brooke! They can't make it stick! They'd have to have photos or a confession that say we did something that I'm damn sure we've never done or confessed to! Besides, they'd never even bother unle..." He looked at her seriously. "What're the other charges?"
"Cohabitation." she replied. "He... or whoever it is, knows I've stayed here a bunch of times! The CO said that the person filing the complaint threatened that unless something is done about it, they'll take the story to the papers! That sets the second and third points of evidence, Jack!"
"They can't prove the first though, Brooke!" he said, standing and pacing the room. "Without that, they can't make anything stick! They can search this apartment top to bottom and they're not going to find anything of yours!"
Shaking her head, she closed her eyes. "Sit down, Jack! You're making me more nervous!" When he'd done so, she let out a worried breath. "The CO told me he knows they can't prove anything, but the rumor mill is so full of talk about us two seeing each other behind Erica's back that he ordered me to stop seeing you and accept counseling because it was hurting moral! If I violate that, or refuse, they can Court Martial me for defying orders!"
"What can we do to help?" Erica asked as she came into the room.
Jack waved her away. "It's fine, honey. I just need to think for a minute."
Refusing to accept his dismissal, Erica persisted. "I don't know much about the military, but... I mean, can't I like, sign an affidavit or something saying that every time you stayed here that I was here and you two were nowhere near each other? I mean, they can't stop you two from being friends based on a rumor, can they?"
"That might work, Brooke." he pointed out, suddenly hopeful. "If we go to the Old Man and tell him how it is, that we never actually dated and I was just helping you keep the guys away, he'll have to drop it. He knows he can't ask you why you didn't want to date any guys!"
Sighing, Brooke nodded. "Yeah, but it also means that the ruse is finished. I'll have to do my last thirteen months without you keeping the flies off me! Everyone who's been laying low will be right back on me again!"
"Can't do anything about that now, Brooke." he pointed out. "I'll call Monday morning. It has to be done." Jack stood and headed for the door before he stopped. "Well, there's one alternative."
"What?" Brooke looked at him hopefully.
"You can follow orders." he stated simply. "Take the counseling and stop coming over."
"Jack!" Erica cried. "She can't do that! You're her best friend!"
Shaking her head, Brooke looked at Jack resignedly. "Besides, it wouldn't make any difference. If I give in, it'll go on my record and the guys will be on me anyway. No, she's right, Jack. My only hope now is you two."
He nodded in acceptance and resumed his walk to the door. "In the mean time, you need to get out of here. Go back to The Bricks and tough it out 'till Monday."
Brooke walked over to the open door and hugged him as Erica looked on. "Thank you, Jack! You're the best friend anyone could ever have!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
True to his word, Jack called the CO first thing Monday and laid it out for him, that he and I had never had a relationship, that it was always a ruse so I wouldn't be pressured for dates, and Erica backed him up the whole way! He was skeptical, but when Erica nearly bit his head off at the accusation that Jack was cheating on her, that sold him. He dropped the whole deal, with no ticklish questions about why. Within hours, I heard that it had gotten around that Jack and I had been a big lie the whole time. The funny thing is, it didn't get worse. In fact, I hardly ever got hit on again after that! Seems once they learned Jack and I had never been a couple, that I hadn't dated anyone for over five years, the trouser hounds lost interest. Oh sure, I got a few asks right afterwards, but all I had to say was 'no' and they wouldn't ask again. My rep went from 'she must be great in bed' to 'she's frigid' in two days. I was never so thankful for being unpopular! So my Leave started the last week of November and, since I hadn't used any that year, I was able to take three full weeks. I decided I wanted to take a trip back home on the way out to Heather and Richard's place and spend a day to introduce my best friends to my folks.
---
Stepping out of the rental car they had driven from the airport, Jack looked around. "So this is your old man's place?" he asked. "Nice."
Brooke looked at him suspiciously as she climbed out of the back seat. "OK, so what's the gag, then?"
"What? I mean it! It's nice!" Jack held his hands up defensively.
"Jack, you have never given a serious compliment in your life! So, what's wrong with it?" she barked.
Erica smiled as she got out. "Nothing's wrong, Brooke! I just told Jack that if he embarrassed you while we're here he'd be sleeping alone for the rest of our trip!" She closed her car door and arched her eyebrows at Brooke.
"Huh!" Brooke leaned on the door, closing it. "Well, I'll be damned! He can be serious!"
"Only when absolutely necessary." he corrected her. "Well, you're a better man than I am, Gunga Din! Lead the way!"
The trio coming up the walk, the door opened before they were even halfway up. "Brooke, darling!" her mother exclaimed as she ran down the walkway. Reaching her daughter, the older woman threw her arms around her. "We've missed you so much, baby!" Rocking her back and forth, she finally released her. "I'm sorry, dear! I didn't mean to embarrass you!" She wiped her damp eyes and looked at Jack and Erica. "I'm Carolyn Hathaway!" she said gaily, extending her hand to Erica.
"Erica Dunning! This is my husband, Jack!" she said with a smile. "It's a pleasure, Mrs. Hathaway!"
Looking at Jack, she smiled politely. "How do you do, Jack. Won't you all come in?" She led them into the house. "Mark! Brooke's home!" she shouted. "Please, make yourself at home! Brooke, dear? Why don't you sit and rest? I know it's a long way from San Francisco. Mark!"
"I'm coming! Jeez, woman! The girl's not going anywhere!" Brooke's father stepped into the living room from his den, a cane in his left hand.
Looking him over, Jack could instantly see the veteran inside the man. His pride was only tempered by the white hair that topped his head. While his clothes were common jeans and a polo shirt that wouldn't look out of place anywhere, Jack noticed that his shoes were polished black boots with not a scuff or smudge and his clothes were neatly pressed. He fought the almost instinctual desire to salute; the man's baring screaming 'officer on deck'. It wasn't until his eyes met his daughter and his face cracked a smile that Jack could finally see the father inside the veteran.
"Brooke, sweetie!" he exclaimed. Recovering quickly, his face once again became an emotionless mask. "Ehem! I see you're looking well. Would you mind?" He nodded toward Jack and Erica.
"Oh! Sorry!" Brooke apologized. "Dad? This is my best friend Jack and his wife Erica. Jack? This is my dad, Colonel Mark Hathaway!"
Extending his hand to Jack, he grimaced. "USMC, Retired, she should have added!" Noting Jack's sharp handshake, he smiled slightly. "You've got the look, but it's gone slack. How long you been Outside?"
"Five months, sir." Jack snapped out of habit. "It's an honor to meet you, sir. Your daughter is a fine Marine!"
"She would have made a finer officer!" he barked as he made his way into the room. "Damn waste, her piddle-farting with handheld radios, generators, and crap like that!"
Jack's habit of taking the heat off his friends was hard to break. "Oh, but she's the best at it! She once fixed a radio that no one could figure out what was wrong! Saved my bacon from our CO that thought I was skating!"
He only grunted in reply. "Still, she had the makings of a finer officer! Like myself and my father before me!"
"Dad!" Brooke almost whined. "We've been through this countless times! I wanted to serve my way! Not yours or grandpa's!"
"Bah!" he exclaimed, dismissively waving his free hand in her direction as he lowered himself into his easy chair. "I get it, girl! Still, don't amount to much!" Relaxing back, he looked at Erica who looked pensive. "Don't worry yourself over me, girl. I'm just a grouchy ol' fart who's all bark! No teeth left to bite with!" he smiled at her as he finished.
Relaxing, Erica sighed in relief. "It is a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Hathaway! Brooke..."
"Call me Mark!" he barked. "I'm no 'Mister' anymore!" He looked at Jack. "Same to you! And don't call me sir again, neither! I'm retired and I don't want you makin' me feel like I need to be ready to return a damn salute!"
Jack fought the comical urge to shout, 'Sir! Yes, sir!' and snap a salute with every fiber of his being. Biting his tongue, he just smiled and nodded. "OK, Mark. You can call me Jack!"
The old man grunted and nodded. "You were stationed at The Barracks in Alameda too, I take it? How long were you in?"
"Since eighty-nine, s... so I did seven years in." he just managed to bite off calling him sir again.
Mark grinned, knowing he had almost caught Jack out. "Mmmm. So were you in the Gulf then, or were you some damn box-kicker?"
"No, I was deployed with the First MEF out of San Diego then. Six months in The Sandbox with my buddy Rich. He's who we're off to see get married to the girl he's been dating." Jack explained.
"Mark!" his wife shouted. "That's quite enough, grilling our guests! They're here with Brooke and she's home to relax, not talk war stories!" Turning to the three, she shifted to a kinder tone. "Would you all like lunch? I made egg salad sandwiches!"
"That sounds great, Mrs. Hathaway!" Jack smiled.
The five sat around Brooke's parents' dinner table eating lunch and talking, Jack noticing her father eyeing him and then his daughter as if looking for any sign that they had been more than just friends. Clearing his throat, Jack excused himself.
"I'm gonna go rest my eyelids on the couch a few. If that would be alright, Mrs. Hathaway?" he said as he started to stand.
"Oh, please! Call me Carol! And you go right ahead, young man! We girls have a lot of getting to know one another to do!"
Mark grunted as he got up as well. "Well, if this is turning into a hen party, I'll be dealing myself out!" He stopped as he passed Brooke and leaned in to kiss her cheek. "Enjoy your talk with your mother. We'll talk more later." He hobbled out of the dining room and into the living room just as Jack was stretching out on the couch. "Shoes!" he barked.
"Oh! Sorry, s... so sorry!" he caught himself. Kicking his shoes to the floor, he stretched out and closed his eyes.
Sitting in his easy chair next to the couch, the retired Marine groaned as he lowered himself down. "I don't know how you kids do it now-a-days, but I feel every year of my thirty in the Corps right now!"
Jack nodded, his eyes still closed. "I feel all seven of mine every time you try to trick me into calling you sir, Mark!"
Chuckling, Mark relaxed. "I uh... I wanted to ask you, boy. About Brooke. She seeing anybody?"
Jack half-smiled. "At the moment I would guess your wife and mine!"
"Don't be a such smartass, boy!" he growled. "You know what I mean! Is she dating anyone? Hell, even a civilian would be good news!"
Sighing, Jack shook his head. "Sorry to disappoint, but she hasn't dated any guys the entire time I've known her, but she told me the first day we met that she wasn't going to date so long as she was serving, so..."
Mark grunted again. "Figures! I taught her too good to love the Corps! Now she's so gung-ho I ain't gonna be a grandpa before I'm dead and gone!"
"Well, you never know!" Jack shrugged. "Maybe she'll meet someone at the wedding! Awfully romantic time, weddings! Make people want to jump the broom themselves!"
"Jump the broom!" Mark exclaimed. "Jay-zus, boy! You talk like my father!"
"Blame my parents!" he chuckled lightly. "They probably were your dad's age! I was a late surprise! Dad served in the Pacific Theater in forty-two."
"Marine?"
Jack nodded. "Got blinded by a naval gun and when his sight came back he couldn't see straight ahead; peripheral only. Oh, he could work alright, but you can't fire a rifle at a target you can't look directly at. He spent the rest of the war doing laundry for Marines that could shoot. So he did his part."
"Damn shame!" Mark lamented. Despite his initial impression, he'd begun to like his daughter's friend, deciding to have a little fun at his expense. "So what's wrong with my Brooke, huh? Why'd you go and marry that other girl instead of her?"
Looking over at the man sitting behind his head, Jack chuckled. "Because she didn't want me, Mark! I'll admit, I was interested, but once she made it clear I wasn't her type, I let it go. Besides, I love 'that other girl', sir!"
Grumbling that Jack wasn't more unsettled by his rude question, he shut up and Jack closed his eyes again.
Caroline Hathaway sipped her tea while her daughter talked about how she had set up Erica and Jack on their first 'date'. "So, you've been in love with Jack since you were a little girl? Oh, that's such a beautiful story! There's just something about an older man that makes a woman feel loved!"
Brooke looked at her mother and then at Erica to explain. "Dad is ten years older than Mom. They met when she was only twenty and he was just shy of thirty."
"Oh!" Erica exclaimed. "Well, Jack's less than four years older than me, but when you're ten, every boy above twelve is old!"
The three laughed before Brooke's mother turned to her daughter. "Dearest, haven't you met anybody that you like while you were serving? Oh, I don't mean you should marry a fellow serviceman like your father, but..." She let her words hang in the air like a dangling sword.
"Mom! I told you when I left for Boot! I'm not going to date while I'm in the service! I don't need the distraction!"
"Nonsense!" she chided. "It didn't distract Erica's young man!"
"You have no idea how much it did distract him, Mom!" she retorted. "Jack never made Corporal because he was too busy going after this Latino girl that wouldn't give him the time of day and missed his cutting score!"
"Oh." she said, disappointed that Brooke had a legitimate comeback. "Well, you only have one year left and then... well... we'll see!"
Brooke sighed. "Yes, Mom. We'll see!"
Erica sat through the exchange uncomfortably. Trying to change the subject, she cleared her throat. "Brooke? Did you tell your mom when we get to New Hampshire you're going to be Heather's Maid of Honor at the wedding?"
"Really?" Caroline practically sang. "Oh, Brooke! Why didn't you tell me! Oh, sweetie! That's such an honor! You should be proud of it! This Heather must think very highly of you!"
While Brooke knew Erica was only trying to help by changing the subject, she groaned at what Erica had changed it to. "Oh, Mom!" She dropped her head onto the table with a loud thump. "This is why I didn't say anything! It's just a ceremony! All I do is stand there and get my picture taken after! It's not that big a deal!" She raised her head up and looked at her mother. "Don't even say it!"
"Mayb..." Caroline stopped herself. "Alright, Brooke. I won't." She grinned mischievously. "Who's the Best Man? Is he single?"
"Fortunately no, Mrs. Hathaway!" Erica giggled. "It's my husband, Jack!"
"Oh." she replied disappointed. "Will there be many Groomsmen or Ushers?"
"You want me to hit up the ring-bearer for his phone number while I'm at it, Mom?" Brooke asked snidely. "God, you have a one-track mind!"
"None of that, Brooke!" her mother snapped. "You don't need to be flippant with me! I just worry is all! I want to see you happy!"
Brooke nearly lost her temper, but checked it at the last second. "I am happy, Mom! Really! Do I want to find someone to be happy with? Damn straight, I do! Who doesn't! But I'm not going to force it!"
Sighing, Caroline shook her head. "Alright! I'll let it go!" Looking at Erica, she lowered her tone. "I apologize if we embarrassed you. I didn't mean to."
"It's fine, Carol. Really!" Erica put the older woman at ease.
"So, tell me about the happy couple!" she said, changing the subject slightly.
"It's my brother Richard and his fiancée Heather." Erica explained. "They've been dating for just over two years and they finally set a date!"
"Your brother asked your husband to be his Best Man, but you're not her Matron of Honor?" she asked. "Isn't that a little unusual?"
"Heather's known Brooke longer than she's known me, Mrs. Hathaway." she explained further. "I didn't meet Heather and Brooke until late last year."
"Oh! I understand, now!" She shot a glance at her daughter. "You might have at least written to me and told me about friends so close to you, dear!"
Brooke just laid her head back down on the table with a satisfying thump.
After lunch, Brooke took Jack and Erica on a tour around where she spent the latter part of her youth, including her last high school and the first place she'd taken a girl on a secret date. She didn't actually have that much to show them, having only spent two years living there after her father retired, but it was gratifying to get out of the house and away from her parents for a while.
"I swear to God that woman can drive me to drink!" Brooke fumed.
"Why not just tell them?" Jack asked. "It'd save you a lot of headache!"
She looked at Jack as though he'd suggested she set her hair on fire. "Are you nuts, Jack! Tell my old man, mister original Clean Marine, that his daughter digs chicks? He'd turn me in himself! And Mom? God, she'd have a stroke! She's been harping on me to get married since I was five!"
"Now, now!" Jack admonished. "Let's not exaggerate! I'm willing to bet she didn't start really harping on you until you were at least twelve!"
"I'll take that action!" Brooke shot back. "For my fifth birthday, she got me a little girl's wedding dress and play wedding set!"
"It's normal for a five year old girl to want stuff like that for her birthday!" Jack countered. "Maybe she thought you'd like it!"
"I asked for a football!"
Erica couldn't hold it back anymore and started giggling hysterically.
"What do you think is so damn funny?" Brooke asked, still fuming.
"S-sorry! I... I can't help it, Brooke! Now I've got this image in my head of five-year-old you in a cute little girl's wedding dress playing football!" Her giggles grew into full belly laughs.
She tried to stay mad, but soon Brooke was smiling and then laughing along with her.
Shaking his head, Jack drove around aimlessly. "If you two hyenas are quite through, I think we should start heading back."
Walking back into her parents' living room once more, Brooke yelled out to them. "Mom! Dad! We're back! We brought ice cream!"
Caroline came out from the kitchen, smiling politely. "That's very thoughtful, dear. Here, I'll put it in the freezer until after supper."
Holding on to it to delay her from taking it for a moment, Brooke looked down. "Just a little peace offering, Mom. I'm sorry for earlier."
Smiling genuinely, she looked away embarrassedly. "It's fine, sweetie. I... I just... I worry! That's all!"
"I know Mom, and it's sweet really, but honestly, I'm fine! I'm happy! And when... not if... when I find someone that I can share that with, it'll be when it is ready to happen. Not a moment sooner. OK?"
Nodding in acceptance, her mother looked at her. "I know, baby. I'll... I'll try not to make an issue of it anymore, alright?" Looking at the three, she took a cleansing breath. "Well! We're having the best meatloaf in Oklahoma tonight! I assume you can stay for supper?"
Brooke nodded weakly. "Yeah, Mom. For dinner, then we're gonna have to go. Stopping off was supposed to be a just layover, but I managed to swing a later connecting flight so I could see you two. We got a ten o'clock flight to Detroit." Seeing the disappointment on her mother's face, Brooke smiled to try and turn it around. "We have the rest of today, though! Maybe after the wedding I can stop on the way back and stay a while. I have Leave time."
Looking up, her mother squared her shoulders. "Yes! We do have the rest of the day! Let's make the most of it!"
While the three were driving back to the airport, Jack looked over at Erica sitting in the passenger seat beside him, Brooke reading in the back seat with a book light. "Something on your mind, love?" he asked his wife.
"Just wondering what they'll say when Brooke does find someone." Erica mused. "I mean, it's obvious they love her very much, but... I... I just..."
"But?" Jack asked. Nodding knowingly, he grimaced. "But you know your mother loves you, and yet she barely speaks to you for who you married. I guess it's not just people like Brooke that have their families torn up because of who they love." He sighed and let just a moment pass before asking his question. "Any regrets?"
"None!" Erica said without hesitation as she looked over at him. "Not one! Not ever! Not for anything! I wouldn't care if the whole world hated me for loving you! I'd never regret a single moment of it! I love you!"
He smiled at her a moment before turning back to watch the road. "Ya' know, sometimes I feel bad that I came between you and your mom. Oh, I know she can be a pain sometimes, but I know you still love her and she loves you." Pausing he sighed. "Unfortunately, she loves you so much she'd rather you be in a gilded, loveless cage where you'd want for nothing, except the one thing you always wanted."
Erica nodded. "My Jack!"
"My Buttons!" he returned.
"You two mind clapping a lid on that gunk?" Brooke sighed. "I don't want to get car sick!"
Waking in the dark to the phone ringing, Richard reached over and grabbed it mumbling, "Hargrave."
"Rich!? It's me! Jack!"
"Jack?" Richard pried his eyes open. "What time is it? Are you just leaving Detroit now?"
"No, we just landed at Boston-Manchester! We're here, buddy-boy!"
Richard sat straight up as Heather rolled over next to him and tried to cuddle. "Jack! I thought your flight was delayed! You weren't supposed to be here for another... um... What time is it?"
"Four in the morning!" Jack laughed. "Turned out the layover in Detroit was only delayed a few minutes, but we didn't have a chance to call and let you know! Don't sweat it, Rich! We'll snag a place to flop for what laughingly passes for the rest of the night!"
"No! I'll... I'll come get you, Jack!" He yawned in the middle of speaking. "Let me just... um... just let me..."
"Go back to sleep, Rich!" Jack ordered. "I just wanted to let you know so you weren't down at the airport at seven in the morning looking for us! We'll call when we're up and about and have you pick us up when you won't fall asleep behind the wheel!"
"Alright." he yawned. "See you tomorrow, Jack." he said groggily as he hung up and rolled over, already asleep before he finished settling in.
Later that afternoon, Richard pulled up in front of a motel near the airport. When he saw Jack turn around and flash his half-grin, Richard chuckled and almost leapt from his BMW before coming to a stop. "Jack!" Wrapping his best friend in a tight hug after months apart, the longest time since the day they'd met, he slowly released him and embraced Erica. "Missed you, kiddo!"
"Missed you, too!" she replied. "How's Heather?"
"Doing good!" he replied. "Busy, but happy!" Turning to Brooke, he clasped her hand and pulled her into a quick hug. "How've ya' been ya' Devil Dog ya'! Jack still keeping the hounds at bay for you?"
"Actually, he doesn't need to anymore!" Brooke half explained.
Richard turned to Jack. "What? You figure some angle to keep guys from seeing her as gorgeous?"
"Not exactly." Jack quickly explained what had happened after Richard left while they put their luggage in Richard's car. "So now they just ignore her! Since the word is out that she hasn't dated any guys in over six years, they don't want her anymore!" Closing the trunk, he leaned on it. "Huh! I guess women are right! Guys are stupid!"
Driving back home, he decided to hold off on catching up with them more until they were settled in so they wouldn't have to tell it all twice, once to him, and again to Heather. Instead, he talked about his and Heather's lives.
"She filed her Candidate for Licensure Agreement before we left Cali, and took the Clinical Mental Health Counselor Exam shortly after we got here. Since then it's been 'hurry up and wait' while she interns with this Therapist's office she's working for. For now she's a glorified secretary, but as soon as her license is approved she can start work! Should be any day now!"
"Is she going to get any time off after the wedding?" Erica asked. "I would hope she won't be spending her Honeymoon at work!"
"Not much." Richard laughed. "She has two weeks off after the ceremony, but then she's going to have to work through our first Christmas."
"That's too bad!" his sister pouted. "I suppose it's for the best, though. At least she gets time off to Honeymoon with you first!"
Jack tapped him on the shoulder. "What about you, buddy-boy? How's your new box-kicker job working out?"
"It's not box-kicking!" Richard barked. "It's actually an interesting job. I'm a Senior Business Analyst with the company. The lowest one, but my VP's a Leatherneck too, so he likes me. I think I'll be moving up pretty quick! The money's nothing to sneeze at! Low six figures!"
"Nice!" Jack complimented. "So what's the downside?"
"I have to wear a suit. That and everyone there thinks that because I was in the Corps that I must have the IQ and temperament of a rabid wolverine, so they either talk to me like I'm stupid or about to snap their neck!"
"I dunno, Rich. You sometimes struck me as the kinda guy who might end up in a news story with the words, '...finally turning the gun on himself'!"
The four chatted for a while until Richard pulled up into Heather's driveway. "This is it!" Richard stated proudly after a half-hour drive.
Jack looked out the window and had to do a double take. "Wait a minute! I thought you guys said you were moving to an apartment?" Jack looked out the window again, his brain not accepting what his eyes were seeing.
"Well..." Richard scratched his neck. "After we got here, I found out that the company I came to work for is actually headquartered in Keene, not Concord where Heather works. Only the final interview was in Concord. There was a miscommunication. Since Heather's home is in Hillsboro, about halfway between the two, we decided for now to just set up in her old home. It's a twenty mile commute for us, in opposite directions, but it could be worse!"
"Oh, yeah!" Jack quipped as he got out and looked at the place his best friend was living. "Twenty miles! I would definitely say it could have been worse! What a hardship for two of the upper crust!"
"At least it's twenty miles of relatively uncrowded highway." he pointed out as he walked around the car. "Nothing like the Bay Area or Pittsburgh! Even on a bad day I can get to work in under forty minutes, and it's forty minutes of gorgeous driving! Come on in!"
The traveling trio surveyed the 'old home' Heather had talked about. It was less a home and more a sprawling mansion. Three stories tall, the house was magnificent. Painted in stately white, the house looked to be of eighteenth century design with an expansive semicircular driveway in front that led to a six-car garage. The house proper looked like six buildings connected to one another with an old-fashioned barn further off to the north.
As Richard walked to the stone pathway that led up to the main entryway, he turned around to see the three guests standing there stunned. "What's the matter?" he asked concernedly. "Come on in!" Reaching the front door, his guests finally following, it opened and an elderly man greeted him.
"Welcome home, Master Richard!" he rasped happily. "Shall I see to your guests' luggage?"
Nodding, Richard greeted him. "That would be great! Thanks, Gregory!" Waving the three in, he almost glowed with pride. "Well? What do you think? Pretty nice, eh?"
Jack looked around the room he'd entered; the high vaulted ceilings making it feel open and homey, and yet still opulent. "No, Rich. Your parents' place back in Pittsburgh was 'pretty nice'. This is un-frigging-believable! You live here? This isn't, like, a museum exhibit or National Historic Treasure meant to preserve eighteenth century architecture? It's a house?"
"Yes!" Heather said politely but cheerfully as she entered from an adjacent room. "It's a house, Jack! It's my house! Welcome to Moore Estates!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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Heather wasn't kidding or bragging, either. Five huge bedrooms, seven full baths, a great room, a formal dining room, and an adjacent kitchen, all with flawless pinewood floors that shined with two centuries of care and attention. In the wings off the main building was the library, den, music room, and what Heather called the 'Meeting Room'. It had marble floors and it's own huge fireplace, in addition to the one in the great room. The bedrooms were all on the second and third floors, each with their own private bath, with two bathrooms on the main floor. The attached garage had chauffeur's quarters, as well as a machine shop... and that was just the house! The property itself was almost beyond description. Forty-five acres with a private pond, apple orchard, woods, walkways, green space, equestrian trails, and, oh yes, lets not forget the 'barn'! The three-story barn with heated stalls and tack room and its own laundry! The second floor was a home for stable workers. Kitchen, living area, bathroom, with the three bedrooms on the third floor, and all of it surrounded by forestlands and fields that were donated to the state as a preserve. It was truly magnificent! When we first arrived, I thought Heather was trying to show off, but she was just as warm and friendly as she'd always been. She was just very proud of her family home.
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Brooke was speechless when Heather showed her to her room. It wasn't as large as the one she'd seen following Jack and Erica to the room Heather had given them, but it was more opulent than any she'd ever seen, let alone been allowed to sleep in. Centuries-old furniture decorated the room perfectly; an oak four poster bed with matching nightstands, a dresser, two wardrobes, and a vanity graced the room with functional style. On the far wall, French doors opened onto a balcony that connected all the bedrooms on the second floor.
"Heather! I... I can't stay here!" Brooke stammered.
Concerned, she walked up to her Maid of Honor. "Why not? I thought you'd like it!" She looked around the room wistfully. "This used to be my room, ever since I was a little girl. I... When Richard and I came home, I finally moved into my parents' bedroom." A note of sadness tainted her otherwise loving description of her home.
"I do like it!" Brooke exclaimed apologetically. "It's just I like it too much! I... I'd be afraid I'd ruin the floors with my sweaty feet!"
Laughing, Heather placed a hand on her shoulder. "It's fine, Brooke! Like I said, I grew up in this room! There's nothing you can do to it that I haven't done a hundred times over or even worse, dear! I used to draw on the walls! I think I drove my poor mother crazy, sometimes!"
Facing her, Brooke smiled. "Thank you, Heather! It's a lovely room! I... I really appreciate that you're letting me stay here!"
"Nonsense!" she dismissed Brooke's seriousness. "You're my Maid of Honor! I wanted to put you in the best room! The floor here is warm in the morning because the Great Room is right below us, so heat from the fireplace comes up through the floor!" Lowering her voice to a conspiratorial whisper, she smiled wryly. "Just don't tell Jack and Erica!"
While the two talked, across the hallway the two in question were putting away their things in their own opulent surroundings.
"Did you notice the look Gregory gave us when we said we'd unpack our own suitcases?" she asked.
"I noticed that she has a cook, butler, two maids, two groundskeepers, and a chauffeur." Jack intoned as he unpacked. "That's what I noticed!"
"Jack!" Erica stood and put her hands on her hips. "You aren't being snobbish about Heather's family background, are you?"
"Me, snobbish?" Jack pointed at himself. "I'm not the one with servants!"
"Jack Dunning!" she almost yelled at him before lowering her voice again. "Heather does not have servants! She has people that work for her! It's not like they're slaves or something! You know Heather! She likely pays them very well! Would they stay if she didn't?"
Something about Erica's logic seemed slippery and no matter how he tried, Jack couldn't make it gel. "OK, sure. She probably pays well, but don't you think people ought to take care of their own homes and not someone else's?"
Walking over to him, she stood in front of Jack with a look on her face that reminded him of the first day they met. "Do you see this place, Jack? Do you think Heather alone could keep it up? What was she supposed to do? Let it fall to ruin while she was in school? That would almost be criminal!" She glared at him. "And don't you even think about making a stink over the place she calls home, Jack! So help me God if you do, you'll be spending the next year sleeping on the sofa! Is that clear?"
Seeing he wasn't going to win this argument, Jack sighed in defeat, holding up his hands. "Alright! You win! But I'm telling you, I for one cannot wait to get out of this place and go back to a normal home!"
Erica shook her head in disbelief. "Of all people, I never thought I'd see the day when I'd lose any respect for you, Jack. You're a snob! You think you're better than Heather because you grew up poor, don't you? Like she's less of a person! She can't help who her family is, any more than I can, Jack! You think you're better than me, too? Because I grew up in Squirrel Hill and not North Oakland? Is that it? Oooo!" Erica stormed away from him and began throwing her clothes in the dresser one at a time as she boiled with anger.
Slowly, Jack walked to stand behind her as she knelt in front of the dresser. "Erica, can you stop for a second so we can talk?" He kept his voice low and soft, almost apologetic. "Please, Buttons?"
She stopped and almost began to sob, she was so angry. Composing herself, Erica stood back up and turned to him; her voice low and growling. "Alright. Fine! We'll talk." She stormed over to the bed and sat on it, curling one leg under her and waited.
Talking a breath, Jack moved and sat on the edge of the bed with his elbows resting on his spread knees and his fingertips together; his head hanging in shame. "You're right. I'm a snob. A slum snob. All my life I've seen people who had everything... handed to them on a silver platter... while Mom and I barely scraped by. All of Rich's friends who lived in nice houses and got cars on their sixteenth birthday? I hated them for it! Hated them for having it easy while Mom couldn't afford shoes." He looked up at Erica. "And I was just as wrong as Ox ever was. I'm sorry I'm such a disappointment to you."
"Oh, Jack!" she groaned. "You're not a disappointment! It's just..." Sighing in exasperation, Erica took a breath. "You can't blame people for what they have or don't, Jack! You know that! I would've done anything when we were kids to make your life easier! I hated seeing your heart get broken, or going through all the terrible things that happened to you, but you once told me you had to go through it, right? That there was a reason for it? Well, can't there be a purpose behind Heather's life, too? Why it had to be easy? Isn't that just as much a part of it as suffering?"
"You're right!" he smiled at her. "But then, you've always been right!" He reached out a hand to her and pulled her to him when she took it. "You were right for loving me, you were right when you showed it to me, and you're right now. What did I ever do to deserve you, Buttons?"
"Nothing." she replied as she wrapped him in her arms. "Just like I never deserved this!" She leaned forward and pressed her lips to his, feeling the spark of electrical shivers that coursed through her entire body. Deepening their kiss, she found herself hungering for his touch with more ferocity than their first time. Just as she was about to suggest they do something about it, she heard a knock on the door.
"Erica? Jack?" Heather spoke through the door. "Lunch is almost ready!"
She groaned as she slid down his body. "Alright! We'll be down in a minute!" she shouted. Gripping the front of his shirt, Erica looked up at him. "Lunch, then dinner..." Sliding up against him once more, she planted a passionate kiss on his lips. "...then you!"
Swallowing hard, Jack was almost in fear of her. "Yes, dear!" Half-smiling as they stood up, he added, "Remind me to do something stupid once in a while so I can come to my senses again! I like the aftermath! Ouch!"
Erica slapped his belly with the back of her hand. "Not even funny, Jack!" she said as she tried to keep the smile off her face. "Come on. Lets get this stuff tucked away and get downstairs!"
Holding Heather's seat out for her as she sat at the table, she looked up at Richard with adoration. "Thank you, dear!"
"My pleasure!" he replied, leaning down to kiss her quickly before seating himself with Gregory's assistance.
Watching the loving exchange between two of her best friends, Brooke had a feeling of deep longing mixed with bitterness. The three sat for a moment chatting before Erica and Jack came in, Richard rising as his sister entered the room.
"Sorry we took so long, Heather!" Erica apologized as they entered. "Your family home takes a little getting used to! It's huge!"
When Erica was about to seat herself at the table and Jack seat himself next to her, Richard cleared his throat. "Ehem! Jack?"
Stopping and about to sit, he looked over at his best friend. "What? Barn door open?"
Shaking his head, he waved dismissively as Erica finished seating herself. "Never mind, you cretin! Siddown!"
Looking confusedly across the table at Brooke, he asked in a hushed voice, "What'd I do?"
Shaking her head, Brooke sipped on her glass of water. "Manners, Jack. A gentleman always seats a lady. Don't you know nuthin'?"
"Oh!" he looked over at Erica. "I... I'm sorry, Buttons! I just thought..." He looked at the others seated at the table with him. "Don't women hate that kind of stuff now-a-days? When did this become a thing again? Last time I held a door for a woman, she bit my head off!"
Chuckling, Richard's laugh carried through the room and echoed off the old walls. "Not here, Jack! This isn't California! That part of Women's Lib never really reached this part of New England!"
Jack sat up straight. "Oh! Well, I'll just have to get back in the habit again, then! Hate to think Mom taught me all that stuff for nothin'! I guess today's the day I get to use some of it! So what's the plan?"
While Gregory brought out their soup and finger sandwiches, Heather looked toward Richard. "Well, we were thinking of just spending the day relaxing and catching up. I'm sure a lot has happened in the last six months, for all of us! Thank you, Gregory!" she added when he smilingly set her soup down in front of her.
Watching the old butler serve everyone while Heather and Richard talked as though it were an everyday occurrence was a little unsettling for Jack. Try as he might to push aside the feelings, he couldn't get past the fact that he was sitting and doing nothing while an old man brought them their food and then stood by to wait on them while they ate.
His discomfort didn't go unnoticed. "Jack?" Heather asked in the middle of telling them about her medical office. "Is everything alright? Did you need Gregory to get you something?"
Lowering his head, Jack chuckled at the irony. He was uncomfortable with being waited on by Gregory and she wanted to fix it by having him wait on Jack even more. "No. I'm fine, Heather. A little tired is all." he lied badly.
Reading his best friend like a book, Richard cleared his throat. "Gregory? Would you mind excusing us for just a moment?" Once the butler had left the room and it was only the five of them, Richard looked at him. "Alright, you can relax now, Jack! Spill it!"
Looking at Erica with a helpless expression, Jack looked at the floor. "OK! I admit it! I... I can't get used to being waited on! It's... weird! I keep finding myself wanting to get up and help the old guy!"
Heather looked away almost ashamedly. "So... so that's what you think of me, Jack?"
"No!" he protested, looking up at her seriously. "I don't think any less of you, Rich, or anyone! This is my problem, not yours! You haven't done anything wrong! Honest! I... I'm just a guy who grew up having to do everything for himself is all. It's... it's an adjustment that's harder than I'd hoped it would be. I never wanted to make you feel uncomfortable with my issues! I swear!"
Brooke hadn't said much of anything since the butler had seated her. Finally she spoke. "Well, I'm with Jack on this. I don't think any less of people that have..." She paused a moment while she carefully selected her words so as to not offend. "...staff, but it is weird for someone like Jack and me that are used to doing things for ourselves. I'm just better at hiding it than him, but then, I've always been better at pretty much everything than Jack!"
Her humor managed to defuse what could have been an ugly scene into a round of giggles from everyone at the table except Jack. "Oh, very funny, Brooke! You should take that on the stage! The first one out of town!"
After a moment more of light laughter, Jack looked over at Heather who was still trying to wipe the smile off her face. "Look, I'm sorry if I offended you, Heather." he said seriously. "I didn't mean to and I was trying to not to. I'm still just a screwed up kid from North Oakland!"
"It's fine, Jack." she accepted with a sigh. "I should have known better. You can't take people like you and Brooke that aren't used to being waited on and just drop them in it and expect it not to rub them the wrong way. I'm the one who should apologize! If it makes you feel any better, Gregory and the others are very well paid for what they do around here and I couldn't hope to run this house without them!"
Erica poked Jack in the ribs. "See? I told you!"
"I sometimes feel like Gregory is almost like a second father to me," Heather admitted, "and Theresa's been the cook for my family since I was a child! They're all like family."
"I have no complaints!" Jack offered. "The soup is great! Heck, everything here is! But yes, it does make me feel better knowing all that. I should have known! You can't be anything less than you Heather, but do you have to be so generous that you're willing to live with this box-kicker the rest of your life?" he asked, pointing a spoon at Richard.
"Hey!" he barked. "Watch your language, Snuffy! I can still kick your butt!"
Relaxing into the lunch, Gregory came in again, served coffee, and collected their bowls. As he did, Jack decided to truly make himself at home, so when the butler was heading for the kitchen, he quickly got up and held the door for him.
"Thank you, Master Jack!" Gregory smiled at him. "But there's no need! I can manage!" he said happily as he entered the kitchen.
His tone was friendly, but Jack could detect the faintest hint of irritation as he tried to help. Returning to his seat, the rest of them looking at him, Jack shrugged. "What? You said to make myself at home! I wanted to help is all!"
"Jack," Richard explained, "I know you're used to doing your part, but help like that would be like when Corporal Rogers thought he was helping you when he squared away your rack for you."
"That's not the same thing!" Jack defended his actions. "Rogers was being a smartass! Kept telling me my rack wasn't regulation!"
"It's the same to Gregory, Jack!" Richard retorted. "If you help him, he'll think that you don't think he can do his job!"
Thinking about it from that perspective, Jack mulled it over as he sugared his coffee. "Well, when you put it that way, you make me feel like an absolute heel for wanting to help! Should I apologize? You know, sort of explain it to him? I just don't want to make it worse is all!"
"Just let them do their jobs, Jack." Heather said softly. "Enjoy being able to take it easy for a while!" Relaxing after lunch, Heather continued with her glowing description of her new job. Finishing up, she noticed Gregory refill Jack's cup, Jack just smiling and thanking him. "So Jack, what have you been doing these months? Getting up to no good, I assume!"
"You know me too well, Heather!" he replied as he re-sweetened his drink.
"Nonsense!" Erica chided him. "Jack is doing fine!"
"Seriously, I've been doing alright." he admitted. "I started managing this dry cleaner in Palo Alto. Pay is pretty good, so Buttons and I should be able to put a substantial down on a place when Erica graduates in the spring."
Richard turned to Brooke. "How's things at The Bricks? I told Heather that things have been easier lately, but anything new?"
Nodding as she drank her coffee, Brooke put the cup down. "They closed the NADEP at the end of September. All the Airdales are gone."
"They really are gonna close Alameda, aren't they? Like the end of an era. Any idea when?" he asked.
Shrugging, Brooke sighed. "Nothing official, but scuttlebutt is that it could close by next spring, probably early May, I'd guess."
"So, you'll be moved to another base before I graduate?" Erica asked sadly.
Brooke looked away. "It's almost a guarantee. I doubt the base will still be open next June, and I don't qualify for Early Release. The Corps is already done with their drawdowns. Either way, my enlistment won't end until next September thirtieth, and I'm not shipping over again."
"What are your plans when you get out?" Jack asked. "I don't think you've ever said."
"I'm not sure." Brooke answered honestly. "I'd thought about college, but then I don't know what for. I guess right now I don't have a plan. I always thought I'd be a lifer."
"You could always do like your old man suggested, go to college and become an officer!" Jack snorted.
"Oh, Ha! Ha!" Brooke sneered at him. "No, I'm done with the service. At least as an enlisted I'm safe from Airdales and other officers. No way would I ever want to open that can of worms!"
"So? You've got ten more months to figure something out then." Jack pointed out. "Plenty of time!"
"In the mean time Brooke," Heather changed the subject, "I was hoping you would go with me into town tomorrow? You'll need a fitting if you want your dress to be altered before Saturday. You too, Erica!"
Brooke's mood quickly went from apathetic to irritated. "Jeez, Heather! Are you really gonna make me wear a stupid Bridesmaid's dress? Honestly?"
"What would you suggest, Brooke?" Jack asked with a grin. "Suit and tie?"
"That might be preferable!" she quipped. Looking at Heather with the same look she used to give her mom when she didn't want to eat her lima beans, Brooke knew that she was going to give in, but that didn't make her like it. "OK! Fine! Dress me up like a friggin' Barbie doll, Heather! At least I know it's only for an hour or two, and then I can burn the damn thing!"
"I'd be surprised if satin doesn't spontaneously combust when it touches your skin, Brooke!" Jack let slip. "Like a cross on a vampire?" He then hissed like Bela Lugosi. If nothing more, it made Brooke laugh and forget her troubles for a moment.
Richard chuckled before he cleared his throat. "Erm... I... uh... I hate to rub salt in it Brooke, but it'll be more like six to eight hours."
"What?" she yelled. "Eight hours? Dressed up like a cake topper?"
"You're forgetting about the reception, pictures, and the bridal party will be getting their hair and makeup done that morning." Heather pointed out. "We will have to be wearing our dresses when we do, otherwise when we go to put them on it will ruin it all!"
Shaking her head, Brooke refused. "Uh-uh! I ain't letting some amateur do anything to my hair! I can do my own, and better!" Sitting up straight, she got a look of giddiness across her face. "That's it!" she slammed her hand down on the table, making Gregory jump slightly. "I've been knocking my brains out over what to get you two for your wedding, and that's it!"
"Brooke!" Heather interjected. "You don't have to give us anything!"
"Yeah!" Jack added. "You never got us nothin'!"
"You two got my car for an entire week, buddy-boy! Remember?" Turning to Heather, she grinned. "I want to do everyone's hair and makeup! I can do that, and it'll make me feel like I gave you two something! Please?"
Erica stepped in for Brooke. "Oh, Heather! You really should let her do it! She did mine for New Years!"
"She did, did she?" Jack asked with a pointed look at Brooke.
Suddenly shy, Erica demurred. "Well, I... I wanted to look perfect for you!"
"Why you old softie!" Jack stared at Brooke in astonishment. "I wasn't just set up, I was submarined! I never stood a chance, did I?"
"Nope!" Brooke answered as she smiled into her cup. "Not a chance!"
"Alright!" Heather admitted defeat. "Only because you want to, Brooke! I don't want you to feel you have to!"
Suddenly feeling a lot better about the impending nuptials, the 'dress issue' temporarily forgotten, Brooke hardly listened to a word after that. Instead the Marine spent the rest of their lunch going over in her head what she planned to do to make Heather shine brilliantly that day.
The next morning, Jack walked into the dress shop behind Erica so she too could get her fitting done. Turning a corner, the sight that greeted him was something the likes of which he had figured would signal the apocalypse. "Oh... my... God!"
Brooke glared at him as she stood on the pedestal in a beautiful pink satin strapless A-line gown. "Don't you say one fucking word, Jack! Not. One. Word!" A round of gasps followed from the seamstress, her assistant, and several ladies looking over dresses for their own weddings the next spring.
"Nope!" he replied. "I have no words, Brooke. Just waiting for the ground to open up and swallow us all!"
"Jack?" Erica warned. "Behave!"
"Yes, dear!" he replied dejectedly. "You ruin all my fun!"
Brooke closed her eyes and took a deep breath. While she stood waiting for the seamstress to finish pinning the gown, she rolled her eyes impatiently. "Aren't you done yet? I feel like I've been in this thing for hours!"
"It's been less than twenty minutes!" Jack pointed out. "Couldn't be longer! You only left half an hour ahead of us!"
The seamstress shook her head, talking through pins stuck between her teeth. "It'll only be another few minutes, ma'am."
"Don't ma'am, me!" Brooke snapped. "I'm no officer! I work for a living!"
"Sorry." she replied, trying to finish as quickly as she could. Standing after pinning the hemline, she worked on pinning the back as she asked Heather, "So, Miss Moore. Do you know when the other Bridesmaids are supposed to arrive?"
"Erica here is next, then I have two ladies from my medical group coming down. They should be here in the next ten minutes or so."
Just as she was finishing with Brooke, the door chimed once more as Jack turned to see two ladies enter. "I think that might be the others." he offered.
Heather rose and greeted them. "Maya! Jennifer! So glad you could make it! Mr. Frakes didn't give you a hard time about leaving, did he?"
Maya, the taller of the two shook her head. "He knew better! You may not be practicing yet, but he knows you will be next month!"
"Good!" She turned to Erica as Brooke stepped down off the platform. "Well, since they're here, would you mind if they went ahead of you Erica so they can get back to work?"
"Not at all, Heather!" she replied smiling. "I'm sure Jack won't mind waiting, will you, dear?"
"Yes, dear." he replied absently. "Oh! Uh... no, dear, I wouldn't mind!"
"Maya, why don't you go first." Heather suggested.
The tall blonde went back into the changing area just ahead of the fleeing Brooke, cutting the Marine off and closing the curtain in Brooke's face.
"Make a hole, lady!" Brooke barked, charging into the changing room. "I need to get out of this monkey suit! You can wait!" she barked as she pushed the blonde bodily back out through the curtains.
"Heather!" Maya whined. "Who does she think she is? Rude much?"
"Sorry!" Heather apologized for Brooke. "Brooke's my Maid of Honor, but she's... well... not entirely comfortable with the dress. Here, why don't you sit for a minute and I'll get you something to drink, alright?" She looked at the shop girl assisting the seamstress, who rushed off unasked, returning a short time later with a bottle of mineral water.
Waiting, Heather made introductions to Jack and Erica. When Brooke came back out carrying the dress, Heather sighed and shook her head as she saw her Maid of Honor toss the dress at the seamstress like a football.
"Here's your dress, lady." she barked. Sighing in frustration, she practically stalked back to Heather as Maya headed into the changing room. "I still don't know how you talked me into this, Heather! I think that damn thing's gonna fall down and my boobs are gonna pop out every time I move!"
"It'll be worth going to the wedding just for that!" Jack arched an eyebrow.
Erica smacked him in the back of the head. "Shut up, Jack!"
"Yes, dear." Jack muttered, rubbing the back of his head.
Turning to Brooke, Heather smiled sweetly. "It will fit better once it's fitted for your measurements, dear. I swear to you, it won't slip!" Seeing that her words still offered no comfort, Heather shook her head and sat back down, waiting for Maya to come out wearing her dress.
"Well, if you don't need me for a while," Brooke said, grabbing her purse, "I think I'll just pop down to that pizza place just down the strip. I'm starved! Wanna come, Jack? Split a meat lovers with ya'!"
The seamstress looked at Brooke as though the Marine had just slapped her. Turning to Heather as the two ran out the door, she was speechless with her eyes like saucers. "Wh... bu... Isn't she on a diet for the wedding? She's the Maid of Honor! If she puts on more than a pound, the dress won't fit!"
"I'm sure it's fine!" Heather consoled the stricken woman. "Brooke isn't like most women!"
"I should say not!" Maya growled as she came out wearing her dress. "She acts like a man! You would think it was some sort of punishment to wear that gorgeous dress! It's even nicer than ours, and this is beautiful, Heather!"
"Well, to her it almost is!" Erica stood up for Brooke. "She's a United States Marine, and proud of it!"
Maya looked at her. "Well, it shows! She has the manners of a bulldozer!" Taking a breath and smiling, she stepped up on the platform. "Well? How does it look?"
Sitting next to Heather, Erica lowered her voice and asked, "Can I ask you a question? Maya... she seems kind of... stuck up. Why did you ask her to be a bridesmaid?"
Leaning over, Heather whispered, "She's usually very nice. I guess Brooke just rubbed her the wrong way. You'll see! She can be very sweet!"
"I'll have to take your word for it, Heather." Erica shook her head in disbelief.
All the while, Jennifer, the other newcomer who hadn't said more than hello since coming into the shop, sat and watched the exchange silently as she struggled with her own inner turmoil.
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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Jack and I had a blast at the pizza parlor that day while Heather and Erica saw to the fittings. We talked for what seemed like hours, laughed, and had a great time. At one point, the waitress that brought us our drinks said we made a cute couple. I wanted to rip her head off at the time, but Jack just laughed. Looking back, it was kind of funny, and I suppose we did make a cute couple, as weird as that sounds! I guess that's why people believed it so easily for so long. The next several days were a blur. Not only were we getting ready for the wedding on Saturday, but Thanksgiving was that Thursday and Heather had planned a large get together at her family home for both the wedding party and guests and friends of hers and Rich's from their jobs. Sort of a hybrid Rehearsal Dinner, Office Party, and Thanksgiving all rolled into one. I had doubts if even her huge home could fit everyone. The biggest worry was Rich and Erica's parents. They were invited of course, but none of us knew if Judith would show or not, what with Jack being the Best Man, and even if she did show, if she would make a scene. Erica told me that she was feeling nervous, like a cat on an unplugged electric fence, scared that at any moment it'd go live. Meanwhile, I was struggling with my own issues. I just didn't know if I could be what Heather needed me to be, and I wanted her to have what she deserved. So Thanksgiving began with a lot of question marks and ended with more.
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Jack awoke just as the sun started to break through the window of the room Heather had given Erica and him for their stay. Still two hours earlier than his usual six o'clock rising time, but already almost an hour later according to the clock, he rolled over so the sun wouldn't be in his eyes and he could go back to sleep.
Rolling into Erica roused her from sleep, stretching and wrapping her arms and legs around him and relishing the feel of every morning that she could wake with her Jack just where she had always wanted him; wrapped in her arms. She almost purred with contentment as she ran her fingers through his lengthening hair. "Good morning, Jack! Happy Thanksgiving!"
"Uh-uh." he mumbled. "Not yet it isn't! Come back in a few hours!"
Kissing his forehead as she giggled, Erica wouldn't let it be. "Not a chance, Marine! Reveille! We have a big day today, and Heather's going to need all the help she can get!" Lifting his chin, she kissed him passionately, knowing it would stir him. When she knew she had his full attention, she slid out of bed and walked nonchalantly towards the bathroom. "Come on! Up, up, up!"
"Dirty pool!" he shouted after her as she closed the bathroom door, throwing the blanket back and climbing out of bed. "Jeez! This floor is freezing!" he commented, stepping tiptoe into the bathroom behind her. "I'm gonna run through a shower real quick. Wanna join?" he asked with his half-smile.
"I'd love to, sweetie. I'm afraid we'd take too long, though!" she said with a seductive grin. "You go ahead. I'm gonna throw some things on and I'll come back up and shower and change before the guests start arriving."
"Suit yourself!" he said shrugging as he stripped and turned the water on. The glass walls of the alcove shower steamed up quickly when he stepped into it, sighing with relief from the cold of the autumn morning.
Dressing in jeans and a T-shirt quickly, Erica came down the stairs and went into the kitchen to a flurry of early morning activity. "Anything I can do to help?" she asked Theresa, the cook.
"No! Nothing, dearie! You just leave everything to me!" Theresa dismissed her with a smile. "I already have most the work done, so I just need room to get the eggs done! You just relax and enjoy the day, dearie!"
Shooed from the kitchen, Erica made her way into the den where Richard sat behind a desk. "Morning, big brother! Happy Thanksgiving!"
"Oh! Morning, Erica. Happy Thanksgiving!" He barely looked up from the papers he was looking at. "Did you need something?"
"No." she replied absently. "Just wondering what you needed me to do is all. I know there's a ton of things that need to be done before this afternoon! How can I help?"
He looked up at her and smiled. "I think we have everything under control. You can just relax and enjoy it! Cook's got the food taken care of, Gregory's making sure everyone else is getting things ready. Maybe you should check with Heather if there's anything she needs help with, if you're so anxious for something to do!"
Erica smiled weakly as she headed out of the den. "Oh. All right. I'll see you later then." The spring in her step faltering, she almost trudged up the stairs before she turned to the master bedroom. Seeing the door open, she peaked in to see Heather at her vanity, wearing a beautiful pale-blue A-line dress. "Good morning, Heather. Happy Thanksgiving?"
"Good morning, Erica!" she smiled. "And Happy Thanksgiving to you, too! Did you need some help getting ready? I can have Franchesca..."
"No! I just wanted to see if there was anything you needed me to do to help is all." She wandered into the room absently, stepping up to the tall posts of the bed and wrapping a hand around it. "I seem to be at loose ends a little! I feel like I should be doing something, anything to help! I know this is a big day!"
Heather stopped getting ready and looked at her soon to be sister-in-law in the mirror and smiled. "Well, I can't think of anything at the moment. Did you ask Richard if he..."
"Yes." she mumbled her interruption, plopping down to sit on the bed. "He sent me to see if you needed anything! And your cook kicked me out of the kitchen! I make really good deviled eggs, too!"
"I have an idea!" Heather brightened. "Why don't you get ready, and then we'll take a walk down by the pond! Just the two of us!"
Sighing, Erica nodded. "Alright. I'd like that, but... and please don't take this the wrong way, Heather... I... I'm beginning to understand how Jack feels. I mean, I get it. There's no way you could run this house yourself, and today would be impossible without help, but... I don't think I could ever get used to living like this all the time! I'd go crazy with nothing to do!"
"I understand!" Heather replied softly. "Imagine how difficult an adjustment it was for me going to Stanford, and then adjusting back after we returned! I just try and focus on my job and making overall decisions for the staff and let them worry about getting it done." She looked off into the distance with a sigh. "Mamma used to say that running a household like this was like being a General in the Army. 'You don't stick your nose in the help's business!' she would say! 'They know better how to get things done than you or I ever will!' I... I wish she were here now."
"That reminds me." Erica changed the subject. "Who is going to walk you down the aisle? Or are you doing it solo?"
"No, your father offered to do the honors." Heather answered. "He and Judith will be here this afternoon and are staying through Monday. I put them up in town, though. I didn't think it would be a good idea to have Jack and Judith around each other any more than necessary!"
"That's probably a good idea!" Erica laughed. "Well, if nobody needs any of my help, I guess I'll go get ready. See you in a bit!" She hugged Heather's shoulders and slowly made her way to their bedroom, bumping into Brooke as she did. "Oh! Good morning, Brooke! Happy Thanksgiving!"
"Yeah. Um... Happy Thanksgiving." Brooke grumbled. "You seen Jack or Rich?"
"Jack's getting dressed, and Richie's down in the den working on something. Heather's in her room getting ready." Erica offered.
"Oh. I'll go see Rich, then." Brooke said before she headed down the stairs. Erica just shrugged and went to go change.
Entering the den, Brooke knocked on the doorway. "You busy?" she asked.
"Yes, but you're going to interrupt me anyway!" Richard joked. "Do you need something to do, too?"
She closed the door behind her and paced the room nervously. "I... um... I think Erica should be Heather's Maid of Honor. After all, Jack's your Best Man, and I'm really not cut out for this sort of thing! I mean, I'm honored that she wants me to, believe me! It's just..."
Richard sat back and nodded. "It's the dress, isn't it? And Erica would be a Matron of Honor. She's married."
"Maid, Matron, whatever! It's not just the dress!" she countered. "I mean, as dresses go, especially bridesmaid's dresses, it's really nice! Not like some of the monstrosities you hear talked about! But... I mean... Rich! I'm just not suited for this! I'm not a girly-girl! I'm supposed to throw Heather a party Friday night, and my idea of a party is not your bridal shower type party! I don't even know what women do at those things!"
"What? You think I do?" he asked incredulously. "Why don't you ask Erica to help? I'm sure she'd..."
"Alright!" Brooke admitted. "It's the dress! The last time I wore a formal was to my Senior Prom and I hated it, Rich! I don't think I can make myself do it! I... I'm just going to have to tell Heather she needs to find another girl! I'll be happy to just sit and watch."
Pursing his lips, Richard stood and set his papers aside. "Come on. Why don't we go talk to her? I'm sure there's something we can do to satisfy you both!"
Erica turned her back to Jack. "Would you zip me up, dear?" she asked.
Showing his half-smile, he pulled the zipper up his wife's back, closing the beautiful green dress in place. Putting his hands on her bare shoulders, the neckline wide and open allowing her shoulder-length curly red hair to just cover her neck, Jack leaned over her shoulder and kissed her cheek. "You look gorgeous, Buttons!"
His wife turned and smiled at him, draping her arms over his shoulders and around his neck. "Thank you, Jack!" She kissed him delicately, making sure not to smudge lipstick on him. "You look very nice, too!" She smoothed his black jacket and straightened his tie slightly. "Shall we?"
The two leaving their room, they made their way downstairs where they saw Richard and Heather, both dressed formally, sitting and talking to Brooke who was lounging in jeans and a T-shirt.
"If I knew casual was an option, I would've gone for that!" Jack muttered.
"Don't worry, Jack." Brooke retorted. "I'll be changing to Class Bs in a bit."
"Speaking of which, Jack." Heather said lightly. "Richard and I would like it if you wore your Dress Blues at the wedding. You did bring them?"
Thinking a moment, he shook his head. "No, I don't think I did, Heather. I'm sorry! You shoulda told me before we left!"
"Good thing I know better." Erica commented. "I packed them, dear!"
Jack wrapped an arm around her shoulder. "What would I ever do without you?" he asked.
"Die alone!" Brooke quipped as she stood and stretched. "Well, I should go get cleaned up. Heather? You said guests will start arriving at noon?" Seeing her nod, she started toward the stairs. "Alright. Be down by then."
Turning to Erica, Heather smiled. "Ready for our walk? I have some things I need to talk to you about." While the two ladies headed for the back door, she started explaining what they'd been talking about when she and Jack had come down. "Brooke was just telling me that she's uncomfortable being my Maid of Honor." Their voices faded as they went outside.
Jack looked at Richard. "So Brooke's out? What? Heather gonna get Buttons to step in for her?"
Shaking his head, Richard clapped his hand on Jack's shoulder and started leading him to the Meeting Room. "Best not to get involved, Jack. I'm sorry I did as much as I did! Come on, let me give you the full tour."
Frank Hargrave drove their rental car in silence, his wife Judith sitting next to him, staring out the window in equal quietude. When he saw a convenient turnoff, still ten miles from Heather's family home, he pulled off the road and slowed to a halt.
"Why did you stop?" she asked. "We're nearly there! I want to see Richard!"
"Before we go one inch further, I wanna make something clear, Judy." he said seriously. "From now on, under no circumstances are you to belittle Jack or their marriage to anyone, especially them! Jack's a fine man! He's a hard worker who's doing right by Erica! Treat him with the respect he's earned!"
"Respect!" she spat. "Some respect! He drags our daughter to some seedy place, in Reno of all places, taking advantage of her childish affections for him, all for a cheap laugh! My baby deserved an honest church wedding, and a man that could afford to give her one!"
"First of all, it was not a seedy place! It was a lovely chapel. You would have known that if you would have deigned to be at your own daughter's wedding! Secondly, if anyone took advantage, it was Erica! She's been wanting that boy for over ten years, and she finally got her hooks in him! She loved her wedding, just the way it was! She would have loved it more with you there!"
"Oh, for heaven's sake, Frank!" Judith shouted at him. "Erica's never been practical when it comes to that boy! You mark my words! She'll be the one supporting that bum!"
"He's not a boy, or a bum, Judy!" her husband retorted with a growl. "He's a man, an honorably discharged Marine, and she loves him!"
"If you had just done what I said and cut off her tuition, she would've come to her senses!" Judith snapped.
"No, she would have quit school and married him anyway!" Frank countered. "Without even her father there to give her away!"
"That's another thing!" she barked. "You blessing this marriage! I just don't understand how you could stand there and watch as she threw her life away! Did you know she could have married Jason Summers? Jason Summers! The boy whose father ran our bank back in Pittsburgh! He begged her to go out with him, but no! You had to encourage Erica to chase down that boy from North Oakland, who couldn't even be bothered taking care of his own dying mother! Just shipped her off to a home! That's our future, Frank!"
Closing his eyes, Frank tried to control his temper. "Look here, Judy. I've put up with your nonsense. You almost celebrated the day Jack nearly died! I almost filed for divorce when you ran off to your sister's because I insisted on paying for his hospital care! You've done nothing since you met him but show contempt for his background! You've tried everything imaginable to throw up walls between he and Erica! Well, get over it! They're married now and nothing you say or do is gonna change that! What happens when they start having kids, Judy? Are you going to forsake your own grandchildren because of their father?"
Judith fumed at the idea of her daughter having Jack's children. "Well, they haven't yet, and if I have anything to say about it..."
"You don't!" he barked at her. "I'm warning you, Judy! If you try and push them apart, it will never work and Erica will never forgive you for it! And if you ruin my chances at seeing my grandchildren, you'll be changing your name back to Rheinhart faster than you can say 'Reno divorce'!"
"It would be worth it!" she quipped. "Besides, once she's married to a nice young man who can actually take proper care of her, she would forget all about her little dalliance and thank me for saving her from her own childish mistakes! It would be a lot easier though if you were at least less supportive! Now, let's get going. Richard's waiting and I don't want to be late!"
"Until you swear to me that you'll keep your lip buttoned about your opinions of Jack, we're going to sit here until Hell freezes over!"
"Never!" she cried. "I won't do it! I'll fight Erica's sham of a marriage with my last breath and you can't stop me!"
"Then we sit here. I'm in no hurry." Frank sat back and closed his eyes.
After several minutes of silence, Judith broke it. "So, are you quite through being ridiculous, Frank?"
"I'm not being ridiculous." he replied calmly, not even opening his eyes. "We don't budge until I hear the words, Judy. You have to swear on your honor to the Lord! That I know you'll keep!"
Ten more minutes passed in silence. Judith considered getting out to walk the rest of the way, but not knowing the address or directions, she could search for days before finding it. Biting her knuckle, she began to realize he would actually sit there and never give in. Jack had been their only serious argument through twenty-seven years of marriage and she couldn't understand why he wouldn't see things her way. That boy's going to ruin her life! Either she'll have to support them both, or he'll drag her down with him into squalor! I have to make her see that!
Formulating a plan, she sighed. "Alright, Frank. Are you done brooding?"
"I'm not brooding." he answered. "I'm waiting."
"Frank!" she whined. "We're already late! Please, dear? For me?"
"I'm not the one keeping us here. You are."
"Oh, you can be so stubborn! Fine! I swear on my honor to the Lord I will not talk down about Jack to anyone at the party!"
"Or at the wedding or reception!" Frank added.
Wincing at him catching on to her loophole, she sighed. "Very well, or at the wedding or reception! Happy now?"
"Or anytime before, after, or between!"
"Frank Hargrave!" she snapped. "You know very well I can't make a promise for things that haven't happened yet! What if he abandons her? Or cheats on her? I'd be bound by that silly promise even if he murdered her! I won't!"
Thinking a moment, he came up with a compromise. "OK, then. For so long as Erica wants him!"
"Alright, fine!" she screamed. "I swear on my honor to the Lord I will keep my peace regarding Jack to anyone so long as Erica wants him!"
Frank looked at her, searching her face for signs of deception or loopholes. Seeing that he'd frustrated her into giving in and certain there were no other loopholes, he started the car and pulled back out onto the highway. "Very well, Judy. On your honor."
Standing in the Meeting Room next to Richard and several of his co-workers, Jack found it eerily similar to how things would be at one of the many parties he and Richard had been invited to when they were in school. He could see the vague look of disdain whenever he spoke or commented on whatever the subject happened to be. The only exception seemed to be Richard's senior boss, the VP of Business Research, Henry Chase. Jack felt at ease talking to the fellow Marine, and found that Henry shared his sense of humor. Seeing him returning with a drink, Jack smiled.
"Welcome back, Hank! Find the good stuff or is that just what Rich put out?"
Laughing, he raised his glass. "Bit of both, Jack! Say, I wanted to ask you. You're still in the reserves, right? Active or inactive?"
"Active." Jack answered honestly. "One more year."
"Good man!" he congratulated him. "So, what do you do outside of that? Your main line, I mean."
"I'm managing a dry-cleaner until my wife finishes college. Then we move to Southern California to be near her and Richard's parents where I plan on opening my own! Maybe grow it into a chain!"
"Speaking of Mom and Dad," Richard interjected. "I wonder what's keeping them? Their plane was supposed to get in over two hours ago."
"Your Mom probably had to wait for Frank to paint the car windows so she wouldn't burst into flames from the sun!" Jack quipped.
Hank laughed as Richard restrained himself from joining in. "Now, Jack. She may be your mother-in-law, but she's still my mother."
"And you have my sincerest condolences on that account, Rich. Speaking of which, I need to find Heather and give her the heads up. Judith will be her mother-in-law Saturday, and she needs a final warning before committing! If you'll excuse me, Rich? Hank?"
Heading to the Great Room where the ladies had gathered, Jack scanned the crowd, seeing Heather talking to the only other person in the room wearing pants besides himself. Making his way through, he smiled. "Heather, if I didn't say it before, I want to say it now. You look beautiful!" He kissed her cheek and turned to Brooke. "Ya' look good, Hathaway! By the way, being serious for just a moment, I really do think you look good in that dress for Saturday. You may hate it, but it loves you!"
Looking down, Brooke tapped her glass. "Thanks, Jack. I... uh... guess you meant that as a compliment, so I'll take it that way. But... um... I... won't be wearing it." She glanced at Heather with an embarrassed smile as she took a gulp of her drink.
He held up his hands. "Didn't mean to get into anything! Just forget I even mentioned it." Looking around the room he asked, "Have either of you seen Buttons recently?"
Brooke shook her head. "Not recently, no. Heather?"
"I think I saw her talking a bit ago with the other ladies in the bridal party." Scanning around the room, she spotted her sitting behind Maya. "There she is Jack! Over in the corner with Maya and Jennifer!"
"Thanks!" Remembering why he came over to her, Jack half-smiled. "Oh! Say, Heather. I... uh... I wanted to give you a heads-up about Richard's mom, Judith."
"I know all about her, Jack." Heather explained. "I think I can handle her!"
"No! You don't understand!" Jack corrected her. "See, she's gonna love you! Nothing like me!"
Heather blinked at Jack in surprise. "Why do you think that? I thought she was difficult to get along with?"
"Oh, to me, she's a monster." he clarified. "But you? You're rich! She's gonna adore you! Not that you don't deserve to be adored, you do, but she wouldn't care if you had three eyes and rode a broom, so long as you have it where it counts, if you know what I mean! Just a friendly warning is all! I'm gonna spend time with my wife! See ya' 'round Heather! Brooke!"
Making his way to Erica, Jack smiled at her. "Hey, beautiful! Just wanted to stop by and see if you'd like to..." He paused when they heard a car pull up the driveway. Glancing out a window, Jack grimaced. "Guess who? Hide your Ruby Slippers, Dorothy! The wicked Witch of the West is here! The upside is Dad drove her. Guess you have to take the bitter with the sweet! Shall we go greet them?" Seeing Erica nod stoically, he started toward the Meeting Room. "I'll run and get Rich."
"Thanks, Jack." she said as she rose and excused herself. Making her way over to Heather, she interrupted the bride and Maid of Honor's conversation. "My folks are here! God, I hope Mom doesn't make a scene today! I'd rather Jack and I leave than embarrass you, Heather!"
"No!" Heather insisted. "This is my home. If she tries to make you or Jack uncomfortable, I'll make it clear it won't be tolerated! OK?" With a breath, she saw the men going to the door, she and Erica moving to meet them there.
After getting out of the car, Judith looked around at the house and grounds. "Frank? Is this the right address?" Seeing Richard and Erica come out the front door to greet them put a smile on her face. "My babies!" she called out, almost running to them.
Richard kept an even expression, but Erica freely let her anger show.
When she and Frank got closer, she noticed the sour expression and slowed; her smile melting. Walking up to them ahead of her husband, she reached out and hugged her son. "Richard! I've missed you!"
"It's good to see you again too, Mom." he said earnestly, if hollowly. While he resented his mother's dislike of Jack, he truly had missed her.
Turning to her daughter, she cleared her throat and held out her arms. "Erica? Won't you hug me hello?"
Looking over at Jack and seeing him nod, she hugged her mother's shoulders quickly and backed away. "Hello, Mother." she stated scathingly.
Heather stepped forward and greeted her with a warm smile. "Welcome to Moore Estates, Mr. and Mrs. Hargrave! I'm Heather and I'm very pleased to finally meet you both!"
While she briefly hugged Judith hello, Frank came up and shook Richard's hand. "Good to see you again, son! How's life on the Outside treating you?"
"Can't complain!" he smiled. "Dad? I want you to officially meet Heather! I know you met her briefly at Erica's wedding." He glanced at his mother, who just turned her head away. "You had to go so soon though, I never really got the chance to properly introduce her to you!"
Heather hugged him hello warmly. "It's good to see you again, Mr. Hargrave! I'm sorry we never got the chance to be formally introduced in March!"
"Better late then never, I say!" he said returning the affection. Stepping back, he looked at Jack who stood behind his son, his face an expressionless mask. "Jack? Good to see you, too!" He reached out as Richard moved out of the way and they shook hands and hugged genuinely. Turning to his wife, Frank growled. "Judy?"
She walked up to Jack and held her hand out. "Jack. You look well."
Tentatively, he took her hand and shook it once before letting it go. "Judith." was all his anger would let him say. He wasn't so much angry with her for how she treated him, but for snubbing Erica's wedding and hurting her.
Heather broke the awkward moment. "Well, shall we go in? It's a little cool out to be standing around outside!"
While everyone else went in, Jack and Erica going in last, Jack lowered his voice so only Erica could hear. "It did feel a bit frosty out, but then The Ice Queen went inside! I wonder who'll win? Her or the giant fireplace?"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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While Jack and them were greeting Rich's parents, I was inside with a bunch of strangers, the only person in uniform, in a place where I didn't even know people's opinions regarding the military. To say I was a bit jumpy is to put it lightly! Even when someone did talk to me, I always felt like a curiosity more than a Marine, or even the supposed Maid of Honor. Later on, when Jack and I were talking, everyone else being busy, he told me about Judith and what all happened between them that day. I wanted Jack to know that no matter what, I would be there for him and Erica both. There's not a lot of things you can count on in this world, but I think my friendship with Jack and Rich could be counted as one of them. Most of the time, you think you know what's going to happen in life. Things like Thanksgiving come around and you... you expect certain things. Turkey, stuffing, football, napping on the couch, talking and laughing with family and friends... You know, the predictable things that are why we have things like Thanksgiving in the first place. To take time together with the people we love and make a memory. Sometimes things happen that you don't expect though, and would and could, never see coming.
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While her four friends were outside to greet their parents and in-laws, Brooke wandered the Great Room aimlessly. She accepted a few compliments and thanks for her service, but didn't know anyone, and none of them seemed to be interested in starting up a conversation, even when opportunity struck.
She was about to head into the Meeting Room to see if any of the men would care to talk, when she felt a tap on her shoulder. Turning her head, she looked down to see a young woman standing shyly behind her.
When the woman in the uniform turned to face her, Jennifer couldn't look her in the face. She shyly looked at the floor between them and cleared her throat before looking up at the statuesque Marine. "Um... Hi! I'm Jennifer Hooks! One of the bridesmaids? We met at the dress shop. Brooke Hathaway, right? You're a Sergeant in the Marines? I wanted to thank you for your service!"
Brooke smiled, almost instantly at ease with the shy young woman. "Yes, yes, and it's an honor." She put out a gloved hand. "Nice to see you again! Sorry I didn't stick around to actually meet you! Mind if I ask you a question?"
"S-sure!" the bubbly brunette answered nervously.
"How is it that you know Heather? I mean, I know you know her from work, but what do you do there?"
"I... uh... I'm the receptionist!" she responded with a smile. "Heather's such a great lady! When her license comes through, I can tell she's going to be a really great therapist!" Glancing away again shyly, she looked at the floor and then back at the Marine. "How do you know Heather?"
Laughing lightly, Brooke shook her head. "The groom Richard and I served together, along with a buddy of ours, Jack Dunning, the Best Man. You met him at the dress shop. They didn't re-enlist, but I have another year before my cruise is up. Thus, why I'm in uniform today and they aren't!"
A confused look came over her face. "But aren't they going to be in uniform for the wedding on Saturday?"
Looking around, Brooke found an open love seat. "Would you like to sit with me for a bit, Jennifer? I can explain!"
"Sure! I'd love to!" she said with an overly dreamy lilt in her voice, before getting self-conscious and wiping the smile from her face. "I mean... that'd be nice of you... to explain it, I mean." Once Brooke took her seat, Jennifer smoothed her peach satin skirt and sat next to her nervously. "And you can call me Jenny! Only my co-workers and my mother call me Jennifer!"
"Alright, Jenny." Brooke said with a smile, which seemed to hit Jenny like a slug of whisky. "See, there are regs about when and where military uniforms can be worn. Marine Corps regs are the strictest. Only someone in active service, or a retiree with twenty years service, can wear the uniform at any social occasion. Wartime vets with less than twenty years service, like Rich and Jack because they served in the Gulf War, can only wear it on certain occasions... weddings, military funerals or memorials, inaugurals, or parades and other activities involving other vets. Other Corps retirees can never wear the uniform again." As she talked, she could see Jenny was listening closely, and sitting even closer. Even still, she had a strange sense about the woman.
"And you know all that by heart?" Jenny asked in amazement.
Laughing, Brooke nodded and blushed. "That's small stuff! Uniform regs. I didn't even get into the four kinds of dress blues!"
Blushing even more obviously, Jenny looked away again. "Thanks for taking the time to explain it to me, Sergeant Hathaway!"
"Please, call me Brooke!" Looking around and seeing nobody paying much attention to them, and wanting to be able to speak more freely to the young woman, she nodded her head toward the back door. "Would you care to take a walk?"
"M-Me?" Jenny stammered as she felt faint. Confused and exhilarated at the same time, she swallowed her fear and nodded slowly. "I... I'd like that!"
Brooke stood and held out a hand. Helping the breathless young woman to stand, she smiled at her. "And here I thought today was going to be dull!"
The two walked out toward the pond in silence. Once there, they started to slowly walk the path around it before Brooke turned to her. "I... uh... got the feeling you wanted to ask me something, Jenny. You don't need to be shy or afraid. It's one of the reasons why I suggested the walk... some privacy."
"Well, since you asked... um... I kinda got a vibe from you? That you... um... aren't into guys?" She twirled her hair with a finger as she talked nervously.
"That's funny, I get a vibe from you that you are! If I'm wrong, just say the words!" Brooke smiled slyly and looked away at the pond.
"Oh, I've been out with a few guys. Nothing serious, just a date or two, but I never found anyone that I really liked though, ya know?"
"Not really!" Brooke laughed. "I've never gone out with a guy. Oh, I've been out with Jack and Rich, but that's just palling around. Not a date!"
"So you... um... always knew?" Jenny asked tentatively.
Brooke stopped and looked at her. "If you want to ask me something, why don't you come right out and ask?"
"Alright." Jenny said, gathering her courage to be uncharacteristically bold. "Did you always know you liked other girls?"
"What if I said yes?"
"Then... um... I think I might ask... Oh! I guess it's stupid! Never mind!"
"Are you wanting to go out with me, Jenny?"
Her eyes grew wide in shock. "Y-you... are you asking me out?"
"What if I were?" Brooke asked cautiously.
"Then... um... I guess I would say, yes?"
"Don't sound too eager!" Brooke joked. "I mean, if you wouldn't want to..."
"I do! I mean... I think I would like that, Brooke!" Pausing as they resumed walking together, Jenny looked over at her. "Can I ask why you won't just come out and say it? That... that you like me?"
Brooke sighed. "You have to understand my position, Jenny. I'm an active duty Marine... in uniform. If I were to be seen doing anything with you, even as simple as stating as fact that I like you or wanted to go out with you, I could be dishonorably discharged. As it is, if... hypothetically... we were to go out, I'd have to dress inconspicuously and not go anywhere I could be recognized or photographed, at least until October when my cruise is up."
The smaller woman furrowed her brow in confusion. "But no one is around to hear you, so why can't you say it?"
"Because you're here." Brooke pointed out, her tone becoming mildly harsh before softening once again. "Jenny, try to understand. You're being vague. You never actually said if you think it's OK for someone like me to like other women. You could just be trying to trick me into admitting it, so you could turn me in! This is a very dangerous subject to even be discussing. You will note that at no point have I admitted to anything, other than the fact that I've never dated a man. Many straight women my age haven't either."
"Oh." she replied. "Brooke?"
"Hmmm?" She looked over at the young woman.
"I think you're beautiful!" she practically sang the words before turning shy again. "I... I've never been interested in another woman before, so I... I'm not sure what I'm supposed to do! All I know is, when I look at you... I get that feeling that everyone says you're supposed to get when... um..."
"When you're attracted to someone?" Brooke finished for her.
Nodding, Jenny sighed. "You... you might think this is terribly forward of me, but... um... do you know what I want to do right now?"
"I can guess!" Brooke laughed. "Why don't you tell me?"
"Kiss you." she said shyly and barely above a whisper.
Brooke laughed as they turned the far corner of the pond. Seeing her walking companion look away embarrassedly, Brooke slowed her pace and stopped laughing. "Oh! I'm sorry, Jenny! I'm not laughing at you or what you want! Honestly! I'm laughing at me trying to tell somebody seeing us that it wasn't me kissing you, when I'm the only person in uniform here!"
Ahead, she saw a small outcropping of bushes that were growing next to the pond. Brooke bit her lower lip and stopped when they reached them.
Jenny only noticed Brooke had stopped after she'd walked on a little further. Stopping and turning back, she tilted her head. "What is it?"
"Come here." Brooke said softly. When Jenny turned back, she pointed a gloved thumb toward the house. "Can you see any part of the house?"
Turning, she looked and then back at Brooke, confusedly. "No."
"Then they can't see us!" she pointed out. Slowly, she pulled on the fingers of her gloves until they were free of her hands. Tucking them into her service belt, she stepped forward and took Jenny's hands in hers, taking a daring risk. "Do you still have the same feeling as earlier? Wanting to kiss me?"
Jenny nodded slowly, her eyes growing wide and her breath growing rapid.
Brooke let her fingers slide gently up Jenny's bare arms until they were at the girl's exposed shoulders. Slipping her fingers down along the peach satin of her gown until they came to rest on her slender waist, Brooke slowly pulled Jenny to her until their bodies touched. Bending down to the woman who stood six inches shorter, she tilted her head as Jenny did the same. Gently, she brushed her lips against the woman's cheek, feeling the quivering of Jenny's desire. Throwing caution to the wind, she moved her lips over the trembling girl's and tenderly let them touch for the first time.
Even as she did so Brooke could feel the instant heat of attraction boiling into desire, then need, within her. She'd never felt such an instantaneous hunger for anyone in her life, the burning passion that enflames the hearts of every woman who's ever been in love. It coursed through her so fast it terrified her that this woman, who she barely knew, could cause such powerful feelings in her that Brooke was ready to throw away her career just to kiss her one more time.
When Jenny felt the woman's lips touch her cheek she went through a wide gauntlet of emotions. First afraid for herself that someone would see them, then fear for Brooke being caught and punished. Then came the excitement at the newness of it, passion for more, dreading that a kiss on the cheek was all Brooke would do, anguish at knowing the woman would soon be over two thousand miles away, and lastly longing for Brooke to do so much more.
When Brooke moved her head and their lips touched, it was unlike any kiss Jennifer had ever known; soft and gentle, patient and yielding, tender and sensual. She could smell Brooke's perfume and it intoxicated her even more. She felt dizzy with so much shock that her eyes snapped open and she would have fallen, were not for the Marine's strong but gentle grip on her waist.
Pulling back slowly, Brooke ended the kiss reluctantly. Opening her eyes once more, she saw that Jenny had never closed hers. Stepping back, she cleared her throat. "I... uh... I guess that wasn't what you expected. I'm..."
She never got to finish apologizing before Jenny moved quickly up to her and pulled her down into a kiss as passionate as though they were long lost lovers reunited. This time it was Brooke who was taken so much by surprise at the depth of feeling this stranger brought out in her that she couldn't close her eyes. She had to look at the beautiful face a fraction of an inch away from hers that stirred her to the point of aching longing, just to know it was real.
Jenny slowly came back to her senses and realized just how forward she'd been. Shocking herself, she jumped back from Brooke as if bitten. "I'm sorry! Oh, God! I didn't... I mean, it's just that... oh, wow! Can I just say something? I've never looked at another woman and wanted to kiss her! I mean, I don't think I'm actually really gay! It's not you being a woman that made me need to kiss you, it was... it was you that made me need to! Oh, I am so confused!"
Brooke tried to repress a grin, but couldn't. "You and me both, sister! I... I think I understand though. When you kiss me, it's not like when any woman has ever kissed me before. When you kiss me, I feel... whole! Like a missing part of me just clicked back into place!"
"Oh! And I think I needed to kiss you to stop you from apologizing for when you kissed me! I mean, that first kiss on my cheek was... wow!"
"Jenny..." Brooke tried to jump in.
"And then that second kiss? I... I was like, in shock, it felt so good! I couldn't even close my eyes!"
"Jenny?"
"Is that why you thought that... Oh! It is, isn't it! You thought I didn't like it because my eyes were open! Oh! Wait, huh?"
Brooke laughed at the sudden wall of words. "Jenny! Calm down!" Walking up to her, she reached out to hold her. When the smaller woman didn't move away, Brooke slid her arms around her and brought her closer. "OK, let's take this a piece at a time. Yes, I was about to apologize. I thought once I kissed you, you found it wasn't what you thought it'd be. I'm glad I was wrong!"
Jenny calmed down and smiled up at her, fairly melting in the larger woman's arms. "I... uh... I'd really like to do that again!"
Her sense of duty reasserting itself, Brooke released her and stepped back. "Why don't we talk for a bit first, hmm?" Quickly pulling a compact out of her purse, Brooke cleaned Jenny's lipstick from around her mouth with a tissue. Reapplying her own lipstick, she smiled at Jenny and offered her the compact to do the same. Blotting and putting her gloves back on while Jenny touched up, she took back her compact and the two started walking the path once more. "May I ask you what made you approach me in the first place?"
Jenny took a breath. "OK, you'll probably think it pretty silly of me, though! I... I was bored, OK? Everyone at the party is like a Ph.D., Doctor, Nurse, Business Executive, or stuff like that! You looked... well... like the only other person there that knows what it's like to work for a living! Like a normal girl with normal problems like paying the rent or the gas bill!"
Breaking into a laugh, Brooke nodded in understanding. "I was thinking the same thing!"
"I... um... I also had really confused feelings about you at the fitting the other day." Jenny explained. "You were all mad at having to wear your dress, but it looked so good on you! Then when you turned and looked at me today? I felt like, 'Woah! She just made my knees weak with a look!' When you asked me to sit with you, my hands got all sweaty like I was thirteen and Jimmy Francis just asked me to the dance! Then when you asked me to walk with you? Uh! I nearly kissed you right then!"
Brooke laughed. "Alright. Next question. How old are you?"
"I turn twenty-one next April eighteenth. You?"
"Oh, God!" Brooke laughed. "I'm robbing the cradle! I'll be twenty-six the end of next June!"
"Well, that's within the acceptable margin." Jenny mused. "I could be almost a year younger and it would still be OK!"
"Half plus seven?" Brooke asked, getting a nod in answer. "I suppose. OK, next. You've never dated a woman." Brooke stopped and waited until Jenny stopped to face her. "Would you like to?" she smiled.
Jenny moved toward her eagerly, wanting to answer with a kiss, but stopped with a blush, turned, and started walking again. "I... um... I... I think... Yes! Are you busy tomorrow night?"
"We both are! Remember? Bridal shower? Heather's wedding?"
"Oh yeah." she said disappointedly. "And at the wedding we'll both be busy! How about Sunday?"
"I'm free then. What did you have in mind?"
"Well, you said you couldn't go anywhere that you might be recognized or photographed." She looked over at Brooke nervously. "I... um... I could make you dinner at... uh... my place? You could relax and be yourself there, right?"
"Yes. I could also be very tempted there!" the Marine admitted. "You're too beautiful and irresistible for my own good!"
"Me? Beautiful? Oh, now I know that you're just flattering me! Maybe pretty, but not beautiful! I mean, Heather and Maya are beautiful!" Nervously, she looked at the ground. "And you're gorgeous!"
"Well, I think you're beautiful!" Brooke blushed. "And way too sweet!"
"Brooke? I... um... Do you think that it's weird that... um... Oh, never mind! What's your next question?"
"No! I want to hear what you wanted to ask!"
"OK. Um... I think... I think... I think you look really sexy in your uniform! I mean, like really sexy! Like super hot sexy! Oh, God! I said it!"
Brooke was so stunned she stopped walking. "Really? I mean, don't get me wrong, I think I look good in it, I know what it means to wear it, but sexy?"
"See? That's why I wasn't going to say anything! It's just... You wear it with such pride, and I really respect that! I mean, you put your life on the line, for me! I think that's just..." Jenny sighed wistfully. "Sexy!" Composing herself, she added, "I'm really thankful, too. Thankful to have met you, that you're you, that you stand up for all of us, and... and for taking a chance on me!"
Brooke sighed. "Well then, you're welcome! And I want to thank you!"
"What for?"
"For taking a chance on me." Brooke sighed. "I was beginning to think that I'd never meet anyone like you, Jenny. You make me feel so good, it's scary really! I'd... If you wouldn't mind, I would really like to spend the rest of my Leave with you! If you wouldn't mind me hanging around that is!"
"When do you have to go back?" she asked almost sadly.
"I have to be back at ANAS by the sixteenth. I took three weeks Leave. I was going to spend it at home, but I'd rather spend it here! Then I have nine and a half months until the end of my cruise, but I'll probably be PCS to the butt-end of God knows where by April." Looking at Jenny, she saw the confusion. "Sorry! PCS, Permanent Change of Station. My long-term posting, Alameda Naval Air Station, is part of the base closures they're doing. So I'm getting sent off somewhere new for my last six months or so before I get Outside. Just enough time to get hit on by every grunt and rust picker there!"
"Is it that bad for women in the military?"
"Depends on the woman. Jack made it easy for me for a long time, though." Brooke explained how Jack covered for her and kept the Sailors and other Marines from asking her out.
"So, did you date a lot then?"
Brooke laughed. "No! Not really! Maybe a half-dozen times over five years. I had to be really careful. Well, that and I'm picky!"
"So, you have over two weeks left. I could... No! Well, um... Yea! I could take my vacation time! I have it coming and I was just going to take the cash equivalent at the end of the year anyway!"
Brook stopped and turned to Jenny with a stunned expression. "You... you want to take your vacation time to spend with me?" Resuming their walk, she whistled low. "Wow! That's a first!"
Coming around the house side of the pond again, they kept up talking about themselves; where they'd grown up, their beliefs, and what they wanted out of life and relationships. The more they talked, the more they realized just why they were so quickly drawn to one another. It was beyond mere physical attraction. They were very compatible and somehow, on some level, they'd felt it before they knew it. Sitting in the lounge chairs next to the pond as they kept talking, Brooke heard someone approaching from the direction of the house.
Taking a drink from his glass, Jack was thankful that beer was a part of the menu. He watched Heather show Frank and Judith the house and introduce them to their other guests and just shook his head. "I don't get it, Buttons. I mean, it's obvious she still hates me, but she's being... polite. Not friendly, but still polite. I don't like it!"
Stealing his glass for a sip as he talked, Erica handed it back to him. "What? You want her to make a scene?"
"No, but it makes me suspicious is all, like she's getting ready to drop a bomb on my head, like she somehow got our marriage annulled or something! I dunno!"
"Just be grateful for the reprieve, Jack. Maybe she's coming around! We are married, and moving to SoCal next summer! Maybe she realized that if she ever wants to see her grandkids, she needs to straighten up her act!"
He looked over at her expectantly. "Anything I should know about?"
Laughing, Erica shook her head. "No, Jack! I'm still on the pill! I still want to finish college first! Believe me, you'll be the second person to know!"
"Who gets first dibs? Brooke? Heather?"
"Me, you dork! I think I might have to know before you do!"
"Oh! I suppose you can tell you first. You're a lot closer! Known you your entire life!"
While Richard and Heather made the rounds with their parents, Jack looked idly around, finally noticing that Brooke was nowhere to be seen. "Buttons? You see Brooke? She appears to be MIA."
"Maybe she went in the Meeting Room. She's almost a guy!"
"Uh-uh. Guys aren't shaped like that. I'll have a look-see, though." Starting toward the Meeting Room, movement outside caught his eye. Doing a subtle double take, he spotted Brooke walking along the path around the pond with a woman in a peach dress. Smiling, he headed back to Erica. "Ready for the A.A.R.?"
"Jack! You don't need to build it up! Where is she?"
"Come here!" he said quietly, taking her hand and casually making their way to the big bay window. "Without drawing any attention, take a look outside by the pond. See anything interesting?"
"That's Brooke..."
"So who's her dancing partner? I don't recognize her from the back and I never danced with her." he joked in reference to an old movie.
Erica drew in a breath. Lowering her voice to a whisper, she leaned over to his ear. "That's Jennifer! One of the other bridesmaids! Oh my God! I never would have guessed it! She seemed so sweet and shy!"
"What? She doesn't wear enough flannel?" Jack quipped, remembering his own reaction when he found out about Brooke. "Come on! Look at them!" Just as he turned, he saw them slowly walk behind the bushes at the far end of the pond, and then not come out the other side. Looking at Erica just as she looked at him, Jack cleared his throat. "Well! OK then!"
"Good for her!" Erica whispered. "She deserves someone!"
As a group went by towards the buffet, they stopped looking. "We, uh... we better stop or we're gonna attract unwanted attention their way!" Leading her back to where they'd been standing earlier, they settled back as though they'd never moved. Leaning over, Jack kissed her on the cheek.
"What was that for?" she asked, almost laughing.
"Because! I just felt like it is all! Don't I have a right?"
"You're feeling all squishy inside for Brooke, aren't you! Ya' big softie! A romantic at heart!" Walking around in front of him, Erica wrapped her arms around his waist. "And this is because I want to!" She leaned in and kissed him tenderly, sighing as she leaned back and looked at him.
"Erica, please! You'll make a scene and I'll blush!"
"Let 'em watch!" she growled. "We're supposed to be all mushy still! It won't be weird until we're still doing this ten or twenty years from now!"
Just as she was about to lean in and kiss him again, he tapped her shoulder. "Heart of Darkness at six o'clock!" Jack steeled himself for the assault as Erica's mother started making her way towards them; Richard, Heather, and Frank nowhere to be seen.
"Well! There you are, Erica!" she intoned sweetly. "Your father is talking to Richard, Heather needed to see to her guests, I thought we could catch up!"
"We've been right here, Mother. Both of us." Erica noted in a strained tone.
"Yes. I can see that dear. Jack? I understand you left the service. Keeping busy, I presume?"
"Yeah, I keep busy." he answered jovially. "Between running my drug trade and all the pimping and whoring I do, I hardly have time to sleep!"
"No need to be crude!" Judith replied haughtily. "I'm making an effort!"
Sighing, Jack closed his eyes and re-centered himself. "Alright, Judith. I'm running a dry-cleaners in Palo Alto. We're saving to buy a place near yours and Dad's, so Buttons can see you two more. By the time she graduates, we should have enough for me to open my own business."
"Well!" she said in surprise. "Maybe I misjudged you, Jack. I still think..."
"What, Mom? That I could have done better than Jack?" Erica snapped.
"No dear, that's not what I was going to say." she refuted. "What I was going to say is that I still thought it was a mistake for you two to get involved. He's almost like a brother to you, dear!"
"Mom!" Erica dragged her name out. "You can't keep doing this! Even when you're not being derisive, you're still managing to put him down!"
"You're right! You're right! I'm sorry, dear!"
"You should be apologizing to Jack, Mother!" she growled.
"Very well!" Judith looked at Jack. "Jack? I... I'm sorry. I'll try to do better."
Arching a brow and cocking his jaw slightly, Jack nodded. "Alright, Judith. Accepted. And... and I will as well. Now let's just forget it."
Just as he spoke, Frank came walking up, pipe in his teeth. "Judy? Richard wants to talk to you about Saturday."
"Alright, thank you dear. Erica? Jack? If you'll excuse me?" She made her way back towards the den where Frank had come from.
Turning to his daughter and son-in-law, he smiled and hugged her. "How you holding up, sweet pea? Your mother behaving?"
"Oddly, yes." she replied, watching skeptically as her mother departed.
"I'm shocked!" Jack added. "She on somthin'? Valium? Prozac? Thorazine?"
Chuckling, Frank shook his head. "No! No, I extracted a promise from her. She promised, on her honor, that for so long as you two love and want each other, she won't say anything negative about it, or you, Jack."
"Huh?" Jack stammered. "Um... wh... how..."
"Frustrated her into it!" he explained. "It doesn't matter how, though. She'd sooner gouge out her own eyes than break a promise to God!"
Spending a few minutes talking, Richard came out with Judith to join them.
"Hey, Jack?" he asked. "You seen Brooke anywhere? Heather needs her."
"Oh! Uh..." He looked at Frank and Judith and lied. "No, but I'll go find her for ya', Rich! You stay here with your guests!" He turned and gave Erica a quick kiss. "Back in a few, Buttons!"
While Jack took off through the house, Judith shook her head. "I thought you didn't like that nickname, dear?"
"No." she sighed. "I just only like it when he says it!"
Brooke turned around to see who was coming. "Oh, Jack! We were just..."
"Yeah, yeah! Talking. I know. Stow it, Brooke! The children aren't around!" Glancing at the woman sitting next to her, he smirked. "OK, maybe I was wrong! She looks a little undercooked, Brooke! Maybe throw her back on the fire a few more years?"
"Don't make me get up and kick your ass, Jack! I'm comfortable!"
"Well, you need to get up anyway! Heather's looking for you."
Brooke stood and helped Jenny out of her chair. "Sorry to cut it short!"
"I... I wanted to thank you, Jack!" Jenny blushed. "You... you've been a really great friend to Brooke and helped her! That means a lot to me!"
"Well! You two certainly hit it off! When's moving day? Oh, Brooke? Jenny? You uh... might want to touch up a little!"
"We already did!" Brooke shot back at him. Even as the words were coming out of her mouth, she knew he had gotten her again. "Jack!" she growled through gritted teeth.
"Hey! I was just confirming what I suspected you two were doing behind that bush! Yeah, Erica and I both saw! Rookie move!"
Brooke hung her head while Jenny blushed heavily.
"Oh! It's fine! I think it's adorable!" he comforted them comedically. "Erica agrees! If you like, I can... uh... see to it you two get some time alone later? Run CAS for you? One last time, Brooke?"
Shaking her head, Brooke was once more taken aback by how much he was still doing for her. "Have I ever told you I love you, Jack?"
"No, I don't believe you ever have, Brooke." Jack answered, turning serious. "I'm touched. Honest. And... well.. the same to you, Brooke."
"Well, let's get back inside then." she suggested, holding out her hand to Jenny. "Walk in front, Jack?"
"Rookie move!" he said through a smile. "You must have it bad!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
Jack not only saw to it Jenny and I had time alone that night, he saw to it we had time the next day before the bridal shower and that night after it! I think Jack was a little in love with the idea of Jenny and I being in love! More than anything though, I think Jack wanted to make sure someone would be there to take care of me, because he knew that very soon, he wouldn't be. The day of the wedding came and everyone was frantic... except Heather. I worked overtime doing everyone's hair, then getting myself put together, but Heather never faltered or got nervous. That woman's a rock! Unshakable! We girls piled in Heather's limo afterwards, and Gregory drove us to the church in good time. Later, Jack told me that Rich begged off his own Bachelor Party. Jack still threw it, but Rich didn't go, so neither did Jack! It ended up they spent the evening at a bar around the corner, nursing at beers and reminiscing, while Rich's guests partied hard a block away. It must have been a beauty of a party though, because Jack wouldn't say a word to me about what happened! So November thirtieth nineteen ninety-six, Rich finally got Heather to say 'I Do'. The wedding was nice. The reception was... well... memorable!
---
Heather was the last to climb out of the car. Brooke escorted her through the front of the church and into a small room off to the side.
"All ready?" Brooke asked in a heavy exhale.
Nodding quickly, Heather squared her shoulders and lifted her chin. "Ready!"
"Alright! Just wait here and I'll be right back with Frank." Casting a quick glance and smile to Jenny, she headed out into the church where their guests were still taking their seats. It was only a few dozen for each side, the church barely a tenth full, so finding him turned out to be easier than Brooke thought it would be.
"Frank!" she yelled at a whisper. Seeing him turn and smile, he tossed her a sloppy salute before he walked over to Richard.
"She's here, son! You're on!" He regarded his boy and nodded in approval. "You look good! Now get up in your place! You too, Jack!"
Checking each other's uniforms one more time, Jack and Richard stepped up in front of the altar.
"You have the rings, right Jack?" Richard whispered.
With a reassuring half-smile, Jack patted his pocket before his face dropped. "Um... uh... um!" Frantically, he started searching his uniform pockets in a desperate attempt to locate them.
"Cut the clowning, Jack!" he whispered again. "I'm not buying it this time!"
Tapping Richard on the shoulder, he looked at his best friend with a pained expression. "I... I think I left them in the pants pocket of my civvies in the changing room! I'm serious, Rich!"
Richard blanched. "You better get them fast, Jack! Move it, Marine!"
Seeing Jack running into the rear area of the church, Brooke stopped Frank on the way to the waiting room. "Take a knee, Frank. Jack just went U-A. You wait here. I'll go tell Heather we're on hold."
A minute later, Jack returned with a smile on his face. "Not to worry, Rich! I got your back! Remember! You need me!"
"Like a hole in the head!" Richard finished for him. "You done now? Can we get on with this, please?"
Jack shot the OK sign to Frank, who waved back and headed for the waiting area. "Alright, whatever it was, it's OK now." he said, rounding the corner. Stunned into stopping, he smiled. "Oh! Rich don't deserve you, little lady!"
Heather shook her head, her veil waving as she did. "No! I don't deserve him, Frank!"
"You can knock off that Frank business, sweetie! If I'm about to walk you down the aisle, I'm Dad to you!"
"Alright... Dad! I'm ready!"
After the music began, Maya started up first. Jenny followed, smiling and blushing at Brooke as she passed her. Lastly, Erica moved in behind them, winking knowingly at Brooke. The three bridesmaids making their way up the aisle, Brooke snapped to attention and began her precession, her Dress Blues a stark contrast to the pale pink of the bridesmaids' dresses.
Lastly, Frank took Heather's arm and escorted her to his waiting son, glowing with pride at seeing him prepared for whatever challenges awaited the two.
The on-looking guests smiled as Brooke passed them with perfect precision in her cadence, her eyes cast in the thousand-yard-stare of long-engrained drill. When at last the guests turned to see Heather, her ballgown dress was trailed by a chapel-length train attached at the bustle with thousands of pearls decorating the dress in an elaborate floral pattern across the bodice.
Reaching the altar just as the music ended, the service went on in traditional fashion, flowing through the ceremony just as billions of others before it. Jack occasionally stole a smiling glance at Erica, who seemed to know when he was doing it, as she would always be looking back at him and smiling.
Brooke was a statue. Her eyes never wavered, her bearing unmovable, as though you could push her over and she would crack like a marble statue. Her perfection didn't stop Jenny from stealing glances around Erica, though. Jack caught her checking Brooke out from behind at least twice, with the faintest glimmer of desire in her eyes each time.
When the ceremony at last came to a close, the minister giving permission to kiss the bride, Richard raised her veil and placed it over and behind her.
Heather looked up at him. "Hello, Mr. Hargrave!" she said low and soft.
Bending down to kiss her, he smiled. "Hello... Mrs. Hargrave!"
When the minister introduced the couple to their guests, Jack and Brooke both gave out a shout. "Ooo Raa!" raising cheers from everyone.
After getting photos of the wedding party, they quickly made their way to the reception hall a few blocks away. Climbing into Heather's limo, Gregory congratulating them as he closed the door, Richard removed his cover and kissed Heather passionately. Making out in the back of the car almost the whole way, Heather finally made him stop to touch herself up.
Meanwhile, Jack worked furiously to get everyone in their cars. "Come on people! Hustle! Hustle! Hustle! We have ten minutes to get to the hall!" He'd made sure that Gregory was taking the scenic route to get there, but it still only gave them a few minutes margin so that their guests could both see them off at the church and greet them at the reception.
Catching sight of Brooke, he half-smiled at her. "Perfect drill, Hathaway! No gigs!"
"The day this Sergeant takes gigs from a Lance Corporal is the day I quit!" she retorted.
Leaning in close, Jack lowered his voice. "What did you do to that poor girl, Brooke! She was practically undressing you with her eyes all through the ceremony!"
"Why not?" she said nonchalantly. "She's done it before!"
"Oh! Details, Girl! You owe me details!" Jack insisted as he got in the car behind her.
The happy couple reached their reception and stepped out, surprised by the cheers and whistles from the same people they'd just left. Jack stood front and center of the crowd and pointed his finger at Richard. "Gotcha!"
Shaking his head, Richard escorted Heather up to Jack. "Someday, Jack. I don't know when, I don't know how, but someday, I'm gonna see you coming, and then..." He started to move toward him.
Jack held up his hands defensively. "Hey! You still need me, Rich! I still got a Best Man speech to give and I still have stuff even worse than 'Cindi with an i' up my sleeve!"
Stopping mid-move, Richard only tipped his cover. "Lead on, Jack! The hero of this story wants to celebrate!"
The party went through the usual motions; cake cutting, face smearing, and first dance to 'Love of a Lifetime'. When all the formalities were over with but one, Jack picked up the microphone.
"Hello? This thing on? OK! Good evening, ladies... gentlemen... Rich!" He paused a moment while people snickered. "Best Man speeches are supposed to be memorable, and I'm sure ol' buddy boy Rich over there is just waiting for me to embarrass the living heck out of him! He knows I can do it, too! I know all his secrets! I could tell you about the day we met! Funny story! Rich sees this jerk about to pummel me... and he stops him. I make a total fool of myself in front of the entire lunchroom... and he helps clean up the mess. I get my heart broken... he's there to help me pick up the pieces. I get humiliated in front of the entire school... he gets even for me. I get hurt... well... Frank helped me there. Sorry, Rich!"
A small laugh went around the room before he continued. "I don't get a date to Senior Prom, can't afford tickets, or a tux, or anything... he gets me the best date I could imagine." Looking at Richard, Jack subtly nodded. "I need physical therapy to pass the Marine Corp physical... he coaches me through it. I find this woman who's absolutely amazing... " he paused to glance at Brooke, "... he shows me what a great friend she can be. I get slapped by my date..." he looked at Heather with a grin, "... and he goes and tries to talk her into giving me a second chance. My mother goes into a coma... he calls to give me the news himself. I get passed up for promotion... he takes me out to celebrate not having to become an NCO!"
After a pause to take a drink, he continued his speech to his rapt audience. "I never get invited to parties... he refuses to go unless I can come. I fall in love with his sister... he gives me his blessing. Yep! I know a whole lot about my buddy Rich! I could tell you stories that would leave you all in stitches for hours... but I wanted only one thing to come out of this speech. I wanted everyone here to know what a privilege it is to know, and be the friend of, Richard Hargrave."
Putting down the mic, Jack walked in front of Richard's seat at the head table. Pulling his heels together crisply, he snapped to attention. Slowly raising his arm, he saluted his best friend and held it. Getting up, Richard returned the salute, and the two looked at each other, both sharing a lifetime of comradery in a single breath. Returning to attention, Jack turned sharply and marched from the room before anyone noticed the wetness in his eyes.
Washing his hands in the restroom after composing himself, he saw Richard stroll in slowly. "You did it again, Jack. Caught me completely by surprise! How do you do it! Here I figure, 'OK, Jack's my Best Man, Best Man speech, Jack the always on comedian...' I knew what I was asking for! So I'm ready for either a ten minute vaudeville routine, or every funny story about me you can think of to embarrass me! And what do you do?"
"Look Rich," Jack interrupted. "I... I just wanted you to know..." Looking up at him, he chuckled once before looking at the floor again and started to dry his hands. "I just wanted you to know that I knew all those times you stood up for me, that... that I... uh... I knew, Rich... and I loved you for it every time. Because you didn't have to! You would have had it easier if you'd have just let Ox beat the tar out of me and just minded your own business! You didn't have to, but you did anyway, and you keep doing it! And I know, OK?"
"Jack?"
"Yeah? What is it, Rich?"
"Your fly's open."
"Shit!" he looked down, but saw nothing wrong and looked up deadpan.
"Gotcha!" Richard shouted as he ran from the restroom.
A second later Jack took off after him. "Rich! You son of a..." Tearing out of the room, he was intercepted by Erica as she threw her arms around him, tears streaming down her cheeks.
"Oh, Jack!" she cried. "That was... it was beautiful!"
Holding her while she cried, he saw Brooke leaning against the opposite wall next to the ladies room door. "Wow, Jack. That was..." Brooke sighed. "It was wonderful, Jack. Nothing could have been better!"
Smiling back at her, he nodded. "Thanks, Brooke!"
Kicking herself off the wall, she slowly walked toward him. "Of course, you know you just caused every woman in that room to rush off to the Head to fix their make-up, right?"
"Everyone but you, Brooke!"
"Bah!" she waved a hand at him dismissively. "I'm no woman, Jack! You know that! Corps through and through! Ooo Raa!"
"You fixed your make-up out here in the hall, didn't you?" Jack guessed.
"Head was too busy!" she smirked at him.
After everyone returned to the reception hall, Richard picked up the mic.
"Um... I know this isn't traditional, but I... uh... I wanted to say a few words about Jack's speech." He paused as he took a drink. "I... uh... I just want to let you all know... he's absolutely right!" Laughter filled the room as Richard smiled. "I have been looking out for Jack since he was thirteen! And I'm such a wonderful guy for doing it!" Laughter rolled through the room once more. "Everyone! Give me a round of applause!" Cheers and applause mixed with laughter as Jack was left agape. "Alright, everyone! Time to have fun!"
Music filled the room as he returned to his seat between Jack and Heather while 'Everybody Have Fun Tonight' played and people started to dance.
"Rich!" Jack looked at him with a shocked expression. "You stole my act!"
"Yeah, yeah! Well, you let us all down, Jack! The King of Comedy gives a serious Best Man speech? It had to be done, Jack!"
"You're a straight man, Rich! You can't do comedy on your own!"
"Lucky for me I followed you!" Richard shot back as he downed his drink.
Heather took his glass from his hand and turned it upside down. "Alright funny-man! You're cut off! I already told you at Jack and Erica's wedding that I am not pouring you into bed again!"
"Yes, dear!" he replied.
"Same goes for you, Jack!" Erica warned him. "I want you sober tonight!"
With the dance floor crowded as the first sounds of 'Girls Just Wanna Have Fun' filled the room, Heather stood up and grabbed Brooke's hand, nearly jerking her off balance. "Come on, girl! You're coming with me!" Reaching the dance floor, they were joined by Erica, Jenny, and Maya as the five of them danced together, while Jack and Richard laughed at Brooke trying to dance to eighties pop in her Dress Blues. More than once the Marine found Jenny dancing very close to her, almost as if they were dancing just with each other, while the others were off on their own.
Just as Brooke and Jenny were smiling and dancing close again, the song faded to 'True' and what had a moment earlier been innocent fun became a dangerous desire to slow dance together in public.
"Jenny..." Brooke began, when suddenly her face became serious. "You'll have to excuse me." Brooke's cheeks flushed red with embarrassment as she quickly left the dance floor and returned to the head table, taking Erica's seat next to Jack for a moment.
Jack leaned over. "Sorry, Brooke. That was rough! That DJ's a bitch!"
Drinking a glass of water quickly, she nodded. "Almost makes me wish I'd just worn the stupid dress! No one would have cared!"
"So what did you two do last night?" Jack asked. "Seriously! No jokes, no crude comments, just a friendly ear."
Looking down at her lap, she shrugged. "We... uh... things got pretty involved and... um... I might have used the word 'love'."
"You might have?" Jack asked incredulously. "Brooke, did you tell Jenny you loved her? After only knowing her for two days?" Seeing her silently nod, he whistled low. "What are you gonna do when your Leave is up?"
"Go back to The Bricks! What else can I do?" she answered, looking across the room at Jenny. "Jack? Tell me not to do what I'm thinking!"
"That depends on what you're thinking." he replied cautiously. Slowly his eyes widened. Keeping his voice low he broke into a whisper. "Brooke! Don't even think it! You get caught and you'll be dishonorably discharged! You think the Old Man won't see pictures of Rich's wedding day online?"
"Jack!" she growled through gritted teeth. Lowering her voice once more, she whined, "Jack, I just want to go out on that floor and dance with the woman I love!" Catching herself saying it out loud again made her eyes bulge.
Shaking his head, he looked at her sternly. "I know, and I'm happy for you that you found someone to love! I wish you could too, but that dance would probably cost you your job and make getting another one almost impossible! How many people that you know will hire a DD Marine?"
Sighing, she nodded in defeat. "I know, Jack. It's just..." She almost felt like crying.
Hugging her shoulders with one arm, he tried to console her. "I know, I know. It's hard, it's not fair, and this time I can't cover for you, but you knew that going in." He looked at her with a hopeful smile. "Hey! You have less than a year left! How long have you been looking for someone like Jenny? What, since you were eight?"
"Seven." she answered with a slight smile of her own.
"So? You've waited eighteen years? What's one more?" Shaking her slightly with his arm, his voice turned mirthful. "Huh? Right? You know I'm right!"
Brooke couldn't help but laugh at his clowning as she surreptitiously dabbed a tissue at the corner of her eyes. "You're right, Jack. Ten months! I can do that!" She paused and looked at her lap again. "But will Jenny?"
He sighed and looked across the room at Jenny talking with Heather and his wife. "Well, what happened when you told her? How did she react?"
She smiled and chuckled once. "She... um... she was stunned, I guess. I mean, we... we haven't done anything yet besides kiss and make out a little. She's... she's never been with a woman before. I think she's never even considered it before!" She shook her head and looked off into the distance. "Lucky me, right? Find the right girl and she's straighter than you!"
"I seriously doubt that, Brooke. I've never made out with Rich before!" His humor worked, lifting her spirits and making her laugh. Looking at her and then across the room at Jenny, he turned serious. "Listen, why don't you go talk to her? Tell her what you feel and what you want and what you need to do to get it. I'll bet you anything, if she's half the woman you think she is, she'll wait for you."
Seeing Jenny across the room glancing at her made her blush again. "You think so? Honestly?"
"Brooke, I love you. You're like the sister I never had. I... I just want you to be happy, and I know if you threw it all away for her, you'd hate yourself for it, and sooner or later you'd hate her for it, too. So, go! Talk!"
Standing up, she looked at him. "You're right. When did you get so wise?"
"Life's a bitch of a teacher, but I learned. Good luck!" he said as she started around the table.
Jenny was beyond frustrated as she talked with Heather and Erica. "I... I just don't get it! She's hot and cold! Fine one second, then gone the next! I... I've never done this before! Am I doing something wrong?"
Shaking her head, Heather smiled. "Jenny, I don't know exactly what's going on between you two, but I know one thing. If you were doing something Brooke didn't like, you'd know it! She can be extremely... blunt!"
"Like a brick!" Erica added. Shyly biting her lip, she looked at Jenny. "Um... so what is going on with you two? I mean, I know you like each other, and that's great, but... um... how far have things gotten?"
Blushing heavily, Jenny wanted to just run and hide. "I... I kissed her."
Heather looked at her incredulously. "That's all? I sincerely doubt that's all that's going on, here!"
Rolling her eyes, Jenny put her hand on her hip. "What! You want details? Fine! We made out, OK!?" Her anger at Heather pressing the point ebbed as she retreated back into herself once more. "I mean... that is we... Oh God, Heather! I'm just messed up! I'm a confused broken mess and she knows it! No wonder she keeps backing off! She ought to just run!"
Erica stole a glance across the room at her husband talking with Brooke, who seemed to be on the edge of tears. "Jenny? Can I ask you something?" Seeing the young woman nod, she tried to be delicate. "How do you feel about her?"
Looking across the room at Brooke just as she was looking back sent a shiver up her spine, making her look away. "I... uh... I really like her! More than anyone I've ever known! I like her so much it scares me sometimes! I wasn't ever ready for something like this! I've never even looked at another woman the way I look at her! She makes me feel... special... wanted..." She sighed and closed her eyes, finishing softly. "...loved!"
The silence between the three was palpable as Erica and Heather looked at one another in surprise. Finally Jenny shook her head as if to clear it. "No! It just... it wouldn't work! I mean, I'm pretty sure I'm not gay! I like looking at guys! I don't think I could ever..." She looked at the floor embarrassedly before looking over at Brooke once more. "Oh, God! But when I look at her, I just want to..."
"Jenny?" Heather asked sweetly. "Are you in love with her? Because I have to be honest, everything you're saying and doing is telling me that you are!"
Looking at her with eyes wide, Jenny blurted out, "She... um... she told me! I mean, last night we had dinner after the shower... the wedding shower I mean!" Flustered that she'd implied Brooke and she had showered together last night, she took a breath and tried again. "Last night, we had dinner after the wedding shower. We were talking, and laughing, and... well... she just... blurted it out!"
Erica shook her head in confusion. "Blurted what out!"
"She said, 'I love you!' At first it was just like one of those things you say? Like 'I love pasta' or 'I love laughing', but then, after she said it, she looked at me funny and... and said it seriously! Like she really meant it!"
Heather blinked. "Well? What did you say?"
"Not much. We were kind of... busy... after that." Jenny admitted shyly.
"So after that did you tell her you loved her, too?" Heather asked impatiently.
"No!" Jenny shot back defensively. "I... I mean... I don't know if I do! How do you know if you're in love with another woman?"
"It's no different than if you were in love with a man, Jenny." Heather stated as fact. "You just know."
Erica smiled subtly as she got an idea. "Jenny? Close your eyes and picture yourself with Brooke." Seeing Jenny's eyes close, she pressed forward. "Now she's gone! How do you feel?"
Her eyes shooting open, Jenny almost started to cry. "Oh, God! I am in love with her! I'm in love with a woman! I'm in love with Brooke! A woman I've only known for two days!" She looked at Heather and Erica as if searching for help. "What do I do?"
Seeing Brooke stand and start walking their way, Heather smiled. "Do? You enjoy it, Jenny!" Quickly, she got out the compact from Jenny's purse and dabbed a tissue under the younger girl's damp eyes. Looking her over, she nodded. "Touch up a little."
Confused, she looked in the tiny mirror and hid the redness under her eyes. Looking up, she saw Brooke approaching. "Oh my God! Do I look alright? What should I do?"
Heather laughed lightly. "You look fine, Jenny! You should just talk to her."
Brooke stepped up to the three women and looked at her friends. "Heather? Erica? Would you two excuse us for a bit?"
The bride and bridesmaid nodded and, as soon as Heather was in back of Brooke, turned and mouthed to Jenny, "Tell her!"
Seeing an empty table, Brooke smiled. "Why don't we sit and talk a bit?"
Melting at her smile, Jenny returned it and nodded. "OK!"
Sitting together, she leaned on the table, looked at Jenny, and smiled again dreamily before clearing her throat and sitting up once more. "I... um... I... I wanted to apologize for earlier. I feel I should explain."
"Oh! You don't have to explain!" Jenny offered enthusiastically. Suddenly looking embarrassed, she looked away. "I... I must have done something that made you... uncomfortable."
"Actually, no." Brooke corrected her. "You did something that made me feel like doing something I shouldn't. Not yet anyway." She sighed as she tried to explain. "I... I have obligations. Part of that is respecting this uniform and all it represents. I wanted to hold you in my arms and dance with you so much, I very nearly did. Doing it would have been a violation of my standing orders though, something I just can't overlook. I'm... I'm sorry."
Jenny looked up at her with eyes full of compassion. "No! You don't need to be sorry. I'm the one that needs to apologize. I... I'm immensely proud of you and how committed you are! I just got caught up in the fun of dancing with you, I shouldn't have put you into the position of having to choose between me and... and what makes me love you."
Brooke suddenly looked at Jenny with eyes wide. "You... you love me?"
"Yeah. I think I do!" Jenny smiled shyly.
Right then, Brooke wanted nothing more than to pull Jenny to her and kiss her passionately. Instead, she just smiled. "You know I love you too, right?"
Nodding, Jenny smiled wide. "Yes! I love hearing it, though!"
"OK, so here's the deal. I have ten months left. As soon as I'm Outside and my commitments are fulfilled, I... I want to move here, to live with you."
The import of what she was saying struck Jenny like a lead weight. "You... you want to live with me? But... don't you have family in New Mexico?"
"Oklahoma!" Brooke laughed. "But I don't care! My father will probably disown me and my mother will try to 'fix' me by guilting me, saying that it's all her fault, but I don't care about any of that! All I want is to do my duty as I swore to do, then spend the rest of my life loving you!"
Jenny was overwhelmed. "You... you'd do that? Give up your family and everything you've ever known, for... for me?"
Shrugging absently, Brooke smiled. "I have to! My heart won't let me do anything less!" Looking at her seriously, she continued. "It means being away from you for most of the next year, though. I'm willing to wait. I've waited eighteen years to find someone as wonderful as you. One more won't kill me, but... but I guess I need to know. Will you?"
"I... I don't know." Jenny said honestly. "I mean, I want to! I think I would do almost anything for you, Brooke! But... a year without you?" She looked away ashamedly. "I... I don't know if I could stand it!"
Brooke felt her heart sink. "Well, I could try and come see you. I... I don't know where I'll be stationed soon though, so I don't know how easy that will be. But I can try! If... if you're willing."
Looking in Brooke's eyes, Jenny saw the longing and saw how easily she could hurt this strong woman. Suddenly overwhelmed with pride for her serving Marine, she nodded and smiled. "I'll wait. I... I love you, Brooke!" Laughing, she looked away. "I guess now I know how military wives feel!"
"Woah!" Brooke shouted quietly. "Are you asking..."
"Huh?" Suddenly her eyes shot open. "Oh! I... um... I didn't mean... that is, what I meant was..."
Brooke laughed and took Jenny's hand discretely. "I know what you meant! I just thought I'd have a little fun with you!" She smiled and looked deeply into Jenny's eyes. "The scary part is, I think if you were asking, I... I'd say yes!"
Enjoying the feel of Brooke's gloved hand in hers, she blushed and shied away. "I don't think I could ever see me asking, but I know how you feel. Sometimes I feel so strongly about you it scares me, too! If you asked me, I... I don't think I could say no!"
It was Brooke's turn to blush as she looked away. "I... I'll keep that in mind!"
Jenny smiled at her and looked at the carefully pressed jacket Brooke wore. Reaching out, she discreetly ran a finger along one of the seams. "I love what this means to you." she commented idly. "And I love that you respect it so much, I... I can't help loving it, too. It's a part of what makes you the person I love, and I know it always will be."
She looked up at Brooke. "Thank you for not putting what we want ahead of the things that make me love you!" She stood up and backed away. "I think we should go back to the head table. I... I don't want anyone to think you're doing something you shouldn't."
"Will I still see you tomorrow?" Brooke asked, half fearing the answer.
"You better believe it!" she smiled. "But, tomorrow? Leave the uniform at home!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
Jenny and I spent the next two weeks together almost constantly. She got her time off of work, though I'm pretty sure Heather had something to do with that! Those weeks we spent together were all that we'd have for the next year. After I went back, I got my PCS notice effective the first of January ninety-seven. They were already drawing down ANAS and shipping us out to other duty stations. So two weeks after I said goodbye to Jenny, Heather, and Rich, I was saying goodbye to Jack and Erica, too. I was being shipped off to Okinawa, which left me so far from everyone else it wasn't worth trying to get home to see anyone. I poured myself into my job and counted the days. All I had to get me though it was the memory of those blissful two weeks and the occasional phone call that I made off base. In the interim, Erica graduated with a degree in Psychology, and she and Jack were getting ready to start their new life.
---
Looking around the apartment one more time, the only thing Jack could find were the last few boxes left to put in Erica's car. Searching each room for items they might have missed, he remembered the fun and love he and Erica had shared in the place they had called home the first eighteen months of their lives together. The heat of the August morning was already making the apartment stuffy since the power had been turned off. Certain that nothing had been overlooked, he grabbed the boxes and carried them out and down to the car where Erica was trying to fit everything in.
"Jack, I don't know if we're gonna be able to fit what we've got in here!" she complained. "We should have put some of these things in the moving van before it left!"
"Everything here we needed for the last two days, Buttons." he pointed out. "I mean, we couldn't pack up the last of our clothes, or the kitchen, or the bathroom! Could you see us going two days in the same clothes, or without a shower or being able to cook?"
Erica sighed. "I know Jack, but what are we gonna do?"
He half-smiled at her. "I got it! Put 'em in the passenger seat, and you ride on my lap!"
Laughing, Erica shook her head. "I think CHP would object, love!" Looking around at the boxes, she threw up her hands. "I give up! You're on, funny-man. Figure out a way to get all of this to fit!"
After re-packing and shuffling the contents into different boxes, half an hour later Jack pushed the hatchback closed, having to lean on it. "There! Got it! Everything's in!"
"You've got things packed so tight in there I'm afraid that when we get to the house and open it, it'll be like opening a joke can of peanut brittle!"
"Don't sweat it, sweetheart!" he said in a terrible impression of Humphrey Bogart. "I'll take the first leg."
Erica shook her head. "No way, José! I'll take the first leg! You get that lovely Southern California traffic!"
"It's not that much worse than up here!" he argued. "Besides, I'll want to take a nap later after repacking all this stuff four times!"
"You can nap first and then drive us over the finish line!" she insisted. "I'm a better navigator than you, and we're gonna need that when we get down there, not up here where I know all the roads!"
"Yes, dear." Jack gave in, opening the passenger door. Pausing, he looked up at their old apartment window. "I think I'm gonna miss this place." He turned and looked at her about to get in the driver's side. "Special memories!"
"For both of us!" she pointed out as she got in. Buckling, she looked over at Jack doing the same. "Ready?"
"As I'll ever be!" he answered. "Let's go home!"
Their drive down was fairly uneventful. They switched places just outside Bakersfield when they stopped for gas. Jack fell asleep less than an hour into the trip and felt rested for the four-hour drive ahead. Erica napped until they reached the four-oh-five interchange, then agonized over the stop-and-go traffic. Finally, an hour after sunset, they reached the house they'd bought in Newport Beach, located less than a five-minute walk from her parents' home.
Turning off the motor, Jack finally relaxed. "We're here! Movers should have put most of the big things where they belong, so all we should have to do is unpack the car, take everything in, and then unpack everything else!" He glanced at his watch. "Shouldn't take past... oh... February!"
They laughed together as they got out. Jack started moving boxes to the front door while Erica got out her keys and unlocked it. She was about to step in when she felt herself suddenly lifted into Jack's arms.
"Put me down you goof!" she laughed.
"Sorry! Old traditions are still important!" He swung her easily in through the doorway and Erica reached over with one hand to turn on the light.
Nothing happened.
She looked at him in the dark. "You remembered to call and have the power turned on today, right?"
"Yeah!" he said as he placed her on the floor just inside the door. Running back to the car, he fished a flashlight out of the glove box and turned it on. Running back to the front door, they saw a maze of boxes filling the living room, creating an imposing wall of packed things. "Let me see if I can make my way through this and check the fuse box."
Erica watched him disappear around a corner stack of boxes. She followed his progress through the living room by watching where the flashlight lit up the ceiling above and in front of him. Finally she saw the light vanish down the back hallway that led to the bedrooms; the breaker box located inside the master bedroom closet. She heard several thumping sounds and Jack cursed twice. Suddenly, she heard him yell as the living room light she'd switched on came to life. "Jack! Are you OK?" The hallway light came on as she made her way into the cluttered house.
Jack saw her as they met near the entry to the kitchen while he sucked on the side of his right index finger. Taking it out of his mouth and shaking it, he nodded back towards the bedroom. "Breaker was tripped, probably when the power was turned on. Damn thing cut me when I reset it!"
"Are you alright?" she asked concernedly, grabbing his hand to examine it. "Jack! You're bleeding!"
"Ah! Just a flesh wound!" he said dismissively. "I'll put some disinfectant on it after we unpack the bathroom. Lets get those boxes in so we can get it."
Two hours later, they sat at the only two kitchen chairs that weren't stacked with boxes. "At this rate we'll need a week to settle in! Where did we get all this stuff?"
"It's things I brought from Pittsburgh, plus things you brought, plus what I'd gotten in college." she answered. "It's all the things you need to run a house, Jack."
"Forget it!" Jack suggested "Let's chuck 'em all outside and live the simple life! It'd be easier than unpacking!"
"Come on, you!" she laughed as she stood back up and dragged him to his feet. "Break time's over! We need to at least find the sheets so we can sleep on our bed!"
They didn't get to bed until well past one in the morning and had only been asleep three hours when the phone rang. Jack turned on the light, reaching down to the floor next to the bed where they'd put the telephone for the time being. "Gary's Dry Clean, Jack speaking." he mumbled.
Heather would have laughed if she hadn't been so excited. "Jack? Jack you're at home, not at work. I need to talk to Erica! Is she there?"
Slowly realizing where he was, he looked at the watch he'd forgotten to take off when they'd gone to bed. "Heather? It's four in the morning! I don't know what time you get up there on the farm, but out here we have hours left 'till we milk the cows!"
"Oh! I'm sorry, Jack! I completely forgot about the time difference!" Heather apologized. "Um... did I wake you?"
"No! We get up at four every morning! Good for catching worms!"
Erica rolled over. "Who is it, Jack? Tell them to call back in the morning!"
"It's Heather, Buttons... and it is morning there. She wants to talk to you. Want me to give her the brush off?"
Sitting up, she shook her head. "No, I'll take it." Grabbing the receiver, she sighed. "Heather? It's Erica. Look honey, can this wait until tomorrow? It's late!"
"So am I!" she replied.
"For what?" Erica asked sleepily. "Whatever it is, I'm s..." Suddenly Erica was wide-awake. "Heather? Do you mean..."
"Uh-huh!" she answered, her smile audible even over the phone.
"Oh my God! Heather! When did you find out?" she yelled.
Jack rolled over, having started falling back asleep until Erica yelled. "Is everything OK? Something wrong with Rich?"
She covered the mouthpiece with her palm. "Heather's having a baby!"
"What, now?" he asked. "When did all this happen?!"
She shushed him. "Heather?"
"I just found out and I had to tell you right away!" she said excitedly. "I'm sorry for calling at such an early hour! I just couldn't wait!"
"No! It's fine, Heather! I'm glad you called!" Lowering the mouthpiece she told Jack, "She just found out!" Going back to the phone she asked, "How far along are you?"
"Five or six weeks." she answered excitedly. "My due date should be in April! Oh, Erica! I'm so excited!"
"How's Rich taking it?" she asked.
"I haven't told him yet." she explained. "He left for work an hour ago and won't be back until late tonight. He's working out of the office today, so I can't even call him. I just had to tell somebody and Brooke isn't reachable!"
"Well congratulations, Heather! I'm sure Rich will be thrilled!"
"Wait a minute!" Jack sat up suddenly. "I know before Rich does!? Oh, ho, ho! This is gonna be so good!"
"Don't you dare ruin this for Heather!" Erica barked. Hearing her sister-in-law over the phone, she went back to it. "What's that, Heather? Oh, Jack was just planning something nefarious for Rich because he knows before Rich does! Don't worry, Heather! I'll keep him in line!"
"You tell Jack that if he ruins this surprise for me, I'll... I'll... I'll never speak to him again!"
She turned to her husband. "Jack? I'm serious. If you ruin this for her, I don't think I could ever forgive you for it! This is not something to turn into a joke! Do you understand me?"
Jack lay back and sighed. "Alright. Fine! Ruin the best thing I've ever had on Mr. Perfect! I'll let it go!" He grumbled as he rolled over and pulled the sheet tight up to his neck.
"OK, Heather. You don't need to worry. Jack won't do anything. You just plan however you want to tell him! Congratulations again! All right! Call me later! Bye!" Hanging up the phone and handing it to Jack to put back on the floor, Erica lay back and sighed. After a time, she rolled over and wrapped her arms around him. "Jack? You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." he grumbled.
"Jack?" She paused, trying to think how to broach the subject. "Jack, I want to go off the pill."
He slowly rolled over and looked at her. "Seriously? I thought you wanted to wait until we were more settled..."
"I know what I said!" she interrupted him. "I changed my mind. Oh, Jack! Don't you want to start our family? Rich and Heather got married after us and here we are, in our own house, and we haven't even started trying yet!"
"We've been in our own house for a total of seven hours, Buttons! What? You wanna start now?" He looked up into her eyes, seeing the mischievous grin creep across her face. His face lit up with a half-grin before they both started giggling and working to get undressed as quickly as possible.
Heather struck a match and lit the two candles that she'd placed on the dining room table. Shaking the match out once they caught, she moved over to the light switch and dimmed it just bright enough to allow them to see while still emphasizing the candlelight. Smiling, she walked back to the mirror by the front door and checked herself one more time. Just then she heard a car pull up the driveway and one of the garage doors opening. Moving through the house gracefully, she went down the few steps at the head of the hallway that led to the garage. Taking a deep breath, she smiled and waited.
Richard slowly dragged himself out of the driver's seat, stretching his worn body. He'd spent all day on the road and was just glad to be home. Slamming the car door as the garage closed, he threw his dark gray suit jacket over his shoulder as he made his way to the door leading into the house. Stepping into the hallway, he smiled at the sight that greeted him. "Hey, beautiful!" he said exhaustedly. "Are you a sight for sore eyes!"
"Rough day?" she asked, hoping that it hadn't been too hard.
"Boy and howdy!" he exclaimed, walking up to her and wrapping his arms around her. "Sorry! You got all dressed up for me and here I am, dragging my butt in here, smelling like a sock!" He started to pull away from her so he wouldn't get his sweat all over her.
Heather tightened her grip on him, not letting him pull away. "I missed you today!" she sighed.
"Just today?" he asked with a chuckle.
"I just really missed you, is all." she said as she looked up at him. "I knew it would be a hard day for you, so I wanted it to be nice when you got home! Have you eaten?" She slowly released him as they started into the house.
"Grabbed a late lunch about three. I'm starved!" He sniffed the air. "What's Cook making?" he asked.
"Her name's Theresa, dear! Calling her Cook just seems... inappropriate!"
"Tough habit to break, love." He shrugged. "You're lucky I don't call you Hargrave! Besides, it's convenient! Her last name's Cook, and that's what she does! What'd she make, anyway?" He looked into the dining room and saw the candles and low lights.
"Theresa's off for the night, dear." she explained. "So are Gregory and the others. I wanted time alone! I hope you don't mind. I made dinner myself!"
He stopped and looked at her. "You cook?"
"If the need or desire arises, yes I can cook, Richard!" She fisted him in the ribs lightly. "Sit down love, and I'll bring you your dinner!"
Walking up to the table, Richard smiled when he saw she'd set places at the head of the table and one next to it. Sliding into the seat at the head as she liked him to, he relaxed for a moment. When he saw her carrying out a large tray, he quickly rose to go to her. "Here, honey! Let me help you..."
"No! You sit right back down, Richard! I want to do this for you tonight!" she ordered, nodding toward his seat.
Holding up his hand in mock surrender, he sat down and waited while she served his favorite dinner of roast lamb. He wanted to start eating right away, but waited until she was done serving herself. Just as he was about to dig in, she put a hand on his arm, staying it. "Something wrong, Heather?"
She smiled at him as she softly answered. "No, Richard! Everything's perfect! I was just remembering dinners with my parents at this table! I really wish you'd gotten a chance to know them. They would have loved you!"
Smiling, he put down his fork. "I'm sure I would've loved them! After all, they raised you and I love you!" he complimented her before leaning over to kiss her gently. Wanting to tear right into his food, he could see Heather had some kind of plan for the evening, so he relaxed into it. "So then, how was dinnertime in the Moore household?"
Sitting up straight, Heather looked off in the distance. "Well, for starters we always dressed for dinner. Father would sit where you are, Mamma at the other end, and I would sit here." She gestured to the seat on her left in the middle of the table that seated eight. "Theresa would serve, with Gregory's assistance, then once served, Father would say Grace and we would wait for him to begin eating. If there was anything that needed discussing that day of major importance, he would talk about it after Grace and before he would start. Anything of minor import would wait until after dinner when we would retire to the Great Room."
She sighed wistfully. "It was like that every night. It was a pleasant comfort to know what to expect, especially after a hectic day at school or after Church and the weekly social that was always so chaotic."
"Sounds nice!" he said smiling. "Dinner at our house was chaos incarnate! Half the time we didn't even eat at the table, we ate in the living room around the TV. Sundays and Wednesdays Mom would have us at the table, though. Saturdays were hit and miss. Once Jack was around, he ate at our place twice a week until..." his voice trailed off. "Well anyway, dinner was a casual thing for us. Mom would say Grace if Dad hadn't started eating by the time she sat down. It wasn't very often into high school though, more often when Erica and I were kids." He looked at her questioningly. "Did you want to make our dinners more formal, like you used to do when you were growing up?"
Heather considered his offer honestly. "Well, it would be nice if we would occasionally." She glanced at him and smiled. "Maybe on Wednesdays and weekends?"
"Mix of both?" he nodded and chuckled. "OK. I can go along with that. Since it's Tuesday, you wanna start tomorrow or start tonight and then pick it up this weekend?"
"If you wouldn't mind starting tonight?" she asked hopefully.
"Anything you like, beautiful!" he leaned over and kissed her again. "Well, 'the cook' has already served, so..." They both bowed their heads in prayer as Richard spoke. "Dear Lord, thank you for the blessings you have seen fit to bestow upon us, and make us truly thankful for them. In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen."
"Amen!" Heather said smiling in contentment. When she opened her eyes and saw Richard about to begin eating, she cleared her throat. "Richard? I have news of importance to bring up."
Setting his fork down once more, he looked over at her. "Oh?"
"Yes, dear." She took a breath and smiled. "I talked to Erica this morning. I called to deliver some news to her."
Curious how this would be important, he furrowed his brow. "What news?"
"An expected delivery?" she smiled at him shyly.
He was about to ask what was going to be delivered when his eyes widened. "Delivery? As in..." He watched in awe as Heather bit her lower lip with a wide grin and nodded enthusiastically. "A... a baby? You mean... you're... you're..."
"We're pregnant!" she corrected him. "You're going to be a daddy!"
Getting out of his chair, Richard helped her to stand. "When? How?" he asked dumbly.
She looked at him with mock seriousness. "You mean you don't know where babies come from, dear?"
He laughed at his own idiocy for even asking. "No... I mean yes! Of course I know! No, I meant... I knew we talked about it and you said you were going off the pill, but that was only last month!"
"Apparently that's all it took, dear!" she giggled.
Wrapping her in his arms, he kissed her strongly, lifting her up and swinging her in a circle afterwards as he howled, "Ooooooo Raaaaaaah!"
Putting her down again as she laughed, Richard almost stumbled back to his chair, his dinner and hunger completely forgotten. "Oh, wow!" he said in a daze.
"So I take it then you're happy about it?" she asked jokingly.
"Happy? No, dear! I'm not happy! I'm over the moon about it!" As his brain starting to work again, he looked at her with a concerned expression. "What about your practice?"
Considering it for a moment after she sat down, she picked up her water glass and sipped it. "Well, I can take six weeks Maternity Leave, and then we can hire a nanny to take care of..."
"No." Richard shook his head. "I don't want my kids raised by a stranger!"
Upset that he expected her to give up her career, she looked at him. "Richard! It wouldn't be a stranger! Besides, I have obligations to keep! Patients that need me!"
Pursing his lips and considering her position, he nodded. "You're right! I'll quit!"
Heather was shocked at his suggestion. "Richard! I can't ask you to do that! You worked so hard to get that position! I'm proud of you for it! Lots of children are raised by nannies!"
"But they aren't my kids, Heather!" he still shook his head. "I don't care about my job! I do it because it's necessary! If we have to cut back to make it on just your salary, it's worth it to have our kids raised by one of us! That's a lot more important than a career to me!"
"Richard, are you sure this is what you want?"
"Absolutely!" he answered without even waiting for Heather to finish asking her question. "Besides, I hate the way the upper managers look down their nose and give me all the crap work they don't feel like doing, just because I didn't go to an Ivy League school! I know Hank will be disappointed, but... No, he'll understand! I'll see him tomorrow and give him the news that..." He thought for a moment, trying to figure out on his own when the baby would be due. "When's the due date?"
Shaking her head, Heather laughed. "April! I'm not exactly certain though. I haven't seen a doctor yet. I just missed my period five days ago and used a home testing kit! Well, actually I used three! I wanted to be sure!"
"Perfect! I'll tell him that after I do the quarterly reports due the first week of April I won't be coming back!"
Lowering her tone to be serious, Heather looked him squarely in the eyes. "Richard? Look at me. Are you sure you could be happy as a 'Mister Mom'?"
Looking back in her eyes, he smiled. "I can't think of anything I'd like more, love!" He frowned suddenly as a thought occurred to him. "Heather? You wouldn't be embarrassed having a stay-at-home husband, would you?"
"No!" she shouted.
"Is it the money then?" he asked, hoping he hadn't misjudged her essential character.
"Richard!" she scowled at him. "I have more money than we could ever need! It's not about money, or what other people think! I just want you to be happy! Are you sure? Is it that important to you that you would give up your whole career for it?"
Nodding, he smiled at her reassuringly. "Positive."
"Alright!" she gave in.
"So it's settled!" he stated. "I'll stay at home and raise the kids and you keep people from going nuts!"
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
I stayed in touch with Jack and Rich while I was overseas. They would call and tell me what was going on in their lives and I in turn lied to them about how great my new posting was. The only benefit of being so bloody far away was that I was still accumulating Leave that I never took, so in the end I got out almost a month early, taking my last twenty-one days as Terminal Leave. By September second, I was on my way back to CONUS... the Continental US... but things had changed. Jack and Erica were living in Newport Beach and Rich was in New Hampshire, which was where I was headed as fast as I could. I didn't even take the time to call anyone and let them know I got out early. I felt like I was abandoning Jack, especially after all that he'd done for me over the years, but I just had to follow my heart.
---
Brooke slammed the door of the cab and pulled the seabag over her shoulder, most of the weight resting on her back. To her, the late summer weather in Concord felt more like the fall that wasn't due to start for another two weeks. Biting her lip nervously, she gathered her nerve and walked up to the door of the tiny house. Setting the bag down once more, she knocked and waited.
Jenny heard someone knocking on her door as she put a load of laundry in the washer. "Coming!" she yelled loud enough for them to hear her. She'd spent most of that Saturday cleaning her one bedroom rental and hadn't been expecting anyone, her parents being out of the country. Jogging through the living room, she slowed as she reached the door. Sighing, she pulled it open quickly, mildly annoyed at the interruption. "Yes?" When her eyes caught sight of who was at her door, she nearly fainted. "Brooke!?"
"Jenny?" she smiled hopefully. "I know I didn't call ahead, but I thought I might surprise you!"
Surprised was an understatement. Jenny was stunned into speechlessness. "Wha... how... uh..."
"Well? Can I come in or do I need to go live in New Mexico?" she said with a smile.
Jenny still couldn't formulate words, so she just stood back and let Brooke enter. Clearing her throat, she finally was able to speak again. "Um... sorry about the mess!" she apologized, looking around the room. "I... I... I wasn't expecting you until..." She shook her head, trying to clear it. "I thought you wouldn't even be out until the end of the month! I wasn't expecting you until sometime in October! What happened?"
"I haven't taken any Leave for almost a year, so I took it all at the end of my cruise so I could get here sooner!" she explained. "Surprised?"
"No, I'm not surprised... I'm floored!" She looked at her grungy sweats and touched the bandana holding the hair out of her eyes. "I... I wasn't ready for you yet! I... I wanted everything to be perfect for you to..." She looked down as her voice shook and cracked, her eyes starting to water.
Brooke moved in close to her and grasped her shoulders. "It's OK, Jenny! I don't care how clean your house is! I just couldn't wait to see you!"
She looked up at Brooke upset. "But I look terrible! Me standing here like an idiot in sweats... and I haven't showered since yesterday morning!"
Laughing at how seriously Jenny was taking it, Brooke shook her head. "You still look beautiful to me!"
Furrowing her brow, Jenny walked away frustratedly. "You're just saying that to make me feel better!"
No longer laughing, she cleared her throat. "Do... do you want me to go?"
Spinning to face her, Jenny pleaded, "No! God, no! It's just... Oooo, you can be so damn frustrating!"
Sighing and shaking her head, Brooke smiled. "Yes, yes I can, and you can be adorable when you're angry!" Pausing for a moment, she looked around the room. "Tell you what. We'll get this place cleaned, together, get us clean and dressed nice, and I'll take you out to dinner. How does that sound?"
Shyly looking to the floor, she blushed. "You mean, out? Like a date?"
"I mean out, like what loving couples do!" Brooke clarified, slowly walking up to her. "But first, I want to say hello properly!"
Gulping at the predatory look in Brooke's eyes, Jenny's pulse quickened as she hurriedly pulled the scarf off her hair, still hardly able to believe that after so much waiting, her love was finally in her home again. Feeling her pulse pounding in her neck, the smaller woman stood there as Brooke walked up to her and slipped her arms around Jenny's waist. Still not used to being so drawn to another woman, fear gripped her heart for a moment before desire overcame it and she found her arms slipping around to draw Brooke tightly to her.
Leaning down, Brooke brought her face only inches from Jenny's. Seeing the fear, but feeling the younger woman pull their bodies close, she changed her approach and instead of ravishing the woman she loved as she desired to, Brooke instead whispered, "I love you!" before gently kissing her, just letting their lips brush together tenderly.
Hearing the words and feeling Brooke's lips lovingly kissing hers, drove the fear out of Jenny's heart as wanton desire took its place and overwhelmed her. Just as Brooke was pulling back to end their loving reunion, Jenny ran her right hand up to rest on the nape of Brooke's neck and pressed their lips back together. Opening her mouth hungrily, she jumped up and wrapped her legs around Brooke's hips to make their bodies press together in a lover's embrace. Throwing caution to the wind, Jenny only knew one thing at that moment; Brooke was in her arms once more and she wanted the Marine more than she'd ever wanted anyone in her life.
Reveling in the love and desire Jenny was showering on her, Brooke returned her desperate clinging as her heart burst with joy. When Jenny's passion was at last sated and she slowly slid back down to her own feet, their lips parting, Brooke sighed in contentment. "I missed you, too!" she whispered, delicately toying with the curly brown hair around Jenny's face. Smirking, she grabbed the smaller woman behind the shoulders with one arm and swept her legs up with the other, Jenny instinctively wrapping her arms around Brooke's neck.
"Brooke!" Jenny yelled. "What are you doing!"
"Something I've been dreaming about my entire life." she answered as she headed for Jenny's bedroom. When she saw Jenny smile and giggle, Brooke knew that the love of her life wanted her just as desperately as she did her, and that this was where she'd always belonged. Home. she smiled to herself as she kicked the bedroom door shut behind them.
Six weeks later, and twenty-five hundred miles away, Erica walked through the door to Jack's Jiffy Dry Clean with a smile on her lips that she couldn't shake. They'd leased the building using some of the money they'd saved for their house and had opened for business in early September. Within weeks, Jack found himself busy enough to start hiring employees and begin paying back the small business loan he'd taken out. Erica smiled at the young lady behind the cash register. "Hi, Gwen! Is my husband available?"
The teenage girl looked up from the order slip she was filling out. "Oh! Hi, Mrs. D! Um... I think Mr. D's in the back. Do you need me to get him?"
"If you wouldn't mind?" she asked politely. She watched the bubbly blonde eighteen-year-old jog off to the back while she waited, going over things in her mind. Gwen returned and headed back to her work as Jack followed her.
"Hey, Buttons! What brings you by?" he said wiping his sweaty hands on a cloth. "I'm a little busy. We got a rush of costumes needing cleaned before Halloween next Friday." He half-smiled as he walked up to her. "Oh, yeah! Today was your physical with... um... what's-her-name, that... that doctor you picked. How'd it go?"
Erica shook her head. "Her name's Dr. Blumenthal, dear... and it went fine! Wonderful, in fact!"
Hugging her, Jack smiled. "That's great, Buttons! So did you just stop by on the way home? Just couldn't stand being away from me on a Saturday?"
Laughing, Erica shook her head. "You know me so well, Jack! I have some news though that I thought you might want to know right away."
His smile dropped. "Nothing bad, is it? I mean, nothing wrong with you? Or your folks or Rich or Heather? Or Brooke?"
She shook her head slowly. "No, nothing bad, and everyone's fine, last time I checked! I needed to make sure your schedule was free next July around the fourth."
Confused, he thought hard. "Next July Fourth? Buttons, I don't even know what I'll be doing next week! We got plans already for next July?"
"Just the birth of our baby!" she said smiling as wide as she could.
He looked at her with a stunned expression. "The wha...? Birth? Baby? You?"
Erica arched her eyebrows. "Well, I do seem to be the only one of the two of us able to do that, sweetie! Unless one of your other girls is expecting, too!"
He stumbled backward slightly, not even hearing her joke. "Me? A daddy? You're sure?"
"Couldn't be anyone else, love!" she quipped.
"Did the doctor tell you what it is?" he asked in a daze.
"It's too soon to tell, Jack! We won't know for fifteen weeks or so!"
Gwen was giddily waiting for an opportunity. Seeing a lull, she rushed up to Erica. "Congratulations, Mrs. D! I couldn't help but overhear!"
"Thanks, Gwen!" Re-shouldering the strap of her purse, she hugged Jack. "I have to get home and call everyone! See you tonight?"
Slowly, Jack started coming out of the fog that had wrapped around his brain. "Huh? Oh! Yeah, yeah! Sure! I... I'll be off at six." Pausing, he looked at her concernedly. "Hey, should you be driving in your condition?"
Erica laughed. "I'm pregnant, Jack! Not drunk!" continuing to laugh as she walked to the door. "I'll see you tonight, sweetie! Don't work too hard!"
Fifteen weeks later, they were in the doctor's office as the OBGYN pushed the sonogram wand around Erica's belly. Jack squeezed her hand while the two waited pensively. When he'd called Richard the day she'd told him about the baby to crow about their expected joy, Richard had told him that their recent sonogram had revealed that Heather would be having a girl. Now it was his turn to find out.
"There!" Dr. Blumenthal said happily. Pressing a button on the machine, a grainy monochrome photo started to print out. "Well, from what I can see, the baby looks healthy, is at the proper growth stage, and..." She paused and looked at the two. "...is a girl!"
Jack looked at Erica with a smile. "A girl!" he exclaimed softly. "A beautiful baby you!" He kissed her gently on the forehead. "I know what I wanna call her!"
Surprised, Erica looked at him. "Don't I get a say?" she laughed.
"What? Of course, Buttons!" he said defensively. "I just mean... I just have a suggestion I'd like you to consider, if that's alright!"
Laughing, she nodded. "OK, so what is it?"
He took her hand in both of his. "Erica Bella! Erica the Beautiful!"
A tear formed in her eye. "Oh, Jack! You're wonderful!" she kissed him on the lips, making him blush in front of the doctor.
"Well... um..." He half-smiled at her. "See, since she's due on the fourth of July, that way, when she introduces herself, she can say, 'Hi! Ah'm Erica... the Beautiful!"
Erica groaned along with their doctor. "Jack! You clown!"
Proud of himself for catching her out, Jack smiled. "Yeah, seriously though, what do you think? Erica Bella? I don't think I'll call her Buttons, that's just for you! Plus it'll make it easier to know who I'm talking to!"
"Aww! You're sweet!" she said, her heart melting at his love for her. "Alright! If that's what you really want!" She smiled and looked at the grainy photo again. "Hello! Erica Bella!"
Richard drove to the hospital in a near panic. Cursing himself for taking a few more days of work to close out the quarterly figures before resigning, he increased his speed to just under sixty. He wanted to go faster, but didn't want to risk getting stopped and delay him even more. Almost an hour after he'd gotten the call at work, he squealed the tires of his car, turning into the parking lot of Concord Hospital. Finding a parking space, he ran to the front doors where he saw Jenny waiting for him.
"Where is she?" he asked desperately.
Trying to calm him, Jenny answered in an even tone, "They've taken her to surgery. Follow me!"
Making him walk through the hospital, she could almost feel him pushing her with his eyes to go faster. Finally, they came to a waiting room where Brooke was sitting.
"Rich!" she sighed in relief. "They just came out and told me! She's fine! You have a beautiful and healthy baby girl, too! They're both fine!"
He very nearly fainted as the rush of adrenaline ebbed and he dropped to one knee. "Thank you, God!" he sighed, eventually letting them guide him to a chair. "What... what happened?" he asked, not having gotten the full story before racing off.
Jenny took a breath. "She started going into a perfectly normal labor while we were at work. She figured there would be plenty of time since the office is right across the street. She also thought it might be false labor and didn't want to worry you until she was sure."
Seeing Jenny pause, Brooke took over the explanation. "Jenny called me just after she called you. When they got her in and prepped, the doctor saw that the baby had her umbilical wrapped around her neck. Heather opted to do a Cesarean to avoid any risks."
"And they're both OK?" he asked, needing to hear it once more.
Brooke smiled at him reassuringly. "They both fine, Rich! This happens all the time! Right Jenny?" Her girlfriend just smiled and nodded.
After a few minutes, the doctor came back into the waiting room. "Oh! Mr. Hargrave? You can follow me!"
He looked back at Brooke and Jenny. "Can they come, too?"
The obstetrician put his hands on his hips and blew out a breath through his pursed lips. "Are there any others coming?" he asked.
Richard shook his head. "No. My parents and the rest of my family are out in California. They won't be here for another few days at least."
Nodding, the doctor turned toward the door. "OK. We normally only allow two at a time, but I'll allow it since three is all there is. Follow me."
The trio followed him into the recovery area where Heather was holding their baby girl and smiling. "Hi, love! Come meet our beautiful daughter!"
He slowly stepped ahead of the others, approaching as though his wife and child might break if his feet hit the floor too hard. "I told Hank on the way out I'd be back for my stuff later on. Oh! He said to say 'Congratulations'!" Pausing, his voice fell. "I... I'm sorry I was at work!"
Heather shook her head, her smile unbreakable. "No, love! It's fine! All you need is to have a little faith! I knew it would all work out alright!"
Laughing, he reached her side and stroked her blonde hair. Looking down at their tiny daughter, it came to him. "Honey? I know we settled on Beatrice René, but... I just had a thought."
"Oh, Richard!" she almost whined. "I thought we settled all this!?"
"Just hear me out!" he said softly. "What about 'Faith Beatrice'?" He looked down at the little girl. "Your mother's name is still there, and you did just say we needed to have a little Faith!"
Heather laughed lightly. "You're channeling your inner Jack!" She looked down at their girl. "Faith! It's perfect, Richard! Faith Beatrice Hargrave!"
While Brooke and Jenny came to meet their tiny honorary niece, Richard had only one thought. I sure wish Jack was here!
Four days later, as Heather was being discharged from the hospital, Frank and Judy arrived. While Heather was being wheeled into the lobby, Richard smiled to see his parents waiting next to Brooke and Jenny.
"Mom! Dad!" he called out to them quietly. After he and Heather had moved up to the four waiting for them, he smiled and looked down at his daughter. "Mom? Dad? I'd like you to meet your granddaughter, Faith! Faith? These are your grandparents!"
Judy wept happily as Frank kneeled down in front of the wheelchair. "Hi, gorgeous!" he said softly as he smiled. "Can you say 'hi' to grandpa?"
Heather laughed lightly. "Oh, Dad! You two just get in?"
He nodded as he stood back up. "Just. Drove straight here from the airport! That Jenny girl was kind enough to give us directions!"
"Sorry, Frank!" Brooke apologized. "I'm new to this wilderness!"
Looking up and nodding at the honorably discharged Marine, he smiled. "It's fine, Brooke. We got here! That's all that matters!"
Judith knelt down next to Heather. "May... may I hold her?" she asked.
The nurse standing behind the wheelchair shook his head. "Sorry. Against hospital policy." Smiling, he added, "Why don't we get these two outside? Then you can get them home where you can make your own policies!"
Standing and looking at the man as though he were denying her the ability to breathe, Judith was about to object when her son spoke up.
"That's a great idea! Let's get you two home!"
Half an hour later, Heather walked slowly and carefully through her front door, carrying her bundle of joy while Gregory smiled and held the door.
"Congratulations, Madame Hargrave!" he wheezed.
"Thank you, Gregory!" she said absently as she stared down at the sleeping child in her arms. Not able to handle the stairs up to the baby's new room while carrying her, she passed the child to Richard. "Here you go, Daddy!"
"There's my baby girl!" he sighed as he took Faith in his arms. "Gregory? Would you get her bags up to the room, please?" he asked.
"Of course, Master Hargrave!" Gregory said happily.
Looking up the stairs to the bedrooms she'd climbed all too easily all her life, it seemed to Heather as though she'd be climbing Mount Everest. As Frank came in, he walked up next to her and took her hand. "Here, sweetie! Let Dad help you!"
Judith jogged in behind him and made straight for Faith. "Oh, Richard! Now may I hold her?"
Looking over at Heather and seeing her nod as Frank helped her up the first step, Richard sighed and handed Faith to his mother. "Careful, Mom!"
"Oh, Richard!" she scoffed. "I raised two babies! I think I know how to hold one!" Turning to her granddaughter, she smiled at the tiny child. "You are just so precious!" she cooed.
Brooke and Jenny came in behind Gregory, who was carting two suitcases toward the stairs. Brooke moved in close to Judith and Richard while Jenny moved to help Heather.
"Here!" Jenny offered. "That's supposed to be my job, Mr. Hargrave!"
"Oh?" he asked.
Heather nodded with a grimace. "Yes. Jenny works at my office, Dad. She took a few days vacation to help me get settled in."
"So, she's a nurse then? Well I'm glad..."
"Jenny's not a nurse, Dad." Richard explained. "She just wanted to help!"
"See, I owe Heather and Richard a lot, Mr. Hargrave!" Jenny grinned as she glanced over at Brooke before slipping under Heather's free arm. "OK! Just put your weight on me, Heather! No exerting yourself for a few weeks!"
Brooke smiled down at baby Faith as Judith cradled her. "Hi there, Faith! You got a smile in there for your Aunt Brooke?" Seeing the babe grin in her sleep, Brooke laughed. "She did! She smiled for me!"
"That was gas." Judith said coldly.
"May I?" Brooke asked. "They wouldn't let us at the hospital!"
Judith turned her body to interpose it between Brooke and Faith. "That's alright, Miss Hathaway." she growled. "Grandma's got her!"
"Mom." Richard dragged out the word. "Let Brooke hold her a minute!"
"No!" she said defensively. "I just got her!"
"She's not going anywhere, Mom!" Richard argued with a laugh. "You guys will be here all week! Let Brooke hold her! She hasn't be allowed to for four days!"
"No!" she barked, pressing Faith into her bosom until the baby girl woke and started to cry.
"Give her here, Mom!" Richard ordered, reaching out for Faith.
Giving Brooke a dirty look, she grudgingly handed Faith back to her father. "Mind her head, dear!" she instructed him.
"I took the baby care classes, Mom!" he said as he took the crying babe who settled down. "There! Daddy's got his princess and everything's all better!" Turning to Brooke, he smiled. "Want a turn, Auntie?" he grinned.
"Do you think that's wise, Richard?" Judith scoffed.
Turning around halfway up the stairs, Heather furrowed her brow. "Judith, Brooke is Faith's godmother and one of Richard's dearest friends! What's wrong with you?"
Sniffing defiantly, Judith stared daggers at Brooke. "I just don't think it's a good idea to let someone like her handle a baby! I think a better godparent would be one who actually follows the word of God! Don't you, Richard?"
"Judy!" Frank barked, moving down the stairs to confront his wife. "Just what's gotten into you!"
"I have eyes, Frank!" she spat. "That woman shouldn't be allowed to hold our grandchild!" Looking at Jenny who stood next to Heather nervously, Judith narrowed her eyes. "That one, either!" Dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, she leaned in close to Frank. "They're ungodly lesbians, Frank! I can tell by the way they look at each other!"
Looking at Brooke with a shocked expression, then to Jenny, he turned to Richard. "Is that true, Rich? Are Brooke and Jenny..."
The two women in question looked at one another. This being her first time being 'outed', Brooke waited for the subtle nod from Jenny before speaking. "Frank? Yes. Jenny and I are a couple. We're in love."
"She admits it! Brazen Harlot!" Judith hissed. "Richard? Throw them out!"
"The hell I will!" Richard barked, stepping away from her with Faith.
"What!" Judith screeched. "Didn't you just hear her!"
"Mom! I've known Brooke was gay since the first day I met her! So what?"
"Mother Hargrave," Heather spoke with dignity as she undid all her progress and came back down the stairs. "This is my family home. Brooke and Jenny are my friends, as well as Richard's! They're a lovely couple and are lucky to have found one another! They will always be welcome in this house!"
"You condone this... this..." Near to apoplexy, Judith looked at Frank, who still stood in shock. "Frank! We're leaving! You call that lawyer of yours and get our grandchild away from them! They're..."
"Shut up!" Frank shouted, rousing Faith once more until Heather took her back and settled her down. "I... I'm sorry I woke her, Richard."
"It's OK, Dad." he excused his father cautiously.
Turning to Brooke, Frank puffed out his chest, but spoke in hushed tones. "You're a Marine, Miss Hathaway! How could you serve!?"
"Because I love the Corp more than women, Mr. Hargrave." she answered just as formally as he had asked. "Jenny and I didn't start dating until after my cruise had ended and I was Outside, no matter how much I loved her. She wouldn't let me."
"That's true, Mr. Hargrave." Jenny spoke up at last. "I... I just couldn't let her ruin everything I love about her! I love that she was a Marine! I waited a whole year for her to come home to me! A year alone! Do you know what that was like, sir? Never seeing her? Hardly even able to talk to her? For a year?"
Disarmed, Frank Hargrave looked at Jenny sternly, but compassionately.
"Frank!" Judith shouted in a whisper. "Are you just going to stand there and listen to this... this... blasphemy? This..."
"Enough, Judy!" he growled low and quiet. "You wanna leave? There's the door!" He turned to his son and shook his head. "I don't like it! Not one bit, son! But..." He took a deep breath and let it out slowly. "...but I'm not going to throw away any chance of seeing my grandchildren by being a stubborn leatherneck!"
"Dad..." Richard began before Frank stopped him.
"Rich, you're a man and this is your home!" he pointed out. "I... I may not agree with how you run it, but I won't disrespect you in your own house!" He turned to Heather and nodded. "Nor you in yours, Heather." Turning to Brooke, he stepped up to her. "I'd like to apologize for my wife's conduct, Miss Hathaway. It was inexcusable."
"Frank!" Judith gasped before he shot her a look that shut her up instantly.
Shaking her head, Brooke sighed as the man turned back to face her. "The sentiment is appreciated, Mr. Hargrave, but you can't apologize for her. Only she can apologize for herself. It holds no meaning unless she does it."
Nodding, he looked down embarrassedly. "I know." Turning to his wife, he growled, "Judy?"
"I will not!" she huffed.
"Then get out and never come back!" Richard ordered.
"But I'm Faith's grandmother!" she argued. "You can't..."
"I can!" Richard interrupted. "And I will, unless you apologize and promise never to do it again! Brooke is a good woman and a fine Marine! She's also Heather's and my best friend. Jack and Erica's, too! I know they won't put up with your nonsense about Brooke, either! So go! Get out and never lay eyes on any of your children, or grandchildren, again! All you'll be doing is proving that Jack was right all along! I can't believe I stood up for you!"
Standing next to Richard, Heather raised her chin. "I agree. Unless..."
Frank turned to his wife once more. "Judy? Please. Just... just let it drop. You can't win this. Apologize and let's get back to why we're here, to see Faith, not to argue religion and politics!"
Outnumbered and with no options short of calling a cab and returning home never to return, Judith swallowed her pride and tried to get back a little of her dignity. "Miss Hathaway? I... I apologize for... for losing my temper and saying hurtful things. I... I still disagree with your... lifestyle... but this is not my home. I... I was wrong to try and force my will on Richard and Heather. Please forgive me."
Turning back to Brooke, Frank regarded her sternly. "Is that satisfactory?"
Meeting his gaze with the same grim determination, Brooke nodded curtly. "It'll do, Mr. Hargrave."
"Brooke?" Heather said softly as she took Faith over to her, handing her over gently. "I think it's time you got acquainted with your goddaughter!"
"Alright! Just one more!" Erica's doctor ordered calmly. "Push!"
Erica thought she was going to faint from exhaustion, but she gathered her strength and made herself bear down once more. She could only barely feel Jack's hand in hers and thought she might crush it to dust. "Errrrrrrg!" she screamed as the pressure built and then was suddenly released.
"There! I have her!" the doctor said smiling. Clearing the baby's mouth and nose with a squeeze bulb, she smiled... and then frowned.
Jack was trying to split his focus between his wife and the obstetrician. The pregnancy had gone normally, but Erica'd been ordered to bed rest for the last three months. That meant when Heather had Faith, they'd had to stay home while Judith and Frank flew out to see her. Now it was their turn to add to the family. When Jack saw her frown, he felt his heart drop. "What's wrong?"
Gathering her wits, she cleared her throat. "N-Nothing's wrong, Mr. Dunning. The baby's fine! I... I think someone made a mistake, though!"
Erica could hardly breath and was terrified. "W-What... m-mistake...?"
Steeling herself for their shock, she looked at them hesitantly. "Mine. It's... it's a boy!"
The two looked at her as though she had just suggested that Erica had given birth to a rabbit. Erica shook her head confusedly. "But... but you..."
"I know!" the doctor admitted her error. "All the sonograms didn't show what I was looking for! It must be a fluke, or I need newer equipment! I'm sorry for the mix up! He seems to be a perfectly healthy boy!"
The two looked at one another a moment before the laughter began. Finally, Erica was able to say, "Jack! If this is one of your jokes, I'm going to ask you how you managed it and kill you, and I don't know in which order!"
Jack was still wiping tears of laughter and joy from his eyes. "I... I swear to God, Erica! This joke isn't mine! It's His!" He looked up at the ceiling and shouted, "Very funny!" before looking back at his wife and laughing more.
The doctor cleaned their baby and wrapped it in blankets, finally returning the infant to its mother. "I really am sorry for the error. It happens, but at any rate, someone would like to meet you two!" Erica took her dear child into her arms and cradled the babe as she wept with joy.
While Erica cooed, Jack used a finger to delicately stroke the soft skin of his child. A tiny hand reached out and grasped it, bringing Jack to tears.
His wife looked up at Jack and sighed. "So what do you want to call him? Jack Junior? I know you said that's what you wanted to call our first boy!"
"I... I don't know!" he stammered "Um... Maybe? I... uh... huh." He thought hard a moment. "What would you think about calling him Eric, Buttons?"
"Eric Buttons Dunning?" she asked incredulously.
"No!" he scoffed. "Eric..." he smiled. "Eric Franklin?"
Smiling at the idea of using her father's name for their child's middle name, thinking a moment, she suggested, "What about Eric Richard?"
"What? And give that brother-in-law of mine more of a swelled head? He already thinks he's all that!" He shook his head and thought hard. "I want Eric, that's for certain. Since I picked the first name, you pick the middle!"
"Alright!" She looked down at their baby and immediately knew what to say. "Say hello to your daddy, Eric Bell Dunning!"
Looking down on his child, the only thing Jack could think was I sure wish Rich was here!
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
--
At very least the confrontation between Judith and Rich ended with, if not acceptance, at least tolerance, which is more than I can say about my own parents when I came out to them. It went about as I'd predicted. Eventually they just stopped communicating with me, even when I reached out to them. I learned later that Dad died in oh-four of a heart attack, and Mom went last year from the same thing. They never returned any of my letters. I wrote twice a year. I just kept busy at a local salon, while Jenny worked her desk at the medical group. Jenny's parents were out of the country when I came home, and I never met them the two weeks we were together before that, so we didn't meet 'til July of ninety-eight. They were surprised, but not half as much as Jenny was! In the mean time, Rich and Heather were getting into the swing of being new parents. Rich loved being 'Mister Mom' to Faith and ran the house like his own personal fire team! Shortly after she was born, they started looking into moving. There were too many sad memories lurking around the home she grew up in, and Rich wanted a place that would be all their own.
---
Brooke checked herself in the mirror one more time as Jenny came out of their bedroom. "Are you sure I look alright?" Brooke asked nervously.
"Um... yeah!" Jenny said even more anxiously. "You... you look beautiful! They're gonna love you, almost as much as I do!" Her assurances did little to boost her own lack of confidence. "Um... Brooke? Can... can I ask you something?"
Stopping her primping, Brooke looked away from the large hall mirror to look at her love. "You don't need to ask. You look hot!"
Fidgeting with her purse, she blushed and smiled before fear took her once more. "Um... your parents. Have... have you heard back from them yet?"
Her smile melting in an instant, Brooke looked at the floor. "Not since that last letter they sent me."
"You... you've sent them like four more since then!" Jenny pointed out.
"Yeah." Brooke admitted. "Given what Dad said in that last letter though, I don't expect they'll write back any more. At least I know my Old Man isn't gonna rat me out to his old Corp buddies that are still in, so there's that. He's too embarrassed to tell them!"
Turning quickly, Jenny let it finally come out. "I'm scared, Brooke! What... what if Mom and Dad hate me? I mean, it's not like they had any warning signs or anything! I dated in High School! Boys even! I never even looked at a girl before you... or since! I still don't think I'm gay! I just love you!"
Trying to calm her, Brooke gently put her hands on her shoulders. "You're adorable! I promise I'll be with you the whole time, OK? No matter what they say, you'll always have me there for you! If your parents are half as wonderful as you are though, everything will be fine!"
Wrapping her in a warm embrace, Brooke held Jenny until her fears subsided and Brooke felt the woman's arms snake up her back. Responding, Brooke leaned her head over as Jenny tilted her face up and let the woman five years her senior kiss her gently. Her worries forgotten for the moment, Jenny relaxed into the kiss. Finally separating, she looked up at Brooke happily.
"Wow! If they could bottle that, it would beat Prozac!" Jenny giggled.
Wiping Jenny's lipstick off with a tissue, Brooke smiled seductively. "Come on! Go fix yourself and let's find out what else you can do with those lips!" Seeing Jenny's mouth drop open at the innuendo, Brooke laughed.
"Brooke!" Jenny gasped. "What, now?"
"I mean talking to your parents!" Brooke answered coyly. "Jeez! Where did your mind go? Gutter, much? Or is it you'd rather do that than go see them?" Unable to control herself, Brooke started to laugh at her own joke.
About to explode in frustration, Jenny couldn't help but smile as Brooke's infectious laugh spread to her as well. "Damn it, Brooke! Why can't I stay mad at you?" she started to giggle.
"Because you love me!" she came back. "That and I learned from the best!" Thinking of Jack so far away and not having had a chance to see their baby with Richard and Heather since Jenny couldn't get more time off work ended Brooke's laughter quickly. "Anyway, we really should get going, babe. You go finish getting ready, and I'll go warm up the car."
Half an hour later, Jenny pulled up in front of her parents' house. "This is it." she said ominously. "Ready?"
"As I'll ever be!" sighed Brooke, climbing out of the passenger side before slamming the door shut.
Heading up the short walk, Jenny stopped herself from just walking in and rang the bell, unsure of her welcome. As the door swung open, she cleared her throat and pasted a fake smile on to hide her insecurity.
Betty Hooks smiled as she saw her daughter standing at her door. "Jennifer!" she cried as she stepped back to allow her entrance. "Since when do you need to ring to come in to your own home!"
"Hi, Mom!" Jenny squeaked as her voice almost faltered. "I... I just didn't know if... if..."
"...if you were welcome?" Betty fake-frowned. "Why wouldn't you be, dear?"
Gathering her courage, Jenny raised her chin. "Mom? I... I'd like you to meet Brooke... Brooke Hathaway!" indicating the tall ex-Marine standing to her side and slightly behind her.
Confused, Betty turned to her daughter's guest at her home. "How do you do, Miss Hathaway." she said politely.
"Mrs. Hooks." Brooke nodded at the woman with fading curly brown hair and good looks that told her where Jenny had gotten both.
Turning back to her daughter, Betty furrowed her brow curiously. "Won't you two come in?"
Stepping into her childhood home, Jenny embraced her mother while nearly shaking in fear. "Thanks, Mom! I... I just knew that you and Dad have been away a while and... and I didn't know if it was OK to... to... just come in with a... a friend! After all, I don't live here anymore!"
"Honey!" Betty held her child warmly. "You know perfectly well that you'll always be welcome in this house... and any of your friends!" Holding her a moment, she broke off the hug and gestured toward the living room. "Come in!" she beamed. Turning her head, she shouted, "Charles! Jennifer's here!" Turning back to her guests, she shook her head exasperatedly. "So why did you really think you had to be invited in?"
"Maybe she thought you and Mr. Hooks were 'enjoying a moment'!" Brooke offered slyly. Jenny blushed three shades of red as she sat on her mother's couch and looked at the floor, while her mother raised a hand to her mouth and gasped at the suggestion. Thinking she'd pushed too far with people she didn't really know, Brooke looked away embarrassedly and was about to apologize before she heard the snort of laughter.
Growing from an embarrassed giggle to full belly laughing interspersed with snorts, Betty tried to control herself. "I... I suppose I can see your point!"
While the two women giggled together, Jenny could only stare at the floor, trying not to imagine her parents being romantic. She finally looked up at the sound of a throat being cleared. "Daddy!" she smiled as she leapt up and ran into his arms.
Charles Hooks wrapped his arms around his grown daughter who stood most of a foot shorter than his own six-foot two athletic frame. Though he was in his late forties, he'd managed to stay in shape and looked younger than he was. "Baby girl!" he sighed as he welcomed her affection. Rocking her back and forth a moment, he stepped back and looked at her. "I sure missed you, baby girl!"
Clearing her throat, she turned toward Brooke with one arm wrapped around his waist. "Daddy? I... I'd like you to meet Brooke Hathaway! Brooke? This is my father, Charles!"
Taking the man's hand, she gripped it firmly. "Mr. Hooks!" she nodded.
Surprised at the firmness of her shake, Charles adapted and returned it. "Miss Hathaway! Please! Call me Chuck!"
"Alright!" Brooke smiled as she released him. "Then it's Brooke, Chuck!"
Sitting a respectful distance from one another on the sofa, Jenny and Brooke waited while Chuck took his favorite seat in his armchair and Betty pulled another seat in close to her husband's, finally settling in with a smile.
"So..." Chuck began. "Brooke? It's nice to meet any friend of our daughter! What brings you here?"
Unsure how to answer, Brooke hedged. "Well, my best friend Rich, Richard Hargrave, got married November before last after moving out here with his fiancée. I was her Maid of Honor."
"Oh!" Betty perked up. "Jennifer, I remember you telling me that you were a bridesmaid at a wedding! Was that the same one, dear?"
Jenny nodded shyly. "That's where I met Brooke! Well, I first met her at the fitting that was before the wedding!" she noted, smiling at the memory of the humorous turn of events.
"Ugh!" Brooke sighed. "Don't remind me!"
"Let me guess!" Betty smiled. "Horrid dress?"
"Yes!" agreed Brooke.
"No!" Jenny insisted emphatically at the same time.
Looking from one to the other, Betty smiled. "Well which is it?"
"She looked gorgeous in that dress, Mom!" Jenny over-emphasized.
"Eh!" Brooke scoffed. "I looked like a Barbie Doll in it! I was so glad when Heather relented and let me wear my dress blues!"
"Dress blue?" Beth asked curiously. "You mean a blue dress?"
"No, I mean my dress blues, Mrs. Hooks." Brooke started to explain.
"Please! Call me Betty!" she smiled sweetly.
Nodding, Brooke continued. "OK, Betty! And please, just call me Brooke. See, I'm a Marine. So's Rich, my best friend who was the groom. When he married Heather, his fiancée, I was still in active service, so I wore my dress blues, my formal uniform, to the wedding and reception."
"Oh!" Betty looked at her with surprise. "You... you were in the service?"
Having sat back and listened, Chuck nodded. "That explains the shake!"
"What, dear?" Betty turned to him.
"Oh! When Brooke and I shook hands, she had a firm grip is all. I was just saying..."
"She's not a man, Charles!" Betty scowled at him. "Just because she was in the service doesn't mean she wanted to be a man!"
"Oh, Betty!" he retorted. "I was complimenting her!"
"How? By suggesting that she has a manly handshake? Really, Charles!"
Turning to his guests, Chuck laughed once. "Sorry, girls! Brooke? I hope you weren't offended at my remark. You certainly aren't mannish! In fact you're quite attractive! I bet you were very popular with the servicemen!"
"Too popular!" Brooke grumbled.
Wanting to change the subject, Betty smiled. "So, you came to Concord for your friend's wedding, and his fiancée asked you to be her Maid of Honor?"
"I met Heather the same time Rich did." she explained. "So she and I were good friends, too."
"I see!" Betty grinned. "So, afterward you decided to stay in Concord?"
Listening to the exchange, Jenny could see the direction it was headed and decided to cut to the chase and take the plunge. Standing up quickly, she looked at her parents. "Mom? Dad? Brooke and I are in love!"
Stunned silence filled the room like thick soup. Brooke sighed and slowly rose to stand beside Jenny, taking the younger girl's hand in her own.
"You... you're what?" Betty finally gasped after the momentary shock wore off. Looking at her daughter she asked, "But... Jennifer! Are you..."
Suddenly very unsure of herself, Jenny shrank back and looked down. "I... I suppose... maybe?"
"But..." her mother stammered. "But you dated! You dated boys! Did she..."
Pursing his lips, Chuck's face was an unreadable mask as he looked at them carefully. "Did you seduce my daughter, Miss Hathaway?"
Looking up suddenly at the accusation, Jenny suddenly felt very protective of her. "No, Daddy! Brooke didn't do anything wrong! She... she waited for me to say I liked her first! She had to! She could've been... um..."
"Dishonorably discharged." Brooke filled in the blank. "Mr. and Mrs. Hooks? I love Jenny! I think I fell in love with her the first moment we spoke. She's a wonderful woman! The kind I've been looking for all my life! She... she completes me. In ways I never knew I needed! You should be very proud of her."
"Miss Hathaway, I am proud of my daughter!" Betty snapped. "I... I just... I can't believe that she'd... she..."
"Betty?" Chuck interrupted her. Looking at the two, he sighed and smiled weakly as he turned his eyes to Brooke. "I... uh... I just want my baby girl to be happy, Brooke." Looking at his daughter, he sighed. "Does she make you happy, baby girl?"
Nodding emphatically, Jenny smiled as tears began to run down her cheeks. "Yes, Daddy! She does! Happier than I ever thought I could be! I... I love her!" She turned to Brooke and took both of her hands before looking up into the brunette's eyes. "I'm so proud of her! What serving means to her. She denied being with me for a year to fulfill her oath! She's wonderful!"
Standing back up, Chuck walked over to them and stood in front of Brooke as the two turned to face him. "Brooke? Do you intend on staying with my baby girl? Making sure she's happy and take care of her? Never hurt her?"
Facing him, Brooke looked up to lock eyes with him. "Chuck? I'd kill or die for her. I'll never hurt or abandon her. You have my word of honor, sir!"
"I can see that word actually means something to you." he noted. Stepping over to regard his daughter, he smiled down at her. "You sure, baby girl?"
Looking back up at him, Jenny smiled. "Yes, Daddy! I've never been more sure of anything in my life!"
Walking up next to her husband, Beth took his arm. "But Jennifer dear, you aren't a... a..." she stammered, unable to say the word.
"Lesbian." Chuck said for her.
"Thank you, dear." Beth blushed. "I mean, I know you aren't! You used to tell me all the time how cute you thought Jimmy Francis, the boy you dated, was! I mean, you... you had a crush on Kirk Cameron for years, for God's sake!"
"Mom!" Jenny whined. "I was a teenager! All the girls back then were in love with Kirk Cameron!"
"Actually, I kind of had a thing for his sister Candice." Brooke pointed out. "At least in the later seasons."
"You see?" Beth pressed the point. "You... you're not... um..."
"Gay." Chuck said for her again. "I don't think that's what Jenny's trying to tell us, Betty. Just that she loves Brooke." Putting a hand on his daughter's shoulder, he smiled at her. "Baby girl, it's OK. We still love you. Brooke seems like a... a fine woman! I... I'm happy for you, sweetie!"
"Charles!" Betty whined. "Aren't you even a little upset by all this? I mean, our daughter is in love with another woman! I mean, doesn't that make her gay?" Realizing how she sounded, the woman backtracked as she turned to Jenny. "Oh, sweetie! I'm not angry! I love you, dear! It's just... this is all so sudden! I mean, we were only gone for a year! When did this happen?"
Walking toward the dining room, Chuck gestured to the table. "Why don't we sit down together and talk about it." he suggested. "We were about to eat. Would you two like to join us?"
Sitting around the table, the two couples looked at one another in silence for a moment. Taking Brooke's hand for comfort, Jenny took a breath and told them about the day they'd met.
"So by the time we got back from our walk, I was..." she sighed happily. "I was in love!"
"We both were!" Brooke added.
"I see." Beth sighed. "But Jennifer dear, are you sure about all this? I mean, what about children? Don't you want to be a mother someday?"
"They can still do that, Beth." Chuck pointed out with a grin. "I understand it involves a donor, and something similar to a turkey baster..."
"Charles, please!" Beth gasped. "Don't be flippant! How can you be so calm about all this!" Turning back to their two guests, she added, "Don't get me wrong, I'm not passing judgement or saying it's wrong. I just..." She again regarded her husband. "I just don't see how you can sit there and take it all in! Aren't you upset at all?"
"Are you kidding, Beth?" Chuck grinned. "I'm happy for my baby girl! Heck! I'm happy for me!"
"What in heaven's name are you babbling about, Charles!" she asked.
"My baby girl found true love! On top of that, I don't ever have to think about a man 'giving it' to my little baby girl! What daughter's father wouldn't give his left arm for that privilege?"
Sighing in exasperation while Jenny blushed and looked away, Brooke just chuckled. Betty got up exasperatedly and headed for the kitchen. "You can be so crude sometimes, Charles!"
Seeing Brooke's laugh diminish, Chuck looked at her seriously and waited until she finished. "Seriously though, I am happy for you two! I won't pretend to not be surprised by it all, but I think I understand. I meant what I said, baby girl. Brooke seems like a fine woman! And Brooke? I hope you know what a special girl you're getting!"
Coming back from the kitchen with a crock-pot full of stew, Betty set it down as she looked at her daughter. "Are you sure she can make you happy, dear? I mean, don't get me wrong Brooke, you're a lovely woman, but that's sort of my point. If you're... well... gay, Jennifer dear, shouldn't you want someone more... um..."
"Butch?" Chuck continued acting as her vocabulary.
"Mom!" Jenny nearly shouted.
Returning to the kitchen for rolls, Beth shook her head. "I guess I just don't understand, dear. You're obviously attracted to men, yet you fall in love with a woman who, if you'll excuse me for saying, isn't handsome, but beautiful! Very attractive, actually! I mean, how does that even work?"
"I don't care how she looks, Mom!" Jenny argued.
"Hey!" Brooke exclaimed.
"Oh! I'm sorry, honey! I didn't mean it that way! I mean..."
Laughing at the exchange, Chuck spooned up some of the stew and handed the bowl to his daughter. "Here, baby girl. Just stuff a roll in your mouth once you get your foot out!"
Jenny blushed and took the bowl while Brooke offered an explanation to her mother as the woman sat back down at the table. "Beth? Jenny isn't gay the way I am. I've known I liked other girls since I was seven, and I never liked boys, except as friends." Taking the bowl of stew that Beth handed her, she placed it in front of her. "Thank you. Anyway, the way I see it, Jenny isn't so much attracted to me physically as she is emotionally."
Shaking her head, trying to puzzle it all out, Beth served herself last. "I... I suppose so." Turning to Jenny, she still looked concerned. "But how can you be happy with her if you aren't... well... attracted to her? I mean, there's an aspect of relationships that needs that sort of... um..." Her hand shook with nervousness as she tried to phrase herself delicately.
"Sexual fulfillment." Chuck answered as he broke up a roll and dropped the pieces in his stew.
"Yes!" Beth agreed. "Thank you, Charles." Turning back to Jenny who was only slowly stirring the hot stew, she sighed. "I... I just want you to be happy, dear, and... well... attraction and sex are part of a fulfilling life!"
Looking at Brooke, Chuck smiled. "I think they're both fulfilled, Beth!"
Smiling as she looked across the table at her love's father while she stirred her stew, Brooke chose to neither confirm nor deny his assertion and instead tried to change the subject. "So, Chuck. Jenny never got around to telling me. Why were you two away for so long?"
"Just work." he stated plainly as he finished stirring in his roll.
"Work?" she asked, realizing that Jenny had never talked to her about what her father did for a living.
Seeing the confused look on Brooke's face, he smiled wryly and turned his hazel eyes to Jenny. "You mean, she doesn't know? You didn't tell her?"
"I... I didn't know how to tell her!" Jenny admitted.
"Know what? Tell me what?" Brooke asked nervously.
Chuck smiled and laughed lightly. "That her old man's a pastor?" Seeing the look of shock on Brooke's face as he happily reached out and took Beth's hand and then Jenny's, Chuck nodded to her. "That's right! You're marrying a pastor's daughter, Brooke! Shall we pray?"
Stepping out of the car, Richard looked hopefully at the abandoned house. Smiling inwardly, he made sure not to let his first impression show to the real estate agent that was standing on the marble steps and waiting for them. Helping Heather out as she moved Faith onto her shoulder, the chill of the late November air stung their noses as she bundled Faith against the cold.
"Thanks, Fredrick." Richard nodded to the newly hired chauffeur who had opened the door for them. "Wait for us here, please?"
"As you wish, Master Hargrave." he intoned flatly.
Rolling his eyes at the man's formality, despite his repeated requests to the contrary, Richard took Heather's free hand and led his wife and daughter toward the building.
"Richard Hargrave?" the agent asked rhetorically as she extended her hand. "I'm Wendy! Wendy Baker from Baker Realty!"
Wincing at her first name, he nevertheless took her hand and shook it.
"Let's go in, shall we?" she bubbled. Unlocking the massive front door, it opened with a groan. Stepping inside, their footfalls against the cold marble floors echoed throughout the hollow building. "This is the entry hall!" she chirped, her voice echoing everywhere. "Over here on the left is a spacious walk-in closet and mud room for coats, winter gear, and anything else you might need to store! You can see the stairs leading up to the second floor, with two landings and all marble construction!"
Only half-listening to the woman's sales pitch, Richard instead looked at the dilapidated structure with an eye to what it would look like after he'd gotten it restored and couldn't help but smile.
"You can see on the walls that the building's original gaslight system is still in place! This building is truly unique in that it was originally built with both gas and electric lighting, rather than most houses of this one's vintage that were retrofitted with electric and the gas systems removed." she droned on.
Leading them through the house, showing them the upstairs bedrooms, the woman opened the first door on the right of the hallway that ran through the middle of the second floor. "This is one of the three larger bedrooms, each with its own private bath! The one across the hall is a mirror image of it!"
Looking at the room, Richard saw a nursery and felt the sting of loss. It had been only five months earlier, just after Heather had fully recovered from her emergency C-section, when they'd learned that she couldn't have any more children. They'd planned on several, three at least. Looking around the room that would have been big enough for five, Richard saw in his mind how it could become their only daughter's private playroom and bedroom.
"Down the hall on the left is the upstairs bath and three smaller bedrooms. On the right is the Master bed and bath with hot tub and separate shower..."
Returning to the ground floor, Richard followed the agent, not hearing much of what she was saying. His mind raced with possibilities as they explored each run-down room that looked as though it hadn't been lived in for thirty years or more.
"The laundry room is off the kitchen with a separate entry from the outside. There are no modern facilities such as a washer or dryer, just an old hand-crank wringing machine, but easily enough room to have modern appliances put in! Just outside the door is the firewood bin, with a door on the outside for loading and a door inside the living room next to the fireplace, so you don't have to haul firewood through the house!"
Following along on the tour, Heather held Faith close to her, trying to keep her warm against the freezing cold in every room. She had to admit, it was a large home, though not as large as the one she grew up in, and less than fifteen minutes from where her new private practice would be. The state of it though left her skeptical. Every room had pealing paint that was probably lead-based, the marble floors were in desperate need of a good cleaning and polishing, and the whole house stank of blood and dead animals.
"The current owner's father only used this building during hunting season, so it hasn't seen much actual use for well over a quarter century! It's very well preserved!" the agent spun. "Additionally, there is the smaller house on the property. It's what is sometimes referred to as a 'mother-in-law' cottage! That one is a complete two-bedroom, one-and-a-half bath home with oodles of storage space, but not of this building's vintage. It was built in the seventies and has all the modern conveniences, including an emergency generator! The last owner used it as a rental, but it's well kept! Would you care to go take a look at it, Mr. and Mrs. Hargrave?"
Looking around the living room, Richard sighed and watched as his breath floated up to the high ceiling. "We'd like a moment alone to discuss it first, Wendy, if that's alright?"
"Sure!" she sung. "I'll just step outside and wait for you!"
Once she closed the door behind her, Richard turned to Heather. "Well?"
"It's... it's big!" she smiled with a strain. "It's also cold!"
"See that fireplace?" Richard asked, pointing to it. "Imagine a roaring fire in there! It'd easily heat the whole house!"
"You love it, don't you Richard?" Heather smiled.
"Yes!" he exclaimed. "The library's a little on the small side, but I think that den she showed us used to be part of it. I could restore it, add a bunch more shelves, and it would easily fit all your books... and more!"
"More?" she asked curiously.
"Yeah! We'll need books for Faith! A whole wall just for children's books and encyclopedias!"
Laughing at his exuberance, Heather shook her head. "OK! I can see you're hooked! Just don't let her know that!" she smiled, nodding toward where the agent had gone. Her mood suddenly shifting, she added, "The asking price is much less than what we can get for... for my old home." Heather hung her head sadly. Shaking it off, she raised her chin. "So let's not give her the idea that they could raise the price simply because you want it so badly!"
Moving to her and taking her and Faith into his arms, Richard patted her back. "I know, love. It's hard letting go."
"It's harder to stay!" she nearly cried. "I... I miss Gregory! And Mom and Dad, Jack and Erica, and Frank and even Judith! Oh, Richard! I feel like I'm keeping you, here in the wilderness, while your family is enjoying..."
"Heather!" he admonished her. "My family is all right here! You and Faith! Besides, who's going to keep people from going crazy while I run the house? Hmm? You! Right? If you don't take the position for that retiring therapist, the closest one will be in Berlin, over an hour south!"
Unsure as she stepped back to look around the living room, she shook her head. "But Richard..."
"And what about Brooke and Jenny? If we leave, who'll be there for them when they need help? Besides, I like the idea of living out in the wilderness! No crime, no hustle and bustle, lots of trees and actual snow for Faith to play in! I bet little Eric won't even know what snow is when Jack and Erica come to visit us!"
Sighing, she exhaled and watched her own breath rise. "Let's go look at the little house. Maybe we can live there while we get this place fixed up, which will take a small fortune if I'm right!"
"That's more like it!" Richard beamed.
"What will we do with it after?" she asked as they walked toward the door.
"Dunno." he shrugged with his arm wrapped around her shoulders. "Rent it out, I suppose. Maybe Brooke and Jenny might want it! Wouldn't that be nice? Having them living so close?"
"It would, Richard. Family should be close!" she sighed as they closed the door behind them.
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
CAUTION - Violence
--
We mourned with Heather and Rich when they got the news about her not being able to have any more kids. She and Rich wanted more, but things are the way they have to be, right? That's what Jack always used to say. They moved north that fall while Rich worked at fixing up the big house. They surprised Jenny and I when they told us they were going to give the little house to us. No rent meant Jenny could quit and I could open my own salon with her as my office manager. So in spring of ninety-nine, just after Faith's first birthday, we moved to be with Heather and Rich in Pittsberg. Meanwhile, Jack and Erica had their own share of troubles. She caught an ectopic pregnancy three months after Jenny and I moved, days after Heather's twenty-fifth birthday, that nearly killed her. She had a radical hysterectomy that saved her life, but meant they too would only have one child. Rich and Heather flew all four of us down there, staying nearly a month, but we had to come home eventually, leaving Jack and Erica alone again. Judith broke her promise and tried tearing them apart, and Frank separated from her over it, though they reconciled after... well... Things were never the same after that. They never came back to visit us in New Hampshire. Jack couldn't leave his business and Jenny and I couldn't leave ours, and Heather had her practice, so that trip in summer of ninety-nine was the last I ever saw Jack or Erica. We kept in touch, but not enough. Then everything changed... for everyone.
---
Rolling over, Jack fumbled around for the light beside his bed. Turning it on, he finally was able to see the phone that was waking him with the sun not even up yet. Grabbing it, he grumbled, "Whoever this is, this had better be good..."
"Jack? It's Rich. You need to get up and turn on a TV."
"What?" Jack grumbled. "Rich, it's six in the morning here! I have work in two hours and I need sleep!"
"Jack! Just shut up and do it!" Richard barked. "Please!"
Shaking his head, Jack got up. "Fine! What channel?"
"Doesn't matter, Jack." he said in a fog.
Erica sat up and looked at him. "Jack? What's going on? Who is it?"
"A dead brother-in-law if he dragged me out of bed for anything less than an alien invasion!"
"Richie?" she said getting up and wrapping a robe around herself. "What does he want?"
"Dunno." Jack turned on the TV and it came on to the news channel it had been on the night before. "What the hell, Rich? A fire in New York? This is what you woke us up an hour early for?"
Erica walked into the living room just as the commentator said, "Another... uh... vehicle, some kind of an aircraft, crashed into the World Trade Center. This is uh, no accident. This is no bomb from inside... uh... this is, as you put it, a terrorist attack. There's no two ways about it."
Hardly able to breathe, Jack just stood there silently, watching the towers burn while he began to burn inside.
"Jack!" Erica clung to him as if her life depended on it; tears starting to rain down her cheeks.
"Rich?" Jack said after a few minutes listening to commentary while sirens blared in the background. "You still there?"
"Yeah, Jack. I'm here."
When the network ran the footage of the second attack, Jack's face hardened into a fury while Erica turned away, unable to watch, and leaving to go hug their child still sleeping in their room.
"Rich? Remember way back when I said if we joined up we might get sent off to war? You told me we weren't at war anymore. Well, we are now!"
Sighing as he turned and looked at Heather, little three-year-old Faith holding her as her mother cried, he nodded. "You gonna do it, Jack? Go back in?"
"Damn straight I am, Rich! Aren't you?"
Looking at his family, Richard answered. "Yeah. Yeah, I think I am, Jack."
Brooke pulled her uniform out of the box she'd packed it away in, at the time utterly convinced she'd never see it again.
"Brooke! You can't! They won't take you now!" Jenny yelled.
"What they don't know won't hurt 'em!" Brooke snapped as she unfolded her uniform jacket and lay it across the ironing board. "As far as the Marines are concerned, you're just my Office Manager."
Jenny stormed up to her. "So that's it? After almost four years together you're just going to sign up again and leave me?" she yelled through tears.
"I have to, Jenny!" she yelled back. "For you! For Heather and Faith! For Erica and Eric and Frank and even Judith! This is war, Jenny! You think they'll stop at killing a few thousand of us? Damn it, Jenny! You once said you were proud of me and what this represents!" she held up her uniform jacket. "I'm a Marine, damn it! Not a hairdresser! I'll always be a Marine! If you can't accept that then you never loved me at all!"
"Why does it have to be you, Brooke?" Jenny asked as tears began to fall.
Brooke calmed herself and lowered her voice. "Because it's the responsibility of everyone who's able, to defend the lives and liberty of those who aren't. Most Americans can't defend this country, Jenny! They lack the training and the drive. You, Heather, Erica, you're fine people, but you're not Marines. Jack is. Richard is. So am I. I... I'd hoped you would understand."
Jenny wrapped her arms around Brooke, laying her head on her shoulder. "I'm just so scared! I... I don't want to lose you!"
"I'm not a Grunt, Jenny! I'm an electronics tech!" Brooke tried to ease her fears. "I'll probably end up being stationed somewhere stateside, but I'll do my part! Even if I'm not fighting, I can take the place of a Marine who can. How many Marines might not come home because one man was here doing my job instead of over there, just so I could stay here with you? If I sat here and did nothing while other Marines died, it'd haunt me the rest of my life!"
Pulling away, Jenny forced herself to stop crying. "I... I understand. I don't like it, but I... I can't keep you from being the woman I fell in love with."
Brooke resumed her task. "Will you be here when I get back? When... not if."
"I don't know." she answered. "I don't know what I'll do while you're gone."
Closing her eyes to keep her emotions in check, Brooke nodded. "I see. I suppose I should be grateful you stayed with me this long."
Confused, Jenny pieced together what Brooke was really asking and shook her head. "No! That's... that's not what I meant, Brooke! I mean, I don't know what I'll do with myself! If I can't be your receptionist, I can't just hang out here doing nothing but pining for you! I'll go mad!"
Looking at the woman who's own father promised to perform their marriage ceremony when they were ready, Brooke sighed. "You could get an office job, maybe a place in Pittsberg or Clarksville? You're a good manager! Or you could move back down with Mom and Dad for a while." She stopped ironing and went to her, wrapping Jenny in her arms. "I'll be fine! You'll see! I'll call as often as I can and I'll be home before you know it!"
Jenny held her as tightly as she could manage. "I... I remember! No surprise homecomings though! I want a warning this time!" she laughed.
Holding the love of her life tightly, Brooke nodded. "I promise, Jenny! No surprises! I love you!"
While Jack packed his old seabag, Erica stood by, helping as she was able.
"Do you know how long you'll be gone?" she asked, handing him one of the uniform blouses he'd pulled out.
"It's a two year cruise Buttons, but I'll get Leave. You remember the drill! Don't know when I'll be stateside, though." Jack answered honestly as he continued to pack.
"What about the business?" she asked, standing back and just letting him pack on his own, the action seeming to help calm his anger.
"You'll have to sell it while I'm deployed." Jack sighed resignedly. "Damn shame, too. We were just taking off, but the lease alone would eat up all the assets over two years with no one to run it. Can't afford to pay a cleaner and manager and continue to pay off the business loan. No one would work as cheap as me, so running it without me won't save it."
"Part of me doesn't want you to go," Erica admitted, "but the rest is so proud of you for it!"
"I think I like that!" Jack smiled. "Makes me feel all noble and stuff!"
Looking out the window of their bedroom, Erica saw their three-year-old playing in the sandbox in the back yard with April, the little girl from down the street. "Eric will be in Kindergarten before you come home." she mused absently, not even aware she was speaking. "He might not even remember you, except from pictures. I'll have to make sure to talk about you, a lot!"
Stopping a moment to look out the window with her, Jack nodded with grim determination. "He's one of the biggest reasons I'm going. I have to make sure nothing like this ever happens again! I don't want him growing up in a world that's too scared to live!" Anger filled his heart all over again.
"I know, Jack." Erica paused and looked at the floor. "I... I'll miss you! Every minute of every day until you come home to me!"
"And I'll miss you, Buttons!" he half-smiled at her. "No matter where they send me, a part of you will be there, too! And I have to come home to you! You'd kill me if I didn't!"
Laughing even as fear threatened to swallow her, Erica tried not to let it turn to tears. "You'll be careful?"
"No! I won't be careful." he stated defiantly. "The only careful Marine is a dead one." Turning back to her after he closed up his bag, Jack looked her in the eyes with the most serious look she'd ever seen in him. "I'll be a killer. I'll make sure I come home by killing every enemy that threatens me. Until there is no enemy, but peace. That's the Rifleman's creed."
Taking him in her arms, Erica held him desperately. "You do what you need to do to come home to me, Jack!" she cried. "I love you so much!"
"I love you, too!" he said softly, holding her just as fiercely as she held him. "My Buttons!"
"My Jack!" she replied. "I have a confession to make! I've had a crush on you since I was ten!"
"Who, me?" he answered back. "Come on! Grab Eric and you two can drive me to intake! That way I'm not away from you two a second more than I have to be!"
Jack walked into the Marine Recruitment Center in Costa Mesa days after the attacks and the day before his thirtieth birthday. He was quickly re-enlisted as a Lance Corporal once more, signing up for a two-year cruise and assigned to the Twenty-sixth Marine Expeditionary Unit. A week later, he was sailing for the Suez Canal and war.
Richard drove his car up the driveway to the little house on a mid-October morning. Honking as he pulled to a stop, he watched as Brooke came out, hugged and kissed Jenny goodbye, and finally tore herself away and jogged to the car before the snow started again.
Slamming the passenger door and buckling in, Brooke sighed. "Let's roll!"
Pulling away, Richard nodded. "Good choice of words." he noted.
Hours went by in total silence as Richard drove them to Concord where they would be re-enlisted into Active Service for two years. Neither one spoke more than absolutely necessary until they got close. Finally, Brooke broke the silence.
"Heather OK? Did she fight it?"
Richard shook his head. "Nope. She hated putting her practice on hold, but she promised that, for me, she'd take care of Faith while I'm gone." He smiled weakly. "She told me that if I could put my career on hold because raising our daughter ourselves was that important to me, she would honor my service by doing it for me until I get back."
Brooke shook her head. "Did she make you cry, little man?"
"Can it, POG!" he ribbed her. "Grunts don't cry! Our tears and other bodily fluids are saved for watering the graves of the enemy with piss!" He drove a little further before he asked, "Jenny put up a fight?"
"She did at first." Brooke admitted. "In the end, she knew this was something I had to do." She smiled briefly. "That woman loves being the girlfriend of a Marine! And she sure can show it!"
Richard smiled at that before it got quiet again. "Heard from your old man or mom since nine-eleven?" he asked, glancing over at her.
"No." Brooke answered sadly. "I wrote them, and called twice after, but they just hang up and won't write back so..."
"Sorry." he expressed his sympathies. "Your old man sounded like a good Marine from what Jack told me."
"He's a stubborn, mule-headed, dirty-rotten son-of-a-bitch! Of course he's a good Marine!" she joked. "Where do you think I get it?"
Just as Brooke had expected, after she signed up for active duty once more, she was assigned to Marine Wing Support Squadron three-seventy-three for the Eleventh Marine Aircraft Group in Miramar; a stateside assignment.
Since he now had a college degree, Richard was offered the chance to be an Officer, but he refused as it would be more time away from home and wasn't why he re-enlisted. He refused to be away from Faith and Heather for one day longer than necessary to get the job done, so instead, just a few days short of his thirty-first birthday, he was assigned to the newly formed Forth Marine Expeditionary Brigade Antiterrorism unit. He would be deployed to Afghanistan a month later as part of Task Force India.
Richard sat in the back of the HUMVEE as it made its way quickly through the crowded streets of Kabul. He wiped sweat from his brow as the desert sun and close confines of the vehicle threatened to cook him alive. The driver sped down the streets just ahead of the armored Jeep Cherokee they were escorting, clearing a path toward the US Embassy that had been abandoned since nineteen eighty-eight. Over the radio he heard someone shout, "Slow down!", but the driver of the vehicle shook his head.
"No way I'm slowing down and letting these ragheads get close enough to toss a frag in here!" he quipped.
Richard tapped him on the shoulder. "We have to keep the charge in sight, Private! Slow up!" He quickly turned and leaned to look through a window at the following vehicle as it entered the traffic circle they'd just traversed, suddenly cut off by a wagon being pulled by a donkey and coming to a halt. "Stop!" he shouted. "The Charge is cut off!" As the driver squealed tires on the pitted pavement, his squad immediately went to ready position, rifles shouldered with muzzles pointed downward; each one ready to race out and rescue the person they were ordered to protect.
Richard could feel his heart in his throat as he pulled his sidearm, judging the fighting distance too close for his rifle. People moved past the military vehicle like a sea of humanity, none smiling. He was about to order the driver to double back when the cart finally started moving out of the road and he could see the Jeep Cherokee start to move once more. "Clear!" he shouted, causing the driver to floor it and race off ahead once more.
Moving to the back of the vehicle, he saw the following vehicle closing with theirs just as a tiny yellow taxi ran up to within feet of the rear bumper of their HUMVEE. Richard pulled his weapon once more in preparation for an attack while the Cherokee raced up to them and cut sharply in front of the cab, sparking flashing lights and a horn honking in irritation. While it was just an impatient driver, the terror he'd felt when the cab ran up behind them made Richard see the HUMVEE driver's point. "No stopping through the next Roundabout, Private! Anyone gets in your way? Blast through!"
"Affirmative!" the Marine shouted back.
Reaching their destination, Richard became suspicious. Grabbing the radio, he ordered, "We're bypassing the Embassy! Drive on and we'll circle back! Spotters watch for anything suspicious! Over!"
"Roger." came the reply over the radio. Circling the abandoned building, they eventually made their way to an adjacent field; the huge metal doors of the front gate locked closed with concertina wire topping every wall.
Spotting a solitary Afghani ahead, Richard pointed. "There! Pull up!" The vehicle slowing next to the man, Richard noted that he was dressed like a western businessman in a suit and tie. He was also the only Afghani he'd seen that day that was smiling at their presence. Another similarly dressed man opened the makeshift driveway, pulling aside a spike strip that they'd put in place. Richard watched them as they pulled through when he caught sight of something even more rare, a young Afghani woman holding a clipboard and wearing a normal American-style dress and no burka. The young woman shyly marked down each vehicle as it entered.
Pulling to a halt, Richard barked, "Deploy!" and their vehicle emptied in a second. One man moved the crewed gun position on top of the HUMVEE to point it at the entrance of the compound, ready to send hundreds of fifty-caliber rounds into anything that would threaten them. Moving his squad up, Richard nodded to the Embassy Guard Marines that had already taken up their post. Handing over his Military ID, he collected a visitor's badge and looked with pride at the Marine guidon that was posted. Taking his squad past the 'Clear Your Weapon' barrel, Richard spat in it.
Behind him he heard, "No way I'm unloading my weapon so long as I'm in country, Embassy or no!"
"Affirmative!" he replied. Making their way into the building, the sound of broken glass echoed as it crunched under their boots, the scent and taste of dust in every breath. The place was like a time capsule. Half-smoked cigars sat in ashtrays where they'd been abandoned when Richard was still eighteen and in jail and Jack was in a coma; a photo of then President Ronald Reagan still hanging on a wall. After clearing the room, Richard saw something that nearly made him cry with pride. Folded neatly, an American flag that had been removed from a locked vault in the basement sat waiting to be flown again. Moving over to it, he noticed a hand-written note and read it aloud.
"Marines, take care of it. For those of us that were here, it means a lot. For those of you who enter Kabul, it could mean a lot to you. Semper Fi. We Kabul Marines endured as I’m sure you will. Think of us as needed."
"Ooo Raa." someone said quietly.
"Alright, split by teams and begin your sweep! Move!" he ordered.
After securing the building, his squad got the detail of sweeping up the floors and moving trash out. They piled up dirt, dust, and broken glass around the floor. Some time later, Richard stood outside the building when that same American Flag was once more raised to fly in the cold Afghan wind.
Jack stood as Corporal of the Watch at the Embassy in Kabul, having flown into Kandahar the previous December, and then deployed with nearly eighty other Marines to secure the embassy in preparation for its re-opening. He saw Richard arrive with the Ambassador, his half-smile the only outward sign of seeing of his oldest friend who he hadn't seen since August two years earlier when he and Erica lost their second child and the hope of having any more. He immediately went back to his duty, seeing to it that all military IDs were checked and re-checked.
Hours later, Jack was finally relieved and took some time to write his letter home. Setting it aside among his personal effects to mail later when he was somewhere more hospitable, he set out to find Richard. Walking the halls of the almost empty building, he saw something that nearly made him laugh out loud. Richard was pushing a broom down the hall, making another sweep of dirt and dust that had accumulated over the many years. "What's the matter, Sergeant? Couldn't find any Snuffies to do that for you?"
Richard knew who was asking before he even looked up. Pursing his lips and coming to a sudden halt, he slowly raised his head. "Jack, you son of a..."
"Ah!" he interrupted as he leaned against a wall. "No salt on duty, Sergeant!"
Leaning the broom against a wall so it wouldn't fall over, he slowly walked up to Jack. "I could always get you to do it, Corporal!"
"Not a chance, Rich!" he smiled his half-smile. "I'm off duty... and not even in your chain!" He pushed off from the wall and stood in front of Richard. "So... what's up?"
Richard smiled and wrapped his brother-in-law in a tight hug, each slapping the other on the back. "God! It's good to see you, Jack! How did you end up here?"
"I got here first, slowpoke!" Jack retorted. "I'm with the twenty-sixth MEU. We took Kandahar and then about eighty of us were ordered here to secure the place before you showed up doing babysitting duty!"
"Oh, you think you got it so hard?" Richard retorted. "You guys are shipping out soon! We're gonna be stuck here for months!"
The two started walking back down the hallway together. "Oh, yeah! Hard duty! Sitting cushy behind metal doors and enough wire and emplacements to guard Fort Knox! Can't the Embassy Guard do your job?" The two happily bantered back and forth for a while before Jack asked, "So when do you go off duty?"
"I've been off for an hour!" Richard laughed. "I got bored and I wanted to help get this place ready... so..."
"So you decided to pilot a push-broom? Wow!" Jack laughed. "Come on! I'll introduce you to some of the guys!"
Two hours later, they were both in the back of a HUMVEE laughing as they recalled various stories from their childhood. On a lark, they'd decided to volunteer for vehicular patrol around the area near the Embassy, along with two members of Jack's unit, just so they could spend more time together. The sun had set by the time they pulled out, making the cold of winter bite a little harder. Richard found himself wishing that, for just a few minutes, he could be back in the hot HUMVEE he'd been in several hours earlier.
"Damn, it gets cold out here at night fast!" Jack commented to nobody in particular. "Not like The Sandbox. Remember that, Rich?"
He nodded and chuckled. "Yeah! Hot as hell and twice as unfriendly!"
"So, did Hathaway go back in, too?" Jack asked after a lull.
He nodded and looked away. "Yeah. She got sent to Miramar. Lucky girl!"
At that, Jack poked his head up. "Miramar? MWS-three-seven-three?"
"Yep." Richard nodded. "She got a nice and safe stateside assignment fixing generators while we're busting our rumps here!"
"Don't count her lucky yet, Rich." Jack shook his head. "I heard they may be deployed to Bagram later this year! Security cleared a Lieutenant from there to go check out the field and see if they can use Harriers there."
"Bagram? That old Soviet airfield?" Richard balked. "Jack! That's right on the edge of controlled territory! You sure?"
He nodded. "Positive. Man, Jenny'll go ape shit if they deploy there! Oh! Heather! Man, her husband, brother-in-law, and Maid-of-Honor all deployed at the same time? She'll be the one needing a shrink!" Pausing a moment as he saw the worry on Richard's face, he changed directions and tried to set his best friend's mind at ease. "Of course they may not deploy there. From what I hear the place is a disaster area. The runway's so cracked they're thinking of using it as an example of how not to build an airfield!"
Laughing briefly, the two looked at each other silently before Jack broke it. "How's Heather and Faith? Heard anything from them since you shipped?"
Richard nodded his head as the HUMVEE turned a corner sharply and sent them both leaning to one side. Recovering, he tried to answer again. "Yeah, they're fine, just miss me. Heather took a two-year sabbatical. Faith asked a few ticklish questions about where I was going and when I'd be back. Damn, but if that kid didn't make me almost change my mind! She was so cute and sad when I told her I wouldn't be back for her fourth birthday!"
His best friend nodded in understanding. "Same thing with Eric! He's quiet for a three-year-old boy, though! I remember raising hell when I was his age! Playing in the mud, running through the yard yelling at the top of my lungs! But not Eric. No, he'd rather play in his sandbox or do other things with his girlfriend!"
"Girlfriend?" Richard balked. "At three?"
"What can I say, Rich!" Jack grinned. "He takes after his old man! That same charming power over the ladies! Poor little girl didn't stand a chance, what with my charm mixed with Erica's good looks! But yeah, seriously his best friend's this girl named April that lives down our street. Those two are nearly inseparable! They glommed onto each other about a year ago. See, she lives about halfway between our house and Dad's place, so every time we'd walk by, Eric would have to stop and play with her for a minute or two. He does everything with her now!"
"Dad's place? I thought Mom was talking about moving back in?"
"Yeah, well as far as I'm concerned, the old witch doesn't count!"
"I thought you and Mom buried the hatchet?"
"I did, but she's still trying to bury it in our marriage!" Jack huffed. "When Erica got that ectopic pregnancy, she goes and blames me for it! Like it's my fault Erica and I can't have any more kids! We're more torn up over it than she is! She hardly even tries to see Eric anymore! Dad's over every weekend for Sunday dinner, though."
Shaking his head, Richard looked out a window at the few lights they could see. "I'm sorry, Jack. Mom took Heather's loss badly, too. She blamed the surgeon that did her C-section for a while, but when Heather stood up to her about it, she let it go. Maybe it was just too much for her when Erica couldn't have any more kids, either. I dunno. Maybe you're right. I still can't believe she lost her shit over Brooke and Jenny the way she did!"
"Ah!" Jack waved his hand dismissively. "Makes no difference to me. I'm used to her hating me, but you shoulda heard her, Rich! She thinks God is punishing all of us because we're accepting of Jenny and Brooke! What galls me though is how she takes it out on Eric by avoiding him. Poor kid! As bad as she ever was to me, she's still his grandma! He should be dropping by her and Dad's place seven days a week for cookies! Instead he gets a grandma with a chocolate chip on her shoulder!"
Richard was about to comment on how lame Jack's joke was, but he never got the chance.
TO: Erica Dunning - Newport Beach, California It is with a heavy heart that I regret to inform you that your husband, Lance Corporal Jack Dunning, was killed yesterday in an attack on a patrol vehicle protecting the American Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. Corporal Dunning distinguished himself by volunteering for the duty. I know this will come as little comfort to you in this time of grief, but I took the time to review his record before sending you this letter. Your husband was the epitome of what it means to be a Marine. He served with distinction in the Gulf War, returning home to serve at Alameda NAS where he retired in June of '96. His reserve status had ended more than a year before he volunteered once more to fight for his country at its greatest time of need. It takes a special kind of man to twice put his life on the line for his country, and I am saddened that he paid The Last Full Measure to ensure that you and his son would never know fear from an enemy aggressor again. While it is not my responsibility to do so, I also wanted to advise you that Sergeant Richard Hargrave, who I have come to learn is your brother, was in the vehicle when the improvised explosive device was set off, killing both men instantly. You will be receiving another letter of condolence soon from his Commanding Officer. Words cannot express my sympathies or the depth of sorrow this single act of hate has wrought on you and your family. Rest assured that my command will do whatever it takes to see to it that the people responsible are brought to swift and final justice. Your husband's personal effects will be returned to you as soon as feasible. Due to the nature of their deaths, two empty caskets will be flown back to be interned in Arlington National Cemetery for their final rest. May God grant you the strength and perseverance necessary to see this time of sorrow pass. Col. Andrew P. Frick C.O. 26th MEU
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
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I didn't hear about Jack or Rich until I'd been deployed to Bagram for over six months. When they extended our deployment another six, we were given ten-day Leaves. Mine came up first in rotation, so I got to fly back to Guam where I called Jenny as soon as I could get off base. She told me and I dug up the details after they were already buried and gone. Heather got a letter from Rich's CO that he'd been killed while volunteering for picket duty, but he didn't know about the association between Rich and Jack, so Heather didn't find out about his death until she called to break the news to Erica. They met up at Arlington and it was the last time any of us in New Hampshire would see any of the California families again. Jenny was there to represent me as a 'friend of the family'. No one ever knew about us while I was serving. I made sure it never showed and Jenny was a rock! She passed the time I was gone with Heather, Faith, her folks, and a promise. After the funeral, everyone just stopped communicating. It... it was like their deaths killed more than their bodies. It killed their families. Last I ever heard from Erica was a Christmas card from her that she must have sent before she got the letter about Jack, but I didn't even know about that until almost two years later when I came home. After so much time and pain, I just couldn't bring myself to call or write her. When Erica finally wrote Heather, and she wrote back, none of us knew just how important those letters would become or how much they would change all our lives.
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Erica sat at the table as she tried to hand write the letter to Heather. They hadn't communicated since the funeral over eight years earlier, and sitting there, she found it hard to know where to begin. She stared at the salutation with vast blank space beneath it, waiting for words of regret and sorrow.
Unable to focus, she looked out the window to the front yard and smiled. Eric and April were sitting on the curb out in front of her house, Erica sure her eleven-year-old was telling his young friend a story that the two would act out together sometime; praying that he might be blissfully unaware of the upheaval that was sure to await after writing and sending her letter. She loved listening to the playful duo and the elaborate stories the two children made up together in their gentle way with one another. It was the one bright spot in her life of heartache since Jack's death.
She just sat there watching them until the two got up and started walking to April's house before turning back to her letter. Finally knowing what to say, she began scratching out the long overdue letter to the woman who'd been her Maid of Honor and so much more, but was unable to finish it for months.
Heather went into the library to read the letter her sister-in-law sent her the month before, having put off reading it for fear of what it might say after so long a time apart. As she began, her worst fears were realized as her hopes of reconciliation with that lost branch of her family faded into tears. Unable to believe what she was reading, she started again.
Dear Heather,
I know it's been a long time since we've spoken. I think it's just been too hard for either of us to breach the pain of our mutual losses. Even as I write this, my heart aches for Jack and Richie, begging for the chance to see them just one more time. It seems that day will come for me very soon.
I'm sorry that it took this to reach out to you, to bridge the gap that grew out of their deaths, but I've been diagnosed with leukemia. It's aggressive and isn't responding to treatment, so I was admitted to the hospital for radical radiation treatment and chemotherapy in an attempt to halt its spread. I have less than a one-percent chance of survival and only been given two months, at best. I tried writing when I was admitted, but it was just too hard.
I hope life has been better for you these last eight years. Do you still have your practice? I kept busy doing HR consulting; writing Conflict Resolution guidelines for companies all over the western states. Eric would stay with a friend of his, the Stone family, on the occasions I was away, which is where he's staying now. I don't know if you were ever told about my parents. I'm sorry I never did so myself. They were killed February of last year when their car was hit by a drunk driver. He was a Frenchman who didn't have a license or insurance and had been living here illegally for over ten years.
Mom did finally learn to respect Jack before she died. She once told me she thought he was going to 'ruin her girl's life' and drag me down into poverty and misery. I think it wasn't until she saw me crying when they handed me Jack's flag that it dawned on her just how happy he'd always made me. Once he was gone, she could see what I was without him... destitute and void.
All I have left of Jack now is Eric. One thing I regret most in life is that we've been so far apart and so distant with one another that he never has had a chance to know his family and the best friends I ever had... you, Faith, and Brooke. I would like to correct that mistake.
I know it's asking a lot, but if the doctors are right, soon Eric will have no one left to love him. I don't want to see him end up in foster care. It would break poor Jack's heart... and mine. So I am asking, please. Would you take care of him for us once I'm gone to be with Jack and Richie? You and Faith may soon be the only family he has left in the world.
I miss you and Brooke so much and have done so for years, but it was always just too hard to try and reach out after so much time and pain. I'd thought briefly about maybe moving nearer to you two once Jack was gone, but Mom and Dad needed Eric and I close with Richie gone. I was thinking about it again after they died, but only days after the accident I was diagnosed and too busy fighting for my life. Pulling up roots and moving across the country at that time was just unthinkable. I hope you can forgive me for not telling you sooner about Mom and Dad... or me... or Eric... or any of the thousands of things we've missed about each other's lives over the years.
Since I'm sending this to you, I wanted to also tell you something else. About a month after the funeral at Arlington, I got a letter from Jack. He'd written it hours before he and Richie were killed and hadn't even had a chance to mail it before they died. I included a copy of it with this letter so you can get a glimpse at their final hours, along with a copy of the letter I got from Jack's Commanding Officer.
I think I'll take Eric and his friend to the beach tomorrow. I should probably be getting ready with making final arrangements and all, but I'm going to take Jack's advice from his last letter to me instead.
All my love to you, Faith, Brooke, and all,
Erica Dunning
Heather's eyes burned with tears that rained down her cheeks. To go so long without news and then to suddenly be handed so much sadness and loss all at once, she was sorely tempted to take the letter to the fireplace in the living room and throw it in; hoping to burn away the pain and perhaps someday forget she'd ever even gotten it. She knew though that it was impossible. There was an innocent life involved that would forever suffer the fallout of such a callous act of selfishness.
Jack and Erica's child.
Putting down Erica's letter, she looked at the copy of the letter her sister-in-law had gotten from Jack's Commanding Officer informing her of Jack and Richard's simultaneous deaths. Turning at last to the final letter Erica had gotten from Jack, she read it slowly and carefully, feeling a chill run down her spine at the words that came so close to her husband and friends' last moments on Earth.
My Dearest Buttons,
Hello from Kabul! Finally got a chance to write you. We've been busy for what seems like forever! My unit got tapped to secure the old abandoned Embassy building here. Lucky us! We've been guarding it for over a month and guess who I see rolling up this morning but Rich! His unit is taking over so we can get shipped out.
You asked me to be careful and I told you I wouldn't. I'll be a ruthless killer and bury our enemies in their own ashes and drown them in their own blood. We did that back at Kandahar. Took a lot of POWs too, but most of them ran or died. I'm still not going to be careful. The minute you do, start looking over your shoulder and listening for the bullet with your name on it, that's the minute your card is punched. I have to live every day here as though it's my last, making sure the threat is eliminated so I can survive to come home to you and Eric.
That's about all. Oh, there's a whole lot more, but nothing I can put in this letter. Remember that every day is your last, too! Don't be afraid to do things without me! Live! Have fun! Take Eric to Disneyland or the beach! Don't sit around pining for me to come home! If you're too scared to live, you'll die long before your body catches up with you.
They say we'll be home for Liberty by the end of the year at the latest, maybe as soon as this summer if things go well on this end. But don't wait on me! Live, have fun, and do it with me there in your heart! I want to hear all about it too, so do it and then write me so I can join you! Got that Buttons?
I think I'll go track Rich down and see if I can't convince him to volunteer for patrol with me. Give us a chance to catch up. That boy still needs me!
Love you and still trying to deserve your love,
Your Jack
Once more brought to tears with the memory of Jack's vibrant zest for life, Heather ached to have that in her life again. Without a second thought, she picked up a pen and stationary and began to write Erica back.
Dearest Erica,
I hardly know where to begin. I have to admit that when I first read about you not telling me about Richard's parents I was upset, but I understand that you've been dealing with something I am too terrified to even contemplate, leaving my Faith alone. Of course I will take care of Eric if the need should arise, but I will pray and ask God to see to it that, if it's His will, you recover fully and have many more years with him.
Speaking of more years, once you are feeling better, I would like to invite you both out to Hargrave House. To stay, if you like. Richard loved this place we made our home! In the years before he went back into the service, he spent more time than I can count restoring this place to almost the same as the day it was built. The rest of his time he spent with Faith; taking care of her and teaching her to walk, talk, and question everything! Don't worry about the cost. I'll take care of that just for the chance to see you again and give Faith and Eric the chance to know one another. They have so little family left that they need to keep who they have closer.
Gregory, my old butler, died of heart failure shortly before we moved out of Moore Estates. I'd saved him a pension that he refused to take and retire, so I donated it in his name to the Heart Association. Before he died, he found his own replacement, Fredrick. I'll have to admit, sometimes I don't know what I'd do without him. He seems to be able to do everything Gregory did, plus the work the groundskeepers used to do!
Theresa is still with me. I started calling her Cook after Richard wasn't here to keep doing it! Every time it's a little reminder that he is still here, that his spirit still lives in this house. She refuses to retire or take the pension I saved for her, either! She says she wasn't built for the easy life and would hate not having a menu for five or more to prepare for! Personally, I think she just would miss us. I know we would miss her.
The only other member of the household that moved with us is Franchesca, the junior maid. She was going to stay in Concord with her fiancé, but she caught him cheating and moved with us instead. She doesn't smile at much anymore, which is a shame because she used to be so happy all the time.
Brooke and Jenny are married now. They got married last year when New Hampshire changed their laws. I can almost hear Jack ranting about how government has no right to get involved in private matters! I know he would have been proud to stand up for Brooke, and I know you had wanted to be her Matron of Honor, but the letter she wrote you was never answered, so I stood in your place. I'm guessing that was about the time you were dealing with your parent's death and the news of your illness.
I would like to share with you something I never got to tell Richard. Shortly after he was deployed, a doctor friend of mine came to me and told me about a procedure that would make me able to bear children again. I underwent the operation two months before they were killed. I was going to surprise him when he got back. Now it's just an empty reminder of what we never got to have; the large family he'd always wanted.
I hope this letter finds you healthy and strong. All my best to you and Eric.
Love,
Heather
Erica read the letter in her hospital bed, machines pumping her full of toxins to try and stop the cancer that was killing her. She wept when she finished it, knowing the heartbreak of things undone. Later she was back in her room recovering, penning her final reply to the family she'd loved so much and lost so long ago.
Dearest Heather,
Thank you for writing back. I was worried that on seeing a letter from me after so long that you just destroyed it unread. I wouldn't have blamed you.
I'm so glad to hear about all the happiness that you've managed to make for yourselves. I was sorry to hear about Franchesca's heartbreak. I remember her coming in to make the beds a few times and how cheery and fresh she seemed, taking pride in her work and never letting the daily grind wear down her spirit. It's a shame that her love's betrayal changed her so much.
Things are not going as well for me here. The radiation isn't working and the chemotherapy isn't slowing down the cancer. I'm afraid that very soon, within a matter of weeks now, it's His will that I'll leave this world and join Richie... and my Jack... after so many lonely years without his smile. I'll be OK though. Just knowing that Eric will be with family who loves him will be enough for me to stop worrying and just let go of what I cannot change.
I've done my best to live every day as though it's my last, as Jack asked me to. The only thing I think he'd be disappointed about is that I never looked for love again. I know he would have wanted me to move on, but nobody could ever replace the missing half of my heart and soul. So I kept busy with work I enjoyed and spent time with Eric cooking, cleaning, going to the park, reading together, and making his life as full of love and happiness as if Jack were here to do them with me.
I do worry about Eric sometimes. He's so quiet and shy, and so very unlike the boys he goes to school with. I think that not having Jack around has made him miss the lessons of how to be a man, so he has a hard time relating to his peers. He had Dad until last year, but I guess that wasn't enough. Instead he spends his time inventing stories and playing with the girls in his classes as they're more accepting of his gentle nature.
The only thing I was worried about him living with you is that he would have you, Faith, and Brooke, but no male role models he could look up to. I'm glad that you still have a man in the house, even if he is only your butler. I know that to you that means he's almost as close as family, so I can set my heart at ease on that issue as well.
I truly am sorry about not responding to Brooke. I would have been honored to stand up for her and Jenny, and I'm happy to know they're still together. Thank you for stepping in when I couldn't. Once you reminded me about her letter, I remembered it came the same day I got the lab results back from my biopsy. I never even opened it, I was so distraught. Since it was from Brooke and not you, I was certain it was just more bad news, that you or Faith had died, so I destroyed it; unable to face whatever horrible news Brooke had written to tell me. Please extend both my apologies and congratulations to them both. I'm so happy they were finally able to join together as one.
Words cannot express how sorry I am that had Richie returned home you two could have grown your family as you both so badly desired. I fear that now that you know it was Jack that convinced Richie to go on that patrol with him that you'll blame him for the loss of not only your husband, but also the loss of the children that you could have had with him. When I had to have my hysterectomy, Jack and I were beyond devastated, not just for the loss of our future children, but the poor baby that died inside me that day. So I know what it meant to you to have that hope rekindled. It seems that it was just not meant to be.
I'm sorry that I'll have to decline your request to come out to see you. I'm sure it's wonderful, unfortunately, my immune system is so weak from the attempts to halt the cancer that traveling is out of the question. I will take consolation that Eric will see it soon enough for the both of us.
I'm very tired from my last round of chemotherapy, so I'll have to close here. The results were no better than last time though, so it will be my last. No more radiation, no more toxins. I'm too tired to keep fighting a hopeless battle. If it were even helping a little, I'd keep trying, but it just seems a waste of effort. Know that I still love you so very much, miss you terribly, and think of you often. I'll write more if and when I can.
Love Always,
Erica
Sitting in the library, once more reading a letter from her husband's sister, Heather wanted to cry, the news hurt so badly. All too soon three of the four people she'd loved as a young woman would be gone, leaving her alone.
Knowing she had to keep up a stoic and strong appearance for Faith's sake, she swallowed her pain and focused on the task at hand, whatever that might be at the moment. Once begun though, the habit was difficult to turn off and came off to those around her as an attitude of being much too proper, cold, and aloof.
Needing time to process the situation, Heather didn't replay right away. She knew time was short for her failing sister-in-law, but even just thinking about it would cause her to nearly break down and sob. After a week of putting it off, she knew that she had to respond before it was too late. Sequestering herself in the library once more, she sat down with pen and paper and wrote out her last words to Erica.
My Dear Sister Erica,
I don't know why I didn't start calling you that long ago, for that is what you are... my sister... the one I always wanted and never got to have. Sister of my heart and in fact. Knowing you will soon be gone breaks my heart over the time lost to us that we could have been closer, too late to make up for it.
More than anything, I wish I could come see you, but Faith has a bad flu and right now she needs me. It is tearing me up inside knowing that at this time when you need me the most, I can't even come to say goodbye. I just can't in good conscience leave her. I'm sure Franchesca would take good care of her, but I could never live with myself if something happened to her while I was off trying to assuage my own guilty conscience over not coming to see you before now. I can't be that selfish, no matter how badly I want to see you.
I do understand why you never moved on to find love again. It is much the same with me. I've no shortage of admirers, but none of them are Richard. I guess nobody ever will be. True love is hard to find. Finding it twice in one lifetime is too much to ask, and I wouldn't want it with anyone else, anyway. Every moment would be a reminder of what I'd lost.
Brooke and Jenny don't know about your condition yet. I just don't know how to tell them without breaking down myself. I've told Faith and the rest of the household as they needed to know that Eric will be coming to live with us soon. It's a bittersweet thought, knowing that soon I'll have Jack's son here living with us, but at the most terrible cost. Losing you.
Regarding Eric, losing his father at such a young age could definitely explain his difficulty getting along with other boys. Fredrick is a good man, almost like a brother to me, and can help Eric learn how to become one himself. We also have social events, church groups, and there are plenty of boys his age at the school Faith attends. I promise I'll help him however I can to become a man just as full of life as Jack always was.
Thank you for your words of comfort regarding my constant reminder of just how much Richard and I lost the day he died. I know you of all people can appreciate the loss. Rest assured that I don't blame Jack for Richard's death, nor for my own monthly torment. Jack had no way of knowing that going on that patrol would cost him and Richard their lives, and I can't be angry at him for wanting to spend time with Richard. They loved each other as more than just friends, but as brothers and life-long companions.
Richard had only one regret in life, and that was moving so very far from you and Jack. If anything, I feel it is my fault that they died. If I had been willing to give up my practice and move back to California, they wouldn't have been so desperate to spend time together that they volunteered for that patrol. I know it's irrational, but feelings usually are.
I have reached out to Social Services there in Orange County to advise them of your failing health and my relationship to Eric. They let me know that at the moment, the Stone family has custody per your written consent. However, they are willing to relinquish custody when the time comes, so Eric will be sent out here to live with me then.
Since I don't have contact information for them, Social Services contacted them for me to advise that I will soon be sending them airfare and traveling expenses for Eric to join us here, however long he needs to stay close to you in this time you have left together. I don't want to take him away and leave you there to face the end alone. As soon as Faith's health improves enough to travel, she and I will come out to see you and stay with you until the end, however long that takes.
I still pray every night for the miracle to come that will spare your life and let us reunite the two branches of our family after so long apart.
Love and Hope,
Your Sister, Heather
Erica read the last letter from Heather with great difficulty. Her doctors had stopped her treatments weeks ago and now were just focused on making her as comfortable as possible in her final hours. She didn't have the strength to pen a reply to her sister, even though she desperately wanted to; if for no other reason than to express how much she loved her as the sister she never had and the sorrow that they wouldn't see each other ever again in this life.
She had just put the letter aside when she heard the knock on her doorway.
"Hey, Mom! Looking beautiful as always! Coming home today?" her child chirped.
She tried to smile at Eric, but her strength was ebbing fast. Her usual reply of 'Thank you, Eric! I bet I'm home by tomorrow!' was just false hope, so today she just sadly shook her head. "No, sweetie."
Pausing as the child's smile fell like sunset, Eric was crestfallen. "No, Mom! You're supposed to say..."
She coughed painfully, and simply reached her hand out to her only child. "I'm sorry, sweetie! I'm afraid today I'll be going Home to be with your father." Her eyes drifted away aimlessly. "My Jack!" she almost whispered, her heart breaking for him just one more time.
Link: Every Day Is Your Last Title Page and Description
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Sitting in Erica's office reading the printed copy of the finished manuscript, Brooke flipped through the final pages as she read the words, tears filling her eyes at the remembered heartbreak of losing her best friends. Wiping them away, she finally put down the papers.
"Wow!" she exhaled heavily. "That was..." She looked over at her niece and shook her head. "I... I can't believe it! You got all this from those tapes you recorded of me? Erica! Some of those lines were almost verbatim, and I don't mean the ones I told you! How..." Her voice trailed off as she looked at Jack's daughter, unable to formulate the words.
"I listened to your stories over and over, picturing them in my mind." Erica shrugged modestly. "The description and dialog just sort of flowed out from everything you told me about them. It just seemed... natural." She chuckled lightly. "I also did a whole lot of research! Learning Marine Corps slang took months! Did I get it right?"
Biting her lip while she considered the question, Brooke shrugged. "A little heavy at times, but not very noticeably. Some places it shows that you never served, but not so terribly that it's off-putting. I think it shows you wanted to re-create the feeling of it out of respect, not just to sound right."
Sighing, Erica nodded. "I could trim it up if you tell me where. I want this to be as perfect as it can be, Aunt Brooke."
"No." she replied. "Thank you for the compliment, thinking I could improve on what you've done here, but it really does work as a story. Anything more authentic would come off as sounding too real. See?" She flipped back to the beginning chapters. "I love the way you depicted Jack as a kid! It's just the way I always imagined him! I don't know if he was really like that, but I think it's probably pretty close. I guess the only way to know would be to seek out people that were there and ask them."
"I did." Erica said as she stood and slowly paced her office. "I did a bit of searching, using the detective agency that found April for me. Wendy Evans seems to have changed her name or moved or both. I found copies of their Yearbook for the class of eighty-nine, so I know what she looked like, but I couldn't locate her, so..." She shrugged helplessly as she sat down behind her desk.
"Huh." Brooke said as she looked off in the distance. "Well, I can tell you for certain that there was somebody who did those things. The look on Rich's face when he would mention her was authentically loathing."
Nodding in acceptance, Erica sat up. "Unfortunately, there weren't enough details or names of other people that could give an honest account to dig much. I did find Uncle Richard's high school football coach and interviewed him briefly. He was able to corroborate the events that took place on the field after the locker incident, but he never really knew my father very well, other than just as, the way he put it, 'the skinny kid that always hung around with Rich'. He gave me a little more insight into Uncle Richard as a kid, but no one seems to remember much about my father, except you and Mamma. The only ones to even remember him were teachers, and even then only vaguely."
Flipping through the chapters, Brooke stopped and laughed lightly at Erica's description of her own parents' wedding day. "How on earth did you get all the details of that day? I only gave you a rough idea of what we did!"
"Lots of research!" she answered with a tired laugh. "That's why this took so long. I wanted to make sure I got as many details right as I could. I looked up weather on specific dates, made sure I had the right day of the week, when was sunrise and sunset for each location and scene, tons of public records, some old maps, online databases of certain events... you know, research! The rest just came from the natural evolution of the characters. There was also the bartender at the club you went to. I found him, even though the club isn't there anymore. Heck, the casino it was in isn't even there anymore! He remembered you five, though. Vividly!"
She stood and placed the manuscript on Erica's desk. "Well, I don't think you could have done it better if you were there!" She sat back down and shook her head. "OK, I have to ask. How could you write that scene about Jack and Erica's first time? I mean, they're your parents! Wasn't that a little..."
"...creepy?" Erica finished for her. "Yeah, only a lot! But the story wouldn't flow right without it. I tried getting around it with a sort of 'fade to black' writing style, but it felt rushed and failed to capture their depth of feeling for one another. So I just pretended they were only characters in my head and nothing more. The rest was just imagining the natural flow of events and trying not to think about it too much!"
Laughing, Brooke clapped her hands together. "Well, you've got a stronger stomach than I do! I don't think I could write that about my parents!"
Erica laughed with her for a moment before getting serious once more. "So then, I told you when I asked you to help me with this that if you didn't think it was good enough that I wouldn't publish it, just keep it as a family record." Pausing as she closed her eyes and took in a breath, she let it out and asked. "What do you think? Is it good enough?"
Brooke looked away in thought. "I... I don't know, Erica. It's good, don't get me wrong! I'm just..." She sighed as she tried to express her concerns. "I just don't want people that were there to think it's trying to make them look bad, or telling about their lives without asking, you know?"
Sitting behind her desk, Erica flipped through the pages. "Well, I can change the names, make sure nobody is mentioned by their real name. That and publishing it as fiction with notation that it is a work of fiction that is only based on stories told second-hand, yadda, yadda, legalese and all. Would it be alright then?"
Sighing, she looked at Erica. "I suppose so. I guess it would be good to know that at least this much of Jack and Rich would live beyond them; that maybe someone might be helped by the stories of their lives." She paused a moment before nodding. "Yeah, I think they would like that! Especially Jack! God! His ego must be bursting at the thought of it!"
"Well then," Erica said standing and picking up the papers. "I'll send it to final edit and put it out there! If people like it... or not... at least I know I did the best I could. I... I also know that now a little bit of my father and uncle lives in my mind. Now I understand what Mom meant when she said there were so many stories about him that she never got to tell me. It was one of her biggest regrets." She looked at Brooke wistfully. "Thank you for helping me put at least some of that to rest for her!"
Brooke stood and walked around the desk to hug her best friend's daughter. "It was my pleasure, Erica!" Holding it a moment, she pulled away to look at her watch. "Well, I think I need to be getting home soon. Jenny will skin me alive if I'm not there for dinner! I've been gone all weekend and she is not happy about it, but I think she understands. She never got much of a chance to know Jack or your mom, just those few days and the month after your mom had her hysterectomy, but she knows how important Jack was to me."
"Just tell her you were spending some time with Jack and Rich for a while." Erica offered. "I mean, from a certain point of view, you were!"
"Yeah..." she mused. "I guess I was!" Clearing her throat and holding her tears back, she stepped back toward the door. "Oh, give my best to the family for me?"
"I will, Aunt Brooke!" Erica answered dutifully.
"Oh! If you hear from that cousin of yours, tell her to call me sometime? Aunts and godmothers worry! I need to know she's OK."
"Yes, Aunt Brooke!" Erica replied again. "I'll make sure to call more, too!"
Blowing her honorary niece a kiss, Brooke turned and walked out the office door. Making her way out to the street, she climbed into her car and started it, still reminiscing about the years of happiness, love, sadness, fun, tears, laughter, and worry she'd shared with the two men who'd been, and always would be, her best friends. Pulling away from the curb slowly, she drove home almost without thought, guided simply by the desire to be back home in Jenny's arms where she belonged.
Absently, her thoughts wandered. I wonder if Jenny would still like a baby? After all, she's only forty-three, and I'm the same age Jack's parents were when he was born!
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Thank you and may God bless,
Roberta Elder
by RobertaME
These stories are all about the life of Rachel "Rae" Evans, the proxy character for the author's re-telling of her life and transition. Beginning with For God So Loved the World..., which tells the story of the first 26 years of her life, the stories following it provide more detailed examinations of her relationships after that. These stories will culminate in an upcoming sequel novel, There But for the Grace of God. (publication yet to be determined, est. 2022)
Please feel free to leave comments that contain spoilers in the comments for each story. Comments without spoilers or about the whole series may be left here. Thank you! RobertaME
Little Rachel "Rae" Evans was a happy little girl. Her mother would say that when she laughed, she could make an entire room of people break out in smiles. All that changed when she was four and the laughter stopped. From then on, she withdrew into herself and hid from the world, convinced that no one, not even God, could ever truly love, or even understand her.
Using the author's memory of her life as a template, For God So Loved the World... is a fictionalized re-telling of one aspect of her life and how she reconciled her Christian faith with her self-identity. Spanning decades and set in her home state of Northern Nevada, the story tells how a scared and lonely girl learned the most important lessons in life; that each and every one of us, no matter how different, has the love of God within them to fulfil their purpose, and that all things, good and bad, are necessary to make us who we are meant to become.
This book is dedicated to my wife Tami, who unconditionally loved
me for who I am when no one else could even see me. You gave
more meaning to my life than I ever thought possible or deserved.
"...the greatest of these is Love."
Copyright © 2020, 2021 Roberta Elder - All Rights Reserved
124,548 words
This is a work of fiction inspired by the recollections of the author's life. Though based on recalled events, the names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are solely the products of the author's recollections and used in a fictitious manner. Some events have been re-ordered, altered, omitted, or invented for narrative purposes. Any connection or resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher.
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A collection of short stories about Rachel Evans' life after the events detailed in For God So Loved the World.... Each one is based on a real conversation the author has had with family and friends relating to her transition, her faith, and her life before and after becoming the woman God meant her to be.
For God So Loved the World:
A Conversation with Mom
This is part one of a collection of short stories about Rachel Evans' life after the events detailed in For God So Loved the World.... Each one is based on a real conversation the author has had with family and friends relating to her transition, her faith, and her life before and after becoming the woman God meant her to be. Copyright © 2021 Roberta Elder All rights reserved. 4,732 words
This is a work of fiction inspired by the recollections of the author's life. Though based on recalled events, the names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are solely the products of the author's recollections and used in a fictitious manner. Some events have been re-ordered, altered, omitted, or invented for narrative purposes. Any connection or resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher. Story 1 - Breaking the Ice Pulling up to the curb in front of her mother's house, Rachel Evans sighed as she turned off the engine and looked to the passenger seat. She watched as her mother, Laura Richard, breathed deeply through her nose, taking in the pure oxygen from the tank that sat between her legs. The emphysema was being treated, and she was doing better than she had been, but she would likely need the oxygen for the rest of her life. "Here we are, then!" Rachel sang out. Having spent most of the afternoon with her mother, and after a good dinner with her and Rachel's family, she was sad that so much still stood between the two, making conversations awkward. "Thank you, baby." Laura smiled as she opened her door. "Sorry to cut the evening short. I just get tired so easy." "It's alright, Mom." Rachel lied to herself as she opened her own door and got out. "It was still good just spending the time." Grabbing the leftovers from the back seat, she knew her mother would enjoy the steelhead trout and chicken parmesan. More than that, she would enjoy having a few meals that neither required preparation nor the expense she could scarcely afford. Carrying the food into her mother's tiny home, she put them in the frige before returning to the living room where Laura had settled into her favorite chair. Taking the one next to her, Rachel groaned as the pain shot up her legs from her swollen knees. "Sometimes I feel like I'm the one that's going to turn seventy next year!" Laughing, Laura settled back after switching from the oxygen tank to the oxygen generator sitting next to her chair. Breathing deeply, she turned and looked at her youngest child. "Thank you for getting me to my doctor's appointment on time, baby... and for picking up my prescriptions... and for dinner! I was glad Leslie and Traci got off work on time and could join us." Nodding, Rachel smiled in pride thinking of Leslie, older of her two boys. Having graduated with an Advanced Diploma, instead of going to college, he'd landed a job with a major software company making more money than she ever had before she retired to become a stay-at-home mom. At twenty he still lived at home with her and Traci, Rachel's wife of twenty-two years, but already had almost thirty thousand dollars saved for a house of his own. "I was glad of that, too." Rachel mused. "Sometimes he works well past midnight, and Traci had to work on Sunday this week. At least Regina keeps a steady schedule. Well, she does now anyway!" Laura winced a little at the mention of Rachel and Traci's partner. She tried to hide it, but too late she saw the look in her daughter's eyes that proved she'd utterly failed to. "Speaking of Regina," Rachel sighed, "she was telling me the other day that she still resents what you said to her when we first told you about her. She tries not to let it get to her, but it does anyway." Honestly confused, Laura furrowed her brow. "Said what, baby?" Grimacing, Rachel couldn't help herself. "Um... well, you said she could do better... than me." With a shake of her head, Laura dismissed the suggestion. "What? Baby, I would never say anything like that! Now what I might have said was that she should never settle, the way I did with your dad or Todd." "Do you really think she was settling for being partners with Traci and I, Mom? Honestly?" Pausing to consider what she knew of the woman who had become part of her daughter's life for the last fourteen years, Laura shook her head. "No. I know she loves you just as much as I loved Mick." Seeing her mother so sad even two years after the loss of her stepfather George to the ravages of cancer made Rachel nearly cry along with her. Instead she just reached out a hand to her mother and held on as the older woman took it for strength. Regaining her composure, Laura smiled weakly at her daughter. "Thanks, baby. It's just so hard sometimes. I miss him so much!" "I miss him too." she replied kindly. "He's still here, though!" Rachel said with a smile of total faith and belief. In truth, Rachel hadn't cried over a single death in her large extended family. Not even when her grandfather passed away right in front of her eyes in the hospital bed. She just couldn't be sad over the transition from one life to the next that she knew for certain await us all. "I know he is." Laura answered with a sad smile. "I just miss being able to hold his hand and listen to the sound of his voice. God, he could be so soothing!" Giggling at the memory, Rachel tried to repress it. "You mean like the time he kept you from killing me when I wrecked my car in Placerville and you had to come rescue me?" "Oh, God!" Laura laughed. "As a matter of fact, yes! Mick just shrugged and told me, 'Well, let's go.' He convinced me that these things just happen and boys will be boys!" Her turn to wince, Rachel couldn't even hide the fact, but she said nothing. With a sigh, Laura knew what she'd said. "I know! But that was before!" "No, Mom! It really wasn't!" Rachel retorted. "I was always Rachel! Since that first day I remember watching Alice at Disneyland when I was three! It was always me!" Her voice softening, Rachel looked down at the floor. "I... I guess it's my own fault. I... I just got so good at lying to you about it and hiding myself that you thought... thought it was real." "Oh, baby!" Laura sighed. "I know... to you, you were always a girl, but to me, I remember my sweet chubby little baby boy!" Looking away, she sighed. "Sometimes I feel it's really my fault. I never prayed for a healthy baby, I only ever prayed for a boy so I could name you after Uncle Ray for your great aunt Vera! She was so sad when he died, I wanted to make her happy again with you." "I know." Rachel weakly smiled back. "That's why I kept the name you would have given me if you'd have known I was a girl... Rachel Michelle." "I know, baby." her mother smiled back. "Thank you! I truly do understand I have two daughters, not a daughter and a son, but you have to understand baby, when I think back, I remember having a son. Now I have to accept that he's gone... like he died. It's a loss, but that death brought with it a new life! A new creation that I love just as much, if not more, because it's... our relationship is honest." Looking away again, Laura took another deep breath of oxygen. "It's just that sons and mothers have a special relationship, not like mothers and daughters. I just... I miss that! I miss having a daughter and a son." With a laugh she added, "Heck! I wouldn't have minded two daughters and a son!" Laughing with her a moment, Rachel shook her head at her mother's inability to see. "Like I said, it's probably my fault. You saw a son because I was too afraid to let you see your daughter... and then later I was really trying to be your son and like it. I... I just never could. I just faked it because I thought I'd burn in Hell if I didn't." Gasping, Laura looked at her daughter in shock. "Who ever told you that!" "Daddy." she shrugged. "It was while you were gone... in Boston." Hearing of the time she'd spent at the burn ward nearly three thousand miles away from her children as she took care of her burned step-children made Laura relive the entire experience all over again. "Oh." was all she could say. Nodding, Rachel swallowed hard and explained. "He... um... he caught me in Marie's clothes. Then he showed me First Corinthians six-nine. You know, 'Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God?' Then it lists people like idolaters and such, and one of them is 'the effeminate'. After reading that I wanted to just be a boy, until I found out that it was all wrong." Writing down the scripture line as a note to look up later, Laura pursed her lips. "What makes you think it was wrong?" With a shrug, Rachel looked away absently. "It's not wrong per se, it's just mistranslated. After learning Hebrew when I was engaged to Kathy... you remember her, right?" Seeing her mother nod, she continued. "Anyway, after that I wanted to learn Greek, because it was nice being able to read the Old Testament in the original language. I wanted to do the same with the New and it was mostly written in Greek, the scholar's language at that time. Anyway, when I read that line in Greek, I found out for myself that Paul wasn't talking about being effeminate, he was talking about people who are weak willed! People with no strength of character! The word he used was malakós. It's where we get the word malleable... as in easily swayed?" Taking it all in, Laura nodded. "OK. That makes sense. Well, I'm glad you didn't think you were going to Hell for it anymore, but I'm concerned that you were afraid to tell me before that. Why?" Embarrassed, Rachel looked away again. This was something that had been eating at her for forty-four years and now she finally had a chance to get it off her chest. The problem was that she didn't want to hurt her mother doing it. Seeing her daughter's reaction, Laura shook her head. "Baby, you can tell me anything! You don't need to be embarrassed about it!" Hearing those particular words didn't help. They were the same words Laura had said when she was thirteen and had been caught once more taking her sister's clothes... and Rachel knew they weren't any more true now than they were then. Shaking off the instinct to lie to her mother the way she'd done back then, she took a breath and looked back at her. "I was afraid ever since I was four and you caught me in Marie's Blue Birds uniform. Do you remember that?" Squinting hard, Laura tried to roll her memory back over four decades. Nodding gently she looked away in recollection. "What did I do that made you afraid? I spanked you, but that was for taking something that wasn't yours, not for..." Even after so much time and acceptance, she had trouble saying the words. "It wasn't what you did, Mom. It was what you said. I remember it vividly." Rachel retorted calmly. "You said, 'No one will like you if you try to be a girl!' Those words exactly." Taken aback, Laura had to reconcile the statement with her own memories. She knew she'd said something to Rae about it, but she couldn't remember exactly what, so she couldn't refute the claim. "Are you sure those are the words, baby?" "Positive." Rachel sighed. "I've been wanting to talk to you about that for a long time. That's when I started hiding... pretending to be a boy so no one would know. In the end though it just ensured that I'd always be alone and have no friends. I was a phony and everyone knew it... they just didn't know what I was being phony about. You know what it's like? You meet someone and you can just tell that they're being fake? That was me. All the boys could tell I was being a phony, so none of them ever liked me. Most of the girls, too... except one." Her smile grew slowly in fond remembrance. "One?" Laura asked curiously. "Who?" Shyly looking at the floor, Rachel sighed wistfully. "Do you remember Harmony?" Seeing her mother shake her head, she recounted the two-year friendship that culminated in two broken hearts. "When... when she called that last time, she told me she couldn't be happy being away from me and not even being able to talk, so she broke up with me. You were in the kitchen, so I had to just put on a brave face until I hung up and went to my room to do my homework. I barely started toward my room before the tears began to fall anyway." Recalling the time, Laura looked at her daughter with understanding eyes. "I know you had a crush on her. I never knew that she..." "It was more than a crush, Mom. I... I fell in love with her. I still love her! I probably always will. She knew about me. I told her, and she liked me even more for it! That's why it hurt so much. I didn't even want another girlfriend after that. I didn't even try for three years, and when you're ten, three years is a really long time!" Rachel laughed, happy to see her mother laugh with her. As the laughter died, she continued more somberly. "By then though, I was trying to be a boy, so no one actually liked me until I met Traci, but that was sixteen years later." "That's a long time to be alone." Laura said achingly. "But you had girlfriends... like Kathy." "Kathy hated the real me, Mom." Rachel confessed. "She... that's why she left me. That's why she... abused me." Tears welled up in her eyes at the memory still so vividly real in her mind's eye as though it were yesterday. "She abused you?" Laura asked incredulously. "Why did you stay? I mean, Momma taught all us girls, and your uncle Darryl, not to put up with that! I... I thought I taught that to you and your sister, too!" Guilt washed over her like waves threatening to drown her at the revelation. Taking a breath, Rachel composed herself and looked up at her mother. "I... I thought I deserved it. I... it was before I found out being myself wasn't a sin. After we moved in together, Kathy found a box of my old things that I thought I threw out. My old... um... girl things. She... she hit me. I'd told her that was a part of me, but that it was a part of my past. Seeing it made her think I lied to her and she hit me... and I let her." "Oh, baby!" Laura cried with her. "I should have told you never to let anyone do that! I thought I did! I know I told your sister... but... I... I guess I just assumed that..." "...that because you thought I was a boy that I didn't ever need to worry about it. Yeah." Rachel sighed. "It wouldn't have mattered. I would have stayed anyway because I thought I deserved to get beaten. That maybe it would make me stronger and make the feelings go away. Instead it just hurt more. Crying in front of her made it worse." After an awkward moment, the two looked at one another. Rachel could see the pain in her mother's eyes, but she couldn't tell if it was because she felt guilty for treating Rachel like a boy or because she felt guilty that she'd failed to instill enough strength in her 'boy' to walk out on a bad situation. Looking away, she almost asked, but then realized she didn't want to know the answer. "Anyway," Rachel segued back into the thing she did want to talk about, "I was saying about when I was four. You told me no one would like me if I tried to be a girl. I... I thought that included you, so I was always afraid to tell you. Besides, I figured you knew. I mean, you had to know, right?" Shaking her head to get back to the original conversation, Laura furrowed her brow once more. "No! Actually I didn't know! I mean, how could I? You wouldn't tell me!" "But I did tell you, Mom." Rachel snapped back. "When I was four!" "That was a long time ago, baby!" Laura retorted just as firmly. "I told you again when I was six when you saw me when we were living in Fallon! Remember Halloween? You caught me again when I was seven too, and then again when I was thirteen going on fourteen. How could you not have known? How could you still think it was a phase I was going through?" Thinking back, Laura sighed and tried to explain. "I... I was told by people that I trusted that little boys like to experiment. They like the feel of the soft material of women's clothes... that..." "It was never about the clothes, Mom!" Rachel interrupted. "They were just a way for me to see on the outside what I felt on the inside!" Taking a breath and calming herself, Rachel lowered her voice back down to a normal tone. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't have interrupted you or shouted." "It's OK, baby." Laura replied in a chastised tone. "I understand. I... I was afraid for you. People can be so cruel about any differences! I... I didn't want you to be a target." "I was a target anyway and you made me lie to you." Rachel said with more venom in her voice than she'd intended. Taking another breath, she calmed herself more. "Remember when I was thirteen and you caught me with your and Marie's things in my drawers? You spanked me until you made me tell you why I took them?" Shaking her head, Laura looked away ashamedly. "No." "I lied to you then. I told you the only thing I could think of that would explain them other than the truth... that I was using them to... um... using them to masturbate. That was a lie. Do you remember now?" Recalling part of the conversation brought the rest back. In her desperation to reach the truth that her stubborn thirteen-year-old child refused to divulge after an hour of spanking with her bare hand, she'd resorted to using her belt, which brought a rapid confession. "Oh." "Yeah." Rachel replied simply. "Why didn't you just tell me the truth?" As a tear slipped down her cheek, Rachel picked up a tissue and dabbed it away, careful not to ruin her makeup. "I... I was afraid you'd hate me. By that time, I'd found some books about it and they were terrible. They called it a sickness and told about families that literally threw their children into the streets after hearing it." Taking a ragged breath, she looked up into her mother's wide eyes. "Really, given the era and everything else, you took it a lot better than most. You did the best that you could have." Stunned, Laura could only believe what Rachel was telling her because she'd seen first hand how cruel some parents could be. "Well... you did better than I did. You found books that at least talked about it." "They weren't nice books." Rachel explained. "More like warnings than anything else. Believe me, the Standards of Care back then were awful! Transgenderism was just not very well understood and condemned as a kind of psychosis to be treated with aversion therapy using shock treatments, sometimes even having people committed!" "Committed?" Laura asked incredulously. "You mean as in..." "...as in committed to an asylum. Yeah." Rachel sighed. "Some parents did that to their own kids. For their own good, of course!" Shaking her head to get the idea out of her mind, Laura looked back at her. "I... I was told it was just a passing thing. That you'd get over it and... and just be normal after that." Laughing gently, she shook her head in disbelief of her own willful ignorance. "I didn't want to see it. I guess I was lying to myself, too." Looking back up at Rachel, she took a breath. "Your aunts, especially your aunt Cathy, she told me there was more to it than just a passing thing, but I didn't listen. I didn't want to. You should ask her." Hearing that was a shock to Rachel. She knew that her aunt Cathy was a very conservative Christian, and that even so after the accident that nearly killed her youngest son Bryant, Cathy had been the strongest supporter of her on that side of her family, but she had no idea that her aunt had known for such a long time. "I... I guess I will, the next chance I get." "You should. She and your aunt Jane tried to tell me, but I just wouldn't see it. They knew when you were wearing a bra under your clothes." "Oh!" Rachel finally understood. "That was later, after Traci and I were married." Embarrassed slightly, she blushed. "I... I did that for Traci. She wanted me to come out way sooner than I did. After Bryant was born, actually. Wearing normal women's clothes under the men's clothes was a compromise we settled on, so she knew I was still me under it all." Laura thought back to that time now thirteen years past. "A lot of things were happening for me back then, too. Momma passed in September, then Daddy the next July, then we were selling the house, the place I always called home, the following April..." "...and then that August I came out and told you about Regina." Rachel finished for her. "It... it was just too much... all at once." Laura admitted sadly. "I thought a year after grandpa died was enough." Taking a cleansing breath, Rachel shook her head. "I don't think I could have waited any longer though. I'd already given up the first half of my life for all of you, and finally being able to be myself only when I was too old to enjoy it would have been worse than never doing it all." Pausing a moment, she let a sly grin creep onto her lips. "Besides, by then I was on hormones and there were going to be visible changes!" she gestured to her now C-cup chest, prompting a giggle from both of them. After an awkward moment, Laura saw a chance to get something off her own chest that had been bothering her for some time as well. "One thing's for certain, all that was a true test of my faith! I swear, that Christmas day I came over to your house really put me to the test of not being judgmental!" "What Christmas was that?" Rachel asked confusedly. "The first one after I transitioned in oh-eight?" "No." Laura sighed. "Later... after you moved?" "Oh." Rachel finally understood, looking away ashamedly. "About that..." "I know." Laura took her turn to interrupt. "You were hurt after the way it went. I called on Bryant's birthday in May, and by the time I called to wish you a happy birthday in July, the number was disconnected. I went over to your apartment, but of course you were gone, and I had no way of finding you." Looking up at her again, Rachel's eyes were wet with tears. "I'm so sorry, Mom! I... I just... yes! It hurt that you could go months without ever coming to see the boys! Or me! Or even calling! When... when I found out that you'd canceled that one time that you were coming over for dinner and that the next weekend you were at Marie's house for dinner, it hurt." Drying her eyes, Rachel took a breath before continuing. "Still, I shouldn't have just cut off ties like that. Admittedly, I was four years into hormone therapy and a little nuts at the time!" she giggled. "I mean, have you ever heard of a girl going through puberty that didn't go crazy? Try it at thirty-five!" The two laughed together at that for a moment before Laura resumed. "Well, it was a year after that when your aunt Darla found the tax notice for your new home with all three of your names on it." "Oh." Rachel finally understood. "Let's see, that would have made it about July of twenty-thirteen." Looking at her mother again, she cocked her head curiously. "You knew where we lived that long?" "Uh huh." Laura smiled slyly. "God bless him, Mick was so understanding that year! I used to drive up and down streets looking for you before that. I went crazy thinking I'd lost you. And then when Darla found your address, I... I would park at the corner near your house and just watch your driveway. I'd see you leave for work, I'd see Leslie heading off for school, and then Bryant. I'd follow them sometimes, staying far enough back that they didn't notice. After four months of that, I came to your door." Drying her eyes, Rachel looked at her mother with regret. "I'm sorry, Mom!" "It is what it is, baby." Laura sighed. "I guess we needed that time apart... so I could bury my son and be happy with the daughter that took his place." Frustrated that she still could not see that the son was an illusion, she chastised herself. It's your own fault! You made her see the boy! You hid too well! That's not her fault! It's yours! Letting it go for the time being, Rachel smiled at her mother. "I... I'm glad we can have this now. That I can be your daughter and know that you still love me." "Of course I still love you, baby!" she chided gently. "Don't ever think I don't, or ever didn't! You're my child! My youngest!" "Like I said, Mom. That was never a guarantee for me. I've heard too many horror stories about women like me that end up losing everything... their jobs, their families, their children. Believe me when I say that's what I prepared for when I came out... losing all of you. If it hadn't been for the accident bringing us all together again, you might still be the only family I had contact with. They all turned their backs on us from the day I did. Dad didn't see me or the boys for seven years because of it!" "I know." Laura admitted. "We could have reacted better." "But you also could have reacted so much worse." Rachel comforted. "But you didn't. OK, so it wasn't great, but given circumstances and the way you were raised, you did the best you could. I understand that now and I wouldn't change a thing that got us here!" Getting up, the two hugged one another tightly. "I love you, Mom! So much!" "I love you too, baby!" Laura sniffed as she held her daughter as tightly as she could. Separating after a long embrace, Rachel looked up at the clock. "Oh jeez! It's after ten! I need to get home and get to bed!" Nodding, Laura put her hand on Rachel's cheek. "I know. Give me a ring when you get in? So I know you're home safe?" With a smile, Rachel nodded back. "I will! Enjoy the leftovers! Call me tomorrow?" "I will baby." she answered as her youngest daughter made her way down the wheelchair ramp and to her car. "Drive careful! Precious cargo!" As Rachel slid into the driver's seat, she opened her flip phone and called home while the car warmed up. "Evans' residence!" Traci answered out of habit. "Hi, love! Have a good talk with your mom?" Smiling, Rachel looked at herself in the mirror on the back of the visor, seeing her ruined mascara and eyeliner. With a sobbing giggle, she nodded. "Yes! I think it was good for both of us. I... I think Mom and I are going to be OK now. At least the ice is broken and we can talk. I'll tell you all about it when I get home. Should be there in about forty minutes, OK?" "OK, love! I look forward to it! Love you!" "I love you too, sweetheart!" Rachel nearly sobbed with joy. "So very much!"
Josh Ryan was not normal. He talked different, walked different, laughed different... and everyone knew it. He had two very close friends who always wanted to help him; in fact, throughout his young life, he always had people around who wanted to help him... usually to fend off his parents who seemed like they would do anything for him. Their desire to help however, often made his own life take a back seat to their ideas of why he was so different and who he should become as a result... "for his own good." Determined to raise Josh 'their way' and according to their own ideas of who he is, it would take extreme circumstances and more pain than Josh ever thought a person could endure for anyone to even begin to see the damage his parents were doing to his childhood, his future, and in the end, his very life... all "with the best of intentions."
Set in northeastern Ohio in the mid-to-late 2000s, The Road to Hell tells the story of a boy whose parents try to make him be something he isn't and can never be, all to satisfy their own ideals and beliefs, and the havoc they create in the process. However well meaning, their efforts only serve to make their son a victim of 'learned helplessness' and to seek out the easiest path in life, rather than fight for what he believes in. A dark tale of idealism, extremism, and ideology versus reality, where the greatest question in life can be brought to bear: "Who am I?" The book takes no stance on right or wrong or the moral questions that plague our time. It merely tries to engage the reader into questioning if their own deeply held beliefs, no matter how firmly they may believe them to be good, fair, or even righteous and holy, are in fact just well intentioned tyranny.
This book is dedicated to my wife, Rachel.
You inspire me to be more than I thought possible,
to live life more full of fun and joy than I knew achievable,
and not take any moment of this precious gift called life for granted.
You never tried to put me in a box; you tore down my walls.
"We love because He first loved us."
Copyright © 2020, 2021 Roberta Elder - All Rights Reserved
128,909 words
This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents herein are solely the products of the author's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any connection or resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events or firms is purely coincidental. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher.
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Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Josh's eyebrows scrunched up in confusion as he opened the box and looked inside. His fifth birthday party had been fun so far. The cake, while not his favorite chocolate, was good, the bicycle his parents had gotten him was just itching to be ridden, and the other toys he'd gotten were exactly what he'd wanted. Now in utter confusion, he could just stare at the last gift he'd opened.
"What's this?" he asked innocently.
Melanie Ryan smiled at her five-year-old. "What does it look like, Josh?"
Still confused, he looked up at his mother hesitantly. Her narrow face was still smiling at him expectantly; her short sandy blonde hair pulled back by the headband she wore. Likewise, her brown eyes, so much like his own, looked at him curiously to see how he felt about the toy. "Um... a doll?"
Fred Ryan nodded at his son as his five foot nine, thin-framed body towered over the boy. He smiled gently at his son; his dark hair pulled back into a ponytail and his green eyes looking at him expecting to see him equally happy with his last toy as he was with his first. "That's right, Josh! Isn't it nice?"
Picking up the doll from out of the box, Josh stared at it as though it might suddenly grow fangs and try to bite him. "Why do I get a doll?"
"Why not?" his mother replied happily as she got down on the floor with her child. She knew from her child psychology courses that her five-foot six body standing over him would be too intimidating to really connect with him as an equal. "I had dolls when I was your age! You used to love your old Raggedy Anne doll! You slept with her for years! Isn't she pretty?" Reaching out, Melanie ran her fingers along the lace of the doll's pink dress.
"I guess." Josh replied confusedly. Setting the gift aside, he walked on his knees toward his mother and gave her a hug, just as he'd done after opening each of his other presents. "Thank you, Mommy." he stated, but without the enthusiasm he'd shown earlier. Getting up on his feet, he repeated the procedure with his father, Fred. "Thank you, Daddy."
Still perplexed, Josh looked back at the doll, shrugged, went over to it, picked it up, and examined it. He had to admit it was a nice doll, but it held no interest for him. Why did they give me a doll? he wondered. I didn't ask for one... and I know I don't need one... He puzzled over the question as he took the doll to his room. Putting it with his other gifts, he shrugged and turned to go get the bike helmet so his dad could teach him how to ride his bike. Parents are weird!
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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A smile broke across Josh's face as he approached the bus stop. The cool air of the September morning stung his nose slightly, but it didn't detract from the happiness he felt at going back to school again. Unlike a lot of the boys in his class, Josh loved school. Now that he was going to Junior High, he would even be going to school with his two best friends, Tracy and David Edwards. He always thought it was silly that just because they lived two blocks over they had to go to completely different Primary and Intermediate schools. Stepping up his approach to a light jog, he couldn't wait to see them.
"Hi, guys!" he shouted as he neared the two siblings. "Great morning, huh?"
David looked at him as though he'd just suggested that lying in front of the bus tires as it approached was a great idea. "What, going back to school? Oh yeah... great day! What're you some sort of weirdo?"
Josh knew his friend well enough to know that David wasn't being serious, so instead he just smiled widely at the boy's remark. "Yeah! Wanna make somethin' of it?" As Josh got closer and slowed to a walk, he stood right in front of the boy and flexed slightly before the two burst out into laughter and embraced like the good friends they were. "You're so full of it, Dave!"
The two separating, Josh turned to Tracy. "Hi, Trace. How was your summer camp?" He hadn't seen Tracy since the fraternal twins' twelfth birthday in mid-July, right before the three were sent to their respective summer camps.
Tracy laughed at their inside joke. "It was fine, Josh! I had a lot of fun! I don't need to ask how your summer camp was though, do I?"
Rolling his eyes, Josh scoffed. "No!" Turning to David, he held up his hands in mock surrender. "No offense, Dave!"
David shook his head. "None taken, Josh. I know the score."
Seeing the bus coming to pick them up, Josh leaned in close to Tracy's ear conspiratorially. "Can I talk to you on the bus? Just you and me? Please?"
Hearing the desperation in her best friend's voice, Tracy nodded knowingly. "I'll tell Davie. He can sit with Mark. He likes Mark, and I think the feeling is mutual!"
Rolling his eyes, Josh nodded and smiled, happy for his friend. "That's cool. Thanks!" he whispered.
The three lined up with the other students, while Tracy leaned forward and whispered in her twin's ear. David nodded and smiled, seeing Mark already on the bus and sitting alone. Loading in, Tracy found an empty seat and swept in gracefully, tucking her skirt under her to sit by the window. She wrinkled her nose at the scent that seemed to come standard on all school busses; a fetid mixture of vinyl, diesel fumes, and children's sweat. As Josh moved to sit next to her, Reggie stood up from the seat behind her.
"Sit elsewhere, fairy!" he snorted. "I wanna sit next to Tracy!"
Closing his eyes, Josh stopped just short of sitting down at the sound of his nemesis, Reginald Hughes. Standing back up straight, he turned around with a false smile on his lips. "Reggie! Amazing to see you survived summer without major head trauma! I see you're up to using multisyllabic insults this year! Take it by correspondence?" The quizzical look on the larger boy's face told Josh he'd far exceeded the bully's vocabulary.
"Huh? That supposed to be some sissy fag insult, queer-boy?" he sneered as he pushed Josh's shoulder aggressively.
"Reginald Hughes!" the bus driver shouted. "Sit back down in the seat you were in before! Or do I have to revoke your bus privileges on the first day of school?" Mary Cartwright knew most of these children well. Only two years earlier she'd been driving them to Primary School before she'd been moved to Middle School duty, and Reggie had always been a troublemaker. "Or maybe you'd prefer to be driven to school by your mommy?"
Turning ashen as the threat hit home, Reggie slowly sank back into his seat, duly mortified as the other kids laughed at the idea of the toughest kid in the neighborhood being driven to school by his mother.
Finally taking his seat next to Tracy, Josh blew out a sigh of relief. "That was close!" he breathed. Waiting for the bus to get moving, Josh fidgeted nervously.
"Must be important." Tracy whispered. "Just calm down, take a breath, and tell me when you're ready. OK?"
Nodding rapidly as the bus began to move down the street, he leaned in close to his best friend. "They're at it again." was all he said.
Groaning, Tracy shook her head in disbelief. "Again? I thought you said you were gonna have a talk with them this summer?"
"I did!" Josh exclaimed. "For all the good it did! They just have their own ideas and nothing I say can change their minds!"
"Just tell me what happened." Tracy sighed.
Standing uncomfortably at the pick up area in front of the summer camp where he'd spent the last six weeks, Josh waited impatiently for his parents to pick him up. Watching the other kids hug their parents and seeing them so happy, he frustratedly kicked a small stone away and watched it tumble along the dirt driveway. Dust, pine trees, and the sweet scent of the nearby lake mingled with the jarring odors of hot tires and car exhaust. Steeling his resolve, he promised himself that this would absolutely be his last summer at this camp.
After all, he mused, I'm twelve now. I think I should have a say as to which summer camp I go to, at least. Taking a breath, he spotted his parents' VW Microbus slowly puttering its way up the driveway. It was bad enough they seemed to think they were sixties flower children, even though they weren't born until the seventies, but the way they treated him seemed to drive him more and more crazy every year. Even the summer camp they sent him to seemed to be an effort to force their opinions of just who they thought their son was.
As soon as the vehicle shuddered and squealed to a stop, Melanie jumped out of the passenger seat and ran up to him. "Baby! I missed you!"
Smiling weakly, Josh returned the affection and even found himself slightly tearing up with his mother's loving embrace. He knew he was loved, that much was certain.
Pulling away and seeing him wipe a tear out of his eye with his sleeve, she smiled wistfully at him. "Have a good summer?" she asked.
"It was alright." Josh said as his father Fred came walking up. "I didn't get to see Dave much, though. He was in different activities than me this year."
"Oh?" Fred asked, curiously.
Shaking his head, the boy sighed. "No. Dave was in water-skiing, archery, hiking, football, and baseball this year." Lucky stiff! he thought.
"Huh." Fred furrowed his brow. "Oh well." Picking up his son's pack, he slung it over one shoulder as Melanie grabbed his suitcase. "Come on then, pumpkin!" he said as he headed back to the Microbus. "Let's get you home!"
Sighing at the term of endearment his father had been calling him for as long as he could remember, Josh followed them to the waiting relic of automotive mockery his parents had spent a small fortune keeping running year after year. The entire back of the vehicle was covered in bumper stickers that professed "COEXIST", "Save the Whales", "Dukakis/Bentsen for President", and a hundred other causes they'd supported over the last twenty years. Watching as several of the campers climbed into the camp's courtesy bus for inner-city kids to be driven back to Cleveland, Josh laughed as he thought, They get to go home in the camp bus, while I go home in the camp-aign bus! He would have found his joke funnier if his mood was better.
Climbing in and placing his backpack and suitcase in the back, Josh settled into the back seat and waited for the long drive home.
Just as they began to pull out of the dirt driveway, Melanie turned to Josh. "So... since you didn't get to spend much time with Davie this year, did you meet any new boys you liked, sweetie?"
Sighing in frustration, Josh blinked slowly as he reluctantly nodded his head. "There were a few cool guys I hung out with some." he admitted. "Not that I like-liked them, though."
Seeing an almost look of disappointment on his mother's face, he saw it vanish just as quickly and melt into a smile.
"That's alright." his father offered from the driver's seat. "It's OK if you didn't 'connect' with anyone new! You still have Davie!"
"I don't have Dave, Daddy!" Josh almost fumed. "He and I are just friends, like I keep telling you!"
Fred looked briefly over at his wife, who returned the knowing glance and secret smile. "Sure, pumpkin! Just friends!"
Hours later, after having been grilled by his parents about his entire summer, Josh was relieved to see his own neighborhood as his parents griped about something President Bush had done last week. He wasn't even listening. All he could think about was getting back to school next Tuesday and spending time with his best friends.
When the van chugged into the Ryan family's driveway, finally squealing to a stop, Josh was immediately out the door with his backpack and suitcase, running to the door with his key already in hand; inside before his father had even gotten out of the vehicle. Racing upstairs to his room, he just wanted to unpack, shower, wash his clothes, and check his computer for messages. He had a cell phone, a Motorola Razor, but neither of his friends were much into the new fad of texting, so most of his communications were by email.
Charging into his room, Josh suddenly stopped and looked around. Backing up, he stood outside the room and looked up and down the short hallway, almost as though he expected to find himself in the wrong house. Edging back in, he blinked in confusion as he surveyed the now unfamiliar place he'd slept in all his life.
The walls had been painted and many of his posters removed, except for those that he loved the most. His old movie posters were still there, now hung in very nice glass cases. His furniture had also been replaced with what looked to be a matched set of antique-style white painted wood. New plush carpet that blended well with the new walls adorned the floor, and his bed had a new coverlet and pillows; his few stuffed animals decorating the head, just where he'd left them.
After Melanie came up the stairs behind him, much more sedately, she paused to stand next to him and placed her hands on his shoulders lovingly. "What do you think, Josh? Nice?"
Blinking with his mouth hanging open, he couldn't tear his eyes off the sight in front of him. "It's... um... it's very... pink!"
Sighing with satisfaction, Melanie nodded. "A lovely shade, don't you think? Do you like it? I picked out the furniture myself! Do you like your new bed?"
His eyes still wide with shock, he looked at the piece of furniture he would be sleeping on tonight. "A canopy bed? Really?"
Grinning happily, Melanie beamed as Fred joined them. "Uh-huh! I think it totally sets the tone of the rest of the room!"
"What do you think of your posters, Josh?" Fred asked hopefully. "That was my part! I was very careful not to damage any of them, I know how hard you worked, saved, and searched to find them! I found authentic movie theater display frames to mount them in!"
Still stunned to near speechlessness, he nodded. "Uh... yeah, Daddy. They... they look great." It was the only thing he liked about the change to his room. Shaking off his initial reaction, he took a good look around. Most of his things were still there, but the room itself defied description. Turning to his parents who looked back at him expectantly, he shook his head. "Why?"
"We wanted to surprise you, pumpkin." his father answered happily.
"Why pink?" he asked more sternly.
"Why not pink?" his mother retorted with her usual dismissal. "Pink is a beautiful color!"
"But..." He stopped himself from saying 'pink is for girls' as he knew that was a non-starter with his parents. They were firm believers that there was no such thing as 'gender specific' anything, least of all colors. "But I don't really like pink!"
"Oh!" his mother waved her hand. "You like pink just fine! Three of your shirts are pink, and you picked them out yourself!"
"They're salmon, not pink!" he corrected her. "This..." he gestured to the room, "is pink! And that..." he pointed at the bed, "...is a girl's canopy bed!"
"Beds aren't gender specific." Fred corrected him. "They're for sleeping on."
Finally beyond his breaking point, Josh lost control. "It's a girl's bed, Daddy! The coverlet has little hearts and rainbows on it!"
"Don't take that tone with your father!" Melanie snapped before quickly composing herself. "Josh, I think it would be best if we all went down to the kitchen, made up a nice pot of tea, and discussed this calmly. Your father and I have a lot to talk to you about."
Too flustered to think straight, Josh knew that his mother's suggestion was reasonable, and it would give him the opportunity to voice his objections to certain things his parents had been pushing on him the last seven years. "OK... fine!" he answered in a restrained growl. "We'll talk."
After the caffeine-free tea was heated up, the three sat together in silence while they each looked to one another; Melanie and Fred looking at each other and Josh concernedly with Josh staring daggers at them both. Fred took a deep breath and began it. "Josh, we think it's time we face some facts about you. You're not like other little boys."
"I'm not a 'little boy'!" Josh shot back angrily at the suggestion he was still a baby. I'm twelve! Practically a teenager! he grumbled to himself.
"We know." Melanie said softly. "Though I'm glad to see that you've finally decided to be honest with us."
Confused, Josh's anger melted for a moment. "Honest? Honest about what?"
Fred smiled patiently. "That you're transgendered." he answered with a sigh. "It's OK. We love you no matter what!"
His eyes squinted in confusion. "Trans-what?" He knew what the word meant, he was just confused as to why they'd apply it to him.
"Transgendered, sweetie." Melanie explained. "It's the proper term for someone like you... someone who, through no fault of their own, feels like they were born in the wrong body. We know you should have been a girl... that being a girl is what will make you happy!"
"It was obvious, really." Fred took over explaining their reasoning. "All the signs were there the whole time. Your love of musicals, the way you keep your room so neat and clean, the way you take to school, your lack of interest in sports, how much you love your BFF Tracy, your relationship with Davie. Honestly pumpkin, it's our fault we didn't see it sooner!"
His father continued as Josh's eyes widened. "We... that is, your mother and I... we thought that you were just gay, and we were totally OK with that! But you've been so insistent that you aren't, we started looking for alternative explanations. Then we started talking with some psychologist colleagues of your mother's who specialize in gender issues, and it turns out that you're probably not gay... you're just a girl... and that's OK, too!"
"So, your father and I decided to surprise you with your room!" his mother picked up where he left off. "You didn't even get a chance to see the best part! You didn't look in the closet, sweetie!"
Stunned into utter disbelief, Josh believed his parents had finally flipped out. "You... you think I'm trans? That I want to be a girl?" Seeing them nod happily, not even seeming to notice his negative reaction to the idea, Josh stood slowly from the table. "I... I need to go for a walk." he stammered.
"Very well, sweetheart!" Melanie smiled sweetly as she and Fred stood as well. "Take your time. We know this is a lot to absorb! When you come back, we'll talk some more." Moving to hug him, she was surprised when he pushed her away and ran for the door.
Running in a near panic, Josh made his way down to the park two blocks away. Sitting on a picnic table bench alone, he tried to fully process what his parents were telling him. Me? A girl? He honestly examined his feelings for nearly an hour before making up his mind. Walking home defiantly, he strode into the living room feeling sure of himself.
"Welcome back, sweetheart!" Melanie glowed. "Feeling better about things?"
"No." he answered bluntly as he crossed his arms. "I am not a girl!"
Her smile melting slowly, Melanie had fully expected Josh to return with a happier outlook, and maybe even ready to share his 'true' name with them. Confused, she furrowed her brow. "I don't understand. Are you just asexual? You don't have to use the word girl sweetie, if it makes you uncomfortable. You can use whatever..."
"I'm a boy, Mom!" he interrupted her. "A perfectly normal, one hundred percent, fully male and masculine, boy!"
Fred rose from his easy chair and looked at Josh. "Now listen. We won't get anywhere with you unwilling to listen to reason, pumpkin!"
"Stop calling me pumpkin, Daddy!" he retorted. "It's humiliating!"
Melanie nodded at Fred. "She's right, dear. Terms like that are degrading for a young woman, even from her father."
"But I've always called her pumpkin!" he countered. "It's..."
"Stop calling me 'she' and 'her'!" Josh shouted.
"Don't interrupt, sweetheart!" Melanie said with a mildly raised voice. "We're trying to really communicate here! Would you prefer a more gender-neutral term?"
"No one's communicating because no one's listening to me!" Josh whined.
Fred's temper, not often piqued, came to a slow boil. "Now see here, young lady! Your mother and I worked hard for weeks researching all about this situation! We know you're young and don't really understand what's going on, but we know what's best for you!"
Pacing like a caged tiger, Josh was desperate to make his parents listen. "By turning me into a girl? That's what's best for a boy like me? To be utterly humiliated?"
"That's enough!" Fred shouted. "I'll not have you talking that way about transgendered people, even if you are one! It's not humiliating to have gender dysphoria, and I'll have no such talk in this house! Go to your room!"
Narrowing his eyes at his parents, Josh fumed at their stubborn refusal to listen. Storming off in a huff, he stomped his way up the stairs and into his room, slamming the door behind him. Now realizing he was confined to a room that looked like a pre-teen girl's dream come true, Josh didn't even know where to sit. Remembering something his mother said, he nervously made his way over to the closet and, with trembling hand, slid the mirrored door to one side.
It was no less than he expected, but seeing it in his room made him almost nauseous with fear. He knew then that his parents were going to make him comply with their absurd notions that he was a girl in the most visible way possible. They were going to make him wear the closet full of dresses, skirts, and blouses that had taken the place of all of his old clothes.
"No!" Tracy gasped. "They didn't!"
Nodding helplessly, Josh sighed. "They did. You'd love it! They got me all the latest fashions! The place is like a girly paradise! Like an un-Lucky Charm box... all hearts, rainbows, and marshmallow pink! And I'm in hell! It was bad enough when they thought I was a co-star in Rent, now they want me to play the lead in Hedwig and the Angry Inch!"
Thinking a moment, Tracy dared ask what only she or David could without hurting Josh's feelings. "Do you think they could be right?"
Looking over at her, Josh could see the sincere look of concern in her eyes. He knew Tracy wasn't teasing him, she honestly was wondering what he felt. Sniffing back a tear and swallowing the lump in his throat, he shrugged and shook his head. "When they first suggested the idea, I went down to the park and really thought about it, seriously, for over an hour. I know I'm kind of a weirdo for a boy." Seeing Tracy about to object, he forestalled her rebuttal. "I know, you think I'm just fine... but you know I'm not like the other guys. Let's stop kidding ourselves."
Tracy sighed as the bus approached the school. "OK, I'll admit you're... different... but different doesn't mean weird! It's just... you're unique!"
"So's a square bowling ball!" Josh sighed.
"...and so is a priceless gem!" Tracy countered. Taking a moment to let that sink in, she asked, "So, what'd you figure out then... in the park, I mean?"
Josh shrugged again, helplessly. "That I'm not a girl, for starters." he sighed. "Believe me, it would be easier if that's all is was! Everything would make sense! I act like a girl, I talk like a girl most of the time, I even dress a little like a girl!" he pointed out as he indicated his salmon-colored shirt. "But I'm a boy. If I know anything, I know that much! I'm just a weird boy because my parents are even weirder!"
Tracy giggled at the comment, sparking Josh to giggle along with her.
"See? I even laugh like a girl!" Looking at his shoes, he shook his head. "But I'm still a boy... and I like being a boy!"
"You write like a girl, too." she added. "Those little circles over your 'i's? That's a girl thing!" Suddenly thinking of something, Tracy drew in a sharp breath. "So... if they took away all your boy clothes, how do you still have what you have on?"
"I washed my camp clothes. That's all I have now." he answered defeatedly. "Apart from what's filling my closet and dresser, that is."
"So... this weekend... when you were washing your clothes... what did you..." She couldn't make herself ask the rest of the question.
"Don't ask." he glumly replied as the bus ground to a halt. "I don't think I could ever live it down if it got out I was wearing a fuzzy pink bathrobe!"
Tracy stared at him wide-eyed as kids started filing off the bus ahead of them. Waiting their turn, they got up together and slowly made their way up to the front of the bus.
"Don't tell anyone, OK Trace?" he begged as they got off together. "Not even Dave!"
"Davie would understand, Josh!" she offered in counterpoint. "He's the one that made sure all the guys at your camp knew you weren't gay like them, right? For a brother, he's a pretty stand-up guy!"
"Even if he is a fruit!" Josh barbed, knowing he was allowed to joke with Tracy and David that way without offending them. "Seriously though, Trace. Please? I... it's just too humiliating! This is worse than the whole gay thing they've been on about for the last seven years! They're talking about hormone blockers, Trace! And just when I found my first chest hair last month!"
Tracy giggled as she walked with him. "You studly man, you!"
The two giggled together as they made their way into the building, following the sea of twelve and thirteen year-olds. After they were inside, David finally caught up with them.
"Hey, you two!" he shouted. "So what's the juicy? What've you two been whispering about all the way from our stop?"
"Private stuff, Davie." Tracy admonished. "Very personal and very none of your business, OK? Trust me, you don't wanna know!"
Looking hurt for a moment, David looked at his sister and his best friend. "Is this about... like, a girl problem?"
Turning to Josh, who was wide-eyed in terror at the prospect of his latest parental embarrassment getting out, Tracy nodded. "Um... yeah. You could say that. Josh has a girl problem."
"Blech!" David retched, thinking she meant that Josh had a girl he liked. "Never mind! You're right, I don't wanna know!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Their first day started uneventfully. The trio got their locker assignments, their class schedules, and coordinated when they would have time to hang out and share classes. When Josh saw the first class of the day that his parents had signed him up for was Home Economics instead of the Shop class he'd asked for, his heart sank a little more. The only bright point was that he'd be sharing the class with Tracy... and twenty-seven other girls.
For PE, Josh was barred by his parents from participating in any team sports or directly competitive sports like wrestling. Sports weren't that interesting to him, but he still felt excluded by not being allowed to play them. Instead, Josh was allowed to run track. Not many kids actually did anything in PE though since the coaches weren't allowed to fail anyone for lack of physical ability. So, while Josh ran track, the rest of the boys either played basketball or sat and watched the game. Most of the girls just stood around talking or reading, while only a few of the 'sporty' girls ran track with him, making Josh the only boy running with a group of girls. He also would be changing in the coach's office, alone.
The 'girl problem' continued when Josh got to his next class; choir. Small for his age, and still not feeling the vocal effects of puberty, he was placed with the Altos, which of course were eight girls. His vocal range would have easily permitted him to be placed with the boys singing Tenor, but the school, courtesy of Josh's parents, had advised his teacher that 'she' preferred the company of 'other girls'.
Last before lunch was Social Studies. Here at least he was just a student, but by that time the boys were avoiding him like the plague. Since students had no assigned seats on the first day, all the other boys filled the rows on the right and back, while the girls all filled the left and front. Forced through glares and non-verbal intimidation to not sit near any of the boys, he ended up having to take the only seat remaining... right in the middle of the girls. He was almost happy though when he saw Tracy sitting to his left.
As class began, he was mortified to learn that their seats were now going to be their assigned seats for the rest of the year. Dropping his head to his desk, he looked up again when he felt a tapping on his right shoulder.
"Excuse me." the girl whispered. "You have a pen? Mine ran out of ink!"
Looking over at the girl, Josh's heart skipped several beats as he took in the sight beside him. Smiling at him warmly, her dark curls framing her face flawlessly, he swallowed hard and felt his temperature rise quickly. Finally remembering to breathe, he exhaled and tried to keep from hyperventilating. After what seemed to be a year but was in reality only a few seconds of his body forgetting its autonomic functions, he nodded and dug into his black backpack with the rainbow on the back. Pulling out a spare pen, he handed it to her and regained the use of his tongue. "H... here." he whispered.
Flashing a smile, the girl took the pen and mouthed, "Thanks!" at him coyly.
Turning back toward the teacher, who seemed to be still getting his notes together, Josh was glad of the respite. Looking to his left, he saw Tracy looking at him with her jaw slightly slack and eyes wide open. Slowly, a smile spread across her lips and she turned back to the front of the class just as their teacher began handing out their first worksheets.
When the bell rang several decades later, Josh was slow to leave, stunned by the apparent goddess of beauty who had deigned to acknowledge his presence. Exiting the room, he ran straight into Tracy waiting for him.
"Josh?" she asked in mock concern. "You in there? Helloooo!"
"Huh?" he replied vacantly.
Reaching up, she felt his forehead, then put her fingers on his wrist, and finally looked directly in his eyes as though he were ill. "Hmm. Slightly warm and flushed, rapid heart rate, eyes dilated... Yep. You got it."
Suddenly shaking himself back to awareness, he really looked at her for the first time since leaving the class. "What? Got what?"
Smiling as she sighed and tilted her head, she shook it slowly. "The hots! For Brenda!"
Blushing heavily, he looked at the floor and clutched his school binder to his chest. "So? What difference does that make?"
While the two began to walk toward their lockers to get their lunches, Tracy giggled. "Only all the difference in the world, dummy! Don't you see? This is the solution to all your problems! You just need a girlfriend!"
"Last I checked, you need a girl to have a girlfriend!" he verbally parried her hopeful advice. "Brenda has to be the most beautiful girl in the school. What chance does a weirdo like me have?" Realizing that he'd accidentally insulted Tracy's looks, he back-peddled hastily. "Not that I don't think you're beautiful, mind you! You are, Trace... gorgeous even... but, I mean..." Stuck for a way out of his own trap without lying to his best friend, he sighed in resignation. "Sorry."
Almost laughing hysterically at his feeble attempts to flatter her, Tracy finally controlled herself and put a gentle hand on Josh's shoulder. "It's alright, Josh! I know what you mean! I know I'm not your type, and that's OK, because you aren't mine, either! Not that there's anything wrong with you that is, you're pretty good looking, really... but we've been friends so long you're like my... brother, kinda, and I'm like a sister to you, so it's no big thing!"
Pausing a moment, she stopped walking and for the first time in years seriously looked at him with a critical eye. He was short, barely four-foot eight inches, with a slim build she would almost call 'willowy', his large brown eyes were nothing special, and his mousy brown hair could use a trim, but his face was nice enough looking with no blemishes or freckles.
"Actually Josh, now that I really look at you, you're pretty cute!" she admitted. "I mean, you're no Orlando Bloom, but... yeah... if you weren't you, I think I'd be crushing on you pretty good about now!"
Looking at her quizzically, Josh stammered for a reply. "Um... well... that's kind of... weird!"
"I know!" Tracy giggled as they continued heading for their lockers.
Resuming their walk, Josh did likewise with Tracy, really looking at her objectively. He had always known she was pretty. Her round face, framed by her shoulder-length chocolate brown hair, was fair complexioned, with just the right amount of freckles to be adorable. While she was four inches taller than he was, that was the case for most of the girls in seventh grade. Her clothes were girly, but stylish, and she walked with an air of confidence that just screamed, 'I'm pretty and I know it!'. He hated to admit it, but he realized that he felt the same way about her as she about him; if she were anyone else, he'd have already asked her out.
Seeing David at his locker, the two quickly closed the distance to him. "So, what's with the slowness? Aren't you two hungry?" he quipped at the two friends approaching.
"Can it, Davie!" Tracy admonished. "Josh has had a pretty rough day." Leaning in close, she whispered, "His 'girl' problem sits right next to him in fourth period... and she talked to him! It's Brenda!"
Looking at his friend, David nodded. "Yep... I see it. Glazed eyes, flushed cheeks, inability to speak spontaneously..." He smiled wickedly. "You got it so bad! No accounting for taste, though! Brenda? Ugh! Way too girly!"
"For you, maybe!" Tracy jabbed as she took her lunch from her locker. "But then, you think anyone more feminine than Leonardo DiCaprio is too girly! Including me... and Josh!"
"Please!" Josh begged as he closed his locker, lunch in hand. "No references to me being too girly?" Realizing he'd made reference to his 'problem', veiled though it had been, in front of David made him wince with regret. Oh God! Please don't let him ask what I meant by that!
"Whadda mean by that?" David inevitably asked.
Sighing and looking at Tracy, he shrugged and waved a hand dismissively at her. "Whatever. I can't keep a secret from him, anyway. I stink at it! You might as well tell him!"
While the three walked toward the cafeteria, and continuing while they sat down together, Tracy whispered in her brother's ear what Josh's latest trouble with his parents was. Finally catching him up as they began to eat, David started to chuckle.
"What's so funny, wise-ass!" Josh mumbled defensively.
Finally getting his laughter under control, David shook his head ruefully. "Just thinking that about a million T-girls would kill or die to be in your place right now... and you hate it!" Finally loosing control, his chuckling resumed at the humor of the situation.
Josh ate glumly while his best friend tried not to laugh at his pitiable situation until Tracy nudged Josh. "Brenda at twelve o'clock!" she whispered, making sure to look the other way as she did. "And she was looking at you!"
Josh could feel the heat rising in him as he spotted the girl of his dreams suddenly look away, pretending she hadn't just been looking at him. "I have to talk to her!" he said, mostly to himself. "I mean, she must be interested, right? She smiled at me... and was just looking at me..."
"Trying to talk yourself into it, big shot?" Tracy joked. "Just get up, walk over to her, and say 'Hi!' It's easy! What's the worst she can do?"
"Point and laugh?" he countered. "Scream 'Harassment!' at the top of her lungs? Say nothing and snub me? Pretty much anything other than say, 'I love you, Josh!' is a disaster as far as I can see!"
Finally controlling his funny bone, David caught up on the conversation quickly. "Oh, for crying out loud, Josh! Just talk to her! She's probably more afraid of you than you are of her!"
"That's spiders, not girls, Dave." Josh smirked.
"Spiders, girls... toe-may-toe, toe-mah-toe... Ouch!"
Withdrawing her hand from having slapped her brother in the arm, Tracy sighed and turned to her friend. "Josh? Do you trust me?"
"As you command, Miss Trace." he answered wryly.
"Stand up." she ordered him, and watched as he slowly obeyed. "Now walk over to her and say hi. When she says hi back, tell her how beautiful you think she looks today. Now, go!"
Caught in a near trance-like state, Josh simply followed Tracy's instructions to the letter. Approaching Brenda, he saw her look behind herself, as though searching for the person Josh was really looking at. Finally standing in front of her, he cleared his throat and almost whispered, "Hi."
Brenda blushed and looked at the floor a moment before smiling back up at him shyly. "Hi."
Nervously, Josh forced the words out of his mouth just exactly as Tracy had told him. "I just wanted to tell you how beautiful you think she looks today." His eyes suddenly popping out of his head as the girl giggled along with the two girls she was standing with, he tried to correct his compliment. "I mean, how beautiful you look today! Sorry!"
Smiling at him and thinking it was adorable how flustered he'd become, she was happy to see him come back to reality. "Thank you... Josh, right? Fourth period History?" Seeing him nod, she smirked a little before continuing. "...and first period Home Ec?"
Hearing the two girls next to her giggling mercilessly, Josh was overcome with a horrible feeling. Needing to know the truth, he started out with his own. "That was my parents' idea! Grownups! They can be so clueless!"
Not expecting that response, her smile melted. "You mean, you didn't take Home Ec just to meet me? I thought..."
Closing his eyes as he realized their giggling wasn't in mockery, but in giddiness over a perceived romantic gesture on his part, Josh lowered his gaze in defeat. "I'm sorry. I... I guess that's why you talked to me in History. Because you thought I'd done that for you?" Seeing her nod, he sighed in utter humiliation. The only reason she likes me is because my stupid parents think I'm trans! Beautiful! Turning to go, he was surprised when he felt a cool hand on his elbow.
"Wait!" Brenda said quickly, before drawing her hand back. "I... I guess it doesn't really matter that much why you were in Home Ec. I still think you're nice!" Looking up at the clock, she sighed and looked back at him. "I... We have to go, Josh." Pausing a moment, she pulled a pen out of the back pocket of her jeans and took Josh's hand. Writing carefully but clearly, she jotted seven numbers into his palm in her flowery script. "Call me?" she asked sweetly as she traced her fingertips over his, pulling slowly back away from him.
Stunned, Josh nodded and smiled while blushing more than she was. "Um... OK. When?"
Starting to move away with her two friends flanking her, she continued to stare into his eyes. "After school? Four o'clock."
Still grinning like an idiot, Josh watched her backing away from him. "OK! Talk to you later, Brenda!"
The three girls leaned in close to one another and giggled like mad as they walked toward the exit of the cafeteria. Looking down at his hand, Josh read the number quickly, just before he saw a half-eaten slice of greasy pizza being smashed into his open palm.
"Oh! So sorry, fruitcake!" Reggie faux-apologized. "My bad! Here, let me clean that up for you!"
Watching in horror, Josh saw as Reggie roughly slid the pile of cheese and sauce off his hand and quickly smashed a clean napkin in its place, rubbing hard enough to smear the numbers into oblivion.
"There! All clean!" he mocked. "Too bad about her phone number though, fag! Win some, lose some! Heh, heh, heh!"
Narrowing his eyes and putting his hands on his hips, Josh smirked. "You know Reggie, you're a jerk! A first-class Neanderthal! You keep calling me gay, but you know what I really am?"
"What's that, Pansy-boy?"
"A guy smart enough to read the number right away!" he gloated.
Sneering cruelly, Reggie stepped closer to Josh. "Guess I'll just have to pound it out of you then, Limp-wrist!"
"Is there a problem here, Mr. Hughes?" a man's voice boomed from behind the bully.
His sneer melting into a phony smile, Reggie turned to the imposing man. "Hi, Mr. T! No! No problem! Right, Josh?" Working to weasel his way out of the predicament, he tried to put his arm around Josh to look friendly while still being intimidating.
Ducking under Reggie's attempt at veiled coercion, Josh stepped further away from the boy. "As a matter of fact Mr. Tanner, Reggie here was just threatening to pound me for outsmarting him in his attempts to bully me!"
Moving quickly, Tracy came up to vouch for Josh's account of events. "It's true, Mr. Tanner! We all heard him!"
Smiling down at the now far-outnumbered boy, the school's Vice-Principal crooked a finger at him. "I know... I was standing right behind him when he said it. Come along, Reginald. You just earned yourself a three-day suspension for bullying a protected minority!"
Hearing himself called 'a protected minority' caused Josh to visibly wince. Great! The dull duo already got to the Vice-Principal and he's acting as my White Knight! That'll make me real popular! Wanting to stop Mr. Tanner and correct his perceptions, the only reason he didn't was that he'd have to explain the situation, that his parents were insane, in front of half the school. Just thankful of the save for the moment, he suddenly remembered he needed to write Brenda's phone number down before he forgot it.
Quickly running for his table, he remembered he left his pack, with all his pens, in his locker at the start of lunch. Turning to Tracy as the lunchroom started to empty out he asked, "Quick! Got a pen, Trace?"
Thinking fast, all she had was her purse with a few cosmetics. Reaching in, she grabbed a pink lipstick and handed it to her best friend. "Here! Use this!"
Taking the lip color, he grabbed a napkin and quickly scrawled the number down as best as he could remember it. "It'll do." he sighed as he handed the lipstick back to Tracy. "Worst case I'll just try a few variations and get a hold of her that way!" he sighed. "I'm pretty sure it's right, though!"
Hearing the bell to end lunch, the three headed back to their lockers together. On the way, Josh noticed a skinny boy with glasses looking at him with fire in his eyes. Not sure why he'd raised the ire of a member of the geek-squad, he shrugged it off and continued on his way to his locker.
"Jeeze, Josh!" David said as he took his pack out. "You weren't kidding! Protected minority? Are they serious? Since when are straight white males a minority?"
"When their parents tell the school that you're trans-questioning, that's when!" Tracy said in hushed tones. "It's part of the district policy now. They have to treat Josh like he's a minority!"
Slamming his locker shut, David moved in close to Josh. "I don't think I care for that situation!" he grumbled low. "That's supposed to be for people that need protection!"
"You think I like it any better, Dave?" he grumbled back. "I'll be lucky if this doesn't get around the whole school by the end of the day, now! The whole freaking school is gonna think I'm gay or trans!"
"And what's so terrible about that?" his friend argued louder.
Lowering his tone, he moved in closer to David. "Nothing, and you know I believe that! What if Brenda gets wind of it, though? There go my chances of a date! Same with pretty much every girl in school, not counting Trace!"
"Eww!" Tracy huzzed. "Don't be gross, Josh!"
"You know what I..." he shouted in a whisper, stopping when his temper flared. "You know what? Fine! You two wanna be that way? Abandon me? Kick me when I'm facing certain doom? Go ahead! Be just like everyone else! What do I care anymore! My life is effectively over, anyway! Daddy and Mom are gonna make me be a girl no matter what, so what difference does you two being total jerks to me make anyway!" Slamming his locker closed, Josh stormed off to his fifth period Math class alone.
His last two periods, English and Computers, seemed to make him even more certain that his rep was effectively ruined at this school, and High School after that unless his parents decided to move; an event he considered only slightly more likely than the Earth being struck by a comet. At that point, he was rooting for the comet. He could almost understand the words being whispered from student to student as he went through the typing exercises, but not quite enough to make out any details.
When at last the bell rang at two-thirty to end school, Josh made his way solemnly to his locker. There, waiting for him, was the same nerdy looking kid who had given him the evil eye at lunch. Walking up to him since he was blocking Josh's locker, he stopped and put a hand on one hip. "Did I like, crap in your Corn Flakes or something?" he asked snidely. "Just what's your issue with me? Not enough pocket protector in my wardrobe?"
Jason Dexter sneered at the boy in front of him. "Go ahead! Flaunt it! I hate you people! Reggie gives me a swirly this morning and what happens? Nothing! He gets a warning! He so much as threatens to touch you, and there's Mr. Tanner... carting him away! Protected minority? Ha! More like privileged few, if you ask me! Just you watch it, buster! You so much as look at me the wrong way, and I'll see to it your entire digital world becomes a nightmare! Fag!" At that Jason stormed off to go home.
Now the lowest of the low, the target of muscle-headed bullies, his own friends, and even the computer geeks, Josh couldn't take any more and ran to the nearest bathroom. Running into a stall, he sat on the edge of the toilet and began to sob. He didn't know how long he sat there, but eventually a janitor came in, forcing him to stop crying and dry his eyes on toilet paper.
"Somebody in there?" the older man grumbled. "School's closed! You kids are supposed to be gone by now! Get out!"
Unlocking the stall, he inched his way around the angry gray-haired man and ran out the door. Exiting the building, he saw all the busses were gone, and he was five miles from home. With no other option, he pulled out his cell phone and called his mother.
"This is Melanie, go ahead?" she answered.
"Mom?" Josh cried. "I... I missed the bus and I need a ride home!"
"Oh, angel!" she moaned. "You sound like you had a really bad day! Did someone harass you? We made sure the school knew about your situation when we enrolled you! Are you OK, sweetheart?"
Hearing her talking to him like he was a five-year-old girl nearly sent him over the edge again, but he still needed a ride home. Taking a slow breath, he calmed himself before continuing. "Can you come pick me up, Mom?"
"I'm sorry, sweetie! I'm stuck at work! Let me call your father and see if he can pick you up. OK? Hold the line, please." she stated out of habit.
Hearing his mother put him on hold while he stood around waiting, Josh sighed and tried to hold his emotions in check. A few minutes later, the hold music went away and he heard his mother's happy voice.
"Good news, princess! Daddy's on his way to rescue you!"
Almost retching at how disgustingly girly his mother was treating him, Josh swallowed his pride and nodded absently before answering. "Thanks, Mom. I appreciate it."
"Mommy has to go, sweetie. Love you!" she said right before hanging up.
Almost twenty minutes later, Fred came chugging down the street in the VW minibus. Glad that at least none of his schoolmates were around to see him, Josh jumped in the passenger seat as soon as the vehicle squealed to a stop.
"Thanks for coming, Daddy." he sighed as he buckled in. "Can we go?"
"First, I want to know what happened." Fred insisted as he put the parking brake on. "Why did you miss the bus?" Looking more closely at Josh, his eyes widened. "Have you been crying?"
Defensive, Josh furrowed his brow and sat up straight. "Of course not, Daddy! Boys don't cry!"
"You have been crying, sweetheart!" he said as he turned the motor off. "Tell Daddy what happened."
Sighing in frustration, Josh reasoned he wasn't going anywhere until his father was satisfied that he was alright. "It was nothing, Daddy!" he insisted. "Stupid Reggie Hughes tried to bully me and he got suspended. That and I had a little argument with Trace and Dave. I missed the bus 'cuz I had to go to the bathroom after the last bell and I took too long. See? It's nothing!"
Removing his seatbelt, Fred reached for the door handle. "Come on, pump... I mean... sweetheart! We're going into the office! I want a word with your Vice-Principal! He was supposed to ease your transition so you could feel free to proceed at your own pace! Now I find out you got harassed on your first day? This cannot be allowed!"
"Daddy, please!" he begged. "Mr. Tanner suspended Reggie for three days for just threatening me! Isn't that enough? Everyone knows it, too. He got caught doing it right in the middle of the lunchroom... the idiot..."
"Josh!" Fred admonished him. "We do not use epithets that are insulting to people with cognitive disabilities!"
Cowed, Josh continued. "Anyway, he did it in front of everybody, and Mr. Tanner told everybody there that Reggie was suspended for three days for his threat... and... um... why the punishment was so harsh."
Fred's eyes went wide. "He outed you? In front of the whole school?"
Burying his head in his hands as he continued to dig the hole deeper and deeper, Josh shook his head slowly. "No! I mean... not really. All he said was that it was for threats against a protected minority is all! Just let it go! Please Daddy! Just take me home!" Looking at his watch, he could see it was already a quarter after three and he was supposed to be calling Brenda in less than forty-five minutes and it took at least fifteen to get home.
"Sweetheart, I need you to listen to me, OK?" Fred stated calmly. "It's important that you not run from reporting a hate crime just because it's embarrassing! How many women are raped each year that don't report it because they're embarrassed? I need to know that you're going to be a strong woman who won't let men dominate you or make you fear them! I'm supposed to be your role model for what a good man is, and a good man doesn't let his daughter suffer a hate crime without seeing to it that the perpetrator is punished! Do you understand?"
Suddenly inspired, just moments from crying again, Josh looked over at his father. "Daddy, it can't be classed as a hate crime! Sure, the school has their standards for who falls under their rules of being a protected minority, but the law doesn't see it that way unless Reggie knew I was dysphoric! He couldn't have because no one knew until after Mr. Tanner suspended him!" He'd learned all about gender dysphoria and the law in his summer camp during one of the LGBT workshops he'd been signed up for by his parents. As soon as he finished speaking though, he realized what he'd said. Oh my God! I all but just admitted I'm trans to Daddy! Now I'm totally screwed!
Thinking for a moment, then fully processing what his 'daughter' had just admitted, at least to his ears, he smiled at Josh and pulled the door closed. "I'm proud of you, sweetheart!" he said with a tear in his eye. "You really are a wonderful daughter!" Reaching over, he planted a kiss on his forehead and buckled himself in. "Alright. You're being grown-up about this, so I'll trust it to your judgement. I'll take you home."
Josh was never so thankful to hear the chugging of the old Microbus's four cylinders as they began pushing the vehicle down the street.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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When Josh walked in the door, he headed straight for his room. Repressing an involuntary shudder at the ultra-feminine dwelling, he picked up his phone extension, only to hear the squeal of a modem. Suddenly realizing his father was still at 'work', running his computer consultant business from home on the house's second telephone line that was also his bedroom phone line, he lowered the receiver quickly. Hoping he hadn't kicked his father off-line, he thought quickly and went back down to his father's office.
He knew if he used his cell phone for anything other than an emergency, like earlier that day, his parents would know within a few days and he'd be in serious trouble. Their cell phones had less than five hundred minutes per month so as to not be too ostentatious, so they had to watch their usage carefully. Most months Fred would use up almost all of them doing his job, and buying extra minutes was considered a luxury they wouldn't tolerate.
"Daddy?" he asked in his sweetest impression of a girl's voice. "Can I use the main house phone to call a friend I met at school today? Her name's Brenda and I told her I'd call her at four." He choked the words out of his mouth in hopes that once he and Brenda were an item, his parents would finally give up their instance that he was a girl; and more importantly, that he liked guys. "I won't be long!"
Holding up a finger to Josh, Fred finished making changes to the HTML code and saved it before turning to him. "Say again, pum... sweetheart?"
"I met a nice girl at school today, Daddy. Her name's Brenda and I told her I'd call her around four. It's almost four now! May I please use the main house phone?" he almost begged. "I won't be on it long! I promise!" Playing on his parents' insistence that he was a girl, Josh did his best imitation of Tracy in the times when he'd seen her beg her father for something she wanted.
"Oh!" Fred smiled. "I heard about this! 'Little girl eyes' and their effect on Daddies! You know what? They're right! Come here, princess!"
Josh walked over to his father, still with pleading eyes and was shocked when his father pulled him up on his knee.
"Give me a big hug and a big kiss and the answer is yes!" he bargained.
Not having counted on that, Josh almost threw in the towel, but he was desperate. I have to talk to Brenda and make sure she doesn't believe the rumors going around school! he sighed inwardly. Steeling himself and smiling sweetly, he wrapped his arms around his father and hugged him, then forced himself to pucker up and give him a kiss on the cheek. Almost gagging over the ordeal, he tried to just remember when he was little and still did such things. Pulling back, he asked impatiently, "Now can I go call her?"
Laughing at his faux-girlish behavior, Fred shook his head. "Alright, sweetie! I know girls need to be able to talk on the phone a lot, so you don't have to ask to use the house phone when I'm at work anymore. OK, princess? Go call your new friend!"
Smiling with relief, Josh hopped off his father's lap, being sure to keep up the act until he left the room. "Thanks, Daddy! You're the best!" Running from the office, Josh bee-lined for the extension in the living room next to the couch. Picking it up and hearing the dial tone, he quickly punched in the number he'd written down in pink lipstick. Hearing the phone ring several times, a girl's voice answered.
"Hello?"
"Brenda? This is Josh! Sorry I'm a few minutes late in calling you. I had trouble getting home."
Silence filled the void between the two phones that seemed to stretch on into eternity. "Um... sorry. Wrong number."
Hearing the phone disconnect, Josh felt the lump rising in his throat. That was most definitely Brenda! he told himself. Gulping as he put the handset back down on the cradle, he was about to get up when he decided to try and mend a few fences. Picking up the phone, he quickly dialed the Edwards' residence. Hearing the line ring twice, he was happy to hear Tracy answer.
"Hello?"
"Trace! I'm so sorry for today! Please forgive me! I... I struck out with Brenda. She pretended it was the wrong number and hung up on me." The terrible silence again threatened to kill his last hope of having an ally against his parents. "Please, Trace? I'll do anything you say... if only you'll forgive me! I... I need you to be my friend. Please?"
Hearing a sigh over the line, Josh was finally relieved when she spoke. "Alright, I forgive you, you little pain! But don't you ever bark at me like that again! You hear me?"
"Honest Trace, I swear I'll never do anything like that again! You have my word of honor!"
"Good! Now about my favor..."
"What favor?" Josh asked confusedly.
"You said if I forgave you, you'd do anything I say, right?"
"Oh." Josh mused aloud. "I thought the promise was the favor."
"No, that was just my guarantee. You've never broken a promise with me Josh, and I don't think you ever will, so I knew the favor was good."
"Oh." he stated simply. "So what do you want?"
"First, I want to come over to your place."
"Well, that's a tiny favor. You do that all the time anyway! You know you're welcome here!"
"That's not the favor either. I'll let you know when it is, OK?"
Perplexed slightly, he shrugged absently and agreed. "OK. When you coming over? Dave too?"
"No, just me. I'll be there in about twenty minutes. I need to finish my stupid homework first." Tracy stated exasperatedly.
"Alright. I'll probably still be working on mine when you get here, OK?"
"Bye!"
"Bye, Trace!"
Recovered slightly from his heart-crushing loss of Brenda, Josh sighed and got up, hurrying to get his homework done before Tracy came over. Not even giving it much thought, he just poured himself into his assignments with dedication while sitting at the dining room table. He had a desk in his room, at least it looked like a desk to him, only this one had a mirror on the back for some reason he couldn't fathom. The less time he spent in there the better, though. It's bad enough that I have to sleep there under that girly canopy and on Strawberry Shortcake sheets! Blowing his hair up and out of the way, he reminded himself that he still needed to get a haircut.
Twenty minutes later, Tracy walked in the front door unannounced, as usual. "Hey, Josh. Almost done?"
Holding up a finger as he finished writing, just as his father did, Josh finally sighed as he placed the page in his binder for the next day. "Done! Sorry, Trace! I was late getting home. Daddy had to come get me."
Sitting in the chair next to him, Tracy nodded. "I could kinda see that you weren't on the bus. What happened?"
Josh told Tracy a brief version of Jason's confrontation and threat while he made them snacks out of rice cakes, peanut butter, and honey. "Honestly, it's not like I asked for any of this to happen! If I could see a way out of it, I'd take it in a heartbeat! Right now the only way out I see is turning eighteen and running for the hills!"
"But who will you be when you run?" Tracy asked before taking a bite.
Confused at first, Josh eventually caught on. "Oh, you mean my parents with their polar opposite idea of who I am? Best plan I have right now is stalling until I get a girlfriend." Remembering the events of the day, he sighed. "Of course, after today, I may still be trying to find a willing sucker when I move out! By now the whole school must think I'm gay... and even if I say I'm not they won't believe me because Mr. Tanner as much as said so in front of everyone!"
Wincing slightly, Tracy didn't want to share what she had learned after their fight, but figured Josh needed to know. "Um... They don't think you're gay."
Looking up, Josh sighed in relief. "Really? Whew! That's a load off my mind! Makes me wonder why Brenda gave me the cold shoulder, though."
Gulping, Tracy knew she had to just rip the bandage off quickly. "They think you're trans."
Josh stopped eating with a bite inches from his mouth. Stunned, he dropped the rice cake absently back onto the plate. "They... what? How!?"
Feeling guilty about having been at least cursorily responsible for getting Josh outed, Tracy put her food down too. "Um, remember when we were fighting at the lockers? Remember what you said?"
Thinking back, he tried to recall the exact words, but couldn't. "Not exactly no, but it was something like you two abandoning me and kicking me when I'm down or some stupid junk."
"You said, 'Mom and Dad are going to make me become a girl.'. None of us were paying attention to who was around or how loud we'd gotten."
Realizing what that meant, and how most of the school had seen him flirting with Brenda, he sat back in his chair wide-eyed. "They all think I'm a butch, lesbian, T-girl!"
"Pretty much, yeah." Tracy sighed. "I sure wish we could have a do-over for today! This is bad!"
"You don't know the half of it yet." Josh stated flatly. "There's a bonus prize." Seeing Tracy on the edge of her seat, Josh just let it rip. "I was so desperate to get a hold of Brenda this afternoon, and Daddy was going to take forever chewing out everyone at the school for 'endangering his little girl', so I... I sort of... on accident... might have gave him the vaguest impression that I was admitting I'm trans?"
Tracy's eyes shot open at the revelation. "And knowing him..."
"...he took it and ran with it like Carl Lewis, yeah." Josh finished for her. "So, now he thinks I'm 'Daddy's little girl' and he's started calling me princess. Mom, too. I'm so screwed!"
Suddenly perking up, Tracy got a smile on her face. "Wait a minute! No you're not! You still have to be... um... what's-it... where they have a shrink sign off on you, right? Isn't that part of the whole process?"
Looking like a man who'd gotten a pardon just as they were strapping him into the chair, Josh smiled. "Of course! I just have to blow the interview! Once a professional tells them I'm not trans, they'll have to believe it, tell the school, and then I can work my way out of all this! Yeah!"
Tracy looked up at him curiously. "So... you're sure you want out of it?"
Looking over at his once-more best friend, he was so elated by the news that it took him a moment to process her question. "Huh? Oh! Of course! I'm no girl! I like being a boy! No offense, but for me, being a boy is what it's all about! It's who I am as sure as I'm sitting here!"
Thinking a moment, Tracy stood up. "Can I see your room?"
"That train wreck?" he asked. "Why? It's horrid!"
"I just wanna see it for myself, is all. Is that OK?"
Shrugging, he picked up his rice cake again. "OK. It's your funeral! Don't say I didn't warn you, though! It's pretty over-the-top!"
"Come with?"
Stopping short of a bite, he put it down. "Why? I've seen it! Blech!"
"Please, Josh? I wouldn't feel right poking around your room without you there! It's just not... right."
Rolling his eyes, he got up and headed for the kitchen. "Let me wash my hands and clean up first!" he said defeatedly.
After putting away their snacks, Josh followed Tracy up the stairs. Once at the top she turned right and went into Josh's room, coming to a complete halt only a few feet in, stunned at the sight.
"See what I mean?" Josh huffed and crossed his arms as he leaned on the doorframe. "It's like a five-year-old girl had a dream about her perfect room and it escaped into my room!"
Looking around, she took in the entire feel of the place. "Actually, it's not that different from your old room, other than the carpet and paint color. That and the furniture is better."
"Better is a matter of opinion!" he snarked. "Open a drawer on the dresser!"
Walking over to the pristine piece of functional art, she slowly slid one of the drawers open; the runners so smooth they made almost no sound. Looking inside, she saw a huge assortment of girl's underwear, all perfectly organized and sorted by color, style, and material. "Josh!" she said breathlessly. "Did you sort this?"
"No!" he insisted. "I only opened the drawers once when I first got home from camp. Mom must have done it."
"I ask because... well... I've known you a long time... since we were four at least... and I've looked in your drawers before. You always kept them just like this... sorted and everything neatly folded just so."
Walking over to the dresser for only the second time, Josh actually took a good look at the contents this time, more than the momentary glance he'd given it previously. "Oh. I... I guess you're right, Trace. Mom must've copied my organization method and just duplicated it with girl things."
Closing the drawer and moving down to the next one, she found an array of bras to fit any style outfit, each one with slight padding to give the wearer at least an A cup; even if they were completely flat chested. "Damn, girl!" Tracy exclaimed. "I am starting to get envious! These are all super nice! Not Wally World brand like I have!"
"When I get out of this mess, you can have the whole shebang, Trace!" he offered. "No purchase necessary! You do not need to be present to win, all sales final, remove tag before using, void where prohibited!"
Not even listening, she moved down to the next drawer full of nightgowns and slips, the next full of tights and socks, and the lowest one full of winter sweaters. "Wow! I can't believe it! You weren't kidding! They really did go all-out!"
"They're nuts!" he explained simply. "You haven't even seen the worst part. Go open the closet! I dare you!"
Making her way over across the room, she slid the sliding mirror door over and almost lost her breath. "Josh! These... these are all designer labels! I know! I've seen some of them in the mall!" Moving the doors to the other side and hiding the wide array of blouses, skirts, and slacks, she once more lost her breath at the sight of all the designer dresses. Underneath them, on racks laid out by pairs, were an assortment of shoes to fit any occasion or style a twelve-year-old girl might need, from pink trainers to black patent leather heels.
"I'm thinking my mom really wanted a girl all along." Josh admitted. "My clothes were cheap stuff. You sure this is all like, expensive?"
Nodding absently as she perused the collection, Tracy looked over her shoulder at Josh. "Would you mind if I..."
"Knock yourself out, girl!" he offered, waving his hands toward the closet. "Have a ball!"
Carefully removing one of the designer dresses off the wooden rod, she held it up before laying it against herself. Enjoying the moment, she frowned after a bit as she pressed it up to her body. Digging in to look at the tag, she sighed and reluctantly hung the dress back up and checked several other tags. "Well that explains it!" she griped, moving to sit on the bed with Josh. "They're all size Medium! I outgrew Mediums two years ago! Damn, you're skinny! I hate you, you cow!"
Puzzled at Tracy's verbal assault that seemed to be completely sarcastic, Josh shook his head. "Why would you hate me? I didn't buy 'em! Mom did! It's not like I enjoy being one of the smallest boys in school!"
Looking at the dresses, Tracy bit her lower lip and turned to look him up and down, as if sizing him up. Getting up, she quickly walked over to the bedroom door and closed it. "Josh? Do you trust me?"
"Last time you asked me that question, my secret got blown all over the school!"
"I know! But you know that wasn't my fault, right?"
"Of course, Trace! It just sorta... happened! Nobody's fault... well, nobody that is except Reggie... well him and Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum who I laughingly call my parents!"
Walking over to the bed, Tracy took Josh by the hands and helped him stand. Guiding him over near the closet before letting go quite calmly and carefully, she pulled the dress out that she'd first admired and held it up, looking at it once more. It was an all satin navy blue A-line with a white satin tie at the waist, rounded collar, one quarter sleeves, and she desperately wanted to try it on. Short of that, she'd settle for seeing it tried on.
Turning slowly, she lowered the dress down until the shoulders of the dress were even with Josh's shoulders. Taking a step closer to him to actually put it in front of him to check the size, she watched as he took a huge step back in a near panic.
"Don't you even come near me with that, Trace! Not even as a joke!"
"I just wanted to see how it would fit on someone it's sized for! I would kill for a dress like this!"
"Well, find another human sacrifice! I think you're swell, Trace! Top notch! Cream of the crop! Top of the heap! But there is no way, no way on Earth, you're ever getting me in a dress! Sorry! Not ever!"
"Never?" she asked hopefully as she poured on the sweetness.
"Nope!"
"Not even just once?"
"Not even just pretend!" he insisted. "Trace, those damn things are like an icon of the living hell I've descended into! No!"
"Pretty please?" she asked, doing her best 'adorable little girl' face.
"Go downstairs and try that on Daddy! He's the sucker for a pretty pair of eyes! I'm immune until I become a father, myself! Not a chance!"
Smiling wickedly, Tracy leveled her secret weapon. "You owe me a favor! You promised!"
Having completely forgotten about it, he gulped. "You... you wouldn't!"
"I forgave you for treating me like dirt for only saying the exact same thing we'd been joking with each other about just a few hours earlier!"
Defeated, Josh slumped back to sit on the girly bed once more. "Yeah, I owe you. But please? Not this? Trace, I'm begging you! Anything else! My kidney! My left arm! My eyes! My first born! Anything!"
Looking at him, Tracy looked hurt. "I... I never thought I'd see the day..."
"See... see what day, Trace?"
Sighing, it was her turn to look defeated. "The day you break a promise."
Josh was crestfallen. She's right... you said anything and now you're trying to put conditions on it. Looking up at his best friend, he nodded as a tear rolled down his cheek. "Alright... you win. I said anything, and I promised. I won't go back on that. I'll do it, but only for you, and then we're even." Sighing inwardly, he felt a pang. And then I don't think we'll be friends anymore.
Standing up, he strode over to the closet, took the dress from her hand, and let out a breath. "OK, how do I put it on?"
"If you're gonna do this, I want to see the whole thing. Undergarments, shoes, nylons, the whole deal!"
"This is what you had in mind the whole time. Wasn't it, Tracy? When you made me make that bargain? Then you came right over?"
She noticed his change in tone and the formality with which he used her name. Looking at her shoes, she fidgeted and nodded. "Yeah. Just forget the whole thing. I tricked you into that promise. I don't wanna do this that way. It... it would just be... wrong. All wrong. This isn't anything like I thought it would be."
"How'd you think it would be, Tracy?" he snapped back at her.
"I don't know!" she whined as she walked toward the vanity. Opening and closing drawers at random, she didn't even look in them; staring out into space. "I... I thought that maybe... on some level... you wanted this! That all it would take to get past your dumb male bravado would be for someone to give you an excuse, so you could justify it to yourself! I... I guess I was just hoping..." Tracy sighed and looked down at the beautiful piece of furniture. "I've ruined everything. I've ruined our friendship, and all because of a silly idea that you... you..." Tears rolled down her cheeks as she tried to make herself say the words out loud.
"That I'd be what, Tracy?" Josh shouted. He already knew what she was going to say, he just wanted her to say it out loud. "Go ahead! Say it, Tracy! Say what's really on your mind! What am I, Tracy!?"
"The sister I never had!" she bawled as she forced the words out. Taking a tissue from the box on the vanity, she dried her eyes and let out a ragged breath slowly. Calming herself, she turned to look at Josh who stood exactly where she'd left him; still holding the dress. "I... I have a confession to make, Josh. I... I've always thought of you as more like my sister than a brother. You... you're just... too nice! You see how Davie and I are! He can be pretty mean sometimes! I know, I'm no saint, but... you care about my feelings like I do yours! You hurt when I hurt! You're always trying to make me happy or feel welcome! I... when I look at you... I don't see a guy. I see my sister."
Josh was stricken. This is the worst day of my entire life! he thought. Still holding the dress and not having moved an inch, he looked at his best friend, understood what she was saying, and took a breath. "You're just like them. You only want me to be what you want me to be, even if I don't feel that way. I want you to leave, Tracy. I don't think we can be friends anymore. I guess we never really were friends. Your friend was a girl that doesn't exist. For my part, I always liked you just for being you. I... I wish you could have done the same. Goodbye, Tracy."
Hearing the words felt like a sledgehammer to her heart. Unable to contain herself, full of regret and self-loathing for what she tried to do to her friend, Tracy ran from the room as fast as she could. Tears were streaming down her cheeks as she escaped down the stairs, through the living room, out the front door, and past Melanie on the porch just as she was arriving home.
Josh hung the dress back up in the closet and closed the door. Devastated beyond consoling, he walked over to his bed, lay down, and began to sob uncontrollably. Tears soaked his face, pillow, coverlet, and sheets as his mother entered his room; trying desperately to find out why both friends were so completely distraught. Unable to stop Josh's tears, no matter what she did or said, she eventually decided that her 'daughter' simply needed to cry it all out and then explain later.
She was only wrong on a single point; it was her son who was crying, not her daughter.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
--
Josh came down the next morning, showered, clean, ready for school, and completely empty of feelings. He'd cried himself to sleep, awoke late in the night, cried himself back to sleep, and finally woke up again shortly before his alarm was set to go off. Emotionally drained, he knew that his parents would be full of questions for which he had no answers.
"Good morning, sweetheart!" Melanie sang hopefully, but her smile died when she saw Josh's reaction, or in his case, the lack thereof.
"Good morning, Mom." he stated flatly as he sat at the table. His breakfast was already served, which was odd for a school day as he usually had to serve himself.
Sitting in the chair next to her son, she ran her fingers through his hair. "I think this weekend I'll take you down to the salon. How does that sound?"
Stopping in the middle of taking a bite, he glared at his mother. It sounds perfectly awful mother! I'd rather see Dad's barber like normal! Maybe get a buzz-cut? Knowing he was trapped in a net he helped sew himself into, he simply shrugged his shoulders emptily.
"I guess you just aren't feeling very nice today." she commented. "I see you're still wearing your camp clothes. You don't have to, sweetie! You could go up and change into any outfit you like!" Suddenly very conscious that she'd tried to push for Josh's first time out too soon, she backtracked and tried to undo any potential damage. "Or not! What you're wearing is fine, dear! Girls can wear anything we like! Even scruffy boy's clothes!" Seeing she wasn't getting any response at all, she tried a different topic.
"Are you ready to tell us what happened last night, sweetheart?" she probed gently. "I... I hate to insist, but we're very worried. She's your best friend! A girl needs her BFF! What upset the two of you so much?"
Thinking about what it was that had ended their lifelong friendship, Josh suddenly realized that the truth was the best answer, just told from a certain point of view. "She... she never liked the real me. She only liked what she thought I was. We aren't friends anymore."
Pulling Josh out of his chair, Melanie hugged him desperately. To his own surprise, he hugged her in return and, for a moment, felt like everything was going to be all right again. Then Melanie opened her mouth.
"Oh, sweetheart! I... I knew there was a risk that if you tried to be yourself your friends might turn on you! I've heard and read so many stories about it! I... I just never thought Tracy, of all people, would be like that! After all, you and Davie..." Feeling Josh's arms stop hugging her, Melanie leaned back to look at him. "What's wrong, dear? Is... Oh, no! Don't tell me! Did... did you and Davie have a falling out? Because you're..."
"We got in an argument." Josh explained in a sorrowful monotone as he sat back down. "He doesn't like me being treated different. He thinks it would have been better if you two had never told the teachers about me and I stayed like I was. Now all the kids at school know. I told him that it wasn't my fault, but he blames me anyway. I don't think we're friends anymore. I don't have any friends."
"Your father told me you made a new friend yesterday! Brenda? You called her up?"
"She pretended it was a wrong number and hung up." Josh said around a bite of cereal. "We made friends before everyone in school heard... when they heard the story that I'm really a girl. Brenda must have found out and now she's not my friend, either."
"Alright! So those people never really were your friends! You don't need close-minded people like that in your life! You'll make new friends! Friends who'll accept you for who you are, and not for what they expect you to be!"
Josh looked over at his mother and just rolled his eyes. You mean exactly what you're doing right now, mother? Hypocrite! Taking his last bite, he tried not to look too judgmental.
"Oh, I know, sweet pea! It doesn't seem like that now, but after a while it'll get better! Your father and I will see to that!"
Standing, Josh picked up his black rainbow pack, slung it over his back, and started to the door. "I'll see you after work, Mom. Gotta catch the bus."
"Oh no you don't, missy!" Melanie stated as she gently grabbed Josh by the elbow. "I'll not have you riding the bus with the same two so-called friends that deserted you just when you needed them most! I'll drive you to school, and your father will pick you up after! I think for a while you'd be better off where we can keep an eye on you... so you don't have to worry about getting bullied by those superstitious, patriarchal, transphobes!"
Sitting Josh down at the table, she knelt down beside him. "Sweetheart, you have to understand that there are a lot of very mean people in this world. People who would hurt you just for being yourself. It's not fair, but it's getting better all the time! Maybe even by the time you graduate things will be a lot better!"
Josh was too numb to care either way. In the space of a day, his entire world had flipped upside down. Tracy and David weren't his friends anymore, Brenda was dodging him, and his parents were going to be hovering over him night and day, pushing him to be something he wasn't. Life had been weird before, but now it was actually and truly a living hell.
Driving the car the five miles to school, Melanie tried to draw 'her daughter' out. She pointed at shops to see if Josh would like to go in and try things on and talked about all the things she needed to teach him that every twelve-year-old girl would have been taught years earlier. Finally, when stopped at a light, his mother pressed a point.
"Sweetie, I know we need to be patient with you, especially now that you've been hurt so badly, but are you ready to tell us your real name?"
"My name is Joshua Vincent Ryan."
Sighing, she shook her head. "You don't need to hide anymore, sweetie! That was the name your father and I gave you when you were born because we thought... well... to our shame we assumed we had a boy. I don't know if you can ever forgive us for not seeing the real you sooner, sweetheart!" Pausing a moment as they started moving again, Melanie struck on an idea. "I know! I understand now, baby! We never told you what your name should have been if we'd have known you were really a girl! You just accepted the name we gave you unconditionally! I need to pull over!"
Pulling into a strip mall parking lot, Melanie grabbed a tissue and dabbed at her eyes, trying not to ruin her makeup. Once settled, she turned and looked at Josh. "I'm so sorry! We should have named you Jocelyn! That was the name your father and I picked out for you before we assumed you were a boy! Jocelyn Viola Ryan! Yes! How do you like that, sweetie?"
"My name is Joshua Vincent Ryan. I don't have any other name. That's what's on my birth certificate, so that's who I am." he said emotionlessly.
"Oh, sweetie! Your father and I will fix that! You must be in so much pain! That's enough! You cannot go to school today! Not after the nightmare you went through yesterday! You need time to heal... to stop hating this part of your life that, right now, seems to have only brought you misery, just for trying to shine out as yourself! I'm such a fool! I'm doing this all wrong!"
Turning the car around, she headed straight back to their home and, once inside, immediately called the school.
"Hello? Yes, this is Ms. Ryan. I'm calling to let you know that my daughter will not be able to come to school today due to the trauma she suffered at the hands of some very cruel students there! I need to speak with Vice Principal Tanner immediately!"
Josh listened absently as his mother cemented the end of the only real friendships he'd ever had.
"Good morning, Mr. Tanner. Yes, Tracy and David Edwards, who had been good friends with my daughter before she transitioned, were both very cruel to her yesterday and terminated a life-long friendship with her, just because she's transgendered!"
Hearing a pause, Josh almost felt a twinge of hurt at the thought of never reconciling with his best friends, but there was nothing he could do.
"That would be fine! Yes! I absolutely agree! Sensitivity courses for the three of them I'm sure would see to it that they will, at very least, never bother my daughter again! Yes, thank you so much Mr. Tanner! I'm so glad this school district is so progressive in its policies! Yes! I'll let you know as soon as Jocelyn is recovered. Alright! Goodbye!"
Sensitivity courses? he pondered. For Tracy, David... and Reggie? Yeah... they're never gonna forgive me!
Melanie went into Fred's office and explained about 'Jocelyn' and why they would both be home today. After a few minutes, Fred came out and looked down at Josh sitting on the couch, apparently catatonic. Crouching down in front of him, Fred took the boy's tiny hands into his own.
"Princess? I wish I could make the world a better place for you. All I can do is be there for you, protect you how I can, and love you unconditionally. I hope that's enough!" Folding Josh into a warm hug, he was disappointed when Josh didn't return it as he'd done the day before. Letting Josh go, his father stood back up with his fists clenched. "I hope those kids get what's coming to them!" he growled. "They should all three be expelled! Hurting my sweet daughter like that! And for what? Just because she's being honest about herself?"
"Now, Fred!" Melanie tried to calm him, "We don't want to upset poor Jocelyn any more than she has been already, right? Just... go on back to work and let me take care of this."
While Fred wandered back to his office, Melanie led Josh up the stairs and into the bathroom across from the boy's girl room. Still just going where he was directed, Josh let his mother strip him of his clothes while a bath ran in the tub; the sweet scent of bubble-gum filling the air.
"I know you're a little old for a bubble bath sweetie, but I did a lot of reading about this, and I know you missed out on so much of just getting to be a little girl! So consider today, 'Jocelyn's Day'! We'll get you all clean, put you in a pretty nightgown, and then sit and watch movies together!" Hoping that it would at least make her 'daughter' smile, Melanie was disappointed when all she got as a response was a tear rolling down the cheek of her only child who was lost in a fugue state.
Josh was barely aware of what was going on. All his senses were cut off, numb, and fuzzy. When he started to revive from his catatonia, he realized with some shock that he was wearing a pink Little Mermaid nightgown and sitting next to his mother with The Hunchback of Notre Dame on the TV.
"Um... what happened? How did I get here? Where are my clothes? Why aren't I in school?"
Pausing the movie, Melanie smiled as Josh starting to become fully aware again. "Oh, sweetheart! I was getting a little worried! Your poor psyche took a terrible blow yesterday. You were in no condition to go to school! Don't worry! I talked to Mr. Tanner and you aren't in any trouble! He said you can take as much as two weeks to recover before you need to go back, alright? I also called my office and told them they'd have to do without me for as long as needed while we get you better. Alright? So you see, Jocelyn? There's nothing to feel bad about!"
Hearing her words and piecing together the parts of the day that he could remember, he became very self-conscious of what he was wearing. "Um... Mom? Can... can I go change into my old PJs?"
Turning off the movie, Melanie turned and faced Josh and put on a serious face and tone. "Jocelyn, you can't keep running back to your old life. It won't fix anything, and it's not what's in your best interests. Your father and I know what's best for you. We got rid of all the clothes you took to camp. That life is no longer a part of you. I know you're scared, maybe even mad or hurt, but you have to believe that we're just doing what's needed to help you and see to it that you become a productive member of society in whatever way you choose! But you can't do any of that if you don't stop trying to escape who you are. Do you understand?"
Seeing that he was now not only without any allies, but also no longer given any options, Josh simply gave up and acquiesced. "Yes, Mom."
"Not 'Mommy'?" Melanie asked curiously. Seeing Josh about to cave in to that too, she shook her head. "That's OK, sweetie! I know you're growing up, and you haven't called me 'Mommy' for a while! I... I guess I'll just have to miss hearing my daughter call me 'Mommy', is all. Mom is fine!"
Nodding in understanding, Josh was still feeling uncomfortable in only a nightgown and underwear. The flimsy material was almost see-through, making him feel nearly naked. "Mom? Could I go get... um... dressed?"
Smiling that he no longer seemed to be trying to hide in his old boy's life any longer, Melanie nodded. "I'll have to help you the first time sweetie, unless you've been doing a lot of research on your own about how a bra works!"
Shaking his head no, he shrugged and simply accepted his fate. Broken and tired of fighting his parents' drive to make him a girl, he relented.
The two climbed the stairs; his mother chatting on about teaching him color matching, how to coordinate an outfit, and how to style hair. As they reached the door to his room, Melanie laughed lightly. "One thing you won't be far behind on is makeup! Girls your age usually haven't had much experience with it either, so you won't be too far behind in that department, at least!"
About to open his closet, Melanie asked him, "Dress or no?"
Still shaken from the evening before with Tracy, he shook his head slowly. "I... I saw there were some pants in the closet. Can I just start with those?"
Worried that he was still trying to retreat into boyhood to escape the pain of his transition, she almost insisted on at least a skirt before she imagined what he'd look like in girl's slacks. "Alright. One step at a time!" Opening that side of the closet, Melanie took out a pair of black slacks and a navy blue top. Moving the doors again, she pulled out a silver belt and a pair of black flats. "One step at a time!" she joked, holding up the shoes. Going to the dresser, she pulled out a pair of knee-high socks, black panties, and a dark blue bra.
"I already have underwear on, Mom." Josh pointed out.
"You're wearing white underwear, sweetheart." she advised. "Since you'll be wearing black slacks, you need to match the undies to the outfit so they don't show through the material." Removing the nightgown in one swift move, Melanie handed Josh the black panties and turned her back. After she heard Josh say he was done, she told him to try to hide his privates between his legs and turned back around. When he once again finished and said so, she turned back around, smiled, and handed him the bra. Instructing him in its use, she helped him into it and adjusted the straps for him.
"Next time you'll have to make sure to adjust the straps yourself, sweetie." Seeing him nod, she had him put on the socks and slacks, giggling a little when he became confused about the button being 'the wrong way around'. Handing him the top, she watched as he pulled it over his head before giving him the flats.
Slipping his feet into the girl's shoes, he felt it odd that he didn't have laces or velcro to close to keep them on.
"Now, come over here and sit at your console set, sweetie."
"You mean the desk with the mirror?"
Laughing, she nodded. "Yes, the desk with the mirror. Women use it to do hair and makeup. People used to call it a vanity, but that's very misogynistic! They called it that because supposedly all women are vain! That's why we call it a console set." Taking hairspray, some spray-on conditioner, and a brush, she teased his hair into a semblance of a girl's style and showed him how to duplicate the effect. "When I take you to the salon, they'll trim your hair a little, but don't worry! We'll let it grow out if you want! Shaping it properly will just make it much more becoming in the meantime!"
His head dizzy with too many new ideas, Josh hardly noticed the beginner's lesson on makeup, other than a seemingly nonsensical expression, 'Less is more'. When he looked in the mirror, what he saw stunned him speechless. He looked like a twin sister to himself. Fighting the urge to rail against the image and break the mirror for showing it to him, he meekly submitted to his mother putting magnetic earrings and a heart-shaped locket on him.
"There!" she proclaimed happily. Making him stand and look at himself in the mirrored doors of the closet to see his whole image, she beamed with pride. "You look so much like me when I was your age!" she stated almost tearfully.
Taking Josh's hand, Melanie led him down the stairs and to the doorway of Fred's office. Knocking gently on the doorframe, the two watched as Fred, his back still to them, held up a finger to let them know that he heard them, but needed a minute to complete his thought.
Typing quickly, he tapped the save button and turned in his chair. "Yes?" he asked before his eyes locked onto the small child with his wife. Stunned at how naturally feminine his child looked, his smile spread slowly across his face until his whole expression was lit up with pride. "Princess! You look beautiful! Just like your mother!" he added as he glanced up at his attractive wife. Getting up slowly, he walked over to Josh before getting down on his knees and lovingly embracing his 'daughter'. "I love you, my little princess!" Looking up at his wife he asked, "Is princess alright to use? It's not demeaning, is it?"
Melanie shook her head slowly. "Not in this case, I don't think. It depends on how Jocelyn feels about it." After Fred slowly let go his child and stood back up, the two looked down at him. "Jocelyn, sweetie? Do you mind your daddy calling you princess?"
Josh was confused. His parents were happy and they were treating him with more care, love, and affection than any time he could remember since he first began fighting with them about his identity. I guess I should have just given in. he reasoned. Then they would have been happy sooner. Now that he had no friends, he was in desperate need of love from the only source he could get it. Shrugging, Josh sighed. "It's better than 'pumpkin'. No offense, Daddy."
The two happy parents laughed at the truthful answer. "I'm sorry, princess! It's just I'd been calling you pumpkin since you were a little baby b... baby." he covered his near slip-up. In truth, Fred could not think of the child whose diapers he had changed as a girl. Still, he was dedicated and single-minded when it came to the happiness of who he thought his child was.
"That's OK, Daddy." Josh answered. "If you call me pumpkin sometimes, it'll be alright. Just not in front of other people, please?"
Taking on a serious voice, he nodded. "I'll do my best, princess! I can't promise I won't mess up sometimes, because Daddy is human too, but I will promise that I'll always try. Alright?"
"Alright, Daddy." he answered emptily. "I should email my teachers and have them send me what assignments I missed today, so I don't fall behind. I... I miss school."
"It's only been one day, sweetheart!" Melanie pointed out. "You don't know how proud I am that you take your education so seriously! You go on and do that! I'll be in after a short talk with your father about some things."
Wandering off to his room, Josh entered it and paused a moment. This is my life now. I'm a girl, not a boy. Girl! It'll just make everything easier if I just do what they say. They do love me, so they must be right that this is what's best for me. Steeling himself, he marched over to his laptop that was sitting on his beautiful nightstand, opened it, and waited for it to power up. I'm a girl! he insisted to himself. My name is Jocelyn Viola Ryan! I'm a girl and I'll be happy as a girl!
When the desktop appeared, he brought up his email and nearly cried with frustration when he saw his old name still written there. Why can't they love me as Josh? Why do I have to be a girl for them to love me like this?
Dismissing the thought, he typed in his password, which also nearly made him cry since it was Tracy's middle name. As the inbox filled, he saw the most recent one was from David. Afraid to open it, he couldn't help himself as he clicked on it, desperate to learn if he perhaps still had at least one friend left and therefore some slim hope of getting his old life back. Reading the email though, his hope shattered.
Josh, (or should I say Jocelyn)
You are such a jerk! Tracy came home last night, bawling her eyes out! She said you threw her out and told her you weren't friends anymore! I thought I knew you, but no. You're just a selfish asshole! You think you're the only one with problems? Everyone has problems! Now I find out you're really transitioning! You lied to us, jerkoff! Your best friends! Who was there when your parents kept saying you were gay? Tracy and me! We helped you every way we could, you selfish prick! Your not who we thought you were!
Tracy and I now have to go to some lame-ass 'Sensitivity Training' class after school. With Reggie, of all people! And Mr. Tanner said it's because of you! Because you think we were mean to you! How many times were you mean to me? I knew you weren't serious when you'd call me a fag and shit! All I said was that you shoulda fought harder to let Mr. Tanner know you weren't really trans! But I guess now I know why you didn't! I guess you should be protected, same as me, but you could have just told us! We'd of accepted you! But no! You had to push us away! Just because we remind you of your old life! Well, fine! Hope you enjoy being a freak of nature!
Don't bother writing back. I'm blocking your email as soon as I send this! Good riddence, tranny!
David, your EX-friend!
Tears rolled down his cheeks as he read the email. Now certain he was alone in the world, friendless and trapped in a life not his own, he closed the laptop and just lay down on his bed.
By the time Melanie came upstairs, Josh was asleep on his bed and still dressed. Assuming that he was only tired from his emotional ordeal, she just covered him with an afghan, kissed him on the forehead, turned off the light, and closed the door.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Waking up in the dark, Josh looked around the room and saw out the window that it was night. Stretching, he felt a funny pain from his ears. Reaching up to rub his earlobes, he felt the magnetic earring fall off and onto his bed somewhere. The memory of his mother dressing him like a girl for the first time came flooding back to him. Almost getting angry about it, he then remembered the email from David and resigned himself to the fact that in order to get along with everyone, he was going to have to pretend to be the girl that everyone now expected him to be.
Getting up, he stumbled over to his door and turned on the light. Fishing around in his bed, he located the missing earring and took it over to the closet mirror. Hating the sight of himself looking so girly, he pushed the feelings down inside himself and forced a smile. He was pretty. He could at least be honest with himself about that. It was then that he most especially noticed the two obvious 'bumps' rounding out the front of his top that gave him a very nice young girl's figure. If he'd seen himself at school dressed this way, he'd have been tempted to ask himself out. That thought made him giggle a little as he put the earring back on his ear.
Going over to the vanity, he hesitated only a moment before he sat down and forced himself to fix his hair the way his mother had shown him. Satisfied that he was 'all put together' again, he got up and left his room. Coming down the stairs, Josh heard his parents talking at the dining room table. Slowing, he listened carefully.
"So anyway, it turns out in Ohio she can't get her birth certificate changed. That's the law... for now." Fred stated.
"That is so barbaric!" Melanie fumed. "How about the name change?"
"Wheels are rolling!" he answered optimistically. "The county doesn't require her to attend the hearing. We can do it for her. That way she won't be subjected to any further harassment. I already filed the paperwork, and the notice will be in the News-Herald tomorrow. Our court date is for Monday the tenth of next month. I think that's about everything."
"You're such a good father to her!" Melanie smiled. "I understand most fathers react very badly when their daughters transition! I think she and I are both very lucky to have you!"
Hearing his parents kiss made Josh roll his eyes as he sat on the steps. Well, that's it. he contemplated. Next month I'll have the name my parents want me to have and they'll be happy. It'll just be easier this way. Even as the sadness of it all threatened to consume him, he shook off the feeling, pushed it aside, and stood up, making sure to make noise as he descended the stairs.
"Jocelyn?" his mother called out.
"Coming, Mom." he answered as he made his way to the dining room. Stopping in the entryway, he made sure to fold his hands in front of him as he'd seen girls do all the time.
"Well!" Melanie exclaimed. "Did you fix your hair all by yourself, sweetie?"
Nodding at his mother's approval, Josh forced a smile. "Yes, Mom. Just like you showed me."
Hugging her child in pride, Melanie crouched down to look at him in the eye with a smile. "Sweetheart? I was thinking it would be nice to maybe have dinner out tonight? Do you think you're ready for that?"
The thought of going out in public dressed like a girl made his blood run cold, but he knew he could 'man-up' and face anything he chose to. "I... I'm scared... but I won't let that stop me!"
Hugging him once more, she took his hand. "Well Fred? Your ladies await!"
Grabbing wallet, keys, and purse, the two walked out the front door. When Josh crossed the threshold and stepped outside, his heart was beating so hard he thought it might explode from his chest. He only hesitated a moment before he set his shoulders, raised his chin, and confidently strode out the door. His parent's each took hold of one of his hands as they went down the walk toward Melanie's Prius.
Glad that it was dark out, Josh sat in the back seat while his mother drove them to a nearby restaurant. Watching the world through the window, he felt a pang of loss as they passed the cross street where Tracy and David lived. He could almost see their house as they sped by.
Parking in front of the restaurant, his parents got out and Fred opened the door for him to join them. Fear still gripping his heart, he forced himself to undo the seatbelt and slide out of the car. The three walked together toward the front door, Josh gulping as he hoped he could 'pass' and not be seen as a boy in girl's clothes. Then he found himself hoping he didn't pass, that finally the observations of other adults that he was obviously a boy would get his parents to listen to reason. He gave up on that idea as he remembered what he'd looked like in the mirror, still full of fear though as the hostess walked up to them.
"Hi, folks! I'm Linda!" she smiled. "Table for three, or are more coming?"
"Just three." Melanie stated.
Crouching down to his level, the hostess smiled at him, making his brain shut off for a moment.
"What's your name?" she asked sweetly.
Finally regaining his senses enough to realize she'd asked him a question, he stammered, "Josh-elyn." Flushing at nearly 'outing' himself to the first person he met, he tried to smile past it.
"Joshelyn?" she asked, quizzically. Slowly her face went from confused to understanding. "Oh! Jocelyn! Sorry! Sometimes I think I'm going deaf with all the pots and pans clanging in the kitchen!" Standing up, she addressed his parents. "Will Jocelyn need a children's menu?"
"She's twelve, young lady." Melanie said sternly. "She'll have a regular menu, thank you."
Her smile melting under Melanie's withering glare, Linda nodded. "My mistake. If you'll follow me, please?" Leading the trio to a corner booth, she placed the menus on the table and waited for them to be seated. "Your server will be out shortly. Anything I can get you in the meantime?"
"No thank you." Melanie stated coldly.
"Could I get a glass of water, Mom?" Josh asked softly.
"Certainly, sweetie!" she smiled. Turning to Linda, it melted into a frown. "A small glass of water for Jocelyn. We'll order with the server."
Seeing the pretty young woman walk away upset, Josh gulped in fear before he asked a question barely above a whisper. "Did... did I mess up bad, Mom? I'm just used to Josh."
"It's alright, sweetheart!" she consoled him. "You didn't do anything wrong! The young lady did when..."
"Linda." he interrupted her. "Her name is Linda."
Slightly taken aback by the interruption and for how particular he was being that she use the young woman's name, Melanie was caught speechless for a moment.
"Princess?" Fred jumped in. "It's not polite to interrupt."
"Sorry." he demurred.
Collecting herself, Melanie resumed her explanation. "Anyway sweetie, the young lady... Linda... assumed you were a small child, just because you're small for your age. That was wrong of her."
"She asked if I needed a children's menu." he pointed out, using his most deferential tone. "Doesn't that mean she wasn't assuming anything?" He knew his parents well enough to know they wouldn't yell at him for debating them. In fact, they'd encouraged him to all his life.
"She has a point, Mel." Fred opined as a neutral observer.
"It wasn't that!" Melanie retorted. "It was the way she greeted Jocelyn! Like she was five!"
"I thought it was nice!" Josh offered in counterpoint. "Linda made me feel like a real person and not just a child with hi... her parents."
Fred smiled. "She has you, Mel! Perception isn't as important as how she made Jocelyn feel!"
Defeated, Melanie sighed. "Alright. So long as she made you feel good, then I guess no harm was done. She still should have asked how old you were."
Just as Fred was about to make a counterpoint, Linda returned with a glass of water for Josh. "Here you are, Jocelyn! Your server will be right out." she told his parents. As she was turning to go, Melanie caught her attention.
"Just a moment." she said softly. "I wanted to apologize for my rudeness. You were just trying to be nice. That was very thoughtful of you."
Smiling at the backhanded apology that she took to be sincere, Linda looked at Josh. "It's fine! Really! It's just she's so adorable!"
"She is... isn't she?" Melanie smiled.
Blushing, Josh couldn't look back at the lovely young woman paying him so much attention.
After Linda departed, a man in his twenties came up. "Hello! I'm Brian! I'll be your server for tonight!"
Getting Melanie and Fred's drink orders and leaving to fill them, Melanie turned to Josh. "He's cute! Right, Jocelyn?"
Hardly reacting, Josh shrugged as he put the glass of water back down after taking a sip. "I guess. If you say so."
Furrowing her brow, his mother pondered Josh's seeming lack of interest in their quite attractive server. "I know when I was your age, a young man like that would have made me feel very nice!" she pointed out.
As the evening progressed, Melanie tried repeatedly to draw out Josh's opinions on what he found attractive in a boy. Meanwhile, Fred just sat and observed the two without comment.
Getting ready to leave, Linda waved at Josh as they walked toward the door. "Thanks for coming, folks! Bye Jocelyn!"
Josh couldn't help but smile, giggle a little, blush, and turn away at Linda's attention. Walking out the door, he managed to turn, look at her watching him leave, and wave goodbye to her.
Getting in the car and waiting a moment for it to warm up, Fred finally commented, "That was a lovely meal. Not as lovely as the company, though!"
"Oh! So the Sphinx speaks!" Melanie quipped. "I was beginning to think that your vegetarian lasagna had been mixed with super glue!"
"Just wanted to sit and enjoy the evening is all." he offered in explanation. "That and I wanted to watch Jocelyn. Make sure she was OK. This was kind of a big day for her!"
Putting the car in gear, his wife shook her head. "Still, you weren't very good company, Fred."
"I'll explain more when we got home, Mel." he stated cryptically. "Suffice it to say, I think we may have goofed on something."
"Oh, you can't say something like that and not explain!" Melanie exclaimed as she pulled into the light traffic. "What have we goofed?"
"Later please, Mel." he said, glancing back at Josh.
"Fine!" she shot back, frustratedly. "Later!"
When they returned home, Josh was sent off to take a shower and change for bed while Melanie and Fred talked privately in their bedroom.
Stripping out of his clothes, Josh almost felt like his normal boyish self as he showered, until he noticed his normal shower gel had been replaced with a girl's floral body wash. Likewise, his shampoo had been swapped for two smaller bottles, one labeled conditioner, that were covered in pictures of fruit. Sighing, he used the shampoo and read the directions for the conditioner.
By the time he was done, he felt even more trapped in the life of a girl than before. Combing out his hair, he did notice it was much easier than usual though. Thankful of at least that much, he wrapped his towel around his waist and came out of the bathroom, only to run into his mother just walking past the door.
"Sweetie!" she yelled quietly. "You need to cover your chest with the towel, dear! Your father shouldn't be able to see your chest!"
Blushing with embarrassment as his mother unwrapped the towel and re-wrapped it around his chest, he listened as his mother clucked her tongue.
"You should also wrap your hair in a towel." she added. "You'll need to dry it and brush it out before bedtime."
"Why?" he asked simply.
"It helps your hair look prettier." she explained. "It also makes it easier to manage in the morning."
"Oh."
"Now scoot into your room and get dressed for bed!" she said with a sigh.
Holding up the towel with one hand as he closed the door behind him, he went over to the dresser and opened the drawer full of slips and nightgowns. Shuddering that he had no choice but to wear one as he had no PJs anymore, he grabbed the nightgown on top, which was green and had Tinkerbell on the front, and threw it on his bed. Opening the underwear drawer, he was about to just grab any pair when he stopped.
I gotta do this. he grumbled to himself. I have to be a girl. It's what everyone expects of me now. Even Tracy and David. Thinking about his former friends made him almost start to cry, but he just pushed the feelings aside again and shook his head to clear it. No! I can do this! I can be a girl and like it! It's not so bad, really. At least I get a lot of attention.
Remembering what his mother told him, he looked over the underwear and picked out a green pair nearly the same shade as the nightgown. Putting them both on, he looked at himself in the closet mirror.
They're right. he concluded. I look like a girl. I guess I always have. Sighing in resignation, he went over to the vanity and opened the drawer containing his hair dryer. Plugging it in, he dried his hair with his towel, then began to blow it. Taking the brush, he did his best to brush it out, but only ended up getting the brush stuck in his hair. Frustrated, he wanted nothing more at that moment than to get out a pair of scissors and chop it all off.
Just then he heard a gentle knock on the door. "Come in." he sighed.
Melanie came in and gave a pained smile at his predicament. "Here, sweetie. Let me show you again." Untangling the brush, she explained how to brush out his hair like a girl again, making sure he took the brush several times to do it himself. "There! See? Not too hard!"
Giving a weak smile, he nodded to her. "Thank you for helping me, Mom. I really do want to try to be the best daughter I can for you."
Pulling him into a hug, Melanie sighed. "You are, sweetheart! Even if you didn't look anything like a girl, you'd still be the best daughter ever!"
Luxuriating in the affection, Josh sighed contentedly.
"Now, let's go downstairs. Put on your robe and slippers first, though. You shouldn't be out of your room in just a nightgown."
"How come I was earlier?" he asked as he pushed his arms into the sleeves of the fuzzy pink robe.
"That was a special circumstance, sweetheart." she explained as she closed the robe and tied the belt in a bow. "That was girl time, just you and me. Your father wasn't allowed in the living room."
Slipping his feet in the soft pink slippers, he giggled a little as they tickled his toes. "Oh. OK." Taking his mother's hand, they walked down the stairs together and into the living room where his father was sitting on the couch reading a book.
"There's my princess!" he smiled, setting the book aside. "Come sit next to Daddy!"
Climbing up on the couch and turning around to sit next to his father, he was surprised when his mother sat alongside, the two adults flanking him.
"Your mother and I wanted to talk to you about something." Fred began.
Groaning inside, he knew this routine. They're going to tell me something else about me that they think I'm not going to like! What else? Am I adopted? No... I think I'd like that!
"Sweetie? Your father and I were talking about some things we observed about you tonight." Melanie explained. "You didn't seem to care all that much about Brian."
"Who?" he asked, honestly confused.
"The young man who was our server?" Melanie asked, hoping it would spark a response.
"What was the name of the woman that greeted us?" Fred fished.
"Linda!" Josh smiled and blushed as he remembered the smile on her face.
Fred looked up at Melanie and smirked. "Told you!"
"No one likes a know-it-all, Fred!" Melanie said irritatedly. Sighing, she gave in to Fred's obviously correct interpretation of the situation. "Sweetie? I know you kept telling us that you and Davie had always just been friends. Since we assumed incorrectly that you were a boy, and that since Davie was gay and you were his closest friend, that you liked him... like a boyfriend. That wasn't true, was it?"
Josh shook his head slowly. You mean now, after he isn't my friend anymore, they're going to finally admit they were wrong? Grrahhh!
"Jocelyn?" Fred got his attention. "We know now that we were right all along, but for entirely the wrong reasons. You are gay, we knew that, but since you see yourself as a girl..." His voice trailed off, unsure how to say what he was trying to get at.
"We know that you're a lesbian, sweetheart. We still love you!" Melanie finished for him.
Stunned, Josh was about to explode at his parents for doing it again; telling him who he was without asking. Formulating how he was going to deny their claims, he realized that he in fact did like girls, and since he was honestly trying to learn to like being a girl, then what they were saying was true, from a certain point of view. Finding the revelation that they had actually guessed right for once even more stunning, he couldn't help but giggle. I guess that old saying is right! Even a stopped clock is right twice a day!
"What's so funny, sweetie?" Melanie asked puzzled. "It's not a dirty word!"
"Oh!" Josh exclaimed. "I know it isn't, Mom. It's just that... well... I guess I just figured that out for myself! I mean, that I... I like girls..." Remembering to include himself, he corrected it by saying, "I mean, that I like other girls... so I guess that does make me a lesbian. I... I just never thought about it before."
Sighing in relief that he didn't fight them on this revelation, Melanie shook her head. "I guess I'll just have to be the only one in the house that can appreciate the male form!"
"I, for one, am delighted about the prospect!" Fred opined. Seeing Melanie and Josh look at him, he smirked. "What? You think I was looking forward to seeing my baby girl go out on a date with her first boyfriend? I may be open-minded, but I'm still her father! Especially seeing as how beautiful she is!"
Blushing at his father's praise, Josh felt a warm glow inside at how he was being treated, but at the same time sad that he had never been praised for being handsome.
"Well, it's after your bedtime, princess!" Fred pointed out as he hugged Josh with one arm. "Give me a hug and kiss and then off to bed!"
Still feeling happy at the compliment, Josh hugged his father tightly and kissed him quickly on the cheek. Turning to his mother, he hugged her, though not as enthusiastically. "Night, Mom. Goodnight, Daddy."
Climbing down, Josh padded his way to the stairs then up to his room. Closing the door, he looked at the room and still shuddered at how girly it was. Oh well. he mused. I guess I'll just have to get used to it. Taking off his slippers and putting them next to his bed, he set his alarm before returning the robe to its hook.
Turning out the light, he got into bed just as he remembered that he'd never gotten around to emailing his teachers. Pulling the laptop over to him from the nightstand, he opened it and waited for it to come up. As soon as it did, he saw the email from David still open. Nearly making him cry again, he shook himself and closed it. Fine! David wants to be a jerk and not give me a chance to give my side of the story? He can just go take a flying leap! Composing himself, he opened a new email and quickly typed out a letter.
Hi!
I wanted to first say I am sorry I wasn't in school today. I am going to do my best to try and not miss too much school. Could you please send me my assignments for Wednesday and Thursday? That way I don't fall behind! I really miss school and hope to be back soon.
Thank you!
Jocelyn Viola Ryan
P.S. I guess I'll have to change my email soon. joshvryan doesn't really fit me anymore. Sorry for the confusion. I'll let you know what my new email is as soon as I get it.
Pulling out his school notebook, he entered in the email addresses for all his teachers and clicked the send button before he realized that he was offline. Duh, stupid! Daddy's network isn't online after he gets off work! Knowing that his email would go out as soon as his father went online in the morning, he closed the laptop.
He was just about to lay down when he heard a noise from his phone. Picking it up and flipping it open, he saw that he'd just gotten a text message. Pushing the button to open it, his stomach lurched when he saw it was from Tracy.
jocelyn. like the name. thought you were a boy. change your mind? i don't understand. call me pls?
Closing his cell phone, he put it down and quietly picked up the handset for his bedroom phone. Hearing the dial tone, he quietly dialed Tracy's number and only had to wait one ring before it picked up.
"Jocelyn?" Tracy answered.
"Yeah." Josh whispered.
"I'm so confused!" she nearly cried. "I thought you told me you were a boy! Now at school they say you want to be a girl? Is this just your parents making you or is this what you want?"
Wondering how to answer her question, Josh sighed. "I... I don't really know anymore, Trace." he whispered. "I'm just tired of fighting them! I don't think I really want to be a girl, but... well... it's just easier this way. Daddy and Mom took away all my camp clothes, so I don't really have any choice. I guess maybe I'll learn to like it."
"Wait! They took away your camp clothes? Then you have to dress like a girl now? Even at school?"
"When I go back, yeah. Mom wouldn't let me go today. I guess I kinda sorta blacked out on the way there. I don't know when I'll be back. Maybe next week."
"I... I wanted to say I'm sorry for being such a manipulative bitch to you, Joss. Can I call you Joss?"
"Sure. It's fine, Trace." Giggling a little, he tried to stay quiet. "Sorry! Joss and Trace just sounds funny!" Hearing his best friend's laughter filled his heart with hope. "Trace? I still like girls and I don't like boys. Is that weird?"
"No!" Tracy shouted quietly. "It's fine! You're not weird! You're you, and I like you! I just don't like-like you, OK?"
Pausing as he tried to repress his giggles, Josh heard footsteps coming up the stairs. "Gotta go, Trace! I'll talk to you tomorrow! Bye!"
"Love you Joss! Bye!" Tracy barely got in before Josh hung up the phone quietly.
Getting under his covers, he was just settling down when he heard the gentle knocking. "Come in?" he said softly.
Melanie crept in with Fred right behind her. "Just wanted to tuck you in, sweetie!" she said with a smile.
"You haven't done that for a long time!" he retorted. "I'm OK! I'm a big... girl." he self-corrected.
"We know, sweetie." she said in a whisper. "But we just wanted you to know how proud we are of you! You were very grown up tonight, but you're still our little girl!"
Biting his lower lip at the compliment that felt like an insult, he looked away, ashamed that he still hated to hear his mother call him a girl.
Melanie tucked him in tenderly and placed a kiss on his forehead, gently running her fingers through his hair before stepping back to let Fred in. "Goodnight, sweetheart!" she sighed.
Fred just leaned over him and kissed his forehead. "Night, princess! Pretty dreams!"
Once his parents left his room and closed his door, Josh tried to settle back and relax, but sleep eluded him for almost two hours while he tried to figure out just how he was going to learn to like being a girl when he hated it so much.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Waking when his alarm went off as usual, Josh turned it off and slowly stretched, trying to clear the cobwebs out of his head. As he opened his eyes, he was confronted by the reality of his situation as the short sleeve of his nightgown came into view. Slowly he remembered the previous day and how he'd caved to his parents' insistence that he was a girl.
Looking down at the ridiculously pretty fairy decorating the front of his garment, he sighed as he remembered he had little choice in the matter, save which ridiculously pretty thing he would wear.
Getting up, he stumbled across the hall into the bathroom, did the necessary, and returned to his room after washing his hands. Now he was faced with the greatest dilemma of his life; what to wear.
Looking in the closet, he noticed that there were only two more pairs of slacks and a pair of girl's designer jeans. Well, I guess I need to get used to it. Looking over his choices, he started going through the skirts and tried to find one that he thought wouldn't be too horrible to wear. Finding a jean skirt with no flowers, designs, or other overly girly patterns on it, he pulled it out and looked at it like examining an insect. Putting it on his bed, he went through the blouses and tops. He settled on a simple black top that the only thing girly about it was a small glittery butterfly on the front over the heart that was in subtle colors of dark red and green, so not very noticeable.
Putting it on the bed, he went to his dresser and pulled out a black bra, but stopped when he started looking through the underwear. Unsure, he tried to remember how Tracy looked when she wore her jean skirt. He'd never really paid that much attention to her clothes, but after thinking back he grabbed a pair of black underwear, then pulled out a pair of black tights. Undressing and getting into his clothes, he struggled for a while trying to determine how to put the tights on. Eventually he figured it out, then put on the top and skirt.
Walking over to the closet, he paused in front of the mirror to examine himself. Straightening the skirt, he found it irritating that there was no way to make sure you had it on the right way front. Opening the closet, he retrieved the pair of black and pink tennis shoes and put them on.
Fixing his hair in the vanity mirror, he looked at the jewelry and balked. There were too many choices and he'd never noticed a girl's jewelry before. The only thing he picked up was the heart locket that he'd worn the day before. Putting it on, he looked at himself once more before taking it off.
Well, I don't look horrible. I look ridiculous in this, but at least I look like a girl, anyway. Looking at his clock, he saw it was nearly six and his parents would be up soon. Not having any schoolwork to do, and knowing that his email wouldn't be sent until eight, he made his way down to the kitchen.
Readying his mother's morning cup of tea, he poured himself a bowl of cereal and sat down at the dining room table to eat. When the teapot began to whistle, he jumped up and turned off the heat; pouring the hot water into a cup with a teabag in it. He was just about to turn around when his mother's voice startled him.
"Jocelyn?" Melanie said tiredly.
Drawing in a sharp breath and spinning in place, he saw his mother peering down at him smiling. "Mom!"
"Didn't mean to startle you, sweetheart!" she apologized. "You picked that out all on your own? You look lovely!"
Looking at the floor and nodding solemnly, he pushed aside the feelings of self-loathing at being called 'lovely' and swallowed hard. "Thank you."
Looking at the steaming cup of tea steeping on the counter, she petted Josh's hair gently. "Is that for me, honey?" Seeing him nod, she sighed. "You're such a wonderful daughter!" she glowed as she added her sweetener to the cup. "Thank you!"
Shrugging, Josh cleared his throat. "I... I didn't know what jewelry to wear. Do I really look alright?"
Looking him over, she nodded in approval. "Very nice, sweetie. I think I would have gone with different shoes, but that's a personal choice."
Glad that he at least looked OK to other people's eyes, he went back to his breakfast bowl. "I realized the email I sent my teachers last night won't get to them until Daddy goes online after he starts work, so I won't get any of my makeup work until this afternoon, probably." he pointed out.
Watching him as she sipped her tea, she nodded in understanding. "That's alright. It gives us the day to go down and get your hair fixed."
Pausing mid-bite, he groaned inwardly. My hair? Ug! Whatever!
Sitting across the table from him, Melanie smiled. "Do you know what sort of hairstyle you want?"
Immediately, an image of himself with a buzz cut sprang into his mind. Sighing inwardly and knowing it was impossible, he shook his head slowly. "Whatever you think best. I don't know that much about girls' hairstyles."
"We'll ask the stylist." his mother dismissed his concerns. "I'm sure my girl Rachel can make you look even more gorgeous than you are!"
Finishing his cereal, he rinsed the bowl and spoon and put them in the dishwasher as usual. Feeling at loose ends, he realized he didn't know what to do with himself. "When will we be going to... um... the hair salon?" he asked, stumbling over actually saying the words out loud about himself.
"I made an appointment for you at ten, so we should be leaving by nine-thirty." she answered as she finished her tea. "You can just play in your room until then... or watch TV if you like!"
"I'll be in my room, Mom." he sighed. Making his way upstairs, he entered his room and closed the door. Looking at the time, he knew Tracy would be up and getting ready about now. Dropping down on the bed, he looked at the phone and felt an irresistible urge to pick it up and call her. Giving in, he dialed the familiar number and listened to it ring a few times before he heard her voice.
"Hello?" Tracy said with a curious tone.
"Hi, Trace. It's J... Jocelyn."
"Joss!" she nearly yelled.
Suddenly the sound over the phone became muffled. He could hear someone else talking, but couldn't understand the words.
"I'm talking to a girlfriend from school, Mom!" he overheard. "I'll be at breakfast in five minutes! I promise!" A moment passed before she returned to the phone. "Joss? I can't talk long. What's up?"
"I was just wondering..." he began nervously. "...did... would you want to come over after school?"
"Can I?" she said hopefully. "I would love to!"
Gulping, he knew he had to tell Tracy what he told his mother. "Um... first I need to tell you something. I told Mom that... um... that you didn't like me anymore because I'm transitioning. I know I sorta lied and now it's my fault you have to do that dumb Sensitivity Class thing, but believe me, doing that wasn't my idea! That was Mom! I just didn't know what else to tell her and she insisted I tell her something. So... I'd understand if you don't want to see me anymore. I was just sorta hoping..."
"Oh." Tracy said dejectedly. "Now it kinda makes sense. I probably should be super mad at you, but I'm just so happy we're still friends that I can't really get mad."
"You can punch me in the arm when you come over!" he offered.
Tracy took a moment while she giggled before she could answer. "You're so weird!"
Giggling along with her, Josh made himself get serious. "Anyway, Mom's like super POed at you and Dave now because she thinks you turned on me. Think you can manage a decent phony apology to her?"
"Are you kidding me? I do that all the time with Davie! Your mom's a total sucker for them by comparison! Remember that time she thought I was mad at you for being gay? I totally snowed her with that phony apology I gave you! I'm sorta used to it with your parents, anyway. They're always looking for something to be mad or offended about!"
"Tell me about it!" Josh conspired. "OK, so here's the plan then. You come over around four and do your thing. I'll beg her to give you another chance, and we'll be best friends again!"
"What about Davie?" Tracy asked uncertainly.
His smile melting away, Josh shook his head. "I don't know if he's ready to see me anytime soon... maybe ever. Especially the way he feels about girls." Josh admitted. "He sent me a pretty nasty email yesterday and blocked me from writing back, so I don't think we're gonna to be friends anymore." Suddenly, he heard Mrs. Edwards in the background on the other end of the phone line.
"Tracy Marie Edwards!" she shouted. "Get off that phone and get down to breakfast! You can talk to your friend at school!"
"But she's not going to school today, Mom!" Tracy whined and making Josh wince at the feminine reference. "She's staying home, probably for the rest of the week! I still have two and a half minutes!"
"Hurry it up, then!" Joyce Edwards shouted. "Two minutes!"
"Ug! Moms!" Tracy groaned. "I gotta go. I'll try and talk to Davie today and see if he'll listen to reason. No promises, though. He can be such an over-sensitive baby, sometimes!"
"Thanks, Trace!" Josh sighed in relief. "See you at four!"
"Bye Joss! I'm glad we're still friends! I think once you give being a girl a chance, you'll see that it's just how things are supposed to be! You are such a natural girl, anyway! See you at four!"
Hearing her hang up, Josh felt a pain in his heart at Tracy's parting words. She doesn't really like you. he heard echoing in his head. She's just like your parents. She'll only like you if you pretend to be someone you aren't. Sighing, he puttered around on his computer for a while before closing it and shaking himself out of his misery.
You gotta stop this! he thought. You have to try to like being a girl! Everyone thinks you are one anyway... and you don't really have much choice! You have no boy clothes anymore, so you might as well learn to like it! At least now Daddy and Mom will stop bugging you about boys! It's just easier this way!
Going to his closet, he took a breath and opened it to reveal the assortment of dresses his mother had bought for him. Repressing his revulsion, he took one down and looked at it. It was a cute floral summer dress that he'd love to see Brenda wearing. Trying to imagine himself in it, he shuddered and stuck out his tongue in disgust. Hanging it back up, he spent the next hour and a half going through all the clothes in his closet learning what his options were, what he might be able to stand wearing, and sorting them his own way.
Looking over at the clock and seeing that it was just after eight, he went back to the computer and checked to see if his father was online. Seeing that he was and that his email had been sent, he checked his inbox, only to find it empty. Feeling lonely, he shrugged. If I were in school, I'd be in PE right now. He thought about looking online for some way to convince his parents he was a boy, but he knew his father monitored his online activity. The last thing I need right now is them knowing I still think I'm a boy!
Closing his laptop, he went back to his clothes and stared at the collection of skirts, blouses, and tops. Seeing a definite pattern, he shook his head. Mom sure went all out to make sure I could only look girly! Turning next to his jewelry, he sorted them his way and started trying them on, using his own judgement of what he thought he'd like to see on a girl. Finding a pair of pink pearl stud magnetic earrings, he smiled at the look with his outfit. See? You can like being a girl! he lied to himself.
While he was looking over the makeup, he heard the knock on his door. "Come on in, Mom." he sighed.
Melanie smiled as she walked in and saw what Josh was doing. "Having fun?" she asked.
Shrugging, he sighed and looked at her through the vanity mirror. "Just re-organizing things my way." he explained. "Time to go?"
"Just about." she answered. "I like the earrings! Good choice! You have a lovely sense of style! You might want to change to a pair of low heels with that outfit, though." she offered. "The jewelry dresses the outfit up more, but the tennis shoes dress it down."
Gulping at the idea of wearing heels, he shoved the feelings aside. Letting his mother pick out shoes, he put them on and practiced walking in them for a few minutes before he saw his mother looking at her watch.
"Time to go, sweetie." she advised. "We don't want to be late."
Giving in to the inevitable, Josh nodded and headed out of his room and down the stairs. Making his way to his father's office, he knocked gently at the door to say goodbye.
Turning at the sound, Fred grinned at the sight. "Morning, princess!" he glowed. "You look beautiful! Heading out with your mom?"
Nodding and shoving away the feelings of revulsion at being called beautiful by his own father, he forced a smile. "Thanks, Daddy. Yeah, we're going to Mom's salon. I... I'm getting my hair styled."
"Need anything before you go? Any money?" he asked.
Blinking in shock at the suggestion of his father giving him money, Josh stared at the man wide-eyed. Daddy? Giving me money? The same man that lectured me for two hours on the evils of consumerism that time I asked for three dollars to buy a Beyblade? "Um... no. No thank you."
Walking over to Josh, he hugged him gently and smiled. "Just let me know if you need anything, alright? Gotta get back to work. Have fun, princess!"
"I will, Daddy." he sighed resignedly. "Bye."
Following his mother to the door, Josh felt his heart racing. Outside it was a bright sunny day, unlike the night before when it was dark out and he was dressed in black and hard to see. Now I have to walk out the door, in broad daylight, wearing a skirt! he shuddered. Petrified to a standstill and ready to run back to his bedroom, he mentally slapped himself. Stop it! he shouted at himself. You have to do this! You have to learn to just accept that this is how things are! You're a girl now, and you can't hide in your house forever! So stop sniveling like a baby and face it like a... he stopped as he realized how much he was fooling himself.
"What's wrong, sweetheart?" Melanie asked as she walked back to him, having realized he wasn't following her anymore.
Shaking his head to clear it, he took a breath and let it out slowly. "Just nervous, Mom." he answered. "It's one thing to go out wearing slacks and a top after sunset, but wearing a skirt? In broad daylight?"
Looking at him, she shook her head. "You look fine! If anyone tries to harass you, they'll have me to answer to! Come on!" Holding out her hand, she waited for him to take it.
Pushing his fear and self-loathing aside once more, he took his mother's hand and forced himself toward the door.
Walking out the door turned out to be easier than he'd feared. It was just another day. The walk to his mother's car was likewise uneventful, as was getting in and riding to the salon. He did have to have a lesson from his mother on how to sit in a car in a skirt that made him blush embarrassedly, but no one was around to see, so he just shoved the feelings aside.
Once there, he again forced himself to go in the salon with all the pride of a condemned man who'd accepted his fate walking into the gas chamber; head held high.
Rachel turned out to be a nice lady who doted on Josh continuously, trying to build up his self-confidence that he was pretty and looked nothing like a boy without saying anything that would 'out' him. When she finished, Josh looked at himself in the mirror, holding back tears of sorrow as he pasted a phony smile on his face at the cute hairdo she'd given him.
Afterwards, Melanie took him to lunch. With each compliment he received, he died a little more inside as his boyish pride and male ego was assaulted on all sides. Stoically, he endured it and pushed forward, convinced that all he needed to do was learn to like it.
By the time they returned home, following a stop at Melanie's office and having to endure all the glowing praise and promises of support from her co-workers, Josh was exhausted from the mental anguish alone. Going upstairs, he checked his email and saw that four of his teachers had written back to him. Reading over the assignments, he pulled out his backpack and dove into the work, thankful that he could immerse himself in something other than hair, clothes, jewelry, makeup, and all things girly.
The next thing he knew he was hearing the doorbell ring. Quickly looking over at the clock, he saw it was five after four already. Slamming the math book closed, he raced downstairs just as Melanie was opening the door.
Tracy stood outside the door with a meek look of shame covering her face. "Hello, Ms. Ryan."
Narrowing her eyes, she looked down at the girl as though she could freeze her solid with a glare. "What do you want, Miss Edwards?"
Looking at her shoes, Tracy gulped and looked helpless. "To tell Jocelyn I'm sorry for reacting so badly, Ms. Ryan. I feel so ashamed."
Skeptical, Melanie shook her head. "You did a very cruel thing, Tracy! Why should I trust you not to hurt poor Jocelyn again?"
Josh knew this was his cue. Walking up to his mother, he cleared his throat to let her know he was there. "Mom? We should at least give Trace a chance to apologize. Everyone makes mistakes. It would be pretty narrow-minded of us not to at least hear her out, right?" he added the last part, knowing it would force his mother's hand.
Tracy looked up and had to force herself not to smile at the sight of her best friend. Looking from Josh to Melanie, she gulped and pleaded with her eyes. "Please, Ms. Ryan! I don't know what came over me! I was just in shock, is all! It was like Josh died, but now I know he never really was there at all. It was my fault I couldn't see Jocelyn right there in front of me the whole time!" Tracy had rehearsed the line over and over until she knew she had it down pat and could deliver it with a straight face.
About to say something, Melanie was interrupted by Josh touching her arm. "Mom? Please? Give her a chance? She's my best friend!"
Overcome by her own guilty feelings of not having seen that her child was transgendered sooner, Melanie caved. "Very well. Come in, Tracy."
Stepping into the living room like a frightened deer, she looked over at Josh and smiled. "You look beautiful!" she said honestly.
Swallowing hard at what he felt was a backhanded compliment, he forced himself to smile back. "Thanks! Mom took me to get my hair done."
Moving in close to Josh, Tracy looked him up and down. "Nice outfit! Shoulda worn tennis shoes, though!"
Giggling at the coincidence and looking up at his mother who just rolled her eyes, Josh looked back at Tracy. "Thanks, Trace. Mom made me change outta mine when we went out!"
"Moms!" Tracy laughed before she turned to Melanie. "No offense, Ms. Ryan!"
Sighing and seeing that Tracy seemed utterly sincere in her acceptance of Jocelyn, Melanie smiled. "It's fine, Tracy! Would you two like a snack?"
"I just had one, Ms. Ryan." Tracy declined.
"Not hungry either, Mom." Josh refused. "Can I show Trace my room?"
Still concerned that Tracy might just be putting up an act, only to turn on Josh as soon as her back was turned, Melanie shook her head. "I don't know if that's such a good idea just yet, Jocelyn. She hurt you very badly."
"It's mostly my fault, Mom." Josh tried to take some of the heat. "I just sorta dumped it all on her at once and didn't think how it would make her feel, then just expected she would be happy about it. That wasn't fair. This is a pretty big change, and Trace is still just a kid like me!"
Sighing, she nodded in resignation. "Alright, but I want the door left open and Tracy?" she turned to the girl. "I want you to promise me that you won't do anything to hurt Jocelyn's feelings or make her feel guilty for just being herself!"
Looking at Melanie directly in the eye, Tracy had no problems saying what she really felt. "Ms. Ryan? I promise you that all I see in her is my sister Jocelyn, and all I want is for her to be my best friend again. I never want her to go back to being... being that other person she pretended to be. Honest! I swear!"
Seeing the truth of it in the girl's eyes, and hearing the way she put it, Melanie's suspicions were at last put to rest. "I believe you, Tracy! Go on then, and let this be a lesson to you both! Never try to force someone to be something they aren't! We all have to love one another for themselves, not for what we expect them to be!"
Nearly gagging on the hypocrisy she was showing, all Josh wanted was to get away from her. "Can we go now, Mom?" he asked impatiently.
Seeing a nod from her, the two ran up the stairs as fast as their legs could carry them. Entering Josh's room, he only closed the door partially to help muffle their voices, leaving less than an inch open.
Letting out a breath, Josh turned to Tracy and saw her sitting on his bed smiling.
"Told you!" Tracy said happily.
"Told me what?" Josh retorted.
"That you'd like being a girl!"
"I wouldn't go that far!" he stated with a snort as he crossed the room and sat next to her.
"Well, you look happy!"
"Looks can be deceiving." he pointed out. "Still, it's not totally horrible! At least this way, Daddy and Mom are off my case! I just don't see any choice. They kinda backed me into a corner... a very pink corner." he said as he looked around the room.
"Maybe it's for the best. You were always pretty girly anyway. Now people will just see you as a normal girl instead of a weird boy."
"A normal girl who's a lesbian in a boy's body that wishes she was a boy!" he sighed. "I must be crazy!"
"If you are, you're in good company!" Tracy smiled. "You really do look cute in that outfit! Did you pick it out or your mom?"
"I did." he admitted. "I was trying to go for something not too girly, which, given my choices, is a pretty limited selection."
"Well, no boy I know could pick out an outfit that well coordinated. I love the earrings! You gonna get your ears pierced next year? I am!"
"Not if I can help it!" he balked. "I draw the line at permanent body modification!"
"You think the 'rents will try and push hormones on you?"
"Probably, but I'm holding on that argument until I can figure a way to win it. I already lost the battle of the name without a shot fired. By this time next month, I'll officially be Jocelyn Viola Ryan."
"I thought you said you were trying to like being a girl?"
"I am!" he stated, standing up and pacing the room. "I'd just like a little choice in it, is all!"
After Tracy left later that evening, having spent the afternoon talking about clothes and school, Josh finished his missed work and went downstairs for dinner. His parents deciding that he'd go back to school on Monday, it left Josh three days to get used to the idea of showing up to school as a girl. All day Friday he emailed back and forth with his teachers and Tracy. With every email, he could see the lacy noose closing in around his neck, forcing him to be stuck as Jocelyn for the foreseeable future.
Everyone he knew was pleasant, supporting, patient, and damnably unwilling to take a stand against his transition. While he kept telling himself that he could learn to love being who everyone expected him to be, he just couldn't figure out how, and kept secretly hoping that someone, anyone, would stand in his way. Where are all these supposedly intolerant people when you need one? he grumbled inwardly.
The weekend passed too quickly for Josh. Saturday was a blur of shopping with his mother and Tracy, each trying to suggest to him what outfit looked the best on him, rarely agreeing with each other and never with his ideas of a nice pair of jeans and a T-shirt. Sunday Josh spent with his parents the same way they always did, lounging around the house and watching TV.
He couldn't even remember what they watched as he spent the entire day contemplating how many ways he was going to get beaten up and picked on at school. He only remembered his mother complaining about all the nine-eleven anniversary coverage and how the news wasn't reporting other more important things, like the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. He always tuned out his parents whenever it came to politics though, so he ignored everything after that.
As he lay on his bed, Josh tried to focus only on the good things in his life. My parents love me. Tracy is still my best friend. All my teachers are totally cool with me showing up as a girl tomorrow. I should be happy. Why can't I just be happy? Hearing the chime from his phone, he picked it up and read the text message from Tracy.
hey gf. looking forward to tomorrow. it will be fine! you'll see! night!
Smiling a little, Josh sighed and texted her back.
Thanks! I'm a little scared. Glad you'll be there with me! Just wish this was all behind me. Love you! Goodnight.
Once he sent the message, he closed the phone and put it on his nightstand. At least I won't have to face it alone! he thought as he closed his eyes.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Josh could see the group of kids milling about around the bus stop. Coming to a halt, he very nearly chickened out and ran for home. His mother had offered to drive him to school, but he had refused.
"I gotta face 'em sooner or later, Mom." he pointed out as he ate his oatmeal.
"I just don't like the idea of you not being protected, sweetheart!" Melanie almost whined.
"Trace will be there!" he countered. "I'll be fine, Mom. I have to do this!" Not really talking to his mother when he said the last part, it was mostly directed at himself.
"Alright, sweetie." she sighed. "But I want you to call me if anything bad happens, OK?"
Steeling himself, he tugged gently on the denim skirt of his overalls outfit, wishing the skirt were just a little longer. He was wearing thick white tights, so his legs weren't visible, and the white long-sleeve top under the overalls covered him from neck to wrist, but he still felt almost naked. Forging ahead, he listened to the steady sound of his pink and white trainers striking the sidewalk as he closed the distance to the other kids.
Tracy saw him as he approached and ran up to him with a huge smile. "Hi, Joss! You look great!" she said as she reversed direction and walked along with him.
"Thanks!" he replied shakily. "You too!" Lowering his voice, he almost whispered, "Did you talk to David?"
Tracy nodded and sighed. "Yeah, but he's being a total jerk! He knows better than to pick on you, though. Mom made sure of that, but I wouldn't try to talk to him. Oh, Mom wanted to know if you were still planning on coming over to my house after school."
Josh nodded as the two approached the five other kids at the stop, one of whom only six days earlier had been his best friend, but now wouldn't even look at him. Pushing aside his feelings, he sighed as he stopped with Tracy beside him while the girl took out her phone and quickly texted her mother.
"OK, I let her know. She can't wait to meet you!" Tracy crowed. "When is your dad due back?"
"Wednesday afternoon." Josh answered softly, not wanting to attract too much attention. "He flew out this morning before I was even up. I wish he was here now."
"Already missing him?" Tracy asked as she spotted the approaching bus.
"Yeah." Josh said glumly. "He can be just as bad as Mom sometimes, but at least he listens to me some of the time!"
The bus pulled to a stop and he and Tracy lined up behind the other kids, David completely ignoring the two the entire time. Stepping on one at a time, Josh was last on and right behind Tracy. Making brief eye contact with the bus driver, he noticed Mary smile at him, so he responded in kind for just a moment before following his only friend down the isle and into the seat next to her.
Exhaling heavily as he kept his cool, he noticed several of the other kids looking at him funnily, like they were trying to figure out who the new girl was. Smiling back at them, they all seemed to lose interest quickly and turned back to their own friends.
"Well that wasn't too bad." he said barely above a whisper.
"Quit worrying!" Tracy said just as softly. "Everything'll be fine! You'll see!"
While the bus slowly made its way to the school, Josh repeated his internal mantra. I'm a girl. Everyone says so. I look pretty. I like being a girl. It's just easier this way. Everything will be fine! Even as he repeated the words in his head, he felt the self-loathing building.
The bus pulled to a stop at the school, Tracy and him joining the line of kids getting off as his heart raced with fear. At last when he stepped out and joined the crowd of kids making their way into the building, he felt Tracy take his hand and give it a squeeze. The two walked hand-in-hand together as they made their way inside. Knowing he had to stop at the office, he pulled away from her and let go of her hand.
"See you in first period!" Tracy said as she headed for her locker.
Entering the office, Josh walked up to the counter and waited for the school secretary to see him.
Mrs. White smiled as she saw the young 'girl' waiting to be seen. "Yes, dear? How may I help you?"
"I'm supposed to see Mr. Tanner." he stated quietly. "I have a note for him from my mother."
Confusedly, the woman looked at her list of meetings for the morning but didn't see a girl's name on it for the Vice-Principal. "I'm very sorry dear, Mr. Tanner is expecting to see a young man about now. I don't see you on his list. You'll have to wait until lunchtime, unless it's an emergency. What is it about?"
As Josh blushed embarrassedly, he was saved from having to explain by Mr. Tanner's voice. "It's alright, Mrs. White." he stated from his office door. "Show Miss Ryan in, please."
Her brows furrowing in further confusion, she looked at the name on her list and saw the last name was the same. "Are you Josh Ryan's sister?" she asked as she buzzed the gate open to let Josh in behind the counter.
Shaking his head sadly, he went through and followed the secretary to Mr. Tanner's office without saying a word.
"Thank you, Mrs. White." he said politely. "That will be all."
While the baffled woman returned to her work, Josh took a seat across the desk from the Vice-Principal. "Here." he stated softly. "It's from my mom."
Taking the envelope, he removed the letter, read it briefly, and placed it on his desk. "Do you know what this says, Jocelyn?" he asked. Seeing Josh shake his head slowly, he nodded. "When your parents enrolled you here, we received a letter from Dr. Williams, your psychiatrist. In it he laid out that you were likely transgendered and that we should consider you as such until such time as you told us otherwise. Looking at you now, and having talked with your mother last week, I see that you've made your decision."
Josh's eyes widened. He knew Dr. Williams as a co-worker in his mother's office, but Josh had never seen him as a patient. Slowly he realized that his mother must have convinced the psychiatrist to rubber stamp a letter for her that he was transgendered without even seeing the man. Melanie was going to force him to be a girl no matter what.
"This note that you just handed me is a copy of the filing to change your name with the county probate court. According to policy, we're supposed to wait until the court officially changes your name, however I see no need to stand on the letter of district policy here. It's quite obvious that calling you Josh now would not only be cruel, but also quite incorrect!" he smiled.
"The Principal, Dr. Fredricks, will have a talk with your teachers to explain. They all know your correct name already, and have been instructed to treat you as a girl at all times. I'm telling you this because I want you to feel that she and I are on your side, here. Any questions?"
Feeling helpless and overwhelmed, Josh just shook his head.
"Well then!" he smiled. "Let's get you to class before you're tardy!"
Walking with Josh, he handed the secretary the letter and instructed her to go ahead and change all of Josh's school records over to his new name. As Josh was walking out the door with him, the boy looked back at Mrs. White who stared back in shock, not able to believe that he was in fact, Josh Ryan.
While the two walked toward Josh's locker, Mr. Tanner explained a few of the differences now that he was going to school as a girl. "You can't use the boys' rooms any more, Jocelyn. However, you might not want to use the girls' bathrooms either. This school has four special needs bathrooms. Do you know where they are?"
Nodding, Josh gulped. "I... I have to use the handicapped bathrooms?"
"Special Needs." he corrected Josh. "We don't use that term here."
"Yes, sir." Josh replied.
Approaching his locker, the man continued. "You should use either the coach's office to change for PE or the special needs bathroom in the gym. You'll be following the school curriculum for girl's PE, but you can't use the girls' locker room. It's not safe. As far as this school is concerned, you are a girl. If you use the girls' restrooms or locker room though, you might be harassed or bullied and we don't want that."
Josh opened his locker only to have a note fall out and onto the floor. Just as he was about to pick it up, Mr. Tanner got to it first. "Is this yours?" he asked curiously.
"Um... yes!" he stated as he took the note and stuffed it in his pack. Getting the things he needed for the first half of the day, Josh closed the locker and followed the man toward his first period class, just as the bell rang indicating three minutes until class began.
"What's your first class?" he asked Josh.
"Home Ec." he answered as they made their way.
"The class is called Family & Consumer Sciences, Jocelyn." he corrected Josh as he subtly changed direction toward the right hallway.
Walking the rest of the way in silence, Josh noticed Brenda looking at him as she went in the Home Economics room down the hall ahead of him.
"I think I'm fine from here, Mr. Tanner." Josh sighed. "You can't guard me every period!"
Nodding at him and smiling, he silently watched Josh walk in the classroom before turning back toward the office.
As soon as Josh entered the room, all talking stopped as more than two dozen girls stared at him in wide-eyed awe. Making his way to his desk, he sat gracefully and glanced over at Tracy to his left, happy to see her genuine smile. Glancing around nervously, he spotted Brenda just behind him on the right. She was looking at him with a confused expression, as though trying to reconcile the idea of Josh in a skirt with the reality.
When the bell rang starting class, Josh just tried his best to focus on his work and the lesson of the day; Introduction to Nutrients. When the class neared the end and Josh found himself with nothing else to do, he reached into his pack and retrieved the note that had fallen from his locker.
Opening it, he puzzled over it for a few minutes before putting it back.
At last the bell rang ending class and the girls all got up to go to their second period classes. Josh hung back with Tracy and watched as Brenda left the room, stealing glances at him at every opportunity.
"I got a weird note in my locker." Josh explained as he walked with Tracy.
"What did it say?"
"It was just some expressions, some from the Bible, I think." he answered.
"Let me guess, all stuff about burning in hell or something?" Tracy sneered.
"No." Josh explained. "That's the weird part. They were all about love, not passing judgement, and other nice stuff! Some I never heard of!"
"Huh." Tracy puzzled. "Did they sign it?"
"No, but I know it was from a girl." he answered as they turned a corner. "Boys, I mean other than ones like me, don't write that nice."
The two went their own ways, Josh walking for the first time alone through the halls. He saw Reggie spot him from a long way off. Oh no! he groaned to himself. Quickly increasing his pace, he made it to the gym before Reggie could get near him. PE was just like it had been the previous Tuesday, the only difference being his gym outfit, which consisted of the girl's shorts and top instead of the boy's gear.
Going on to choir, Josh noticed the girls in his section looking him over. Blushing, he just tried to ignore their stares. By the time he got to his history class, he wasn't even paying attention to the stares, whispers, or thinly veiled tittering from the kids around him. Sitting next to Tracy, he was glad to see her smile. Returning it, he glanced over at Brenda who seemed to be ignoring him. Going through the motions, he found it difficult to focus on his work, oftentimes finding himself daydreaming, pretending he was just another boy.
When the bell rang for lunch, he walked with Tracy to their lockers, only to see David there ahead of them.
"You go on ahead, Trace." he offered. "I... I'll wait until he leaves."
"No, Joss!" she insisted. "You have every right to go to your own locker!" Taking his hand, Tracy nearly had to pull him along.
Walking up to the lockers, Josh glanced over at David, who had his back turned. Putting in his combination, Josh opened the locker and put away his pack and retrieved his lunch while Tracy did the same. None of them spoke. Before Josh was done, David slammed his locker closed and walked off in silence.
"Jerk!" Tracy said as she closed her own locker. "He's just butt-hurt 'cause you're a girl and he hates most girls!"
Josh gently pushed his locker closed and joined Tracy in walking toward the cafeteria. "It's not like I chose this!" he grumbled. "Oh, and you'll love this latest news. Mom got Dr. Williams at her office to sign off on me, sight-unseen. So now I really have no choice!"
"I thought you were learning to like it?" she asked confusedly.
"I'm trying to." he admitted. "I just don't like being railroaded into it! I wish things could just go back to the way they were before. Everyone just keeps staring at me and whispering behind my back!"
"They're just jealous 'cause you're so pretty!" Tracy tried to cheer him up, not realizing it had the opposite effect.
Taking their seats in the lunch area, they passed the time in silence while no one else sat near them. Finally, as they were almost done, Josh looked around at the empty seats at their table. "You keep hanging around me and you'll ruin your social standing, Trace. You'll be as big a social outcast as me!"
"I don't care!" Tracy said with a huff. "You're my sister and best friend... and BFFs don't abandon each other!"
His last few classes were just a repeat of the first four. Nobody talked to him, everybody stared, and nothing bad happened. When at last it came time to go home, he met Tracy at their lockers just as David was leaving.
"Fine! Tell the freak I hope she enjoys being the laughing stock of the whole school! Just keep it away from my room!" David snapped at his sister as he stormed off.
"Ooo! That complete..." Tracy began as she turned around and saw Josh. "Joss! You heard that... didn't you?"
Nodding, he opened his locker and collected his things. "It's fine. I won't bother him. I just wanna get on with life and hope everything settles down."
Walking toward the front of the building together, Josh noticed a girl in the courtyard standing and looking at him. While he'd gotten used to being stared at, he noticed she wasn't staring, just watching him. When she noticed him looking back at her, she suddenly looked embarrassed and turned away.
"Trace? See the girl by the tree? The one in the long black skirt?"
Looking where he'd indicated, she nodded. "Yeah. What about her?"
"Who is she?" he asked. "She was looking at me. Watching me."
"That's Jennifer Healy. She's in my math class and went to my Intermediate school. I thought you said everyone was staring today?"
"She was different, though." he said as they walked toward their bus. "She wasn't staring... just... kinda watching... and when she saw I was looking back, she looked away.
"Weird." Tracy noted.
Climbing on the bus, they saw only one seat still completely free. Taking it quickly, the two chatted together until they reached their stop. When Josh stood up to get off, he found himself face to face with David trying to do the same. Unable to get out of his way, and seeing the look of anger in the boy's eyes, Josh turned and quickly walked off the bus, hearing David right on his heels as he fought to keep from crying at the loss of one of his oldest friends.
Stepping clear of the door and jogging the opposite direction from Tracy's house, Josh stopped after he was behind the bus and only then turned to see David stalking his way home. Sniffing back the tears, he watched Tracy walk up to him.
"Joss! Are you OK?"
"No!" he answered, wiping a tear away just as it escaped his right eye. "He hates me! David hates me! And now I'm supposed to go over to your place until Mom gets home from work!"
"Come on." Tracy said, taking his hand again and smiling. "Let's go. Mom is dying to see you!"
Walking the short distance to Tracy's house, they could see David ahead of them, the boy storming into the Edwards house while they were still a few houses away. Slowly wandering up, the two finally reached Tracy's front door and went in.
"Mom!" Tracy yelled. "We're here!"
Joyce Edwards walked into the entryway from the hall leading off to the bedrooms where Tracy and David had their rooms. Seeing 'Jocelyn' for the first time, she stopped and looked at him from head to toe with a stunned expression. Finally shaking herself free of the spell, Joyce smiled at him warmly. "It's very nice to finally meet you, Jocelyn!" she said happily. "I must say, I don't know why I didn't see it sooner. You're lovely!"
Feeling the sting of the compliment after his near confrontation with David, Josh pushed the feelings away and smiled. "Thank you, Mrs. Edwards." he said shyly. Looking up at the woman with her curly red hair from a bottle and fair complexion, he tried to look the woman in her bright green eyes.
"Mrs. Edwards?" she replied. "Sweetie, you've been calling me Aunt Joyce for years! No reason to stop now!" As she talked, she approached the two, finally standing in front of the child she'd known since age three. Taking him in a hug, she stepped back and turned to walk in the kitchen. "You two want a snack? I'm making one for David who's exiled himself to his room!"
"Thanks, Mom!" Tracy said as she led Josh through the kitchen and into the dining room. "We'll be in here doing homework!"
After fixing them a few finger sandwiches, and delivering a plate to David's room, she brought them their snack and sat at the dining room table with the two apparent girls. Seeing a moment when the two took a break from their assignments, she took the opportunity to talk.
"Jocelyn? I want to apologize for David's behavior." she stated seriously. "You don't deserve it. He's being very petty!"
"That's OK, Aunt Joyce." he answered, finishing his bite. "I understand. Dave doesn't have to like me. I'm different than I used to be."
Watching him closely, Joyce shook her head. "No... not really. Other than the clothes, which you look very nice in by the way, you're still the same wonderful... girl... that you've always been!" her pause a very obvious near pronoun slip that she'd managed to avoid.
Josh smiled when she nearly called him a boy, only cementing further into Joyce's mind that he was still a happy child and was just being grateful to her for calling him a girl.
"May I ask you something?" Joyce asked delicately. "If you'd rather not talk about it, just let me know, but I was wondering... when did you know?"
"Know what?" Josh asked innocently.
"Well... that you were... a girl." she stated plainly.
Unsure how to answer, Josh tried to find a way of putting it that wasn't an outright lie. "Well, to be honest I'm not really sure. I'm just me and I've always just been me. It's not like I woke up one day and suddenly went, 'Oh. I'm a girl.' or anything."
"Huh." she pondered his answer. "But when did you know you were... well... different... from other boys?"
"Oh, I've always known that!" he said with an honest grin, happy that she'd essentially just called him a boy. "I think the first time I really felt different was in Kindergarten. Until then, the only boy I really knew well was... um... was Dave." he finished with a note of sadness as he took another bite of sandwich.
Sighing heavily, Joyce just looked at Josh for a moment. "Thank you." she said finally.
"For what?" he asked curiously.
"For being you!" she said with a smile.
Letting the two get back to their assignments, the afternoon passed quickly. Once done, they went into Tracy's room and played as they always had, taking turns picking what board games to play as they simply enjoyed each other's company. When Melanie arrived to take him home, she was pleased to see them getting along just as they always had, watching them play for a few minutes without either of them noticing her or Joyce's presence.
"OK, girls!" Joyce said at last. "Time for Jocelyn to head home!"
Looking up and seeing his mother there, he was suddenly brought back to reality. The whole time he'd been playing with Tracy, he'd forgotten he was supposed to be a girl. Even Tracy's new nickname for him was so close to his old name that he hardly heard the difference.
For her part, Melanie took his abrupt mood shift to be simple disappointment that he had to stop playing with Tracy, never knowing the real reason he suddenly looked so sad.
The rest of the evening proceeding uneventfully, Josh went to bed and closed his eyes, hoping against hope that he would wake up and find it had all been a bad dream and he would find himself still at summer camp.
When his alarm woke him to the same reality he'd fallen asleep to, he nearly cried in frustration. Taking a shower and getting dressed, this time in a pair of black slacks and a simple white blouse, he still made sure to style his hair correctly and picked out some simple rhinestone earrings. Looking himself over, and seeing nothing but a girl in the mirror, he found himself almost angry with his impossible situation.
Going through the motions, he went to school and tried to focus, but found school much less fun than he used to. Hardly paying attention, he was in a fog most of the time, continually thinking about how much better things would be if he could just be a boy again. No one harassed him all day, and going home to Tracy's house was thankfully free of run-ins with David. Once more he forgot he had to be a girl as he played with Tracy before his mother came to collect him.
Depression settling in as he got ready for bed again, he wondered how long he could keep it up. As he lay down in his canopy bed, he began to worry when his parents would try to put him on hormone blockers, making sleep very restless that night as he had nightmares of growing breasts the size of basketballs. Getting up in a grumpy mood, he almost stomped into the bathroom to get clean.
Going back into his room, he forced himself to stop and look at himself in the mirror with nothing on except a towel.
I'm a girl. he sighed as he looked at his body. It's so not fair! What boy looks like I do? He sighed as he opened his closet, looking for something to wear for the warmer weather expected. Opting for a light knee-length floral skirt and a poet blouse with lace around the neckline, he brushed out his hair and put on a pair of white pearl stud earrings. Looking himself over, he sighed as his heart filled with self-loathing and anger at the world for ending up in such a horrible state.
Unlike David, he didn't have anything against girls. He quite liked them, in fact. More than just as girlfriend material, they made better friends, were nicer, and he could relate to them better. Everything about me says I'm a girl. he pondered as he looked himself over and judged himself quite pretty. I think like a girl, I talk like a girl, I write like a girl, I laugh like a girl, I cry like a girl, I throw and run like a girl... So why do I hate being one? It just doesn't make any sense!
Reaching the bus stop, he saw to his horror that Tracy wasn't there, but David was. Walking up to the assembled kids, he waited alone for a few minutes and kept watching down the street to see if she was coming, but saw nothing of his sole friend and ally. Pulling out his phone, he texted her quickly.
Trace? Where are you? The bus will be here soon!
It only took a moment for the reply to come.
i have a stupid cold! sry! begged mom to go anyway, but she said no way. let me know if you need me. luv u sis! xxx
Gulping in fear, he realized this would be his first full day of possibly many ahead where he would be totally and completely alone.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Petrified as he saw the bus coming, Josh knew it was too late to get a ride from his mother as she'd already gone to work. Getting a ride with his father, which wasn't an option as he was not due back until that afternoon, would have been more humiliating than getting on the bus in a dress. He honestly respected his parents and their right to express their opinions, but he'd gotten enough of a hard time in Primary and Intermediate school when his classmates would see the rolling campaign ad for the Democrat Party. Not because of their politics, but simply because it looked so tacky.
When the bus pulled to a stop next to him, he queued up at the back of the line and waited for everyone else to get on. As he climbed aboard, the driver noted Tracy's absence.
"Jocelyn?" Mary asked delicately, "Where's Tracy?"
"She's home sick with a cold, Miss Cartwright." he answered shyly. Looking at the seats, he found one that was empty near the front and sat down, not wanting to make eye contact with any of his classmates without Tracy there to support him.
The bus ride was excruciatingly long, seeming to drag on for hours over the thirty minutes it took to reach the school. Several times he saw kids just about to sit with him, only to suddenly change their minds and move to another seat when they saw who was sitting there. When at last they arrived at the school, he was up almost before they stopped and got a minor look of disapproval from Mary. Looking down embarrassedly, he waited for the doors to open, then practically ran into the building.
Making his way to his locker, he opened it to find another note on the same style paper as before. Glancing at it briefly, it was similarly written out with expressions of peace, brotherhood, hope, and kindness. Reading it nearly made him cry just at the sentiment. He didn't know where most of the quotes were from, sure they were from the Bible, but a few he recognized from his History book as being made by Martin Luther King and Abraham Lincoln. Putting it in his pack, he had a smile on his face as he put things away in the locker and closed it. As the door swung shut, he saw David at his own locker, the two locking eyes a moment before Josh quickly turned away and went the opposite direction, even though he needed to go past David to get to class.
Milling about in the courtyard, he sat down while David took his time. While he waited, he saw Jennifer Healy once more looking at him as she walked to class when she thought he couldn't see her. Wondering what her deal was, and fully expecting her to be someone like Jason who had a grudge against him, he sighed and waited until David finally left and started toward his first class.
Entering the Home Ec room, Josh took his seat and got out the homework from the night before. He wasn't happy with the quality of his work, and felt guilty that Tracy had helped him far more than he'd helped her. Still, he forced himself to shove the feelings aside and re-double his efforts to stay focused in class and keep up. Finding himself daydreaming far too much, by lunchtime was feeling very isolated, scared, distracted, and depressed.
Sitting in the lunchroom and eating alone, he sighed sadly and barely kept the tears at bay. Everyone else there had someone to spend lunch with, but he was now a complete outcast. Picking at his food, he was nearly startled to death when he heard the voice behind him.
"What? No dykes to hang with the freak anymore?"
Closing his eyes, he felt the true terror of loneliness when it mattered most; when you were being threatened. "Tracy's not a dyke, Reggie." he spat. "She likes boys."
Sitting next to Josh, Reggie sneered at him. "Well, I guess that's why she sits with you, huh? The dude in the dress!"
"Leave me alone, Reggie!" he said slightly louder, but still barely audible more than a few feet away.
"Or what?" he challenged. "It's a free country! I can sit here if I like! I think I'll sit next to you every lunch! Whadaya got, anyway?" he asked just as he snatched Josh's lunch bag.
"Give that back!" Josh said more sternly.
"In a minute!" Reggie replied. "I just wanna see what a lady-boy like you has for lunch! Probably tofu and soy yogurt! Heh! Heh! Heh! Oh! Look! You have cookies? Aren't you afraid they'll ruin your girlish figure? How'll you turn tricks at night if you become a fat cow? I better take these... for your own good, of course!"
"Knock it off, Reggie." came a familiar voice from behind the bully.
Turning to see David standing behind him, Reggie chuckled. "Well, well, well! Come to have your share, fag? Here, you can have the rest of its lunch. Just a dumb bologna sandwich, though."
"Give it back to her, Reggie..." David growled as he clenched his fists, "...or else!"
"Or else what, fruitcake?" he said as he stood up and flexed in front of the smaller boy. "Gonna make me, faggot?" he tried to push David away.
Smacking the bully's hand away, David made the boy yelp in surprise. "Don't touch me!" he warned him.
Infuriated that David wasn't intimidated, Reggie hauled back his fist and, much faster than anyone could have expected, landed it squarely across David's jaw, sending the smaller boy flying over the table with a loud crash.
A grin spreading across his face at having laid out Josh's protector with one punch, he suddenly realized he'd be in big trouble if he were caught. Turning to run just as Josh leapt from the table to run to David's prone form, Reggie slammed right into the approaching body of Mr. Tanner, who grabbed him to prevent his escape.
"Hey! Lemme go!" Reggie screamed. "You can't touch me! My parents will sue your ass into oblivion! Let me go!"
Waiting for a school security officer to show up, he calmly restrained the boy while Josh helped David sit up. "Is the boy alright?" he asked.
Josh looked at David and saw the blood seeping from his mouth. "Oh, David! You should have just let him do what he wanted! It was just lunch! I wasn't hungry anyway! You're bleeding!"
Shaking his head to clear it, David looked at Josh like he'd lost his mind. "Of courff I'm bleeding! He knocked a tooff out!" he hissed as he looked around before spotting his wayward dentition under the next table. "Vere it ish." he said pointing at it, causing a boy at the table to crawl under to retrieve it.
Getting back to his feet with Josh's help, he glared at Reggie with a look of raw hatred and fury. Trying to climb over the table to get at his attacker, Josh wouldn't let him.
"Let me go, Joff!" he demanded. "I'm gonna kill that fon of a bitch!"
The Vice-Principal released Reggie as the security officer put handcuffs on him and turned to the furious boy. "David? You need to calm down! I know you're angry, but I'm not going to let you continue the fight!" Looking at Josh, he nodded. "Are you alright, Jocelyn?"
Nodding as he continued to try and restrain his ex-best friend, he was helped when a teacher showed up and grabbed hold of David's left arm.
"You two come with me." Mr. Tanner said calmly. "We'll need you to write a statement about what happened. OK, Jocelyn?" Seeing Josh nod as he was obviously near to tears, the man sighed and started walking with the security officer and a restrained Reggie toward the office.
The teacher started to make David come along when the boy jerked his arm free. "I can walk on my own!" he insisted as he started toward the office, the teacher following close behind to ensure he didn't try to run after Reggie.
Just as Josh was about to follow, he stopped and turned to the boy who'd picked up David's tooth. Grabbing a paper napkin, he held it out to the boy. "Here. Let me have that, please?"
The boy looked at Josh confusedly for a moment before he hesitantly put the tooth in the offered napkin. "Sure."
Wrapping it up, Josh quickly followed the teacher escorting David.
Jennifer watched as he hurried his way across the lunchroom, holding the edge of his skirt as he ran; an ever so slight smile on the girl's face.
Henry Edwards walked into the office at the same time Fred Ryan did, both having been called to the school for their children's involvement in a fight.
Seeing Josh standing in the nurse's station, Fred thought the worst and leapt over the counter to run in. "Jocelyn!" he cried out.
Turning to see his father running toward him, he moved out of the nurse's office just in time to be enveloped in his father's arms. "I'm fine, Daddy! It's Dave! That Neanderthal Reggie... the boy that threatened me on the first day? He punched Dave and knocked out one of his teeth!"
Making his way over, having waited for the secretary to buzz him in, Mr. Edwards approached the two.
"Hank!" Fred said as he released Josh.
Slowing briefly as he nodded to Josh's father, he entered the nurse's office to check on his son. Coming out a few minutes later, while Josh told Fred what happened, Hank sighed heavily and walked over to the two. "Sorry. I needed to make sure he was OK. How's J... Jocelyn?"
"She's fine!" Fred said with a relieved sigh. "David was protecting Jocelyn from that Hughes boy and got caught by a right cross. I owe your son a debt of gratitude, Hank. He saved my little girl!"
Grimacing, he looked down at the small boy in the blouse and skirt. "I'm glad you're OK, Jocelyn." he said with a sigh. Looking up, he saw trouble coming. "Uh oh." Nodding toward the front of the office, the three looked over to see a heavyset man in a business suit, red in the face with anger.
"I want to see that Vice-Principal now!" demanded George Hughes. "If I don't get some action soon, I'll own the whole lot of you! Where! Is! That! Man!" he yelled, punctuating his last four words with beats on the counter loud enough to rattle the windows.
"Mrs. White?" Mr. Tanner stated from his office door. "Would you please show Mr. Hughes, Mr. Ryan, Mr. Edwards, Jocelyn, and David, if he's up to it, into my office, please?"
Buzzing George Hughes in, she barely kept pace with him as he charged forward toward the Vice-Principal's office. Fred held Jocelyn back until the large man passed them and only then followed him into the room, while Hank checked to see if David was up to joining the conversation.
"How dare you call in the middle of a workday to tell me you're suspending my son... again... and that you've called the police!" George barked. "I'll have you know my law office is one of the biggest in the area and my time is valued at over five hundred dollars an hour!"
"Good." Mr. Tanner stated. "You're going to need a lawyer, Mr. Hughes. Won't you sit down?"
"I don't have time to sit, you pompous cream puff!" he yelled. "I just came down to warn you that if you suspend my son and cause me to miss more work, I'm gonna sue the school district, and you personally, for lost wages!"
"Mr. Hughes!" the administrator barked. "Your son is currently under arrest and on his way to Juvenile Detention for assault and battery against a student of this school, as well as for theft, threats, and harassment of another student! Sit! Down!"
Finally cowed, the large man lowered himself into a chair in front of the Vice-Principal. "So what happened? They get in a tumble and you blow a gasket? Boys will be boys! You have to allow 'em a little leniency to blow off steam! I'm sure the other boy got in his licks! Is he under arrest?"
"My son didn't hit yours, Mr. Hughes." Hank spat from the doorway where he stood with David, who was holding an ice pack over his swollen cheek. "He was standing up for his friend and your son sucker-punched him!"
Turning his bulk in the seat to see who it was that was speaking to him, George Hughes eyed the man and then looked at David. He then swept his gaze over Fred and Josh. "So? Reggie was hitting on your son's girlfriend and your little brat couldn't take the competition, huh? Ha!"
"Mr. Hughes!" Fred barked. "Your son stole my daughter's lunch, threatened her physically, and is the same girl that he was suspended last Tuesday for threatening with bodily harm! That makes it criminal harassment! David, in full view of dozens of witnesses, tried to make him stop, and your son punched him without provocation!"
Confused, he looked at Josh and then at Fred. "No! That can't be right! Reginald was suspended for allegedly threatening some gay boy named Joshua! Not a girl! Friggin' pansies! I actually read the suspension form! Think I'm stupid or something?"
"The name on the form was incorrect, Mr. Hughes." Mr. Tanner explained. "Ms. Ryan there is the person your son threatened and was suspended for three days for harassing."
"So then I'll sue the district for suspending my son on false accusations; for threatening a boy that doesn't even exist! You people are all idiots!"
Looking at Josh expectantly, Mr. Tanner asked the child wordlessly for permission to 'out' him.
Shaking his head in fear, Josh looked up at his father for help, only to see Fred looking down at him hoping he would be brave enough to see justice done. Lastly, Josh looked over at Hank and David, hoping one of them would take his side, but both looked away, meaning it was up to him.
Taking a breath, he stepped away from his father and walked over to the desk to stand by Mr. Hughes. Shaking with fear, he stiffened and raised his chin. "Sir? Last week, my name was Joshua Ryan. Now it's Jocelyn."
Looking at Josh up and down, he saw what appeared to him to be a totally normal, if pretty, twelve-year-old girl. Dismissing the suggestion with a huff, he smiled at the ridiculousness of the idea. "Huh! Please! Do I look like I fell off the turnip truck yesterday? You're a girl!"
"Nevertheless," Mr. Tanner explained, "last week his name was Joshua Ryan, and now her name is Jocelyn Ryan."
Turning ashen as he looked at the scared child unbelieving, then over at Fred who simply nodded, he turned back to Josh with a look of horror. "You mean that... thing... is a boy?"
"No, Mr. Hughes." Fred explained. "We mean to say that Jocelyn was mistaken for being a boy at birth, but now we know better."
Knowing he was on a legally unhelpful topic, he dismissed it. "Irrelevant! The issue is Reginald being handed over to the cops like a common criminal! Do you know what this will do to my firm's reputation? I want the charges dropped or I'll sue all of you for damages in the tens of millions!"
Hank stepped forward. "Oh, I doubt your firm will be willing to have its name dragged through the mud in costly litigation with ties to hate crimes, Mr. Hughes! You see, my son, the boy your son assaulted, is gay. I think on balance, since I know you're only a junior partner in the firm, they're more likely to distance themselves from you before any damage can be done."
David smiled at his father's defense of him. "Yeah, they'll just fire your aff!"
"That's quite enough, David." Mr. Tanner said, holding up his hands.
Flustered to near apoplexy, Mr. Hughes looked at the two men standing near the door, then Josh standing next to him, and lastly to the Vice-Principal. "Damn leftist pinko-commies!"
"I think you'll find, Mr. Hughes," Hank said with a smile, "I'm a member of the Ohio chapter of Conservatives Against Discrimination and the Cleveland chapter of the Log Cabin Republicans!" Looking over at Fred Ryan, whose face had turned pale at the revelation, Hank smiled. "Him you can call a leftist! I don't know about Vice-Principal Tanner."
The administrator sat back in his chair and regarded the large man sitting in front of him. "So Mr. Hughes, if you are quite through making threats, I have a form for you to sign which will result in your son being expelled from this school for repeated acts of violence, threats against student safety, and harassment of protected minorities. If you fail to sign, the district will begin legal proceedings to have him removed by court order. Please just sign on the indicated line and you'll be free to go to Juvenile Detention to sort out your family problems on your own."
Taking the pen and signing the form, George looked ready to explode. "At least this will keep his name out of the courts!"
Just as the Vice-Principal took the form, Hank shook his head. "I'm afraid not, sir. I intend to press charges. Your son is a bully and attacked my boy. I'll do whatever it takes to see to it David and little Miss Ryan there remain safe from his anti-social behavior by putting your son in jail!"
Growling as he stood up, George Hughes stormed out the door without saying another word.
As the five remaining people stood in the room regarding one another, Fred looked over at David and nodded in gratitude. "Thank you for protecting my Jocelyn, David." Seeing the boy look down embarrassedly, he turned to Hank. "And thank you for not letting that Reggie boy get away with it!"
"I'm sure you'd have done the same for me if our positions had been reversed, Fred." he stated, hoping it was true.
"As for the rest of the issues..." Mr. Tanner continued. "Mr. Edwards? The district has a 'no tolerance' policy on fighting that states anyone involved in a fight on school grounds must be suspended for three days at a minimum."
Josh's eyes went wide. "You can't do that, Mr. Tanner! Dave didn't do anything except stand up for me and get hit! It's not fair!"
"Jocelyn, please. Settle down." Fred tried to ease his son's ire. Walking up and putting his hands on Josh's shoulders protectively, he looked at the Vice-Principal with a pleading expression. "Mr. Tanner, surely you have some degree of leniency due to special circumstances! David didn't do anything wrong! In point of fact, he did everything right!"
David walked up to the desk still holding the ice pack on his cheek. "I'll underfand if there'v nothing you can do, fir. I knew what I wav doing."
Grimacing, Mr. Tanner nodded. "In answer to your question Mr. Ryan, yes I have the authority, in special circumstances, to mitigate the standard policy. The issue though is that young Mr. Edwards was already on probation for cyberbullying. He sent a very slanderous email to Miss Ryan last Wednesday that was forwarded to my office. While I can mitigate the punishment for the fight, I cannot mitigate the three-day suspension for violating his probation. The district policy simply does not allow less than that. I'm sorry, son."
Looking in surprise at his father, Josh stepped back and away from him. "You turned in the email Dave sent me? Daddy! How could you!"
"I had to, princess!" he defended his actions. "At the time, he seemed to be a threat to you!"
Glaring at his father, Josh narrowed his eyes in anger. "You always mess everything up! You think you know everything and what's best for me, but you don't! You thought I was gay for seven years, Daddy... and you were wrong! I don't even like boys! And now you... you..." Overcome, Josh broke down and cried, never able to get to the part where he would tell his father that he wasn't a girl and he'd been wrong again.
Everyone assumed Josh's breakdown was in response to David's suspension and he was only angry with Fred because he'd turned the email in. Looking at one another as Josh dropped to his knees, each of the three wondered what they could do to console the 'girl' openly bawling in the office, but none felt in a position to do so. Fred was the target of his anger, while Hank and Mr. Tanner both felt it inappropriate to comfort a 'girl' not their own.
David solved the problem by going over to Josh and helping him up off the floor. As soon as he did, Josh latched onto him in a desperate hug.
"Oh, Dave!" he cried into the larger boy's shoulder. "It's not fair! It's just not fair!"
Holding Josh as well and trying to comfort him, David laughed. "Well, at leaft now I know it wavn't you who got me in trouble, Joff. I'm forry I wav fuch a jerk to you!"
Without thinking, Josh lifted his head and kissed him on the cheek. Instantly, both boys' eyes shot open and they looked at each other in horror, splitting apart like the same pole of two magnets.
"You kiffed me!" David complained. "That is fo disgufting! Kiffed by a girl! And not just any girl, a girl who ufed to be a pretty awesome guy!"
"Oh, that is so gross! I kissed a boy, and it was Dave! Eww! I kissed Dave! That is just so wrong!" Josh simultaneously huzzed.
The three men in the room laughed at the sight, eventually all calming down to discuss the matter. While there was nothing that could be done to prevent the three-day suspension for violating his probation, Mr. Tanner agreed that there were extenuating circumstances in that situation as well, so David would be barred from campus, but could still be given his assignments. Josh even agreed to take them home with him from school and drop them off for David to work on over the rest of the week. He also gave David's father the boy's lost tooth.
When the four left the Vice-Principal's office, Fred noted the time. "Looks like you missed all your afternoon classes, princess." he said to Josh.
"I can get a note from Mrs. White excusing it, Daddy. I'll get my makeup work tomorrow. I just wanna go home!"
It was then that Fred realized something while Josh was getting a note from the secretary. "Holy... Um... I just realized! I was coming home from the airport in a cab when I got the call! I had the driver bring me here!" Racing out front, he saw that the cab was gone and his bags sat next to the curb.
The other three joined him out front, Hank slapping him on the shoulder. "That's OK, Fred. I'll give you two a ride home!"
Smiling weakly at the father of the boy who had defended his child, Fred sighed. "Thanks, Hank. I appreciate it."
As the four rode in the minivan Hank had driven to the school, Fred was dying to know something. "Um... Hank? Mind if I ask you something?"
"Go right ahead, Fred!" he said, knowing what the man in the passenger seat was going to ask.
"Were you serious with that guy? I mean, about being a conservative and a... a Republican?"
"Honest as Abe!" he admitted as he turned a corner with a wide grin.
"But... but how? How can you support people who are so... so cruel to your son? Isn't that... well... moronic?" Fred stammered.
Laughing, Hank just shook his head. "Because I believe in liberty and limited government, Fred! I believe everyone, including my son and your daughter, has the right to make their own way in the world, to succeed... or fail... on their own merits and not on the work of others. The best way I can see for getting that is to make my party that I mostly agree with more accepting by sticking with them, not jumping ship for one that I only agree with on one subject. After all, we all deserve decent treatment from our neighbors..." He paused and glanced over at Fred who sat in shock at his answer. Smiling, he turned back to the road and added, "...even if they hold the moronic ideas you have, Fred!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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After returning home, Josh was truly happy for the first time since the start of school. He had his two best friends again and it actually gave him hope for a moment that, with their help, he could figure a way out of his predicament. They always helped with my parents insisting I'm gay! he reasoned. Slowly though, a new thought dawned on him. I've gone to school three times dressed as a girl! Everyone thinks I want to be one now! It'll be impossible to convince them I really wanna be a boy... even Tracy and David!
He also realized that not only would he be going to school without Tracy for the next few days, but without David as well. Even when David was mad at me, he was still there.
The next morning saw him waiting at the bus stop as usual, the light breeze making the early hour cooler than it had been lately, so he was glad he'd chosen that day to wear his one pair of designer jeans. He almost felt normal, if it weren't for the girl's top and bra he wore that were constant irritations. Getting on the bus, the same story repeated itself as the day before; no one sat with him. Almost trying to hide in plain sight, Josh struggled to ignore the feelings of despair through his classes. Lunchtime saw him again sitting off on his own, but this time no one approached. No confrontations. No drama.
Just quiet loneliness.
He went through his day not really paying attention to much of anything. Riding the bus home was just a repeat of the morning in reverse. Sitting on the bus alone, he was surrounded by kids his age who wanted nothing to do with him. He dropped off David's work at the Edwards' house and said hi to Tracy, but he still felt alone.
Friday morning the weather turned warm again and Josh decided to try and fight his self-loathing by fully embracing the role of being the girl everyone expected him to be.
He pulled out the floral sundress.
Coming downstairs, he felt ridiculous. His closet mirror told him he looked beautiful with the cream-colored cardigan over his shoulders, but every step taken in the off-white two-inch heel sandals told him the truth, over and over.
Boy in a dress.
Swallowing his pride, he smiled at the praise from his mother, tried to enjoy the hug from his father, and re-packed all of his books and things into his new backpack. When he'd gotten home from camp, he'd found his mother had bought him, among other things, a glittery pink backpack. He never thought he'd actually ever use it, but there he was, moving all his things over to the accessory that absolutely screamed 'GIRL!' to anyone looking.
Making his way to the bus stop, he tried to loosen up and just enjoy the fact that he looked pretty and knew it, the way Tracy did, but it continued to eat at him. Sitting on the bus, he tried not to care that the other kids avoided him, but that too slowly gnawed at his heart. Going through his morning classes, he tried to focus on his work and ignore the whispers, but the growing sense of isolation and disgust at his own appearance wouldn't go away. Not even the uplifting note he found in his locker could make a difference.
Eating outside on the grass and enjoying the warm sun, he had a weird feeling come over him; one he couldn't place, just a general sense of unease. Slowly, he turned around to see Jennifer Healy sitting on the grass less than ten feet behind him. He realized then that the odd feeling he'd had was that she'd been looking at him again. Swallowing in fear that it was now her turn to pick on and humiliate him, he looked right in the girl's eyes. This time they were too close to one another to pretend they weren't seeing each other.
"You don't have to be afraid of me." Jennifer said gently.
"What makes you think I am?" he said, trying to keep fear out of his voice.
Smiling, Jennifer shook her head. "I can see it in your eyes. I understand. I'm not going to pick on you."
"Why'd you sneak up behind me, then?" he asked more boldly than he felt.
"I didn't." she said with a light giggle. "You sat down in front of me!"
"Oh." he sighed. "Sorry."
"For what?"
"For thinking you were, like... stalking me? Or something?"
Laughing genuinely, she got up and walked down the short, grassy hill to sit next to him. "I'm Jennifer."
"I know. Tracy told me who you were. I'm J... Jocelyn."
"I know." she giggled. "I've been stalking you, remember!" she said in a sarcastic tone.
Blushing when she smiled at him, he felt a queer feeling in the pit of his stomach, like he'd eaten a sour apple, and couldn't help but look away shyly.
"You're really pretty." Jennifer said with her own degree of shyness. "I... I wish I was as pretty as you!"
Turning to the girl, he admired her straight pale blonde hair that hung just below her shoulders. She was skinny, almost too skinny, and her angular frame as she sat next to him could only be improved in his opinion by being a little more curvy. Like me! he thought glumly. Her skin was free of blemishes and her complexion gave her a pleasant warmth. Her smile when she laughed showed she had slightly large front teeth, but he honestly felt it gave her character, that unique something that made her different from everyone else.
"I think you look pretty." he said, blushing mildly.
"Not as pretty as you, though." she sighed as she looked at him wistfully. "I... can... may I ask you something?"
"You just did." he pointed out with a giggle.
Making her laugh, she threw her head back happily. "No! I mean... you know what I mean!"
Laughing with her, he nodded and smiled. "Go ahead."
Composing herself and turning serious, she looked at him. "I... I wanted to know why you showed up looking like a boy the first day of school? You're way too pretty to hide it like that!"
Expecting to feel the usual pang of self-loathing when she said he was pretty, he found himself smiling instead. Pushing that confusing feeling aside, he tried to answer her question; not sure if she knew he really was a boy. "Well... um... I was still... um... you see, I'm... uh..."
"It's OK." she said sweetly. "I didn't mean to make you feel uncomfortable. I just wondered why you weren't dressed nice that day like you have been all week. I woulda thought that you'd be dying to get out of boy clothes! Or were you still trying to get your parents to let you?"
"Um... not exactly." he explained, realizing she knew he 'used' to be a boy. "I was fighting it. My parents were actually pushing me to... to be a girl."
"Well that's different!" she giggled. "Usually it's the other way 'round! When did you know you were a girl inside? Did you, like, always know?"
Taking a chance at honesty, he gulped and looked away. "To tell you the truth, I still don't know. I mean, I act like a girl. I look like a girl. I talk like a girl. I laugh like a girl. In a lot of ways, it's just easier to be a girl. My parents think I've just been repressing it because I'm afraid. I guess they're right. I know I don't look it, but I feel silly in this dress! Like any moment, someone's gonna run up and start laughing at me!"
Jennifer nodded. "I guess I understand. I don't know a lot about girls like you, only what I read on the Internet. Gender dis... um... disflor... um..."
"Dysphoria." Josh finished for her. "It means 'uncomfortable', basically. I dunno. I was never really uncomfortable as a boy. I guess I'd learned to like it. Now I'm trying to get used to liking being a girl."
Cocking her head slightly to the left, she tucked her hair behind her ear. "It almost sounds like you want to go back to being a boy!"
Shaking his head, Josh sighed. "I can't. I need to just learn to accept that I am what I am. My parents call it 'running away back to being a boy' 'cuz that's where everything was easy and comfortable, like when I was little."
"What do you want?" she asked innocently.
Stunned into silence, he turned away from her and toward the school, lost in thought. What do I want? Nobody ever asks me that! Smiling, he looked back at her. "I... um... I guess if I had a choice, I'd just be a boy. I guess that makes me a bit of a coward, though. Everyone says I'm such a girl! So I'm trying to be brave and just face it."
Scrutinizing Josh, she tried to figure him out. Shrugging, she smiled. "OK. If that's what you want to do! I like you this way!"
Doing a double take, he stared at her curiously. "You... you like me?"
"Sure!" she answered happily. "What's not to like? You're nice, smart, funny, and... well... really pretty!" she finished with a dreamy sigh.
Blushing at the compliments, Josh shied away toward the grass. "I like you, too. You seem to actually care what I feel. Plus, you're nice, honest, and... um... pretty, too!"
Her turn to blush, she too glanced away shyly. "Thanks! No one calls me pretty except my parents, though!" Looking up at him, she smiled. "Um... my birthday's the first of next month. Would you like to come?"
"Sure!" he said with a smile. Hearing the bell ring, he looked down, realizing he'd never finished lunch. Packing it quickly as the girl stood up and started toward the school building, he looked up when she turned back to him.
"Oh! Do you have a nice dress?" Jennifer asked.
Inspecting at the dress he wore, he became self-conscious. "Isn't this nice?"
Rolling her eyes, she walked back to him and helped him to his feet. "Not what I meant, silly!" she giggled. "I meant like a party dress. I want a party that's a little... nice... this year. Kinda 'grown up', ya' know? I am turning thirteen, after all! A girl only becomes a teenager once!"
Thinking quickly as they headed back to the building, Josh bit his lower lip. "I... I'm not sure. I have some nice dresses, but I don't really know if any of them would be a party dress." Remembering the blue satin dress that Tracy had tried to have him wear, he brightened. "Oh! I have the perfect dress for something like that! Yes! I do have a nice dress! It's blue satin with a white belt that ties in back! It's really pretty!"
"That sounds perfect!" Jennifer looked at him with a wide smile. "I'll bet you look beautiful in it! Try not to out-shine me on my own birthday, though!"
Giggling together like old friends, they stopped when they got to his locker. When Josh got his pack out, Jennifer asked for a piece of paper. Handing her one from his notebook, he watched as she wrote her number down.
"Here. Call me after school? Maybe we can see each other this weekend!"
"Sure!" he replied happily, glad to have another friend. Watching her walk away towards her own locker, he sighed lightly, closed his locker, and practically skipped to his math class.
The rest of the day went by uneventfully and quickly as Josh found it easier to concentrate on his work. Even the solitary bus trip home seemed brighter and happier, having seen Jennifer wave to him as she rode home on her bike. Dropping off David's assignments, he knocked gently on Tracy's door.
"Come in." the miserable girl croaked.
"Hey, Trace." he said sympathetically. "Feeling any better?"
"No!" she said with a growl. "Stupid cold!"
Stepping into her room, he sat in her desk chair. "Guess what happened to me today!" he said happily. "I made a new friend!"
Sitting up at the news, Tracy looked at him with a smile. "Oh? Who?"
"Jennifer Healy!" he said with a smile. "We ran into each other at lunch. She's actually really nice!"
Feeling mildly jealous, Tracy grimaced. "That's cool, Joss. You deserve it!"
"Thanks!" he smiled. "I was feeling really lonely with you and Dave not around. You know I never had any friends in my old schools. It was nice to have someone to spend lunch with who doesn't see me as some kind of a weirdo!" Seeing his oldest friend look away towards the window sadly, he frowned. "You're still my best friend though, Trace! No one could ever replace you!"
Turning back to him and smiling at the sweet sentiment, she quickly grabbed a tissue and sneezed into it. "Thanks." she said after blowing her nose. "You better go though, Joss. I don't want you getting sick!"
Wanting to go over and hug his best friend to comfort her, he reluctantly kept away. "OK, Trace. Just know I love you! Hope you get better soon!"
"Thanks, Joss!" she replied hoarsely. "You look really nice today, by the way! I like the cardigan! Can I borrow it when I get better?"
Laughing lightly, Josh smiled and nodded. "Sure thing, Trace! Heh! Funny, never thought we'd be borrowing each other's clothes!"
Giggling until she started coughing, Tracy nodded in agreement. Once she brought the cough under control, she answered, "You can borrow anything of mine you like! 'Course, it'll all be huge on you, skinny witch!" Suddenly an idea sparked in her head. "Hey! I bet you can wear the clothes I grew out of last year! Mom!" she yelled with her gravelly voice.
A few moments later, Joyce came into the room. "What is it, dear?"
"Mom! I had a totally great idea! Joss is about the same size I was a year or two ago. I bet she could wear some of the things I outgrew! I like the idea of my sister getting some of my old hand-me-downs!"
Skeptically, she looked at Josh and realized that he was in fact just about the size Tracy had been when she was ten and eleven. "I suppose so."
"You don't gotta do that, Aunt Joyce!" Josh protested. "I already got enough clothes that I won't need to re-wear anything for three or four weeks!"
"Then you definitely need more!" Joyce said with a smile. "Two months at very least... just to start!" Taking his hand, Josh turning to Tracy for help, the older woman dragged him from the room. "Come on, Jocelyn. Tracy needs her rest. I'll show you the box of her old things and we can go through them before you head home!"
Sighing in resignation, he went along quietly. "Bye, Trace! Get better!"
Tracy waved to him as her mother led Josh down the hall to the door into the garage. Moving a box, she opened one that was three feet square and half filled with clothes. Spending an hour going through the outfits, Josh ended up being glad he'd stayed as he walked home carrying a bag. It was filled with three pairs of designer jeans, six tops that were not very girly, four very plain skirts, and two pairs of leggings still wrapped in packaging; Tracy having outgrown them before even getting a chance to wear them.
Once home, he put them away in his closet and dresser. Since Joyce cleaned them before packing them away, they didn't need laundered again. Settling in, he decided to put off homework long enough to call Jennifer. Plopping down on the couch, he picked up the phone and dialed her number.
"Hello?" a woman answered.
"Hello." he answered. "Um... is Jennifer there? This is Jocelyn from school."
Hearing the smile over the phone, Josh was relieved to hear the woman being friendly. "Oh! Yes, Jenny said you might call. One moment, dear."
The line went quiet for a moment before Josh heard the girl's voice. "Hi, Jocelyn! Perfect timing!"
"Just finish your homework?" he asked.
"No, just about to start History!" she said with a laugh. "You saved me!"
The two giggled about that for a moment before Josh nervously bit his lower lip. "Um... I was wondering. Are... um... are you doing anything on Sunday? I don't have any plans and Tracy, she's my BFF, she's got a cold... so I was hoping that maybe we could..." His voice trailed off in nervousness.
"Um... well, we go to church on Sunday." the girl answered. "Don't you? Or did you mean after that?"
Feeling self-conscious of his parents' unwillingness to even discuss religion unless it was to complain about Christians, he took the easy way out. "Oh! I meant after!" Not sure how things worked, he probed delicately. "So, when do you get back?"
"Usually about noon." she explained. "Daddy takes us out to brunch after! It's so much fun!" Pausing a moment, she considered how to ask what she wanted to. "We go to a non-denominational church... the one on Spring Drive? It's a Christian service, just without being too strict when it comes to... um... I forget what it's called. You know, the details? They leave that up to the congregation to figure out for themselves. I don't suppose you'd want to join us, would you? Please say yes! It would be so cool if you were there for brunch! We get dressed up nice and everything! Even my little brother looks nice and behaves himself for like a whole hour!"
Unsure, Josh tried to think of a good reason why he shouldn't go, but came up blank. "Well, I'd need a ride. You live close to the school, right? I live five miles away. Bus twenty-two's route."
"We could pick you up!" she offered. "I'm sure Mom and Dad wouldn't mind! I'd love for you to meet them! They're pretty cool... for parents!"
Wondering how he could go without his parents learning where he was going, he hit on a different idea. "Where exactly do you live? I could just get a ride there. I wouldn't want to inconvenience your parents or anything." Noting down the address, he smiled. "Can you hang on a few while I ask?"
"Sure!" Jennifer said happily. "I'll go ask Mom if it's OK! Be right back!"
While Jennifer ran off to ask her mother, Josh ran upstairs and opened his laptop. Bringing up the city bus website, he found her address and the bus that ran nearest. Tracing back to his neighborhood, he found the bus went through there as well. Perfect! he thought. Hitting print on the route's Sunday schedule, he went downstairs and knocked on his father's doorframe.
His focus broken, Fred turned and smiled at Josh. "What's up, princess?"
"I printed a bus schedule." he stated without detail. "May I have it, please?"
Getting up, he went over to the printer and took out the paper. Reading it quickly, he walked over and handed it to Josh. "What's this for?" he asked.
"Um... I met a new girl at school!" he said honestly. "Her name's Jennifer and she's really nice! She lives close to the school and wants me to come over to her house on Sunday. Can I go, Daddy? Please! I'll dress nice, I'll behave like a perfect lady, and you and Mom won't even have to drop me off or pick me up! I can take the bus and I'll be safe the whole time! I'll have my phone with me and you always say that the bus is safer than if you drove me there yourself! Please?" He knew he was playing it risky, that his father might offer to pick him up and drop him off, but he felt confident in his ploy.
Sighing as he stared into Josh's pleading eyes, he shook his head. "I see I'm gonna be in trouble as you get older!" he admitted. "You're too cute! Just be sure to use your insidious powers for good and not evil!" he laughed. "Alright, so long as your mother agrees, which I'm sure I can convince her, you can go! Here." Picking up his wallet from the stand next to the door, he retrieved five one-dollar bills. "Just so you have money if you need it."
Taking the offered money, he wrapped his arms around his father's waist. "Thank you, Daddy! You're the best!" Running back to the phone with an unbreakable smile, he picked up the receiver. "Jenn?"
"Well?" Jennifer asked quickly. "Mom said she'd be happy to have you!"
"I asked Daddy and he said I could go! I'll just use the city bus, so no one needs to give me a ride or anything! What time do I need to be there?"
"Services start at nine. We usually leave about eight-thirty."
Scanning the bus schedule, he found the closest drop-off time before then and ran his finger back to the stop nearest his house. "Perfect! I can catch the eight o'clock bus and be at your house by eight-twenty!" Thinking of what she'd said earlier, he paused and asked, "Um... what should I wear? I don't know how dressed up you all get."
"Oh." Jennifer thought for a moment. "Well, Mom usually has me wear a nice dress. Not too fancy, but not casual clothes. Something like that overalls outfit you wore Monday would work! You looked really cute in that!"
Getting the idea, he smiled. "OK! So... I'll see you Sunday morning then!"
"I can't wait!" Jennifer glowed back. "Bye... Jocelyn!"
"Bye... Jennifer!" he answered back shyly as his heart accelerated at the way the girl said his name. Stopping and frowning for a moment, it dawned on him that it was the first time anyone had called him Jocelyn that he really liked hearing it. Smiling again as he put down the receiver, he skipped to the stairs before gliding up them in a haze of happiness to start his homework.
He spent until late Saturday morning going through his wardrobe, picking and discarding outfit after outfit, before frustratedly seeking out his mother. Finding her on the living room couch reading a book, he waited for her to see he was there.
Looking over the top of the pages, she smiled at him standing there patiently waiting in a jumper. "Yes, sweetheart?"
"Mom? You know Daddy told you I'm going to a friend's house tomorrow? I need help! I can't figure out what to wear!"
Laughing lightly as she got up, she took his hand and started toward the stairs. "Well, Miss Perfection... let's go see what your options are!"
After twenty minutes of hearing Josh say that this outfit was too casual and that dress was too formal, she finally threw her arms up. "I give up! Nothing I suggest is just right! You act like you're going on..." She stopped herself and looked at Josh with her eyes wide. "Jocelyn, sweetie... is this... a date?"
"No!" he protested. "I just want to look nice is all! Just not too nice."
Seeing his initial reaction, she sat on his bed and patted the coverlet for him to sit beside her. Once he had, she put an arm around him. "You like this girl... don't you, sweetie?"
"Of course, Mom!" he said emphatically. "Why else do you think I want to go over to her place?"
"No..." she explained. "I mean, you're attracted to her. Aren't you." she stated more than asked. "Does she like you the same way? Does she know your history? I mean... who we thought you were?"
His eyes widening at the idea, he leaned away from her as though she were crazy. "Mom! I'm only twelve, we only met on Friday, though Tracy's known her for years apparently, and we're just friends! And yes... she knows I used to be Josh! She's totally cool with it, though! So's her parents. She asked. They sound like people like you and Daddy... the supportive kind, I mean."
Smiling even as she pursed her lips in skepticism toward his insistence that they were only friends, she shook her head. "Alright, just friends. You want to look nice, just not overdressed... right?" Seeing him nod, she stood up and pulled him to his feet. "Alright then, grab your coat! We're going shopping!"
Six hours later, they returned with five new outfits. One, a matched floral knee-length skirt and blouse with a sweetheart neckline, another an off-white A-line dress with little pink flowers dotting it, two summer dresses, and the last a simple knee-length shift dress in dark blue with white piping. All five Josh considered perfect for a tween to wear to church... he hoped.
Hanging them in his closet, he pulled out the floral skirt and blouse and smiled. Perfect! he thought. Puzzling over his apparent happiness at wearing an outfit so girly, he wondered what it was that had changed. I guess I'm just learning to like being a girl! he hoped. Pondering that, his thoughts kept drifting to what Jennifer had said to him.
"You're way too pretty to hide it like that!"
Sighing at the memory, he found himself imagining dancing with Jennifer, then eating a nice dinner together... a walk through the park... and ending a night with the most perfect kiss in history.
Shaking himself from his reverie, he was stunned at the thought that he really was attracted to her. What was even weirder was that in his imaginings he was always dressed as a girl with her, and he'd liked it. Remembering himself dressed as a girl at school all week, he suddenly felt a knot in his stomach and that feeling of self-loathing again, except for Friday, and only after lunch.
Thinking about what he would wear on Monday, he was thinking of one of the pairs of jeans he'd gotten from Tracy and a nice pink top, he again hated the idea of wearing it to school. That is, until he imagined seeing Jennifer while wearing it, at which point his icky feeling melted into one of dreamy happiness. Experimenting with the idea, he imagined the same thing, but with Brenda, a girl he knew he liked, and the icky feeling came back.
"I'm crazy!" he mumbled. I still don't like being a girl... unless I'm with Jennifer... and it's not just because I like her. So what's my deal?
Shrugging and deciding he didn't care, he was just happy he'd found some way of dealing with his being backed into a corner by his parents. Putting away all his clothes other than the outfit he planned for the next morning, he headed for the shower. Scrubbing more thoroughly than normal, he spent extra time on his hair, washing it twice and conditioning it with a comb.
Remembering what the hairdresser Rachel had done, adding curls to his hair with a round brush and a blow dryer, he dried himself and headed for his room. After changing into a nightgown, he proceeded to dry his hair using the curling brush he found in his vanity. He'd barely begun when he saw his mother in the mirror.
"I knocked, but you couldn't hear me." she said with a smile once he'd turned off the dryer. "Would you like some help?" she offered. Seeing him nod shyly, she took the brush and dryer. "You'll have to fix it in the morning on your own." she stated as she began. "I'm not getting up at six in the morning to help you get ready for your not-a-date!"
Lying down in bed that night, he hoped that the next day would be half as wonderful as he imagined it could be. Drifting off to sleep, he dreamed of an unending dance, being held in Jennifer's arms as he looked into her hypnotically beautiful bright blue eyes.
It was the best dream he'd ever had.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Josh awoke at six as usual. He almost didn't need the alarm he'd set the night before, having gotten used to rising at that time anyway, but he was taking no chances. Jumping out of bed quickly, he got dressed. Putting on fresh white undies and white tights easily now that he'd had practice at it, he put on a pretty bra and then got into the skirt and blouse.
Going to his vanity, he spent half an hour fixing his hair, nearly burning his fingers on the curling iron a few times having only ever seen his mother use one twice. Content with the result after brushing the curls out into a cute wavy style, he moved on to makeup. Wishing he'd paid more attention when his mother had given him his one lesson, he ended up having to remove it all a few times before he felt happy with the result.
I get it! he praised himself on the fourth try. Less is more!
Picking the pink pearl stud magnetic earrings and the heart locket, he donned them and looked over the finished result. Smiling weakly that he looked every bit the sweet and innocent girl, he sprayed some perfume on his wrists and went to the closet, retrieving a pair of pink Mary Janes with a low heel. Putting them on, he looked at the whole picture in the closet mirror.
Wow! he stood in amazement, looking at the girl in his mirror. Perfect! Not too dressy, but still nice and sweet! I hope it's right!
Making his way out of his room, he noted that he had over twenty minutes before he needed to catch the bus. Allowing for five minutes to walk to the stop, and a few extra minutes to make sure he didn't miss it, he tried to sit and relax for the last few minutes before leaving.
Nibbling on a piece of toast to tide him over until brunch, he was surprised to see his mother come in. Gulping, he watched her cross the room and make her way into the kitchen. "Good morning, Mom." he said nervously.
"Good morning, sweetheart." she said groggily, putting the water on to make a cup of tea. "I wanted to see you off." Walking to the table, she sat while her water heated up. "Is that all you're having?" she asked concernedly.
"We're supposed to have brunch together." he explained. "That and my stomach was a bit jumpy this morning."
Getting up, she felt his forehead. Smiling as she sat back down, she sighed. "I just wanted to make sure you weren't getting that cold Tracy got. You look very nice, by the way!"
Blushing, he looked down and took another nibble of toast. "Thanks!" Noting that he didn't feel weird or icky when she complimented him, he chalked it up to thinking he was getting used to liking being a girl.
"Sweetie, I also wanted a quick word with you before you go." Melanie said softly. "I know you have high hopes for today, I just don't want to see you get hurt is all. So... just don't try to go too fast, OK? Take it slow and enjoy your time with her!" Reaching out, she fixed a few hairs back into place.
"Oh, Mom!" he whined as he finished his toast and got up to rinse the small plate and put it in the dishwasher. "It's not a date, OK? It's just a nice brunch with a friend and her family! It's not like I'm gonna ask her to marry me or somethin'!" Drying his hands on a dishtowel, he looked at the time and saw he still had almost five minutes left, but he wanted to get away from her. "I should go." he lied. Walking over to his mother, he hugged her weakly and kissed her cheek as Melanie returned the hug.
"I know, sweetheart. I trust you. You're your own person and I can't control you. I just worry sometimes. I shouldn't. It's bad for your self-esteem and sense of self." Releasing him, she got up to walk him to the door. "You don't have a purse, honey?"
"Do I need one?" he asked impatiently.
"Come with me." she ordered as she led him up to his room. Opening the side of his closet with his blouses and skirts, she opened a drawer full of purses and pulled a shiny pink one out that matched his shoes. "Take this." she said as she went over to his vanity. Seeing the makeup he'd left out, she picked up the blush, compact, lipstick, and eyeshadow and put them in his purse. "Put your money, phone, and ID in there too, sweetie." Seeing him fish his phone out of his bra strap, his money folded inside it, she shook her head.
"What!" he protested. "All the girls put their phone there!"
Walking back to the door a few minutes later, she sighed. "Good thing I got up! Hope you have a nice time, sweetheart! Call if you need anything!"
Heading out the door at a brisk but still dignified pace, he turned back and waved at her. "I will, Mom!"
Strutting down the block toward the city bus stop, he pulled out his phone and looked at the time. Smiling that he was still ahead of schedule, he slowed his pace, not wanting to work up a sweat, and truly enjoying the bright and crisp late summer morning. He could smell the flowers from Mrs. Hanson's yard as he passed her house, giggling at how she might react if she knew who the pretty 'girl' going by her house was. Soon he arrived at the stop, a few minutes later seeing the bus turn the corner ten blocks down the road at a cross street.
The trip passed uneventfully as he was the only one on the bus, other than the driver and the man sleeping on the furthest back seats. The driver gave him an odd look as he paid the fare, but nothing more than that. Getting off at his stop, he started down the street and read the house numbers, searching for Jennifer's home.
The neighborhood was nice, the houses all upper-middle class in style, and he actually thought it a much warmer and more welcoming place than his own upper-scale neighborhood. Seeing the pattern in house numbering, he determined that Jennifer's house must be three more down the street. Looking it over as he approached, he smiled at the homey looking dwelling.
White trim adorned a simple single-story house of pale gray. The outside was nicely maintained with a small rock garden in the front yard, a fence of trees and nicely trimmed hedges lining the yard along the sidewalk. A flowerbed bordered the driveway and a healthy green lawn filled the spaces in between. A red minivan sat in the driveway, off to one side so as to not block access to the one-car attached garage.
As he turned up the driveway, he nervously took a deep breath. Heading up the walkway that curved around the garage to the front door, he noted his appearance in the glass of the screen door while the scent of fresh-cut grass tickled his nose and the sound of a lawnmower somewhere in the distance filled the silence of the morning. Checking his hair and straightening his blouse and skirt before ringing the doorbell, it was just eight twenty-five.
Hearing heavy footsteps approaching the door, he knew it wasn't Jennifer. Peering through the screen mesh and glass, the door opened to reveal a lovely woman in her early thirties, but appearing more like her mid twenties. She wore a cream satin shirtwaist dress that came down to mid-calf, low heeled pumps the same color, and her soft dirty-blonde hair was worn in an up-do of curls that emphasized her long neck and lovely face that had only a little makeup to enhance her natural beauty.
"Jocelyn?" she said with a smile. "Please! Come in!"
Opening the screen door, he cautiously stepped into the entry hallway of the brightly decorated home. "Hello, Mrs. Healy." Josh said politely and softly. "Thank you for allowing me to come." While his own parents downplayed social niceties as phony social posturing, he'd been influenced by Joyce Edwards to appreciate the natural 'glue' they provided to awkward initial meetings with people you didn't know.
"Well!" Victoria Healy said with a smile as she closed the door. "Don't you look lovely, Jocelyn! My Jenny has been glowing about you for days now, and I can see why! And please, call me Vicky!"
Just as Josh was about to say something, Jennifer came around the corner from the living room and the two stopped and stared at one another for a heartbeat that lasted several hours. While Jennifer looked Josh over from toe to bow, Josh similarly took in the vision in front of him. Wearing a long-sleeve white blouse with lace around the collar, the skirt was a similar color to her mother's dress and fell just below her knees. Her straight blonde hair was pulled back with a simple off-white headband, showing off her lovely smile. Altogether, she was a vision of youthful beauty just about to spring forth from the sapling.
"Wow!" Jennifer said after a moment. "You look great! Is that what you usually wear to church? It's lovely!"
Swallowing hard, Josh forced himself to pull his mind together from the shattered pieces Jennifer had left it in and answered as best he could. "N... no. I actually got this yesterday with my Mom just for today. We don't normally dress up on Sunday." He hoped that not mentioning church, just alluding to it, would be enough.
"I hope your mother didn't go to too much trouble." Vicky said, stepping over to the mirror in the entryway, touching up her hair and adding a small flowered hat. "We as a family like to put in an effort to look nice. It's our way of respecting Him in our hearts and helps us feel closer to one another as a family. You could have worn what you normally wear and it would have been fine, Jocelyn!"
"It's alright, Mrs. ... um... Vicky." he corrected himself. "It wasn't any trouble. Mom and I needed to do some shopping. I needed more clothes than I have right now anyway. When Jenny said you dress nice for church, I just didn't want to disrespect your faith. She didn't get into the reasons."
Finishing touching up, she looked down at the small child. "Well, so long as it wasn't any trouble!" she said with a smile. Putting on her off-white gloves, she walked with a carefree grace into the living room. "Come on! We'll introduce you to the men in our lives!"
He tentatively made to follow Jennifer into the living room, feeling her take him by the hand and walk with him into the room wearing a broad smile.
Looking at the place, it was modestly decorated but felt warm and inviting. The opposite wall held a broad fireplace with a large photo of the family above it, obviously taken somewhat recently as Jennifer looked much the same. Though dressed in a formal gown, her genuine smile and the mirthful sparkle in her eyes made the picture look candid and alive. Along the wall to the right was a white gauzy curtain that extended to the floor, hiding a large sliding glass door behind it, while a flat-screen TV sat to the right of the door. Along the left wall was a white leather couch facing the TV, with a matching loveseat on the wall opposite the fireplace. A creamy plush carpet covered the floor while a ceiling fan turned slowly in the cool of the morning.
Seated on the couch was a small boy in a dark blue suit, fidgeting with his feet as they dangled over the edge. He appeared to be a few years younger than Josh, perhaps nine or ten. His short light brown hair was nicely combed and his suit made the boy handsome, despite the many freckles adorning his nose and cheeks. "Are we ready now, Momma?" he asked impatiently.
"Luke? I want you to meet a friend of your sister's. This is Jocelyn. Jocelyn? This is our son, Luke."
The boy politely got up and walked over to Josh, looking him over. "Nice to meet you." he said rotely as he extended his hand.
Taking the boy's hand gently, Josh barely shook it. "Nice to meet you too, Luke. You look nice!" she answered, secretly envying the boy's attire.
Dismissing the compliment with an eye-roll, Luke was about to turn and walk back to the couch when he saw his mother's stern look. Turning back to Josh, he sighed. "Thanks. You look OK too, Jocelyn." Looking back at his mother for approval, she shook her head and repressed a laugh.
"Boys!" the woman said softly. "Let me introduce you to a real gentleman!"
Walking over to the dining room table, which was in an open room adjacent to the living room just to the left of the fireplace, Josh's eyes fell on a man wearing a suit very similar to the one Luke was wearing, but much finer. His foot was up on one of the table's chairs, using a rag in his hands to buff his black leather shoes. Stopping as his wife approached, he looked up at her and smirked.
"Who, me? A gentleman? Who blabbed?" he joked, looking over at his guest.
Laughing lightly, Vicky smiled and turned to Josh. "Jocelyn? This is Jenny's father, John. Honey? This is Jenny's new friend, Jocelyn."
Dropping the cloth on the dining room table and moving into the living room, the man towered easily eighteen inches over Josh's height. His frame was obviously well muscled, but not so much as to mark him as vain. His face was ruggedly handsome, and his short light brown hair, while well groomed, looked to need a haircut soon. As his blue eyes gazed down at Josh, he bent at the waist slightly and offered his hand. "Very nice to meet you, Jocelyn! You look very beautiful!"
Blushing and feeling funny at the compliment, like a sick feeling in his belly at a grown man finding him beautiful, Josh tentatively took his offered hand. Shaking gently, he released it and watched John straighten up and turn to his wife.
"Was that OK, love?" he said with an impish grin.
Dismissing him with a slap to the shoulder, she laughed. "Oh, go on then! Get your coat and let's go!" Turning to the two apparent girls, Josh's left hand still in Jennifer's right, she sighed. "You ready, Jocelyn? Need to use the ladies' room first?"
Thinking it would be better to use it there than at the church where he'd have to use the men's room, he nodded. "Which way?"
Vicky started to point back the way they'd come, Jennifer interrupting her mother's explanation. "I'll show her, Mom. This way, Jocelyn!" Leading him past the entry hallway, they entered a hallway and went back towards the garage. "Here." she said simply, pointing to the first door on the right. "I'll wait for you right here!" she said with a smile.
Going in and locking the door, he quickly sat and did his business, having already learned that going while standing and wearing a skirt was next to impossible with only two hands. Washing up afterward, he checked his makeup in the mirror, using the compact to touch up a little shininess on his nose before approving of his appearance.
He had no clue what was about to happen to him, having never been in a church in his life, but based on the way he felt at that moment, there was no way on earth he was going to leave Jennifer's side. Even if they began a ritual blood sacrifice at the alter, he was committed. Hearing a gentle knock on the door as he tried to calm himself, he started at the sound.
"Jocelyn?" Jennifer called out. "Time to go."
"Coming!" he shouted back as he closed his purse and unlocked the door. Exiting and seeing Jennifer looking at him with her wonderful smile, he completely forgot where he was or what he was about to do. Smiling back as Jennifer held out her hand, he took it and the two joined the three others in the entry hallway.
Heading out into the still-rising sun, the heat of the day was nowhere near, but the promise of it could be felt in the warmth on their skin. John locked the house while the four made their way to the minivan in the driveway. When Vicky opened up the driver's side sliding door and gestured for the three children to enter, Luke attempted to rush in.
"Me first!" he shouted, trying to vault into the booster seat on the passenger side.
Catching him by the arm, Vicky tutted. "Ladies first, young man!"
Cowed, he bowed his head in shame. "Sorry!"
At last letting go of Josh's hand, Jennifer climbed in and made her way to the back row bench seat. "Back here, Jocelyn! We can sit together!"
Following the girl to the rear seat, Jennifer having taken the driver's side, Josh gracefully placed himself on the passenger side and buckled in while Vicky situated Luke in his booster seat. When at last the two adults took their seats in the front, John driving and Vicky next to him, John looked back at the two as the engine started.
"Everyone belted in?" Hearing no objection, he smiled at the two. "Good! Church is about fifteen minutes away, so we have plenty of time." Pulling out onto the residential street, he waved at one of the neighbors working in their yard who waved in return as they drove past.
Turning to Jennifer, Josh noticed she seemed to be staring at him. Feeling self-conscious, he leaned in slightly. "What is it? Is something wrong?"
Smiling at him, Jennifer shook her head. "No. It's just..." At a loss for words, she blushed and looked at her lap. Taking a breath, she looked back up at him. "It's just... you're too beautiful!" she said barely above a whisper.
Worried, Josh looked at his outfit. "I thought this was just right. I'm sorry I overdressed!" he answered embarrassedly.
"No! Not that!" Jennifer said softly. "I mean you! The outfit is perfect! You fit right in! I mean you're too beautiful for anyone to think you were ever..."
"A boy?" he finished for her. Suddenly feeling guilty for being and feeling like one, he cast his eyes downward. "I know."
"It's nothing to be ashamed of, Jocelyn!" Jennifer said, trying to cheer him up. "I meant it in a nice way! You... you're..." she blushed heavily as she stared at him. "You're like a dream. You can't be for real!"
Now feeling quite flattered, he smiled at the compliment and looked in her beautiful blue eyes. "Jenny? Can I ask you something?"
"Anything!" she answered.
"Do you... um... like... uh... like me? Like more than as a friend?"
Her face rapidly turning from elated to terrified, she looked away from him quickly and out the window. "Um... why would you ask me that?"
Fearing that he'd misunderstood, he shrugged. "I guess no reason. Maybe... the way you look at me? It's OK, I didn't mean to offend you by asking. I don't wanna lose you as a friend. I just thought... never mind. It's stupid."
Turning slowly and shyly back to face him, Jennifer looked near to tears. "If I tell you something, you promise to keep it a secret?"
Gulping, he nodded and said, "I promise."
Biting her lower lip, she looked at him and decided he meant it. Leaning in as far as she could, she waited for Josh to lean his ear closer. As soon as she felt he was close enough she could whisper and he would hear her, she shared her secret. "I like you. A lot! Too much for you being a girl! I think I did from the first moment I saw you on the first day of school!"
Leaning back to look at her, he saw the fear in her eyes and knew she was telling the truth. Stunned, he looked down at his lap. "And me being a girl doesn't change that?" Looking back at her, he saw her just shake her head no.
The rest of the drive to the church was passed in silence. When they arrived, Josh looked out the window to see a simple building with a high vaulted roof and a steeple off to one side. It was a modern building, obviously built in the last thirty years, but it still had an old-world style to it. Pulling into a parking space, John killed the motor and the two adults got out and opened the side doors. While Vicky helped Luke out and closed his door, John offered his hand first to Josh and then to his daughter to help them out.
Walking toward the building together, Josh felt Jennifer's hand in his again and her gripping it tightly. Looking over to her, she was smiling at him and blushing heavily before turning away embarrassedly. Squeezing her hand in return, he was glad to see her turn to see him grinning at her.
Entering the open double doors, the pastor was there, greeting the people as they entered. "John! Vicky! Glad to see you, as always!" he offered happily. Looking behind them, he saw a new addition to their usual group. "And who are we lucky enough to have as your guest this morning?"
Vicky took charge of introductions. "Pastor Roberts? This is Jennifer's friend, Jocelyn. She wanted to join us this morning!"
Looking at the man, Josh got a sense that he wasn't someone to be feared, but someone you could trust, like a teacher or a Principal. As the man knelt down to his level, he held out a hand to Josh.
"I'm so glad you did, Jocelyn! Have you ever been to church before?"
Faced with someone directly asking the question he'd hoped no one would, he swallowed hard and lowered his gaze before slowly shaking his head. "N... no, sir." Looking up at Jennifer and then her parents, he expected them to be angry, but they only looked puzzled. "D... do I need to go? I'm sorry."
Looking up at the Healys as he continued kneeling, the pastor turned back to Josh. "I don't want you to go, but maybe you should talk with Mr. and Mrs. Healy first, OK?" Standing up, he nodded toward a small room off to the side used for coats during foul weather that was currently unoccupied.
Vicky took Jennifer's hand and lead her, and Josh by virtue of the girl's unwillingness to let go of his hand, into the room while John told Luke to go off to his Sunday School class. After John came in and closed the door, the two parents turned to Josh and knelt down to look him in the eye.
"Are you mad at me?" Josh asked terrified. "I... I never said I went to church, I just... I never told you I didn't go."
Jennifer tried to intercede on his behalf. "It's my fault, Mom! I just assumed she went to church! I never actually asked her! Please don't be mad at her!"
"We're not mad, sweetie." John said calmly. "We're just... concerned."
"Jocelyn?" Vicky said gently. "Do your parents know where you are?"
"They know I'm with you." he answered truthfully. "They trust me! Honest!"
"Did they know we were going to church?" she asked more directly.
Shaking his head, he sighed in defeat. "No. If they did they'd have never let me come. They say really bad things about Christians."
Closing her eyes in sorrow, Vicky sighed before opening them and looking at Josh. "Then why did you want to come with us?"
Looking from Vicky to John and then to Jennifer, he turned back to Jennifer's mother. "Because I think they're wrong a lot. They've always told me things I know are wrong... I can't say what... it's very private... but I know they say things that are wrong, so I wanted to see for myself. Please? Let me stay? I just wanted to know what it's all about."
"I'll be thirteen in like five months!" Josh continued arguing unbidden. "My parents trust me to go anywhere in town without me even having to ask! If I wanted to, I could have just walked into a church... or a synagogue... or a mosque... anytime. I just thought... well... since Jennifer seemed so nice, and she invited me, that it'd be OK. If it's not, I'll just catch the bus back home and maybe try going to a different church next week on my own. I don't want to cause you any problems."
Looking at one another and shrugging, not sure what to do, the two adults stood back up and John went to the door, opening it and gesturing for Pastor Roberts to come in. Explaining in brief what Josh had just told them, the pastor came over and knelt down in front of the boy again.
"Jocelyn? Have your parents ever told you that you cannot attend church?" he asked gently.
Josh shook his head slowly. "No, sir."
"And you're telling me the truth? It's important. If they have, you have to tell me, unless you want me to get in trouble."
Smiling, Josh shook his head again. "No, sir! They've never told me not to go to church. Not ever! I think they think I just wouldn't want to go."
Standing up with a grin, he turned to the concerned parents. "In Ohio, it's perfectly legal to expose someone, even a minor, to religious ideas. So long as Jocelyn here is not violating the rules of her parents' home, and I choose to believe her when she says she isn't, then no law is being broken and she's welcome in my church. I trust her because she could have easily lied to me when I asked if she'd ever attended church before, but she didn't. If you two are uncomfortable with the situation, then she can be my guest today!"
John and Vicky looked at one another before Vicky shook her head and turned back to him. "No, Pastor!" she answered for them both. "It's fine! Jocelyn was Jennifer's guest, and she should remain so! Thank you for your help!"
"Anytime!" he smiled at them and then down at the two children holding hands again. "And girls? Let this be a lesson to you both. When all else fails... just tell the truth!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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After the service, the family went to their usual restaurant for brunch. Josh was quiet and contemplative, distracted as he mentally deconstructed the topic, The Sermon on the Mount. He didn't understand the context, other than in theory, so all he could do was judge the value based on the words spoken. He ate his turkey club sandwich absently, staring off into space as he pondered the words that seemed to be in total contradiction with the impression his parents had given him of the Christian faith.
Getting up, Jennifer tapped Josh on the shoulder to get his attention. "Come with me!" she said happily.
Not even knowing what she was doing, Josh took her hand and would have eagerly followed her if she said she was going to get her appendix removed. When they reached the ladies restroom though, Josh stopped and brought the girl to a halt as well.
"I can't go in there!" he whispered with eyes wide.
"Why not?" she asked innocently, reminding Josh of the answer his mother gave when she wanted to be evasive. "You're a girl!"
"Not really." he pointed out quietly.
"Well, you can't use the men's room dressed like that!" she answered with a giggle. "Just come on! No one's gonna think you're a boy, so what difference does it make?" she insisted as she started pulling him along by the arm.
Slowly giving in, he let himself be pulled into the ladies room. Luckily it was empty and Josh soon discovered that the two glasses of milk he'd drunk had caught up with him and he actually did need to go. Slipping quickly into a stall, he sat down and just tried to pretend he was in the boys' room. The illusion was shattered a moment later when Jennifer started talking.
"Jocelyn?" she said from the adjacent stall. "Thank you for coming!"
"Thank you for inviting me." Josh answered nervously, unused to the way women talk so freely in the bathroom. After he was done, he left the stall to wash his hands while Jennifer continued to chatter away. Just as he finished, a middle-aged woman came in and peered down at him.
"Don't you look nice!" she offered sweetly as she paused before going into the stall he'd just vacated. Finding it unsettling that a strange woman was about to do something very private in the same room he was in, Josh quickly dried his hands and exited. Leaning against the wall outside the door, he exhaled and pondered why it made him so uncomfortable when he'd never felt that way in the men's room. I thought I was starting to like all this?
After he stood and waited a few minutes, Jennifer finally came out. Her brow furrowed, she looked at him quizzically. "Why didn't you wait for me?"
"I did!" he insisted. "I'm here, aren't I?"
"No, I mean... why didn't you wait inside? I was talking to myself in there!"
Unsure how to answer, he gave the only explanation he could. "When boys are done, they just leave. All I know about bathroom etiquette is from being a boy. That was my first time in the ladies room." Walking slowly back to their table, he noticed Jennifer take his hand again.
"I suppose that makes sense. I never see boys go to the restroom together, so why would they wait for each other? I just never thought about it before."
"Why do girls go to the bathroom together?" Josh asked innocently.
"To talk!" she said as if it were the most obvious thing in the world. "Well, that and in case one of us needs something that the other one is carrying if we run out. You know... something we need one week a month?"
Confused for a moment, slowly it dawned on him what she was talking about and his eyes went wide. "Oh! You mean... OK. I'm almost sorry I asked!" he finished with a blush.
"You're adorable when you're embarrassed!" she giggled as they approached the table.
Rejoining the rest of the family, Josh enjoyed the happy ease with which they conducted a simple brunch. They do this every week? he wondered. Several times he was even drawn into their chats. The best night out with my parents was that night last week when I first went out dressed like a girl, and even that night was nothing compared to this! They never seem to get mad about anything! After a little more than an hour eating and chatting, Luke started fidgeting restlessly.
"That's our cue that we're done!" John said with a smile. Getting up, he dropped a ten dollar bill on the table, before taking the check up to the front counter to pay.
While the rest of the family and Josh made their way to the car, Josh leaned in and whispered to Jennifer, their hands once more together. "Jenn? Why did your dad drop cash on the table?"
Looking at him perplexedly, she shrugged. "He was tipping the waitress! Don't your parents do that?"
Blinking absently, he tried to think of an instance, but the closest thing that came to mind was the loose change that they dropped in cups and hats of panhandlers. "I don't know. They never talk to me about things like money or what to do at a restaurant. Daddy always pays with a credit card. Can you give a tip on one of those?"
"I think so." she answered. "They must always do it that way."
Climbing in the back seat, the two rode back to the Healy's home in relative silence, interrupted by an occasional glance at one another and shy giggling.
Pulling into the driveway, just as the two parents let the children out of the car, Josh felt his cell phone vibrating. Climbing out, he was in too good a mood to care that it was his parents calling. "Hi!" he said happily.
"Hi, sweetie!" Melanie said, much more cheerful than usual. "Having fun?"
"Yeah!" he replied, looking back at Jennifer. "We just got back from brunch. I had a turkey club and it was really good! The Healys are very nice!"
"That's great, sweetheart!" she said honestly. "I'm so glad! I know I was worried, but you're your own person and know your own mind. I just wanted to know when you're coming home. No rush! Not trying to cramp your style or anything, but your father wanted to take me out and we need to know if you were going to be home soon. Fred! Stop that! I'm talking to Jocelyn!"
"Hi, princess!" Josh heard in the background. "Love you!"
Rolling his eyes, Josh sighed and looked at Jennifer, who was the only one still outside; the others having gone in. "Tell Daddy I love him too!" he said, shaking his head. "You guys go ahead. I think it'd be OK if I hang out here a while." Eyeing Jennifer questioningly, he was rewarded with a look of utter joy on the girl's face. "Yeah, it should be fine!"
"OK, sweetheart!" his mother replied. "We'd like you home by dinnertime. Is that alright? Love you, baby! See you in a while! Bye!"
Hearing his mother burst into laughter as the line disconnected, he went up to the waiting girl. "They said I can stay out 'til dinnertime. That's usually at seven. I'll need to leave by six-thirty to get the bus home. You sure it's OK?"
"Let's go ask!" she said, taking his hand as the two ran to the house together.
Slowing as they came in the door, Jennifer found her mother in the master bedroom removing the bobby pins holding her hair up; the door wide open. "Mom? Jocelyn's parents said she could stay out until seven, that's when they have dinner. Can she stay until then?"
Looking at the two who looked back at her expectantly, she sighed. "Well, let me ask your father what he thinks, but I don't see why she can't stick around a while. Why don't you show her your room while we talk it over?"
Squealing with delight, she practically pulled Josh's arm out as she went a short way down the hall, opened a door on the opposite side from her parents' room, and pulled him in. "This is my room!" she said proudly.
Looking around, it was smaller than his, but her bed was only a twin instead of a double, so there was almost as much room. "Nice." he said honestly, thinking it was better, as in less girly, than his own. Checking out her posters, they were mostly of popular girl bands with a few landscapes.
"What posters do you have up in your room?" she asked. "This one is my favorite! It's from an old movie!"
Looking at the poster of Austrian hillsides, he smiled. "The Sound of Music! I love that movie! Julie Andrews is so cool!"
"What other movies do you like?"
Grinning like a piano keyboard, Josh sat on her bed and started ticking off his fingers. "I have original movie posters for West Side Story, Oklahoma, The King and I, My Fair Lady, Hello Dolly, and The Fiddler on the Roof! Daddy put them in actual theater display frames for me! I love old musicals! They have such great songs and wonderful period costumes!"
Seeing him so animated and happy was infectious for Jennifer, even though she hadn't even heard of half of the movies he'd mentioned. "That sounds so cool! I'd love to see them sometime! Your posters, I mean! I've seen some of those movies over at my grandma's house. I don't think she has the first few you said, though."
Stunned, he stared at her and asked, "You've never seen West Side Story? It's just like the best musical ever! It's Romeo and Juliet done in the slums of New York in the 50s. It won like ten Academy Awards that year, the most of any musical! You have got to see it! It's like thee best movie in history!"
"Better than The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe?" she asked skeptically.
"I wouldn't know." Josh admitted as his enthusiasm died. "I haven't seen it."
Smiling, she sat down next to him and took his hand again. "That's because it isn't out yet! It doesn't come out 'til December! The previews make it look like it's gonna be thee best, though!" she echoed his enthusiasm. Biting her lower lip nervously she asked, "Would... would you come see it with me?"
Shyly grinning back, he nodded and squeezed her hand. "I'd love to!"
Sitting silently together a moment, staring into each other's eyes, eventually Jennifer got up and let go his hand. "You wanna play a game or something? We could go for a walk in the park just down the street... or watch a movie? I don't think we have any old musicals, though."
Just as Josh was about to answer, Vicky stepped in the room. "Mind if your father and I have a talk with Jocelyn first, sweetie?" she asked.
"Sure." Jennifer said as she walked over to her mother for a hug. "Just don't beat her too badly, Mom!" she said as she let go and ran out laughing gaily.
Exhaling heavily, Vicky pulled out the chair from Jennifer's desk. "Come sit over here, dear. I promise... no beatings!"
Giggling, he moved from the bed to the chair as Vicky sat on the girl's bed and John entered, mostly closing the door behind him. Moving to sit next to his wife, the two sighed as they considered what to say.
"Am I in trouble?" he asked, his smile fading. "Did I do something bad?"
"No, sweetie." Vicky said gently. "Not as such. We just want to know a little more about you, is all. Jenny seems very fond of you and we..."
Seeing his wife of fifteen years unsure of how to put it, he finished for her. "We have some... concerns." he put it delicately. "She only just met you last week, but for the last six days she hasn't been able to stop talking about you and... well... we were curious about you. You said your parents have said bad things about Christians?"
Nodding, Josh felt the air collapse from his lungs. Figures! Those two are gonna ruin my friendship with Jenn and they aren't even here! "Yeah. Does that mean you don't want Jenn and I to be friends?"
"No!" they chorused.
Turning to one another, John deferred to Vicky. "Sweetheart, we'd never hold you responsible for things your parents say! You seem like a very open and caring girl and we... we're just concerned that you might repeat some of the things that your parents have said to Luke or Jennifer. We don't believe you would, because we've gotten to know you, but... we just need you to tell us that you won't... for now. When you're older perhaps, but we don't want the children to be exposed to that degree of animosity toward their faith just yet. You're only young once, and we want them to have an innocent time in their lives when they don't have to worry about such things. There's plenty of time for that when they get a few years older."
"Understand, Jocelyn..." John added, "...we're not asking you to lie... just don't bring it up, and if they ask, say you can't talk about it. That's all."
"We'll believe you if you give us your word, dear. We've seen you're an honest girl." Vicky finished.
Being called an 'honest girl' made Josh feel a severe pang of guilt that he wasn't actually a girl, and wasn't being truthful with them about that. He wouldn't lie to them if they directly asked, but he also knew he looked so much like a girl that they never would. Not for a few years anyway, and only if I manage to get out of taking hormone blockers. Deciding that some things were just private, and that it was his choice who to tell and who not to tell, he justified keeping it from them for the time being.
Looking at them a moment, he nodded. "I promise. I won't tell them the things my parents say about Christians until you say I can."
Expressions of relief washing over the two, John stood up and headed for the door. "I'll let you ladies finish. I'll go check on the kids."
As the man closed the door firmly behind him, Josh turned back to Vicky and swallowed hard. This can't be good. he thought.
Vicky bit her lower lip nervously, reminding him of Jennifer's habit and showing him where she'd gotten it. "Jocelyn, I wanted to ask you something privately because it's a sensitive subject and I didn't want to embarrass you. OK?" Seeing Josh nod, she pressed forward. "I... I noticed Jenny taking more of an interest in you than normal... for a girl. She..." Pausing as she tried to formulate the words delicately, she sighed and did her best. "She... likes you, more than girls normally like other girls. You know that, don't you?"
Blushing and turning away, he saw the poster for The Sound of Music, which reminded him of nuns, which in turn reminded him of Pastor Roberts and the friendly man's good advice. When all else fails, tell the truth. Looking back at Jennifer's mother, he hesitated only a moment before he nodded his head slowly.
Moving on, Vicky scooted forward and reached out to take Josh's hands. "Jocelyn? Do you have similar feelings for my Jenny? Please tell me the absolute truth. I won't judge you either way, but I have to know the truth."
A tear escaped his right eye as he fought the desire to deny it, certain that as soon as he did so, he would no longer be welcome in their home. Still, he felt he could do nothing less than tell her the truth. Slowly, tears dropping silently down his cheeks, he almost imperceptibly nodded his head.
Seeing how scared he was, Vicky slid off the bed to her knees and hugged Josh, cradling his head to her breast as though he were her own daughter. "Shhh! It's OK, sweetheart. I'm not mad! You can't help what you feel! I understand! I've got you!"
Feeling the comforting embrace and hearing her words of true compassion and tolerance, Josh released all his pent-up fear, anguish, repressed self-loathing, and bitterness that he'd been pushing aside and burying inside of himself for weeks. Unable to stem the tide once the dam was broken, he sobbed openly into Vicky's shoulder and clung to her as though he might drown in his own tears if he let go.
After a time, finally the feelings of helplessness and self-loathing began to ebb, at least enough he could regain his composure and some of his outward dignity. "S... sorry... V... Vicky." he said though halting sobs. "I... I... I didn't... mean to... lose con... control... like that." he blubbered. Taking the tissue she offered him, he wiped his face and blew his nose. "I must look a fright!"
Laughing at his use of such an old-fashioned expression gleaned from his beloved old movies, Vicky shook her head. "No, dear! Though you might want to clean up before you come out of Jenny's room!" Pausing to let him calm himself and use another tissue to dry his face and eyes, Vicky guided him to sit next to her on Jennifer's bed. "Feeling better?" she asked. Seeing Josh nod, she sighed and looked away at her daughter's girl band posters.
"John and I were afraid of this." she admitted to the boy. "She's never shown any interest in boys, even though all the other girls her age have. We were hoping that it was just a phase, but it's not." Turning to Josh, she smiled at him gently. "Yes, we know it's not your fault! You didn't make our daughter g... gay. Nobody did. We don't hate you, or her, for something you had no hand in. May... may I ask you something personal?"
Josh took a breath and nodded. "Anything." he answered.
Turning away, embarrassed to be asking a twelve-year-old this, she forged ahead regardless. "Have... Is Jenny the first girl that you've liked this way?"
Slowly shaking his head, Josh answered honestly. "No. There's another girl at school I liked, but she doesn't like me."
"That hurts no matter who you are or who you like." Vicky said with a sigh. "We've all been there. Last year, Jenny... well... I shouldn't tell you things about her. That should be up to her if she shares them with you. Suffice it to say, she liked a girl and the feeling wasn't mutual. Jenny was devastated for months. We knew, but hoped it might change her. God's work is sometimes very painful to endure, but a greater good always comes from it to erase the hurt. It just sometimes takes longer than we'd like."
Biting her lip again, Vicky looked at Josh once more. "I... I'm afraid for my daughter, Jocelyn. Afraid that out of love for someone, she'll abandon her faith and turn against us. John and I promised each other that no matter what, we wouldn't do anything that might drive her away from us. We may not like it, but we can't do that to our own daughter. I'm telling you all this because I think you might understand. You may only be twelve, but you have an air of wisdom to you beyond your years. I feel like you not only understand, but that... well... we think you can help."
Looking up at her, Josh furrowed his brow. "How can I help? I can't even help myself! There's a part of me that makes me different. I wish I could make it go away, but I can't." He hated not telling her everything, but he wasn't ready to face the possible rejection, so he equivocated.
"I understand, sweetie." she said, squeezing him with the arm she'd wrapped around his shoulders. "What I mean is that you can... well... be there for her. She likes you... and so do John and I. We were both impressed with your honesty and how you wanted to learn about our faith for yourself, despite what your parents told you. That means you aren't likely to try and force your opinions on others... even if you don't share them."
Sighing as she couldn't believe the words she was about to say, she let go of her fear and said them anyway, trusting to providence. "We... we wouldn't object to you two spending... time... with each other, if that's what you two want, so long as you can respect the limits we set, and providing, of course, that your own parents approve, which we gather, they're likely to."
Turning to face Vicky, Josh was in complete stupefaction at what he was hearing. Having fully expected to be thrown out of their house for admitting he liked Jennifer as more than a friend, here they were, all but giving them permission to date each other.
"Just so you know, if you'd have said that the feeling wasn't mutual, I'd have believed you... and then asked you to leave and never return, hoping that in a few weeks Jenny would get over you." Vicky admitted. "We couldn't stand to watch her work herself up over another girl, only to be spurned again. If you didn't like her that way, we would have tried to minimize the hurt by ending your relationship right away. Do you understand?"
Regarding Vicky, Josh released the breath he was holding as he realized that the truth was what had saved him. "OK. I understand. So... what limits?"
Confused for a moment, she blushed and looked away as she began to follow his question. "Oh! Um... well for starters, you can't be alone anywhere, like in this room, or yours, with the door closed. Secondly, no public displays of affection. That's mostly for your and Jenny's protection. Here in the house, or at yours or another private place where it's safe, it would be... permitted. Lastly, Luke cannot know about your relationship, so you'd have to make sure he never sees anything that would be... well... inappropriate... for a nine-year-old boy. This would be the case until he's at least a teenager. By then you'd both be sixteen... and at that point you'd be of the age of consent anyway... and I think it would also be obvious to a blind fool that you were a couple if you're together that long... so..."
Tapping Vicky on the shoulder, Josh waited until she'd turned to face him. "Before I came over here this morning, my Mom figured out how much I like Jenn and the only thing she said to me was to go slow, enjoy it, and not let myself get hurt." Letting that sink in, he continued. "I think your rules are a lot better. Jenn and I are just kids!"
"I like Jenn." he sighed happily. "A lot, but I don't want to race ahead. I like how she makes me feel and don't want it to change, even if it's to feel better. She means too much to me to risk losing her by going too fast. I don't know if we'll still feel the same four years from now, I just know that right now I'd do just about anything just to be near her. I like how she makes me feel and how I make her feel... and that's enough."
Gaping at Josh, Vicky was speechless. Finally she stood and offered Josh a hand up. Kneeling down and taking him in her arms, she let go of her fears. "I see what Jenny sees in you, Jocelyn. You have a good soul. I could think of no one better for her than someone like you... boy or girl!"
Giving Josh a few minutes to clean and fix his face, the two headed out into the living room together. Seeing John sitting and holding Jennifer as the girl wept, the two adults looked at one another knowingly and nodded.
"Jocelyn? Why don't you come in the kitchen and help me make up some snacks?" Vicky said in order to give Jennifer time to compose herself. A few minutes later, John joined the two in the kitchen.
"Jenny wanted to go freshen up." he explained. "She'll be out shortly."
"Have a good talk?" Vicky asked as she cut up a cucumber.
"Very productive and with a positive outlook." he answered her real question in a way that would be difficult for Josh to discern.
"Same here." Vicky told him, glancing down at their twelve-year-old guest.
Just as the two finished making up a vegetable tray, Josh spotted Jennifer coming into the kitchen. Her eyes were as bloodshot from crying as his own, but inside them was a light that shone gaily. "Here, Jocelyn." she offered. "You're my guest, let me get that for you!"
When Jennifer came in close to Josh to take the tray, their hands touched and they both froze, their eyes fixed on one another. Josh felt her fingers against his, her skin sliding ever so gently against his own hypersensitive nerves and lighting a fire in his belly like none he'd ever known. It lasted barely a second, but it burned into his memory for the rest of his life.
Later as they walked through the park, John far enough behind them to give them some privacy, they were once more holding hands.
"So..." Jennifer said at last, "I take it Mom talked to you while Dad talked to me?"
Josh nodded. "Your parents are wonderful, Jenn. They love you so much!"
She agreed and smiled. "I know. They're about as good as parents can get and still be parents! I mean, I can't even get my ears pierced until I'm in High School, and they always have to know where I am, who I'm with, what I'm doing... blah, blah, blah! I know they do it because they love me and care about me, but sometimes it gets to be a bit too much!"
"Believe me, Jenn!" Josh laughed. "That's way better than parents that don't set any limits or try and control your every move! I should know!"
Giggling together, they swung their hands between them playfully, their fingers intertwined. After a moment, Josh screwed up the courage to ask the question he needed to know the answer to. "Jenn? I... I need to know if they know about me... about who and what I am, I mean,"
Jennifer shook her head and stared at the sidewalk. "Not unless they figured it out on their own, they don't... or unless you told them. I doubt there's any way they could figure it out themselves, though! You're much too beautiful!"
Blushing, Josh turned away a moment before looking back to her. "I think I need to tell them. I can't stand lying to them, even by way of just not telling them everything. I wanted to talk to you about it first because... well... there's a chance they'll take it all back and we'll never be allowed to see each other again if I do. So since this doesn't just affect me, I need to see what you think before I decide what I'm going to do."
Terrified, she shook her head vigorously. "No! You can't! I couldn't take it if they made you go away! I... I need you too much! Can't... can't you just wait? That way they get used to you, get to know you like I do, and then..."
"...and then tell them that the person they thought I was is a phony?" Josh pointed out. One thing growing up in his parents' home taught him how to do well was to have an open debate. "It'd make them question everything they know about me and destroy the trust they put in me. They might just send me packing on that alone, even if they otherwise wouldn't."
"But Joss, if you tell them now, then we get so close, only to have no time together to enjoy it!" she countered. "God! I wish He would just tell me what to do sometimes... which path is the right one! Sometimes it's just so hard to tell!"
"I don't know much about Christianity, just what I heard today, really." Josh shook his head. "But a lot of what I heard says that Jesus wanted us to be good to one another, right? That part about 'doing unto others'? I've heard it before. It's called The Golden Rule." Seeing her nod, he continued. "It seems to me that if you live by that rule, you gotta be as honest with them as they are with us... and what your mom told me earlier was pretty darn honest, even though she didn't want to say it!"
"I'm scared!" she admitted, slowing to a stop. "Hold me?"
Glancing back at her father, Josh wrapped her in a warm hug. Jennifer in turn clung to the smaller boy and threatened to crush him with the ferocity of her need to be close to him. After a short time, the two sensed John moving up closer. Not angrily, but enough to be a gentle reminder of their promise to limit displays of affection in public. Separating, Josh looked over at the man whose face was a turmoil of concern, fear, anguish, and hope. Looking down and then smiling up at Jennifer, Josh started walking with her again, their hands still entwined.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Sitting in Jennifer's bedroom, the door open, and with a promise from her parents not to 'wander by' to check up on them for at least half an hour, the two sat on her bed next to one another. Before the three had returned to the Healy's home, Josh had decided that it was now or never, so he'd asked her parents for a moment of semi-privacy to talk with Jennifer alone first.
"So... um... what was it that you needed to tell me?" Jennifer asked quietly, smiling at what she hoped it might be. As she spoke, she ran her fingers along the back of Josh's hand.
Taking a sharp breath, Josh looked at her, his heart hammering away in his chest at her closeness and her touch. "Um... can... I like that, but I need to say this and I can't think when you do that!"
Giggling, Jennifer ceased driving him to distraction. "OK... for now. So what did you want to talk about?"
"Me." he explained simply. Starting at the beginning, he laid out how his parents had insisted since he was five that he was gay, then how when he'd kept insisting that he wasn't gay his parents essentially forced him to accept being transgendered. They'd done nothing illegal; no law covered his exact situation. Josh had essentially acquiesced.
"Plus, you know... I'm really girly!" he laughed, making her laugh with him.
"Joss... um... Josh... I guess..." she asked, "I don't care! I like you! More than like really, I think I'm falling for you." She ran her fingertips along his hand again. "When I look at you, all I see is someone beautiful. Like I said, I think I fell for you that first day when you were still dressed like... um... like a boy, I guess. Even then, even with everyone calling you Josh and the clothes you wore, you were still pretty. Not handsome or cute, but... pretty. Beautiful, really! Does that make you mad?"
Closing his eyes as he reveled in the feel of her touch and her words, not even caring that being called pretty and beautiful made him feel wonderful, Josh shook his head to clear it. "Jenn? We're still just kids... and I promised your parents we wouldn't... um..."
Running her finger up his arm, raising gooseflesh as it went, she loved seeing how good she could make him feel. "The first rule was that we couldn't be alone someplace with the door closed." Looking over at the open door, she smiled. "It isn't closed! The second rule was no PDAs. We're not in public. The last rule was never anything in front of Luke. He's not here."
Vaguely aware that she was right, they were doing nothing directly against her parents' rules, Josh felt that they were perhaps violating the spirit of them. Looking up at her though, he couldn't think anymore.
"Jocelyn?" Jennifer said as she stopped and withdrew her hand. "I... um... I want my first kiss to be with you. Will you let me kiss you?"
Seeing him nod slightly, their fingers linked, she leaned in close and pressed her lips to his as their eyes closed. It was just a simple kiss, honestly no more than the kisses he used to give his parents. When he felt her soft lips against his though, and felt the emotional connection it brought with it, he found that a 'simple kiss' could mean so much more. The kiss lingered for several moments that stretched into eternity for the two. Slowly, they parted and opened their eyes once more.
As Josh stared into her gaze, he saw within the girl a need; a storming hunger for much more. It was so fierce it scared him. Trembling slightly, his voice wavered as he spoke. "That was... really nice. Can we go slow? Can you?"
Seeing the fear in his eyes and hearing it in his voice, Jennifer scooted back slightly. "I'm sorry! I didn't mean..." At a loss for how to apologize for terrifying him so much, guilt washed over her like a tidal wave. "Jocelyn, I won't ever push you for more than you're ready for, OK? I promise! I know I wanna do more... a lot more... but hurting you to get it would make it terrible, not wonderful. Can you forgive me?"
Nodding as he relaxed, he looked at her kindly. "Anytime, Jenn! I promise I'll let you know when I'm ready for more." Smiling mischievously he added, "For now, can we just do that again?"
Like an animal that had just broken free of the chain that bound it, Jennifer kissed him again, this time letting her free hand touch his face. As the kiss once more ended, she blew out a breath. "Wow! You are so beautiful! I could do that all day!" Kissing him a third and much longer time, they were in the middle of it when they heard the voice behind them.
"Jenny dear, your fath... Oh, God!" Vicky gasped as she instantly regretted not knocking first.
Breaking the kiss and glancing at the clock, Jennifer saw she and Josh had five minutes left of their half-hour. "Mom! You promised! It's not time yet!"
Her eyes cast down at the floor, she very nearly yelled at her daughter before regaining her emotional composure. "I'm sorry! I'm sorry!" she cried. Unsure if she could ever get used to the idea of her daughter kissing another girl, she remembered all that she and John had talked about and the promise she'd made to never risk driving their daughter away. "I'll... I'll come back in a few minutes." she stammered as she blindly turned toward the door, still looking down.
"Mom!" Jennifer sighed exasperatedly. "Come back! We're done talking anyway."
Stopping and slowly looking up, she was relieved to see Jennifer standing behind her and not on the bed with Josh. "Sweetheart, I am sorry. I lost track of the time and I wanted to let you know that your father was going to offer to drive Jocelyn home. I... I'll try to be more careful in the future." Smiling weakly, she hoped Jennifer would understand. "You're just growing up so fast and... it's hard to keep up!"
Walking up to and hugging her mom, Jennifer sighed. "It's fine, Mom. Like I said, we were done talking."
Seeing an opportunity to both grow from the experience and at the same time break the shame threatening the two preteens, Vicky smirked. "That's not what we called it when I was your age!"
"Mother!" Jennifer gasped as she backed away from her, turning beat red.
"Oh, Jennifer!" she countered with a smile. "I was a child of the eighties! You think I never had a boy up in my room when I was in Middle School?" Looking over at Josh, she bit her lower lip embarrassedly. "Not that I was calling you a boy, Jocelyn! Far from it! You're a lovely young girl, and..." Forcing herself to say it out loud, she completed her thought. "Jenny is very blessed to have found you! You're very special!"
"You don't know the half of it." Josh said exasperatedly. "I was wondering if you would ask Mr. Healy in? There's something I need to tell you both and I don't think I can do it more than once."
"Certainly, dear." she answered softly. "I'll get him. Watch the time, though. You need to get home soon." Exiting calmly, she went to fetch her husband.
"Jenn?" Josh asked. "Can... can you sit next to me and hold my hand? This'll probably be the scariest thing I've ever done. I don't think I can do it alone."
Nodding with a smile, she sat next to him and put her hand in his again, giving it a squeeze before giving him a peck on the cheek. "For luck!"
Staring into each other's eyes, they heard Vicky and John coming this time and scooted slightly apart, though still holding hands. As her parents came in, Vicky took a seat at the desk chair while John stood behind her and held her shoulders to comfort her.
"Jocelyn, dear." Vicky said with a blush as she handed him a tissue, "You have... um... Jenny's lipstick... on your cheek."
Quickly rubbing it off with the kleenex, Josh turned red and looked up at the two. "Sorry. Um... I wanted to tell you that you two have been nicer to me than even my own parents. They love me, I know that, but sometimes they get so caught up in doing what other people tell them is the right thing to do they get carried away... and I kinda just get swept along with their ideas... like I'm some science experiment or something."
"I need to tell you something because you two have been so nice... I just can't let today end without you knowing." he said as he looked them each in the eye in turn. "You trusted me to be honest, but there's something about me that I've kept from you. I convinced myself it was just my own business, but I want you two to never doubt my honesty, so I need to tell you."
Vicky faced up toward John who nodded his assent to let her speak for them both. "Jocelyn, you don't have to share your private matters for us to trust you, dear! You're an honest girl and we..."
"Boy." Josh interrupted in correction.
"Pardon?" Vicky said confusedly.
"You said honest girl. That's wrong. I'm an honest boy."
Looking at him carefully, she couldn't make the words make sense. "Um... you think you're like a boy? Is that because you like other girls?"
Sighing, he let it all out. "No, I mean I am a boy. My parents are convinced that I'm transgendered... that I want to be a girl... so they forced me to accept the idea. They took away all my boy clothes, are changing my name, and I'm sure that pretty soon they'll try to put me on hormone blockers so that I don't grow into a man. I don't think I'm a girl. I'm pretty sure I'm a boy. I just act like a girl a lot, so they think that means I want to be one."
Gaping at the boy in horror at the idea, Vicky shook her head in stunned disbelief. "No. No, I can't believe you! No parent would do that to their own child! You're lying!"
Shaking his head, he looked down at the floor between them. "I wish I were. Lying would be easier. For seven years they thought I was gay. They sent me to a summer camp for gay boys. I fought 'em. I argued, denied, yelled, cried, and did everything short of marry a girl to prove to 'em I wasn't gay, but they wouldn't listen. Then, just before this summer vacation ended, they told me they think I'm transgender and want to be a girl. I tried to fight it, but when they took away all my boy clothes, I had no choice. So I gave up. I let them treat me like a girl. I even tried to like it... but I can't. I'm a boy."
Seeing his hangdog look, the two looked at their daughter. "Jenny?" Vicky asked gently. "Did you know this?"
At first shaking her head, she then shrugged. "Some of it." she admitted. "I knew she used to be a boy. She dressed like one the first day of school, but even then she looked like a girl wearing boy clothes. I didn't know it wasn't her choice until today, though. That's what she wanted to talk to me about after our walk with Daddy."
Vicky slowly sat up. "You mean, you knew that..." She struggled with the idea for a moment before continuing. "...that he was a boy... when I came in? When you were..."
"Kissing?" Jennifer finished for her. "Yeah. It's sorta weird. Even knowing Jocelyn's a boy, I don't really care. I just like her so much!"
Taking a moment, the two parents stepped outside the bedroom door to discuss the issue in whispers. Meanwhile, Josh felt Jennifer lay her head on his shoulder.
"I don't think they're mad." she said softly. "I just wish I knew what they were gonna do." As the two returned to the room, Jennifer sat back up.
"Jenny?" Vicky said sweetly. "Would you wait in the living room, please? We need to talk to... um... Jocelyn... alone."
Squeezing his hand, the young girl got up and left. Josh then looked at them nervously. "You can call me Josh, if you want. That's my real name."
Taking it slowly, Vicky sighed. "OK then... Josh... we first wanted to say we're glad you felt you could confide in us. It tells us that the trust we have in you was well placed. Knowing this actually makes things easier for John and I to accept. But..." She paused, trying to figure out the right words.
Josh's heart sank. "...but you don't want me to be around Jenn anymore? I was kinda expecting that."
"That's not what I was going to say!" she admonished. "What I was going to say was that we'd like to help. We don't understand all this, but John and I feel that you're a gift from God. You're a boy, but Jenny likes you... and that's good! We can accept that Jenny likes other girls, we have no choice, but we didn't want her to have to face a world that would be so hard on her. A world that would drive her away from her faith and deny her so much of what life has to offer just because she's... different. Her liking you, and you wanting to be a boy, means she doesn't have to face so much hardship."
Taking it all in, Josh nodded. "So... how do you think you can help?"
"We'd like to talk to your parents." John stated. "We think we can help you make them see that being a girl isn't what you want."
Josh almost laughed. "Seriously? You think they'd listen to you?"
"We can try." Vicky said with a smile.
Shaking his head, Josh exhaled in futility. "It's no good. I already gave in and told them they were right. They won't believe you." Taking a breath he looked up at them. "Can you give me some time to work on them? Believe me, I want you to help, but if you just show up today and try to tell them I'm really a boy, it'll be no good. They'll just get mad and say I can't be around you or Jenn anymore. That you all are bad for my 'self identity' or that you're just being 'preachy and close-minded' or some junk like that."
"We still need to meet them... Josh." Vicky struggled with the name, having a difficult time putting it on the 'obvious girl' seated on her daughter's bed. "Would you mind if we drove you home?"
"Sure." he said with a weak smile. "Just don't mention God, church, or me really wanting to be a boy... for now. Please? Just give me a chance to work them up to it?"
The two looked at one another and nodded. "Alright, dear. We'll be patient, but you can't take forever. We'll give you a few weeks, but then we really should talk to them. Do you want us to call you Jocelyn until then?"
"Please?" he asked. "Just around them? Or you can call me Joss. That's what my friend Trace... I mean, Tracy... calls me. It's pretty close to Josh!"
Smiling at him as Vicky stood up, she helped him to stand as well. "Well then... Joss, why don't we go ahead and drive you home?"
Sitting in the back seat of the minivan, Josh held Jennifer's hand and watched her looking at him with a worried expression. He'd already called home and warned his parents to expect company. "It'll be OK, Jenn." he tried to calm her fears. "They're not ogres... just... misguided."
Jennifer giggled at that and Josh was happy to see her smile. Pulling along the curb in front of his home, Vicky got out and opened the side door for the two preteens, the girl having already begged to let her go in with him.
While the three walked up the flagstone walkway toward Josh's front door, Jennifer squeezed his hand so tight he felt she might crush it. Reaching the door, he opened it with his free hand. "Come on in." he invited Jennifer and her mother. "Mom! Daddy! We're here!" he shouted as the three stepped into the living room.
Melanie came out of the master bedroom and smiled at Josh and his guests. "Welcome home, sweetheart!" she said as she walked up to him and gave him a quick hug. "You must be Vicky!" she said as she looked at the woman. "And you must be Jennifer!" she said, at last shaking the girl's hand. "Please! Make yourselves at home!" she gestured to the sofa.
"We can't stay." Vicky said regretfully. "My husband John and our son Luke are waiting in the car. I just thought it best if we actually met, seeing as how well the... girls... are getting on." She looked at Josh and Jennifer holding hands.
Smiling weakly, Melanie looked at the two. "I take it then that today was a... pleasant day?" she addressed Josh, gently probing to see if he was hurt in any way. Seeing the blush on his and Jennifer's cheeks, and the happy nod from him, told her all she wanted to know.
"Can I show Jenn my room before they go, Mom?" Josh asked sweetly. "I want to show her my movie posters!"
"Make it quick." Melanie said as Fred joined them while the two children ran up the stairs.
"Jocelyn..." Vicky said carefully, trying her best to keep up appearances as she promised, "...was an angel! Always polite and honest, about everything." She emphasized her words with a pointed look to show that she knew about Josh.
Tilting her head slightly, she looked in the other woman's eyes and saw kind understanding. "And you're OK with them seeing each other?"
"Jenny isn't allowed to date yet, Mrs. Ryan..."
"Please, call me Melanie... or just Mel! By the way, this is Jocelyn's father, Fred."
Nodding to him, Vicky flustered as she tried to continue. "As I was saying, Jenny isn't really allowed to date yet, but we... that is, John and I... we think it would be OK for the... the girls... to see each other socially. Even in just these past few days, they're already very close."
Melanie furrowed her brow at the other woman. "I take it that you're not thrilled that your daughter likes our daughter? It's not like they have a choice in the matter..."
"Oh! I know!" Vicky interrupted. " I actually think that Jocelyn could be just about the best person, boy or girl, for my Jenny to have feelings for! She's such a wonderful child! Polite, honest, and very up-front. She... she insisted that she tell us she used to be... well... a boy."
"She didn't used to be a boy." Fred argued the point. "She was always a girl. We just... well... we didn't understand that until recently."
Vicky was starting to see what Josh had tried to tell her about his parents. "I... I'm sorry. I put that badly. This is all new to me."
Melanie's expression softened. "It's alright. We see you're trying and not judging, that's what matters! As far as we're concerned, Jocelyn is free to date anyone she likes. It's not like we could stop them, right? They'd just do it behind our backs, anyway. I just want her to be careful and take all of the appropriate precautions. We don't want her to get hurt."
Nodding as she swallowed hard, Vicky was overwhelmed by the need to go before she said something she'd regret.
Leading Jennifer into his room, Josh stopped in the middle and gestured to his prized movie posters. "See? Aren't they..." Just as he turned to face her, Jennifer cupped his face in her hands and kissed him, this time much more sure of herself and more full of passion than the earlier kisses.
Josh could only relax into the moment and let her kiss him, relishing it.
Enjoying the feel of his lips and the warmth of him next to her, Jennifer at last languidly backed off and breathed heavily. "Sorry. I... I don't know what came over me. I just... I needed to do that!" she apologized as her hands ran down the arms of Josh's blouse, then linked her fingers in his. "Show me!" she said happily, turning to see the posters.
Overcome, Josh was stupefied for a moment before his brain started to work again. "Um... oh. Oh yeah! Uh, this one was... um... the first one I found." he sputtered as he indicated the poster for West Side Story.
Explaining where and how he found it, Jennifer came around behind him, her arms wrapping around his chest and her chin resting on his left shoulder as she pressed her cheek against his. Sighing contentedly, she listened as he slowly stammered through the story. After a minute, the two heard Jennifer's mother calling from downstairs.
"Jenny! We need to go, dear!"
Turning him abruptly, Jennifer kissed him on the lips once more, this time quickly, but much more aggressively and with an almost pained expression. "Oh, Jocelyn! I wish I never had to leave you ever again!" she nearly cried.
Hugging his girlfriend to help ease her upset, he let go and took her by the hand, heading out of the bedroom and down the stairs. "We'll see each other tomorrow at school! I'm gonna see if my parents will let me come over for 'Sunday brunch' again." he winked at her. "I wanna hear more of what I heard today!"
"What's that, princess?" Fred asked curiously.
"Oh, just talking before brunch." he answered vaguely. "Can I go? Please?"
"Jocelyn, you don't need to ask our permission!" Melanie smiled. "Your father and I got a chance to talk with Vicky and we so no reason why you shouldn't be free to go over there any time you like! We'll get you a city bus pass so it'll be easier. OK? And Jennifer? You're free to make yourself at home here anytime you like!"
"We really do have to go." Vicky said as she started moving toward the door. "I'm sorry I don't have more time to sit and really talk, but John and my son are outside waiting!"
Josh hugged Jennifer warmly and slowly. "See you at school, Jenn!"
Reveling in his embrace, Jennifer hummed contentedly. "See you tomorrow!" Pulling themselves apart, she backed away towards her mother waiting at the door; her eyes never leaving Josh's return gaze. "Bye... Jocelyn!"
"Bye... Jennifer!" After the two parted, Josh collapsed onto the couch with a dreamy look on his face. "I love the way she says my name!"
Fred came up behind Melanie, wrapping his arms around her stomach, unknowingly mimicking what Jennifer had just done with Josh upstairs. Smiling down on their child, they waited for him to come out of his haze before saying anything.
Sitting up, feeling the vacant hole in his heart that Jennifer had left, he looked up at them. "What?"
The two laughed as Melanie slipped in to sit next to him. "We're just happy for you, sweetheart! Jennifer seems like a wonderful girl! It's obvious she's attracted to you, too! I'm surprised you two came down so quickly after her mother called for her!"
"Mom!" Josh whined. "We're just kids! We weren't up there making out! Yes, I like her... a lot... and she likes me... maybe more than I like her, but I told her I want to go slow. So no making out in my room!"
Melanie shook her head dismissively. "Make any rules you want, sweetheart. Just know that they're your rules and you can change them anytime you see fit. Just make sure you close your door. I'll have your father put a lock on it tomorrow while you're at school, so you can have all the privacy you need."
Sighing, Josh was finding himself wishing his parents would set boundaries for him for once. It's like they don't even care what happens to me!
"Come on, lover girl!" Melanie said as she helped him to his feet. "Let's have dinner and you can tell us all about your day!"
Walking with his parents into the dining room, he knew one thing he wasn't going to tell them about. Well, that and the kisses! he thought with a smile.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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The next morning Josh cheerfully made his way toward the bus stop. It was a beautiful late summer day, so he'd worn one of the skirts that used to belong to Tracy and one of the tops Melanie had gotten him. When he saw his best friend at the stop, he smiled wide and jogged forward to greet her.
"Hey, Trace! Glad to see you feeling better!"
"Thanks, Joss!" she grinned back. "I'm just glad I'm not in bed anymore!"
The two giggled together as they waited for the bus.
"So, what did you do this weekend while I was dying?" Tracy dramatically asked. "You never called or anything. I missed you!"
Feeling bad that he'd almost completely ignored his best friend while she was sick, he looked away. "I... uh... I went over to Jenn's house on Sunday."
Her smile melting, Tracy turned away as well. "Oh. I guess she's your best friend now."
"No!" Josh insisted as he moved to make the girl look at him. "She's... um..." Glancing back at the other kids, he took her by the arm and led her a short distance away. "She's sorta... maybe my... um... girlfriend? A little?"
Tracy slowly looked up at him with an astonished expression. "Your... Joss! You have to tell me everything!"
Recounting his weekend, it took all the way until the bus got to the school before he finished.
"So, as soon as she came in my room, she kissed me... again!"
"And her parents are totally cool with you? I mean, that you're still physically a boy and that she's dating you as a girl?"
Josh shrugged as they waited for the vehicle to stop. "Like I said, I told them everything. They think I'm pretty cool!"
"You are so lucky!" she replied as they got up to file out the door. "Mom and Dad won't let me date until next year!"
"We're not really dating." Josh admitted as they started moving. "I mean, I just went over to her house is all. I do that with you!"
"But you don't kiss me!" Tracy pointed out as they stepped off the bus. "And you're going to go to her birthday party... and you're making plans months in advance... and you still wanna say you aren't... um... Joss?"
He wasn't listening anymore as he watched Jennifer ride her bike up to the racks and push it in. Unlocking the chain, she threaded it around her tire and frame before locking it again. It seemed like every move she made was meant to catch his attention, even though he knew she hadn't seen him yet.
"Oh, brother!" Tracy sighed. "You've got it bad! Way worse than Brenda! Hello! Joss!?"
"Huh?" he asked as he tore his eyes away from Jennifer to look at Tracy.
"Never mind!" Tracy giggled. Pointing toward his girlfriend, she smiled. "Go! I'll see you in first period!"
Walking over to the girl he'd spent the previous day with, his heart leapt for joy at the elated expression on her face when she saw him.
"Jocelyn!" she said as they jogged up to one another. Stopping herself from wrapping him in her arms and kissing him deeply right there in front of everybody like she wanted to, Jennifer swallowed hard and stopped short. "Um... hi!"
"Hi!" Josh said with a stupid grin. "Walk in together?"
"Sure!" she said with a blush. The two making their way to the doors into the building, she tucked her hair nervously behind her ear. "Oh... I suppose I can just give you this now!" she said as she reached into her pocket and pulled out a note. It was the same paper used for the notes left in his locker.
"That was you?" he asked. "Why didn't you tell me?"
Walking the halls towards Jennifer's locker, she explained. "Well, at first I didn't know if you'd like me or not, so I didn't want to spoil it if you didn't. Then after I knew you did, I wasn't thinking about it anymore." Blushing, she stopped in front of her locker. "Um... this one's... different." she admitted shyly as she put in her combination.
Opening the note, his eyes bulged as he began to read. "A... a love letter?"
Nodding, she put away some of her books and closed the door. "Don't read it here!" she whispered. "Wait to read it when you go to bed tonight!"
Giggling as he re-folded the note and pushed it into the front pocket of his jean skirt, he started towards his locker. "So... wanna have lunch together? I usually eat with Trace... my best friend? Tracy Edwards? She says she knows you from your last school."
Thinking hard, her face lit up. "Oh! I remember her! The one with the twin brother? He called me a 'stupid girl' all the time, so I sorta ignored them."
"Dave can be a bit of a jerk, especially to girls." Josh admitted. "He figured out he's gay pretty early. He's liked other boys since Kindergarten."
She stopped in mid-step and lowered her voice. "He's gay!"
Blinking at her shock, he stared at her a moment. "Yeah. So?"
Thinking about it briefly, she resumed walking with him. "I... I just never knew a gay kid, is all."
"Aren't you gay?" Josh asked her pointedly. "I mean, it's what your mom said... and you like me because I'm pretty. Beautiful you said, though I beg to differ. Plus there was..." Halting his tongue as he realized he was about to bring up a painful subject she hadn't told him about, he turned away.
"There was wha..." she stopped cold again. Her eyes widening, she looked at him as though he'd read her mind. "How do you know about her?" she asked softly.
Moving closer, he took her hand and started moving. "Your mom told me that a girl broke your heart last year. She didn't tell me anything more than that, I swear! She only told me because she needed me to understand how hurt you were afterwards... and how easily I could hurt you."
Walking along, being blindly led by Josh, Jennifer swallowed. "Her name was Janice. She... she used to be my best friend. Then I told her I liked her. She called me bad names and never spoke to me again."
"I guess that's why you were so afraid to tell me you liked me." Josh said rhetorically as he put in his combination.
"I guess I am gay." she admitted quietly to herself, just coming to accept the idea. Puzzled a moment, she considered that. "Or am I? I like you and you're really a boy inside... and outside... just not... oh, you know what I mean!"
"But for a boy I'm really girly." he admitted in counterpoint. "And I look like a girl, even in boy clothes. You said so yourself."
Sighing, she nodded as she clutched her school binder to her chest. "I guess so, but is it really gay if you like a boy that looks like a girl?" Realizing the ridiculousness of the question, the two looked at each other and giggled. "What's your first class?" she asked.
"Home Ec." he explained.
"Really? You sure you're not really a girl?"
Hearing the warning bell, the two started to back away from one another toward their respective classes. "We'll talk at lunch! Look for me?"
Jennifer nodded happily. "See you then!"
By the time Josh got to class and settled into his desk, he looked over toward Tracy who was grinning like the cat that ate the canary and glancing back at him sideways. Then she started mouthing, "Jocelyn and Jennifer, sittin' in a tree..."
Josh widened his eyes in pleading for her to stop before someone noticed and was grateful when the tardy bell rang and class began at last.
The rest of the morning went by smoothly. Josh still had trouble focusing in History class, but now it was because his mind kept drifting off into fanciful images of Jennifer smothering him in kisses. When the bell rang for lunch, he was startled back to reality and quickly grabbed his things and caught up with Tracy.
"Oh, so you decided to join the land of the living?" she needled him.
"Trace! Please! Don't tell anyone about Jenn and me. OK?"
"I won't, but it's an awful hardship, keeping a secret like this!" Tracy joked. "What'll you give me?"
"Not a black eye!" he jokingly threatened her. "Please, Trace? I trusted you! You have to keep it a secret!"
"Alright!" she gave in. "I was just kidding! Don't whine!"
Reaching their lockers, Josh saw David already at his. "Hey, Dave. Glad to see you back! I didn't get a chance to say hi this morning."
David turned around and then looked at the floor. "Oh. Hey, Joss. Sorry. Just busy talkin' with the guys. Look, I'll catch you later, K? Bye." At that, he turned away with his lunch and walked off, not even giving Josh a chance to say anything more.
"Don't pay any attention to him, Joss." Tracy comforted as she opened her locker. "He's just weirded out by you being a girl, is all. He'll get used to it!"
After Josh got his lunch and the two sat down in the lunchroom, Josh was once again surprised by a voice from behind him, this time pleasantly so.
"Is this seat taken?" Jennifer asked, sitting on the opposite side of him from Tracy.
Smiling, Josh played along. "I'm afraid so. It's reserved for this really nice girl who thinks I'm the living end!"
Continuing the banter, Jennifer giggled. "Well, too bad for her, because I'm gonna sit in it, just to make sure nobody else can! Otherwise some boy might wander over and try to talk to a pretty girl like you!" Seeing Tracy sitting uncomfortably on his other side, Jennifer got serious. "Hi, Tracy."
"Hi." was all the girl said back.
Now feeling like a boxing referee, he wanted the two to at least get along. "Trace? Jenn was telling me that she kind of avoided you at your old school 'cuz Dave was mean to her sometimes, so she musta thought you would be, too. I'm sure she wouldn't ignore you for no reason."
Sighing, Tracy looked across him at the girl on his left. "I'm sorry about my dufus of a brother, Jenny. He can be a real jerk, sometimes. He just now sorta blew off Joss, even after she went to bat for him to make sure he didn't fall behind in his classes."
"It's OK, Tracy." she answered back. "I guess I shouldn't have judged you because of what he did. I was just... sorta... afraid of you... I guess... but you can't be that bad if Jocelyn likes you."
Tracy giggled at the way Jennifer had said her best friend's name. "Wow, you two really must be in love, the way you said, Jocelyn just now!" Seeing the other girl look down embarrassedly, Tracy backed off. "Really though, I think it's sweet! I'm glad that Joss found someone that likes her for who she really is. She's a pretty great girl!"
Looking at Josh with a confused expression, Jennifer saw him shake his head, she decided that the conversation could wait until later. Once they were done eating, the three took a walk around the school playground.
"So, after you left, Mom told me I can basically do whatever I want. She seems to think you and I are gonna start having sex like any day now or something! Your parents are way better! Mine are like, no-limits crazy!"
"You're crazy Joss!" Tracy shook her head. "Your parents are totally cool! If I even thought about having a boy in my room alone, Mom'd skin me alive! And here you are, complaining about being allowed to do basically whatever you want?"
Jennifer just shrugged. "I get it. Jocelyn wants to feel like her Mom and Dad care enough to set boundaries. We talked about it in our church camp last year. Limiting what kids do shows them that their parents care what happens to them. Look what happens when kids have no limits, like in the inner cities and stuff. They keep pushing the limits of what they can do, and when no one stops them they run wild and end up hurting or killing themselves."
"Oh, come on!" Tracy rolled her eyes. "You act like the whole solution to gangs and stuff is just to have their parents tell them what they can't do! It's not that easy!"
Josh decided to play adjudicator to their debate. "Trace has a point. The solution must be complicated, or else there wouldn't be a problem."
"It takes more than just setting rules." Jennifer sighed. "Someone's gotta enforce 'em. That means someone has to be at home to do that. A lot of inner city kids either have both parents at work or only one parent, so no one's there to enforce the rules."
Nodding in agreement, Josh was proud of Jennifer. "Fair point, Jenn. A rule that isn't enforced isn't a rule... it's a guideline. Counterpoint, Trace?"
Tracy stopped and looked at her friend. "What are you doing? Mediating a debate? We're just talking! You know I hate it when you do this!"
He blinked at her, then glanced at Jennifer who appeared equally confused. "I was just playing adjudicator. You two started the debate. What's wrong? I thought it was fun! You both made points off each other and we were really getting somewhere!" Looking at the two blank stares directed at him, he shrugged. "What?"
Turning to Tracy, Jennifer asked, "Does she do this all the time?"
"Yes!" Tracy scoffed. "Drives me nuts! She won't take a side! She tries to be 'neutral arbiter' every time! She did it all the time with Davie and me! I swear, getting an opinion out of her is like pulling teeth!"
Embarrassedly, Josh looked at his shoes. "Sorry. I can't help it. Daddy does it all the time with Mom and me. I guess I just picked it up from him."
Jennifer softened her expression towards him. "I'm sorry, Jocelyn. I didn't mean to make you feel bad! Don't be sad!" She instinctually reached out and took his hand, lacing her fingers into his.
Glancing around, Josh spoke softly. "Um... Jenn? We promised. Rule two?"
Gazing achingly into his eyes, she slowly released his hand. "I know. It's harder than I thought, though. I just wanted you to not be sad anymore!"
"What's 'Rule two'?" Tracy asked confusedly.
"No PDAs." Josh explained. "It's a condition Jenn's parents set in order for us to see each other. Rule one is we can never be totally alone, like in a room by ourselves with the door closed? Rule three is that her brother Luke can't know we're a... a couple. Not for a few years, anyway."
Hearing the bell ending lunch, the three made their way back inside. "So what? That means you can kiss her, but only in front of her parents?"
Giggling, Josh shook his head. "That was an accident!"
Jennifer stopped and looked at him in shock. "You told her about that?"
"Um... no." Josh admitted truthfully, having skipped that part when he told Tracy about Sunday. "I... that just sorta slipped out!"
"Told me what?" Tracy asked curiously. "Did I miss something? Joss! Did you kiss her in front of her parents?" she whispered.
He looked at Jennifer who had turned beat red as he mouthed, "Sorry!" Moving close in as they resumed their walk to the lockers, Josh apologized profusely. "I am so sorry, Jenn! I can't believe I said that! Forgive me? Please?"
Rolling her eyes, she giggled. "You know I can't stay mad at you, Jocelyn! I like you too much!"
The two telling Tracy the whole story as they got their things from their lockers, he turned at last to Jennifer. "See you after school?"
Blushing and biting her lower lip, she nodded. "Sure! Meet me at the bike racks! Bye!"
Sighing wistfully as Jennifer departed, Josh turned to Tracy. "Trace? Will you..."
"...save you a seat on the bus?" she finished for him. "Yeah, yeah. Sure. Jeez! You can't be away from her for more than a few hours? You are definitely in love, girlfriend!"
After classes, he did as promised and met her at her bike. When he saw her coming, he took a moment to straighten out his skirt. "Jenn! I missed you!"
"I missed you too!" she glowed as she walked up. "Look, can you come over to my house tomorrow after school? I just want to be able to spend some time with you and I can't wait all the way until Sunday."
Smiling, Josh stared into her eyes. "Sure! I'd love to!" Glancing at Tracy leaning out the bus window, his smile melted. "I gotta go or I'll miss the bus. See you tomorrow?"
"Tomorrow!" she grinned as she unlocked her bike. "Call me tonight?"
"I will!" he smiled at her as he ran for the bus.
Sitting in his seat after a glare from Ms. Cartwright, he let out a sigh.
"Thought for a minute there she was gonna kiss you!" Tracy teased. "You two are hopeless!"
"Good!" he countered. "I don't wanna be saved from this!"
The next day went much the same, but when school ended, Josh didn't have Tracy save him a seat. Waiting by the bikes, he noticed that Jenn's wasn't there. He knew she was at school, he'd seen her at lunch. A moment later he saw her approaching.
"Ready to go?" she said dreamily.
"Where's your bike?" he asked as they began to walk together.
"I walked today. I knew you wouldn't have a bike, so I thought it wouldn't be fair of me to use mine."
"Oh." he smiled as his black skirt blew in the light breeze, making him thankful of the heavy tights. "You're wonderful!"
"No, you're wonderful!" Jennifer sighed. "I wish we were home already. Luke doesn't get home until after four 'cuz he has an after-school thing he goes to that helps with his homework. He got in trouble last year for bad grades and almost got left back, so Mom signed him up for it this year so he doesn't fall behind again. He goes every Tuesday and Thursday."
Josh blushed. "So... that means... it'll just be us and your mom at home?"
"Uh-huh!" Jennifer acknowledged. "Just us... and I study in my room!"
"With the door open, right?" he asked cautiously.
"Right." she conceded with an exasperated sigh. "Maybe someday..."
When the two arrived at the Healy residence, Vicky met them at the door. "Hi... um... Josh!" she said as she ushered the two inside. "You two want a snack?"
"No thanks, Mom." she answered heading directly for her room. "We wanna get right to it so we get done sooner!"
Josh looked up at her and stopped. "Thank you for calling me Josh, but you might want to just call me Joss so no one catches on. Can you bring us a snack so we can work and eat?"
Smiling as Vicky tried to see the boy in the girl before her, she gave up and nodded. "We don't usually allow the kids to have food in their rooms, but I think I can make an exception! You're a good g... boy, Jocelyn... Joss! Sorry! I'll bring it in a few minutes, OK?"
"Thanks, Vicky!" he stated gratefully. "For everything!" Going down the hallway, he turned in to Jennifer's room, and felt her grab his hand to drag him in and around the corner from the door. Hearing noises of Vicky making snacks from the kitchen, Jennifer drew him in close and kissed him strongly for over a minute.
"I didn't think I could wait any longer!" she said breathlessly as she ended the kiss and just held him tightly. "I just miss you so much!"
Holding her as well, he relaxed into the comfort of her. "I missed you, too." After another moment, he pulled away. "But we really should get to work!"
Even though they were in different classes, the curriculum was standardized, so their core classes had the same worksheets and homework assignments. While Jennifer sprawled out on her bed, Josh set up at her desk just as Vicky came in.
"I just made you two a quick sandwich and got you a few fig newtons." she said as she put the plate on the desk. Looking at Jennifer and seeing her a little embarrassed, she sighed and shook her head as she gestured for Jennifer to get up. "Come here, sweetheart." Taking her daughter into her arms, she rocked her gently and ran her fingers through Jennifer's hair. "You don't need to be embarrassed, dear. I understand." Releasing her and looking to see that she was better, Vicky sighed and backed out of the room. "Just... don't close the door."
"We promised." Jennifer said. "I love you, Mom!"
"Love you, sweetie!" Vicky said as she turned down the hall toward the living room. A moment later, the two heard music that was loud enough to make eavesdropping impossible.
Josh tapped her on the shoulder, making the girl jump. "Sorry, didn't mean to scare you. Is she testing you?"
"I think so." Jennifer said as she turned and hugged him. "I wanna just sit and make out... but..."
"...we should get to work." he said with a smile as he leaned his forehead in to touch hers.
Forty minutes later, almost an hour before Luke was due to get home, the two came out of her room, Jennifer carrying the empty plate into the kitchen where her mother was beginning to make dinner. "Here, Mom." she rinsed the plate and put it in the dishwasher. "Thanks."
"You two done already?" she asked, skeptical that they'd even begun.
"Yeah. We're done!" she answered as she leaned against the counter.
"Not a lot to do today?" she asked.
"About average." he daughter answered with a slight hint of a smile.
Looking over at Josh, she peered into his eyes and saw no signs of any embarrassment or that they'd done anything other than homework. Sighing, she shook her head. "Well, your brother won't be home for another hour. Why don't you go play in your room until then? Joss? Did you want to stay for dinner? We're having a roast. You're welcome to stay!"
Blushing, he nodded. "I'd like that, Vicky!" he said shyly. "Thank you!"
Turning and walking up to him, she leaned down to his eye level. "No, thank you... for making me feel better that we made the right decision about you!" Hugging him quickly, she let him go and returned to the kitchen to resume cutting vegetables. "Fifty-eight minutes!" she said simply.
"Come on, Jocelyn." Jennifer said as she took his hand. "You can tell me all about West Side Story!"
Pulling him into her room, he was about to start explaining the story when her lips got in the way.
A little more than fifty minutes later, Vicky knocked gently on the open doorway while she still stood around the corner of the door. "Your brother will be home shortly." she gently reminded them.
"You can come in Mom!" Jennifer giggled.
Seeing they were not at all disheveled, she smiled at the two. "So... West Side Story, huh?"
"Yeah." Josh blushed. "It's my favorite movie! I have an original movie poster for it, the soundtrack on CD, and Special Limited Edition DVD of the movie I got for my eleventh birthday!"
Looking at Jennifer, she smiled slyly. "So, what did you think of the story?"
Getting her own sly grin, she answered, "It's basically just Romeo and Juliet set in the 50s in the New York slums, but I still can't wait to see it! It won ten Academy Awards, so it must be pretty good!"
The Healy family sat down for dinner, Josh sitting between Jennifer and Vicky. He was about to start eating when he saw them all bow their heads. Pausing, he watched as they prayed together as a family.
"Lord," John began, "may we be truly thankful for the food we are about to receive and all your other blessings. In the name of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, Amen."
He listened as the rest of the family echoed the closing and looked up.
"Well, dig in!" John said with a smile.
As the family plus one began to eat, Vicky turned to Josh. "Jocelyn, did your mother say anything when you called to ask to stay for dinner?"
Shaking his head as he finished his first bite of roast, he swallowed and took a breath. "Nothing really, Vicky. Just to have fun and be home by bedtime, is all. They're having veggie-burgers tonight."
John looked up. "Are they vegetarians?" he asked curiously.
"Not really." he answered. "They try to avoid meat, but they aren't strict about it. They let me eat bologna sandwiches for lunch, and I sometimes make myself an egg salad sandwich, but we only have soy milk at home and this is the first time I've ever had a roast. It's really good, Vicky!"
Luke instantly changed the subject. "How come she gets to call Momma 'Vicky'? She aren't a grownup!"
"Isn't." his mother corrected him. "And she can call me that because I said she could. Now eat your asparagus, young man."
"Blech!" he said, sticking out his tongue. Before she could reprimand him though, he picked up a spear with his fork. "Yes, Momma."
Giggling at his plight, Josh and Jennifer each took a bite of their own.
When Vicky drove Josh home that night, Jennifer seated beside him in the back seat of their sedan, the two held hands and stared into each other's eyes the whole way. She tried to make small talk with the two, but soon realized after having to repeat herself over and over that they weren't listening and just drove in silence. When at last they reached his home, Jennifer got out and held the door for Josh.
"May I walk Joss to the door, Mom?" she pleaded.
Sighing, she nodded. "Hurry back, sweetie. I'll be waiting."
The two held hands as they headed up the flagstones. "I miss you already." Jennifer complained.
Giggling gently, he noticed that his parents hadn't remembered to turn on the porch light and it was very nearly completely dark out. "I had a really good time, Jenn! I love spending time with your family! They're so nice!"
"Thanks!" she said, wishing she could return the compliment. "So... same thing on Thursday?" she asked.
"Sure! But I'm really looking forward to this Sunday again!"
Reaching the door, and barely able to make out her mother's car, she leaned in close. "Can I kiss you goodnight?"
Nodding, he relaxed into the moment and enjoyed the brief kiss, using it to sustain him for the next few days.
Releasing each other, Josh opened his front door and turned on the porch light, so Jennifer could see to walk back. "Goodnight, Jennifer!" he said as he leaned on the doorframe and watched her back away.
"Goodnight, Joss!" she grinned and turned to skip down the path back to her mother.
Watching her get in the front seat and then seeing the car drive away, he sighed wistfully and entered his open-door prison.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Looking himself over one last time, he nodded with resigned satisfaction. The blue satin dress looked good on him, flattering his natural curves and making him appear to be every bit the pre-teen girl he was made to become. His visits with Jennifer and the Healy family and to their church over the past two weeks had been blissful reprieves from his home life. While his parents were happy to have him come and go as he pleased, when he was home he'd had to endure a new round of pushing from his parents.
They were insisting he let them take him to their family doctor to put him on hormone blockers.
He did everything he could think of to put off their 'helpful' pressuring, but only the day before he'd resorted to his last line of defense.
"I'm not sure I want to be a girl forever, Mom."
"What?" she asked incredulously. "Now where is all this coming from? Is this your girlfriend's influence?"
"No!" Josh denied. "She thinks I'm beautiful, and pretty, and loves me as a girl! Vicky's known she's liked girls for over a year now!"
"So what's this all about, then?" she pressed.
Josh sat on the sofa as he tried to derail his mother's plans. "I just... I'm not sure, OK? This is a huge step and I want to be absolutely certain about it 'cuz it can't be undone! I can change my clothes in a few minutes, and I can get my name back in a month, but this? This is permanent! This'll affect the rest of my life! If I don't start puberty as a boy, I'll never be able to have kids!"
Taking a harsh tone, she nearly barked at him. "Adoption is better than having kids! The world is too overpopulated as it is without adding to it!"
Seeing she was now getting angry, Josh knew he'd already lost this round.
"Sweetie, we're not talking about starting you on female hormones yet!" she continued in a softer tone. "Just... not letting the male ones ruin your chances of happiness! If you start male puberty, your voice will change, you'll grow muscles and hair on your body, and forever have body image issues! We can't allow that! Until you start female hormones, you can still change your mind later! All we have to do is just stop using blockers and you'll begin male puberty, just a little late! Now, I've made an appointment for you for next Friday and that's that!"
Hating the image he saw in the mirror, his hair beautifully curled and his light makeup flawless, even his nails were painted a lovely pink shade that complimented his natural skin tone. Turning to see himself from the side and back, he saw the perfectly tied white satin bow in the back and felt a pit in his stomach, like he'd swallowed a cannonball.
Great. I look fabulous. he told himself sarcastically. Giving in, he consoled himself that Jennifer would be happy with him and found it helped a lot.
Grabbing a small white purse that matched the white of the dress trim and the strappy sandals that adorned his feet, he dropped his makeup, phone, keys, and what money he had in it. Steeling himself and plastering a fake smile on his face, he grabbed a small suitcase and headed out. Coming down the stairs, he almost felt good about himself before he heard his father.
"You look beautiful, princess!" he said genuinely. "An absolute vision!"
Blushing embarrassedly at the compliment, he dismissed it. "Oh, Daddy!"
"Don't 'Oh, Daddy' me!" he lovingly groused as Josh finished descending the stairs. "You gook great! I hope you have a good time, princess!" Hugging him at the last step while careful not to muss his hair or makeup, Fred grabbed the digital camera off the railing. "Hold still!" he ordered.
Feeling that pit in his stomach again, he once more put on his phony smile and posed for the picture. Once done, he glanced at the pretty watch he wore. "Vicky should be here any minute." he said impatiently. Standing around for a time, he found himself restlessly unable to settle.
"Sit down, sweetheart." Melanie chided him gently as she sat on the couch reading her book. "Pacing won't get her here any faster!" Seeing him perch impatiently on the matching loveseat, she shook her head. "I still don't see why we couldn't drop you off, Jocelyn."
Just about to answer, he heard a car pull up outside. "She's here!" he said with relief as he got up and smoothed out his dress. Without even so much as a hug for his mother and father, he picked up the case and started toward the door. "See you tomorrow!" he shouted over his shoulder.
Heading out the door, he was glad that the Healys had said he could stay the night at their house and get ready for church in the morning with them. He was still livid with his mother and intentionally didn't hug Melanie or say he loved them. While his father backed Melanie up in pushing for hormone blockers, Josh knew that he only did so because it was her idea and he, being a good feminist, almost always agreed with her.
Jogging out to the Healy's sedan, he opened the front passenger door and slid in next to Vicky, belting in quickly and putting the small case under his legs. "Thanks for coming to get me!"
Vicky pulled out onto the street smiling. "It's fine, Jocelyn... um... sorry! Joss!" She laughed at herself for being unable to see the child as anything other than a girl, even though she knew him to be a boy in both mind and body. "You look nice!" she said, trying to make conversation. "Sorry, does that make you uncomfortable?"
"It's fine, Vicky." he sighed. "I do look nice. Heck, I look beautiful and I know it! I just wish..."
"Wish what, dear?" she asked as she turned a corner.
"I wish I could just be me." he admitted sadly. "I think it's too late, though." Looking over at her as she drove, he dropped the bomb. "Mom's taking me to Doctor Biggs next Friday to get my first shot of hormone blockers."
Pulling over quickly, Vicky turned to him in utter shock. "Honey! Are you serious? How can she do that? Don't you need a letter or something from a psychiatrist that proves you're... um..."
"Dysphoric." Josh finished for her. "Mom's a psychologist and had a co-worker of hers give her a letter. Turns out I saw him once for a few minutes before I went to summer camp. I didn't even know who he was at the time or that I was even 'seeing' him. I was supposed to just be waiting for Mom at her office and he 'just happened' to be there and asked me a few 'casual' questions." he explained with little air quotes. "That was it."
Looking out the window, Josh shook his head again. "So, I'm stuck. If anyone tries to stop her, she has the law on her side 'cuz parents can do anything with their kids so long as they aren't abusing them. With that paper, she has proof that putting me on hormones isn't abuse. I'm stuck."
Vicky once more started toward her home. "I'm sorry, dear. I wish I knew what to do. I'll have a talk with John tonight and see if he knows someone that can help, OK? Just..." She paused, worried for his safety. "Just don't lose hope." She was seriously concerned he might hurt himself rather than be turned into a girl against his will. "Promise you won't do anything drastic?"
Nodding, he still looked out the window. "I promise." He meant it, but he was also certain there wasn't anything that could be done.
When they started to get close to the Healy's home, his mood began to lift somewhat. Vicky noticed and smiled, glad that her daughter could have such a positive effect on such a troubled soul. Pulling into the driveway, and then into the open garage, she pressed a remote control on the visor, closing the door behind them.
Climbing out, she watched Josh do the same and come around the front of the car, carrying the small suitcase. "Jenny's been itching to see you since she got home from school yesterday!" Pausing a moment, she tousled a few of his hairs back in place, stopping when she realized she was treating Josh just like a girl. "Sorry, Joss... bad habit. Comes from raising a daughter!"
"That's OK, Vicky." he sighed as they walked in the house through the inside garage door and entered the hallway across from the master bedroom. "I understand. It's only natural the way I look." he gestured to himself.
Coming into the living room, Josh saw that it was tastefully decorated for a teenager's birthday party. There weren't balloons, streamers, or things like that. Just a simple banner that read, "Happy Birthday Jennifer!" Underneath it he saw something that made his heart skip a beat as he put down his small suitcase. Jennifer was breathtaking in her lovely pale blue A-line dress that came down to mid-calf. The color went perfectly with her pale blonde hair that was curled and hanging loosely about her shoulders.
Jennifer just stood under the banner and looked back at him with wide-eyed awe at his innocent beauty. Slowly walking over to him, she took his hands as her mother removed herself to the kitchen. "You look amazing, Joss!" she said in a low, husky voice as she squeezed his hands gently.
"Thanks!" he blushed and looked away slightly. "You look beautiful! That dress is perfect for you!"
Releasing his hands, she smiled and turned in place quickly, letting the skirt flow around her like water. "Do you like it? Mom made it for me! She used to be a professional dress designer! I must be the luckiest girl in the world!" Moving in closely again, she put her arms over his shoulders, clasping her hands behind his head. Grinning, she looked down the hall and then at the dining room. Seeing no one coming, she kissed his lips, soft and gently so as to not muss their lipstick. Then she took him into a warm hug.
Relishing the feel of her holding him, he nearly cried as he relaxed into her embrace. The built up tension and buried feelings of dread at being pushed onto blockers threatened to all come bursting out at once, save for the fact that he wouldn't let his problems ruin Jennifer's birthday. Swallowing hard and putting on a smile, he stepped back. "Where's your dad and Luke?"
"They took the minivan and went out to the park or something. Girls only here today!" Pausing a moment, her smile diminished. "Except for you, I mean. Do... would you like to change into something less girly?"
"It's OK." he sighed. "From you I don't seem to mind much, and I don't have anything else, anyway. Besides, it's your party and you like me this way. Is anyone else coming?"
Nodding, she answered as she led him into the dining room. "A few friends that I've known since Kindergarten, but we've only recently really become friends." she answered. "Karen, Lucy, and Erica."
Not knowing them, he looked down at himself. "I hope I look alright."
"You look wonderful!" she sighed happily as she stared at him with dreamy eyes. Hearing the doorbell, her expression changed to giddiness as she left Josh in the dining room and moved around her mother through the kitchen, taking the direct route to the entry hallway. Opening the door, she squealed as her three friends came in, all dressed nearly as nicely as Jennifer.
Josh could see them through the kitchen. Looking down at his dress, he gulped. I look like a little girl compared to them. he chastised himself. His dress was beautiful, but the fact that it only came down to just past his knees made it look juvenile in contrast to the styles the four girls were wearing. Steeling himself, he waited next to the dining room table for introductions.
"You look so pretty in that!" Jennifer complimented Karen on her outfit.
"Thanks!" the girl said shyly, not used to such praise. Handing a wrapped package to Jennifer she grinned. "Here! Happy birthday!"
"Thank you!" Jennifer said sincerely.
Repeating the process with Lucy and Erica, the four made their way to the dining room by way of the living room. The four girls had bonded in the last year of Intermediate school based on their common experience; they were all social outcasts. While Karen was awkward and unattractive, Erica was heavy and Lucy was the only Asian girl at their school. When rumor got out that Jennifer had a crush on her best friend, she'd joined the other outcasts.
"Lucy? Erica? Karen? I want you all to meet Jocelyn!" she said as the four saw Josh standing shyly by the table. "Joss? These are my friends!"
Feeling scrutinized from the instant their eyes hit him, he swallowed hard and tried to smile. "H... Hi! Nice to meet you all!"
Lucy looked at Josh like a bug under a microscope. "Um... so... nice dress." she said, not knowing what else to say.
"Yeah." Erica said absently. "You look nice... for a b..." She was interrupted as Karen elbowed her in the ribs before the other girl could say what all three were thinking. "What!" Erica grumbled at her quietly.
Seeing her three friends who she felt could understand Josh's situation as a social outcast do the same thing to him as everyone else at school, her smile melted. "Guys? What's wrong? Why are you being like..." Flustered, she was nearly in tears. "...like everyone treats you?"
Karen and Lucy looked down ashamedly, but Erica couldn't see it. "What do you expect, Jenn? He's not a girl... and he's wearing a dress!"
Vicky listened from the kitchen, but didn't want to interfere unless she had to. She felt the best thing she could do was wait and see if they'd resolve their differences on their own. Hearing Erica's comment, she decided she needed to defuse the situation before it became serious. Walking out and carrying a tray of h'orderves, she smiled. "Here we go!" she offered. "Erica! Karen! Lucy! Nice to see you!" Putting the tray on the table she regarded them all. "Well! Don't you all look lovely! Shall we sit and chat?"
Seeing Jennifer's mother not react to Josh at all, the three stared at him as he sat next to Vicky.
"Thank you, Vicky." he said softly. "I'd be happy to."
Karen rolled her eyes frustratedly at Erica and moved to sit on Vicky's other side, followed by Lucy next to Karen. That left just Erica and Jennifer, the two staring at one another like gunfighters; each waiting for the other to say something and ready with a quick comeback.
"Erica?" Vicky said gently. "Will you be joining us?"
Crooking her jaw to one side and narrowing her eyes as she looked at Josh, a habit she had when trying to decide something, she at last tentatively moved to sit next to Lucy. "Sure, Mrs. Healy." Never taking her eyes off Josh as though he might suddenly spring to his feet and attack her, she sat slowly and watched out of the corner of her eye as Jennifer went around the table to sit next to Josh.
"Um... Mrs. Healy?" Erica began. "You do know he's really a boy, right?"
"Yes, Erica." she said calmly as she put a few cucumber slices and some stuffed olives on a small plate in front of her. "Though considering how she looks, it would be inappropriate to call her he unless she asks you to, don't you think?"
Josh sadly stood up, the three girls watching him intently. "I should just go. I'm sorry, Jenn. I didn't mean to ruin your party."
"No!" Jennifer yelled as she leapt from her chair. "Stay! Please, Joss? If you leave, the party will be ruined!"
"I don't think your friends like me very much." he said openly as he stood behind his chair and looked at them. "It's OK. I understand. I'm a freak. The boy that looks, talks, and acts like a girl. I'll just take the bus home, Vicky. You don't have to leave your guests. This was just a mistake."
"Please sit down, Joss." Vicky said evenly. "You are Jenny's guest and are welcome in this house. Anyone who thinks otherwise is not." she stated as she leveled her gaze at Erica. "Though I'd rather hope that everyone can get along and not be judgmental of one another."
When Josh sat back down, Erica stood up. "I think I should go, then." she said harshly. "How can you all stand it! Look at him! He looks ridiculous!"
Jennifer flashed into anger in an instant. "She does not! She looks beautiful and you know it! If you didn't know her and ran into her on the street, you'd never know she was anything other than a totally gorgeous girl! You're just jealous!"
"Girls!" Vicky exclaimed, trying to defuse the situation, but was interrupted by Erica's return outburst.
"You like him!" Erica said in shock. "You're sick! You've got a crush on that?" she said pointing a finger at Josh.
"Yes!" she admitted openly, shocking Lucy and Karen. "I think that she's wonderful, and you would too if you actually got to know her!" Looking at Josh, she smiled sweetly at him and her voice softened. "She's thoughtful, kind, considerate, smart..." Whipping back around toward Erica, her voice turned harsh again. "...and a way better friend than you, Erica! She may be a boy, but she can change her clothes to look like one and still be just as sweet! You could change into the most beautiful gown in the world, but you'd still just be a nasty bitch!"
"Jenny!" her mother chastised. "Language!"
Fuming at the insult, inside Erica felt the sting of truth and railed against it. "Fine!" she shouted. Picking up her gift, she looked at Lucy and Karen. "Well? You staying with that or are you gonna come to your senses and show it that it's not welcome anywhere?"
Turning away from Erica as she saw the irate girl for who she really was, Lucy finally spoke up. "Maybe you should just go if you can't be nice, Erica." Looking over at Josh, she sighed. "I'm staying."
Karen, not sure what to do, surveyed Erica and then Lucy, Jennifer, and finally Josh. Taking a breath, she let it out slowly. "Mrs. Healy? Could you pass the olives? They look good!"
Not believing that her three best friends had all turned against her, Erica screamed at them. "Fine then! See if I care! You're all stupid anyway! I don't know why I ever was friends with you! Goodbye!" At that, she stormed out of the house, slamming the door as she left.
Facing the four others, Josh hung his head sadly. "I'm sorry, everyone. I shouldn't have come."
"Nonsense!" Vicky said as she took Josh's hand. "You are always welcome in this house, no matter what you wear or call yourself. It's just clothes and names are just labels. You're a good person, Joss."
"Don't mind Erica, Jocelyn." Lucy said as she glanced at him. "She's kinda got a nasty temper. Usually she's nice, but sometimes she's just mean. We try to look past it, but today was too much. What she said was just cruel. You don't look ridiculous! You look really nice! Honest!"
Karen just nodded in agreement as she munched a stuffed olive.
Feeling Jennifer's hands on his shoulders, he turned his head to peer up at her. "I'm sorry, Jenn. I didn't want you to lose your friend."
"After the way she treated you, she no friend of mine!" Jennifer growled as she dropped like a rock into the seat next to Josh.
After a moment's silence, Lucy shattered it. "So... you and Jocelyn? That's cool! She a good kisser?"
Karen nearly choked on her olive at Lucy's brash remark while Jennifer, Josh, and Vicky blushed and looked away. "Luce!" Karen said between coughs. "You are so crude!" After a moment, Karen and Lucy began to giggle, spreading then to Jennifer and Vicky. Lastly, Josh began to giggle along with the others as the tension in the room evaporated.
As the four 'girls' and Vicky began chatting easily between each other, the mood lightened enough for Jennifer to open her presents. Lucy had given her a cute skirt that Vicky said was too short and Karen had bought her a pretty blouse. When everyone turned to Josh, he cleared his throat and pulled a tiny box out of his purse.
"Here, Jenn. Happy birthday!" he said softly.
Opening his gift excitedly, she removed the wrapping to reveal a velvet box. Lifting the lid, her eyes went wide for a moment before they scrunched up in tears. "Oh, Jocelyn! It's beautiful!"
"Lemme see!" Lucy and Karen chorused as Vicky took the gift and Jennifer hugged Josh tightly.
Pulling the necklace out of the box, Vicky held it up and drew in a breath. It was a simple gold chain and heart-shaped pendant. On the front in cursive script was the word 'Together' above and the word 'Forever' below a single opal stone set next to an amethyst; the birthstones for October and February, Jennifer and Josh's birth months.
"Jocelyn!" Vicky said at last. "Where did you find this?"
Once Jennifer let him go to take the necklace back from Vicky to admire it, he shrugged. "At the jewelers on Maple." he said with a slight smile. "The necklace is just one they had, but I had the stones put in. Is it OK?"
"It's a lovely gift, dear!" Vicky said as she smiled. "Maybe a little much!"
Taking off the pendant she wore that was a gift from her aunt three years ago, Jennifer slipped the necklace on and had Josh get up. "How does it look?" she asked grinning.
Blushing, he cast his eyes to the floor shyly. "It looks perfect!"
After the two other girls admired it, talk changed to other subjects. While they chatted and sat together, being quite grown up, Jennifer slipped Josh's hand into hers under the table and wouldn't let go.
After her father came home with an exhausted Luke in tow, Vicky gathered the girls and Josh together and left for the movie theater. Getting five tickets for MirrorMask, they took their seats in the darkened theater with Jennifer sitting next to Josh and holding his hand the entire time. At one point Josh felt Jennifer lift his hand to her lips and kiss the back of it gently.
After the movie, Vicky dropped Lucy and Karen off before returning to their home with Josh. He'd earned the trust of both John and Vicky to the point that they believed even if Jennifer wanted to 'go too far' Josh wouldn't, simply because he'd given his word. So that night he would be sleeping in Jennifer's room; the 'door open' rule suspended for the occasion as a special concession to Jennifer for her birthday. Still, Vicky was worrying herself sick as they walked in the door.
"Luke will be in bed already, so why don't you change in the bathroom, Joss?" she said nervously.
"Vicky?" he said softly. "If this makes you uncomfortable, I should go home. It's OK. I understand. You trust me, but not that much."
"No!" Vicky denied her fears. Glancing at Jennifer and telling her wordlessly to go to her room and change, she waited until they were alone. "Joss, I believe you when you say you'll be on your best behavior. I do!" Trying to formulate the right words, she sighed. "It's just an irrational fear, dear. It's not your fault and I don't want you to have to go home!" Closing her eyes and sighing once again, she opened them and looked him in the eyes. "Just promise me again that you won't do anything you shouldn't tonight."
"I promise." he said seriously. "I wouldn't want to ruin anything! If we did something... um... adult... it might ruin everything. It wouldn't be worth it."
Hugging him earnestly, she let her fears go and trusted the broken child in her arms to keep his word. "I believe you, sweetie! I know you... that you... you care for her... and wouldn't risk that for anything. Thank you!" Letting him go, she still had a hard time seeing the child as a boy, even knowing the truth. "Go get changed!" she said with a smile. "I'll get your bed ready!"
He'd decided to take a shower in the morning, so he hung his off-white A-line dress with the pink flowers out on the hook used for robes, intent on using his shower to steam any wrinkles out that didn't fall out overnight. After that he quickly changed and washed up. When he'd scrubbed off all his makeup, he pulled out his brush and came out brushing his hair that was getting long enough to soon need another trip to the salon, though he still held out hope that he'd never have to go there again.
Walking into his girlfriend's bedroom, he saw that Vicky had laid out a thin roll-up foam mattress and several quilts as a bed with a spare comforter on top. Jennifer was sitting up in her bed, watching him brush his hair out.
"What?" he asked, stopping his hair care regimen.
"Nothing!" she said with a grin as she fingered the necklace he'd given her that she refused to remove.
Shaking his head, he sat at the desk and continued brushing until it was soft and wavy once more. He was about done when Vicky knocked on the door.
Opening it, she tip-toed in and whispered, "You two all set for the night? Need anything?"
"Yeah." Jennifer said with an impish smile. "For my mother to stop spying on us to make sure we aren't making out! Goodnight, Mom!" she giggled.
Sighing and holding up her hands in mock surrender, she sighed. "Alright! Hop up and give me a kiss goodnight and I'll go!"
Jennifer got up and walked over to her mother. Hugging her tightly, she sighed. "Thanks, Mom! Today was wonderful! I love you!"
Returning the hug, she let her daughter go only to see Josh there waiting for his turn in a white cotton nightie trimmed in lace. Taking him in her arms, she held him no less warmly than she had her own daughter. "Goodnight, Joss."
"Goodnight, Vicky." he said warmly. "Thanks."
Releasing him, Vicky looked at him as she held him at arm's length. "For what, dear?"
"For making me promise not to give up." he said before he leaned in and kissed her cheek.
Nearly crying, she hugged him fiercely this time. "We'll think of something!" she promised. Letting him go, she wiped her eyes dry and padded to the door. "Goodnight, you two. Sleep well and God bless!"
As she closed the door, Josh went to lay down on his makeshift bed, but was stopped when Jennifer asked, "What was that all about?"
Explaining in brief his fate the following Friday and Vicky's intention to help him escape it, the girl hugged him as well. "I won't let your mom do it, Joss!" she promised in vain.
"We'll see." he said hopelessly. "We should get to bed. I'll need a shower in the morning before I get dressed."
"Wait!" she said as she knelt by her bedside and silently bowed her head. After a moment, she said, "Amen." and got back up.
"What was that?" he asked curiously.
"I was saying a prayer for you. Asking for God's help... if He can."
Sitting on her bed, he was still confused. "I thought you were supposed to do that privately... and aren't there certain words you have to say? It's so confusing!"
Jennifer lighted beside him and took his hand. "We are in private, and God knows what you want without even asking. He's everywhere, even in our heads!"
Puzzling over another point, he asked, "OK, you said 'if He can.' Isn't He supposed to be omnipotent? Can't He do anything?"
Jennifer tried to explain. "It's like this. He can do anything, but sometimes He won't because He needs something to happen we don't like to make something even better happen later... or because it's out of His hands. See, He won't make people do things, 'cuz He gave us free will. That means we can do things He doesn't want us to do, even if it's bad and He wants us to do something else."
Contemplating the idea, he followed the conclusion to the end. "So then... He can't help me. He won't change my mom's mind, so it's up to your mom and dad. If they can't help..."
Pulling him into her arms, she hugged him and then kissed him gently. "We'll think of something, Joss." she echoed her mother's hope. Kissing him tenderly once more, they continued kissing as they sat on her bed for some time before retiring to their own beds.
At some point in the night, Josh partially awoke to feel a comforting warmth move in under his borrowed covers and against his back; an arm wrapping around him lovingly. Smiling softly, he was only partially aware of just who or what it was, but he knew one thing for certain.
He was loved.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Intense scenes involving a minor
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
--
Slowly, Josh became aware of a hand shaking his shoulder. Not wanting to leave the warm comfort he felt, he groaned at the hand. "Go 'way!"
"Jocelyn..." a voice pierced his dream-state. "Joss? It's time to get up." the lovely voice whispered in his ear so closely that her breath tickled, causing him to squirm slightly in delight.
Both piqued and provoked, he felt the hand move from his shoulder to his hip. Giving him a gentle shake, Josh heard the voice even closer.
"Joss? Your phone alarm woke me up. I need to go back to my bed and you need to get up and take your shower." the voice whispered again.
Trying to roll over to look, he found he couldn't roll on his back as there was something... someone... pressed up against it, the feel of soft breasts were pressing into his shoulder blades. Turning his head slowly, the vision of Jennifer's lovely face, so close that he could feel her warm breath on his skin, swam into view in the darkness of the room that was lit only by the soft glow of the streetlight twenty feet from her window. "Jenn?"
"Good morning, beautiful!" she whispered happily before kissing his cheek. "You need to get up. I'm going back to my bed."
Scooting his body around so he could face her better, he gazed into her joyful eyes. "Jenn... what're you doing... down here?"
"You were having a nightmare last night and it woke me up." she explained. "I laid next to you and held you until you settled down." Shyly smiling, she added, "You felt so nice, I... I fell asleep next to you."
He felt her hand on his nearly naked hip, his nightgown having ridden up in his sleep. "Um... Jenn, this is very... intimate." he said plainly.
Giggling quietly, she removed her hand. "Sorry! We didn't do anything, if that's what you're worried about. Just sleep together. It was so nice, though! I wish I could stay like this forever! But..." Extracting herself reluctantly, she moved back into her cold bed and under her covers while Josh got up. "Have a nice shower!" she said dreamily as she lay her head against her pillow and closed her eyes. Seeing her lying there looking so happy and peaceful, he couldn't help but sigh with contentment.
Putting on his robe and slippers, he padded his way to the bathroom, locked the door, and showered. He made the water much warmer than usual and left the fan off, so by the time he'd finished the room was filled with steam. After drying off, he ran his hands over the dress he'd hung out, smoothing away the few wrinkles that remained. Turning on the fan, he dressed hastily and came out just in time to see a bleary-eyed Luke standing at the door.
"Need 'ta potty!" he demanded sleepily as Josh got out of his way and moved back into Jennifer's bedroom.
Seeing the time after closing the door to her room behind him, Josh grinned and sat on Jennifer's bed next to her and gently shook her shoulder, his hair still damp from the shower. "Wake up, beautiful! Your turn to get up!"
Opening her eyes and seeing him there, she smiled and stretched. "Good morning!" Just as she did so, there was a soft knock on the door. "Come in?" she grumbled as Josh stood and moved to her desk to get ready.
Vicky entered, glad to see Jennifer still under covers and Josh fully dressed in his off-white floral. "Good morning, you two! Sleep well?"
"Best sleep ever!" Jennifer said softly as she gazed longingly over at Josh sitting at her desk and brushing out his hair. Turning back to her mother, she saw the worry in her eyes as the woman glanced from Josh to her and back. "It was just nice having her close, Mom. Honest! Nothing happened!"
Looking at Josh just focusing on his hair with the faintest hint of guilt in his eyes made Vicky a little nervous. She knew Josh would tell her if they'd done anything if she asked, but she wanted the truth from her daughter. "Joss? Would you move to the bathroom so Jenny can get up? Luke is out now."
The boy glanced up at her and collected his things, passing her and heading to the door. "Sure, Vicky. I'll try not to be long."
After he left the room, the woman turned to her daughter sternly. "Alright, young lady. You look like a bride on her first wedded morning. Talk!"
Jennifer shrugged. "It's nothing, Mom! Honest! Joss had a nightmare last night and I laid down next to her for a bit to calm her down and that's it! I swear! I just laid next to her and held her... like you used to do with me when I was little. Her back was to me the whole time and I didn't touch anything! She never even woke up!"
Taking a deep breath, she stared closely at her daughter, seeing no lie in her eyes. "Then why do you look so... content."
Lying back on her pillow, she closed her eyes and made herself say what she was feeling. "It just felt so nice Mom, laying next to her like that! I... I think I might love her... for real! Not just a crush... not like with Janice. If she asked me, I think I'd marry her! I think I'd do about anything for her, just to make her happy!" Sitting up, she saw the chance to change the subject. "Mom, we have to help her! You know what her parents are going to do? Hormones! We need to call the cops or something!"
"I know, sweetie." Vicky said as she sat on the bed next to her daughter. "I think we should start by calling him Josh, dear. I know he seems to like it whatever you call him, but he needs you, more than anyone, to love him the way he is... not the way you want him to be." She sighed and petted Jennifer's hair. "He... he loves you, sweetheart. That means you can hurt him more easily and more profoundly than anyone... even his parents."
"What can we do about them, Mom?" she asked almost in tears. "There has to be something we can do!"
"I talked with your father last night about it." she explained. "He looked into things and found that if everything Josh says is true, which we believe him," she forestalled the obvious objection Jennifer was about to voice to the mere suggestion he could be lying, "then the only real option we have is to plead his case to his parents. They have the final say until he's eighteen. Period. If they can prove he's... um..."
"Dysphoric." Jennifer helped.
"Thank you. ...dysphoric, by use of a letter from a psychiatrist, then no legal method can stop them. We can only appeal to their good sense and try to help them hear what Josh is trying to tell them." As Jennifer sat up and hugged her mother, the woman tried to sooth her worries away. "We'll do all that we can, sweetie. I promise."
Josh finished styling his hair and checked his makeup again. Sighing that he still seemed every bit the perfect pre-teen girl, his hope died a little more. By this time next week, I'll be stuck like this for at least three months. Near to tears, he forced himself to shove the feelings away so that he didn't ruin his makeup. Giggling a little at the irony, that he was trying to 'man up' so he didn't make his mascara run, it helped elevate his mood somewhat.
He was honestly looking forward to going to services. Having been twice, he was starting to get the hang of things and understand the appeal, even to someone like him who was agnostic. If there is a God, he determined, he's pretty 'hands-off' when it comes to doing anything.
He did consider that perhaps if there was a God, his work was made manifest in the seemingly random things in life. Things like a child with a debilitating illness suddenly going into remission for no reason, or the apparently random encounters in life, such as his meeting Jennifer the way he did.
I didn't plan on going out to the grass to sit and eat. I wasn't really paying attention to where I was going. I just sort of seemed to end up there. Was that God or happenstance? he wondered while he finished his final touches.
What he liked was the feeling he had with so many cheerful people at the church services. Disregarding the theological question, he intended to keep going with the Healy family for that reason alone. For a short time, he could forget his problems and just be happy to be around happy people. Adjusting the little pink flowers that were his earrings, he smiled at the total effect, even though he wished it wasn't him that looked that way. Gathering his things, he headed to the living room to wait for the others.
Seeing John already there and waiting, he sat at the dining room table with the man and smiled. "Thank you." he said simply.
Turning to the youth, Jennifer's father grimaced weakly. "For what, Joss?"
"For letting me spend time with your family." he began. "For wanting to help me. For being so kind and understanding. You're nothing like my parents say Christians are, and neither are the people at church. Especially Pastor Roberts! He's smart, funny, and... just nice! So... thank you."
Genuinely humbled, John patted Josh's hand on the table. "Then you're very welcome." he answered joyfully before his mouth turned to a frown. "I don't know that we can help you with your parents, Joss. They seem very..." He struggled to find a polite way of putting it. "...determined... to see that you be a girl. We're going to have to talk to them today in order to try and stop their plans for you next Friday." Seeing Josh nod sadly at the fact, he turned away and continued almost to himself. "I don't know what I'd do if Luke wanted to be a girl. Hope it was a phase and he'd grow out of it, I suppose."
"But if it wasn't..." he paused to think, "I'd like to think I'd be willing to at least listen to him. I'd probably do as your parents are doing though... make a decision for him based on what I think's in his best interests and just hope I made the right call. That's parenting! You do your best, try to make the most rational decisions you can, and listen to your heart for the rest."
Laughing a moment, the older man shook his head. "I remember my mother used to tell me, 'Kids don't come with instruction manuals.' and since every one is different, every child you raise you do it as a novice. Oh, some things you get better at, like how to change a diaper, how to tell when they need an aspirin or the doctor, or make sure they're doing their homework... but the rest? Educated guesswork."
Turning back toward Josh, he grinned again. "There! Now you know the secret! Parents are rank amateurs working the most complex and important fieldwork imaginable... creating a functional human being... but it's the best job in the world! The worst thing anyone can do is to try and fiddle around with someone else's project. I only know we have to try and make them see that they're operating without feedback from the equipment... and that can lead to catastrophic results... including total loss of the project."
Seeing the analogy to the man's job working as a foreman for the power company, Josh nodded. "So, in your example, I'm the 'equipment' and my parents aren't taking my 'feedback', right?" Seeing him nod, Josh continued. "So, parents should listen to what their kids want?"
"Within reason." he pointed out. "Not to drive the analogy too far, feedback is no substitute for good judgement parents spend a lifetime earning. Often you have to ignore 'feedback' because the 'equipment' just wants ice-cream!"
Making Josh giggle, he saw Vicky and Jennifer come into the living room. The older of the two wore a long red and eggshell floral dress that hugged her waist and flared out at the hips. Jennifer was a vision to his eyes, wearing a pretty eggshell silk blouse and a mid-calf-length skirt that exactly matched the pattern in her mother's dress; obviously made of the same material.
"Where's Luke?" Vicky asked as she looked around, putting on her gloves.
"In his room, playing cars to occupy him in the cleanest way possible." John said as he stood and helped Josh up by the hand without even thinking. "I'll go get him, you get the girls..." he paused, winced, and turned to Josh with a pained expression. "Sorry. ...get the kids into the van."
Nodding silently, she led the two outside and into the back seat once more, joined shortly by John and a recalcitrant Luke. As they drove to the church, the nine-year-old boy was quite vocal about his distress.
"I wasn't done!" he pouted and yelled. "I just needed a little longer and I coulda got that jump 'ta work!"
"That's quite enough, Luke." Vicky admonished him. "Keep it up and you won't get to finish after brunch. We'll take your cars away."
Duly censured, the boy rode the rest of the trip in silence. Josh watched the exchange, in it seeing a practical example of what John was talking about. It was compassion, good judgement, and using the boy's feedback to adjust the situation to make Luke follow their desired course of action; namely behave in the car, at church, and during brunch.
The only question that remained was how to make his parents listen to his 'feedback' when they were convinced that their opinions were better than his. Even as he pondered the problem, Jennifer held his hand and watched him with a worried expression on her face. Leaning closer, he whispered, "Your mom and dad said that when they take me home, it's time to talk to them... try and convince them I don't want to be a girl. I... I hope it works."
Jenny gulped and nodded quickly. "Me... me too... Josh. I... I really hope that today is the last day you have to be Jocelyn."
Arriving as they had the previous two weeks, the five made their way to the doors, Pastor Roberts there to greet them as usual.
"John! Vicky! And welcome again, Jocelyn! You too, Jennifer. I understand you turned thirteen yesterday! Congratulations! Did you have a good day?"
With a nod and a grin, she couldn't help but touch the pendant that she wore alongside her plain gold cross. "Yes! I had all my friends there, we had a nice lunch, then went out to a movie! It was great!" She couldn't stop herself from stealing several glances at Josh as she spoke.
Smiling, he glanced over at their guest as well. "I'm guessing that you were among the guests at her party, Jocelyn?" Seeing him nod, he straightened up and smiled at them both. "I'm very glad for you both, then!"
"What 'bout me?" Luke interjected. "Dad took me to the park and we played baseball!"
"More like catch." John clarified. "Still, we had a good time!"
Josh had never envied a nine-year-old boy so much in his life at hearing that. Not that he especially liked baseball, he didn't, but just doing something a normal boy might do with his father was appealing. At the same time, he wouldn't have traded spending that day with Jennifer for all the games of catch with a loving father in the history of the world.
Going in and taking their seats, Josh enjoyed the service. He wondered if people would still be as friendly to him as a boy though, noting that a few boys his age were not as well monitored and talked to in-often, if at all. As a result, or possibly as a cause, he couldn't tell which, they were much more rambunctious and loud before and after the services and inattentive during.
Afterward, the family went once more to the same restaurant and enjoyed a lively conversation on the sermon that day, Are we saved by Good Works or are Good Works evidence that we've been saved? Once Josh had figured out what 'good works' were, he found the topic fascinating.
"So, if I understand it right," he puzzled, "no one can earn a place in heaven, because you'd have to be perfect to deserve a place there. It can only be given to you un-earned... undeserved. Then you try the rest of your life to deserve it, knowing you can't live up to the task? Wouldn't that just be frustrating?"
"Not really." John answered with a smile. He liked that Josh was interested and yet took nothing for granted in it; wanted to understand faith and make sense of it, and thereby the people that practiced it. "Trying yields its own rewards. Let me put it this way. You have a goal. Even if it's an impossible goal, just working towards it makes you a better person for the effort. Plus, once a person's been saved, they want to try."
"Hmm. I'll have to think about that." he pondered. Changing the topic, he brought up the disparity in how the young boys were treated in church versus how the girls were treated. "I have a special interest in this subject," he hinted, "so I guess I'm just more aware of the difference. Why is it they're treated differently?"
Vicky fielded this one as she leaned in close to him with a hushed voice. "Because boys and girls are different. You should know that better than anyone here. You know what it's like to be stuck on the wrong side of that difference. If there were no difference, it wouldn't matter to you which you were, would it? So then, why all the angst about being one over the other?"
Just at that moment, Josh realized he was operating from an assumption that had been drilled into his head for as long as he could remember; the idea that there were no differences between men and women or boys and girls, other than their primary and secondary sexual characteristics. He was living proof that his parents' assertions of it as immutable fact were wrong.
Making their way back to the car, Josh held Jennifer's hand tightly. "I... I know I gotta go home. I don't want to though. I feel like that girl in the movie when the queen makes her think she's the princess, but then Valentine breaks the spell. You all broke my spell, but I have to go back to the evil queen."
"But you won't be going back alone!" Jennifer smiled. "Step into my flying tower!" she said as she gestured toward the minivan, making the two giggle.
After stopping by the house to pick up Josh's things, they arranged for Karen to baby-sit Luke, which went as smoothly as a cat giving birth to an alligator.
"I don't need no dumb babysitter!" he insisted. "Why can't I go with you?"
Taking his turn to help, Josh led the boy into his room and knelt down in front of him. "Luke? I need you to do me a favor. I need your mom and dad to help me with something. I can't tell you what, it's a secret, but I really need their help, OK? You know how good and smart they are, right?" Seeing the boy nod shyly, Josh continued. "So, will you help me? If you come with us, they can't help me and something bad might happen to me. I need them to help protect me, but you can't know why, so you have to just trust me and stay here while they help. Can you do that for me?"
Examining Josh carefully, he sighed. "OK. I like you. You make Jenny happy so she's not bugging me all the time. I'll stay."
"Good!" Josh said with a grin. "Can Karen stay with you so she's not alone? She doesn't know the secret, so she needs to stay here, too. In fact, you need to keep it a secret that there's even a secret to keep! OK?"
"Sure." he nodded and smiled weakly. "I'll keep her safe here."
"Thanks, Luke!" he said and started to lean in for a hug before reconsidering and just extended his hand. "Help me up?"
That taken care of, the four of them all headed back to Josh's home, hopefully to end the nightmare that he'd found himself trapped in for the last month.
When they reached his house, Josh gulped in fear. "Are you sure we have to do this now? Maybe I haven't tried hard enough to like being a girl!"
Jennifer shook her head. "No, Joss. You can't learn to like being something you're not. You need help and we want to help you. You said so yourself, your parents aren't bad people. Once they see us agree with you that you shouldn't be forced to be a girl if you don't want to, they'll listen." Looking up at her parents nervously, she steeled herself. "I... I love you. I can't just stand by and watch them take a... a wonderful boy like you and turn you into what they want. You need to be you... so I can love you... Josh."
Sitting next to her, he was in awe of what she'd just professed. She... she loves me? As Josh? Do... do I love her? How do I know? Thinking a moment, he remembered something he'd read once. Love is when the happiness of another person is essential to your own. Imagining Jennifer being sad made him need to do anything to make her happy because he couldn't be happy if she wasn't. Turning it around, he realized that she must truly love him in return. She needs me to be me so I can be happy... so she can be happy.
"I think I love you too, Jenn. I know I'd do anything to make you happy, even stay living as a girl, but if I don't have to, I'd rather just be myself."
"Then why don't we go in and talk." Vicky suggested. "That's why we came!"
The four climbed out of the car and made their way up the flagstones, Josh leading the way. When they got to the door, he opened it and saw his parents sitting on the loveseat. "Hi! We're here!" Holding the door for the three others, he closed it behind them.
Getting up, Melanie went up to Josh. "Welcome home, sweetie!" she said as she hugged him. "OK, Jocelyn. So what's this about? All you said on the phone was that the Healys wanted to talk about something important." Seeing Jennifer standing next to him and holding his hand with an aspect of fear in her eyes, she turned to the girl's parents. "Is she pregnant?"
"No." John said with a mild chuckle. "Nothing like that. We wanted to talk to you about... well... about Josh. May we sit?"
Furrowing her brow, she crossed her arms. "Please, don't call her that! It's painful for her to hear! Don't you know that?"
Stepping forward, Vicky tried to calm things down. "Please, Melanie. We just want to talk about the situation... to help in any way we can. Please?"
Relaxing somewhat, she sat next to Fred and gestured toward the couch. "Take a seat." Seeing the four of them sit together, including Josh, she felt a pang of jealousy that he'd chosen them over her.
"OK." Fred began. "Let's not cloud the issue with unneeded pleasantries or formalities. Obviously, something's wrong or you wouldn't be here."
Josh turned to Vicky for support, but she just nodded back at him. When he got the same from John and then Jennifer, though the girl at least squeezed his hand reassuringly, he turned to his parents. Taking a breath, he held it a moment before pushing the words out. I hope they're right about you two. he thought before he said it. "Daddy? Mom? I'm a boy."
"What?" Melanie shouted and stood up.
"Mel?" Fred said calmly. "Let's hear her out, at least."
Josh's mother stared daggers at the trio sitting with her child. "Fine! But I already know what's going on!" Sitting down heavily, she glared at her son.
Suddenly losing his nerve, Josh's face sank. What's the use. he sulked. She's already made up her mind. It's hopeless.
Seeing him begin to falter, Jennifer forged ahead. "Mrs. Ryan? I love Joss. I think I've loved her from the first moment I saw her." When she saw his mother's face soften at the sentiment, she took the plunge. "But even I'd rather love Josh for himself than Jocelyn as the fake person that he pretends to be because he feels trapped. You never asked him what he feels."
"I think I know my own daughter!" Melanie snapped back. "I'm an expert in psychology! Besides, I had her checked by a licensed psychiatrist. I think that his opinion is better than a thirteen-year-old girl's!"
"But he doesn't know Josh, Mrs. Ryan!" she pleaded. "I do! You can't get to know someone in just a few minutes! Please! Don't do this to him! It... it'll kill him inside if you force him to become a girl against his will!"
"Now, nobody's forcing anything!" Fred countered. "Jocelyn's admitted to us, repeatedly, by word and action, that she's a girl. Jocelyn is my daughter. She went through a lot of hardship getting where she is, and I won't let anyone influence her to throw that all away just because you want her to be a boy!"
"But Mr. Ryan, I don't want her to be a boy!" Jennifer cried. "I... I'm gay, OK? I like girls! I love Jocelyn! She's wonderful! I don't want Joss to change back into Josh, but I need him to or else he can't ever be happy!" Pausing for a moment, she added softly, "I'd rather die alone than see Josh forced to be something he isn't."
Her heartfelt sentiment defused their anger, but not their resolve. "None of this matters." Fred stated flatly. "Jocelyn is a girl. That's been proven by her own words and actions. So, why are you all trying to convince her that she's a boy? What's really going on here?"
Taking Jennifer's strength to fight back, Josh took a breath. "Daddy? I was pretending to be Jocelyn. You didn't give me any choice. You never asked me what I want, you just told me. I don't want to be a girl. I'm a boy."
Melanie shook her head. "Jocelyn, come over here with us. They're confusing you! That's just your body!" she argued. "Your mind is a girl's mind!"
Frustrated, he sat back down next to Jennifer. "I told you they would never listen." he almost cried. "It's useless. They hate me!"
"Of course we don't hate you, Jocelyn!" Melanie stated. "But we do know what's best for you and these people are not helping your self identity! They have their own agenda, and I know what it is." She stared at the gold cross Jennifer still wore alongside the gift from Josh. "They're Christian extremists, Fred! Look!"
Seeing the cross she indicated, Fred sighed. "I would ask you three to leave and never bother my daughter again. If you do, I'll get a restraining order."
As his father said the words, the life in Josh's eyes died.
"No!" screamed Jennifer as she wrapped her arms around Josh and they held each other as tightly as they could. "Please! Don't say that Mr. Ryan! I'll do anything! Just don't say that! I love her and she loves me! Please!"
Sympathizing with her plight, Fred still shook his head. "I'm sorry, Jennifer. I don't want to, but your parents' actions are forcing me to. I have to protect my daughter. I'm sure you like her a lot, and I'm sure that your parents put a lot of pressure on you to find a boy you could like, but Jocelyn isn't a boy. I think the way you feel about her is enough proof that she's a girl. You like her. If she was a boy, you wouldn't like her so much, but you'll have to find another girl to like."
Glowering at the two parents, Fred stiffened his resolve. "Take your daughter home and stop filling her head with superstitious garbage that some fairy sky king hates her for liking girls, or whatever nonsense you've been telling her!"
Vicky stood up to defend her daughter. "Mr. Ryan! We love our daughter and have already accepted that she's gay!"
"So you try to take the girl she likes and turn her into a boy to suit your evil prejudices?" Melanie barked back at her. "I hope Jennifer figures out soon what deluded bigots you are! Then she might get away from you two before you drive her to kill herself! Please leave or I'm calling the police!"
Trying to pull Jennifer away from Josh required both sets of parents to actually cooperate for a moment. Even as they helped literally rip Josh and Jennifer out of each other's arms, the Healys tried to plead for them to get a second opinion.
"Please, Melanie!" Vicky pleaded. "Just take Josh to a second psychiatrist without prejudice and..."
"Her name is Jocelyn!" Melanie shouted back. "Stop misgendering her!"
"Mr. Ryan!" John implored him. "You're a smart man! Listen to your son! He needs..."
"I have a daughter!" Fred shouted. "Get out!"
"Jocelyn!" Jennifer screamed. "Jocelyn! Please!"
The whole time Josh was once more in a fugue state, the whole world around him a blur of noises, movement, and the agony of losing Jennifer. No! God? If you're real... please help me! Don't let them take her away from me! Please? Help me!
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Indirect Reference to Suicidal Thoughts
CAUTION - Intense scenes involving a minor
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
--
Josh was 'sick' the next week, which wasn't far from the truth as he was lost in a near constant fugue state. Friday came and he was taken down to Dr. Biggs's office and got his first three-month shot of puberty blockers. The next Monday, he went back to school and met Tracy at the bus stop.
"Joss!" she said excitedly as she ran up to him. "I tried calling you, but your mom said you were sick! Did I give you that awful cold? I'm sorry! You shouldn't have come to see me! I..." she paused when she noticed he was like a zombie. "Joss? What's wrong?"
"They... they made me stop seeing Jennifer." he nearly sobbed.
"Oh, Jocelyn!" Tracy gasped. "Why? What happened?"
Knowing she was just like his parents, wanting him to be a girl, he couldn't tell her what happened. Lacking the will to fight back, all he did was shrug.
"Joss, you have to tell me!" she insisted. "I'm your BFF! It's like a law or something!" She giggled in hopes that it would be infectious, but her laugh died when she saw it didn't work. "Joss, please. Just tell me what happened."
He shrugged dismissively as the bus pulled up next to them. "It doesn't matter. Nothing matters."
Getting on the bus, Tracy moved to their usual seat so he could sit with her, but saw him instead take the empty seat up at the front of the bus. Just like the days Tracy had been sick, Josh rode to school alone.
For months, Josh only existed. He went to school, but he barely did any of his work, just drifting from class to class in utter despair. After reaching out for weeks on end with no response, Tracy inevitably stopped trying to get him to engage with life and the two began to drift apart. David had never really reconnected with him, so even sooner the two friends ceased to even acknowledge one another. The two twins, who he'd practically grown up with, slowly became like all the other kids in the school; cold strangers.
Melanie and Fred were worried. When they'd forced the Healy family to have no further contact with Josh, they knew it would hurt him, but felt that after a while his attitude would rebound to be like it had been before he'd met them. Instead he just seemed to get worse with each passing day.
He found the first note in his locker the day he returned. Josh tried to read it, but hearing how much Jennifer missed and loved him hurt so much he just cried. Once home, he put it in the box where he'd put the other notes, including the love letter she'd written him.
Two more notes came that week, then three more the next week and each week that followed; one every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. He couldn't bear to read the words of tolerance, love, and hope. For him, there was none, especially hope. They went in the box unread because, as much as it hurt to ever read them, they were from Jennifer so he couldn't part with them.
He saw her sometimes, watching him as before as he went around the school pretending to be Jocelyn. The terrible sadness in her eyes was worse than having to pretend to be a girl. He wanted to go to her, but knew if he did his parents would punish the Healys, and he cared for them too much to do that.
Just after his thirteenth birthday that he spent alone, he came to school the next Monday and there was no note. There was also no Jennifer. No matter where he looked, she wasn't there. Worried, he hoped she wasn't too sick.
She never returned. After two weeks he realized she was gone and had no idea what happened to her and no way to find out if she was even still alive. He'd tried calling the Healy home from the solitary payphone out in front of the school, but their number had been disconnected. That was when he concluded that something terrible must have happened, and it was his fault.
It was then that the sadness that permeated him turned to anger.
He'd been on hormone blockers for six months when he got in his first fight. The boy had called him a sissy fag, and Josh slapped him hard enough to knock him to the floor. The school looked the other way because he'd been harassed and afforded him special privileges, but that only encouraged him. By the end of the school year he'd been sent to the office three more times and his grades were poor, but no matter how little work he did, his teachers passed him. The Principal ensured that 'Jocelyn', their first openly trans student, wouldn't be failed since it would make them look bad.
That summer he refused to go off to camp. Instead, he just spent the time hanging around the house and going for long walks alone.
Eighth grade was no better. If anything, it was worse. As his peers grew and developed, he remained the same; trapped in a body that wouldn't mature and in a life he hated but couldn't escape.
When he'd been on hormone blockers for a year, his parents tried to force him on female hormones.
Melanie was at her wit's end that October evening when she first brought it up. "Jocelyn! It's for your own good! You can't stay on blockers forever! You have to grow into a woman!"
Josh stared at her with a glare that would freeze steam. "No!"
"But sweetheart, they'll get you out of this horrible cycle of depression you're in!" she insisted. "I'm making the appointment!"
"Try and make me go, Melanie!" he spat. He hadn't called her 'Mom' since the day they'd forced him to stop seeing Jennifer. She in turn just excused it as his 'becoming her own person'.
"Oh, you'll go!" she stated boldly.
"Only if you tie me up and drag me there!" he sneered. "And if you do drag me there, I won't talk and I will not let them shoot me up!"
"Jocelyn! Why are you fighting me on this? We're just doing..."
"...whatever you want to do to me!" he interrupted her. "Like I'm some doll for you to dress up and put on display for your progressive cred! 'Look at us! Aren't we so progressive? We have a trans child!'"
"You can't talk to me that way!" Melanie shouted.
"Why not? What're you gonna do about it, Melanie?" he scoffed.
"Just leave it be, Mel." Fred tried to defuse the situation. "Engaging at her level won't change anything. She's just being a teenage girl."
"Fine." Melanie growled. "Ever since she went on blockers and fell out with Tracy she's been absolutely impossible!" Refusing to accept that his troubles had anything to do with the forced breakup, Melanie chose to blame his anti-social behavior on everything other than the truth.
When the subject came up again later that month and he refused HRT once more, he became suspicious she'd try to sneak it into his food. The following Monday he found a lunch made for him as he got ready for school.
"What's this?" he questioned her suspiciously. Melanie had never made him lunch, even when he was in Primary school, claiming it 're-enforced gender stereotypes' to expect her to make a lunch for her child.
"Oh. I... I made you lunch, sweetheart!" his mother stammered. "I... I was thinking that I could make some things easier for you, since you're having such a hard time lately, so you won't have to make your lunches anymore!"
"Nice try, Melanie!" he huffed as he tossed the bag in the garbage. "I'll get lunch at school." At that he stalked out the door in his black jeans and top; a style that was all he would wear of his considerable wardrobe. When he searched the house later that day while Melanie was at still work and Fred was practically hiding in his home office, he found the opened prescription bottles in his parents' room. He took them to the toilet and flushed them all.
After that Melanie became desperate and dragged him to therapy sessions with Dr. Williams. The first day Josh threatened to stab him with a pen for signing off on his transition after only a five-minute talk. Within a few visits though, he used the time as a bitch session to complain about school, the kids that snubbed him, his parents, and anything else that came to mind.
Eventually, the anger melted away, leaving only a severe depression in its wake. He started giving in on things. Slowly at first, but soon he was passing his classes legitimately and dressing more femininely again. He was back to just drifting through his days as he had been right after Jennifer had been literally ripped from his arms. His anger still unspent, it seethed inside him.
It suddenly snapped one day when Jason Dexter passed him in the hallway. He called Josh a name. Josh in turn sent the boy to the floor crying.
"Jocelyn?" Mr. Tanner said sadly as Josh sat in his office. "I'm going to have to suspend you for three days for this. I can't look the other way this time. I've called your father and he's on his way here to pick you up. I have to say, I'm extremely disappointed. What ever happened to the girl that was sweet, kind, and helpful like you used to be?"
"She's dead." Josh growled.
"I... I suppose that's just the anger talking. You escalated way too far this time, though." the man chided him. Seeing Fred enter his office, he sighed. "I'm very sorry about this, Mr. Ryan. Jocelyn's suspended for three days. Please sign this form and take her home. She can come back next Tuesday."
Fred stopped halfway in the room. "What? No discussion? What happened?"
"She assaulted Jason Dexter, Mr. Ryan. She's suspended. Please just sign the form or I'll turn it over to the district legal department."
Resignedly, Josh's father signed the form. "Alright. Get your things, Jocelyn. I'll take you home."
Puttering away in the rusty Microbus, Fred glanced over at Josh. "Well?"
"Asshole called me a fruitcake, so I kicked him in the nuts." he answered.
"I thought you worked though this with Dr. Williams." Fred whined. "I wish you'd start gender appropriate hormone therapy! It would help stabilize..."
"No! No hormones!"
"Jocelyn, you have to start puberty!" he begged. "You're fourteen!"
"I'll start when you let me off the blockers." he mumbled.
"What?" Fred asked, not having heard him over the car's engine.
"Nothing." Josh spat. He knew trying to assert his masculinity again was just a waste of breath, so he didn't even bother to try.
When Melanie found out he'd been suspended, she scoffed. "What? They've never suspended her for standing up for herself before!" she cried. "That school is to blame for all of her problems! They're bigoted and backwards, targeting Jocelyn just because she transitioned!"
"Mel..." Fred countered softly. "You can't blame them every time something like this happens. Jocelyn is at least partly to blame."
"It's the hormone blockers!" she redirected. "They... they have side effects... emotional lability, aggression, depression... so it's not her fault! Those damn pharmaceutical companies! Milking their patients for every dime for drugs that are so loaded with side effects they're almost worse than the disease!"
Josh just lay on his bed in his room brooding. He'd long ago ripped down the girly canopy, the framing sitting there all around him like the bleached bones of a dead animal, almost a cage. He knew he'd overreacted. Jason Dexter was a know-it-all jerk, but he didn't deserve being attacked like that, even though the boy had mildly threatened Josh that one time. He was roused from his continued self-loathing by a knock at his door.
"Go away!" he shouted.
Trying the knob, Melanie found it locked. "Jocelyn, sweetie! It's Mom. Please let me in?"
"Go away, Melanie." he grumbled.
"Sweetheart, I know it's not your fault." she tried coddling him. "You were provoked and are suffering from severe social anxiety! It's not your fault!"
Rolling his eyes, he turned his back to the door. "Just leave me alone."
She tried bringing him dinner, but his paranoia prevented him from eating; certain that she'd laced his food with a new supply of estradiol.
The next day Melanie stayed home from work, something she hadn't done since Josh's first week of Junior High. He came down wearing his torn black jeans and ratty loose-fitting top, going to the kitchen to make breakfast. After they'd forced him on hormone blockers, he'd refused to drink the soy milk or eat anything with soy when he'd learned it contained phytoestrogens. His still pre-pubescent body could mistake them for real estrogens and begin a mild form of female puberty. It was something he'd ironically read on a transgender forum intended for trans girls whose parents wouldn't let them get hormones. Instead he went to make some toast.
"Jocelyn?" Melanie said softly. "Would you come here, please?"
Turning around, he saw she was sitting at the dining room table with her usual cup of tea. "Why aren't you at work?" he asked suspiciously.
"I need to talk to you." she said gently. "Please?"
Rolling his eyes, he stalked over to the table and dropped heavily into the seat. "What now, Melanie?"
Clearing her throat, she only glanced up at him. "I've been talking with Dr. Williams about your... problems... lately."
"So much for doctor-patient confidentiality!" Josh jeered and rolled his eyes again, crossing his arms defiantly.
"Honey, I needed to know what's wrong with you, and now I understand." she said contritely. "You... you want to be able to have your own children. I know that it's bad to contribute to global overpopulation, but Dr. Williams explained it to me. It's actually a common issue with transgender girls. You... you'll never be able to carry a baby like I did, and that hurts. I understand."
Eyeing her with a dead expression, he snorted. "Sure. That's my problem!"
She sighed patiently at his sarcasm. "I know there are other issues, but I see now that this is why you've been so much against starting HRT! So, I talked it over with your father and... and we've decided that it's in your best interest for you to skip the shot of blockers you were scheduled to get next week."
Sitting forward, the tiny ember of hope that still clung to life in the frozen wasteland of his broken heart began to flare. Swallowing hard, he gaped at her, hopeful over something for the first time in a year and a half. "You... you're going to let me become a boy?"
"No, sweetie!" she said sympathetically, willingly mistaking his eager tone for one of fear. "We'd never do that to you! We're just going to let your body develop enough to produce some... genetic material... have it harvested and frozen, and then you can be free to start HRT without any regrets!" Seeing the life die in his eyes, she thought he just didn't understand. "Don't you see? You'll be able to have your own children someday and become a woman! It's true that you won't be able to carry the baby, but your partner could! Assuming that you're still a lesbian, that is." She turned to study his reaction curiously. "Are you?"
Having the flicker of hope snatched away from him so dismissively, he answered absently. "Yeah."
Smiling as though she'd just solved world hunger, Melanie got up. "Alright then! Dr. Biggs already knows and will need to see you once a month for a while, to monitor your progress. We don't want you developing too much! As soon as he thinks you're ready, you'll go down to a clinic, they'll get what they need, and then you can start HRT! I'm really very thrilled for you! Finally we can get past all this craziness and get you on the proper path!"
Months went by and Josh started feeling changes in his body. Excitedly he began to think that when he was to begin HRT he might somehow convince his parents he really was a boy. Just after school ended for the year and he was passed on to High School, Dr. Biggs told him that the time had come.
Josh went down to the clinic willingly. He didn't feel he had any reason to fear what they were going to do. When he was taken in to see the doctor, he was told he was being prepped for minor outpatient surgery.
"Surgery?" he asked curiously. "I..." He paused a moment and considered his words carefully. "That is, I didn't know I had to have surgery for this."
The attending doctor raised an eyebrow at that. "Jocelyn? Are you certain that this is what you want?"
With an embarrassed shrug, he looked away. "It's not a big deal. I mean, I thought it'd be done the 'old fashioned way' is all. Yeah, it's fine with me. I just want to get it over with and go home."
"You have her informed consent release, Doctor!" Melanie hissed. "You also have her psychiatrist's letter! If you don't proceed, I'll sue your whole clinic for discrimination... which isn't covered by malpractice insurance!"
Cowed by her threat, and having gotten a verbal acknowledgment from Josh, the physician nodded. "No need for that, Ms. Ryan. I'm required to verify patient consent prior to surgery, is all." Facing Josh, he smiled weakly. "No, we don't use the old-fashioned methods at this clinic, Jocelyn. Don't worry! It'll be quick and almost painless! We'll put you to sleep for a little bit, take what we need, then bandage you up and you'll be on your way home!"
It wasn't until Josh woke up afterward that he found out what the doctor had meant when he said they were going to 'take what they need'.
"You... you had me castrated?" he said with shock through a mind and body that were barely functional due to the anesthesia that was just wearing off.
"You would have done it eventually." Melanie said happily. "This way it's done, you don't have to take anti-androgens, and you have genetic material frozen for the future! Now, lie back and the doctor will let us know when we can take you home! You can start hormones tonight! Isn't it exciting!"
Josh blacked out. The next thing he knew he awoke in his bed wearing his Little Mermaid nightie, still fitting since he hadn't grown much in the last twenty-one months. Slowly becoming aware of his body, he felt a mild sting between his legs as it all came rushing back to him. Horrified, he felt down. Slowly pieces of the previous day came back to his mind.
He remembered his mother dressing him after the surgery, then the warm breeze as he was wheeled out to the microbus. Then he remembered her handing him some pills and him taking them. It's too late. he realized. It's already started. He lay back down and sobbed uncontrollably for hours.
By the time summer vacation ended, Josh was beginning to develop like a normal teen girl. He was also convinced that all hope was lost and stopped fighting his parents' efforts to push him through transition. He even took his pills without a fight. For most of the first month Melanie made him open his mouth and checked in his cheeks and under his tongue to make sure, but he just didn't care enough to try. He continued to see Dr. Williams, but instead of spending the time complaining as before, he spent it sitting there; ignoring the man and contemplating his own death.
Walking to school in his short denim skirt, tights, trainers, and V-neck top, the High School being less than a mile from his home, he was neither happy nor sad. He just existed. Finding his assigned locker, he absently went to his classes; first Math, then Biology, English, and Spanish. As he sat eating his lunch, he looked up to see a girl standing across the table from him.
"Mind if I join you?" she asked cheerily.
Cautiously, Josh nodded and gestured to the seat across from him as he chewed his salad.
"I'm Grace!" she greeted him enthusiastically. "What's your name?"
"Jocelyn." he said flatly. "You can call me Joss, if you want."
"Hi, Joss!" she chirped as she opened the small paper carton of milk. "Isn't High School cool? It's almost like being a grown up!"
"Thrilling." he answered lifelessly.
"Are you OK?" she asked concernedly. "Did some senior girls pick on you, too? Some girl that thinks she's God's gift just 'cuz she's three years older tried to make me kiss her shoes in the bathroom! Man, if I didn't think I'd get suspended, I'd of punched her out! As it is, I just scrammed outta there!"
He shook his head sadly. "No, nothing like that. I just..." As he spoke, he spotted Tracy sitting at a table full of other girls, laughing happily. Sighing, he shrugged. "I just don't have any friends anymore."
"Awe!" Grace empathized. "I know how you feel. I don't either. Mom and I just moved here over the summer from San Diego. I don't know anyone here!" Taking a bite, she slowly stopped and swallowed before a smile grew on her face. "You and I could be friends!"
Seeing she was sincere and just trying to be friendly, he felt he owed it to her to have all the facts first. "Um... thanks, but you don't wanna be my friend. If you are, nobody else will be." He lowered his voice. "I... I'm trans."
Without a blink she asked, "No kidding? The way you dress I'd of never guessed you wanna be a boy! Your mom make you dress like that?"
"I'm male to female." he answered curiously, taking a bite of his sandwich.
"Wow!" she replied wide-eyed. "You'd never know it! You look totally hot! This T-girl in my old school, you could tell. Her parents were supportive and all, but she was, like, built like a boy, ya' know? Supposedly as she develops she'll look more girly, but you? You look like you were destined to be a girl, though! Like the hand of fate was pushing you that way all along!"
Shaking his head, his long light brown hair flowing around his shoulders, he laughed sardonically. "Ha. More like the hand of my mother! She's the one that pushed me to transition. I don't care anymore, really. It is what it is."
"Were you afraid to?" she asked quietly. "Like, afraid you'd get picked on?"
"I was picked on." he answered plainly. "A lot in seventh grade, but not as much last year. I also lost my two best friends." At that he peered up to see Tracy eye him, then turn away and pretend she hadn't seen him.
Grace turned, glanced at the table, then looked back at Josh. "Which ones?"
"The girl with the dark brown hair in the jeans and white top? That's Tracy." he sighed. "She used to be my BFF. I guess forever doesn't last very long anymore. Not that I blame her... I was kind of a bitch to her for a bit. She was pushing for me to transition, too. Her and her brother David, he's not here right now, used to be my best friends. Now I don't have any friends."
"I don't get it." Grace wondered. "OK, you were scared. It's understandable. It's a rough thing to be so different from everyone... let alone realizing that in Middle School! Still, they shouldn't of pushed 'til you were ready!"
While the two finished eating, he watched her. She was small, but not nearly as small as he was. Her honey blonde hair was in a pixie cut and her skin was like alabaster with only faint hints of a fading tan. Two large blue eyes stared back at him with kindness in them and not a hint of revulsion.
"Wanna go sit outside while the weather's nice?" Grace asked. "I hear you actually get snow here in the winter!"
Josh nodded and the two got up and dumped their garbage, walking out under Tracy's watchful gaze.
Sitting together on the grass behind some benches and soaking in the warm late summer rays, Grace turned to him. "Can I ask you a personal question?"
"Shoot." he answered with his eyes closed and his hands behind his head.
"Um... do you like boys, girls, both, neither?"
"Neither, really. Girls if I had to pick." he answered absently. In truth, Josh's heart was still locked away, mourning the loss of his beautiful Jennifer.
"That's cool. I'm Bi, but I've known asexual girls. They're usually easier to get along with! No like, hang-ups or drama with boy or girlfriends, dating issues, angst over unrequited crushes... blah, blah, blah!" she giggled, only to stop when she noticed he didn't join in. Silence passed between them before Grace spoke again. "Joss? Do you care that I think you're cute?"
Sighing inwardly, he felt the empty half of his heart ache in loneliness. "No. I don't mind. I know I'm pretty, you like girls. It just sorta happens, I guess."
"Cool!" she said with a smile. "Not that I'm like, asking you out or hitting on you or anything! I respect your boundaries! It's just cool!"
As the bell rang ending lunch break, the two got up and dusted themselves off. "Listen, I have R.O. next period. You?"
"PE. What's are oh?" he asked.
"R.O.T.C.?" she annunciated each letter. "It's totally cool! I don't gotta take PE and I bet I look fabulous in uniform!" she said, striking a glamorous pose.
Josh honestly giggled for the first time in nearly two years. Catching himself and feeling self-conscious about it, he suppressed it and put his hand over his mouth. "Sorry! I didn't mean to laugh!"
Blushing, Grace touched Josh's shoulder as they walked toward the freshman lockers. "It's OK! I like your laugh! I think I'll try and make you laugh more just to hear it!" When he stopped at his locker and got out his pink bag, she snorted. "My turn to be sorry! I didn't mean to laugh at your bag. It's just..."
"...really girly. I know." Josh sighed as he hoisted it onto his right shoulder. Following Grace to her locker, he waited. Getting out a black bag, identical to his old one, he smiled at the happy memory of when his parents had only pushed him to date boys. "I like your bag." he complimented her.
Blushing again, she looked away shyly. "Thanks! Mom found it in a second hand store last week. It's a little used, but sturdy! I like it!"
Josh examined it closely and noticed the tiny scrapes on the rainbow across the back that made his eyes go wide.
Seeing his reaction, Grace furrowed her brow. "What's wrong?"
Collecting himself, he took a breath. "That... that bag. It... it used to be mine. Back in sixth and seventh grade. I guess Melanie, my mother, gave it to the second hand store over the summer."
"How do you know it's yours?" she asked as they headed toward the gym.
"The scrapes on the rainbow?" he explained. "I took it the last time I went to summer camp before going to Middle School and scraped it on some trees. I'd know that pattern of scratches anywhere!"
"Are you serious?" she asked. "Holy cannolies! Talk about the hand of fate! What're the odds of that?"
The two giggled together before separating at the gym doors. "See you later, Grace!" Josh said almost happily.
"Catch ya' 'round, beautiful!" she answered back with a finger point before she began jogging down the hall toward the ROTC classrooms.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
--
Turning in place and looking at himself in his closet mirror, Josh sighed at the utter futility of looking anything like a boy. He'd bought some boy's clothes in a department store; a pair of jeans, a T-shirt, and a baseball cap. Even with his hair tucked up in the cap and his still-growing breasts strapped down with an ace bandage, the image he saw reflected in his mirror looked like a pre-teen girl wearing boy's clothes. Once he took off the cap and his hair spilled out, the vision was complete and he would even be hard-pressed to say they were boy clothes. On him, he felt they still looked girly.
Putting them away, he got back to the business at hand, namely trying on the dress that he was supposed to wear to the Spring Fling in two weeks. He thought it funny that the fifteenth was still five days before the official start of spring, but the name of the dance wasn't that important. That he was going was. That he was going with Grace even more so.
He and Grace had become good friends quickly. They actually had quite a lot in common, most notably that they both loved musicals. Josh had her over to his house many times to watch dozens of his or her favorites since the start of the school year when they'd met. They would invariably take twice as long as the movie length to watch each one, he or she always pausing the video to expound on some point of trivia.
They also shared a disdain for Melanie. While Fred wasn't bad, Melanie was constantly trying to push Josh into being more flirty with Grace, suggesting more revealing outfits or referring to the two as a couple. During the winter break, Melanie had finally gone too far.
The two lay on the living room floor next to each other watching State Fair as Melanie wandered in and sat on the couch behind them. When the movie ended and the two began to get up, they finally noticed she was there.
"Oh. Hello, Mrs. Ryan." Grace said, knowing it would grate on her nerves.
"Grace, please." she moaned, "I've told you before, it's Ms. Ryan... or Melanie... or even better, just Mel!"
"Sorry, Mrs. Ryan." she twisted the knife. "Hard habit to break! My dad drilled it into me, but good! I'll try harder."
Sighing in frustration, Melanie put the issue aside and smiled at the two. "It's quite late, Grace. After ten. Since you two don't have school tomorrow, I called your mother and asked if you could just stay the night and she said you could! You can borrow one of Jocelyn's nightgowns!"
"Melanie!" Josh shouted. "Why do you have to do stuff like that! It's not your place to be asking Mrs. Wright if Grace can stay over!"
"Sweetheart, I was only thinking of Grace's safety! It's not safe to be out after ten for a pretty young girl like Grace! Besides, I thought it would give you two a chance to get closer... to... bond!"
His jaw falling open at the brazen insinuation from his mother, Josh was speechless. Fortunately, Grace wasn't.
"Mrs. Ryan, I like Joss!" she admitted. "A lot! Hell, I'd marry her! And I can too, 'cuz she's still legally male which would be totally awesome! But she's not into me and that's cool!"
"But Grace, dear," Melanie retorted, "Jocelyn sometimes needs help to not pass up the opportunities available to her! It was like pulling teeth getting her to stop pretending to be a boy... and getting her on gender appropriate hormone therapy was a battle in itself. Still, she always saw in the end that I knew what was best for her, so I was just hoping to push her along in the proper direction again! You two make such a cute couple!"
Grace narrowed her eyes at Melanie. "Mrs. Ryan, we're not a couple, and Joss is not some helpless girl who needs her mother to set up dates for her! If you push her to date me, I'll turn her down flat! She's nobody's pity date and she doesn't need you to set her up!"
"I wasn't suggesting that she was, Grace!" Melanie shot back. "And I don't like being accused of pushing my daughter on you!"
Smiling and dropping her tone to one sweet as pie, she retorted, "Then stop trying to pimp her out!"
Melanie fumed at the accusation. "I think it best if you leave and never..."
"Mel." Fred interrupted her as he entered the room. "Don't say it. I'll just have to invite her back."
"Fred! Didn't you hear what that girl..." she argued.
"I did, Mel." he said calmly. "She was crude, but right, at least in principle. Jocelyn doesn't need you or anyone to push her into dating. She can make her own choices in her own time. Leave. It. Be." He rarely if ever opposed his wife about anything, but when he did he was immovable on the issue.
Seeing he was not going to budge and that she was outnumbered, Melanie stormed off in a huff. "Fine! I'm only her mother and trying to look out for her best..." her voice faded as she retreated into the master bedroom.
"Thanks for the backup, Mr. Ryan." Grace said appreciatively.
"I was only looking out for Jocelyn." he answered honestly. "Mel was butting into an area that's none of her business. She knows that, but it's sometimes hard to not want to help your child... especially a girl like Jocelyn. If you're crude about it again though, I won't stop her from throwing you out."
Josh was completely mortified. His mother had not only tried to see to it that Grace stayed the night, but was actually pushing the two of them to have sex. "I am so sorry, Grace!" he apologized. "Melanie was way out of line! I... I'd understand if you decided not to come over anymore."
"Nah!" Grace dismissed the offer. "You have a bigger TV than ours!" Seeing that it made Josh smile a little, she wrapped the small boy in a friendly hug. "Come on! Fuhgetaboutit! Who's my best friend? Huh? You! Are we gonna hafta watch Xanadu on that dinky screen at my place?"
Josh rolled his eyes. "Ugh! Are you still holding me to that? Xanadu is not a classic musical!"
"Hey, you made me watch Easter Parade last month! That sappy thing made my teeth hurt!" Releasing him, she held out a hand. "Walk me to the door?"
"If she won't, I will." Fred offered as he grabbed his keys. "I'm driving you home, Grace."
"It's like six blocks from here!" she argued. "If I can walk down Washington Boulevard in the City of Commerce, I can walk a few blocks in northeast Ohio! Anyone messes with me, they get an eye-full of my left jab!" Taking a fighting stance, she covered properly and snapped out with her left hand with lightning speed. Relaxing and bouncing on the balls of her feet with a grin, she smiled sweetly. "Aren't I such a girly-girl!"
While Josh still brooded nearby, Fred burst out laughing before his tone turned serious. "That's all well and good, but..."
"Mr. Ryan, please." she interrupted. "My father taught me self-defense from the time I was three until... well, right up until the end. I probably could take you. Compared to me, you're old and out of shape... no offense. I'll jog home and be there before you can even get that heap of yours out of the driveway!"
"Hey!" he said defensively. "That's a classic car!"
"Yeah, well it needs a valve job and a hundred dollar visit to Earl Scheib's." she countered. "I'll be fine, Mr. Ryan! I'll text when I get home so you know I'm safe, OK?" Seeing Fred relent and head off to follow Melanie, she turned to Josh and took his hand again, pulling him toward the front entry. "Call me tomorrow?" she asked.
Nodding and smiling, he sighed. "I will." Opening the door, he looked up at his only friend as she put on her jacket. "Did you mean all that stuff? I mean, that stuff you said to Melanie? About me?"
Moving to the porch together, Grace groaned as her breath floated away in the cold. "Oh! You just don't know, do you girl?" Glancing away, she put her hands in her jacket pockets to keep them warm. "Yeah Joss, I like you. A lot. You're smart, funny, and pretty as hell! I was crushing on you after talking to you for like five minutes!" Leaning against the railing while Josh stood in front of the closed door in a pink cardigan and white capris, she shook her head. "So yeah, I want to stay... with you... in your room with the door locked and music blaring so no one can hear you scream like a banshee! I admit it! You're hot! Who wouldn't want to?" With a short pause she added, "But..."
Josh exhaled heavily, his breath visibly joining Grace's. "...but I just, I can't!" he cried. He liked Grace. She was a great friend and there was so much about her that he was attracted to. But she's not Jenn. he sighed inwardly.
"Someday, you gotta tell me who it was that broke your heart so bad." Grace lamented as she pushed off the railing back onto her feet and wrapped her arms around Josh. "Not tonight, though. I gotta scram." Making her way down the flagstone walkway backwards, she waved goodbye to Josh before turning and running for home.
Picking up the pink pastel dress, he pressed it up against himself and looked in the mirror. I look like a friggin' Barbie doll, he huffed. After having sorted through dozens of options at a local shop, Melanie had ordered the dress in his size as they didn't stock that style in child's size twelve. Still only four-foot-ten and just under ninety pounds, he looked closer to twelve or thirteen rather than fifteen, having missed nearly two years development on top of being naturally small. When Grace asked him to go to the Spring Fling with her, he'd almost said no, but her pleading eyes just couldn't be refused.
Trying on the dress, he found he had enough of a chest to fill the bust nicely but worried that the off-shoulder style was too risqué. The way it hugged his waist and showed off his developing curves was undeniable, though. The dress was perfect. Hanging it back up, he got re-dressed in his girl's jeans and top and plopped down on his bed. Looking up at the powder blue canopy that looked much more mature than the childish pink canopy he'd torn down and ripped up, he heard his new smartphone chime.
Rolling over and plucking it off his nightstand, he saw it was a text from Grace and smiled.
hey gf!
Josh typed his reply quickly.
Hey there! What's up?
just hangin. wondering if my girl was up 4 sum company!
Sighing, Josh typed back.
Anytime, Grace. You know you don't need to ask.
A moment later, he saw the response.
k! b rite their! :kiss:
Rolling his eyes at her lazy text, he got up and fixed his hair and makeup. He knew he didn't have to, he just felt it was the right thing to do anytime she came over. If I gotta be a girl, I don't have to be a slob! Heading down the stairs, he waited on the couch until he heard knocking. Getting back up he shouted, "Come on in, Grace!"
Entering, she looked Josh up and down. After closing the door, she wrapped an arm around his shoulders. "God, girl! You're gorgeous!"
Pulling her arm from around him like a dance move as he ducked under it, he waggled a finger at her. "Watch that now, Grace!"
"Oh, I'm watchin' it, alright!" she said as she looked at Josh's rear end as he walked away from her. "You sure you were ever a boy?" she joked.
"Ha. Ha." Josh said as he started up the stairs. "Come on. It came today."
"An invitation to the inner sanctum?" she said almost reverently as her eyes followed his swaying hips up the steps. "How can I resist?"
Showing her the dress, Josh held it up against himself. "Think it'll be OK?"
Almost salivating that Josh was going to be her not-really-a-date to the spring dance wearing that dress, Grace nodded. "Yeah. I'll hafta go armed though!"
"Laughable." Josh sneered as he hung the dress up. Moving to sit on the bed, he sighed. "Listen. Remember last December when you asked me who broke my heart?" Seeing her nod, he took a breath as his voice turned sad. "Her... her name was Jennifer... and she didn't break my heart... she stole it."
Sitting next to him, Grace took his hand. "It's OK. Just go slow."
After getting Grace to promise to not interrupt until he was done, Josh took hours recounting the horror story of his Middle School years. By the time he'd finished, tears had ruined his makeup and he had a pile of tissues on the floor at his feet.
"And when I woke up, I found out she'd had me castrated!" he bawled. "I... I was devastated, Grace!"
"Wait." she finally said. "Is it OK to talk now?" Seeing him nod as he silently cried, she took a breath. "You mean to tell me that you never wanted to be a girl? That your parents did that to you without your consent? Isn't that like, illegal or something? Child abuse?"
Shaking his head, he took a ragged breath. "No! They have that damn letter from Dr. Williams saying I'm TG, so it's all legal, just completely wrong!"
"So... then you're really a boy? In your head I mean?"
"I don't know what the hell I am!" he cried. "I'm so messed up it's not even funny! I... I've always looked like a girl, even before HRT! I... I giggle, I talk like a girl, I write like a girl, I even move like a girl! I always have!"
"But you're a boy." Grace stated. "You are because you say you are!"
Sniffing and dabbing at his eyes, he sighed; glad to get it out of his system. "But... as I was going to say... it doesn't matter. It's too late to fix anything. I've been on HRT for most of a year, I've lost my... um..."
"...balls." Grace answered for him crudely with a smile, making Josh giggle lightly. "Wow. This is just so..." Standing up, she began to pace the room. Turning to look back at him, she could only ask the one thing that had been on her mind since Josh's terrible story had begun. "So... this Jennifer. Was she pretty?"
Smiling and crying simultaneously, he nodded his head. "Beautiful! And kind, caring, selfless... and... and she loved me. I mean, she loved me! Josh!"
"I thought you said she was gay?" she asked, sitting down next to him.
He nodded and wiped his nose. "It's complicated. She... she wanted me to stay a girl, but loved me enough to want me to be myself." Lowering his head, he sighed. "I loved her so much I was willing to be a girl for her, but..."
"...but the Harpy strikes again!" Grace quipped. "God! That woman is insane! I can only believe that she literally ripped you two apart because I've actually met her! That was beyond cruel, Joss!"
Neither said anything for a few moments while Grace worked up the courage to ask her next question. "You... you still love her... don't you?"
Getting up and pacing the room, Josh admitted the truth. "How can I not? Jenn... she was willing to do anything for me, and she was... she was just... wonderful." he said wistfully.
Grace got up and hugged her best friend, holding him for several minutes.
Finally separating, he shook his head. "I'm sorry I'm such a mess, Grace. I just felt... well... you needed to know the whole story. About me, I mean. I understand if you don't want to go with me to the dance... or even if you don't want to be my friend anymore. I mean, I'm a freak! A boy pretending to be a girl trapped in a boy's body that's turning into a girl?" He stepped away from her before facing his closet mirror, his expression contorting into one of pure disgust, and shouted, "Freak!"
Grace stormed up to him and took him by the elbows. "Don't you ever say that about my best friend ever again, Joss! You hear me? Ever!"
Breaking into sobs, Josh collapsed into Grace's arms and cried. She could only hold him and pet his head, trying to comfort him as best she could as she started to cry herself. Finally, after several minutes holding each other, Josh pulled away slightly and looked up at her. "Thank you." he whispered as he dried his tears with another tissue.
"For what?" Grace asked as she wiped away tears from her own cheeks with her sleeve. "For being here for you? What else could I do?"
Josh looked into her eyes and saw the longing in them. He knew she wanted to say more, to do more, but she'd kept it back for his sake. Having told her his truth, he could see in Grace's gaze that she still wanted him. Moving in closer, Josh tilted his head to one side and closed his eyes, leaning forward until his lips met hers. Kissing her gently, he opened his eyes to see she was staring at him wide-eyed.
"Wh... why'd you do that, Joss?" she asked after taking a moment to collect and calm herself.
Josh smiled knowingly. "A few minutes ago, you held me because you knew I needed it. That was because I knew you needed it."
Grace was overwhelmed. She'd dreamed about kissing this beautiful 'girl' for months, and now when he was so vulnerable, her beautiful boy had kissed her first. "Joss, I... I want to do that again, but..."
"...but I'm not ready, I know." he admitted. Leaning in to lay his head against her chest, wrap his arms around her, and close his eyes, he continued as much to himself as to Grace. "I have to learn to let go of the past that I can't change. Jennifer's gone and I have no way of getting her back. I guess someday I'll stop loving her so much that I'll be able to..."
"No." Grace interrupted him. "You'll never stop loving her, Joss. For the rest of your life, you'll love her. She deserves nothing less. She earned that love by the way she loved you. Never forget that."
"So..." he sighed, "...I guess I'll just live alone. Good thing I like cats!"
Leading him over to sit on the bed again, Grace sat close and held his hands in hers. "No, Joss. You'll love again. It'll just be different. My dad once told me that every person we love is a unique thing unlike any other. Loving one person doesn't take away the love you have for another. You think parents with two kids have to stop loving their oldest when they have a new baby? You think when a couple falls in love that they suddenly feel nothing for the people they've loved in the past? No. You'll love again, and you'll never stop loving Jennifer. That's just the way things work."
Josh suddenly remembered something from the second time he'd gone to church. It was so beautiful, he'd memorized it and began to recite it. "Love is patient, love is kind. It doesn't envy, it doesn't boast, it isn't proud. It doesn't dishonor others, it's not self-seeking, it's not easily angered, and it keeps no record of wrongs. Love doesn't delight in evil, but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres."
"Love never fails." the two chorused.
"You know the verse?" Josh asked blinking.
"It's only like one of the most famous Bible quotes ever, Joss!" Grace said with a giggle. Seeing her friend feeling better, she sighed. "So you see, I'm still your friend, right?" she asked. Seeing Josh nod she added, "As for the dance? Of course I wanna go with the prettiest girl there!"
"Even if she's not really your date?" he asked. "Or a girl?"
"Even if your name was Dirk Slabchest!" Grace joked. "But only 'cuz you're so damn adorable!" Laughing together she added, "Of course, it'd be an absolute crime not to wear that dress! Tell you what. You wear that dress with me on Saturday, and I'll call off the Olivia Newton John marathon! No Xanadu or Grease!"
Getting up and retrieving the dress once more, he held it up to himself and looked in the mirror. "For you?" he turned and smiled at her. "Deal!"
That Saturday night, Grace's mother Judy dropped the two off at the school. While Josh wore the pink pastel dress that only came down to just past his knees and left his shoulders bare, Grace wore a dark blue satin halter-style dress that covered her from neck to ankle, only leaving her arms and upper back bare. As they went in, a school councilor stopped them.
"Jocelyn Ryan?" he asked Grace.
The girl stepped up while Joss stopped dead in his tracks and watched wide-eyed. "Who wants to know? Looking for autographs?"
Examining the two, and not knowing either student by sight, he concluded by her question that Grace was Jocelyn. "I'm afraid you can't come in dressed like that... Miss."
"Why not?" she asked incredulously, checking over her dress before turning back to him. "Clashes with my skin tone?"
The councilor looked at her pleadingly. "Please, Miss Ryan. Go home and change into a suit like all the other boys. You're being disruptive."
"Oh, this is too funny!" Grace tried to hold back a giggle. "I'm Grace Wright, you idiot! Wanna see my student ID?" She got it out and showed him.
Looking it over, the slightly heavyset man handed it back and blinked at her. "But... why did you say you were..."
"I didn't, you Neanderthal!" she interrupted him angrily. "You asked if I was, I asked who wants to know, then you assumed I was! That's your fault!"
Looking at her and sighing exasperatedly, he glanced up at Josh and didn't even ask, thoroughly convinced that he was a girl just on sight and already embarrassed by his error. "Sorry about that, ladies. Have fun."
The two entered the gymnasium, Grace still fuming about the councilor's attempt to bar Josh from the dance. Seeing dozens of kids already dancing, she insisted they join in, trying to improve her mood. A short time later when a slow song came on, Josh looked at Grace for a moment and hesitated. He knew she liked him and would like nothing more than a slow dance with him, and he wanted to as well, but the nagging voice in the back of his head just wouldn't stop. What would Jenn say, seeing you dancing with another girl?
When he started moving off the dance floor though, he was stopped by an answer. She'd be happy for you stupid! She's not here... Grace is. She loved you enough to want you to be able to be yourself, even though she loved the girl. Looking back at Grace, he could tell she was disappointed and hiding it. Fearing that they'd be thrown out for being two 'girls' dancing a slow dance together, he was about to chicken out anyway when he saw two other girls take to the floor. Letting some of his grief and loss go, he smiled at Grace and approached her. "Dance with me?" he asked.
Grace didn't need to be asked twice. Taking the lead position, she placed her left hand on Josh's waist and took his left in her right. Swaying to the slow song, the two stared in each other's eyes and smiled, oblivious to everything around them. When the song ended, the two moved off the floor to rest.
Sitting next to him, Grace took his hand and asked a simple question. "Why?"
Smiling weakly, he glanced at her shyly. "Because love doesn't envy." he said in a breathy tone. "I like you Grace! I have for a while now. Yes, I still love Jennifer, but she and I aren't together anymore and probably never will be. I... I think she'd be happy for me, that I found someone who knows me and still likes me! That, if she can't be here, you can, so... so I'm not alone!" Seeing her processing what he'd said, he finished. "I don't know where I am right now. I know I like you and like being near you. Can that be enough for now?"
Letting out a patient sigh, Grace nodded. "For now? Let's dance!"
The next Monday at school, Josh took a moment to see the school councilor that had questioned Grace. Knocking on his door, he waited until he heard the invitation.
"Come in!" Derek Grayson shouted. It was his open time when students could come to him with any questions or concerns about their classes, so he was expecting another complaint about the PE curriculum or some math teacher. "Can I help you Miss..."
"Ryan." he stated as he sat down. "Jocelyn Ryan." He then waited to see if the name would register with the school administrator.
"Ryan... Ryan..." he mumbled as he looked at his computer records. Before he could locate the child's file, he stopped cold and slowly turned his head to look at him again.
"You were looking for me at the dance on Saturday." he stated. "I waited to see if you would ask who I was. You didn't, so I didn't volunteer information that would see me discriminated against."
Struck speechless, he only managed to mumble, "But... you can't be..."
Shaking his head dismissively, Josh pulled out several printed papers and placed them on the man's desk. "I am. That having been established, I'd like to direct your attention to this court case, Doe versus Yunits from eight years ago. In their ruling, the court stated that a school trying to prohibit a female transgender student from wearing female clothes was sexual discrimination and a violation of her rights to freedom of expression."
When he saw the councilor's jaw drop at the information, he pressed forward. "Here is a copy of the letter from a psychiatrist saying I'm transgender, which should already be on file in my school records. Lastly, here's a copy of the school district's policy that prohibits school staff from discriminating against any student on the basis of sexual orientation or identity."
Standing up, Josh leaned in over the desk. "Whoever told you to keep me out of the dance isn't the person who my parents will sue and see to it they loose their job the next time you try to deny me my rights, Mr. Grayson. I personally don't care. I'd have been happy to comply with your demands, were that possible, but I did notice that you didn't stop any of the stoner girls who were there wearing guy's flannels and jeans. My friend Grace was very upset by it though, and I won't see her hurt like that again. Do we understand each other?"
Not used to being talked to that way by a student, he tried to recover. "Now see here..."
"So then I should just have my parents call their lawyer." Josh interrupted. "I see. Good day, Mr. Grayson." At that he turned to leave.
Seeing him walking away, Derek stammered in a panic. "Wait!" When Josh turned around and looked at him through the open door, the school councilor wanted to fight the child's threat, but his better sense kicked in. "Alright." he nodded. "I'll... I'll look into this and let you know what I find."
Nodding in satisfaction, Josh was about to leave again when Mr. Grayson stopped him once more.
"Wait! Just a moment!" he shouted. Seeing Josh come back to the office door, he shook his head. "Why can't you just be a normal boy?"
Thinking a moment, Josh stared him squarely in the eyes. "That's an excellent question, Mr. Grayson. Call me when you find out the answer!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION: Attempted Suicide
CAUTION: Referenced / Discussed Suicide
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
--
As the school year came to a close, Josh and Grace were getting closer to one another, but he continued to struggle with his feelings while still clinging to the memory of his love for Jennifer and all that she'd tried to do for him. No matter how many times he tried to look at it, he couldn't figure out what the right thing to do was.
Exactly three months after the day of the dance, he found himself dressed in a conservative white floral dress and walking from the bus stop to the church on Spring Drive. He hadn't been to any church since the Sunday he'd lost Jennifer, but he was drawn to return that day and to that church in particular. As he approached, he saw Pastor Roberts standing in the doorway greeting members of the congregation as usual, just as though no time had passed.
Clearing his throat, he walked up and smiled. "H... hello, Pastor Roberts."
Taking a moment, the man's smile lessened somewhat as he searched his memory to identify the apparent young woman who'd greeted him. He knew the face was familiar, but he couldn't quite place it. Recovering, he greeted Josh anyway. "Hello!" Taking Josh's hand, he shook it gently and admitted defeat. "I'm sorry... I know I should know you, but I just can't quite place..."
"That's alright, Pastor Roberts." Josh blushed. "It was years ago. I was only twelve and came to church with..."
Suddenly a light came into his eyes and he smiled broadly. "Jocelyn! The girl who came with the Healys!" Remembering the months that followed her visits, his happy grin diminished. "I was sad to see you stop coming. So were the Healys. When I asked after you, they said that your parents forbid you to come with them." Thinking a moment, he frowned. "You're fifteen now, right?" Seeing the finely dressed boy nod, he shook his head. "Jocelyn, I should warn you that if your parents are still denying you the right to attend church, you could get in a lot of trouble if they find out you've been here."
"It's alright, Pastor." Josh smiled weakly. "My parents never forbade me to come to church. They just forbade me from associating with the Healys. They felt Vicky and John were trying to... influence me. Are they here?"
He shook his head sadly. "No, they moved away a short time later." Looking at his watch, he glanced inside. "I need to get in and start services. You're welcome, of course!"
"That's why I'm here!" Josh said with a breath of relief. As the two entered the church together, he touched the pastor's arm a moment. "Pastor? Could I talk to you after services?"
Nodding with a gentle smile, he placed his hand on Josh's shoulder. "Of course, Jocelyn. I'll see you afterwards!" Heading for the pulpit, Josh slid into one of the rear pews and was warmly greeted by an older couple.
Once again enjoying the happy camaraderie of the congregation, he sat and listened to Pastor Roberts' sermon, The Meaning of Salvation. After that the assembled faithful sang, celebrating their time together before the services ended. As he stood aside waiting for the others to leave, he saw the pastor wave him forward. Picking his way through the crowd and seats, Josh walked up to the man, standing with a woman about the same age as the pastor.
"Jocelyn?" he began, "I'd like you to meet my wife, Susan. Susan? This is Jocelyn, that girl that I told you about a few years ago? The one that came with the Healy family to see what church was like?"
Susan Roberts smiled in recollection of the story her husband had told her about Josh and gently shook his hand. "A pleasure to meet you, Jocelyn!" the woman beamed. "So glad you could join us again!"
Looking at Josh, Daniel Roberts nodded toward the side of the sanctuary. "We can talk in my office." he said as he headed toward a door. Going through and holding the door for Josh, Daniel led him into a room with a large desk overflowing with papers. Indicating a couch off to the side, he stood and waited for the youth. "Please, have a seat, Jocelyn."
The fifteen-year-old sat on the old piece of furniture, its upholstery of forest green having seen better days and smelling slightly of dust. He watched as the man sat in an easy chair adjacent to and slightly facing the couch.
"So, what is it you wanted to talk to me about?"
Taking a breath, Josh looked at the battered coffee table that sat in front of his feet. "Well, I... I have some questions. I was hoping you might help me figure some things out."
"Does it have anything to do with the Healys and why they left?"
"No." Josh answered before slightly reversing his answer. "Well, not really. I guess it's more of a question of what's the right thing to do about something. It's sorta complicated and... um... well, like when two people really like each other... and um..."
Seeing that he was showing signs of embarrassment, Daniel held up a hand. "Jocelyn. First of all, I want you to know that anything we talk about is strictly between us. I would never share that information with anyone, unless it presented a danger, to others or yourself. Secondly, if this is a matter of relationships and romance and you'd be more comfortable talking to another woman, Susan is a wonderful listener and she'd be more than happy..."
Josh shook his head, making the pastor halt his offer mid-sentence. "No... no thank you, Pastor Roberts. I... I don't know her. I know you and I trust you to have good judgement. I'm sure your wife is a wonderful woman, but... if you don't mind, it's your perspective I'd like to hear."
Nodding in understanding, Daniel sat back. "Alright. I'll do what I can."
Taking another breath, Josh tried again. "Well... OK, let's say one person likes another. They fall in love, but then they can't see each other anymore. Then one of them, who still loves the other, meets someone new who likes them. Is it a betrayal of their love to begin a new relationship? I mean, what if she starts to go out with the new person and then she finds out that the other person still loves her and is hurt because they feel betrayed? I guess I just want to know if it's ethical to give up on a relationship that has little to no chance of ever being rekindled, or if it's hurtful to 'move on', as it were."
Taking a breath, the man parsed the convoluted question, combined it with other things he knew, and put the pieces of a nearly three-year-old puzzle together. "Jocelyn, I understand your desire to be discreet, and I applaud you for doing so, but let's dispense with the hypothetical and get to what you're really asking. You and Jennifer Healy had feelings for one another. Correct?"
Fear gripped Josh's heart as his blood ran cold. Looking away toward the door, he was nearly overcome with a desire to run, but made himself face the question. "W-why would you ask that?"
Shaking his head slowly, Daniel chuckled lightly. "I have eyes to see with and ears to hear with, Jocelyn. After you stopped coming, Jennifer was... an empty shell. Physically present, but spiritually absent. At the time, I thought it might be because you two had some sort of falling out, but I recognized the signs of her being lovesick and heartbroken. I thought maybe she had a boyfriend and they'd had a falling out. I never would have guessed that... well... that you were the reason for her depression."
Getting up, he paced the room a moment. "Jocelyn, this is an Evangelical church... that is, it isn't associated with any denomination. As such, we have no position on the question of same-sex couples. It's simply never come up. If you ask me personally I'd say it's wrong, but I know I'm in no position to pass judgement on the hearts of my fellow man... or woman, in this case." He stopped and turned to Josh. "It wasn't until you asked your question that I was finally able to understand what made Jennifer... do... what she did."
Standing up, Josh quickly walked up to him. "Do what, Pastor? What did happen to Jennifer? Please! You have to tell me!" His eyes were wild with fear as his imagination ran through thousands of horrible scenarios.
Blinking slowly, he gestured to the couch. "Please Jocelyn, sit with me." Leading the teenager back to the couch, Daniel helped him to sit and took a place next to him. Placing his hand on Josh's, he took a breath. "Jocelyn, Jennifer tried to commit suicide a few months after you stopped coming."
The shock washed over Josh like a wave. He felt dizzy and his vision blurred. The next thing he knew, he was lying on the couch with Susan standing over him, looking down at him concernedly.
"What... what happened?" he asked as he sat up.
"You seem to have fainted, Jocelyn." she said sympathetically. She moved next to him and helped him to sit up, handing him a cup of water. "Here. Drink this."
Taking the offered liquid, he sipped it slowly. "Thank you." he said barely above a whisper.
Sitting next to him, Susan looked worried. "It's fine, Jocelyn. You had a bad shock. It's perfectly normal that you would react like that." Seeing the color starting to return to his cheeks, she inquired delicately, "You look like you're feeling a little better. Did you want to talk to Daniel again? He's out in the sanctuary, straightening up."
Nodding, Josh sat up the rest of the way, putting his feet back on the floor. "Yes please, Mrs. Roberts."
"Please, call me Susan!" she insisted. "I'll go get Daniel. You just sit and rest a moment, alright?" Getting up, she left him in the room alone.
Jennifer? Suicide? he pondered. Needing more information, he sat waiting until he saw Pastor Roberts come back in the office. Standing impatiently, he struggled for understanding as he wrung his hands nervously. "Pastor Roberts! What happened to Jennifer? You simply must tell me!"
"Please!" he said in a compassionately raised voice. "Jocelyn, sit down! I barely caught you from falling off the couch last time!" Seeing Josh sit once more, he sat back down in the easy chair. "I can't tell you everything, only what John Healy told me to tell the congregation if they asked, alright?"
"I just want to know if she's all right!" Josh pleaded. "Was she hurt? What did she do?"
Reluctantly, he recalled what John had told him. "Apparently, she tried to asphyxiate herself in their garage. She was only saved because Vicky heard the motor and went to go see what was going on. She was treated and then transferred to the psychiatric ward of the children's hospital in Akron. The family moved down there to be close to her while she was being helped."
Finally understanding why Jennifer and the family had just disappeared, Josh looked at the man kindly. "Thank you."
"I'm sorry I had to be the one to tell you the news, Jocelyn." he said as he looked away. "I... uh... I assume that in your question, you and she were..." his voice trailed off, unable to actually say the words.
"...in love?" Josh finished for him. Nodding, he looked away as well. "Yes, very much so. She was wonderful. She cared more for my happiness than her own. And I... well... I would have done anything to make her happy!"
Turning back to Josh, he smiled weakly. "That can be a most wonderful thing, Jocelyn. Getting on with it though, I take it that you've met someone else? If it wouldn't be too personal a question, may I ask if it's a boy or girl?"
Swallowing hard, Josh looked back at him shyly. "Girl." he stated softly.
"Ah." Blowing out a breath, he puzzled over the question. "Well, to answer your question simply, from an ethical point of view, even though you and Jennifer... loved... one another, you were far too young to make any sort of commitment. That having been said, our Lord told us that a sin of the heart is just as bad as a sin of action. It could be said that starting a relationship with one person while in love with another is a form of spiritual adultery."
He continued in deep thought. "However, things are never that cut-and-dry. If that were the case, then every single one of us is equally guilty and equally redeemable through Christ. When I met Susan while I was studying for my theology degree, I was getting over a breakup with my previous girlfriend. She'd left me for another man. When Susan asked me out and I accepted, I was still in love with Barbara. Was that a sin? Even if it was, the Lord has forgiven it of me, so I don't dwell on it."
"But was that the ethical thing to do?" Josh asked. "I mean, taking sin and forgiveness out of it, was it right?"
"Jocelyn, if you're asking me if it's wrong to start dating this new girl while you still have feelings for Jennifer, I can't tell you that. To my mind, the whole thing is wrong. I'm sorry."
"What if I were a boy?" he asked. "Could you answer then?"
Sighing heavily, he thought about it. "Alright. Theoretically, if you were a boy, and you still loved Jennifer but she's moved away, and now there's a new girl, then the answer would be the same. It's wrong because your heart is elsewhere, so it's not fair to the new girl, Jennifer, or you. That having been said, no one could judge you for it without being a hypocrite, so you should just do what you think is right."
Josh nodded sadly. "I was afraid you might say something like that."
He looked at Josh sympathetically. "I'm sorry I can't give you the answer you wanted, Jocelyn." As Josh started to get up, Daniel stopped him. "One moment." Josh sat back down and the pastor took a breath. "I want you to know that, while I personally don't believe that you getting involved with other girls is healthy for you, I will never ask you to leave this church for that reason alone. You're always welcome here, Jocelyn. Alright?"
Seeing Josh nod in understanding, he continued. "The only thing I ask of you is to not openly discuss your... private life... with the other members of the congregation. Not because I disagree with it, but because I worry about you and don't want to see you get hurt. People, even the members of this church, can be cruel. They react badly sometimes to things they don't agree with, even if they might otherwise be reasonable and tolerant people."
"I'm also not putting special limits on you." he explained. "I would ask the same thing if you were a boy. Church is not the place to discuss one's love life. It's a private matter. I've told that to boys and girls that have attended this church over the years when I've overheard them talking about such things. This is a house of worship, not a dating club. Do you understand?"
Josh looked at the man he'd come to respect. "When I first met you Pastor, I knew you were a good person. Now I know why." Standing up and waiting for the man to do the same, Josh gave him a friendly hug. "Thank you for helping me, Pastor... and for letting me know what happened to Jennifer."
Hugging her in return, he smiled. "You're a good young woman, Jocelyn. I knew that the moment you told me the truth that you'd never been to church before. Come back soon!" Separating, he watched as Josh walked out of the office before turning back to his desk.
Josh sat on the bus and pondered the advice the pastor had given him. He liked Grace very much, but his heart was still aching for his lost first love. Knowing at last what he needed to do, he grimaced with determination and waited the return to his home.
Not wanting his parents to know what he was doing, he picked up his laptop and headed for a coffee shop that was near his school. He knew the shop had free Internet access, so once he bought a cup of tea, he sat down and logged into their network. Doing a few searches, he found what he was looking for and braced himself for the task ahead. Texting Grace, he hoped she would understand.
Hey. You free?
A moment later he saw the response.
4 u? always! sup?
Meet me at the coffee shop near school.
Almost immediately he saw the reply.
B their in 5!
Putting away his phone, he sipped his tea and waited. As promised, five minutes later Grace walked in and spotted him.
"Hey, gorgeous!" she smiled as she sat down at his table. "You look so adorable in that dress! So sweet and innocent! What's going on?"
Glancing up at her, Josh forged ahead. "I... I found out what happened to Jennifer today." he started glumly. Repeating the story the pastor had told him, he looked up at her and saw the expression of shock in her eyes.
"Joss! That's awful! Are you OK?"
Shrugging, he stared down at his cup. "No, but I understand how she felt. I've thought about doing something like that a lot over the years." Looking up at her, he could see she was worried. "Grace? Can I ask you a favor?"
"Anything, Joss." she offered. "You name it and if I can do it, you can count on me."
"It's a big one to ask of you. I want to use your phone for a few minutes." he explained. "I... I found out where the Healys moved and I wanna call 'em and let 'em know I found out what happened. I have to know if she's OK."
Hesitating only a moment, terrified that she might lose Josh to Jennifer, she swallowed her fear and handed him her cell phone. "You... you should go outside. The reception's better. I'll hold your table."
Getting up, Josh walked around, put a hand on Grace's shoulder as he paused next to her, looking at her compassionately and thankfully, then proceeded out the front door on a mission. Dialing the number as he stood near the doorway, Josh was visibly shaking, he was so terrified at what he might learn. After a few rings, his wait was finally over.
"Hello?" Vicky answered.
"Vicky? This is... um... this is Josh. Josh Ryan."
Standing in her living room, Vicky nearly dropped the phone. Too shocked to speak, she could only just make her mouth open and close silently.
"Vicky?" he probed. "Vicky, please answer me. I... I just today found out what happened to Jenn. Pastor Roberts told me when I went to church this morning. Please! I... I just need to know if she's OK."
Finally recovering her composure, she cleared her throat before answering. "Josh! I... how did you get this number?"
"I looked online once I found what city you moved to." he explained. "The rest was easy, if you know where to look. How's Jenn?"
"Jenny's alright." she answered solemnly. "She... she was so devastated by losing you that... well... you know what she did. She told us that she wrote you about her plans, but you never did anything to stop her. Is that true?"
His turn to be caught speechless, he heard her say his name three times before he was able to answer. "I... I'm so sorry, Vicky! I couldn't read the notes she left for me! It just hurt too much. After the first one, I just took them and packed them away in a box. I never read any of them after that horrible day! You must hate me! I could have stopped her!"
"Of course I don't hate you, Josh!" she scolded him. "I understand why you couldn't read her letters. You must have been hurting just as badly, probably worse, after... after that day. I honestly blame myself. I was the one that insisted on talking to them. I thought they would be reasonable once they saw others saying the same thing you were. I'm the one who's sorry, Josh."
"Mom?" Jennifer said, causing the woman to jump and turn around suddenly in surprise.
"Jenny!" she said taking in a breath. "What is it, dear?"
"That's Jocelyn on the phone... isn't it?" she asked, her voice a lifeless husk.
"I didn't think you could hear me talking."
"I was curious who called." she stated hollowly. "Is she OK?"
"She... He seems fine, Jenny." her mother stammered. "He just wanted to know how you were."
"Can I talk to her?" both Jennifer and Josh asked at the same time.
Not knowing if it would be right or wrong to allow them to talk, Vicky was petrified. Jennifer had never fully recovered from the loss of him. Physically she was fine, Vicky had caught her soon enough that there was no lasting damage, but emotionally Jennifer was still as devastated as Josh. She feared Jennifer re-connecting with him might lead to her attempting suicide again, but she also feared that if nothing changed for her daughter, that she might try again anyway through sheer sorrow and loss. Biting her lower lip, Vicky made a decision. "Alright. Just for a few minutes, though."
Taking the phone away from her mother, Jennifer spoke to Josh for the first time in almost three years. "Jocelyn?"
Hearing the name was bittersweet. Josh loved her so much though, he could never hate what she'd called him. "Hi, Jenn. I... I just found out where you moved. I wanted to find out if you were OK... if you were... um..."
Lighting up like a tree on Christmas morning just at the sound of his voice, Jennifer genuinely smiled as though she'd never before known happiness. "I'm OK, Joss. How are you? You sound different. I guess I do, too."
"Yeah, but I think I'd know you anywhere." he sighed longingly. "I'm doing well enough." he lied. "Jenn, can I ask you something?"
"You just did!" she smirked.
Giggling a moment, Josh looked off toward the south in the general direction of Akron. "Good memory! God, I've missed you! I... I saw Pastor Roberts today. He told me what happened to you. Jenn, please don't ever do anything like that again! If you died, I'd die too! You have to promise me!"
Embarrassed, Jennifer looked down and frowned. "I'm sorry, Joss. It was stupid. I... I just hurt so much seeing you day after day, picking up my notes, and not even getting to see you read them. I watched you every day! When kids made fun of you, I told them off! I wanted so much to come up and talk to you, but..." She looked over at her mother and sighed. "...but I was afraid you'd just ignore me or I'd get my parents in trouble."
"I would never have ignored you, Jenn." Josh confessed. "I was afraid to talk to you. That if I did you might get in trouble. I was so sad when you left. I wasn't a very nice person for a while after that. Mom had me on blockers and they kinda messed with my head a little, but mostly it was because you were gone and... and I didn't know if you were OK."
"I missed you too." she answered simply.
"Jenn?" he took a breath. "I... I have to ask you a question, but I don't know how. I couldn't stand it if I hurt you again!"
"You never hurt me, Joss!" she stated in a firm voice. "It was all your parents! They were just so mean! Do they still have you on blockers?"
"I don't need them anymore." Josh informed her. "They... they put me on female hormones and had me castrated. I'm turning into a woman now."
"Oh God, Jocelyn!" she said in horror. "How can they do that!?"
Ashamed to say it, Josh felt she had to know the truth. "In the end, I just let them. Mom tricked me into getting castrated and after that, I just sort of gave up and let them do whatever they wanted. I'm sorry."
Now crying, Jennifer felt even more regret over her attempted suicide than before. "Oh, Joss! It's all my fault! If I hadn't done that, maybe you'd..."
"Jenn!" he shouted quietly. "Jenn, it's not your fault! It's hers." Pausing, he waited until Jennifer's sobs were under control. "I... I wanted to know if you were OK. Are you happy? Are... have... have you been seeing anyone?"
Guiltily, Jennifer nodded. "I'm OK. I... I tried, yeah. I feel bad about it now. Her name was Lindsey. I met her last September, but it didn't work out very well. I was still in love with you, so I messed it all up... but don't worry. I'll be OK. How about you?"
Closing his eyes, he told Jennifer the truth. "I'm OK, I guess... considering. I have a good friend. Her name's Grace. She knows all about me and likes me anyway. She wants to date me, and I like her, but... I... I can't. It... it wouldn't be fair... to her... or you."
Realizing that Josh was still in love with her, Jennifer's heart leapt before she realized there was no way they could see each other. Not only was there the distance, Melanie would be certain to still cause problems. Taking a breath, she let her heart do the talking and forged ahead. "It's OK, Joss. You... you should do it. I... I'd be happy for you, really." She meant it, even though the idea of him finally moving on stung.
Josh felt a tear roll down his cheek. "Same here, Jenn. I just want you to be happy. It's all I ever wanted." Taking a breath to calm himself, he knew there was not much more to say. "I... I guess I better go now, Jenn. Remember your promise, right? And just know... I... I love you. Always."
Crying as she responded in kind, Jennifer could barely answer. "Me too, Joss! Never forget that, OK? And I'll remember! Together Forever!"
"Together Forever." he echoed. "Bye, Jennifer."
"Goodbye... Jocelyn."
Both hanging up, they were immediately in tears from the heartbreak of their respective realities. While Josh went back into the coffee shop to be consoled by Grace, at the same time in Akron, Jennifer was bawling openly in her loving mother's arms.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
--
Trapped in a one-car garage filling with smoke, Josh found it strange that he could breath just fine. It was then that he saw both Jennifer and Grace were there and choking on the deadly fumes as he watched helplessly. Suddenly, he noticed he had a respirator in his hand and looked at the two girls in turn. He knew that he could only save one of them at this point, as they were both so close to death that by the time he'd saved one, the other would be gone. Frozen in indecision, he stood there and watched as both succumbed to the smoke and fell lifeless to the floor as he screamed.
"No!" Josh yelled as he sat up in bed; his plain white sheets soaked with sweat. Breathing hard while he determined it had all been a nightmare, he threw off his comforter and slid out of bed exhaustedly. Putting on his robe, he saw that it was after ten in the morning and Melanie would be long gone to work, having started working Saturdays for most of his freshman year. Slipping quietly into the bathroom and a shower, he scrubbed the terror of the night off his skin. Washing his now quite long light brown hair, he went through the rest of his morning beauty ritual out of habit.
After Grace had helped console Josh the Sunday earlier, she'd walked him home and stayed with him the rest of the day. Melanie had asked what was wrong, but both refused to answer, leaving her exasperated, frustrated, and angry. She'd made noises that Grace should leave, knowing that if the girl did she might worm the information out of Josh when he had no support, but Grace wouldn't be moved and Fred had eventually told her to leave them be. She'd stayed with Josh until he'd cried himself to sleep in bed.
While he showered, he considered that he could possibly look more 'manly' if he tried, but after so many years he just tried to blend in with the girls to not be picked on or noticed. Drying off and returning to his room, he thought about his dream. I know what it meant, he mused. I don't have to be Freud to figure out that much! He hated that he'd stood there and done nothing, frozen in terror and letting both die when he could have saved one. But which one?
Thinking about the dilemma, he realized that not picking was also a choice, the one he'd made and with catastrophic results. Understanding himself a little more than he had the night before, he opened his closet to get dressed. His body was growing steadily, just a hair under five-foot, but to his dismay his curves were growing ever more feminine and lovely. Looking over his choices, he opted for a pretty sundress that he knew looked good on him.
Getting dressed, he picked tan hose instead of tights to show off his legs and a pair of cute three-inch white strappy sandals with a heel to give him a bit of a height boost. Doing his hair and makeup, he went for a more grown-up and attractive style than normal, and picked out a pair of hoop earrings that Melanie had given him when she'd forced him to get his ears pierced.
Looking over the complete outfit, he knew instantly that he wasn't just pretty, but hot. Taking a breath, he walked over to his phone and called Grace.
"Hey, Joss!" she answered. "Feeling better? I've been worried about you all week! You haven't left the house the whole first week of summer vacation!"
"Hi, Grace." he replied softly. "No, I'm fine. Much better, actually. Wanna do lunch? I sorta slept through breakfast and now I'm starved!"
The two giggled together before Grace answered. "Sure! Where?"
"How about the Sunset Lounge?" he asked coyly.
"Really?" she inquired. "That's a little up-scale for your usual 'let's eat like a cow' meals!" She mercilessly teased him about his inability to gain weight no matter how much he ate, but she knew he took it all in fun.
"Yeah. I just feel like eating somewhere... nice... today."
"I'll hafta change then." she warned him. "Right now I'm wearing a dirty T-shirt and baggy sweats! Mom says I look like a bum!"
"I can wait!" he offered. "How about I come down there and we'll walk over together?"
"Beautiful!" she said enthusiastically. "See you in a bit!"
"Bye!" they said together.
As he was headed out the door, Fred saw him from the kitchen while making his lunch. "Woah! Hold up there, princess!"
Stopping in his tracks, and closing his eyes at his father's favorite term of endearment, he turned and sighed. "Morning, Daddy." he said patiently.
Coming out into the living room, Fred looked him up and down twice. "OK, I'm officially a hypocrite."
"What wrong?"
Sighing, he looked in Josh's big brown eyes. "I really wanna say 'That outfit is inappropriate, young lady! Go up and change!' so bad right now!"
Josh felt the outfit was no more inappropriate than many he'd worn before. The skirt was knee-length and the rest of the dress didn't show off too much skin. OK, so the back is open all the way down to just above my butt... He actually found himself hopeful that Fred might care enough to set at least one boundary, even if he thought it overprotective, making Josh smile at the idea before his too-easy-going father killed the moment.
"But I know better." he told himself. "You going over to see Grace?"
Let down, Josh nodded glumly. "Yeah. We're gonna have lunch." Seeing his father pull out his wallet, Josh objected. "No, Daddy! You give me enough allowance to fund a Ph.D. at Harvard! Speaking of which, when I'm sixteen, I wanna get a job and earn my own money. Can you talk to Melanie?"
Still not comfortable with Josh calling her 'Melanie' while he still called him 'Daddy', even after almost three years, Fred shook his head and absently put away his wallet, the money already forgotten. "Look, we'll talk about it when your mom gets home, alright? Right now just give your old man a kiss and be careful!"
Kissing him on his cheek, Josh gave him a quick hug and turned toward the door. "Bye Daddy. See you at dinner."
Fred nearly stopped him before leaving, wanting to tell him to go change, but then chided himself for desiring to control his 'daughter' and turned back toward the kitchen.
Making his way to Grace's house, Josh noticed the looks from his neighbors, but kept walking. Reaching her home, he smiled at the sight. It was a lovely single-story building, forest green trimmed in light gray with a well-kept lawn and an apple tree in the middle of the front yard. He saw Judy's small blue sedan in the driveway, but wasn't surprised since he knew her job as a paralegal gave the woman weekends off.
Going right in as he'd been told many times not to knock, he slowed a moment to let his eyes adjust to the darker interior. Coming up the entry hall, he turned left and entered the modest living room. Sparsely decorated, only one photo hung in the room over the fireplace. Seeing a man dressed in the uniform of a United States Marine and standing next to an American flag, he felt a pang of sorrow that he'd never gotten to know Grace's father. Josh had the feeling that he really would have liked him. She often talked happily about her dad, telling stories of where he'd been stationed and what he'd done, but Josh could always see the hurt just beneath her surface.
"Judy?" he called out toward the kitchen.
"Hi, Jocelyn!" she called back. "Grace is in the shower! Come on in and grab a chair!"
Making his way around the corner into the dining room, he saw the kitchen just beyond it with a breakfast bar closing off most of the border between the two rooms. Spotting the widowed woman at the sink, he smiled as he made his way over to her. "Hi, Judy! Enjoying your weekend?"
Laughing, she shook her head. "Lovely! I just adore doing dishes!" Turning off the water and grabbing a dishtowel to dry her hands, she at last turned to see Josh and what he was wearing. "Did you wait until your father wasn't looking and sneak out wearing that?" she asked jokingly.
He stopped his approach and felt a little embarrassed for his wardrobe choice. Lowering his head, he shook it and shrugged. "No. He saw me. I thought he might say something, but he just gave me a kiss and told me to be careful. I think it looks fine!"
Sighing and shaking her head as she mentally criticized Josh's father, she clucked her tongue and gestured toward one of the stools at the breakfast bar. "Well, if you were my daughter, I'd have suggested something a little less... grown up. Scott would have insisted it was too 'adult' for a fifteen-year-old!" Thinking about Scott a moment, she couldn't determine if he'd have let Josh become a girl if he'd been their son, but she saw Josh as so much a natural girl, she had difficulty finding a rational argument to deny it.
Shrugging, Josh repressed his smile. I must be pretty hot if everyone's taking so much notice! Scrutinizing Grace's mother, he could see that even only a few years ago she'd been quite a looker. Now, worn down by loss, work, and raising a daughter alone, her lovely auburn hair was beginning to turn gray, her once lithe five-nine figure had gone slightly pear-shaped, and her bright blue eyes were now a dull color from worry and exhaustion. "It's just that today I was feeling a little... different." he stated. "Older, I guess."
While the two chatted, Grace came out of the bathroom and heard the two talking. Sneaking up to the dining room entryway, a robe wrapped around her and her hair in a white towel, she spied Josh and quietly gasped at his outfit. Retreating to her room, she decided that the jeans and top she'd gotten out were not going to cut it.
"So where are you two off to, then?" Judy asked curiously.
"The Sunset Lounge." Josh said with a smile. "I was just feeling a little..."
"...older?" Judy interrupted him with a sly grin. "Yes, you said that." she stated cautiously as she sat down next to him. "Jocelyn, I'm glad for a chance to talk to you. Grace is very fond of you. Very. I'm glad she's found someone special like you out here. I grew up near Cleveland, but she's spent her whole life in California, so I was worried that she'd be too different to make good friends here." Pausing a moment, she collected her thoughts.
"When Scott died, she was thirteen and absolutely worshiped him. Still, to this day, I've never seen her cry over his loss." Facing Josh, Judy's voice lowered. "When she became your friend, she put all her eggs in one basket, so to speak. She hasn't made any other friends. I don't think she could take it if you two were to get involved and then lose you. I just don't want to see her get hurt. Or you!" she added.
Josh gulped at the heaviness of the conversation. "Mrs. Wright, I know we're still only fifteen. I like Grace. Very much. I was going to ask her at lunch if she'd be my girlfriend. If you tell me we can't date, I'll respect your decision. I'll have to, but that won't stop how we feel about each other. I'd never hurt her or abandon her. Believe me, I know what that's like. I could never do that to someone I care about."
Turning sorrowful, Josh looked out the kitchen window. "I used to have two of the best friends in the world, Tracy and Dave. They were twins. Then, when I had some problems, they gave up on me. I still see 'em around school and the neighborhood, but they ignore me. Every time I see them it just... just hurts." Looking Judy in the eyes, Josh poured all his feelings into one statement. "I would never do that to anyone. I'd rather die."
Seeing the pain in his eyes, Judy nodded. "Alright. I believe you. Just..." She had to look away, the terrible agony in Josh's eyes too much to bear. "Just... go slow, OK? You have your whole lives ahead of you. Don't do anything you might... regret... later."
Smiling, Josh waited until she looked back at him. "Judy? I'm like... a snail!" Both laughed lightly at that as Judy got up to go to the fridge.
"Can I make you a snack while you wait?" she asked.
"No thanks." he said heavily. "I was thinking that maybe I should go home and change into something a little less..."
"...obvious?" Judy smirked. Shaking her head and making herself lunch, she could only remind herself that when she was fifteen, she was no different.
"Don't you even think about it!" Grace said from behind him.
Turning on the stool, he nearly fell off it when Grace spun in place to show off her outfit. She was wearing a dress similar to his with a complimentary print, but with spaghetti straps instead of a halter and a higher back. His heart hammering in his chest, he looked her over and felt a tingling in his belly. Her makeup made her look to be in her late teens or early twenties and the hem of her skirt fell several inches above her knees, showing off her very attractive legs. The color was a slightly darker shade and wasn't cut quite as low in the front as his own, but emphasized her figure nicely.
"Wow." Josh exclaimed with a low breath. "You look..." Words failed him as she walked closer.
"Thanks! You ready?" she asked with a slight blush.
Glancing from her daughter to Josh and back, Judy saw the obvious attraction between them and sighed. "Please be careful, Grace!" she begged.
"We will, Mom!" Grace said with a smile and taking Josh's hand. "Bye!"
The two sat in the restaurant nibbling their lunches, gazing at each other dreamily. Grace scanned him up and down, a sly smile creeping across her lips. Dressed as he was, Josh seemed delectable.
"Grace?" he stated shyly as he finished his soup. Snapping her out of the dream-state she was in, undressing him with her eyes, he giggled as she blushed.
"Sorry!" Grace turned away. "I shouldn't stare like that!"
"Like what?" he asked throatily. "Like a hungry wolf?" Both giggling, it was Josh's turn to blush. "Grace? I... um... I like you very much... and um... I was wondering... well, if... um..."
Her heart raced as Grace heard the words. Seeing that he was having a hard time saying what he wanted to, the fear almost palpable, she held up a hand to stop him. "Joss? I like you too! A whole lot! Would you go out with me? We could go to a movie! I know they don't make musicals anymore, but it still might be fun! We could see one together... as like... a couple."
Smiling that she'd taken the pressure off, he nodded. "Yes! I... I'd love to!"
Slowly, Josh moved his hand closer to the girl sitting across from him at the tiny table. When she did likewise, their fingertips met in the middle and linked together.
Walking out of his house that Friday evening just before Melanie was due to get home, Josh was glad he'd managed to avoid her. Her smug 'I told you so' attitude about his relationship with Grace was enough to make him want to call the whole thing off. He couldn't hurt Grace that way just to get back at his mother, though. Making his way down the walkway, the hem of his skirt drifting against his calves in the light breeze of the late afternoon, he made his way to her place. Going up to her door, he stopped and knocked for the first time in months.
Grace opened the door wearing a lovely floral summer outfit in a similar style to the one Josh wore. "Hi!" she said shyly. "Come on in."
Entering, Josh felt the atmosphere was different from the hundreds of other times he'd walked in the home. Catching the light scent of Grace's perfume, his head swam with lovely thoughts. "Thanks, Grace! You look beautiful!" Admiring her short-cropped hairstyle, he couldn't take his eyes off of her.
"You look gorgeous, Joss!" Grace returned the compliment. "I love the way your hair is done! It's so sexy!" Taking Josh's hand, she led him to the living room. "We're just waiting on Mom. She should be ready any minute." Sitting on the old leather couch, she patted the cushion next to her. "Sit with me while we wait?"
Smoothing the skirt under him, Josh lighted next to her and noticed that she immediately put her hand in his. Nervously, he glanced over at her. "So... after the movie, what did you want to do?" he asked with a slight waver in his irritatingly feminine voice.
"Things we're too young to do!" she teased. "But seriously, anything you like! The movie was my choice, so whatever you like after works!"
He was about to suggest something silly when Judy came out appearing nicer than Josh had ever seen her. Usually in jeans and a top, she'd instead worn a green shirtwaist dress that was open enough to see only a hint of cleavage. As the two stood, Judy smiled at them.
"Aren't you two lovely!" she complimented them. "Are you ready?"
"We've been ready for ages, Mom!" Grace moaned. "You look OK, though."
"I think you look beautiful, Judy!" Josh emphasized. "Green really works for you! It really sets off your hair!"
"Thank you, dear!" the older woman smiled. "Well, let's go then!" As the three headed out the door to her car, she continued talking. "I think the last time I saw a movie in the theater was The Return of the King with you and your father, Grace! Remember that?"
Nodding a little sadly as she climbed in the back seat, the girl remembered the last time she'd seen her father. "Yeah, he loved those movies! He was home for two whole weeks before he got shipped out again that last time."
Slipping in beside her, Josh took her hand after buckling in. The rest of the drive had the two in silence as Judy nattered on about movies, memories, and what they might do after the film.
In the end, the two decided to go out to a nice restaurant afterward, Judy offering to pay for the chance to show off 'her girls', as she put it. Shortly after arriving, while they sat at their table talking and waiting for their order to be taken, Judy felt a tap on her shoulder.
Turning around, she saw a man in his late thirties grinning at her. "May I help you?" she asked nervously.
"You don't recognize me, do you?" he asked with a light chuckle in his voice.
Straining her mind, she tried to see the man's face as though it were younger, but still couldn't place him. "I'm really very sorry. Are you sure you have the right person? Do I know you?"
Shaking his head while Josh and Grace looked on silently, his laugh was almost infectious as he tried to calm himself and answer her. "We only dated for most of High School, Judy Dillard!"
A flood of memories came rushing back to Judy's mind. "Oh my Lord! Greg Long?" Getting up, she hugged him briefly and then gestured to the empty fourth chair. "Won't you join us?"
Glancing at the two seated with her, he looked back at her. "I wouldn't want to intrude, Judy... and I'd guess it's not Dillard anymore." Looking back at the two teens, he added, "You have two very lovely daughters and I wouldn't want there to be any misunderstanding." He peeked at her left hand and noted the engagement ring and wedding band she still wore on her ring finger.
"Oh, that!" Judy at last understood his hesitancy as she sat back down. "I'm widowed, Greg. My Scott died over two years ago in Afghanistan."
His smile melting, he suddenly seemed embarrassed as he took a seat. "I'm very sorry, Judy. I didn't know." Turning his gaze toward Grace and Josh, he nodded respectfully at them. "To you two as well. I'm sorry for your loss."
"Greg, this is my daughter, Grace... and her very close friend, Jocelyn." Judy explained.
Looking at the two, he quickly realized that Josh looked nothing like Grace or Judy. "Oh! Well... to you then, Grace. You're both very lovely ladies, though!" Turning back to Judy, his face lit back up. "Last I heard, you went off to UCLA to study law."
"That's where I met Scott, my husband." Judy nodded. "We got married after I graduated. Grace and I only just moved here last year after..."
"Well, it's good to see you, Judy... though I wish it could be under happier circumstances." Getting up, he nodded across the table. "Grace? I just want you to know that I'm very grateful for your father's service and sacrifice... and yours. Everyone here owes him a debt of gratitude. On behalf of us all, thank you."
When Greg first interrupted her time with Josh, Grace was irritated. After his heartfelt condolences though, all she could feel was guilty that she'd instantly hated him for it. "Thank you, Mr. Long." she blushed sadly.
Cupping Judy's hand in both of his, he smiled down at her. "We'll have to get together sometime, Judy!" Releasing her, he fished a business card out of his inside jacket pocket. "Call me, if you like!"
Suddenly feeling very flushed and self-conscious, Judy realized he was even more handsome than she recalled. She also noted he obviously remembered her fondly, and that he wasn't wearing a wedding ring; his finger showing no signs that he ever had. Taking the card, she cleared her throat. "I may do that, Greg! It was nice seeing you again!"
"Likewise, Judy!" he beamed. "Ladies?" he said bowing ever so slightly to Grace and Josh as he departed.
While he walked away, Judy couldn't help but watch him go, joining a group of men at another table. Turning back to the two fifteen-year-olds, she picked up her glass of water and sipped it anxiously as they gawked at her. "What?" she asked, putting the glass back down.
Grace couldn't stand it. "Well? Talk! You used to date that guy?"
Nodding, Judy answered wistfully. "Up until just after the Senior Prom, yes. He was a wonderful young man... polite and charming. I guess he still is!"
Josh was equally curious. "What ever happened with you two?" he asked conspiratorially. "I mean... how did you two break up?"
Chuckling lightly, she sighed. "Stupid teenage angst!" she answered vaguely. "I thought he was cheating on me with Linda Baker, an old friend of mine, but it turned out that she just spread that rumor so we would break up and she could date him! Before we could reconcile though, he got his scholarship to University of Toledo and I had my acceptance to go to UCLA... so..." She shrugged helplessly.
Awkward silence hung over the table as they waited for their food after ordering, all previous conversation forgotten. Finally, Grace broke the lull. "Looks like he's still got the hots for ya', Mom!"
Nearly choking on her water, Judy coughed and drew a lot of attention from the other diners, including Greg, before they all turned back to their meals. "Grace Elaine Wright!" she shouted quietly, making the two teens giggle at her flustered response. Before she could chastise her daughter further, the waiter brought out their appetizers.
While they ate, Grace slipped her hand under the table and took Josh's hand discreetly. Smiling at one another, they continued their meal.
"So Jocelyn." Judy asked, "What are your plans for the summer?"
Shrugging, he finished his bite of linguini. "Not much, Judy. Just church on Sunday, really."
Stopping eating, she looked at him surprisedly. "I didn't know your parents went to church!"
Swallowing, he shook his head. "They don't... and they don't know I go, either. If they knew, they'd forbid it. They're very anti-Christian." Noting Judy's concern, he put down his fork. "Please don't tell them, Judy! I like going to church and I don't want them to stop me from going!"
"I don't know about this, dear." the woman stated her concerns. "You're their daughter and they should know where you are and what you're doing."
Grace decided to add her two cents. "Mom? It wouldn't be fair to tell them just to stop Joss from going! Because that's all it would do!"
"That's not our decision, Grace." she pointed out. "Parents have a right to have a say over anything that happens to their children."
"What if they'd decided that Jocelyn shouldn't have transitioned?" Grace probed, looking for an opportunity to work in Josh's 'special circumstances' without risking his secret.
"Then that would be their decision and she'd have had to put up with it until she turned eighteen." Judy declared easily. "That's all there is to it!"
"What if they'd forced Jocelyn to transition, even if she didn't want to?" her daughter pressed.
Pausing briefly, Judy furrowed her brow as she tried to imagine the situation. Shaking her head in disbelief, she sighed. "They would never do that. No parent would make their child be a girl when they really weren't!"
"But what if they did, huh?" she countered. "Would that still make them right?"
"If that were the case," Judy admitted, "then no, that would be wrong. It would also be illegal and classed as child abuse."
"What if they had a letter from a psychiatrist." Josh added meekly. "A letter that was written as a favor to my mother. Wouldn't that make it legal?"
Looking at him askance, Judy nodded after thinking a moment. "OK, but it would open up the psychiatrist to a malpractice suit, so..."
"It's true." Josh interrupted her sadly. "They did it."
"Did what?" Judy asked in confusion. "Who did?"
"My parents. They did it. They made me become a girl."
"I don't understand." Judy stated. "What do you mean, made you?"
"Melanie got a coworker of hers to write a letter saying I'm dysphoric after a five minute talk, then used it to get me on hormone blockers, castrated, and put on HRT." Josh explained fully. "I never wanted any of it, but they wouldn't listen to me. They just kept telling me it was for my own good."
Seeing the genuine sadness in his eyes, Judy just looked at him in utter disbelief. Finally, she scooted a little closer to him. "Jocelyn, don't even joke about things like that! It could get people in serious trouble!"
"I... I'm not joking, Mrs. Wright." he answered sadly. "They did exactly what I just said. I never wanted to be a girl. They made me be one. After a year or so, I just gave up fighting them and let them do it to me. Fighting them was pointless anyway. They always get their way eventually."
Glancing over at Grace, Judy saw her daughter nod seriously. Slowly, she turned to face Josh once more.
Humiliation making him unable to face her stunned gaze, he closed his eyes and stated his truth. "They turned me into a girl and there's nothing you, me, or anyone else can do about it."
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Judy spent the next month looking into any legal options for Josh. In the end all that came of it was that he could file a malpractice lawsuit against Dr. Williams, but not until after he turned eighteen. Until then only his parents could file one on his behalf.
As for action against his parents, while she made sure to couch her questions in hypotheticals to protect Josh's anonymity, everyone she'd spoken to gave her the same answer; in Ohio, a parent's authority over their children was almost absolute unless abuse could be proven. So long as Melanie had a letter certifying that Josh was transgendered, everything she'd done was completely legal and in 'her' best interests.
By the time school resumed in September for their sophomore year, Josh was almost indistinguishable from the girls in his classes, only noteworthy for his smaller size and above average looks. He was also seeing Grace daily.
Walking to their lockers on the Monday four days before Halloween, the girl seemed nervous. Josh didn't say anything, figuring she would tell him when she was ready, and proceeded to put in his combination.
"Joss? Next Sunday is my birthday." she stated.
"I know!" he answered, putting away half his books. "I already have your present if you were thinking of dropping any hints!"
"No... nothing like that." Grace elaborated. "My Grandmother, my dad's mom, is coming out to see me."
Not having ever met any of his own grandparents, both Fred and Melanie's parents having all died without ever meeting them, Josh shrugged. "Sounds nice! What's she like?"
"Like about a hundred!" Grace groaned. Turning away embarrassedly, she continued. "Um... Joss, she... she doesn't... " Gathering her nerve, she said it all at once. "She doesn't know I'm Bi, OK? So she doesn't know anything about you and me."
Stopping as he was about to close his locker, he looked at her. "You mean, she doesn't know you're my girlfriend?"
Looking away, she mumbled something.
"Sorry, what?" he asked.
"She doesn't even know you exist." Grace said again. Sighing once more, she seemed to drag her feet as she headed towards her locker. "Grandma Doris is like, old-fashioned? I mean... like, really old-fashioned! She seems to think all sixteen-year-old girls should already either be betrothed or married! She's constantly on me to write and tell her about my 'suitors'! I can't exactly tell her my 'paramour' is a fifteen-year-old girl... sorta... no offense, and I can't really talk about you without getting all mushy, so..."
Giggling slightly, Josh smiled at Grace's troubles. "Aw! I'm sorry, Grace!" he apologized as she looked upset. "How often do you have to email her?"
"No, I mean write, as in on a piece of paper with a pen!" she complained. "She doesn't even have email! I tried typing her a letter once and printing it out. She said it was cold and impersonal! I even signed it by hand!"
Too much to take, Josh caught a case of the giggles. "Oh! I'm sorry, Grace! I... I can't help it! It's just too funny is all!" he continued to laugh while she fumed.
"Yeah, well you won't find this funny. She's bringing me out a date for my birthday!" Grace groused.
His laughter coming to an abrupt end, Josh looked at her. "You... you can't be serious?" he hoped.
"Oh... I'm afraid so, Joss." she seethed as she spun the dial on her locker like a top. "His name's Francis Green, he's twenty, he goes to Harvard, and drives a Mercedes. And he's taking me to dinner, dancing, and a movie!"
His heart breaking as he listened, believing that she was mad because he was laughing, Josh was only moments from running off to the nearest restroom to cry. "You... you told her you'd go with him?" When Grace didn't answer, he nearly broke down. "Are you dumping me, Grace?"
Slamming her palm against her locker as she messed up the combination again, she glared at Josh. "No! How can you even ask me that!" Turning away from him, she tried again to open it.
Gulping in fear, Josh said nothing until she'd opened the lock. "I... I guess because you told her you'd go with him. You're going on a date, with another boy... a man. What am I supposed to think, Grace?" When she didn't answer, Josh continued. "Look, I know you like manly-looking guys as well as girls! I've seen you ogling Jeff Spencer at football games when you're in color guard! I don't care! But... a date? With a grown man? A man in college?"
Waiting, when Grace didn't say anything, the microscopic vestiges of his male ego were crushed. "I... I guess I'll just never be good enough for you. I hope you have a good birthday without me. I guess I'll see you around." Turning to go, Grace caught his arm.
"Joss!"
When Grace spun him around to face her, she saw he was silently crying.
"Damn it, Joss!" she nearly sobbed. "Of course I want you to be there! It's my sweet sixteen! I don't want to go, she's making me go!"
Furrowing his brow, he yanked his arm from her hand and wiped tears off his cheek. "Making you go? How can she force you to go on a date with a grown man? Twenty, Grace? That's creepy! Thinking about some grown man putting his hands on you..."
Looking up and away at his graphic depiction, she then returned her gaze to his face and yelled in a whisper, "How can she make me, Joss? The same way Melanie made you get your ears pierced! You can't tell her no!"
Infuriated that she would try to compare his living hell to her situation, Josh narrowed his eyes at her and pursed his lips. "Last I checked, the only one you have to obey is Judy!" he shot back quietly. "I have no choice! If I don't do what Melanie says, they can lock me up! In a boys' juvenile detention! Can you just see what would happen to me there? Nothing bad will happen to you if you disobey your grandmother... will it, Grace? You're just too scared to tell your grandma no! Either that or you actually want to date Sir Slab of Beefcake! Fancy car! Dinner and dancing! So, which is it?"
Hearing the hurt, anger, and betrayal in Joss's voice and seeing the tears dripping from his eyes, Grace knew she should say something, but she could only hang her head in shame at being too cowardly to tell her grandmother the truth. Unfortunately, it was the worst thing she could do.
"I see." he said sadly, taking her silence the worst way possible. "You do want to go. Well, I hope he's worth it, Grace. Goodbye." At that, he turned and stormed off to his first class, leaving her standing there alone.
When Grace looked for Josh in their usual meeting place, the same spot on the grass behind the benches they sat in on the first day they met, he wasn't there. She didn't see him again the rest of the day either, which was unusual as there were several times during the day that they should cross paths.
At first she was angry with him for assuming the worst of her, but the more she thought about how there could be no real negative repercussions if she just told her grandmother the truth, that she was Josh's girlfriend, the worse she felt. By the time she returned home, Grace was certain that she'd ruined their relationship with her cowardice.
Sunday the second of November came and Grace sat in her living room bored and depressed. While her grandmother was visiting with Judy in the kitchen, Frank, her unwanted guest, sat too close to her with his arm on the back of the couch behind her head. Regaling her with dull stories about college and fraternity life, he obviously thought he was utterly fascinating to a sixteen-year-old girl. Feeling dirty and used, she wished she could be anywhere else but there right then, preferably in Josh's arms.
"So anyway," he blathered on, "that was the third time I caught him in a logical fallacy, which all but ended the debate! We won, of course!" Turning to Grace, Frank lowered his arm so that he could touch her bare neck and shoulders. "So... Grace? Now that you're sixteen, you're free to do a lot of things you couldn't do before!" he oozed.
Standing up to avoid his touch, she shuddered with revulsion. "Can I get you anything, Frank? Coffee? Soda? Neutered?" she mumbled under her breath.
"Nothing like that, Grace." he said, standing up next to her. "Maybe later? Say after dinner? Skip the movie? Find a nice motel somewhere? You're a really lucky girl! I know how to treat a woman!"
As he reached for her, Grace headed for the kitchen. "So, Grandma Doris! How've you been?"
Seeing her granddaughter running away from the date she'd spent a lot of time and trouble setting up, she stood and narrowed her eyes at Grace. "You seem to have forgotten your manners, dear! You have a guest to see to!"
"But Grandma Doris, it's my birthday, and I haven't seen you in two years! I miss you!" She hoped the ploy would sidetrack things for a while at least.
Falling for the act, Doris Wright smiled at her. "Of course, child! I should have thought about that! Francis! Won't you join us in the dining room?" Moving Grace to a chair, she took the one to the girl's right while Frank entered and took the one to her left, sliding the chair over so he could drape his right arm over the back of hers.
"Mother Wright?" Judy interceded. "Perhaps Frank should sit a respectable distance from Grace."
"Nonsense, Judy!" she batted away the suggestion. "Let the young lady be! She's sixteen now and not some child! I'm sure she's quite content with a big, strong arm around her!"
Judy put her foot down. "Whether she is or not, Mother Wright, this is my house and Scott wouldn't have tolerated it, so neither will I. Frank?"
Seeing the woman was not going to give in, Frank cleared his throat and scooted his chair back where it came from. "Yes, Ma'am."
"Oh, Judy!" Doris admonished. "You're ruining the girl's day! Sixteen is supposed to be the opening of new frontiers! Magical! Mysterious! The doorway to womanhood!"
"In this house, Grace's doorway to womanhood is closed!" she insisted as she sat across from her mother-in-law.
The mood turning chilly while everyone went silent, Grace tried to fix it. "Could I open my presents now, Mom?"
Sighing before looking at her daughter, Judy smiled kindly. "Of course, sweetheart! Frank? Lend me a hand?"
As the two left the room, Grace looked over at her grandmother. "So... Frank seems... mature."
"He is, child." she replied frankly. "Mature, virile, wealthy, well-connected, with good breeding and a good future. You would do well to take advantage of his interest in you! You don't know how hard it was to get that interest. My son, your father, God rest his soul, being a military man who didn't even have the wherewithal to get a commission, doesn't exactly inspire the crème de la crème of society to come seeking your hand."
Standing, Doris paced around the table. "I'll not see my only granddaughter marry some backwoods farmer from Ohio! So you listen to me! You stick to Francis tonight like glue! Make him want you! Make him beg to have you! Only give in when he offers you his name!" Coming around the table, she moved up behind Grace and laid her hands on the girl's shoulders, pushing down the corners of her sleeves to expose more shoulder. "I think you know what to do!"
In shock that her grandmother was suggesting she give herself to a man she barely knew in promise of him marrying her, she was too terrified to even speak. Luckily, at that moment Judy and Frank brought in her gifts. While she unwrapped them, her mind was racing to find a way out of all this.
When at last she thought she'd opened all her presents, she went to get up before seeing a small package that had been hidden under some discarded wrapping paper. "What's this?" she asked, picking it up.
Looking at it a moment, Judy had to think before she remembered. "Oh! That was the gift Jocelyn dropped off for you on Friday. I forgot all about it! I'm sorry she missed today, Grace! I know you wanted her to be here!"
"Who is this Jocelyn?" Doris asked as though the name were dirty. "Some schoolgirl friend?"
"She's my best friend, Grandma Doris." Grace said as she examined the package wistfully. "The best friend I've ever had!" Looking at the perfectly wrapped box, tears formed in the corners of her eyes as she realized Josh had dropped it off after their fight; that he'd still wanted her to have it, even after she'd let him down so badly.
"Well, go on child!" Doris insisted impatiently. "Open it and get it over with so we can get on with the evening!"
Peeling the paper back slowly and carefully, she at last revealed a simple white box with a lid. Lifting it off and pushing aside the tissue paper, her breath caught and the threatening tears flowed like water as Grace's face furrowed into sobs of anguish.
"Whatever is the matter, child!" Doris bristled. "What's going on?"
Making her way around the table, Judy put her arm around Grace, helping her to sit as the girl cradled the box in her hands as she cried openly. "Grace, sweetie? What's wrong? What did she get you?" Looking down at the gift, Judy nearly started crying herself. "Oh, Grace!"
Pulling herself together, the girl choked back her tears and finally showed her grandmother the contents of the box. "It's Daddy!" she choked out.
Snatching the gift, she examined it like a pawnbroker appraising a stolen watch. It was a wood carving, obviously done with a dremel using a piece of oak that had been stained and polished until it shone. Carved into it was the face of her son with a grim and determined expression. Under it, carved in lovely calligraphy, were three simple words.
"No Greater Love..." Doris said slowly as she read them.
Grace threw her arms around her mother and bawled heavily, not caring if she embarrassed her grandmother or Frank. "Oh, Mom!" she cried.
Standing up, Doris was furious. "Grace! Stop that at once! You're sixteen, not six! It's a simple wood carving not worth the stain used to make it!"
Hearing the harsh words, Grace slowly let go of Judy as the tears stopped.
"That's better!" Doris said with a smile. "Now..."
"Shut! Up!" Grace shouted slowly as she stepped away from Judy and in front of Doris. "Just shut your stupid mouth!"
"Grace!" Judy said in surprise.
"I've put up with just about enough of this, Mother!" the girl yelled. "I put up with her setting me up on a date I don't want... I put up with denying myself for her sake... I put up with her causing me to not have Joss here today... I even put up with her telling me I should act like a bimbo tonight for Frank here so he might be horny enough to marry me! But when she belittles such a beautiful gift from the girl I love, that's too much!"
Stepping in front of Doris, standing nearly eye-to-eye with the older woman, Grace laid it all out. "Don't you ever say anything bad about anything my Jocelyn does! Do you hear me you nasty old bat?"
Sputtering like an engine running out of gas, her eyes widened at what Grace was saying. "Your Jocelyn? The girl you love? Have you gone mad, girl? No granddaughter of mine..."
"Ya' wanna bet?" Grace interrupted her. "Get a clue, Doris. I'm Bi! Suck it! I like girls! In fact, I'm in love with one! Jocelyn is ten times the woman you'll ever be without even trying!" Turning to Frank, who still sat in his chair speechless, it was his turn for her wrath. "And ten times the man you'll ever be! At least he doesn't try to sexually assault sixteen-year-old girls in their own home! Try to touch me again and you'll pull back a bloody stump! Ya' got that, Romeo?"
Grace was suddenly overcome with a need to get away. Picking up the carving, she looked at the three she'd intimidated into silence. "Now if you'll excuse me, I have a girl to go thank for the best gift I've ever gotten... him! If he'll still have me!" At that she ran out of the house as fast as the long skirt of her dress and her high heels would allow.
Looking at her mother-in-law in stunned silence while Grace went on her rampage and then out the door, Judy finally asked, "You told her to let this man take advantage of her?" When she saw Doris was not going to deny the claim but try to justify it, she didn't even let her finish. "Get out, Doris. Get out and never come back. Don't write, don't call, don't bother! You will have nothing to do with Scott's daughter! Don't even speak to me! Get! Out!"
Her face contorted into fear and then fury, Doris narrowed her eyes and walked out the door without a word.
Turning at last to Frank, she leaned over the back of his chair and stated calmly, "I have my husband's Beretta M-nine on my nightstand, Frank. You have until I reach it to get off my property or I'm going to blow a hole in you so big you could row a boat through it!" That said, she started down the hallway at a brisk pace.
Frank came flying out of the house and passed Doris at a run as though the devil himself were on his heels before Judy even reached her bedroom door.
Josh sat in his room, still dressed from church. He told his parents that he'd gone out for breakfast, which he had after the services, and then returned without a word. In fact, he hadn't spoken to them all week save that which was absolutely necessary and unavoidable. While he lay on his bed, thoughts of ending his miserable existence floating though his mind, they were suddenly dismissed when he heard a commotion downstairs.
Grace ran in her heels all the way to Josh's home, not even caring that she looked ridiculous running through her neighborhood in an evening gown. When she at last reached his house, she burst in through the front door and yelled, "Joss!"
Fred and Melanie came running into the living room while Grace continued to shout for him. "What's going on?" Melanie shouted at her. "Grace! Stop that yelling!"
Fred tried to calm both women down. "Let's just settle down, now!" he shouted. "Grace? Please stop shouting! Mel? You too!"
"Joss!" the girl shouted again as she searched the room. Seeing he wasn't downstairs, she shouted towards the upstairs landing. "Joss!"
Getting up, Josh made his way to the bedroom door and out to the stairs. When he saw Grace being surrounded by his parents shouting at her, their eyes met in a moment.
"Joss!" Grace said in relief as she saw him on the upper landing, pushed between the two adults, and ran up the stairs. Throwing her arms around him, she kissed him more deeply than she'd ever kissed anyone in her life.
Overcome at the sight of her, Josh watched as she raced up to him. When she embraced him and kissed him, he melted into her arms immediately, wrapping his own arms around her without even thinking. All he knew was that before he was miserable and now he was complete.
When at last she separated from his lips, still holding him in her arms, Grace smiled at him and pulled him into a hug. "I couldn't do it, Joss! I love you too much! I told that old bat just where she could stuff it and ran here as fast as I could! You were right! I was being a coward! Please forgive me?"
Slowly processing what she was saying, Josh began to smile and hug her in return. "Of course, Grace! I'll always forgive you! I love you, too!"
Pulling back slowly to look him in the eyes, stunned at hearing the words, it dawned on her that she'd finally told Josh to his face that she loved him. "Joss? You... you love me?"
Nodding with an ever-growing smile, he pressed his forehead against hers. "I've known for a while now. I was just too scared to say it out loud."
Giggling, Grace hugged him tightly once more. "I love you, Joss! And I love your gift! It's the second most beautiful thing I've ever seen! Thank you!"
Smiling together, they both heard the knock on the door. Looking down at his parents, they watched Fred move off to answer it.
"Judy!" he said, only half surprised to see her. They'd met a few times when she'd come over to pick up Josh, but his son had made sure to limit their contact, still remembering the trauma of his parents meeting the Healys. "Come in!" he offered.
"Thank you, Fred." she said politely. "Is Grace here?" Looking around, she spotted the two at the top of the stairs. "Grace!"
"I'm not going back, Mom!" the girl said sternly. "I don't care what you do to me, that woman's a nasty bitch and I'm not spending my birthday anywhere near her or that human octopus she brought with her!"
"It's alright, Grace!" her mother explained. "She's gone. So's that vile little troll she brought with her! I threw them out!"
Grace's countenance brightened as she stared down at Judy. "Really! You did that? For me?" Seeing her mother nod, Grace hurried downstairs with Josh in tow, refusing to let go of his hand until she stood next to her mother. "You're wonderful, Mom!" she stated as she wrapped Judy in a hug.
When at last Grace let go and returned to holding Josh's hand, Melanie had finally had enough. "OK, so what's going on then?"
Even as Grace opened her mouth to explain, Josh answered, "It's nothing, Melanie. Just a big misunderstanding between Grace and I. Everything's fine now!" When Grace gave him a questioning look, he imperceptibly shook his head, indicating that he didn't want his parents involved.
Swallowing nervously, Grace took both of Josh's hands. "Jocelyn? Would you go out to dinner with me tonight? Please?"
With a smile, Josh nodded enthusiastically. "Of course I will, Grace! Let me get my purse!"
The two sat with Judy at the same restaurant that Josh and his parents had gone to his first day out as a girl. He listened quietly while Grace and Judy took turns explaining the events of the afternoon.
"So that's when I told her off!" Grace stated. "I could take a lot from her, but I just couldn't take her bad-mouthing you... or your gift! It's the most beautiful thing I've ever seen, Joss... second to you, of course!"
Blushing, Josh just picked at his salad.
Judy nodded in agreement. "It is, Jocelyn. Where did you get it done?"
"I made it." he stated shyly. "Over the summer in woodworking class. I told my parents I was at a trans therapy group that meets in the same building."
Looking at him in stunned silence, Judy broke the spell first. "You... you made that? Jocelyn! You have a wonderful talent! It's beautiful!"
Grace took his hand and squeezed it gently. "That makes it even better than if you'd bought it, Joss! You did all that... for me?"
Shrugging, Josh took a bite and swallowed before answering. "I just wish I could have known him. He seems like he was a wonderful man. While I was making it, I thought a lot about why he chose to do what he did... join the military, I mean... and spend so much time away from the people he loved... only to end up dying so far from home." Looking up at Grace, he smiled weakly. "Then one day, it just suddenly clicked into place. It all made sense."
Squeezing Grace's hand, he sighed and looked at her with love in his eyes.
"He did it for you."
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Before the end of the month, Grace had her driver's license and the two spent their first evening out alone without Judy. It was a simple dinner at a fast food place and then a movie, but she and Josh enjoyed it just the same.
The following Sunday, Grace was driving him to the church on Spring Drive instead of him taking the bus as usual.
"You sure you want to go with me?" he asked, sitting in the passenger seat and looking at her. "I appreciate the ride, but it doesn't mean you have to go."
She glanced at him before turning her eyes back to the road. "Yes, I want to go, Joss! I wanna meet these people that you care about so much that I can't see you every Sunday morning!"
Pulling her mother's car into the church lot, Grace found a spot and parked. Climbing out, Josh explained some things as they walked toward the doors.
"No hand-holding, Grace." he warned her. "And no making eyes at each other or talking about us being a couple. Pastor Roberts has a rule, and it's not just for same-sex couples. 'Church is a house of worship, not a dating club.' He gives that lecture to nearly all the kids in the congregation."
"I understand, Joss." she said with a smile as she looked at him. "You look nice, though!"
Grinning back at her, he answered happily. "You too!"
The two entering the doorway, Daniel was there as usual. "Jocelyn! Your turn to bring a guest?"
Shaking his hand, Josh introduced her. "Pastor Roberts? This is my best friend, Grace! She wanted to know what the fuss was all about!"
Daniel Roberts beamed at her as he shook her hand as well. "Glad you decided to come, Grace! Love the name!" The three laughing together, he gestured inward. "Won't you find a seat, ladies?"
Entering the sanctuary, Josh directed Grace to the pew he normally sat in near the back. Taking their seats, he felt a tap on his shoulder and turned around. "Good morning, Mr. and Mrs. Mason!" he said warmly.
"Good morning, Jocelyn!" the older woman responded in kind as they all stood up to greet one another.
"This is my best friend Grace, Mrs. Mason!" he said as Grace and the woman shook hands. "She decided to join us this morning!"
"Very nice to meet any friend of Jocelyn's!" she smiled genuinely as Grace turned to shake Mr. Mason's hand. "She's such a thoughtful and considerate young lady! It does my heart glad to know she has good friends!"
Sitting back down, Josh sighed happily as Grace looked at him. "How many people here know you, Joss?" she whispered.
Shrugging, he did a quick mental inventory. "Um... a little less than half of them, really." he whispered back.
Looking around the room, Grace was surprised. "Joss, there are like four hundred people here! You know half of them? And they know you?"
"They know Jocelyn." he clarified quietly. "Not me. Only you, your mom, and the Healys know me... and I'm not sure about your mom. She still calls me Jocelyn."
Nodding in understanding, Grace tried to cover for her mother. "She just doesn't want to slip up in front of someone like your parents, Joss. Believe me, she gets it. She just wants to help and not make things even worse. If she could afford it, she'd buy you guy clothes so you wouldn't have to wear girly stuff all the time!"
"Fat lot of good that would do." he countered quietly. "I look like a tomboy!" When the service started, Josh listened to the pastor's sermon intently. Still agnostic, he nevertheless enjoyed the effort of coming to understand people who believed in something they could neither see nor hear, only feel. He understood that. He looked like a girl and sounded like a girl, but he didn't feel like one. All the empirical evidence said he was a transgendered girl, but he still knew it to be wrong. For him, it was a matter of faith.
After the sermon, the congregation sang and truly enjoyed their time as a community. When people started to leave, Josh and Grace began walking out with the others, stopping to talk to a few families Josh knew on the way. Before they got to the door, he heard Daniel call out to him.
"Jocelyn! Glad I caught you!" Glancing at Grace, he gestured back into the sanctuary. "Could I have a moment of your time before you go?"
Looking over at his girlfriend, Josh shrugged. "Sure, Pastor Roberts!"
Leading the two back in, Daniel looked at them each in turn and lowered his voice so it wouldn't carry beyond the three of them. "Jocelyn, can I assume that this young lady is the girl you came to me to ask about?" Seeing Josh nod seriously after a moment, he continued. "I just wanted to make sure this isn't the start of an effort to force your... situation... on the congregation. I don't for a minute believe that you would, but I have a solemn duty to protect everyone who comes here, including you, so I just need to hear you say it."
"Pastor Roberts," Josh said earnestly, "I have no intention of letting anyone here know anything about my private matters. Coming here is too important to me to try and change people's minds, not that shoving it in their face would do any good, anyway. In fact, it'd probably make it worse. Even if I were a boy, it wouldn't be any different. My private life is not for public debate."
Relieved, he smiled at Josh. "I knew you'd understand, Jocelyn! You're a credit to this congregation!"
"Pastor?" Grace interjected. "I get that you don't want there to be trouble, but would you really prevent Joss from coming if people knew about us?"
"I'd have to, Grace." he said seriously. "For her own good. I may not agree with your... relationship... but I try not to judge. I can't prevent others from judging though, in very un-Christian ways. I can't allow that, for their sakes!"
Driving home after saying their good-byes, the two were quiet. Finally, Grace spoke up. "I can't agree with Pastor Roberts, Joss. You should be free to express who you are anywhere and not worry about getting attacked!"
Josh shook his head disagreeingly. "No, Grace. He's right. Trying to force your opinion of how things should be on others is wrong, no matter how much you think it may be right. Just look at my parents. They're certain I'm a girl. That doesn't make forcing it on me right, does it?"
"I suppose." she said as she drove. "I just think if they're as nice as they're supposed to be, they should be able to handle you being different! I mean, take that Mrs. Mason! She seems like she wouldn't be mean just because you're a boy forced to be a girl, or we love each other! What's the big deal?"
"It's no big deal to you or me, but it is to them." he pointed out. "They're entitled to their opinion on any subject, Grace. Trying to force them to accept something they fervently disagree with not only would be wrong, it would be impossible! You can't force people to change their minds."
"I'm not talking about forcing anyone to change their minds, Joss." she argued. "I'm talking about how they should be anyway!"
"According to who? You? My parents? OK, so you think they should accept apparently same-sex couples. My parents think they shouldn't believe in God at all and should be forced to disband the church. The congregation would disagree with all three of you. Who's right?"
Wanting to answer that she was right, it occurred to her that she was being just as arrogant about her own opinions as Josh's parents were about theirs. Her mouth opening and then closing, she furrowed her brow. "I guess I see your point. Doesn't mean I have to like it!"
Looking out the window, Josh sighed. "The hardest part of being tolerant is actually tolerating people you disagree with and letting them have their opinions without trying to change them."
"But how can we expect to improve if we don't try to change things for the better?" she pointed out. "You can't make society more accepting by hiding!"
"You can't make society more accepting by shoving it down their throats, either." he countered. "Society is just the collective opinions of individuals. It'll only change if the individuals change, which they only ever do of their own free will. Things aren't better today because intolerant people were forced to accept what they found unacceptable. Intolerant people have just become the minority, so their opinion doesn't count for much. Trying to force it on them just made people mad about it. It does more harm than good."
Spending the rest of the day together, they let the subject drop and enjoyed their time alone. By the time Josh turned sixteen two months later, they began to think about their futures.
"I think I'm going to go to art school." Josh told her one Saturday afternoon over a cup of coffee. "I'm getting pretty good, and I like it a lot! The only thing is, I think I should have a fallback career, in case it doesn't turn out."
Grace nodded as she sipped her tea. "Well, you're good at logic and debate. You could become a lawyer... or a politician!"
Laughing at the suggestion, Josh shook his head. "Oh yeah! That'd be a real hoot! Imagine me running for office? With male on my birth certificate?"
"You know the Democrat Party would love to have you!" she pointed out.
"The feeling isn't mutual." he countered. "I hate politics! It's the reason my life sucks so much! My parents and their activism!"
Grace shrugged. "Just a suggestion. I was thinking about one of the military academies. I might try for Annapolis... or maybe the Air Force Academy."
"Hmm..." Josh considered. "Annapolis is only four hundred miles away, but the Air Force Academy is in Colorado, isn't it?" Seeing Grace nod, he sighed resignedly. "Well, I guess I'll start looking at colleges around both places... just in case!"
Giggling, Grace eyed him hungrily. "You could always just be my housewife, Joss! Would you mind being a 'kept woman'?"
Choking on his coffee, he giggled along with her once he managed to get the dark beverage out of his nose. "Oh great! I can see my mother now! Screaming at me for the rest of time for 'lowering myself' to the level of some stepford wife!"
"It wouldn't be like that!" Grace argued. "You don't honestly agree with that idea, do you?"
"No." Josh admitted. "Not at all. In fact, I could think of nothing that would be more gratifying than raising our kids for you!"
"I suppose we can adopt." Grace sighed sadly.
"Why?" he asked. "I have 'stuff' on ice."
Staring at Josh perplexedly, Grace slowly put her cup down. "What? How?"
Realizing he'd never gotten into detail about that day, he fully explained the excuse his mother had used to trick him into his castration. "So, if you're willing, we can have our own kids."
Thinking about it for the first time, Grace smiled. "I think I'd love having your children, Joss!" Her smile melting, she looked at him seriously. "Um... Joss? After you turn eighteen, are you gonna... you know... revert? Go back to being a boy? Or... I guess a man at that point. I'll love you either way!"
Looking off, Josh's voice became distant. "I honestly don't know that I can, Grace. I've tried looking more guyish a few times, but I always come off just looking like a butch girl or a tomboy. If I got on testosterone it might help, but everything I've read says it won't fix me. I look too girlish to be a guy, but I feel too guyish to be a girl. I just don't fit in anywhere!"
Taking his hand, Grace smiled at him. "That's OK, Joss. I love you either way... or neither way!" Changing the subject, she turned to him again. "Joss? Spring Fling is coming up. Will you be my date? For real this time?"
Smiling, Josh nodded. "Of course! I was wondering when you were gonna ask! I already have the perfect dress!"
Giggling at his exuberance, Grace shook her head. "Are you sure you're a guy, Joss? You're awfully excited about what dress you're going to wear!"
Rolling his eyes, Josh glowered at her sarcastically. "Yes, I'm sure! That doesn't mean I don't like looking good! If I can't look good in a tux, at least I can look good tucked under your arm!" he smiled, loving Grace's groan.
Three weeks later he was checking himself in his closet mirror before going downstairs. The dress was one he'd bought for church, but decided that it was too formal for that and it had sat in his closet ever since. He'd thought about just wearing black slacks and a plain white blouse, but he knew he would just look like a girl who didn't dress up, like the stoner girls who hung out in jeans and flannels in the corner with their wasteoid boyfriends.
Seeing how the peach dress hugged his waist and made him look even more curvaceous than he was naturally, he sighed at the too-feminine image that shone back at him. Grabbing the matching clutch, he checked his hair and makeup one last time before heading out of the room and down the stairs.
"Wow!" Grace stared as he descended, making him blush at the compliment. "Joss, you look... wow!"
Josh watched her walk over to him wearing a dark blue strapless dress that made her look much older than sixteen. "Thanks! You look amazing, Grace!"
Her turn to blush and giggle at his little pun, she took his hand. "Thank you!" she said shyly.
"Turn around, girls!" Fred insisted. "Smile!" Holding his smartphone, he took several pictures and fiddled with it for a moment. "There! I sent Judy the best one!" Walking up to them, he hugged Josh warmly. "Have a good time, princess! Come home when you're ready! We'll see you tomorrow!"
Disappointed that his parents were willing to let their sixteen-year-old stay out all night alone with his date, Josh smiled weakly. "Yes, Daddy! We'll be careful!" he added, trying to emphasize that his father hadn't even thought to say it anymore.
Melanie sat on the couch watching them over her phone as the two left without even saying goodbye to her.
Seeing his wife agitated, Fred looked at her. "She knows what you've done for her, Mel. All teenage girls naturally think their mothers don't understand them... that's all! Remember how you felt about your mom at that age?"
"I could understand if I handed down draconian edicts on her like my mother did, Fred!" she spat. "I let her do anything she likes, and she still treats me like every day is some kind of trial to be endured! Like I'm forcing her to do unreasonable things!" Putting down her phone, she sighed. "I just feel I got the worst of both deals! When she was younger, she and I should have been closer, but we treated her like a boy so she was closer to you. Now that she's growing up, she's Daddy's Princess and I'm the ogre that she hates!"
Pulling his wife to her feet, Fred hugged her and tried to comfort her. "It's alright, Mel. She'll come around. You'll see."
Grace parked in the lot south of the school gym where the dance was held. The Spring Fling was only one of two dances of the year, the other being Homecoming, that any student was welcome. All others were segregated by year. Even so, not many juniors or seniors attended Spring Fling, most calling it 'Kiddy Prom' and looking down on the kids who took it seriously.
Turning off the engine, she looked over at her date and smiled sardonically. "You know, my mom is a chaperone this year!"
Nodding, Josh gazed at his lap. "I know. Sorry!"
"It's fine!" she laughed lightly. "Not like I was planning on swabbing your tonsils with my tongue on the dance floor or anything!"
"Eww!" Josh huzzed. "You can be so gross sometimes!"
Giggling a moment, the two slowly turned serious. "Joss? I love you."
Smiling and blushing, he looked down at his hands in the lap of his skirt again. "I love you too, Grace!"
Scooting over, she reached out and turned Josh's face toward hers with a fingertip. Kissing him gently, the two lost themselves in the moment, their passions held in check only through their own will. Slowly ending their kiss, she smiled at him when he leaned his forehead against hers. "Shall we?"
"Let's!" he said with a giggle.
Climbing out of her mother's car after a quick makeup check, the two made their way to the gym door, Josh taking Grace's arm. Passing through the entrance, they nodded to the school councilor who was checking for dress code violations. "Good evening, Mr. Grayson!" they said together with a laugh as they noted his irritation at not being able to stop Josh from entering.
Walking into the dance, they saw a lot of kids were already there, though others were still on their way in behind them even as they entered. Mostly being other sophomores and freshmen, the two were among the oldest there. Spotting Judy, Josh finger-waved at her with a smile before the next song started and the couple went out on the dance floor.
When at last the evening came to an unremarkable end, the three, Josh, Grace, and Judy, all drove to Grace's home together. The plan was to let the two of them spend more time with one another at her house before the girl would drive him home.
Judy sighed happily as she watched her daughter drive. "I'm really very proud of you, Grace." she remarked. "You've become a wonderful young woman!"
"Thanks, Mom!" she said cheerily. "That means a lot!"
"I remember when I was your age when I first got my driver's license. I... um... I took my father's car one night without asking and drove it to my boyfriend's house!"
"Would that be one Greg Long, Judy?" Josh asked from the back seat with a sly grin.
Blushing, the woman nodded. "Yes! I told him I had permission to be out that night. He was skeptical, but took my word for it. When the cops pulled us over for driving a stolen car..."
"Grandpa Dillard called the cops on you?" Grace said in surprise.
"Yes!" she said mortified. "Well, not on me, they had no idea I took the car! They thought I was still up in my room and that it was actually stolen!"
"Oh!" the two teens chorused.
"To make a long story short, we were dragged down to the police station, booked, jailed, and my parents showed up to get me. They tried to blame Greg, but I wouldn't leave until they dropped the charges and let him go!"
"Wow, Mom!" Grace exclaimed. "That was a pretty brave thing to do! They might have just left you there to try and teach you a lesson!"
Shaking her head, Judy disagreed as Grace pulled into the driveway. "No, I knew they would do the right thing once they knew all the facts. Anyway, I'm glad that you aren't as rebellious as I was at your age! I don't think I could handle a second me!"
Going inside, and once Judy had changed out of her nice outfit, Josh and Grace relaxed in the living room with her and continued to talk.
"Speaking of Mr. Long, Mom..." Grace said with an impish smile, "I notice you've been talking to him a lot on the phone! Anything going on there?"
"That's none of your business, young lady!" Judy chided her. "Greg and I are just catching up with one another! We were friends first before he was my boyfriend, you know!"
"You mean like Joss and me?" Grace pointed out.
"A little, yes." Judy admitted. "Just goes to show you that when you're in High School, the people you like may not be who you're meant for."
"Mom!" Grace yelled. "How can you even say..."
Judy interrupted her tirade. "I'm not saying that you and Jocelyn aren't serious Grace, or that you aren't meant for one another! I'm just pointing out that if something were to happen and you two were to break up, that it wouldn't mean your life was over!" When she saw Grace was calmed down some, she continued. "When Greg and I broke up, it was the end of the world to me. I thought I'd never love anyone ever again." Contemplating the picture above the fireplace, she sighed. "Then I met Scott."
Grace looked at her hand as it held Josh's. "I get what you're saying, Mom. I just hope nothing does happen! I can't imagine a future that doesn't have my Joss in it!"
"I'm sure you can't." her mother said understandingly. "Just like I couldn't imagine a future without Greg when I was your age." Seeing Grace fume at the idea of it, Judy dismissed her fears. "I'm sure you two will be just fine!"
Driving Josh the scant six blocks home just after midnight, Grace couldn't help but feel agitated. Seeing her upset, Josh tried to calm her fears.
"Grace? It's fine! We're fine! I know that whatever happens, I am never going to leave you and you're never going to leave me!"
"I know." Grace said as she furrowed her brow. "I just... I don't like the idea that I could get over losing you the way Mom got over losing Greg. It's stupid, I know... but I just can't help it! It... it's terrifying to think I even could live without you!"
Unable to help, Josh just stared out the window until they pulled up along the curb out in front of his house.
When Grace turned off the motor, she quickly slid over next to him and wrapped her arms around him. "I love you, Joss! So much!" she nearly cried before kissing him desperately. After several minutes of them making out and holding one another, she slowly started to calm down. "Sorry, Joss!" she giggled. "I guess I just sort of needed you to be close for a bit! The idea of losing you scares me! When I think about what nearly happened on my birthday... how I almost lost you over my stupid fears..."
Taking her hand, Josh looked deep into her eyes. "Me too, Grace. I guess the best we can do is just be there for each other and promise never to let little things get in the way ever again. I'd rather die than see you unhappy!"
Kissing one more time, she walked him up to his door. "Goodnight, Joss!" she smiled at him. "See you tomorrow morning?"
Nodding, Josh smiled back just as happily. "Tomorrow!"
With one last desperate kiss, Grace tore herself away from him and stepped backward down the walkway. Josh stood in front of his door, not wanting to go in until she'd left. Giggling at each other and their silly sentimentality, Grace at last turned toward her mother's car and walked away, waving at him one last time as she started to drive off. Josh quietly made his way in through the front door, not wanting to disturb his parents, and had just turned off the porch light when he was spooked by Melanie's voice.
"Have a good time?" she asked, making him turn and draw in a breath.
"Melanie!" he gasped. "What are you doing up so late? You startled me!"
"Just was waiting up to see if you were coming home is all." she said nonchalantly as she put down her phone. "So, did you have a good time?"
Drifting on the pleasant memories of the evening, he nodded as he started slowly walking toward the stairs. "Yes!"
"Why didn't you invite Grace in?" she asked.
"She had to get home." he retorted, his happiness collapsing into the black hole of his mother's pressuring. "Judy worries when she's driving at night."
"Why didn't you just stay at her place then?"
Rolling his eyes, he looked at her as though she'd asked the dumbest question in history. "Because Judy didn't want me to, that's why! God, Melanie! We're only sixteen! Why the third degree? What's it to you what we do?"
Standing up, she walked over to him and glowered. "I'm just concerned is all! You should be all over each other already, and yet you're refusing to take advantage of the opportunities I provide you! Opportunities I would have done anything to have when I was your age!"
"I'm not you, Melanie!" he shouted. "I'm nothing like you! Thank God!"
"What's that supposed to mean?" she demanded as she crossed her arms.
Angry that his mother had ruined what was up to that point a wonderful evening, he glared at her. "Oooo! You just don't get it! You never will! I'm glad I'm nothing like you! If I was, I'd probably kill myself!" Turning, he stormed up the stairs, slammed his door, and locked it before dropping onto his bed to cry himself to sleep.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
--
Josh was finally ready. Having spent most of the day getting his hair and nails done, a complete facial, and then almost two hours to get dressed, he looked at the final product. Trying to make himself like what he saw, he still hated the vision of young womanhood staring back at him from his closet mirror. Seventeen and hours away from his Junior Prom, he was irreparably and unmistakably a woman in all but the most basic of ways. No one would even believe you if you told them you were a boy. he ridiculed himself as he examined the beautiful woman in his mirror.
Suddenly he was reminded of the Sunday when his semi-open secret had gotten out at the one place that he didn't want to be known as Josh.
Grace walked with Josh in through the front doors of the church, greeting Pastor Roberts as usual and taking their usual seat in their usual pew. As they waited, she and Josh both started to overhear the conversation being held just behind them.
"So anyway," Mrs. Mason continued, "I heard from Mrs. Ashberry that he goes to the local High School! Just think about that, Henry! A boy dressed like a girl... right here in our area! Using the same restrooms as the girls! The same changing rooms for PE! I ask you, how can you not care! What if our granddaughter were going to that school? Would you want her being seen naked by a boy?"
Henry Mason sighed, sick of her harping on the issue even after they'd gotten to church. "Quiet, Edith! This is hardly the place to talk about it!"
"Why not?" she asked, incensed that he wasn't more upset. "This is God's house and He would condemn such things..."
"Edith!" he shouted in a whisper, looking embarrassedly to see that Josh was turning around to look at them with fear in his eyes. "Edith, this is not the place to discuss it! We are here to glorify God, not discuss politics!" Seeing that both Grace and Josh were fully listening to their conversation, he turned crimson. "Sorry, girls. Mrs. Mason was just about to apologize to you two for disturbing you... right dear?"
Narrowing her eyes at him, Edith Mason turned to the two youths. "I most certainly was not, Henry! They understand! Don't you girls? It's just not right for a boy to impersonate a girl and be free to roam in and out of the restroom when you're using it! It's disgusting and perverted!"
Having had about enough, and tempted to grab Josh and kiss him right in front of her, Grace instead turned in her seat and glared. "Mrs. Mason," she whispered angrily, "I agree with Mr. Mason. I don't think this is the place!"
Turning to Josh as Grace angrily turned her back on the woman, she hoped for at least one ally. "Jocelyn, you're a fine Christian girl! I'm sure you'd never want anything to do with such people! Am I right? You're nothing like them!"
Swallowing hard, Josh whispered the best answer he could. "Mrs. Mason? The girl you're talking about? I know her. She'd do anything to be normal, but she has no choice. That choice was made for her. Mr. Mason's right, though. This isn't the place to talk about it."
As Josh turned and looked away, Edith sat back in her seat, but refused to apologize. The next week, Josh and Grace sat in a different pew.
Checking one last time, Josh picked up the small pink clutch that matched his gown and dropped his phone in, snapping it shut. The ankle-length princess gown rustling with each step, he left his room and made his way downstairs once more to be photographed and embarrassed by his father.
Prom was uneventful, save for typical instances of jocks trying to spike the punch bowl and other teenage angst. Josh had long ago disappeared into the background to be quietly ignored and snubbed by his peers, but that was fine by him. He was content to just be there with Grace at his side.
After the Prom, as Grace drove them back to her house for some time alone, Judy and Greg having gone out themselves for the evening, the two were anxious to reach the girl's empty home and finally lose themselves in each other. "I love you." Josh said to her dreamily.
Smiling wickedly, Grace never took her eyes off the road. "I love you too, Joss! I can't wait to get you home to show you how much!"
"Are you glad we waited?" he asked unsure of himself. "Are you sure you don't want to wait until..."
"No!" Grace interrupted him. "I don't want to waste one more second I can spend with you, Joss! I need you!" Sliding her hand toward him, she smiled when he took it and squeezed it, letting go to put it back on the wheel.
"I just want you to be sure, Grace." he sighed. "I can wait, even if I don't want to! I love you too much!" Glancing over at Grace who just smiled as she watched the road, thinking about what the rest of the evening might have in store for them, Josh giggled just before he blacked out.
Waking up slowly, Josh wasn't sure where he was. His eyes wouldn't focus and he felt adrift and weak. Trying to move, he found himself restrained and began to panic. The dreamlike unreality of it all, most especially the detached feeling of no real sensations, made him relax. I'm dreaming.
He'd never managed to lucid dream before, but figured that since he knew now that it was a dream he could do anything he wanted. Trying to move again, he felt the vague disassociated sensation of pain and stopped. It hadn't actually hurt, it was more like a distant memory of pain that dreams have. Going with the flow, he tried once more to open his eyes, but they refused to focus.
"So anyway, that's about all I could do." the girl's voice said. "Jocelyn?"
Furrowing his brow, he revolted at the name haunting his dream. Working to place the voice, he couldn't quite manage it, or remember much at all.
"Jocelyn!" it said again, sounding joyful. "Oh my God, Joss! I thought you were never going to wake up!"
Finally able to put together the voice into something he could remember, he giggled lightly. Now I know it's a dream! he laughed at himself. Forcing his vision to focus on the voice that came from the bodiless face hovering over him, he smiled. "I miss you Trace! You were my best friend!" Hearing a sniff come from the fuzzy apparition, he knew she was crying.
"I know, Joss! I missed you, too!" Tracy said through sniffs, trying to hold back her tears. "I... when I heard what happened, I came down here right away! Davie too! We've been coming to see you every day after school ever since! He's downstairs getting a coffee right now."
While she spoke, Josh's head started to clear and his vision and memory began to improve. The background behind Tracy's head slowly resolved into the image of a hospital room. Blinking back the fog in his brain, Josh slowly started to feel real again. "This... this isn't a dream?" he asked.
Sadly, Tracy shook her head. "I wish it were, Joss. I'm so sorry! I know I've been terrible to you these last few years! I... I said some awful things about you behind your back, just so people would like me, but I don't care about that anymore! I just... I just want my sister back!"
Recalling their falling out over Tracy's insistence that he was actually a girl, Josh's attitude changed from glad to irritated. "Your sister... right." he sighed. Pausing a moment, it dawned on him that he didn't know how he'd gotten there. "Wait, what am I doing here? Where the hell am I?"
"Southwest General." she answered. "Don't you remember what happened?"
"No!" he answered with annoyance. "Would I ask how I got here if I did?"
Suddenly quiet, Tracy got up. "I... I should get a nurse." she said nervously. "Be right back!"
Watching her leave, he looked around and noticed that he was strapped to the bed. Wanting to be able to get up, he searched to find the release and unclipped it, slowly easing it away from his body.
"Oh, no you don't!" the nurse said as he came in and hooked the strap back in place. "We don't want you spilling out of bed if you have another seizure."
Blinking at the large black man wearing green scrubs, Josh shook his head to clear it. "A seizure? I had a seizure?"
"Three." he said, checking the teen's vitals. "One before you got here."
Believing that he may be beginning to understand what happened to him, Josh cleared his throat. "Did... did Grace bring me here? What day is it?"
Furrowing his brow, the nurse looked away. "Wednesday afternoon."
His eyes shooting open, Josh tried to grasp it. I've been here since Saturday night! Nearly four days! Realizing he'd missed church Sunday, he resolved to reach out to Pastor Roberts and let him know he was OK. Looking at the man studying him, Josh swallowed. "Um... are my parents here?"
"They went home a bit ago." he said in his smooth voice. "You've had guests since you were admitted! You got lots of people that care about you!"
Grimacing at the idea, he could only call to mind a few. Grace, Judy, Pastor Roberts and some of the congregation, Trace and Dave too... I guess, Melanie and Daddy at least think they care about me! Not able to think of anyone else at first, he mentally added a few more. Jennifer of course, and Vicky and John... maybe Luke. Sure that he'd gotten everybody, he smiled up at the nurse. "I guess so."
"Well, you rest here and I'll go call your doctor and your folks, alright?"
"Can you call Grace and Judy, too? Judy Wright?" he asked, more interested in seeing them than his parents.
Stopping, he shook his head. "Let's start with your folks. They can call whoever else needs to know, alright?"
As the nurse left, Josh saw an almost unfamiliar face staring at him from the hallway. If it weren't for the fact that he'd seen him here and there over the past few years, he wouldn't have been able to place him. "D... Dave?"
Walking in slowly, his hands stuffed in his front pockets, David Edwards shuffled in nervously. "Um... hey, Jocelyn! Have a good nap?"
Chuckling and noticing it hurt, he tried not to. "You're so full of it, Dave!"
The boy looked down and away as a smile cracked on his face. "Yeah... nice callback, dude... um... I mean..."
Josh shook his head again, making him dizzy. "It's fine, Dave! I'm not gonna jump your shit over that!" Seeing him relax, Josh sighed happily. "Can't say I care for how I got to see you... but I'll take it! Could you do me a favor?"
"Sure thing." David said as he pulled his hands out of his pockets. "Want some water or somethin'?"
"Not right now." Josh said, shaking his head slowly this time. "I... would you call someone for me? Judy Wright. She's my um... girlfriend's mom."
"Yeah, I know." he said glumly. "I think everyone at school knew about you two. You want me to call her mom?"
"No, you call Aunt Joyce, Mom!" he joked, making the other boy groan at the wordplay. "Would you call Judy for me though? Please?"
"Hey, don't even try those 'little girl eyes' on me!" David countered. "They don't work on me and it's creepy as hell coming from you!" Laughing for a moment, David nervously looked away. "So, uh... you want me to call her?"
"If you wouldn't mind." Josh begged. "Just dial and hand me the phone." Giving him the number, David pulled out his cell phone and dialed. Once he heard it ring, he handed the mobile device over to Josh.
After a few rings, Judy answered. "Hello?"
"Judy!" Josh exclaimed.
"Jocelyn?" she replied. "Oh my God, Jocelyn! You're awake?"
"Only just." he answered. "I woke up a bit ago and borrowed a phone to call right away. I still don't know what happened. A nurse told me I had like, three seizures. Is Grace there? I want to let her know I'm OK!" Silence greeted him as he saw the shocked look on David's face. "Hello? Judy? You still there?"
"Yes." she answered. "I'm here, Joss. Didn't they tell you what happened?"
"Just what I said... that I had a seizure." His thoughts clouded over as he saw David turn away. "Judy... where's Grace?"
Another interminable silence followed as his mind raced with what might have happened. Finally, Judy answered. "There... there was an accident, Jocelyn. Your car was hit by a drunk driver." A silence stretched on for what seemed like hours before Judy said, "She's gone, Jocelyn. Grace died."
Josh dropped the phone into his lap. Slowly, it slid down and off his bed, landing on the floor with a thundering clatter. "No..." he whimpered.
Scooping up the phone, David looked at it before putting it up to his ear. "Hello? Mrs. Wright? This is David... David Edwards. I'm a friend of Joss's. She uh... she dropped the phone."
Judy collected herself. "Is he... is she alright?"
Looking at Josh, David shook his head. "I don't think so, Mrs. Wright. She looks... catatonic, I think."
Josh's mind was a blur as his entire world collapsed around him. Vague feelings of anger, loneliness, and an unendurable sadness slowly started to fill his mind, threatening to drown him in sorrow and pain. His barely endurable existence, only made livable by the bright light of Grace, fell apart as he descended once more into his own personal living hell.
Slowly coming back into awareness, Josh found himself being held by his mother. Initially repulsed by her, he couldn't help but grasp on to what little affection he could find.
"It's alright, baby." she soothed him, rocking back and forth and petting his long brown hair. "It's alright."
Desperately, he wrapped his arms around her and clung to her for dear life. "She's dead! Grace is dead!" he began to sob uncontrollably into his mother's comforting shoulder.
"I know, sweetheart." Melanie answered softly. "I know."
"Princess?" Fred announced himself, emotion choking his voice and not even trying to hide it. "We're here, sweetie. We'll get through this."
Bawling like a four-year-old, Josh cried for what seemed to be hours before exhaustion claimed him once more as he passed into a restless sleep.
He awoke facing the sun streaming in through the window. Blinking through his dried tears, he didn't look away. He just lay there and existed.
Days passed and still he lay there. While his body was healing, his mind, heart, and spirit were all dying. Aware of what was going on around him, he nevertheless refused to engage with anyone or anything. Convinced that his life was nothing but an endless turmoil of pain, torture, and sorrow, only interrupted by teasing moments of happiness for them to be cruelly snatched away, he lay there just watching the sunbeams filter through the blinds in the morning, only to shift and fade with the passing day and disappear with the night.
After a week of near catatonia, Josh roused one Thursday to a familiar voice.
"Good morning, Jocelyn."
Moving just his eyes, his vision came to rest on the face of his pastor.
"I came down to see you the day after they brought you in. I called Judy to find out why you two missed church and she told me." Daniel stated. "We prayed for you, Susan and me. I'm glad to see you awake."
Not acknowledging his words, Josh simply looked back to his window.
"I... uh... I didn't tell your parents who I was." he continued. "I told them I was your councilor... which is true, in a way!" he chuckled lightly. "I knew you were keeping your church attendance from them." he explained. "I... I didn't want to add to your troubles." Pausing, he collected his thoughts.
"The congregation has missed you these last two weeks. They've asked about you, but I haven't told them what happened. I told them you were ill. See, there was a news article about the accident. You weren't named, but your... uh... situation... was. Your parents seemed to go out of their way to make sure the papers all knew that you were... well... a boy."
Hearing that, Josh moved his eyes to look over at the man again.
"I... um... I don't know what to say! You... you seem very much a girl to me. You always have. I never... well... I guess this is one way for the Lord to test a man's faith! I guess I just want to hear it from you." Daniel paused and asked the question. "Are you a boy?"
Looking back to his window with a blink, Josh felt that was answer enough.
"I see." he sighed. "You've made me do a lot of soul searching these past few days... Jocelyn. Examining if this is just the work of man or the work of God. I honestly don't know. What I do know is that you have always been a warm, kind, and caring member of my church, and I would hate to lose you from our family."
Stepping forward a little, he sighed again as he tried to make his way though the next thing he wanted to say. "I... I'm so sorry for your loss, Jocelyn. Grace was a bright light every Sunday, and I'm sure to you she was much more than that. This world is a darker place at her passing. I can offer no words of consolation to you that will ease the pain. For a loved one to die so young, with so much of life yet to live, is more than a loss. It's a tragedy."
Clearing his throat, he saw Josh look at him once more. "For you, I can only imagine how it must feel, and then I find myself realizing that I can't imagine it. I... I choose to believe that your feelings for Grace are no less than mine for Susan. Even if I were to lose her now, I at least would have the memories of our years together and the children we've raised. You... you lost Grace before you two even had a chance. I'm so sorry."
Not seeing much of any headway in reaching him, Daniel sighed once more and tried again to reach out. "I want you to know that when you're feeling better, you'll be welcome in any church I run. My sermon on Sunday is going to be on the subject of not judging others. I intend to cite your accident and what it said about you in it. I won't mention your name, but... I intend on asking them how they would feel if this was their daughter... their son... or a member of their congregation. That they shouldn't be so quick to judge you when they have their own sins condemning them... sins that are forgiven them by Christ's infinite love."
When Josh looked away to his window once more, Daniel stepped even closer. "One last thing, Jocelyn. I know right now you must feel that the pain will never end... that it'll surround you and drown you in it for the rest of your life and beyond, but I want to tell you a story. Once there was a king, and being king he wanted to seem wise no matter what was going on. So he tasked all the wise men of the kingdom to tell him what sage advice he could give to anyone... about anything... at any time... that would always be true. Finally, after months of listening to an endless parade of platitudes and witticisms, the eldest man in the kingdom came to him and offered him just four words..."
Taking Josh's hand in his, he squeezed it and sighed as a tear fell down the man's cheek. "'This too, shall pass.' May God bless you, Jocelyn Ryan."
After the pastor left, Josh felt the wetness soaking his cheek, his pillowcase having become soaked in the tears that had fallen silently from his eyes.
Over the next several days, Josh slowly began to respond to people again. Tracy and David visited him several times, catching him up on the things going on at school and elsewhere. It was the following Sunday when his convalescence was broken by another voice he did not expect to hear.
"Hi." Judy said from his doorway. "Mind some company?"
"No, that's fine, Judy." he said sadly. "I... I didn't think you'd ever speak to me again."
The broken woman slowly made her way into the room. "I... I wasn't going to." she admitted embarrassedly. "I didn't see what good it would do and I... it hurt too much."
Turning away from her, Josh stared out his window. "You must hate me."
"No!" Judy denied as she quickly crossed the room to his bed. "Jocelyn, I could never hate you! Least of all for this!" She sighed and sat in the chair on the opposite side of the bed from the window. "It isn't your fault! The boy that hit you was drunk, doing fifty miles an hour, and ran a red light! He is to blame! Not you! Why would you think I'd hate you?"
Torn apart, Josh couldn't even look at her. "If Grace hadn't been taking me to her house so we could be... alone... together for the first time, we wouldn't have been in the accident that killed her. If she would have just taken me home, we would have turned north a block sooner and never even been there to get hit. It's my fault she's dead! It should have been me that died! Not her!"
Standing up gently, Judy took Josh's hand. "I... I didn't know you two were going to...um..." Swallowing hard, she took a breath. "She loved you Jocelyn, as deeply as I loved Scott. You two made a beautiful couple. Her wanting to... share... that... with you... no matter that it turned out the way it did..." Tears dripped from her drawn and pale cheeks as she tried to console him. "You both deserved to be happy with each other, Jocelyn. I'm just sorry that it had to end... so soon... for you both."
"This too, shall pass." he said, finally understanding the pastor's words. "It's true. Everything ends." Collecting himself, he looked over at Judy. "I'll love Grace for the rest of my life, Judy. I promise."
Moving in close, she embraced Josh and cried harder than she had the night she'd lost her daughter. The two cried together for quite a while until at last Judy let him go and stepped back. "We... ah... we had the services for her last week. I'm sorry you were stuck here, but... if you like, I'll... I'll take you to see her... once you get released."
Nodding and wiping away his tears with the tissue she handed him, Josh looked down at the tissue in his hands, fiddling with it absently. "Thank you, Judy. I... I appreciate that. You don't have to."
"I know." she answered stoically. "I want to. Grace... would want me to."
The following Monday, sixteen days after the horrible night he was admitted, Josh's parents took him home. His extended stay was due to the head injury he suffered, which was also the cause of his seizures.
He knew that he was actually quite lucky to have escaped the accident with as few injuries as he had. He didn't even break a bone. The only lasting effects were his headaches, for which he was prescribed mild pain killers, and trouble sleeping, for which he was prescribed a mild sedative. His doctor had told him that even those should pass within a month, leaving him with no bodily scars to mark the event.
Instead, his scars were much deeper.
Josh didn't go to church the next Sunday as he had somewhere else to be. Instead he was picked up by Judy and driven to the cemetery.
Riding in silence, Josh turned to her as they approached his love's final resting place. "Thank you, Judy."
She didn't reply. She couldn't without breaking out in tears and completely falling apart again. Pulling in and parking, the two got out and wordlessly made their way through the grounds. Josh felt the oppression of his life with every step, his low black heals clacking on the concrete walkway and the black of his skirt and the gray of his silk blouse matching his emotions. When at last they turned off the walkway, Judy's arm around his shoulders, she led him to the freshly dug grave, his love buried six feet beneath the fresh sod and marked by a simple gray stone.
Grace Elaine Wright he read as he came to a stop, the flowers in his hands all but forgotten. November second, nineteen ninety-two to April tenth, two thousand ten. "She Loved Enough to Last A Lifetime" Reading the epitaph, Josh fell to his knees and began to sob uncontrollably, his hands gripping the sod and crushing the grass and some of the flowers he'd brought for her. After a moment, he felt Judy crouch down next to him, holding him and crying alongside him. Once his feelings were spent for the moment, he took a tissue from his purse and dried his eyes, nodding at her.
"I... I'm OK, J...Judy." he choked. "I'll... be alright." Looking back to the gravestone, he turned to her again. "Could... could I have a moment... alone with her? Please?"
Judy sniffed and wiped her own tears away with a nod. "Sure, sweetie. Just... just let me know when you're done, OK?"
While Judy walked a short distance away to give Josh his last farewell, he picked up the remains of the flowers he'd brought and carried them to rest in front of the stone. Kneeling as though in prayer, he laid his hand on the cold marble. "Grace?" he whispered, "I... I don't know if you can hear me, but I need to say it just one more time. I love you! I'll always love you!" Standing up, with tears running down his cheeks, he sighed with a shudder before turning to walk away.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Attempted Suicide
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
CAUTION - Intense scenes involving a minor
--
A month to the day after the accident, Josh went back to school. He walked into the building dressed in a black skirt, top, tights, and flats. He also carried the black backpack that Grace had used for the last three years, the same one he'd had before her. Judy let him keep it as a memento of their love, along with a few other things. He'd asked about the carving he'd given her for her sixteenth birthday, but Judy told him she'd been buried holding it, unwilling to make her daughter ever part with the gift she'd loved nearly as much as Josh himself.
Not even looking at the other students, he never saw their looks of sorrow, regret, or guilt, nor heard the solemn greetings and condolences of passers-by who hadn't spoken to him in years, if ever. He didn't care. Figuring that if they hadn't been good enough to be friendly to him before, he didn't see what difference Grace being dead mattered. He hated them all.
He wasn't interested in their pity. To his way of thinking, they'd had years to be nice. That they felt sorry for him because he nearly died and his best and only friend and love did die, meant that their feelings weren't genuine. Nobody is my friend. he told himself. It's just better that way. Only horrible things happen to people who are friends with a freak like me! The boy in the skirt!
Going through the morning, he got a month of back work and meaningless condolences from his teachers and a wide berth from his fellow students. As the day progressed, fewer people tried to extend the hand of friendship as word got around that he was being completely anti-social. When at last lunch came, he sat at the same table that he and Grace had eaten at for three years, now eating there truly alone. Just as he was about to finish and leave, he heard someone sit beside him.
"Hey." Tracy said glumly. "I'd say welcome back, but I can see you're still not feeling any better."
Sighing as he finished his last bite, he looked at her, really looked at her, for the first time in years. She'd grown up, just as he had. Her chocolate brown hair had a natural curl that made for a pretty 'frizzy' style, and her athletic tone from cheerleading made her slim and attractive. Her hazel eyes stood in contrast to her fair skin, making them seem big and beautiful. She's really changed. he mused.
Looking down at his tray, his lips narrowed to a thin line. "Aren't you afraid to be seen with the freak, Trace? What would your captain Kelly Brooks say? You might get thrown off the squad just for talking to me!" he growled in a tone that was far too feminine for his mood.
"Joss!" Tracy whined. "Come on! You are not a freak! You're like my sister! Besides, Kelly can't throw me off the squad, even if she wanted to, which she doesn't!" Pausing and seeing Josh's mood unchanged, she tried to reach out to him once more. "After... well... after the Prom, a bunch of us got together, including Kelly, and talked about how bad we all felt about how we treated you and Grace. We all just kind of snubbed you two all through school, and now... now Grace is gone and you... you're hurt, not just from the accident, but from what we did. What I'm trying to say is that we're all sorry, most especially me. I should have known better. You were my BFF!"
Getting up and then glaring down at her, Josh's stare could have welded steel. "I don't need your pity, Trace!" he shouted loud enough for the entire room to go quiet. "You all had years to realize what bitches you were being to me and Grace! Now that Grace is dead... you want forgiveness? Screw you! It's too late! She's dead! You don't get any forgiveness 'cuz she's not here to give it to you, so you sure as hell aren't getting any from me!"
Still not done, Josh let her have both barrels. "You just want me to forgive you so you don't feel bad for how you all treated us like shit all these years! Well, you don't deserve forgiveness! You've done nothing to undo the five years of abject humiliation you put me through! I hope it eats you alive, Trace! Just leave me alone!"
Stomping off, he threw his tray at the garbage can, bouncing off the rim to fall to the floor with a loud clatter as he stormed out the door, leaving a room full of students feeling guilt and shame for their own actions toward the two. In the middle of it all, Tracy began to sob.
Going to his and Grace's spot, he saw two girls he'd hoped never to run into again, Karen and Lucy, sitting there apparently waiting for him. Moving in on them like a hurricane, they didn't even get a chance to say whatever they wanted before he laid into them. "What do you two bitches want? To beg forgiveness for snubbing me ever since Jenn left and blaming me for her trying to kill herself?" He continued with a similar litany that he'd doled out to Tracy until the two left in tears.
Sitting down on the spot he and Grace spent so many hours, Josh tried to imagine her sitting next to him. Grace? I... I know I'm being a total jerk, but I can't let anyone get close to me ever again. he spoke his thoughts to the universe. Everything ends... and friendship quickest of all. Even yours. I know you didn't want to go, but neither did Jenn. So now I'm left here all alone and I won't let anyone else I care about get hurt like that ever again!
When lunch ended, Josh repeated the morning procedure with his afternoon classes. After the bell rang and he started his walk home, he heard someone running up behind him. His fury pressed to its limits, he spun around and turned his ire toward whoever it was that was about to confront him.
"Jocelyn!" David shouted running up to him. "Trace just told me you bit her head off at lunch! She's a total wreck! What did you say to her?"
His adrenaline pumping, Josh let his anger loose. "I told her the truth, Dave! That she's a total bitch and so are you! I don't need anyone's pity, least of all yours! You blew me off years ago! You both did! Now it's my turn! Blow, jerk-wad! You had years to apologize for dumping me as your friend! Now you feel bad about it? Tough shit! It's too late! Grace is dead and as far as you're concerned, so am I! Don't ever talk to me again!"
Turning to storm off, he felt David grab his arm to stop him. Whipping around, Josh slapped him hard across the face, making David let him go. "Don't you ever touch me again, faggot!" he screamed.
The sixteen-year-old boy was stunned. He was mad at Josh for yelling at his sister, but he'd been willing to listen to Josh's side. The violence and hatred flashing in his ex-friend's eyes was beyond reason; beyond reach. Backing away with his hand covering the sting on his cheek, David watched as Josh turned and stalked away from him.
Spending all his free time doing makeup work, Josh's life was reduced to school, sleep, and the meals his parents insisted he eat. The only exception was the four hours Josh took each Sunday to walk to Grace's grave, clean it, tell her he loved her, that he'd see her soon, and walk home. All else was just existence. By the last day of May, he'd finally caught up with all of his schoolwork just in time for finals and the end of the school year.
No one tried talking to him after that first day back. Once he was an outcast, but between the two outbursts at lunch and the one after school, over half the student body had personally seen his fury. None of them wanted Josh's righteous anger pointed at them.
The Sunday after school let out, as Josh got home from the cemetery, Fred caught him before he ran upstairs.
"Jocelyn! Could you come here a moment?" His voice was only mildly harsh when he said Josh's loathed name.
Turning around halfway up the stairs, Josh put a hand on one hip and cocked his head to one side. "What?"
"A call came for you while you were out." he stated. "It was a Mr. Roberts. I think I remember him coming to the hospital to see you before you woke up. He said he was your councilor, but Caller ID said it was from a church!"
"Oh, him." Josh spat. "I'll see to it that he never calls again! I'll be up in my room." Just as Fred was going to ask more questions, Josh ran up the rest of the stairs, slammed his bedroom door, and locked it.
Melanie came out of the master bedroom and looked up the stairs before turning to Fred. "What was that all about?"
Her husband just kept looking up to the landing where Josh disappeared. "I don't know, Mel... but I don't like it."
Shaking her head, she turned away. "We just need to let her work through it. We don't want to push her. She's very fragile right now. She needs time to work through the pain and re-center on her own self-identity." Heading back to her room, Melanie's voice faded as she went. "It'll be good for her in the long run, losing Grace. Jocelyn was far too dependent on that conservative of a girl. Women need their independence or they lose their options..."
Josh lay on his bed and read the first prescription bottle. The one hundred milligram Phenobarbital tablets had a two-fold purpose; they helped prevent a relapse of his seizures and acted as a sedative to help him get to sleep at night. He was supposed to take one per day just before bed until all twenty were gone, but he'd not taken any since leaving the hospital.
Putting it down, he picked up the second. The Fioricet was to help with the headaches, but he was warned not to take any after two in the afternoon to minimize drug interactions and only as necessary. His doctor didn't like giving Josh the two drugs together, but felt the risks were lower than if he'd given him a stronger pain reliever. He'd taken only two, enduring the pain and sleeplessness, and still had a nearly full bottle of forty tablets. As far as his parents knew, they were all gone. He made sure that's what they believed, and had years of practice making them believe what they wanted of him.
The pain he could handle. It was nothing compared to the pain of the empty shell his heart had become. The sleeplessness he actually preferred over the nightmares he suffered when he'd been made to take the Phenobarbital in the hospital. Half the time they were horrifying concoctions of half-remembered scenes of the accident. The rest he dreamed that he was trapped in a car at night while it sat on railroad tracks; Grace sitting next to him and smiling, blissfully unaware of the lights from the train racing at them and the blaring of its horn. That is, until it struck them with the force of an atomic bomb.
Sitting up, he placed the two bottles on his nightstand and got out of bed. Plopping down at his vanity, he pulled out his laptop and began to write, taking half a day to re-write, tweak, fix, add, and get his letter perfect.
To Whomever Gives A Shit, My name is Joshua Vincent Ryan. NOT Jocelyn Viola! I AM A BOY! My father, Fred Ryan, is a weak-willed IDIOT. My mother, Dr. Melanie Ryan, is a sadistic WITCH. From the time I was 5 until the age of 12, they kept telling me I was gay. I knew what gay meant. I had a best friend that was gay named David Edwards. I knew I had no interest in boys, and by the time I was 9 I actually started liking girls... but my idiot parents just told me I was just REPRESSING being gay, sent me to LGBT summer camps, and refused to listen to me. Tracy and David Edwards can confirm all this. They first forced me to start wearing girl clothes in September of 2005 when I was 12 years old. That's when they told me I was supposedly a transgender GIRL! I told my parents REPEATEDLY that I was a boy, but they refused to listen. OK, so I did some girly things. So what? That didn't make me a girl any more than them making me put on a dress did. They signed me up for Middle School as a transgendered girl and took away all my boy clothes. I had ZERO choice in it all. There was a girl at school that understood me. Jennifer and her parents tried to help. Since I was 12, I just did what the grown-ups said I should do. My asshole parents then proceeded to TRAUMATIZE both me and Jenn so badly that Jenn tried to KILL herself. They're THAT bad! My mother tricked me into getting castrated when I was 14. After that I gave up fighting it. No one would listen and it was too late to undo anything. Then, miracle of miracles, I met another girl who understood me. Her name was Grace Wright. We were just friends for a while, but I knew she liked me as more than a friend. She didn't care if I was a boy or a girl... she just liked ME. Eventually we started to date and on her 16th birthday we professed our love for one another. We were going to be married and have a family. She was everything to me; my reason to live. Now I've lost her and I have nothing to look forward to except a future trapped in a body I hate, with a name I loathe, and am expected to just pretend everything is sunshine and rainbow flags! I could wait 8 months until I'm 18 and then tell my parents where to go, but I don't care about getting away from them anymore. Now I just want to get away from ME and what my parents made me become because they WOULDN'T LISTEN. It's sad, really. If I HAD been transgender, my life would have been a dream come true. But I'm not, so it's a NIGHTMARE. My parents USED me because it made them look good with their liberal friends and they had a political axe to grind. They wanted something they could shove in conservative faces and say "Look! You're MEAN and HATEFUL because you hate this little girl!" Even when the love of my life was killed by a drunk driver, they went out of their way to make a point that she was my 'lesbian girlfriend' and I was 'trans'. Any way you look at it, that's just wrong! Using my pain to further their cause! I HATE them! So my only option left is death... or torture and THEN death. Death will come to me eventually anyway; I'm just cutting out the long, torturous time waiting for it to GET here. EVERYTHING ends. EVERYBODY dies. So what difference does it make now or later? I've been secretly going to church for 5 years now. It HAD to be a secret because my atheist parents are psychopaths who hate Christians over a fucking difference of theological opinion that neither side can ever prove anyway! I'm an agnostic... I keep an open mind, just not so open that my brains fall out. So why did an agnostic 'T-girl' who was secretly still a boy go to church? Because I MET them... and they were NICE to me. Yes, they treated me as a girl, but EVERYBODY did that. I liked that they believed in something they couldn't prove, just like I couldn't prove I was always a boy. I also found a quiet beauty in spending time with people who hardly ever spent that time bitching about this, that, or the other thing! Yes, there were a few bad apples, but the most of them were just nice to be around. My pastor most especially. I'm sorry, Pastor. I know you think suicide is a sin, but I can't live this life one more minute without hope... and my hope died when my Grace died. If God is real, I can only hope that he understands my agony and forgives me. It's all you're counting on too... so I don't see the difference. Judy? I've never forgiven myself for Grace's death and I never will. I know you tried to make me feel better, but I know that she's dead because she was in a hurry to take me home and make love to me on our Prom night. If not for that, we would have never been hit by that idiot. It IS my fault. Now I'll join her. It wasn't fair that I got to live and she had to die. It would have been better if I'd died with her. Half of me DID die that night. I'm just finishing the job. To my parents? FUCK OFF. I'm just another 'Trans' suicide statistic now. I know you'll just use my death to push for 'gender rights' even harder... claiming I was bullied by 'those evil Christians' until I killed myself. Lie to everyone else if you like, but know the truth: those 'evil' Christians were one of only two things that kept this from happening YEARS ago! Unfortunately, without Grace, going to church isn't enough to save me. (Funny, that works for actual Christians, too!) I truly hope you are devastated by this and HATE yourselves for what you did to me. I want you to suffer as much as you made ME suffer. Unfortunately, you're too fucking selfish to even care. If either of you have a decent bone in your body, you'll bury me in what I'm wearing with a headstone showing my birth name and, if Judy will allow it, next to my Grace. To Tracy and David, I once loved you better than family. Then, when I needed you most, you threw me under the bus and abandoned me. I forgive you, even if you don't deserve it. I suppose I can understand. You had your own problems. Mine are too much for anyone, even me. So I'm sorry for the things I said when I came back to school. I just hurt so much that I wanted others to hurt too, and I also wanted to keep you away. Everyone I ever cared about or who cared about me gets hurt, so maybe you can understand. It was wrong. I was wrong. I love you both. It's time. By the time anyone reads this, I'll be long gone. I know it sounds cliché, but it works because it's true. If anyone finds me and I'm not dead yet, please just let me die. I should have died in that accident with Grace. Now I can finally join her.
Examining and re-reading the letter, Josh saved it for sending on the schedule that he'd set to go to the local police, Pastor Roberts, Judy, and Tracy at two in the morning. He didn't bother sending one to his parents since he knew his father read his email anyway.
He stripped naked and got out the boy clothes he'd kept hidden in his closet behind his old pink robe. Getting dressed and stuffing his hair in the cap, he took a last look at himself. I still look like a girl in boy clothes. he shuddered. Worse, I look like a young woman in boy's clothes! Accepting that he couldn't improve on his appearance, he went over to his nightstand and opened the bottle of Phenobarbital and laid out all the tablets.
He knew he didn't have enough to ensure his death, two grams being barely adequate, but taken in combination with at least half of the Fioricet, the interaction of both should do the job. Having read the warning labels as a set of instructions, he knew that if he took them all at once he might throw up, so he started by taking one and waiting on his bed for thirty minutes. While he waited, he pulled out the old shoebox that contained all of the letters that Jennifer had given him and read them all, finally understanding the utter hopelessness written in her last letter.
When he felt the effects begin to kick in, that woozy feeling he hated, he took eight more and five Fioricet. Waiting ten minutes, he took the rest of the Phenobarbital and five more Fioricet. Feeling very drowsy, he knew he needed another ten painkillers to finish the job and he wanted to wait ten more minutes to take them. Getting up, he paced his room, looked at his posters, and enjoyed feeling like a boy again.
When he felt he couldn't stay awake any longer, he shuffled towards his bed. This is it. he accepted. I'll just lay down, fall asleep, and never wake up. Thinking of Grace, remembering her smile and the feel of her hand in his, he smiled and hummed 'There's a Place for Us' to himself as he slowly sat on his bed. "Wait for me, Grace." he said with a tear. "I'm coming." He took two of the last ten tablets, one at a time, before blackness took him.
Some time later, Melanie and Fred were awoken by a loud knocking. After a moment, Fred started to rouse.
"Someone's at the door." he yawned, kicking the covers off. While he made his way to the front door, Melanie put on a robe. The knocking became more urgent before he shouted out, "I'm coming!" Opening the door, he saw two uniformed policemen with an ambulance crew standing behind them at the ready. "What's going on?"
"Is this the Ryan residence?" Officer Kyle Nelson, the policeman on the left, asked.
"Yes." he said hesitantly. "What about it?"
"Who is it, Fred?" Melanie asked as she came up to join him.
"Cops." Fred groused. "They woke us up in the middle of the night to ask who we were!"
"Mister Ryan?" the policeman stated impatiently, "May we come in?"
"You got a warrant?" Fred spat at him. "If not then you can get the hell off my property!"
"We have a report of a possible suicide at this address by a... Joshua Ryan." the man said as he looked at his notepad. "Does he live at this address?"
"Her name is Jocelyn Ryan!" Melanie spat at him. "You pigs are so..." Pausing as it dawned on her what he'd said, she did a double take. "Did you say suicide?" Quickly, she and Fred looked at one another in horror.
"Jocelyn!" they screamed together as both ran for the stairway. Even as they ran up the stairs, the police and EMS crew, now knowing they had the right place, entered uninvited on the grounds of exigent circumstances.
Reaching Josh's door, Fred found it locked. Terrified, he slammed his body against the door to no avail. It refused to open. "Stupid lock!" he yelled as he tried again and again until Kyle reached them.
"Is he in here?" Kyle asked. Seeing Fred nod, even as Melanie screamed at him for 'misgendering' Josh, the officer made them move into the bathroom and kicked the door in, sending a shower of wood splinters into the room. Charging in, hand on his weapon in case Josh had a gun for his suicide, he saw a boy laying face down on the bed in a pool of his own vomit. "In here!" he shouted as he raced up to Josh.
While Fred and Melanie tried to push their way in, the second officer held them in the bathroom to give the EMS crew access.
"Get out of my way!" Fred tried to push past him.
"Sir!" Officer King shouted. "Let the EMS crew handle this! You'll just get in their way, slow them down, and you might kill your son!"
"Daughter!" Melanie shouted as she tried to get past him as well. "You stupid fascist pig! We have a daughter! Who said you could come in our home! Get out! Jocelyn!"
Officer Nelson turned Josh over and felt for a pulse, but found none. Looking at the boy, his face covered in very recent vomit, he looked like a typical teenage boy, even though the room was decidedly feminine. That is, until the cap fell off Josh's head when he moved him to the floor. Suddenly the vaguely plain 'boy' resolved into a definite girl.
The EMS crew entered and began CPR immediately, not even knowing yet if Josh was already dead. Kyle assisted them while Officer King held back his wailing parents. He hated rolling up to see a kid like this. It terrified him as he thought each one was just like one of his own children. Doing chest compressions, the ace bandage restraining Josh's breasts not making it any easier, a moment later one of the EMS crew cut it off with a pair of scissors. Not even thinking, Kyle placed the heel of his hand between Josh's breasts and resumed compressions as the other EMS member prepared a breathing tube.
A few minutes later, they had Josh in the ambulance and began racing to the nearest hospital while one of the crew kept up chest compressions and the other forced air into his lungs. Kyle was exhausted from the effort as he watched the vehicle race away, but hoped he'd made a difference that night.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Referenced Attempted Suicide
--
Floating in a dream state, Joss wondered if this was what death was, an endless sea of nothingness for all eternity.
"Of course it isn't!" she answered.
Wanting to turn to the source of the voice, Joss was frustrated by the lack of everything, including a body to turn around.
"It's OK, Joss." she said kindly. "Don't be scared."
He knew the voice well. "Grace!" he screamed frustratedly.
"I'm right here!" she groaned. "You don't need to yell!"
"Where are you?" Where am I? he wondered.
"Nowhere special." she answered both questions. "Just a place where we can talk." her voice turning sad, she sighed. "Why'd you give up, Joss?"
Wanting to cry, he felt the sadness cover him like a blanket, threatening to smother him. "You... you died. I was alone and it... it hurt too much to keep going!"
"You weren't alone, Joss!" Grace said with a hint of irritation. "You can't lie to me! Even if you lie to yourself, I can see you! Mom was there, and Tracy and David, Karen and Lucy, Pastor Roberts, even Officer Nelson."
"Who?" he asked curiously.
"The policeman who found you." she huffed as though it were the most obvious thing in the world. "You scared him, Joss! That wasn't very nice of you! Just think how sad all those people will be if you die!"
"Sorry." he grumbled. "I guess I didn't think about the poor guy that would find me, how it would make him feel." A feeling of warmth pushed away his sadness, flowing through him. He didn't need to ask what it was. The feeling was the same when Grace hugged him. "Thanks, Grace. I... I miss you!"
"I miss you too." she stated somberly. "It's OK, though! It had to be this way. If Peter hadn't hit us, I'd of died in a year anyway from cancer, and a year from now would be too late for you. Given the choice, at least this way didn't hurt. I didn't know what happened 'til I was here. Also Peter will be different. He won't kill those little kids two years from now. He explained it all to me."
"Who?" Joss asked again.
Giggling, he could hear the smile in her voice. "Him! Or Her. Neither one really works. He's not a man or woman, He just is. I only said 'He' out of habit, I guess."
"You mean... God?" he said tentatively.
"I didn't mean Santa Claus!" Grace laughed. "We've got it all wrong, Joss! He's not like anything we ever imagined!"
"Where is He? I mean, I'm dead. Shouldn't I be seeing Him or something?"
"You're not dead yet! Besides, He's everywhere, Joss! He always was! He's in everything! Everywhere and every time... all at once! He's so beautiful!"
"Then where is He?" he wondered aloud.
"He's a bit miffed at you at the moment." Grace chided him. "He knew you were going to do this, but that doesn't mean He had to like it."
"Oh." Joss said simply. "So... am I going to Hell then?"
"Only if you die... and only if you send yourself." Grace answered. "He doesn't condemn us to Hell, we can only do it to ourselves." she explained.
"Why would anyone condemn themselves to Hell?" he mostly asked himself.
"Guilt." she answered sadly. "He shows you what He had in mind for your life. Then you get to see all the evil you did by not doing what you should have done and how much better everything could have been if you'd done it. I should have been easier on my Mom, and there was a kid in my old school, remember? That girl I told you about that didn't look very girly? I should have been nicer to her. She could have had a better life if I had been. Now..." Her voice trailed off as a feeling of remorse washed over Joss.
"How were you supposed to know?" he asked irritatedly. "I mean, if He has all these plans for us, why keep it a secret? Why not tell us what we're supposed to do? Isn't that a little mean?"
"I knew." Grace said guiltily. "I felt it in my heart when I said mean things about her behind her back. Just like you knew when you told off Tracy and David that it was wrong. We always know... we just ignore it."
"Still, He doesn't have to point it out, does He?" Joss debated. "I mean, it's too late to fix it. Why rub it in?"
"It's just how it works." she answered. "You'll see. Then it'll make sense."
"So, when?" he wondered. "How long do I stay here?"
"Until it's decided." Grace answered cryptically. "Now, don't give me any of that!" she laughed. "You always do that when you don't like the answer!"
"Do what?" he asked honestly. "What'd I do?"
"Roll your eyes at me!"
I have eyes? he wondered to himself.
"You can see, can't you?"
"No... well, not really. It's just black. Nothing. But I can sorta see it."
"Oh." Grace said disappointedly. "I guess you're punishing yourself. That explains a lot. I hope you learn to forgive yourself."
"So... you can see me?" he hoped.
"Of course I can!" she insisted. "You're so beautiful! Just like always!"
Pausing a moment, he had to know the answer. "Grace? Am I... do I look like a boy or a girl?"
"Same thing I always tell you, Joss! You're you!"
"That's not really an answer, Grace!" he groused.
"Well, it's the only one that works." she stated matter-of-factly. "You're you... my wonderful Joss!"
Feeling the warmth of her hug again, Joss suddenly felt it vanish and grew cold. "What's happening?" he asked fearfully.
"It's been determined. Doctor Hicks did everything right, and you didn't."
"What do you mean?" he asked curiously.
"You took too long to get your letter just right." she explained. "It was one in the morning when you took your first pill. You just didn't notice. Still, it was kind of up in the air. Doctor Hicks could have chosen to give up on you after the third time, but he didn't. You're going back."
"No!" he yelled. "Grace, please! I don't want to! I want to stay here with you! I have nothing back there without you!"
"You have to, Joss." she pointed out unhappily. "I miss you too, but you're not done yet. That's why a year from now would have been... Oh!"
"What?" he asked, wondering what it was that surprised her.
"Um... He's here! He doesn't usually come here. This is the place He chooses not to be to let people understand on their own, or with help if anyone is willing, like me! That's my job! I'm a Helper, just like Daddy is! He wanted to be your Helper so you'd get a chance to meet him like you always wanted to, but I insisted! He could never say no to me!" she giggled.
Confused, Joss began to feel an overwhelming sense of love and compassion, one so big it drowned out everything else. Slowly the darkness began to fade into gray warmth, then white brilliance, and finally into a dazzling light brighter than anything he could ever have imagined. There, standing in front of him, was Grace as he remembered her best, the fourteen-year-old girl with the pixie haircut and exuberant attitude.
"Grace!" he smiled.
"No." she said with an ethereal voice that echoed with billions of voices in perfect harmony. "She is here. She is with Me." The feeling of love pushed through Joss like waves of water, penetrating every part of his being. "She has done what she needed to do, to help you see." Even as the waves of love emanating from Grace's form suffused his very soul, a terrible feeling of dread overwhelmed him. "Do not throw away My gift again!" The voices were all raised as if in anger, but felt more like frustration and irritation.
Overcome, Joss had to look away from the blinding brilliance as guilt filled him, only to be pushed away by the unending tide of love and compassion.
Hearing the voices soften again, Joss turned to face Grace once more. "I gave you a rare gift. You know what to do with it." the voices echoed.
"Bye Joss." Grace said in her own voice. "I'll miss you, but I better not see you here too soon or I'll thump ya'!" she giggled. "Just follow your heart..."
Joss's eyes fluttered open. Once more he was in a hospital room, only this time he was alone. Trying to sit up, he found himself restrained as before, but with straps holding his wrists. Glancing around, he saw a small remote next to his hand with a single button on it, a line-art icon of a traditional nurse's cap decorating it. Picking it up, Joss pressed the button and waited.
Within a minute, he heard footsteps approaching. Turning his head, he saw a woman in her forties walking up to him.
"Afternoon." she stated professionally, looking at his chart. "I'm Carolyn. Is it Joshua or Jocelyn?" she asked without prejudice, Joss noting that her voice had a bit of a British accent to it.
Croaking a whisper, he felt like someone had punched him in the throat. "You can call me Joss." he managed to eke out.
"Joss it is, then." she said with a half-hearted smile. Checking the machine next to him that was monitoring his vitals, she noted the readings before sitting on the corner of his bed. "Want some water?"
He nodded and watched as the woman brought him a cup with a straw, letting him sip a few drops before taking it away.
"Not too much." she said in warning. "Your body's been through the wars!"
Nodding in understanding, he tried to clear his throat, regretting it almost immediately as the pain nearly overpowered him.
"Easy, love!" the woman admonished gently. "Don't push. Try and go slow."
Swallowing and enduring the pain, he tried again. "Where am I?" he asked in a gravely voice.
Sighing, she looked at him with pity. "You're in the psychiatric observation ward at Southwest General. You remember what happened, Joss?"
Guiltily, he turned away from her. "I... I did something stupid I wish I could take back." his voice starting to sound normal after painfully clearing his throat again.
Smiling at him sympathetically, the nurse stood up. "Well that's a good start, anyway." she offered. "Need anything else?"
Looking down at the restraints, he looked up at her pleadingly. "Do these have to stay on?"
"Sorry, love." she shrugged.
"Another sip of water then, please?"
Giving it to him, Carolyn smiled down at him compassionately. "You're quite the pretty young thing, Joss... if you don't mind my saying so." she said softly. "For someone like you, it must be a nice... a rare gift."
Her words ran his memory back to the half-remembered dream he'd awoken from, suddenly not sure if it was a dream or not. "Like me?" he asked.
"Your chart says you're transgender... undergoing hormone therapy? There's a note that says you were having second thoughts though, so I wasn't sure how to address you. That's why I asked. I was just pointing out that a lot of girls like you could be so lucky to look so pretty... a rare gift. Hope you don't mind, love."
Shaking his head, he leaned up to get another sip. Swallowing it carefully, he was pleased that it didn't hurt so much this time. "Thanks, and no... I don't mind. I know I'm pretty. That's part of the problem."
Putting the cup on his rolling tray, she smiled at him and shook her head. "I have to get back now. You be alright?" Seeing him nod, she turned and walked out of his room.
Nearly an hour passed before he heard footsteps once more. "Glad to see you awake... Joss." a man said consulting the nurse's notes.
Looking over at who had come in, Joss knew at once he was a doctor just by his bearing, even though he wore business clothes. "I'm Doctor Benson. Mind if I ask you a few questions?"
Shaking his head, Joss tried smiling at him. "It's fine, doctor." he answered, disheartened a little that his name wasn't Hicks. Guess it was all just a dream after all. he admitted his disappointment inwardly.
Pulling up a chair and sitting next to the bed, the man regarded him earnestly. "You seem sad."
Taking a breath, Joss glanced at him again. "Just regretting being stupid." he half-lied. He did regret trying to kill himself, but was honestly more sad that his time with Grace was nothing but a fantasy.
"How were you stupid, Joss?"
"Trying to kill myself. I... I wish I could take it back."
Arching his brows at the boy's unexpected response, he looked over Joss's charts once more. "You wish you hadn't tried, or you wish you'd done it a different way?"
"Hadn't tried. I... I..." Joss shook his head. Concluding who it was he was talking to, he tried to encapsulate into words what he was feeling. The power of compassion and love that he'd felt in his dream made him realize just how much he'd nearly lost, but he didn't want to tell Doctor Benson about it for fear that he'd be locked up for thinking he'd met God. "I guess I just realized when I woke up that it was a stupid thing to do. Trying to kill myself, I mean. I shoulda known better. My friend Jennifer tried, too."
Shifting in his seat, Dr. Emanuel Benson regarded Joss curiously. "That's quite an unusual attitude for someone who just found out they failed." he commented. "Normally, the first response is regret that they didn't succeed. What changed your mind?"
Shrugging absently, Joss turned away from him. "I feel awful!"
Chuckling, the doctor noted it and looked back at Joss. "If you would have succeeded, you wouldn't feel awful. You wouldn't feel anything. Wasn't that why you did it? To make the pain stop?"
Nodding, he looked back at the man. "Yeah, but there were other ways to deal with it. I knew that, but killing myself seemed like the easiest way." Seeing Dr. Benson scratching some notes, Joss recognized the behavior. "You're a psychiatrist, aren't you?"
"Yes." he admitted. "I figured it wouldn't take you long to determine, your mother being a psychologist and all. Normally, I try and talk to my patients a while before I let them know. People get intimidated when they know that they're talking to a psychiatrist, but not you. Why is that?"
Noting his technique, Joss giggled. "I see what you did there! I know the routine... that's why, Doctor Benson. You ask questions meant to get through people's defenses. I'm not saying it's bad or anything, I just know the deal. Inside information, and all."
Jotting down more notes, he looked back up at Joss. "Alright then, Joss... you're being direct, so I will as well. Are you transgendered?"
Grimacing, Joss knew the doctor would ask, but hadn't yet figured out how to answer. "I don't know, doc." he said honestly. "I mean, I'm not dysphoric, if that's what you mean. I liked being a boy, but as to being trans? I just don't know. Being a girl is just easier."
"Because of how your parents treat you?" he asked.
"Yes... well, that and it sorta comes naturally, I guess." he admitted. "I've always been kinda girly. That's why my parents thought I was gay when I was little." He couldn't keep the derision out of his voice as he answered.
"You don't like your parents very much, do you?"
"Not really, no. I mean, I love 'em, but they think they know me better than I do. They would never listen when I told them how I felt."
"Parents are supposed to know their children." the doctor pointed out. "They have the advantage of better judgement and more perspective."
"But as was pointed out to me once, every child is a unique person." Joss countered. "We aren't clones of our parents. Their experience and judgement isn't necessarily appropriate to our situations. That's why they should actually listen and take the kid's perspective into account. Anyway, most of parenting is just educated guesswork and hoping you didn't mess up."
Furrowing his brow, he grinned weakly. "Where'd you hear that?"
Smiling at the memory of his time with the Healys and the sage advice from John, he sighed fondly. "The best source available, a loving parent. Not one of mine." he added harshly.
Taking notes, he looked up at Joss. "You seem to be an emotionally healthy person... maybe more so than average. So why did you want to die?"
"Did you read my letter?" Joss asked, knowing he would have. Seeing the man nod, he turned away embarrassedly. "It's pretty much all there. I wanted to escape what my parents turned me into." Gesturing to himself with his restrained hands, he glanced back up at him. "From this body... from the constant reminders that I look, sound, write, and probably eat like a girl!"
"How does a girl eat that's different from a boy?"
Rolling his eyes that the man took the statement seriously, Joss looked away. "That was a joke."
"Do you think this is a good time for jokes, Joss?"
"Sorry." he apologized sincerely. "Bad habit. Guess it comes from being a joke. The boy who looks and acts like a girl, but feels like a boy."
"Do you always talk so badly about yourself being transgendered?"
"Only since my parents forced me to become a joke."
"You think being transgendered is a joke?" the older man asked.
"It is if you aren't!" Joss snapped back. Forcing himself to calm down, he took a breath. "Sorry. But I will not be shoved down that road."
"What road is that?"
"The one where you back me into a corner, forcing me to say that there's nothing wrong with me being trans!" he nearly growled. "Because there is something wrong with it! I'm not! I have nothing against trans people! I just don't happen to be one! I'm not Natalie Wood, either! Sure, there'd be nothing bad about it if I was, other than the fact that she's dead, but if people tried to treat me like I was her, that would be a problem!"
Making more notes, the doctor's eyes darted back toward Joss. "Do you think you're in a good enough place to even make that determination?"
Joss sat up as much as possible in the restraints and stared him directly in the eyes, unwaveringly. "Nobody gets to decide who I am, except me."
Pursing his lips, Dr. Benson noted something down before looking back up at him. Examining Joss carefully, he smiled. "That's an excellent answer, Joss. Just so you know, I only wanted to see how you would react to me trying to tell you who you are. I'm glad to see that you won't let someone do that to you."
"Not anymore." Joss stated coolly.
"That's a healthy attitude." the psychiatrist advised. "The willingness to fight to defend your identity shows your sense of self-preservation has re-asserted itself, reducing the probability that you'll attempt suicide again." Taking a few last notes, Dr. Benson stood up. "Well, I have some other people to see. It was a pleasure talking with you. I'll be back tomorrow."
As the man started to go, Joss had to ask. "Doctor Benson?" Seeing him turn back around, the boy sighed. "I'll understand if the answer is no, I mean, it's your butt if I were to try again, but..." He glanced down at the restraints. "Are these still necessary? I'd give you my word that I have no intention of hurting myself ever again, but I know that doesn't mean much to you. I wish Pastor Roberts was here. He could vouch for me."
Taking a breath, the barrel-chested psychiatrist looked at him seriously. "Joss, you're right. If I release you and you hurt yourself again, your parents could sue me for letting it happen."
"Then I guess it comes down to whether or not you'll take my word." Joss said, lying back down to stare up at the ceiling.
"I'd like to Joss." he said sadly. "I really would, but I just don't know you well enough to know if that means anything to you. You're also very adept at deception. You've been making people truly believe you're a girl for years when you say you aren't. That, on top of your mother's influence, you could know just what to say to me to make me believe you. I'm sorry. You don't realize how bad off you were when they brought you in. Given how much of what you took, it was a minor miracle that you survived. You might not have if Doctor Hicks hadn't been so stubborn."
Whipping his head around, Joss's eyes went wide. "What did you say?"
Perplexed, Emanuel Benson raised his eyebrows. "I was just saying that I don't know you well enough to tell..."
"No!" Joss interrupted him. "Doctor who?"
Gazing at the boy, his expression lightened. "Oh! Doctor Hicks! He's the emergency room physician that treated you when you first came in. He lost you three times, but he wouldn't give up. You wouldn't be here except for him." Looking at Joss concernedly he asked, "Are you alright?"
His face went ashen as he recalled the name Grace had told him. I suppose I could have heard it on the operating table. he tried to justify to himself, but the details were too startlingly accurate. "I... I'm fine." he lied. "I... I just never owed someone my life before."
"You don't owe him anything, Joss." Dr. Benson advised skeptically. "He does it because he loves helping people. It's in his nature." His expression turning jovial, the man tried to help elevate Joss's mood. "Besides, it's your parents who owe him. They'll be getting his bill next month! See they pay it! He's got student loans to pay that saved your life!"
Left alone again, Joss pondered his revelation. Was it real? he wondered. Or was it all just my brain taking in information and building an elaborate dream to fulfill my need to see Grace again? Then why couldn't I see her until the end when it wasn't her anymore?
Taking a deep breath, he closed his eyes and tried to sleep, but it eluded him for several hours.
He became aware of the fact that he must have dozed off when he looked up and saw the clock on the wall. It said it was a few minutes after nine, but without a window he didn't know if that was AM or PM. Lying back, he realized after a moment that he was very thirsty. Pressing the button on the remote again, this time a voice just came over a speaker.
"Yes?" the disembodied female voice asked.
"I'm thirsty." he stated simply. "Could someone get me some water, please?"
With a note of irritation the voice replied, "Someone will be in there shortly." followed by empty silence.
When the clock showed it was twenty minutes to ten, he considered pressing the button again. His thirst was agonizing; his throat hurting and his lips dry and cracking. Deciding to wait and find out if he'd been forgotten, it was a few minutes later when a woman finally came in looking very put out. Without saying a word, she picked up the cup of water and held it out in front of him impatiently.
Leaning forward in the restraints, Joss stretched himself to reach the straw, barely managing to put his lips on it and suck some of the refreshing liquid into his mouth. Holding it there a moment, he let it soak his lips and tongue before swallowing some. Not yet finished with his first drink, the woman put the cup down and started for the door at a brisk pace.
"Wait!" he begged, causing her to pause and look back at him scornfully. "Could I have more, please?"
Rolling her eyes, she stalked back to the bed and thrust the cup in front of him again. "Here!" she barked, the only word Joss ever heard her say.
Taking another drink, and certain that she'd walk off as soon as his lips left the straw, he took several gulps before filling his mouth with water until his cheeks bulged. As he predicted, the woman put the nearly empty cup down and left. He took several minutes to slowly let the water trickle down his throat, not wanting to run out too soon. After it was gone he felt better, but found he was wide-awake. He tried sleeping, but it wouldn't come. He lay there for countless idle hours with nothing to do but ponder his situation and listen to the electric hum of the clock on the wall.
When Carolyn came in the next morning, Joss snapped his eyes open, unsure when in the early hours of the morning he'd fallen asleep. Lifting his head, he smiled at her. "Good morning, Carolyn."
"Mornin', love!" she chirped. "Sleep well?"
"Not really." he admitted. "Could I get some water, please?" Once more he found himself parched, despite the IV bag pouring fluids into him.
Refilling the cup, Carolyn sat on the edge of the bed. "Here we are. Let's sit you up so you don't choke!"
Raising the head of the bed helped immensely as Joss took the offered straw in his lips and sucked gently. Swallowing little sips, he felt safe she wouldn't walk away before he was done.
Looking at him as he finished, she pushed the bangs out of his eyes. "Have a good talk with Doc Benson, then?" she asked knowingly.
He nodded and relaxed. "Yeah. He seems nice. I think he can help me."
Getting up, she put the empty cup down before noting Joss's vitals on his chart. "He is nice... for a trick cyclist!"
"Sorry, what?" Joss looked at her with confusion.
"Slang for psychiatrist, love." she explained. "He cares about his patients, maybe too much... 'specially young ones like yourself. He's too empathetic. He can look at you and just know how you feel. Eerie sometimes!"
Laughing together, Joss nodded. "I noticed that. He knew I was sad without me even saying a word."
"What were you sad about?" she asked.
Not wanting to lie like he had to Dr. Benson, he stared at her carefully. "Can I tell you a secret? One you won't put in your notes?"
Tilting her head, she looked at him askance. "I'm supposed to note anything you say, love... even you asking me to keep a secret."
Joss lay back, unwilling to risk getting labeled as a crackpot just to be honest. "Never mind. It's not important." he said disappointedly.
Wanting to help, Carolyn thought for a moment. "Tell you what, Joss. You tell me, and if I think it's not something the good Doctor needs to know, I won't note it. That fair?"
Deciding to trust her, he nodded and waited while she sat on his bed next to him again. "I was sad because I thought it was all a dream." Telling her what he'd experienced, he noted how he knew the name of the emergency room doctor and his tenacious attitude before Dr. Benson had told him. "I... I think it was God, Carolyn... but I'm afraid if Doctor Benson knows that's what I think, he might think that I'm totally insane, lock me up, and throw away the key!"
Listening quietly, Carolyn took it all in understandingly. "It's alright, love." she comforted as she moved Joss's bangs out of his eyes gently once more. "I understand. I don't think he'd lock you up, though. Pro'lly just tell ya' it was only a dream, but I believe you!"
Looking at her a moment, Joss smiled. "Thank you, Carolyn." His expression turning concerned, he asked, "Are you gonna tell him?"
Sighing as she got up, she picked up his chart. "I should, but I think I'll leave it to you, love. Tell him. Bet you he already knows you're keeping something from him. You should learn to trust people. He wants to help. You said so yourself!"
Leaving him with those thoughts, he considered her words. By the time Dr. Benson came in that afternoon, he'd made up his mind.
"How are you feeling today, Joss?" Emanuel asked as he pulled up a chair.
"Bored." he confessed. "And stiff from not being able to move, but I get it."
Noting it down, the man stood and unlatched Joss's restraints. "We'll see if they stay off, but for while I'm here at least, you can move a little. Just be careful of your IV and catheter."
Rubbing his wrists, Joss pushed himself up and felt his back pop. "Ohhh! That felt so good!" he moaned.
Chuckling a little as he sat back down, he reviewed the nurses' notes. Not seeing anything of interest, he went straight to the first question he had on his mind. "So how about we start with you telling me whatever it was you were dodging yesterday."
Turning away, Joss was embarrassed, but pressed forward. "I... I lied to you yesterday." he admitted. "When you asked why I was sad, I lied." Explaining about his experience, he finally got to his disappointment. "So, when you said your name was Benson, I thought it was all just a dream, but then you told me about Dr. Hicks. I already knew his name and about how hard he fought to save me. Grace told me."
Scribbling in a frenzy, Emanuel finally got it all down. "I can understand why you'd be afraid to admit all that Joss, but we don't lock people up for their beliefs. We lock them up for their own protection, or the protection of others. If you chose to believe that what you experienced was real, that's your choice. Now if you told me God said to try to kill yourself again or hurt other people, that would be different."
Relieved, Joss scooted over on his left side to face the man. "Thanks! I feel a little better now. I don't like lying to people. You're right. I do it too much already. I... I was just scared. Thanks for not thinking I'm loony!"
They spent the next hour talking about Joss's feelings of frustration, anger, and learned helplessness over the past five years. The tormented teen held nothing back. By the time Dr. Benson got up to leave, he watched as Joss moved to lay on his back once more and put his hands down at his sides.
"Do you want me to restrain you again, Joss?" he asked.
"No." he answered. "But I'm not going to fight you over it. I understand."
Walking up, Emanuel smiled and put his hand on the boy's shoulder. "I trust you now, Joss. I don't think you'll hurt yourself ever again. Why don't we try leaving them off tonight and see what happens, alright?"
Joss smiled back at him. "Don't worry!" he chirped. "I think I'm gonna be just fine!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Referenced Attempted Suicide
--
The following day Dr. Benson talked with Joss for another two hours after his IV and catheter were removed. Sure that he understood his patient, he needed to see how he handled other people. On the afternoon of the fourth day of his observation, the first guest he allowed to see Joss was his father.
Following the psychiatrist into the room, Fred saw Joss and nearly cried. "Princess!"
"Don't call me that!" his son snapped, making the man stop in his tracks, dumbfounded. "You can call me Joss, Fred. That's all."
Furrowing his brow, he looked at Dr. Benson who said nothing and just scribbled some notes. "Um... but I've called you pr..."
"Not anymore." Joss interrupted him. "I'm nobody's princess! I'm not your sweetie, sweetheart, or pumpkin. I'm your son, Fred... and barely that."
Moving closer, the man tentatively sat in the chair beside the bed. "Alright... Joss. When did this happen?"
Joss stared at the oblivious man with disdain. "Since always, Fred! I've always been your son! You just refused to hear me when I told you!"
Swallowing hard, Fred shifted uneasily. "We know that you initially had difficulty accepting who you are, Joss..."
"You still aren't listening!" he said in a raised voice. Looking over at Dr. Benson, he forced himself to calm back down. "Fred, you aren't listening. I never had difficulty knowing myself. You and Melanie tried to tell me who I am." Turning again to his psychiatrist, he grimaced determinedly. "Nobody gets to decide who I am, except me."
Facing his father once more, he continued. "You thought I was gay for seven years and tried to make me be gay by trying to convince me it was true. The only reason I was able to fight you was because of Tracy and Dave. They kept me sane. They both knew I wasn't gay."
"Look, Jocel... Joss." Fred tried to defend himself. "Your mother and I know we made some mistakes, but we realized what was wrong and tried to..."
"No, Fred!" he interrupted again. "You made the same mistake all over again! You tried to tell me who I was! You can't do that! Nobody can!" Calming himself again, he resumed. "You can't tell someone they're gay or trans and make it be real, Fred. I never wanted to be a girl. You did that to me without my consent and against my will."
"But you admitted you were trans!" he shot back. "The first day of Middle School when I had to pick you up!"
"No, Fred!" he corrected his father again. "You chose to interpret what I said to mean that, and I couldn't change your mind. All I wanted at that moment was to get home to call the girl I liked back then to make sure she didn't think I was trans. Turned out I was too late, but I was only twelve! At the time, I'd have told you the sky was purple if it meant I could have had a chance with Brenda!"
Fred considered the idea for a moment before pressing forward. "But what about all the rest? Calling me Daddy, your clothes, the way you laughed and talked, your best friend Tracy... you were a girl!"
"No, Fred." Joss denied once more. "I wasn't. I liked doing some girly things and I looked more like a girl than a boy, but that didn't make me a girl. At worst it made me an effeminate boy... but I was, and still am, a boy! Just because a woman looks severe and manish doesn't make her any less of a woman, does it? So why did me looking like a girl make me one?"
"Forget your looks!" Fred batted the question aside. "You act like a girl!"
"That doesn't make me one, Fred." he pointed out. "A tomboy may like doing boy things and acting boyish, but that doesn't make her a boy!"
"Well that's just..." Fred stopped and thought about what Joss was saying. Guilt threatening to overwhelm him, his mind refused to accept the truth, that he'd forced his son to be a girl against his will. In complete denial, he shook his head. "No! No, you're a girl and that's that, Jocelyn!"
"Joss." he retorted calmly.
"I'll call you what I like!" he shouted. "I'm your father! Joss is only short for Jocelyn, anyway!"
"Mister Ryan?" Dr. Benson chided him. "I'm going to have to ask you to calm yourself or I'll have you removed."
"Try it!" he snapped at the psychiatrist. "I'll just have Jocelyn moved to another facility where..."
"I'm afraid not, Mister Ryan." the doctor interrupted. "Joss is being held here under psychiatric observation per state law. He is under my custody until such time as I deem him not a threat to himself or others. He will not be moved."
"She!" Fred barked. "Her name is Jocelyn!"
"My name is Joss." he stated stubbornly. "And I'm a boy. A male. A he."
"You keep out of this, Jocelyn!" he shouted. "You don't know yourself! These quacks have warped your mind! They've twisted everything around to make you believe..."
His tirade was interrupted by a heavy hand on his shoulder. Turning around, he saw a black man the size of Mount Rushmore standing behind him wearing the uniform of a police officer.
"Mister Ryan?" he said in tones low enough to shake the floor. "I'm afraid I'm going to have to ask you to leave, sir. Now."
Cowed by his size, Fred swallowed hard and stammered his reply. "But... I'm her father!" he pointed at Joss.
"You may be his father Mr. Ryan," Officer Jesse Webber retorted, having heard Joss's denial of his femininity, "but you're disturbing the peace and if you don't leave, I'll have to place you under arrest. If you resist, I'll tase you. Please don't make me do that. It always makes a mess!"
Joss giggled at the imagery of the giant man tasering his father.
"There!" Fred pointed at Joss as he looked at Dr. Benson. "You hear that? That's a girl's laugh! She talks like a girl, she acts like a girl..."
"And yet," Dr. Benson stated plainly, "he's a boy. Figure that?"
"You just want to reverse her transition!" Fred shouted. "You think he's a boy because it says so on his birth certificate! The state won't let us change it!"
Answering calmly, Dr. Benson shook his head remorsefully. "If Joss told me he was a girl Mr. Ryan, and I listened to him and believed him, I'd say he was a girl, regardless of what it says in his birth certificate. He instead continues to insist he's a boy, and always has been, and I believe him... so that's what he is. And I'm sorry Mr. Ryan, but you were warned. Officer Webber?"
Fred felt his arms twisted behind his back and the handcuffs ratcheted around his wrists. "No..." he whimpered looking at Joss.
Watching his father being placed under arrest and handcuffed, Joss folded his arms across his ample chest with a look of sympathy on his face.
"I'm placing you under arrest for aggravated disorderly conduct, Mr. Ryan." Officer Webber went through his Miranda rights. "You have the right to remain silent. If you choose to shoot off your stupid mouth, anything you say will be used against you in court." Dragging the man bodily from the room, he continued to read him his rights. "You have a right to have an attorney tell you to shut the hell up, too."
Dr. Benson sighed and shook his head as he sat in the chair by Joss's bed. "I'm sorry about that, Joss." he apologized. "I see now what you've been putting up with all your life. I talked with him before he came in and he seemed perfectly reasonable, at least the more reasonable of your parents. Your mother was openly hostile. I won't make you endure that again if I don't have to, alright?"
Nodding, Joss looked at his hands in his lap. "I... I didn't want anything bad to happen to them, Doctor Benson. I just wanted it to stop."
"I'm sorry it took you nearly dying... twice... to get someone to listen." the man consoled him. "Are you up for more pleasant company?"
Curious, Joss looked at him. "Who?"
Dr. Benson stood up and started towards the door. "Let me bring her in." At that, he left as suddenly as he came.
Nervously, Joss sat on the bed and waited. Hearing footsteps coming, out of habit he wished that he had a mirror to check his appearance.
Stepping through the doorway, Judy saw him and let out a sigh at seeing him alive. "Joss!" she cried. Rushing over to him, she took him in her arms and cried. "I was so scared for you, honey! Don't you ever do that again!"
Relaxing into her warm embrace, he sighed contentedly. "I won't, Judy! I promise!" Holding each other a moment, Judy at last released him and took a step back. "Judy?" he began, "I... I saw Grace. She helped me."
Listening in utter disbelief, she heard him recount his time in Limbo with her daughter. When he told her about Dr. Hicks, she embraced him once more. "My God, Joss! I can hardly believe it!" Crying with him, the two separated after several minutes and Judy handed him a tissue, also taking one herself as they dried their eyes.
Talking for quite a while, the two relaxed into their comfortable familiarity, laughing and talking seriously about different things. Eventually, Dr. Benson had to interrupt them.
"Mrs. Wright?" he said sadly. "I'm afraid it's time."
Not wanting to leave, she turned to the doctor. "Already? Do I have to go?"
Emanuel gazed at her at her intently. "Mrs. Wright, you seem to care for Joss very deeply."
Turning back to the boy, she looked at him both happily and sadly. "He... he was going to be my... my son-in-law, Doctor. Grace adored him, and I learned why. He's wonderful!"
"He is remarkable." he noted before he took her aside. "Mrs. Wright..."
"Please!" she interrupted him. "Call me Judy!"
Pausing a moment, he nodded. "Alright... Judy. I was wondering how much you cared for him."
Not sure how to answer, she turned to Joss. "Well... I care for him as much as I did for my Grace. She... sorry... bad habit... he was going to be family. To me, that means something. In my heart, he's been family since he and Grace fell in love. I guess he always will be, even now that she's gone."
Surprised at her own words, she looked away at nothing. "I... I didn't even realize it until just now. When... when Grace died, I never wanted to see him again. Then, all of a sudden, I couldn't let him be alone." She looked back at Dr. Benson. "What does that mean?"
He smiled at her compassionately. "It means that you love and miss your daughter, but you love Joss as your son no less." Pausing, he glanced at the girlish boy before turning back to her. "Judy, I'd like to talk to you privately before you go." Nodding to Joss he asked, "Would you excuse us, Joss?"
Giving their good-byes, Joss watched her leave with the doctor. When the psychiatrist came back in, the man looked at him sympathetically.
"Ready for more?" he asked happily. When Joss responded with a smile, he leaned out the door and waved someone forward.
Tracy and David came in with their parents Joyce and Hank, Tracy running up to Joss and throwing her arms around him, both beginning to cry.
"Oh, Joss!" she sobbed. "I didn't know it was so terrible! I'm so sorry!"
While the three others walked up, Hank seemed embarrassed as he looked around at everything other than Joss. "Um... Joss? The doctor said that's what you want to be called, right?" Pausing a moment as Joyce joined Tracy next to the boy he'd thought of as a girl for the last five years, he forced himself to turn to the apparent grown woman lying in the hospital bed. "We... we read the email you sent to Tracy. I can't believe your parents could be so cruel, so... tyrannical. I'm sorry that we couldn't help protect you."
At first Joyce tried to hold Joss to comfort him, but Tracy's tearful embrace made it impossible. Instead she just petted his head and held his free hand, his other arm wrapped around Tracy as they sobbed together. "It's alright, Joss." she soothed. "It's OK, dear. We're here for you."
After a few minutes letting their emotions run their course, Tracy stepped back and rejoined David and her father as her mother slipped an arm around his shoulders. "Joss?" the girl had to know. "Is... is it true that you never wanted to be a girl? Not even a little?"
Shaking his head slowly and sadly, Joss repeated his truth. "No, Trace. Not even a little. It was all them. They didn't give me any choice."
"So, does that mean you're gonna want to start, like, going to football games and watching sports on TV?" she asked with a mildly disgusted look on her face. "I mean, if that's what you want to do, it's fine, but..."
"Trace!" he giggled, "I do the stuff I do because I enjoy it. Yeah, I like shopping, chatting for hours, and other girly stuff, but that never made me a girl! Is a tomboy really a boy just because she likes to do boy things?"
"Well no, but..." Tracy stopped even as she started. Thinking for a moment, she looked at Joss in a completely different way. "So, you're just a normal guy that looks like a girl and likes to do girl stuff? Um... a Tomgirl? Is that a thing?"
Getting a few chuckles from everyone, including Joss, Dr. Benson thought he should help at this point. "Yes Tracy, Joss is a boy, even though he looks like a girl and likes to do typically feminine things. He is because that's what he feels like, even though he's been made to go through female puberty. That fact means that Joss is transgendered now... a boy trapped in a mostly female body. Do you understand?"
"I think so." she sighed. "Joss... I'm really sorry! I feel like it's all my fault! You told me all this years ago, but I just thought..." Her voice trailed off as guilt choked her words.
"...you thought my parents were right, that I was hiding from being trans." Joss finished for her. "I know. It's OK. You were just a kid!"
Finally, the last one in the room who hadn't spoken yet stepped up to Joss's bedside. "Um... Joss?" David said in his baritone voice. "I... um... man you musta gone though hell itself, dude! If my folks tried to turn me into a girl? I woulda lost it!" Turning to his parents, he held up his hands in mock surrender. "Don't get me wrong! I know you wouldn't, I'm just sayin'!"
After a bit of laughter, David regarded Joss somberly. "Um... I guess I have more to apologize for than Tracy. At least she didn't turn on you for what they did to you like I did. I thought like, you were lying to me all those years growing up, ya' know? Hell, I knew you liked stupid girly stuff like Trace, but you were still a guy. When I thought that you'd just been pretending to be a guy, I got mad and never even gave you a chance to tell me what was really going on. That's all on me. I'm sorry, dude."
"That's OK, Dave." Joss smiled at him weakly. "I wasn't very nice to you, either. Or you, Trace." he said, turning to her. "I was upset because I felt abandoned. Then when Melanie... um... had me castrated and put on HRT, I blamed you guys for not being there to help me. So try not to feel too bad about it, OK?"
Reaching out, Joyce hugged him desperately on hearing him say that. "Oh, Joss! I feel just awful! I should have tried harder to find out what went wrong when you three had your falling out! I just thought that... well... that you pushed them away! I'm sorry, dear!"
After several more rounds of apologies and a little catching up, including telling them about his spiritual revelation, the four were shown out by Dr. Benson, who returned once again after several minutes.
"Are you up for one more?" he asked gently. "You can say no."
"That's alright, Doctor Benson." Joss said happily. "I'm fine!" A moment later, Joss wasn't so sure as Pastor Roberts came into his room.
Looking at one another a moment before he could speak, Daniel walked up to the child he'd known for five years as Jocelyn. "I understand you're going by the name Joss now." he began.
"If you don't mind, Pastor." he answered meekly. Turning away, he couldn't face the man.
"Joss... I... Once again, I don't know what to say." the pastor stammered. "I look at you, and I see a girl... even though I know you're a boy. Now I come to learn that this was done to you? Against your will? By your own parents? Joss... why didn't you tell me? I could have helped!"
"How?" he asked as his wet eyes once more turned toward the man. "They didn't do anything illegal. They had a note from a psychiatrist. What could you have done? The last people that tried to help were the Healys. My parents responded by literally ripping Jennifer out of my arms, throwing them out, and banning me from ever seeing them again. That's why Jenn tried to kill herself. You think they'd of treated you better than a twelve-year-old girl?"
Processing what he was saying, he shook his head. "OK, I don't understand something. If you didn't want to be a girl, and your parents didn't know you were going to church, why did you come dressed as a girl?"
"I had nothing else." he answered. "Should I have just not gone?"
"If you would have told me your problem, I would have gotten you boy's clothes!"
"And suddenly Jocelyn stops coming to church and Josh starts coming, but he looks just like she did, just in boy clothes." he argued. "The congregation isn't stupid, Pastor Roberts. That would have lasted about five minutes before someone freaked out. Besides, I eventually was able to get some boy clothes, but I just looked like Jocelyn dressed sloppy. I... I look too much like a girl."
Shaking his head, Daniel wanted to refute the argument, but the logic was inescapable. "And even if I told the congregation your story, some would still have reacted badly... for you. They would have tried to interfere as the Healys did, tipping off your parents that you were attending church..."
"...and they would have forbid me to go anymore." Joss concluded. "You see? No good would come of it. I was stuck."
Daniel sat down in the chair by Joss's bed. "I'm surprised you ever came, given what you had to go through to do so. I... I read in your letter that you're agnostic. I know you said you liked the people, but I feel like I've failed you as a spiritual advisor if you still don't believe after so long."
"I believe now!" Joss smiled at him.
Looking at the boy, Daniel's eyes grew wide. "What? But you said..."
Going through the whole story again, Joss told him about his experience. "He said he gave me a rare gift and that I know what to do with it, but Pastor Roberts, I don't know what He meant! What gift do I have? I'm an OK artist, but nothing special. I once beat Heather Kent at jump rope when I was eight. The only other thing special about me is that I'm a boy that looks like a girl!"
Taking it all in, Daniel thought a moment before turning back to Joss. "You say He said you knew what to do?" Seeing Joss nod, the man got up and took the teen's hand. "Then you'll know what to do when the time comes. Hold on to that! You have many gifts! You're kind and compassionate, especially for someone who's been through what you have. Most boys forced into your situation would have become violently hateful. Just trust that you are special and have many gifts."
The hour getting on towards late afternoon, Dr. Benson had to cut the time short. "Pastor Roberts?" he began after he and Joss had said their good-byes, "Could I take a few minutes of your time in private before you leave?"
Going out in the hallway, they were gone several minutes before Dr. Benson came back in. Taking a seat next to Joss's bed, he looked at his patient sadly and seriously. "Joss, today is the last day of your observation. By law, I have to either release you or get a court order to have you committed to a state institution. Given everything I've seen, even if I did file commitment papers, they'd be denied. You're no danger to anyone, yourself included."
Joss turned away from his doctor glumly. "That means you're gonna have to give me over to Melanie, since you had Fred arrested. I'm sure she's gonna be pis... um... angry... about him getting thrown in jail. I'm guessing my trips to church are over, too."
"That's what I wanted to talk to you about." Dr. Benson stated. "Joss, it's my belief that while not technically illegal, what your parents have done to you may constitute mental abuse under Ohio law. The trouble is, providing unwanted medical care to a minor has no precedence for being a form of abuse, and getting a court to agree that it is might be difficult. I think the best option would be to get your mother to willingly give up custody of you."
"Fat chance of that!" Joss snarked. "She sees me as her trophy, the ultimate expression of her progressiveness. How could anyone ever even hope to overcome that?"
Melanie walked down the hallway of the hospital with Dr. Benson just ahead of her. She was angry that she'd been denied access to Joss for four days after he woke up. Reading the note he'd left had sent her senses beyond reason. The very idea that Joss had been going to church of his own free will was beyond possibility. Somehow, somewhere, they'd gotten to her 'Jocelyn' and brainwashed 'her'. It was the only possibility she'd accept.
Convinced that the pastor and congregation of the church he was attending had driven him to deny being transgender and that they were responsible for his attempted suicide, she needed to get to him and start undoing the damage they'd done. That Dr. Benson wouldn't allow it infuriated her. That he denied Dr. Williams access as well enraged her. When he'd had Fred arrested for disorderly conduct, she was ready to snap.
To add insult to injury, she was forced to follow the man to Joss's room, simply because she had no idea where he was. To her mind, having to follow a man was the equal of foot-binding and being told that her place was in the home... cooking, cleaning, and making babies. The very large police officer following her was the only thing that kept her from saying anything.
When she entered the room, she stopped dead as a cold shiver ran down her spine. Joss was standing next to his bed wearing boy's jeans and sneakers, a man's flannel shirt, and a baseball cap; his long hair apparently gone and his breasts nowhere to be seen. "What the hell is this?" she demanded.
"Hello, Melanie." Joss said calmly.
"Jocelyn!" she yelled, only to be interrupted before she could say more.
"He prefers the name Joss, Mrs. Ryan." Dr. Benson stated truthfully.
"Her name is Jocelyn!" she shouted at him. "Don't you dare misgender her again! And it's Ms. Ryan, thank you!"
"Actually Melanie," Joss sighed, "Doctor Benson is correct... I prefer Joss. And he didn't misgender me, you did! I'm a boy. I always was."
Walking over to him, she watched as he fearfully moved around to the other side of the bed from her, making her stop and try to figure out how to get him to comply. "Jocelyn, sweetheart, you're just confused. Those religious extremists filled your head with hate and internalized transphobia! You're a girl, Jocelyn! Now... you come out from behind that bed and let me take you home."
"No, Melanie." Joss shook his head. "Doctor Benson hasn't released me, so you can't take me home. First, I want to talk to you."
Biting her lip, she knew if she just waited, the psychiatrist would have to let Joss go or file to have him committed. Still, she wanted to get on Joss's good side so that once he was home she could get rid of the boy clothes and spend the summer deprogramming him. "Alright, sweetie."
"Joss. No more pet names, Melanie. I'm a seventeen-year-old boy and..."
"Girl!" she snapped at him.
"Boy." he stated right back calmly.
"Ms. Ryan," Dr. Benson warned her, "I'll ask you not to shout at him again. You're disturbing the other patients."
"Her!" she barked at the doctor, unable to stop herself. Covering her mouth, she took a breath and glared at him. "Fine. I won't shout." Turning back to Joss, she looked at him gently. "Jocel... Joss... your father and I know you hate confrontation. You want to fit in. We understand, sw... Joss." she self-corrected. "But you can't hide from who you are! That's what drove you to this!" she gestured at the room.
"No, Melanie." he replied evenly. "You drove me to hate my life and see no value in it. You forced me to become a girl against my will. That won't be happening again."
"Jocelyn!" she whined in frustration.
"Joss." her son corrected her sedately.
"Fine!" she shouted, before looking over at Dr. Benson in anger. "Sorry!"
"Ms. Ryan," Joss's doctor began, "Joss has chosen to express his gender identity as male. He has told me that he has always been male and that you forced him to assume a female identity against his will."
Frustrated, she spat her answer at him. "Doctor Benson! You have no idea how hard it was to make Jocelyn accept her true self! We had to take away everything boyish and force her to wear only the most feminine clothes! If she had anything even remotely male available, she'd run back to pretending to be a boy! We had to make her transition for her own good! You're not a gender specialist! You wouldn't understand!"
"I may not be," he countered, "but in addition to being a licensed psychiatrist, I have a law degree and am a member of the bar. That's why I work here. I know the law and what you just confessed to, in front of an Officer of the Law and an Officer of the Court, could be classed as mental abuse per Ohio Revised Code for Offenses Against the Family, section twenty-two. I'm thinking of having both you and your husband charged with criminal abuse."
Backing away from him, she absently sat in the chair beside Joss's bed. "You can't do that!"
"I most certainly can, Ms. Ryan." he stated flatly. "Officer Webber there is here in case it becomes necessary to place you under arrest and to act as a witness. Additionally, before you were allowed in, you signed an agreement that everything in the Observation Ward is subject to being recorded." At that he pulled the digital recorder out of his pocket and showed it to her before replacing it. "Of course, if you can show that you're willing to be reasonable in all this, I'd be inclined to forgo legal action."
Reading between the lines, Melanie nodded as she glanced over at Officer Webber, his bulk a menacing reminder of what happened to Fred. "OK, Doctor Benson. I'm listening."
Looking at her, he walked over to Joss and put his hand on the girlish boy's shoulder. "You and your husband, once he's released from jail, will attend child abuse counseling sessions with a councilor of my choosing. No getting one of your co-workers to rubber-stamp a letter after talking to you for five minutes the way you did with Joss."
Swallowing hard that he knew about that, the shadiest part of what they'd done, Melanie nodded. "Agreed. So then, I can take her home?"
"No, you can't take him home." he answered. "Part of the agreement will be that until you complete counseling, Joss will be placed under PCSA custody, voluntarily, by you. He'll be placed in a foster home for the duration. There is a family already willing and available to take him."
His tone turning ominous, he added the final nail to the coffin. "If you do not agree, I'll have Officer Webber here place you under arrest under the charge of mental abuse of a minor. With your husband in jail already for aggravated disorderly conduct, Joss will be placed under PCSA custody anyway as he would have no guardians out of jail to care for him." Clasping his hands behind his back, he rocked on his heals and leveled his gaze at her. "So which will it be, Ms. Ryan?"
Closing her eyes, she very nearly got up and attacked the man, but for the perilous presence of the police officer behind him. Believing it to be the only way out of going to jail, and knowing that no matter what she did Joss wouldn't be coming home with her, Melanie bowed her head in defeat and nodded. "Agreed."
After signing the form Dr. Benson had prepared that voluntarily turned over custody of Joss to the local Public Children Services Agency, Melanie left without saying a word to Joss, for which he was thankful. Having already reached out to them, the agency was prepared when Emanuel called them to say that Joss was now in their custody and to contact the foster family he'd lined up.
As Joss walked with Dr. Benson out of the observation ward several hours later, still dressed in the boy's clothes he'd been brought, he smiled at his savior. "Thank you, Doctor Benson!"
"I just did my job, Joss." he said with a smile. "I also hope never to have to see you again!"
"Don't worry!" he giggled. "The only time you'll ever see me again is on a purely personal basis! You will come to my eighteenth birthday party in February, won't you?"
"I'll see what I can do, Joss." he hedged, uncertain he could as he signed them both out and taking the boy through the security doors.
Joss's smile grew from pleasant to joyful as he picked up from a walk to a jog, his cap falling to the floor and releasing his hidden long brown hair as he ran straight into Susan Roberts's arms.
Daniel smiled weakly, noting how even dressed as a boy he looked so much like a girl. Hugging both Joss and his wife, he was thankful that they'd been qualified as foster parents years earlier, never knowing how it would affect their lives. "Come on, Joss." he grinned, picking up the fallen cap. "Let's take you home!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content
--
Living with Joss turned out to be more difficult than the pastor and his wife had believed it could be. Even though he was a boy, they realized he might find it difficult to adjust to living as a boy given his physical development. Even as Daniel drove them home, Susan noticed one major problem.
"Daniel? We have to drop by Joss's house before we take him home."
Stopped at a light, he turned to her. "Why? Anything he needs we can get."
Pulling her lips into a tight line, she arched her brows and nodded toward the rearview mirror. "Dan? Look at him." she said softly.
Still waiting for the light to change, he glanced in the mirror at his passenger. He'd seen it before they left, but once Joss had removed the uncomfortable compression band that he'd worn to rattle his mother, he at last nodded in understanding. "I see what you mean." he sighed.
When the light turned green, Daniel took the first opportunity to pull off the street and into the parking lot of a restaurant. Turning around in his seat, he sighed in frustration. "Joss? We need to discuss a few things before we go any further."
Worried that they'd changed their minds, he looked from one to the other. "Did... did I do something wrong?"
"No, dear." Susan assured him. "It's just... you look like a young woman... and we have two little boys, eight and ten. Even dressed like that, there's no hiding what your parents did to you, and they're too young to understand. They might think we could do that to them as a kind of punishment."
Hanging his head, Joss nodded. "I know. Even if I stop taking hormones, I'll never look normal."
"Joss," the pastor spoke, "I know it's not your fault, but now we have to deal with it. We have no intention of treating you like a girl, but we do need to face certain... practical problems."
Susan saw that he was beating around the bush, so she said it plainly. "Joss? You need a bra. At least for now."
Shaking his head mournfully, Joss felt he would never escape his parents' trap. "It's no good, is it? Even now that I'm away from them, it doesn't make any difference, does it? It's too late. I'm stuck forever this way, aren't I? I'm a woman now. They won."
"It's only temporary, Joss." she tried to reassure him. "But for now, would you mind being a little bit Jocelyn for just a while longer? If you say no, we'll figure something else out."
Giving in, he accepted the inevitable and nodded. "OK. I mean, I get it. I have a woman's body and you have two little boys. I can't just pretend this never happened." Looking up at Daniel, he let it go and nodded. "I'll grab a few things, but please don't call me Jocelyn!"
"We won't, Joss." he promised. "And please, Joss. Call me Daniel. You're seventeen and we're not in church!" he tried to make light of the situation.
Smiling, Joss knew that no matter what, the pastor truly did want to help him. "Alright... Daniel. Let's go."
Following the boy's directions, the three drove to his house. Unfortunately, Melanie's car was in the driveway.
"She's home." Joss stated with dread in his voice.
"Let me do all the talking, Joss." Daniel advised as they got out. "Hopefully, she'll be reasonable." Walking up to the door, they knocked and waited.
Melanie had just gotten home from the jail where she was told bail couldn't be posted until Fred was finished being booked, which wouldn't be for a few more hours. She was halfway through a glass of Chardonnay when she heard the door. Opening it, she saw Joss standing there with a strange man and woman. "What do you want?"
"I'm Daniel Roberts and this is my wife Susan. We came to collect some of Joss's things."
"I'm sorry, Daniel." she spat. "But the things here belong to Jocelyn Ryan... a girl. Your Joss wouldn't want anything she has."
She was about to close the door on his face when he stopped her. "Mrs. Ryan, please be reasonable. If you care at all about your child, you'll let us get a few things and be on our way."
Downing the remainder of the glass in one swallow, she fumed and glared at the three. "Fine! You have five minutes!"
While Susan took Joss up to his room, Daniel stayed at the bottom of the stairs and watched Melanie pour another glass. "You have a wonderful son, Mrs. Ryan." Daniel offered an olive branch. "He's remarkable."
Taking a drink, she slowly walked toward him. "So, where did they find you? What makes you think you're qualified to care for my daughter? And it's Ms. Ryan!"
"I've known Joss for over five years, Mrs. Ryan." he explained simply.
"I said it's Ms.! Not Mrs.!" she barked.
Smirking slightly, he cleared his throat. "Irritating when someone calls you by a name you detest... isn't it, Ms. Ryan?"
"What would you know about it!" she snapped. "Wait, how do you know Jocelyn?" she puzzled. "Five years? That's since she transitioned!"
"Yes." he replied. "Joss pretended to be a girl because you and your husband gave him no choice. I never knew him as anything other than a polite and honest girl until the accident that nearly killed him a few months ago."
"How can you claim to know her if you can look at her and see a boy!"
"Because that's what he is, Ms. Ryan." he stated calmly. "All you had to do was ask him. Did you even once ask how he felt?"
Melanie scoffed. "Parents know best how to raise their own children, Mr. Roberts! She didn't know what she was! Fred and I had to make her see it!"
"Yet, here he is, five years later, still professing to be a boy. Doesn't sound like you made him see anything except that his parents didn't want him."
"That was those extremist Christians that got hold of him!" she yelled after taking another drink. "They brainwashed him!"
"We did no such thing." he told her evenly. "Joss only ever came to church as Jocelyn. None of us ever even suspected he was a boy... not in five years."
Melanie's eyes went wide. "You... you belong to that group of superstitious transphobes?"
"No." he answered, making Melanie's anger subside in confusion before he dropped the bomb. "I'm the pastor of the church that gave Joss some sense of solace while you abused him. By his own words, my congregation kept him from trying to kill himself a long time ago." Seeing her anger start to rise, he tried to forestall it. "No one in the congregation even knows about Joss being a boy... they still all think he's a girl. Susan and I are the only ones that know, and we only found out after the accident that took Grace's life."
Just as he said that, Joss and Susan came downstairs, the woman carrying two of his suitcases. Seeing him carrying his rolled up posters, Melanie looked at him pleadingly. "Jocelyn! You can't stay with these people! They believe in those sexist fairytales!"
"My name is Joss." he replied evenly as he came down the steps. "And they don't believe in fairytales, Melanie. They believe in God... and so do I." Standing in front of his mother who stared at him in shock, he took a breath and smiled at her as he remembered the feeling of infinite love. "I saw Him, Melanie. I met God. When I almost killed myself? He told me He gave me a rare gift. I don't understand it all, I don't think I can, I just know He loves and cares for us all more than all the people in the history of the world ever did or could. I wish you could understand."
"That's it!" Melanie shouted, throwing and shattering her glass on the table. "We're getting a lawyer to get you away from these monsters! They've made you believe in their sexist, homophobic superstitions! You're not going to live with them!"
"Yes, I am." he stated calmly. "You gave up custody and Daddy's in jail. By the time you could get a court date to fight it, I'd be eighteen and you'd never see me again. Please. Just let it go, Mom."
Hearing Joss call her 'Mom' for the first time in five years disarmed most of her fury. She watched helplessly while the three walked out of her house, Joss pausing a moment as he got ready to close the door behind him.
"Goodbye, Mom. I'll always love you, no matter what you did to me."
As the door closed, Melanie broke down and sobbed.
Stopping at a gas station, while Daniel filled up the tank, Joss went into the restroom with a change of clothes. He slipped on a pair of woman's jeans and a modest blouse and undergarments, taking a moment to brush out his hair and look in the mirror. One step at a time... he thought, remembering his mother's joke all those years ago as he grabbed his boy clothes and headed back out to the car. At least I don't have to wear makeup or jewelry!
Shortly afterward, they were pulling up in front of a simple home. Joss looked it over briefly as he climbed out; the light blue paint with white trim reminding him of a sunny day with little wispy clouds. Putting his black backpack that he'd put his posters in over his shoulder, he grabbed for one of the suitcases right before Daniel snatched both.
"I'll get those, Joss." he said with a friendly smirk. "Come on!"
Wrapping an arm around Joss's shoulder, the pastor's wife guided him to the front door ahead of Daniel. "Eddy! Jimmy!" Susan called out coming through the door. "We're home!"
Thunderous footsteps approached quickly while Joss braced himself for the unexpected. Standing back, he watched as Susan was enveloped by two small boys who practically threw themselves in her arms.
"Mom!" the larger Eddy shouted joyfully.
"Mommy!" the smaller Jimmy nearly cried. "You were gone all day! Where did..." His voice trailed off as both boys noticed that they weren't alone.
Susan hugged them quickly while Daniel carried the suitcases to their spare room. "Eddy? Jimmy? I'd like you to meet Joss, who'll be staying with us a while. Joss? These are our boys, Eddy and Jimmy."
While the two looked him over, Joss smiled weakly at them as he put his backpack on the floor next to the front door. "H... hi!"
The younger Jimmy separated from his mother first and walked up to Joss cautiously. When Joss got down on his knees, his five foot six stature making him nearly twice Jimmy's height, the boy looked at him intently before wrapping him in a welcoming hug without a word.
Embracing the boy in return nearly made Joss cry at how sweet the sentiment was. After a moment, the two separated and Jimmy stepped back.
"Hi, Joss. I'm Jimmy." Gesturing over his shoulder with his thumb, he smiled. "That's Eddy!"
Getting back on his feet, Joss smiled back. "It's nice to meet you, Jimmy." Glancing up at the older boy, he nodded politely. "Eddy."
"You're pretty!" Jimmy said as he gazed up at Joss. Suddenly frowning, he asked, "Did your Mommy and Daddy die?"
"Jimmy!" Susan scolded him. "What did I tell you about asking people personal questions like that?"
"Ta' not to." Jimmy answered embarrassedly.
Joss tried to defuse the situation by answering him. "It's OK, Jimmy. No, I didn't lose my parents. They... um... they just need some time without me so they can fix some problems they have."
"Oh." the small boy said simply. "How long you stayin'?"
"I don't know." Joss answered, glancing up at Susan who stood next to Eddy. "Maybe only a short time. Maybe a few months. I turn eighteen in February. When's your birthday?"
Jimmy's eyes sparkled. "Mine's next month! I'll be nine... goin' on ten! Eddy hasta wait all the way 'till October! He'll only be eleven. You like chocolate or strawberry ice cream?"
"OK, boys." Susan said authoritatively. "Let me go talk to Kathy and I'll start dinner in a little bit, OK? Scoot!" While the two boys ran off to their room, Susan led Joss into the living room where a young girl sat on the couch staring at her smartphone. "Hi, Kathy! How were the boys?"
Kathy Smith tore her eyes away from the hypnotic device. "Huh? Oh! They were great, Mrs. R! Fed 'em lunch 'bout noon. They just played in their room all afternoon."
Handing the girl a twenty-dollar bill, Susan smiled at her. "Thank you so much for helping on such short notice. Kathy? This is Joss who's going to be staying with us for a while."
The sixteen-year-old looked Joss up and down critically. She'd met a few of the foster children that the pastor's family took in, but Joss was different. He seemed too well cared for to need fostering. "Interesting name." she nodded to Joss in welcome. "Is it short for something?"
"My parents named me Jocelyn, but I hate that name." he shrugged.
Standing up, Kathy relaxed slightly at Joss's frankness. "Yeah! The 'rents named me Katherine, but I just use Kathy! Katherine is so old!" Pausing a moment, she looked at Joss more closely. "Hey! I know you! You're that girl from church! The one that comes without parents or anyone! I hardly recognized you in jeans! You're always dressed so nice!"
Joss blushed and looked away. "My... my parents hate church, but I like it."
"That's cool." Kathy nodded. Wanting to ask why Joss was staying with the Roberts family, she thought better of it, held her tongue, and extended her hand. "Well, whatever the reason you're here, I hope it all turns out OK."
Susan interrupted their bonding after they shook hands. "Well, thank you for watching the boys, Kathy! Be sure to give my best to your mother!"
Grabbing her coat and purse, Kathy smiled at the woman. "Sure thing, Mrs. R! I can always use the extra money! Let me know anytime you need me!" Turning to Joss, the girl surprised him by giving him a friendly hug before heading for the door. "See you on Sunday, Joss! Bye!"
Once she left, Susan headed for the kitchen along with Joss, wanting to help. After a time, Daniel came in and watched a moment before interrupting.
"Sorry to drag Joss away, but I wanted to get Joss settled into the room."
Hearing the pastor neatly dodge every potential pronoun use, Joss became self-conscious. "Um... it's OK if you call me she and her for the time being, Pastor Roberts. It'll just be easier for now, and I know you know who I really am... so it doesn't hurt like when they did it."
Looking at one another a moment, Susan and Daniel turned to him, the pastor saying what they both were thinking. "We just didn't want you to feel like we only see you as 'Jocelyn, the girl from church'. You've had quite enough of that in your life, Joss. We'll try to minimize it as much as possible, OK?"
Smiling weakly at them both, he almost wanted to cry. "Thank you!" he sighed with a quivering breath. Hugging Susan, he followed Pastor Roberts into the room that would be his for the duration of his stay.
Living with the family also meant he'd be going in to church with them and taking on some of the responsibilities of being part of a pastor's family. He packed one nice dress for church out of habit, but putting it on that Sunday made him feel as though nothing had changed; that he was still Jocelyn and trapped in the world his parents had forced him into.
As the congregation began to arrive and Eddy and Jimmy were sent off to Sunday School, Joss stood with Susan near the front row where the pastor's wife always stood, greeting regulars and taking prayer requests. His presence with her there that Sunday caused a bit of a stir among several members.
"Hello, Mrs. Zimmerman!" Susan greeted the older woman. "Good to see you, as always!"
Harriet Zimmerman was about to smile at her before noticing Joss standing shyly behind her. "Good morning, Susan. May I ask why young Jocelyn is with you today?" She'd seen the boy almost hiding out in the rear pews for years and rumors had begun to circulate after his disappearance following the accident and what the papers had printed anonymously about the couple.
"Joss is staying with us for the time being, Mrs. Zimmerman." she explained simply. "Family problems. Daniel and I took Joss in as a foster child."
"I see." the woman said coldly. "Do you think that appropriate, Susan? I mean, you with two boys?"
Blinking as her smile melted slightly, Susan tried to recover. "Well, we have a separate room for the boys, and it's not like we haven't taken in teenagers that needed our help before! You remember the Finley girl?"
"Yes, but that's different." she huffed. Lowering her voice to a conspiratorial whisper, she glared at Joss a moment before turning back to Susan. "I've heard things about Jocelyn, Susan. That he's not what she appears to be! There's no place for that in God's house, and certainly not in the home of our pastor and his children!"
Susan looked over at Joss, who'd retreated back away from the two, nearly plastered against the wall. Turning back to the woman, she shook her head. "Mrs. Zimmerman, I'm surprised at you, dealing in rumors! Ephesians tells us not to say any unwholesome things, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs. What help to Joss is this?"
Uncertain if the rumors about Joss were true or not, her cheeks flushed and she turned away embarrassedly. "I... um... I see your point, Susan. Of course, if you say that it isn't true, then I've done the poor child wrong."
"Even if they were true Mrs. Zimmerman, we are tasked to love one another, not tear each other down." she said in answer. Glancing back to Joss, Susan extended her hand to him, making him swallow hard and close the distance to take it and stand with the pastor's wife. "Mrs. Zimmerman, I don't believe you've ever actually met Joss. Joss? This is Harriet Zimmerman!"
Nervously, Joss extended his free hand to the woman. "N... nice to meet you, Mrs. Zimmerman." he stammered.
Taking the offered hand, Harriet scrutinized Joss for any sign of masculinity. Seeing none, she smiled at him. "Nice to meet you as well, Jocelyn. I'm afraid I owe you an apology. I... I heard things about you that were ungodly and believed them. Please forgive me."
Taking back his hand and fidgeting his fingers in a knot, Joss sighed and looked down sadly. "It's OK, Mrs. Zimmerman. I don't blame you."
Three other parishioners that morning made similar comments. Each time Susan deftly dodged the issue without lying, instead only pointing out how spreading and listening to rumors was hurtful and against the teachings of Christ. When the time for services began and the two took their seats in the front row, Joss leaned in close to Susan and whispered to her.
"You don't have to protect me." he offered. "I don't want you or Daniel to get in trouble when the truth comes out. It's bound to, eventually!"
"Joss, I told them the truth, that rumormongering is sinful." she answered quietly, "They shouldn't be talking about anyone behind their back, even if the rumors are true."
Sitting through the sermon, he was torn between listening and thinking about what Susan had said. Just sitting in the church next to her made him feel as though he was being dishonest with everyone, but he knew his circumstances were not his fault and that he was just making the best of a bad situation.
When the time came to sing, he raised his beautifully feminine voice in song with the others, forgetting his troubles for a moment as he focused on the memory of love and compassion that had struck him to his very soul at the lowest time of his life. Bidding the members of the church goodbye with a strained grin, Joss almost collapsed when the last of them finally left.
"I don't think I can take much more of this, Susan." he admitted to her.
Sitting next to Joss, she took his hand and smiled at him understandingly. "I know, Joss. It's hard. You want to just be yourself, but..."
"...but I can't be, can I?" he interrupted her. "I might as well go back to my parents' house! I'll never escape it!"
"Just give it time!" she admonished his impatience. "You've only been with us a few days. Dan told me last night that he has something in mind that'll help. OK?"
Sighing and smiling weakly, Joss tried to be patient. "Alright, Susan. If you say so. I owe you two so much already, the least I can do is wait a bit more."
Two days later, Daniel called Joss into his study where he often worked on sermons during his time at home. Watching Joss sit on the small couch fluidly and gracefully out of habit, he had to remind himself who this person really was. "Joss, I wanted to talk to you about next Sunday's sermon as it's less a sermon and more about you, in particular. Susan told me what some of the congregation have been saying about you."
"You're going to tell them all about me?" he asked surprisedly.
"That's my intention." he answered. "Joss, what happened to you isn't your fault. Your parents, however well intentioned they were trying to be, did you a great deal of harm. I don't think you should suffer because of it the rest of your life."
"But I will, Dan." he responded, having taken less than a week to go from 'Pastor Roberts' to 'Daniel' to 'Dan'. "No matter what anyone says or does, I have to start facing reality. I'm almost a grown woman now... effectively I am already in all but the legal sense!"
The pastor looked at his charge and sighed. As much as he hated to admit it, what he'd said was true. Nothing of a boy or young man showed through in the person sitting across from him. "I know your life will never be the same as it would have been Joss, but I can't let you hide who you are. You can't keep pretending..."
"That's just what Melanie and Fred used to tell me." Joss interrupted as he looked at the floor.
Stopping dead, Daniel was shocked to hear Joss compare him to his parents. "No, what they did was wrong. What I need to do is undo as much of the damage they've done to you as possible."
Looking back up at the man he respected so well, Joss just shook his head. "You're my guardians now, so I have to do whatever you tell me to do. Why even ask me?"
Seeing how helpless and vulnerable he was, Daniel began to second-guess his plan. "Joss, have you changed your mind? Do you want to be a girl?"
Looking out the window over the man's shoulder, Joss pondered the question. Do I? Do I actually like being a girl? Being honest with himself, he realized the question was moot. Like and dislike have nothing to do with it. Am I a girl? he wondered. All the years his parents had forced it on him, he'd hated it. Since he'd gotten away from them and was suddenly being pushed the other direction, he found himself hating that, too.
"I... I honestly don't know, Pastor Roberts." he admitted, reverting to the man's formal title. "I just know that I don't like the idea of being pushed one way or the other. When I used to ask Grace if she loved me as a girl or a boy, she'd tell me, 'I just love you.' Can't I just be me?"
"Whether you like it or not Joss, the world will see you as either a boy or a girl, a man or a woman. You can't undo thousands of years of culture and instinct in a day, a week, a year, or even a lifetime. People will see you as one or the other. Maybe that's a failing on our part, but it is what it is... and you can't force people to change who they are. You can make them leave you alone, but you can't shove that sort of thing down their throats and expect them to like you for it... or even treat you decently, even if they should. People just don't work that way."
"I know Dan, I know!" he replied, acknowledging the truth before he turned back to the pastor. "But the fact remains that no matter what you or I want, I'll never be a man, and I can't be a woman. I'm stuck... halfway both and neither at the same time." Glancing away and trying to hold back the tears, he sighed and looked at the floor. "So, what are you going to tell them?"
"The truth." he answered, standing up and walking over to the couch to sit with Joss. "That you were born a boy... that your parents forced you to dress like a girl... that you had no choice in it... and that everyone should love and accept you as the young man you are, regardless of what you look like."
Laughing a little, Joss shook his head. "You sound like a transgender rights activist... that I should be treated as the gender I identify with, even though everyone looks at me and sees a girl!"
"The difference is that you are a boy and you couldn't have chosen otherwise, Joss. It's the way God made you."
Getting up, Joss became uncomfortable with the pastor's plan. "Pastor, you can do what you like, I can't stop you, but I would ask you not to do this. Otherwise I won't be able to go to church anymore! They won't understand! They'll all have their own ideas of what to do about me and it'll just cause a big argument. I'll drive people away if I do go, so that means I won't be able to go!"
"Joss, I once told you that you'd be welcome in any church I run." Daniel reminded him. "You're a boy, about to be a man, and you've got to face this like a man! Come with us on Sunday. Let them see you for who you are."
Pacing frustratedly, Joss paused and looked at Daniel. "Everything inside me is screaming that this is wrong... that it's no different than what they did to me. I want to be a normal boy, but I won't be forced into it the way I was forced to be a girl. So do what you want, but I won't be any part of it or help you do it. I'm sorry." Walking away sadly, Joss stopped right before leaving. "Pastor? One last thing. I won't let you push me to be anything. I promised Doctor Benson. Nobody gets to decide who I am, except me." Returning to his room, he left Daniel alone to ponder his words.
The following Sunday Joss didn't attend church, instead spending his time at the neighborhood park. Certain of the rightness of his own position, Daniel forged ahead anyway and gave his open sermon to the congregation, telling them of Joss's trials and inviting others to talk about the things they'd heard and the person they knew in Joss. The response he got was not at all what he'd expected.
Unwilling to even listen to the idea that Joss was an 'involuntary girl', several families walked out the minute Daniel suggested they let Joss come at all. Others stayed, but some demanded that Joss be barred from church unless he could be made to look like a boy. Still others insisted that since Joss looked like a girl and couldn't be made to look like a boy without surgery, having him dress like one would only blur gender lines, encouraging girls to dress more like boys. They in turn demanded that Joss either dress and behave like a girl or be barred.
Only a minority of the congregation, those who actually knew Joss well and liked him, were willing to accept Joss the way he was. By the end of services, the congregation had indeed fractured and Daniel realized too late that the girlish boy had been right; he should have never tried to force the situation.
Joss ended up only staying with the pastor and his family for a few weeks. In the mean time, Hank and Joyce Edwards had updated their insufficient placement training to care for a child needing specialized treatment. They'd fostered a few children in the past several years, and were happy to oblige when Dr. Benson suggested taking Joss in, but they'd never qualified to care for a special needs child which, like it or not, Joss had become involuntarily.
For the second time that month, Joss found himself moving to another place he might call home.
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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To give him a room of his own, Hank and Joyce Edwards worked every spare minute to convert their den into another bedroom. Previous foster children had shared a room either with Tracy if they were a girl or David if a boy, but the family quickly realized that Joss didn't really fit either and did their best to adapt.
It was the first Sunday after he'd moved in that the trouble began.
Joyce saw the meager clothes Joss had been able to get from his home and that the pastor's family had gotten for him and had insisted that she take him shopping. Barred from church services, not by the pastor but by the simple fact that if he showed up he'd drive the majority of other worshipers away, Joss was out of sorts and moody. He'd also not taken any hormones in over three weeks.
Sitting in the back seat of their minivan, Joss stared out the window while Tracy chattered on.
"It's gonna be so much fun with you living with us, Joss!" she said happily. "And you get an all new wardrobe! I am so jealous!"
"Meh." Joss shrugged absently. "It's just clothes."
"Yeah, but you always did look so great all the time! You have good taste!"
"Melanie bought all my clothes." he grumbled.
"Oh, well that's alright! You have me along to help you find your perfect style!" the girl chirped.
"Tracy." Joyce warned from the driver's seat. "Need I remind you that Joss isn't a girl?"
Suddenly brought back down to earth, Tracy's mood soured. "Oh... oh yeah. I... I kinda forgot. Sorry, Joss."
Scowling at nobody as he continued to watch the world go by the window, he shrugged again, not even replying.
The shopping trip turned into a disaster. Steadfastly refusing to shop in the women's department, every time Joss thought he found something that he liked in the men's section it either wouldn't fit his feminine body or looked girly on him. Frustrating him until he stormed out of the department store, he walked the six miles back to the Edwards's home alone. Coming up the driveway two hours later, the minivan parked in the open garage, his mood had softened to one of regretfulness.
Opening the front door quietly, he slipped in unnoticed and around into the converted den. Laying down on the small twin bed that was used whenever they were caring for a foster child, Joss curled up and cried. He cried for his lost childhood, his lost church, and for his hated female body. After a short time he fell into a restless sleep.
Standing at the shore of an ocean, Joss gazed out at the waves and listened to them crash against the sand. Glancing down at himself, he saw hands that looked like a grown man's and his clothes were a man's jeans and polo shirt. Feeling his scalp, he felt the short-cropped hair and smiled. Relaxing and watching the waves, he wasn't even startled by the familiar voice next to him, almost expecting her to be there with him.
"Peaceful, isn't it Joss." Grace stated softly.
"Yeah. It's nice." he said quietly as he turned to her, noticing the deep rumble of his smooth baritone voice that at once seemed odd and perfectly normal. He was surprised, and yet at the same time not so, that she appeared older, perhaps how she might have been in her twenties had she lived.
"So is this what you really want?" she asked, turning and looking at him with a smile. "You look nice, don't get me wrong, but it's not very... you."
"I know." he sadly responded, turning back to the ocean before lowering himself to sit in the sand. As he did, he noticed that his hands had changed back into the feminine shape he was used to. That's when he became aware of the sand against his rear, not through a pair of jeans, but through a light flowing skirt as he looked down at the dress he wore. "I guess this is all I can ever be." he grumbled, his voice once more light and feminine.
Sitting down next to him, Grace leaned over and bumped his shoulder the way she used to always do. "Hey, look at it this way, you'll save a ton on shaving cream and men's deodorant!"
Grimacing, he turned to her. "Grace? Why are you here?"
"Just trying to help." she said simply. "You were kinda mean to Tracy and Joyce. In fact, you've been downright bitchy for weeks! For someone who's finally gotten what they always wanted, you're awfully unhappy about it!"
"I know!" he yelled at her. "I just... I hoped... Ugh! What's the use? I can't get away from it! Never! Goddamn assholes! They ruined my life!"
Sitting in silence a moment, Grace broke it with a question. "So, you just gonna give up and be a jerk the rest of your life?"
Picking up a fistful of sand, he threw it in frustration, only for it to fly back in his face.
"Joss!" Grace yelled as she spat and stood up, even as Joss tried to get sand out of his eyes. "Nice move! You got sand everywhere!"
Taking a moment to wipe his face clear of the grit, Joss lay down on the warm sand with his back to her. "I'm sorry, Grace."
"Don't be sorry, Joss!" she snapped. "Just don't do it! You get mad and throw a fit and all it's gonna do is fly back and hurt you and everyone around you!"
Seeing the allegory in his situation, he nodded, the sand grinding into his long brown hair as he did so. "I know Grace, it's just... it's so hard! I'll never be free of them!"
"They're your parents, Joss." she said softly and lovingly as she lay next to him and petted his hair. "No one can ever escape them. Even kids who their parents gave them up for adoption and never even met them can't escape what they did. I mean, what did you think was going to happen? You'd get away and suddenly be like it'd never happened?"
"No!" he grumbled, still laying in the sand and enjoying the feel of her fingers running through his hair. "I just... I thought it would be easier."
"Why?" she asked softly.
"Because I could stop being what they wanted me to be and start being myself."
"And who are you?" Grace asked, lying against his back as she continued to brush his long hair with her fingers.
About to say 'a boy', Joss caught himself, knowing the answer Grace had always given him. "I'm me."
He could hear the smile on her lips as she responded. "That's my Joss!" she giggled. "I think you may actually be getting it! Your gift..."
Lying next to her, Joss just enjoyed the closeness. "Your mom really misses you, Grace."
"I know." she sighed. "I miss her, too. Tell her I love her?"
"I will." he promised. "Grace? Is this a dream or is it real?"
"Little from column A, little from column B... little bit neither one." she tried to explain. "I'm a Helper. People used to call us Angels, but Helper really describes us better. Most the time, people don't even get to know they've been helped. Only a special few get to know. Like you."
"My parents would say it's just a dream... a fantasy my mind cooked up to help me get over losing you."
"Yeah, well your parents also said you were gay, and a girl, so... consider the source!" Grace pointed out, making both giggle together as they used to. Sadly, her voice became distant. "I gotta go now, Joss. Remember, I'll always love you."
"I love you, too." he sighed, not catching the first part of her statement as he reveled in the second. Just as he realized what she'd said, he sat up and found himself in his room. "Grace!"
"Shhh!" Joyce soothed him, reaching out to run her fingers through his hair some more. "It's alright, Joss!"
"Aunt Joyce!" he squeaked, his mind slowly coming out of the dream state he'd been in and back to his harsh reality. "Aunt Joyce, I'm really sorry about this afternoon! I just... I'm frustrated is all! I'm not a girl, but I'm not a boy, either! I'm a nothing!"
"Joss Ryan!" she barked, her brow furrowing. "I will not have you saying things like that about yourself! You're a wonderful person, boy or girl, and we love you!"
Calming himself, Joss relaxed back down onto the bed where the woman resumed combing his hair with her fingers. "I'm sorry, Aunt Joyce."
"It's alright, sweetie." she soothed. "You've had a pretty rough time. We just want to take care of you." After a few minutes trying to ease his fears and frustrations away, Joyce asked, "Do you dream about Grace often?"
Shaking his head, he relaxed. "Not since I got out of the hospital." Rolling over to look at her, he swallowed lightly in nervousness. "I... I feel like she was really here just now, like she's watching over me and trying to help."
"Like a guardian angel?" Joyce asked kindly.
"More like a psychiatrist!" he giggled. "She asks me questions I don't want to hear 'cuz I already know the answer." Changing topics, he returned to one from earlier. "Aunt Joyce? What am I gonna do? I can't dress like a boy... I look ridiculous! Like a late-teen tomboy that refuses to grow up!"
Not sure how to answer, and afraid to sound like she was pushing him in any direction, she shrugged. "I don't know, Joss. I'm sorry, but I just don't. Grownups don't have all the answers, dear. What do you want to do?"
"Go back in time six years and run away from home!" he answered honestly.
Joyce stopped petting his hair and helped him sit up. "Well, until we find Wells's time machine, how about we try going back to the store, without company, just you and me, and find you something to wear that suits you? You can't just keep wearing the same four outfits all the time!" Smiling, she added, "You'll give us a bad name!"
Laughing, Joss got up and tried again. This time shopping in the women's department, he managed to find enough jeans, tops, and other things that fit well and actually looked good on him that he didn't mind as much that they looked feminine. At least there are no skirts! he consoled himself. He was putting them away in the dresser and closet in his makeshift bedroom when Tracy knocked on his open door and came in.
"Hi, Joss." she said solemnly. "Look, about earlier, I'm sorry. I... I just have a really hard time seeing you as a..." Noticing the clothes he was putting away, she stared at him with an expression of betrayal. "Joss! After all that, you got women's clothes anyway? What's your damage?"
"Trace!" he snapped back, "I just need to kind of find my own thing, OK? I'm not really a girl, but at least these things fit and I have to wear something! Or do you think I should adopt the nudist lifestyle?"
Glaring at each other sternly a moment, the two slowly began to crack smiles, eventually devolving into a giggle-fit. Calming down after a few minutes, Tracy just smiled at him. "I'm sorry, Joss. I know your parents royally screwed you up, and I'm not really helping much. You've just always been my little... um..." She stopped as she realized she was still doing it. "Sorry."
Sighing, Joss shook his head. "It's fine, Trace. I understand. You look at me and you see the same thing everyone else does. A girl."
"Does it count that I want to see you differently?" she asked hopefully.
"Yes, Trace!" he grinned. "Yes it does!"
The year passed into summer, with the twins turning seventeen in mid-July. Joss tried to settle in to his new situation, but each day found him feeling more irritable, moody, and on an emotional roller coaster. By the end of the month, Hank and Joyce took him aside one evening to talk.
"Joss?" Hank began, "We think you should start seeing someone about your problems. You obviously need help coming to terms with things. You might even need... something... to help with your emotional problems."
"What? You wanna put me on drugs now?" he snapped, instantly regretting it and crying as he tried to take it back. "Oh, Hank! I'm sorry! I just..."
"We know, dear." Joyce forgave him quickly. "I think you know that we need to do something to help, though! We can't just sit by and watch while you tear yourself apart!"
Sighing and collecting himself, he looked at his two caregivers. "So what did you have in mind?"
"We've made an appointment for you to see our family doctor, Dr. Yates. She should be able to point us in the right direction." Hank explained.
Grinning weakly back, Joss agreed. "Alright, lets go find out how much Prozac she wants to put me on!"
Sitting on the examination table after getting dressed again, Joss waited with Joyce in the exam room for the doctor to return. He'd already done the blood tests she'd requested to be completed prior to the visit, so the physical exam was to find out if there were any other issues.
Dr. Elizabeth Yates returned and smiled at him gently. "Well, other than a few minor physical issues, I would say you were a perfectly normal and healthy fifteen-year-old girl."
"Except I'm a seventeen-year-old boy." he pointed out.
"I could tell." she retorted slyly at him. "Anyway, the blood tests I had you do last week came back and there is something concerning there." Pulling out the report, she handed a copy to Joyce. "Joss has almost no testosterone or estrogen in his blood, and given his development through puberty, his body is responding as though he's entered menopause. It explains the majority of the emotional instability he's been experiencing, as well as his general lack of energy."
"What do you suggest, Doctor Yates?" Joyce asked curiously.
After a moment of hesitation, glancing at Joss uneasily, she stated, "Hormone Replacement Therapy." before turning back to Joyce. "He needs testosterone or estrogen. Without one or the other, he'll start to lose bone mass, gain weight, lose energy, and his health will deteriorate." Looking once more at the boy, she regarded him sadly. "I know HRT carries a bad history with you Joss, but I'm afraid it's what you need at this point."
Joyce took the lull to ask the big question. "So then, which should it be?"
Dr. Yates shrugged. "I'm afraid that part is up to you. Yes, I know that's the hard part and I'm officially chickening out of telling you which way to go!" Laughing a moment with Joyce, the doctor's tone turned serious. "Honestly Joyce, we just don't have enough information to tell you all the ramifications. To the best of my knowledge, if we put him on testosterone therapy, there's a good likelihood there would be... issues."
Facing Joss, she looked at him helplessly. "You would start to develop some masculine traits, muscle and facial hair growth, and your voice might break, but in the end you'll still look more feminine than masculine. At best, you'll be androgynous. I'm sorry. I wish I had better options for you."
"It's not your fault, Doctor Yates." he glumly replied. Biting his lower lip, he pretty much knew the answer to the question, but knew he needed to ask it anyway. "What if I... um... go back on estrogen?"
Somberly, the doctor looked absently at the papers she held. "You'd go back to normal female hormone levels and stay pretty much as you are, Joss." Turning once more to Joyce, she smiled hopefully. "There are surgical options. We could put him on testosterone, wait a few years, and then try to help fix his androgyny with plastic surgery. A mastectomy to begin with, then facial reconstruction to give him more masculine facial features. Those are options."
"But that would be years down the road, right?" Joyce asked hesitantly.
"Yes, I'm afraid so." Dr. Yates admitted. "And even if your insurance covers Gender Identity Disorder, which most don't, none that I know of cover GID reversal, which in Joss's case it would be considered as such. Even then, the results might not work as well as you'd hope. It's one of the reasons there is such a high suicide rate for those that try to reverse gender reassignment. They simply can never get back all that they lost."
"I'll take the estrogen." Joss glumly acquiesced after a few moments' silence. "At least then I won't feel so awful all the time."
"Are you sure?" Joyce asked intently. "Hank and I will make things work no matter what you decide. Don't worry about the cost! It's only money!"
Nodding in resignation, Joss sighed. "Yeah, I'm sure. I know I'll never be who I would have been if my parents had let me be myself. I guess I've known that since I was fourteen. I'll take it."
"I can put you on a very minimal amount, Joss." Dr. Yates offered. "Just enough to make it easier on you."
"Thanks, Doctor Yates." he said looking at her. "I know you're trying to help, but if I do this of my own free will, I might as well do it right. Give me however much you think I need to stay healthy."
Within a week, Joss's moods had stabilized. By the time school was due to start his senior year, Joss seemed to be back to normal for him. The only major thing wrong was that he couldn't go back to church.
Sitting in the coffee shop with Daniel, Joss sipped his tea and glanced at the pastor, having just told him of his return to hormone therapy.
"Well..." he answered, "I can understand your reasons, Joss. I don't agree with them, though."
"Dan, even if I tried to go back," Joss explained, "I would never be a man. My mother saw to that."
"You don't know that, Joss!" he insisted. "Only God can know that!"
"God may know the results without even trying, but that doesn't make it impossible for medical science to make a really good guess." he countered. "I've seen what happens to people who try and go back, Dan. It's never very good. I looked it up. A shocking number of them end up in the morgue."
"They aren't you though, Joss!" he almost shouted. "You're different!"
"Why?" he asked. "What makes me so different that I should expect different results?"
"Your faith, Joss!" he pressed. "With the faith of a mustard seed you can move mountains! How much more could you do with Him on your side!"
"I do have faith, Dan." Joss admitted. "But faith won't undo what's been done to me."
"You have to put in the effort." he argued. "You can't just sit and pray for it! You have to try! Then trust Him to meet you the rest of the way."
"It sounds good on paper Pastor, but God doesn't care about my body, does He? Isn't this just a shell? A temporary housing for the immortal me within? Why would He bother working a miracle just for my vanity?" Joss shook his head. "No, it's too late for any of that. It would be vain and wasteful to try and change myself back into something I can never be."
Daniel Roberts turned his coffee cup around idly. "You know that so long as you remain looking like a girl you can't attend our church. Believe me, I've tried repeatedly to convince the congregation to accept you as you are, but I've been warned by the church council that if I continue to press the point, they'll fire me and hire another pastor. I'm thinking of just resigning to save them the trouble. I told you that you'd be welcome in any church I lead. I have no intention of going back on that promise."
"No!" Joss pleaded. "No, Pastor Roberts! I can't let you do that! They need you! Maybe now more than ever! I'll be alright. I can always find a church where they don't know me as Jocelyn. I promise, I won't lose my faith over this, OK? Just promise me you won't abandon the others!"
Daniel looked at him and saw the genuine concern in his eyes. Glancing down, he reluctantly agreed. "Alright. I'll let it go. I have to say, you'll be missed. Some of the congregation ask about you every week. How you are and what you're doing."
"Tell them... Tell them I'm fine!" he said with a smile.
Joss tried attending other churches, but none seemed to have the same feeling he'd gotten from the simple little church on Spring Drive. He met with Pastor Roberts twice more, talking about various issues, but his voluntary return to estrogen seemed to be the death knell of their relationship. As summer turned to fall, the two stopped reaching out more and more until there was too much time between them for either to bridge the gap.
School went on and by mid-October the general sense of people's guilt over how they'd treated Joss and Grace over the years waned with fading memories. So too was gone all the support he'd had over his transition. His Government teacher even went so far as to ridicule him openly, only calling him 'Jocelyn' and accusing him of setting a poor example to other LGBT students.
By the time November came and school was back after Halloween weekend, Joss was once more eating alone. Tracy wasn't snubbing him so much as they were just too different to really enjoy hanging out together. David likewise had moved on. Being on the Varsity football team left him little time to hang out with his socially awkward friend.
With Thanksgiving approaching, Joss had begun to feel like the proverbial unwelcome houseguest. Joyce and Hank did everything they could to make him feel at home and bought him everything he wanted or needed, but it was an isolated existence. With no real friends and without a church to call home, he drifted from day to day much as he had in his time after he'd lost Jennifer. Slowly depression set in and began to make Joss think of easier times.
The day before Thanksgiving, since they were home from school, Joss talked to Joyce about it.
"I was thinking of calling my parents and asking if they'd like to have me for the holiday tomorrow." he suggested idly as he cut up the carrots. "After all, Thanksgiving is a family holiday. You all don't need me around for it."
Stopping with her hand still stuffed in a twenty-pound bird, Joyce looked at him like he'd gone mad. "How can you even think of going back to them?" she asked incredulously. "They abused you, Joss! We won't allow it! You are family to us! We care for you just as much as if you were our own child!"
"I know, Aunt Joyce." he said with a melancholy lilt. "It's just... I miss them sometimes. I haven't even spoken to 'em since I got out of the psycho ward."
"It was an observation ward." Joyce corrected him as she pushed the stuffing further into the bird. Finishing up, she turned to him as she washed her hands. "You're not happy here, are you Joss?"
"Oh, it's fine, Aunt Joyce." he admitted half-heartedly as he slowly sliced carrots. "It's just... I was thinking, maybe now that they see how serious I am about who I am, they might treat me differently. I... I do still love them, even after all they did to me."
Walking over to him, she took the knife from his hands and led him over to sit at the kitchen table. "Are you sure about this?" she asked.
Looking at her and taking a breath, he let it out slowly as he answered. "No, but I think I have to at least try. Worst case I can walk back over here. It's only a few blocks. They can't stop me from leaving, right?"
"Not legally, no." Joyce said suspiciously. "Tell you what. Help me finish getting things ready for tomorrow and I'll give them a call and test the waters, so to speak. Then, if you still want to, I'll walk you there tomorrow morning and stay with you a bit until I'm sure you're safe. Does that sound fair?"
"You shouldn't have to spend time away from your family on Thanksgiving just for me." he argued.
"That's the deal, Joss." she stated seriously. "We're your guardians and are responsible for what happens to you. Take it or leave it."
Giving in, Joss nodded. "Alright, Aunt Joyce."
Once they'd completed the food preparations for the next day, Joyce did as she promised and dialed the Ryan residence, only to get a recording. As she listened intently, her eyes grew wide and she hung up the phone in disgust. "Figures!" she spat at the device.
"What's wrong?" Joss asked curiously.
"Your parents have apparently decided that they're too embarrassed to tell the people they know the truth about what happened to you and have decided to concoct some story that you've been abducted by religious extremists!"
"No, that's just the way they see it." Joss said disappointedly. "Like I told you, they're convinced that Pastor Roberts and the rest of the congregation brainwashed me into becoming a Christian and turning against my transition. Funny when you consider that I can't even go back there now that they know about me! Ha, ha."
Getting another idea, Joyce smiled and looked at him. "Joss? I need to call someone. Can you excuse me for a bit, dear?"
Nodding, he went off to his room after getting cleaned up. Lying in his bed, he could hear Joyce talking on the phone, but not what she was saying. He considered eavesdropping to find out, certain that it had to do with him, but thought better of it and just lay back and began to daydream once again about his pretend life as a normal boy.
The next morning, Joss got up and got dressed in a pair of slacks and a plain white blouse. Taking the time to do his hair simply, he left his room to join the family for breakfast. As soon as he walked out of his door, his smile grew wide. "Judy!" he yelled running to her and falling into her loving arms.
"Happy Thanksgiving, Joss!" Judy said as she held him. "I take it you're glad to see me?"
"Immensely!" he cried as he held her tightly. "I've missed you so much! I haven't seen you in months!"
"I missed you too, baby." she sighed. Releasing one another, she looked at him and smiled. "You look nice today! What would you think about spending Thanksgiving with me? It'll just be the two of us. Think you can stand that much of me?"
Blushing at the compliment, Joss nodded happily. "I'd love to, Judy! And Happy Thanksgiving to you, too!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Joss was happier than he'd ever thought possible. In the days that followed Thanksgiving, he'd started staying over at Judy's house more and more often. While he cared for the Edwards family and knew they loved him for himself, he loved Judy far more than his own mother. Once she became a licensed foster home in mid-December, Judy took over care of Joss officially, moving him from one house to the other with Joyce and Hank's blessings.
Of the three families that had taken him in, it was with Judy that the lost boy flourished. While Pastor Roberts and Susan had offered spiritual comfort, and Hank and Joyce Edwards offered financial stability and freedom, he didn't need those things. With Judy's unconditional love and support, along with the strict discipline of a Marine's wife, Joss's attitude turned from one of getting by and drifting from day-to-day to one where he felt he had a purpose; to make Judy proud of him.
For Judy's part, having Joss in her home was like having a little piece of her daughter alive again. She'd been very much alone in the seven months since Grace died. Having been on a date with Greg when the call had come telling her that her daughter was dead, out of misplaced guilt she'd never seen him again. There were times when she felt pangs of sadness when Joss would remind her of her lost daughter, but those were more than made up for in the times she and Joss would share together as mother and child. The two bonded over their common loss and found in each other what they needed; solace, togetherness, and forgiveness.
Getting ready for Christmas was a new experience for Joss. While he'd seen Christmas trees in the Edwards home growing up, he'd never been able to take part in the holiday that his parents forbade. Decorating the family tree together on Christmas Eve, Joss looked over at Judy and smiled. "I love you, Judy." he said utterly spontaneously. Realizing he'd said it out loud for the first time, he blushed and turned away embarrassedly.
"Joss!" she said kindly. Putting the ornament down and walking over to him, she replied as she took him in a hug. "I love you too, sweetheart!"
Stopping their decorating for a time, they sat and talked.
"Judy?" he asked tentatively. "Um... I've wanted to ask you something for a while now, but I wasn't sure how."
"You can ask me anything you like, Joss!" she said, looking at him happily.
"Can... um... may I call you Mom?" Terrified that it was asking too much, he tried to back out of it. "No, you know what? I'm sorry. It's stupid. Never mind! Let's get back..."
"Joss!" she said in a raised voice to get his attention. "If you would let me answer?" Seeing him look away fearfully, she could see him waiting for the inevitable disappointment. "Joss, I've known you for over three years, and in that time I've come to think of you as my own child. I should have become your mother-in-law, so... yes."
Not believing his ears, Joss turned to her in utter shock. "You mean it? I mean, you wouldn't mind?"
"I think it would be an honor for you to call me Mom, sweetie! I love you!" she said as a tear fell down her cheek.
"I love you too... Mom." he tried the name on for size as he also started to cry. Hugging one another, they cried, dried their eyes, and eventually went back to decorating the tree, together.
Several times Judy would have to stop to comfort Joss as he cried at having a truly loving mother or for all that he'd lost in life, only for Judy to find an ornament that Grace had made in Kindergarten or one that used to belong to Scott and Joss would find himself consoling her. When at last all of the decorating was done, they sat back on the couch together and watched the lights twinkle while Christmas music played on the stereo.
Ending the evening with a Wright family tradition, watching a Christmas movie and opening one present each, after watching White Christmas, Joss watched anxiously as Judy opened her present. "I hope you like it, Mom." he said nervously.
"I'm sure I will, dear!" she said as the paper ripped away from the wide flat box. Opening the lid, she nearly cried again as she saw the glass-framed eight by ten oil painting of Grace standing by the ocean, watching the waves, and looking as though she were in her twenties. "Oh, Joss! This is beautiful!" Tears streaming down her cheeks, she held it to her chest and hugged it. "I can almost feel you hugging me, baby!"
Getting up, Joss wrapped his arms around her and held her while she cried. "I didn't mean to make you sad, Mom."
"It's OK!" she said, her tears starting to ebb. "I'm not sad, I just miss her!"
"Me too, Mom." Joss admitted softly. "She told me to tell you that she loves you and misses you, too. When I saw her last, she looked like this."
Sobbing tears of happiness and sadness at the same time, it took several minutes and most of a box of tissues before they could come to his present. As he unwrapped the gift meticulously, Judy scoffed at his fastidiousness.
"Come on, sweetie! Before midnight comes and Santa skips our house!"
Giggling, Joss shook his head. "This is my first Christmas present ever, Mom! I want to keep the paper!"
"Oh, alright!" she gave in. "But just this once! I want to see torn paper and ribbons tomorrow!"
Carefully removing the wrapping paper as he nodded happily, he set it aside. The long slim white box opened easily as he took off the lid and his eyes went wide. "Mom!" he said with a breath, taking the golden chain out and holding it up to see the simple, inornate, golden cross.
"It's not much dear, but I hope you like it!" she said with a smile.
Pulling it around his neck, he fastened the clasp behind himself and let it lay over the simple cotton pajama shirt he wore, looking down at it. "I love it, Mom! Thank you so much! I... I've never had one before."
"I know, baby." she smiled at him. "Merry Christmas!"
"Merry Christmas, Mom!" he said as he got up and hugged her tightly. "I love you!"
What Judy lacked in finances, she made up for in attentiveness and true motherly love, which was something Joss needed even more than things. His big present that year was learning that she had set in motion officially adopting Joss as her son. Getting a court date just before he turned eighteen, they stood in front of the judge who glanced down at the paperwork and frowned.
"Mrs. Wright," he asked curiously, "I see here that Jocelyn turns eighteen next week. Why are you requesting formal adoption of your foster child?"
She swallowed nervously before answering. "Your honor, I love Joss just as much as my own departed daughter. I want Joss to be part of my family always. Not just to take care of until age eighteen, but for the rest of my life... and I want Joss to know it. So I guess the simplest answer I can give is, out of love, your honor."
Looking over the rest of the paperwork, he noted one other thing. "I see that you've also petitioned for change of name with the adoption." Turning to Joss, he smiled and peered over his reading glasses at the boy. "Are you agreeable, young lady?"
Standing next to Judy in a dark blue lady's suit jacket and matching slacks, Joss nodded solemnly. "Yes, sir... I mean... yes, your honor!"
Leaning back, he pursed his lips. "Very well." Reading over the rest of the paperwork, he glanced up at the two and smiled briefly before signing the form. "Then it is so ordered. From this day forward your name will be Joss Vale Wright. Congratulations, Mrs. Wright... Joss!"
Processing the judge's order took the rest of the day, but in the end the two came out of the family court building legally as mother and son. When Joss graduated that June, he walked with the boys instead of the girls, his fresh new haircut letting him easily blend in with the sea of unisex robes that hid his feminine shape. Meeting up with Tracy and David after the ceremonies, he hugged Tracy happily.
"We did it!" Joss and Tracy almost squealed together.
Smiling at one another, he then briefly hugged David with plenty of back slaps and the three of them posed for pictures for their parents, both together and separately.
Driving to the Edwards home afterward for their graduation party, it being much larger than their own house, Joss looked over at Judy with a grin that wouldn't stop. Pulling up, he saw something that made his smile melt. "Oh no!" There, parked in front of them on the street, was the vehicle he'd long ago christened 'the Lib-mobile'. "What're they doing here?"
Putting her car in park, Judy swallowed hard. "I didn't tell you they were coming because I wanted you to enjoy the moment. They were at your commencement ceremony, too."
"I don't want to see them, Mom!" Joss shouted at her, immediately regretting it. "Sorry, I shouldn't yell, but what could they possibly want?"
"To see you." she answered simply. "Nothing more. They finally completed that counseling course Doctor Benson made them take to avoid prosecution. They're on strict orders not to refer to you by your old name or as she, her, or in any other feminine way... or out they go! Even an accidental slip means they get the boot! OK?"
It had been almost a full year since he'd last seen them. Even though he still loved and missed them, Judy had taken their place in his heart. Dreading the encounter, Joss sighed and shook his head. "OK, Mom. I'll trust you."
"That's my brave boy!" she said lovingly as she patted his cheek and the two climbed out of the new model car that Judy got from the insurance settlement against the drunk driver that had killed her daughter. She'd been told that she could sue for far more, but she balked. Suing him wouldn't punish him further as it wouldn't be him she could sue, but the insurance company that had covered him; and money wouldn't bring her daughter back. Instead she settled for enough to buy a new car, bury Grace, and have some left over that she'd put away.
Going up the walkway to the front door hand in hand, Joss began to sweat nervously as they entered the house. Moving to the living room, Joss saw the banner that read, "Happy Graduation, Class of 2011!" and smiled. Around the room were all the people who cared about him, as well as many of the most popular kids in school from the cheerleading squad and football team. Meanwhile, through the window he could see in the back yard were even more graduates playing volleyball, laughing, and enjoying their freedom from school.
Looking back in the living room, he saw David talking with Hank and Pastor Roberts, while nearby Susan Roberts talked animatedly with Joyce Edwards. Tracy meanwhile was over by the back door, laughing and drinking punch with three other cheerleaders, her football-player boyfriend Mike hovering next to her. Lastly, he saw Dr. Benson talking with Fred and Melanie over in the far corner of the room. Everyone's eyes turned toward the two as they came in.
Greeting and hugging Daniel and Susan and all four Edwards, and making polite small talk with some of his fellow graduates, he at last turned to Dr. Benson who stood between Joss and his parents. "Thanks for coming, Doc!" he smiled at the man who he considered his living guardian angel.
Shaking Joss's hand firmly, Emanuel grinned at Joss genuinely. "I'm sorry I couldn't make your birthday. I'm glad to be here today, though." Glancing over his shoulder toward Fred and Melanie, he turned back to their son. "You look good! I might even go so far as to say happy!"
Blushing and looking away, Joss smiled embarrassedly. "Thanks! I am!"
As Dr. Benson stepped aside, Fred and Melanie walked up to him cautiously and took in the changes in his appearance. His hair was short, but the vaguely feminine style was still there and his formerly pierced ears had tiny scars where the holes had closed from lack of use. He had to wear a lady's plain white cotton blouse due to his bosom, a man's shirt simply not fitting right, but he wore men's black slacks and dress shoes. The only piece of jewelry he wore was the simple gold cross Judy had given him for Christmas.
All in all, he looked like an androgynous young woman trying to look like a man, but much happier than the two had seen him since he was five.
Fred spoke first. "Um... congratulations... Joss." Almost wanting to pull Joss into a hug, he stopped himself and instead just pushed his hand out to the boy. "How are you?"
Shaking his father's hand, Joss looked back at him with a cold expression. "Fine, thank you. And you, Mr. Ryan?"
Wincing at the formal mode of address, he tried to warm their relationship up slightly. "You can call me Fred, Joss. I think we know each other that well."
"No sir, I don't believe we do. I don't think you ever knew me, Mr. Ryan."
Taking a deep breath, the man exhaled it slowly and nodded. "I guess maybe you're right. I deserved that."
Melanie could hardly stand it. Looking at her child, the only thing she could see was the gold cross hanging around his neck. "I see you're still wasting your time on that sexist, homophobic..."
"Mel!" Fred barked at her. "Do you need to leave? Because I won't let you spoil this time we have with our... our son."
Narrowing her eyes at Fred, she scowled at him before turning back to Joss. "I was just stating a fact. So, Joss. Interesting outfit. I think the slacks could be a nicer cut and the shoes are too manish, but you seem to wear it well."
Pursing his lips at the backhanded compliment, Joss glared at her. "Thanks, Ms. Ryan. Do you like the cross? It was a Christmas gift from my Mom." He smiled wickedly as he saw her wince at each emphasized word. "That and the formal adoption papers and legal name change. Speaking of which..." Pulling out his diploma, he smiled as he indicated the finely printed name. "Joss Vale Wright! Has a nice ring to it, doesn't it, Ms. Ryan?"
"I can see this was a waste of time, Fred." she fumed. "This isn't my child. My child is dead. She never came out of that car wreck!"
"Your child is standing right in front of you, Ms. Ryan." Joss stated flatly. "I'm the same person I always was, just free of you! I hated every second of being your sweet princess, Melanie! Get this through your thick skull. I... Am... A... Boy! I... Always... Was! And I believe you just violated the terms of you being here... calling me a girl."
"I did no such thing!" she argued.
"You said 'She never came out of that car wreck', Mrs. Ryan." Judy pointed out, putting her hands defensively on Joss's shoulders. "Since the only ones in that accident were Joss and my daughter, unless you were trying to claim that Grace was your child, you were calling Joss a girl. The only girl in that accident was Grace! I think he's right. You should go. I don't know what possessed me to think you'd change or admit your abuse of your son! Go!"
"This isn't your house, Ms. Wright!" Melanie spat. "And Jocelyn will never be your daughter!" She jumped in a start when she heard Hank's voice from right behind her.
"You're right, Ms. Ryan." he boomed. "Jocelyn will never be Judy's daughter because no such person ever existed. Joss is Judy's son. This is however, my house and I think you need to go."
Glancing over at Joyce, Melanie looked back at Hank and made a final argument. "It's her house, too! Or do you think she has no say? I didn't see you consult her first!"
"He didn't have to, Mrs. Ryan." Joyce growled as most of the conversations in the room fell silent and Melanie turned to her. "He knows me well enough to know I agree! And even if I didn't, he knows I wouldn't make him put up with someone in his home as vile as you, so he doesn't need my permission!"
Seeing that she was going to get kicked out anyway, Melanie let loose with everything she had. "You all are crazy! Jocelyn is a girl! We can all see it! She looks, talks, moves, thinks, cries, and laughs like a girl! Look at her!" she gestured at Joss. "If you can look at that and see a boy, you're crazy! As for her believing in that sexist, homophobic, flying spaghetti monster in the sky, you all brainwashed her! I raised her to only believe in what you can prove! All objective analysis proves Jocelyn is a girl! You're all cruel, selfish, transphobic, Nazis that are shoving her back in the closet to protect your sexist, cis-normative prejudices! You all would be lined up out in the street and shot if I had my way! The whole lot of you!" As she finished, her eyes were wild with fury.
Joss walked up to her and stared her down, now being an inch taller than her. "I do believe in what is provable, Mrs. Ryan." he snarled at her. "I can prove Judy loves me as a mother should, unconditionally. She supports what I want to be, not what she wants me to be, which proves that you love nothing but yourself! You're a mean, hateful, intolerant woman, Mrs. Ryan! If anyone here is a Nazi, it's you! After all, it's you who said you'd like to see us all shot over a difference of opinion!"
Glaring at the assembled people who looked at her harshly, she turned away in a huff. "Come on, Fred! Let's go!"
Fred glanced around the room with a hopeful expression. "If it's all the same to everyone else Mel, I'd like to stay and get to know my son."
Melanie spun around and scowled, the fury in her eyes boring into him. "What! After what he just said to me? Fred! He called me a hateful, intolerant, Nazi! I can't be a Nazi! I'm a socialist!"
Stepping back away from her, Fred shook his head and smiled. "You called Joss him, Mel. I think we had it wrong... again... and I think you know it."
"Don't mansplain to me, Fred!" she screamed wildly. "No man can ever tell a woman what she thinks! I... it was an accident! I didn't mean to say he! I wasn't misgendering him! Her! He just got me... I mean she just got me so infuriated that..."
Melanie was so busy explaining how she wasn't really misgendering Joss and rationalizing her intolerance that she didn't notice the knock on the door, or the new arrivals until she felt the tap on her shoulder. "What!" she yelled, spinning around to see the police officer standing right in front of her.
"Ma'am?" Officer Janice Woods said calmly. "The homeowner called us a few minutes ago to complain that you were trespassing on his property and refused to leave. You're disrupting this graduation celebration. Will you leave voluntarily?" When Melanie just stood there in shock for a moment, not moving, the woman hooked her hand around Melanie's arm and gripped it, pulling gently toward the front door. "This way, ma'am."
Ripping her arm free and slapping the officer's hand away, Melanie spat in the officer's face. "Fascist pig! Don't touch me! I was leaving!"
Wiping the spittle from her cheek, Janice reached behind her and pulled her handcuffs out. "You're under arrest for assaulting an officer of the law and aggravated disorderly conduct." Moving quickly around Melanie, Officer Woods pulled the woman's arms behind her back and clapped the cuffs on, all the while Melanie spitting off a string of insults and threats.
"Traitor!" she screamed. "Defending the patriarchy and selling out women everywhere! Arresting me when I'm a mother protecting her daughter! You should arrest these people for hate crimes! Stupid dyke! You're twisting my arm! I'll have your job for brutality! Fred! Do something, you useless prick!"
While Janice frog-walked Melanie to the waiting squad car, reading the woman her rights with Melanie spewing hate the whole way, the other officer present took down the particulars.
"OK, so who is this daughter that she said she was trying to protect?" Officer Jim White asked, taking notes and looking around the room.
Joss stepped forward and cleared his throat. "She meant me, officer." he said with his head held high.
"You're her daughter?" he asked, expecting it to be a rhetorical question.
"No, sir." Joss answered, making Officer White look up in confusion.
"What's your name, miss?" he asked.
"Mister Joss Wright, sir." he answered clearly as he handed the officer his recently changed driver's license. "Mrs. Ryan used to be my mother."
Confused, he looked at the license and noted it stated Joss was male. "You're Joss Wright?" he asked incredulously, examining the feminine photo.
"Yes, Officer." Judy answered, putting her hand protectively on Joss's left shoulder. "I'm Joss's adopted mother, Judy Wright. Joss is my son."
After several minutes collecting information, he looked over at Fred. "Will you be following us down to the station then, Mr. Ryan?"
Pursing his lips, Fred shook his head. "No. She wasn't good enough to wait for me to be booked last year. She's a big girl. She can take care of herself." He glanced around the room, never having gotten the answer to his earlier inquiry. "That is, if I'm welcome to stay."
Hank turned to Joss with a questioning expression. "Well, Joss?"
Looking at his father, he smiled. "I'd be happy for you to stay... Fred."
Once the officers had left, the mood lightened significantly as kids went back to their own conversations. Sitting at the kitchen table, Joss talked with Fred while Judy sat next to her son.
"I got accepted into the Cleveland Institute of Art!" he boasted proudly as his father admired the oil painting of Grace that he'd given Judy, she having brought it with her in case Joss's parents wanted to see an example of his work. "I'm majoring in Painting with a minor in Graphic Design, just in case painting doesn't work out! I even got a Merit Scholarship! It's not much, but every little bit helps!"
Turning to Judy, Fred furrowed his brow. "You're not paying for his school?"
"I'm only a paralegal, Mr. Ryan. I don't make much money." Judy swallowed and glanced away embarrassedly. "At least he can still live at home while he goes to school, which will save on a lot of his costs." Then, with a sly expression, she pulled an envelope out of her purse. "However, I do have a graduation present for him!" Handing the envelope over to Joss, she smiled at him genuinely. "I am so proud of you, Joss!"
Taking and opening the envelope, his eyes widened before he turned and hugged Judy tightly. "Oh my God, Mom! You didn't have to do this! How can you afford it? Where did you get this?"
Fred looked at his son curiously. "What? What is it?" Seeing Joss hand him a check, he took it and read it. "Ten thousand dollars?" he asked, giving it back to his son while gazing at Judy.
"It's most of what's left from the settlement." she explained. Looking at Joss, her expression turned sad. "Consider it a gift from Grace, sweetheart." she stated, running her fingers through her son's short hair.
Fred smiled at the woman who'd become the mother his son deserved. "If he needs anything, please let me know." Turning to his son, he grimaced. "I have a lot to make up for. Maybe more than I can ever repay."
Taking a breath, he let it out slowly. "I... I'm sorry, Joss. I know that doesn't mean much now, but I hope you can forgive me someday. I should have listened to you and not let your..." He stopped himself and glanced back at Judy before turning his eyes back to Joss. "...not let Melanie... convince me that you were something you weren't. I should have protected you better."
Reaching a hand out, Joss watched as his father took it hesitantly. "Of course I forgive you... Dad." he sighed.
Surprised at the ease of his son's absolution, Fred blinked in confusion. "Don't get me wrong, Joss. I... I'm grateful, but... why?"
Fingering the cross he wore, he glanced up at Daniel who stood nearby and nodded back at him. The young man answered with a smile as he turned back to his father. "Because I was forgiven my mistakes, by Someone who had no good reason, other than the simple fact that He loved me, unconditionally!" Standing up, he waited for Fred to do likewise before embracing the confused man in a hug. "I love you, Daddy!"
Holding him in return, Fred relaxed into the moment and closed his eyes, remembering his son as he was when he was only a small boy and hugging him just as tightly. "I love you too, son."
Releasing his father, he returned to Judy and hugged her next. "I love you, Mom. Thanks... for everything!"
Also returning the embrace, Judy sighed contentedly. "Love you too, baby!"
With one arm still around her shoulders, Joss turned and looked around the room at the assembled people all smiling at him proudly. "I love you all so much!"
Link: The Road to Hell Title Page and Description
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Joss sighed as he worked on the commission painting. Knowing it needed to be delivered within two weeks, he wanted it done that day so the oils had time to dry. Smiling as he shook his head, he continued to add details to the dog's ears. Four years and a double degree and I'm using it to paint a rich woman's dead Airedale! he chuckled to himself.
Taking a break, he stretched his back and exhaled just as he heard the bell ring, indicating someone had entered Paintings and Portraits, the unoriginal name of his business. In the three years following college, he'd worked for an advertising company doing graphic design, saving all his money to open his shop. He still did freelance work for them when business was slow, but painting was his true passion. He'd opened a little more than a year earlier, just a few months after he'd turned twenty-five. He enjoyed the free time it gave him to paint his own works and loved the joy he saw on people's faces when they saw their own classic portrait done so well.
Getting off his stool, he checked himself in the mirror before going to greet whoever had come into the shop. His shoulder-length light brown hair was still mostly styled well from that morning, though the man's red flannel shirt he wore over the plain white woman's tank top was stained with oil paint in a thousand places and his jeans were equally spattered with color. He still looked like a woman, nothing would change that short of massive amounts of plastic surgery he was hesitant to do solely for his vanity, but at least he was content to be himself, even if most people assumed he was a woman.
That fact helped Joss more than he liked to admit. When dealing with clients, them taking him to be a woman had given him opportunities he never would have had as a man. Some of his best clients were women who felt ill at ease around men, but Joss's feminine nature and appearance opened their doors, and wallets, to his business. His actual masculinity helped in those rare cases when the opposite was true, giving him options that he never could have had as strictly one or the other.
Walking out front, he entered his commercial gallery filled with dozens of his paintings on display. Many were landscapes that he sold most frequently, but he also had portraits on display to advertise his skill in that area. Seeing the skinny young woman with her back to him admiring his duplication of da Vinci's The Last Supper, he smiled and cleared his throat.
The young woman, startled by his sudden appearance, jumped slightly and turned around to face him, her long pale-blonde hair spinning in front of her bright blue eyes before it fell over her right shoulder. "Oh! You startled me! Do you work here?" she asked, before realizing how dumb the question was.
Laughing, he nodded. "Yes! I'm Joss. Interested in a painting or a portrait?"
"Painting." she answered, looking at him carefully. "I... um... I just moved in near here. The walls are a little bare! Not sure why I came in here... I was just sorta drawn to the place. It's nice!" Looking at him curiously, she tilted her head. "You said your name is Joss?"
"Joss Wright." he looked down. "Have anything particular in mind, Miss..."
"Healy." she said, sounding disappointed. "Sorry, I just thought for a moment that you were someone I knew once, but his name was..."
"Jennifer?" he asked in shock.
"No, Jocelyn." his first love answered. Slowly realizing he was addressing her, she arched her brows. "Wait... what? Oh yes! I'm Jennifer! How did..." Examining him carefully, her eyes went wide. "Jocelyn?"
Turning away, he cleared his throat. "Actually it's just Joss now. I changed my name... among other things. How are Vicky and John?"
Running up to him, she wrapped him in a desperate embrace, barely keeping her tears at bay. "My God, Joss! I didn't think I'd ever see you again!"
Holding her in return, he instantly recalled the scent of her, inhaling deeply and releasing a flood of memories, some terrible, others wonderful.
Jennifer stood back and looked at him, her eyes in shock at what she saw, but her hand still holding his. "Mom and Dad are fine! They're still in Akron with Luke. What happened to you, Joss?" she asked curiously.
"Long story." he smiled at her, his feminine voice lilting. "Got a few hours?"
Giggling as feelings for him resurfaced rapidly, she found herself blushing. "Um... not now, I'm just on lunch, but... are you busy for dinner?" Thinking, she remembered the last time they'd spoken, over ten years earlier, he'd found someone else. "That is, if you're available?" she probed, looking at the floor.
Smiling at her kindly, his own attraction for Jennifer back as though it had never gone, Joss nodded. "I'm free, Jenn. Are you?" Seeing the young woman nod her head slowly and smile back, he watched as she fished a necklace out from within her top and played with the chain.
"I'm available." she said wistfully, glancing down to smile at the gold cross he wore that Judy had given him, before gazing into his eyes once more. "See, once upon a time, long ago, there was this girl I knew. We fell in love and I never really got over it. No one could ever measure up to him."
Joss stared at the gift he'd given her so long ago, the two birthstones set one against the other, and felt lightheaded. "Together Forever."
"Together Forever." she sighed back as she looked at their joined hands and noticed that she hadn't let him go. I don't think I ever really did!
--
If you have enjoyed this story, I would ask that you pay a small amount for the entertainment it has provided you. Nothing worthwhile in life is free. A one-time donation of $5 to the site makes it cost less than most paperbacks. Even if you regularly donate, this is the price I ask you to pay to see to it that this and stories like it can remain available.
Thank you and may God bless,
Roberta Elder
Walter Cocoran had a secret. Inside, she was Christina Joy Cocoran instead of the eleven-year-old boy everyone thought she was. In her quiet desperation, Christina tried to be the best girl possible. She did everything her parents told her to do, even the stupid boy things, and did them happily. Every night, she would pray that she would wake up a normal girl. The purity of her faith was noticed and she was given a choice; one that sent her life, and countless others, in a much different direction than she could ever have possibly imagined.
Set in Phoenix, Arizona in 2017, The Wisher's Paradox is a fantastic novella that acts as a catalyst for exploration of magical transgender transformations and the idea that the things that make us who we are and how others perceive us cannot be easily undone without unraveling the fabric of our own lives.
59,640 words
Copyright © 2021 Roberta Elder - All Rights Reserved
This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Though depicting some real-life events, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual firms or individual experiences is purely coincidental. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher.
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Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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Looking around her room, Christina smiled. Well, it's as clean as I can get it, anyway! Wiping her hands together, she turned to leave the decidedly boyish bedroom, catching sight of herself in the mirror that was the door to her closet.
Her smile melted every time she saw herself. Instead of the tiny blonde girl she saw herself as, very much like her mother Ruth, 'Walter' was a tall husky boy with short brown hair like her father David. Pushing the depression away with a shake of her head, she forced herself to look again. It's not as though she were overweight. She was actually quite athletic, built just like her father who wouldn't look out of place as a linebacker for a professional football team. Look on the bright side! You know who you are, you're doing good in school, you have lots of friends, and no pimples! With a sigh, she headed out into the living room to vacuum before her mother got home from work.
No one asked her to do it. She did it so that her parents wouldn't have to. Moving the furniture was easy for her. Even at eleven, she was almost as big as her mother and, if her father were any measure of where her body was headed, she'd end up over six feet tall and a shade over two hundred pounds of easily obtained muscle. Not exactly the girly type. she mused with a giggle as she pushed the couch out of the way before running the vacuum over the exposed carpet.
Straightening up after cleaning, she looked around the room with a satisfied smile and headed back to her room to do her homework.
Writing her given name at the top of her paper, she couldn't help but sigh in mild sorrow. Ever since she was three years old and made her first friends, all other girls, she knew herself to be a girl like them. She enjoyed playing dolls, house, tea parties, and other games with the girls in her neighborhood. The few boys she'd met played games she couldn't understand. Army men and their pretend wars, cars, and other such games baffled her. It was her best friend Kathy who'd given her the name Christina. Even a few years later though, her friend didn't even remember the name. She was 'Walt'.
It was then that she realized that she wasn't like the other girls. All too soon she'd realized that her body was a boy's body. Rather than turn sad or angry though, Christina was different. She was the eternal optimist and tried to just not let it bother her.
Shaking herself from the doldrums that threatened to take her, Christina put a smile on her face and dived into her English assignment.
Two hours later, Ruth Cocoran turned off the engine of her car and sighed exhaustedly before opening the door, letting the cool of the air-conditioned interior out and the ninety-three degree air in. Stepping out into the heat that had come down from almost a hundred degrees earlier that day, she was nearly sweating by the time she opened the front door, carrying the bag of groceries in with her.
"Walt!" she shouted from the entryway as she kicked the front door closed behind her. "I'm home, sweetie!"
Bounding out into the living room like an excited puppy, Christina ran up to her mother happily. "Welcome home, Mother!" Taking the groceries from her arms, the oversized girl beamed as though she hadn't seen her in days, even though it had only been since breakfast that morning. "Let me help you with that! How was work?"
It was the same as most afternoons for Ruth, so the behavior didn't seem at all out of place to the accountant, mother, and wife. "Work was fine, sweetie. How was school?" Even as she asked, she was kicking off her shoes while Christina took the food to the kitchen.
"School was OK." the girl answered noncommittally as she began to put the newly purchased food in the refrigerator. "Oh! You should have seen the outfit Kathy wore today! I can't believe that her mom let her wear a top that didn't even cover her midriff! I gave her a bit of a hard time about it! You could almost see her bra, it was so short!"
Shaking her head as she put her briefcase next to the desk she used at home, Ruth arched a brow at Christina's revelation. "Given how hot it was today, I almost envy her! Ah, to be young again!"
Stopping her self-assigned chore, Christina leaned out of the kitchen back into the living room and looked at her with eyes wide. "Mother!"
"Oh, Walt!" she retorted. "I was a girl of the eighties, sweetie! We invented the bare midriff!"
Her turn to shake her head, Christina resumed her task. "Well, I think it's a little too risqué, if you ask me! I mean, I'm not judging her for it, but still."
Biting her lip to repress her desire to correct her child for talking so much like a girl, Ruth closed her eyes and took a breath. No matter how long Christina had been acting so femininely, which was over six years that the woman could tell for certain, she just couldn't get used to it coming from such an obvious looking boy. "I'm going to hop in the shower before I start dinner, sweetie. Thank you for putting away the groceries for me. You didn't have to, you know."
"I know!" Christina replied cheerily. "I'm happy to help, Mother! Enjoy your shower! I need to get back to my English paper... unless you'd like me to cook dinner for you?"
"No!" Ruth almost snapped. "That is, you should focus on your school work. Let me take care of dinner, sweetheart. Alright?"
"OK, Mother!" Christina chirped as she almost skipped back to her room.
Heading into the master bathroom, Ruth tried not to read too much into her child's feminine behavior. At first it had worried both her and David, to the point that they'd had Christina genetically tested to verify she was in fact a male and not misidentified at birth. The test had come out as expected; she was a perfectly normal boy physically, but her personality was definitely female. When she and David had talked to her about it with open minds, they still didn't get anywhere. She could still remember the conversation.
Ruth looked at her five-year-old eating lunch after school a week following the doctor's visit. "Honey? Your daddy and I want to ask you something."
Trying to be supportive, David Cocoran nodded. "Listen to your mommy, Walt. It's important, OK?"
Seeing that they were serious, Christina's eyes widened and she put down her glass of milk. "OK, Daddy. I'm listening."
Gathering her courage, she asked, "Honey? Your daddy and I want to help, so please be honest. Do you know why you don't act like the other boys?"
Biting her lower lip, Christina slowly shook her head. "No."
With Ruth frustrated on that front, David took a turn. "Walt? Do you know why you do act like the girls in your Kindergarten class?"
Suddenly happy and animated, Christina smiled at him. "Oh! You mean like Kathy and Rachel and Lindsey and Beth and Sharon and..."
"Yes!" he interrupted her. "Like them! Don't you have any boys that are your friends?"
Thinking hard, Christina shook her head. "Nuh uh. They all play dumb games and aren't any fun! Robert even pushed Kathy on the playground and called her a dumb girl, and boy did he get it when I told teacher!"
Looking at one another knowingly, they both recognized the way she'd answered and sighed, having been warned by Walt's pediatrician that she might have gender issues. Knowing they had to ask the inevitable, Ruth waited for David to nod before turning to Christina. "Honey? Do... do you think you're a girl?"
Hearing them ask, Christina swallowed hard. Of course she felt like she should be a girl. She always had for as long as she could remember, which was at least the last two years. However, she also knew that she was a boy on the outside and that nothing short of a miracle would change that, for she wasn't just a boy, she was a masculine-looking one, even at five. Being a practical girl, she just accepted the inevitable, without anyone telling her she should, that she was a boy and could never change it. Shaking her head slowly, Christina did her best to answer her mother's question.
"No. I know I'm a boy. Girls are... different."
Stymied, but partially relieved, the parents pressed her for hours as to why she acted so much like a girl, but the only answer they could ever get from Christina was that she knew she was a boy, but just didn't like boy things.
Stepping out of the shower, Ruth dried herself off before throwing on a light summer dress that would keep her cool in the heat of the evening. For six years she'd watched Christina become more and more feminine, all the while insisting that she was a boy. They'd taken her to see a child psychologist at six, but all he could tell them was the same thing Christina kept insisting, that she was a boy, despite her naturally feminine behavior. Even speaking to their pastor, Reverend Brookes, didn't produce any answers.
Afraid that Christina might be gay and fearing the troubled life it would bring her due to the intolerance of others, they'd had a delicate talk with her at age seven, asking if she liked boys, fully prepared to support her no matter what she said. Remembering her response made Ruth giggle lightly. He looked so cute sticking his tongue out and going "Blech! Boys are gross! No way would I marry a boy! I am a boy!"
Fixing the spaghetti she'd planned for the evening meal, she heard her husband's car pull up the driveway and the motor die into the background noise of the air conditioner keeping the house cool. Smiling, she shouted, "Walt! Your father's home! Dinner in fifteen! Go wash up!"
"OK, Mother!" she shouted from her room as she finished putting her work in her backpack for the next school day. Hurrying to the front door, she opened it just as her father was reaching for the doorknob. "Daddy!" she shouted, hugging him with all the considerable strength in her.
"Ugh!" David groaned at the bear hug his child wrapped him in. No small man at six-foot-two and well over two hundred pounds of well-toned muscle, his eleven-year-old child's robust stature only a foot shorter and her growing strength made him wince.
"Sorry, Daddy!" Christina giggled. "Did you have a good day?"
Stepping in and closing the door behind him, her father nodded curtly. "It was alright. I had a sales review, but don't worry about your old man! He can whip the rest of the salesmen on the lot with his eyes closed!" Throwing a fake punch at Christina, he smiled at her playfully.
Shying away from the punch and pulling back to defend herself the way he'd taught her, Christina giggled and put her fists up in mock combat, but threw her father for a loop with her words. "Daddy! No fair! I wasn't ready!"
Putting his fists down, he sighed as his smile melted. "OK, sport. I'm going to go take this monkey suit off and you need to get cleaned up for dinner!"
Moving in quickly, Christina hugged him again before he could stop her and smiled as she stepped back. "OK, Daddy! I'll be quick!" Racing off to the bathroom, she tried to be happy with her lot in life. So I'm not Daddy's little girl! I know he loves me! What more can a daughter ask for?
A quarter hour later the three sat down for dinner together at the table as usual, the three joining hands while David said the prayer of thanks as he did every night. Once more with her head bowed in pure faith, Christina's thoughts turned to God. I do thank you for everything I have, God... but... well... you know. Please? As her father and mother said "Amen." she joined them with a smile and the three enjoyed their meal.
Once dinner was done, Christina went off and took her shower while her father cleaned the dinner dishes and her mother relaxed to pick a movie they could watch together. The evening seemed no different than any other as Christina sat in her boy's plain gray pajamas on the couch between her loving parents watching Angels in the Outfield, one of her favorites.
In truth, even though she was a girl of eleven, Christina believed in angels. She even still believed in Santa, though she was beginning to doubt that he was a real physical person, but more of a way of life everyone should live. It's why she tried so hard to do everything her parents told her, and then some. She knew that the angels were watching and that the only way she would ever get her heart's desire was to be as good as possible.
She did far more than they ever asked. She had nearly perfect grades, was never tardy, would never consider skipping school, refrained from using bad words, even when her parents weren't around, and in all ways tried to be the perfect little lady. Even when her father signed her up for football, she smiled and threw herself into the task, trying to be the best player she could be, even though she disliked the game. It made him happy, so she tried.
Even as the three watched the movie, they were unaware that they too were being watched by unseen eyes.
When at last the movie ended, Christina stretched and got up. "Thanks for the movie, Mom! I know you guys must hate it by now! I must have seen that at least a dozen times!"
"Just this year!" David joked.
"Oh, Daddy!" she almost whined. "I'm not that bad!" Reaching down she hugged him, careful not to overdo it this time.
Returning the hug, David was surprised when she kissed him on the cheek. He needn't have been as she'd been doing so every night of her life, but the action still seemed so at odds with his child's physique and insistence that she was a boy. "G'night, sport!" he said. "Sweet dreams and God bless!"
Hugging her mother gently, Ruth also received a kiss on the cheek. "Goodnight, Mother! See you in the morning!"
"Night, sweetheart!" she answered back before Christina had her hair petted by the woman. "Want me to tuck you in?"
"No." she sighed. "It's fine, Mother. I'm a big... boy!"
Hardly noticing the slight hitch in her only child's reply, Ruth smiled and nodded. "OK, baby. Goodnight and God bless!"
Heading for her room, Christina smiled weakly to herself. I gotta watch that! I almost called myself a girl! She knew her parents were concerned about her feminine behavior. She wasn't that naive, but felt that she needed to keep it from them so they wouldn't worry. Not like there's anything they could do about it, anyway. She'd tried acting less girly, but no matter what it just came out. Closing her bedroom door behind her, the hair bristled on the back of her neck as she looked around the silent room cautiously, feeling like she was being watched for a moment. Seeing no one there, she relaxed and turned down her covers before kneeling next to her bed.
God? It's Christina. Same thing as always! I know! You must get tired of hearing me ask for the same thing every night for seven years straight, but if it would be OK... would you make me a girl when I wake up? Please? I'm really trying to accept being stuck in a boy's body. I know there isn't much I can do about that because the body you gave me is just never gonna look girly no matter what I do, but I know you could change me to fit the inside!
I'm still trying to be the best girl I can be, just like I promised! Even if the answer's no, it's OK, though. I still love you and love the family you gave me! I'm sure if I told Mother or Daddy that I wanted to be a girl they would try and help me be one, but you know how that would work! I'd still look like a boy, no matter what clothes I wore or even if I wore makeup and had my long blonde hair! Anyway... please? Can I be a girl? I love you! Amen!
Climbing into her bed, she still couldn't shake that feeling of being watched. It scared her more than she even wanted to admit to herself. Sliding under her covers, she almost felt like hiding under them or pulling her pillow over her head. Trying to settle her nerves, she took a breath and tried to ignore the feeling until sleep claimed her.
Ruth dragged the brush through her hair after having washed it and blown it dry while David brushed his teeth and settled into bed. "David? Did you notice anything unusual about Walt tonight?"
Putting down the book he'd started reading, David looked toward the open door of the bathroom. "Hmm. Now that you mention it, yes." he agreed thoughtfully. "He seemed..." Searching for the words, he was at a total loss how to describe it. "Huh. I can't put my finger on it, but yes... there was something different."
Frustrated that he'd had no better a time recognizing the difference than she had, Ruth began angrily pulling the brush through her hair. "I don't know either! Just something... off... you know? Like he was... sad? No! That's not it! Um... maybe... content? If I didn't know better, I'd swear that he was..." Putting the brush down, she regarded herself in the mirror with a stunned look. "David! Do you think he might have a... a girlfriend?"
Sitting up, David thought back to Christina's behavior during dinner and the movie. Furrowing his brow, he pursed his lips and thought hard. "Well, he does have quite a few girlfriends, but I assume you mean something more than the girls that he's friends with?"
Coming out of the bathroom and snapping off the light as she did so, Ruth's brow was similarly bunched as his own. "Yeah, that's what I meant, but... no... it's... it's something else that I just can't put my finger on. He almost seemed... smaller. Not physically, I mean... I mean emotionally. Like he was giving something up that he used to like. You know?"
"Not really, no!" David laughed. "But I suppose I can see that." Pausing a moment, he was about to continue when he had an eerie feeling crawl up his spine. "Shhh!" he whispered.
"What's wr..." Ruth began, only to be shushed again as her husband got out of bed and silently retrieved his Smith and Wesson revolver from the nightstand.
Opening the cylinder, he loaded all six chambers with the deadly copper-jacketed hollow-point ammunition, ready to put down any intruder that might threaten his family. Flicking the weapon to the right with his wrist, the cylinder clicked into place as he crept up on the bedroom door, listening beyond it cautiously. The last thing in the world he wanted to do was shoot another human being, but he would if he had to in defense of his family.
Seeing David spooked was rare for Ruth. He'd only ever acted like this once before, shortly after they'd brought Walt home from the therapist and one of the front windows had been shattered while they'd slept. It had just been mischievous teens then, but it was enough of a scare that he'd bought the gun the next day. She wanted to stick close to him, but knew that if he needed to defend his family, the last thing he needed was her clinging to his back.
Slowly, David opened the bedroom door and peered out into the darkened hallway that led to the living room. Edging his way down the hall, he noted that Christina's door was open a crack. Nudging it open with a shoulder, he quickly swept the room with his eyes to see if there was anyone threatening his child. Seeing her sleeping form breathing slow and deep and covered head to toe under blankets, he moved throughout the rest of their home cautiously, making sure that no one could be hiding anywhere and that all the doors and windows were in fact locked.
After an interminable wait, Ruth heard him coming back down the hall at a normal pace, the sound of their child's door being closed before he returned to their bedroom as he closed the door behind him with a look of relief.
"What was it, David?" she begged.
"Nothing!" he chuckled. "I was sure that I heard someone moving around the house for a moment, but there's no one there and we're locked up tight, so..."
"...so you were just being paranoid?" she joked.
"Cautious." he corrected her as he unloaded and returned the revolver to the drawer. "Believe me. I take my responsibilities as a father and husband seriously." Settling back into bed, David shook his head to try to clear the odd feeling he couldn't shake, but just ended up ignoring it. "I worry."
"About what?" Ruth asked nervously as she climbed into the bed next to him.
"About ignorant fools thinking that just because Walt is... well... delicate, that he would make a good target." he admitted. "I won't let anyone hurt him... or you... out of ignorance, fear, or hate."
While the two talked quietly to one another, in the next room Christina was dreaming of her one wish coming true. As she did, Lisbeth looked down on her with a gentle smile and watched her beautiful dream unfold. With a slow blink, she sighed at the simple desires of the poor girl trapped in a body that was so unlike her true self; the small thin blonde that matched the girl's soul.
Dear Christina! she spoke into the girl's dream in the only way possible for her to communicate, as pure thought. You are such an innocent and beautiful girl! Your faith is pure, unselfish, and trusting in the Creator's wisdom, not your own. You don't know how rare a gift that is! Tonight it is seven years to the day that you first made your promise to the Creator that you would be the best girl you knew how to be! You have kept your promise and the Creator remembers it! The Creator has decided that you are deserving of an even more precious gift... that of choice.
Christina was standing in the middle of a field of wildflowers. The sun was warm on her skin through the thin fabric of her white floral sundress as her long blonde locks tickled gently across her shoulders in the light breeze. As she looked around, she saw the beautiful woman looking at her and smiling, the words she spoke without moving her lips simply appearing in her mind.
"Who... who are you?" she asked nervously.
A friend! Lisbeth thought to the girl. My name is Lisbeth. You people give us so many wonderful names, though! Spirit, fairy, elf, fay, genie, nymph..., but you Christina, you would call me an angel.
Her breath caught as she looked at the woman who seemed no different than any person she'd ever met, save that she was uncommonly beautiful and could speak to her wordlessly. Swallowing hard, she looked at the creature and stepped closer cautiously. "W-what choice am I being given?"
The choice to accept or deny your heart's greatest desire. Lisbeth told her with a gentle smile. Do you accept it? I must warn you, it may not be all you hope it to be. You need not accept. You're old enough now to know that decisions have consequences. This one is no different.
Suddenly realizing that the woman was offering to give her a girl's body to go with her girl's soul, her eyes went wide. "W-what? How can I say no? I mean, is there a downside? Will I still look like a boy or something?"
Laughing gently, Lisbeth's mouth still never opened. No! You will look as you do here. It is the image the Creator gave you to soothe your aching soul. It is what you would have looked like, what you will look like if you accept this gift, a mix of your mother and father. Are you so vain it would matter?
Smiling, Christina shook her head. "No! Not really! I mean, it's nice to be pretty, but I just want to be a girl! I don't care what else! Just being able to be called Christina instead of Walt all the time! Oh, to be able to wear a dress when I want to feel pretty, or grungy sweats when I'm grumpy? Yes!"
With a slow nod, Lisbeth arched her brows. I give you this last chance to refuse. Once done, it cannot be undone. Are you sure you don't have any questions you would ask first before you decide? I will answer truthfully.
Trying to think of any possible downsides, Christina narrowed her eyes. "Will... will making me become a girl make me like boys?"
Shaking her head, an almost mischievous grin crossed her lips. No! Not even an angel can change who you are. You will love as you would have in your old body, for it will still be you. To change that about you would be to kill you and replace your soul with someone that is just similar to you. Only the Creator can create new life. It is not within our power to grant such a wish. Your body is not you. It does not control your heart.
Trying to think of anything else, Christina could barely contain herself. "Yes! I accept His gift! Please! Make me a girl!"
You always have been one, Christina. Lisbeth admonished. Your body is just a vessel for your soul, which has always been just as you are here. I know your simple words are so limited that they fail to capture what you truly mean even part of the time, but I know your heart's desire... that your body should reflect your soul. It shall be. From this day forward you will have a girl's body which will grow into a woman's body as though it had always been yours. Nothing else will change. You will still be yourself and your promise will still be held by the Creator as the gift you offered freely. Now rest and sleep. When you awaken, it will be done. Goodbye, Christina! Go with the love of the Creator!
Suddenly very sleepy, which she felt was odd for this being a dream, the girl lay down in the wildflowers and her eyes closed; the last thing she saw being the beautiful woman fading from view.
In her bedroom, Lisbeth stood watch over Christina as her body slowly transformed over the course of hours. It could have been instantaneous, but Lisbeth wanted to ensure that the process was painless and natural, allowing time for her system to acclimate as her body shrank, her hair lengthened and turned a golden fair, her bones shifted, and a womb grew in her body.
When at last it was done, the sun was nearing the horizon and an alarm clock buzzed from the next room where Christina's parents slept. With a shake of her head and a sad expression, Lisbeth sighed in sorrow for the girl. You poor creature. You did not have the experience or forethought to ask the needed questions. It will be hard on you, little one. Harder than you ever thought possible. Far easier a time you would have had would you have turned down the gift and just showed your parents who their daughter is. I do not know why the Creator offered the gift to you, or why I could not counsel one as young as you without you asking. Still, you may yet persevere. May the Creator watch over you, dear one! You are going to need it!
At that, Lisbeth vanished from sight, even as the girl's father crawled out of bed to get ready for work.
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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Stirring slightly, Christina was in the wonderful middle ground between dreaming and waking, still not fully conscious, but no longer asleep. God, that was a beautiful dream! she mused sleepily. It all felt so real!
"Walt!" Ruth shouted from just beyond the door. "Time to get up!"
Hearing the name she'd fallen asleep to, Christina sighed frustratedly. Still, she put a smile on her face and sat up. Could be worse! She might have...
Pausing mid-thought, Christina immediately knew something was wrong. Her boy's pajamas sat on her body like a circus tent. She couldn't even find her hands as they were lost somewhere up the sleeves. Shaking her head to clear it, she shrieked when tangles of blonde curls flew into her face and mouth. Spitting to try and dislodge the wayward strands from her teeth, she tried wiping them away with the sleeves of her gray PJs.
Hearing a mild "Eep!" from her child's room, Ruth did a double take at the closed door when she realized it was the voice of a girl. Knocking, Ruth tried to decide if she should just barge in or give Walt a moment, possibly to keep her from seeing something very embarrassing involving him and a girl.
"Walt!?" she patiently yelled through the door. "Walt, I'm coming in!"
When her mother walked in the door, Christina was still trying to get the hair out of her face and pull the sleeves of her pajamas up until her hands were free. "M... Mother?" Even as the word escaped her lips, she couldn't recognize it as her own voice.
Seeing a girl in Walt's bed, wearing the very same pajamas that her son had worn to bed the night before, Ruth's mind went straight to the first place a parent's thoughts would go in such circumstance. It didn't involve angels.
Ruth screamed.
Still shaving in the bathroom, the sound of his wife's voice raised in fear and shock made him drop the electric razor, its head shattering as it crashed into the porcelain sink. Ignoring his ruined appliance, David ran for his child's bedroom to find out what had terrified his wife so much that she'd sounded as though she'd discovered a body, and hoping that he was wrong in that estimation. "What!? Ruth! What's wrong?"
Even as her father rushed in to stand next to her mother, Christina had finally freed her hands from her oversized sleeves and saw the tiny fingers and hands that only ten hours earlier had been meaty and strong. Now they felt like toothpicks as she tried to use them to get the hair out of her eyes and mouth as she turned to see the shocked expressions of her parents.
"Walt!" Ruth finally managed to shout as she couldn't take her eyes off the intruder in her home. "Walt, get out here right now!" Tearing her eyes away from the girl, Ruth began scouring the room for where her child might be hiding. "WALTER DEVON COCORAN! You get out here this instant and explain yourself!"
Slowly catching up to what was going on, David was stunned at the sight of an eleven-year-old girl in his child's bed and wearing the nightclothes 'he' had worn to bed, appearing to him as though she'd just managed to get the top on before he came in. "Oh God!" It was all he could say before turning to look away and provide the girl some sense of modesty.
Losing her patience, Ruth began tearing through Christina's room, flinging open closet doors, looking under the bed, and even opening dresser drawers, as ridiculous as that seemed to be later. "Walter! Come out, damn you!" Ruth considered herself a modern woman and good and patient mother. She could accept that Christina had sneaked a pre-teen girl into her room overnight, and even that the two might well have had sex, but her child was now hiding and trying to pretend it had never happened, which was making her more and more angry by the second.
Even as her parents lost their minds, Christina lost hers and she could only stare in stunned shock at her tiny hands. "D... d... Daddy!?" she finally managed to eke out as terror gripped her throat.
Clearing his throat, David furrowed his brow and addressed the strange girl. "You... your daddy isn't here, young lady. You're in our son's house... in his bedroom... in his bed."
Sure now that Walt was nowhere in the room, Ruth ran out to search the rest of the house. "Walt!" she screamed. "Wherever you are, you get your fanny out here and explain why there's a girl in your bed!"
Hearing her mother scrambling around the house looking for her, Christina slowly looked over at her father, her eyes wide in fear. "Daddy?"
Crossing his arms, David shook his head. "No. I'm Walt's father, David. Do you wear glasses? Where did you put them before you... um..." The man couldn't bring himself to say 'before you climbed into bed with Walt.' It was too big a shock, given his child's innocent nature.
Now in shock that her own father didn't know her, Christina began to cry. "Oh, Daddy!" She tried to say more, but the wracking sobs kept her from being even slightly coherent.
Seeing the poor girl reduced to tears and wanting her father, David was torn. He wanted to comfort this strange girl who obviously was something special to his child, but at the same time he knew it would be inappropriate to even get within arm's reach of her. Examining the room that his wife had just torn apart searching for Christina, David started looking himself, this time for the girl's clothes that he determined she must have worn to come into their home. It must have been her that I heard last night. he told himself.
Meanwhile, Ruth was at her wit's end where else to look for her wayward child. Reduced to near hysterics, she forced herself to calm down and lower her voice as she walked around the house and talked to the walls.
"Walt? It's Mother. It's OK, sweetheart! I promise I'm not going to hit you or spank you! We just want to talk to you, OK? Please come out! You can always talk to us about anything! You know that! We're not mad! We're just... we're frightened for you! That poor girl you left alone in your room is frightened, too! Walt! This is no way for a... a man to behave! Walter!"
Hearing his wife getting nowhere, and not having any luck in finding the girl's lost clothing, David moved to the door. "Ruth! Honey? Would you come here, please?" As soon as she was near enough, David lowered his voice. "Let's switch. Maybe I can find Walt and you can find the young lady's clothes? I can't even talk to her without her breaking into hysterics and wanting her father!" As he was about to leave, he paused and added, "Oh, I think she wears glasses. She thought I was her father."
Nodding in understanding, Ruth entered Christina's room cautiously while David left to search the house. Seeing the girl sobbing uncontrollably on her child's bed, there was something almost familiar about it, reminding her of times when Christina was young and would wake up with a nightmare. Her instinct to help a hurt child overcame her discomfort with the idea that this girl had slept with her son and she approached the wailing girl.
"Shhh! It's alright, dear!" she soothed, moving close enough to rest a hand on her shoulder, not wanting to scare the girl more. "We're not mad, dear! You don't have to be scared! No one's going to hurt you, OK? Shhh!"
Hearing her mother's soothing voice made Christina need to feel the woman's embrace. "Oh, Mother!" she cried as she turned and latched onto her like a life preserver, sobbing as she tried to bring her emotions under control. Why is it so hard to stop crying? she wondered.
Having the strange girl call her 'Mother', and then cling to her as though she were, unnerved Ruth. After a moment she wrapped her arms around the girl and tried to calm her. "It's alright, dear! You're safe, OK? Do you think you can calm down enough to tell me your name?"
Pulling back slightly, she regarded her mother through tear-stained eyes. "It... it's me, Mother! Christina!" she burbled between sobs, unaware of her own faux pas.
Pulling the girl into a supportive embrace, Ruth furrowed her brow in confusion. "A... Alright. Your name's Christina. I'm Ruth, Walt's mother. David is my husband and Walt's father. He said you might need your glasses. Do you know where they are?" She glanced around the ruined room briefly, hoping to spot them without releasing the girl to resume her wailing.
Confused, Christina pulled away again and tried to compose herself. "I... I know who you are, Mother! I don't need glasses! I never have before!"
"Why do you keep calling me Mother? I'm not your mother, sweetie! I'm Walt's mother! You're confused! It's OK! It's understandable! You... you were scared and surprised! Take a good look at me, OK Christina?"
Hearing her secret name spoken aloud finally made her realize that her parents had no way of knowing who Christina even was, let alone that she was also Walter. Thinking of all the stories she'd read where a girl like her gets magically changed to have a girl's body, the whole world had always changed so that she was instantly accepted as one as though it had always been so. Isn't that what the angel said would happen? she wondered. Yeah! She said, 'you will have a girl's body, which will grow into a woman's body as though it had always been yours.' Looking into her mother's eyes, her sad and scared expression dissolved into a giddy smile. "I... I'm a girl!"
Seeing the stranger happily state the obvious in such a simple way made her back away slowly, thinking the girl must be slightly crazed. "Um... of course you're a girl, Christina. What's your last name?"
Rolling her eyes at her mother, the giddy girl giggled. "The same as yours, silly! Cocoran!"
Still backing away, Ruth shook her head. "No! You... you're too young to have married Walt! Playing pretend is fun, but your name is still the same as it was before you met him, dear. What is it?"
Her smile fell as she saw that her mother wasn't getting it. "No, Mother! You don't underst..."
"I'm not your mother, Christina!" Ruth nearly shouted before calming herself once more. "You... you aren't my Walt's wife, so I'm not your mother! I'm only his mother! Where are your clothes?"
"My clothes?" she pondered curiously. "In the closet, of course!"
Moving to look, the woman saw no girl's clothes there at all. "I don't see them. Do... do you?"
Pointing at her shirts that hung in the closet, Christina sighed in exasperation. "There! Those are my clothes, Mother! I'm Walt!"
The stunned expression on Ruth's face was a pale shadow of the stunned feeling in her heart. The poor girl's insane! she told herself.
Even as Christina said the words, David was nearing the bedroom once more. Sure that he must have misheard, he knocked before entering. "Safe to come in, love?"
Nodding absently, Ruth took a moment before she realized he couldn't see her. "Y... yes, David. It's safe... I think."
Frustrated that her mother didn't seem to believe her, Christina was about to get up off the bed when she felt her pajama bottoms and boxer shorts start to fall off her much smaller hips. Grabbing them quickly before she flashed her parents and sent them screaming from the room to call the cops, the girl just sat quickly, suddenly very aware of the changes to her anatomy within the loose boxers. The thought made her giggle once more like a mad girl.
"David? Any luck?" Ruth asked, never taking her eyes of their seemingly insane intruder.
He shook his head ruefully. "No. The doors and windows are all still locked and the chains are still set on all the doors, so if he left the house, she locked up after him... which means he's been gone since before we got up."
"I'm right here, Daddy!" the girl cried petulantly. "I'm Walter! Or at least... I was before last night."
Looking over at his wife, he saw Ruth nod with eyes wide. "That's what she told me once already, David... after telling me at first that her name is Christina... Christina Cocoran of all things!"
Stepping closer to his wife defensively, he looked at the strange girl sternly. "Now see here young lady! Enough is enough! Where has our son gone? When did he leave the house? What's your real name?"
Now scared that her own parents might throw her out with nowhere to go, Christina began to panic. "Mother!? Daddy!? I am Walt! Ask me anything! I can prove I'm your daughter!"
"We don't have a daughter!" David barked. "We have a son! This sick joke has gone on long enough! Where is Walt?"
Now sobbing again, Christina was near to hysterics. "Please! You've got to believe me! I'm Walter! I'm your son! I... I always wanted to be a girl and last night I got my wish! It wasn't supposed to be anything like this! This is supposed to be the happiest day of my life! Now I feel like I'm going to lose everything! Please! Tell me you still love me, Daddy!"
Seeing the girl close to a total breakdown, David stepped away from his wife. "Stay with her, love. I'm going to call the authorities and get it straightened out just who this girl really is!"
"No!" Christina screamed. "Daddy, please! Don't do that! They'll lock me up, thinking I'm crazy!"
"You're not well, dear." Ruth offered sympathetically. "You need help and we need to know where our son is!"
As David left the room to use the phone, Christina tried to get up again and chase after him, but the baggy bottoms of Walt's old pajamas tripped her up and sent her crashing to the floor before Ruth could catch her, sending her back into black unconsciousness.
When at last she regained consciousness, she was looking up at her mother's concerned face as the woman kneeled over her. "Mother?"
"No, Christina. I'm Ruth Cocoran. Are you OK?"
"I... I think so." she replied. "My head hurts."
"You took a nasty tumble, dear." Ruth explained. "Walt's pajamas... um... don't fit you very well."
"I know." she sighed frustratedly. "I thought becoming a girl would be a dream come true, but it's turning into a nightmare! I just want to wake up back in my old body! At least then you'd know it was me and wouldn't send me away!"
Concern still marring her normally lovely features, Ruth looked closely at the girl. "You really do think you're Walt, don't you? This isn't just some game you two are playing at, is it?"
"Of course it isn't, Mother!" she nearly cried. "How can I prove it to you?"
"I don't believe you can, Christina." Ruth admitted. "This is the real world. People don't magically change genders overnight! You don't even look like Walt! Your hair and eyes are both wrong! My Walt has brown hair and green eyes. Yours are blonde and blue."
"Just like you." Christina pointed out sadly. "It... it's how I always imagined myself... being as pretty as you, Mother."
Hearing the way she spoke sent an eerie shiver down her spine. Her speech and way of talking sounds so much like Walt! she shivered. She must go to school with him and listened to him for a long time. Her heart went out to the poor girl. "It's alright, Christina. You... you're very pretty. I'll bet Walt really likes you! Do... do you know where he went? Please tell me, dear! You're scaring me!"
Beginning to cry again, Christina closed her eyes and tried to will herself to wake up back in her old body with the love of her parents waiting for her. Then she would tell them her secret right way. Tears fell down the side of her face and into her small ears that looked exactly the same as David's. Then remembering what Lisbeth told her, that her new image was a blend of her mother and father, she tried to calm herself.
"M... Mrs. Cocoran?" she stopped herself from calling her Mother as she sat up. "Will you do something for me?"
"Of course, dear!" the woman offered.
"Look at me really closely. Don't you see it? I look like you and Daddy!"
With a patient sigh, she humored the girl. "Well, now that you mention it, you do look a little like I did at your age... and those ears and nose look so much like your fath... I mean... like Mr. Cocoran's."
Hearing the Freudian slip, Christina sat up in hope. "See? I'm your daughter! I mean... your son! I mean..."
"It's OK dear!" Ruth tried to soothe her once more. "Don't try and sit up, alright? You might have a concussion. Try to lie back and don't talk, OK?"
"But I have to convince you!" she nearly cried. "Before the cops come and haul me away to the loony bin... or wherever it is that they send runaways!"
"You're a runaway?" Ruth caught her out. "Ah! So that's why you're scared of us calling the police! Are you ready to tell me your real name now?"
"No!" she protested. "I mean, no, you don't understand! If the cops come and you turn me over to them, I only have two choices! Tell the truth about who I am and get locked up for people thinking I'm crazy, or tell them nothing and get locked up on suspicion of me being a runaway, which is what they'd have to assume is the reason I won't tell them my name! Please Mother! Don't let them take me away! I love you so much!"
Listening to the girl try to dig her way out of the slip of the tongue, then hearing her words dissolve into wracking sobs once more, Ruth wished there was some way she could help her.
Just then, David came back in. "The police are on their way, along with an ambulance." he said calmly. "Walt's not under arrest or in juvenile hall, so that's a relief, anyway. They're checking hospitals and... um... the morgue."
Suppressing her worst fears, Ruth looked down at the crying girl. "She... she's either utterly convinced that she's Walt, or she's the best con artist ever, David."
"Either way, she's not our problem! Either she needs the police or a doctor."
"My parents hate me!" Christina sobbed. "You both hate me!"
"We don't hate you, Christina!" explained David. "You... you just aren't our son! Do... do you think you're a boy? Inside, I mean? Is that why you want to be our Walt?"
"No, Daddy!" she cried. "I don't think I'm a boy inside. I'm a girl, like I always was, but now I'm a girl outside, too!"
"Our son wasn't a girl inside, Christina." he retorted. "He told us so, many times."
"No I didn't!" she shot back. "I so did not, Daddy! You only ever asked if I thought I was a girl, but I didn't think that! I knew I was stuck being a boy, but inside I kept being Christina a secret so... so..." Near to tears again, she couldn't bring herself to say out loud the reason she'd kept it a secret. So you wouldn't have an ugly daughter! Now it's going to cost me my entire life!
David shook his head. "Sweetie, our son knows that we know he's... different. Delicate. He knows that if he was a girl inside that we'd support him to be himself, or I guess in that case her to be herself. He'd have no reason to keep it hidden from us!"
"I did it because I was ugly, Daddy! I could never pass as a girl, even if I wore a ball gown and a dozen layers of makeup! It was no use even trying! So I just prayed and tried to be good... and the angel granted my wish!"
"What angel, sweetie?" Ruth asked curiously.
"I don't remember her name." she admitted. "She... she was really pretty and talked without moving her lips. She gave me a choice to accept the gift of becoming a girl or just stay the way I was, and warned me that there might be consequences and there was no going back! I shoulda said no! Being a girl isn't worth losing you two!" Once more the tears overwhelmed her as she finished talking.
Looking into one another's eyes, the two parents could see the hurt and anguish the girl was suffering. After a moment, Ruth shook her head. "You won't lose us, sweetie. We... we aren't your parents. We wish you would tell us where Walt is. We want him back home!"
As if on cue, the doorbell rang and the two looked up at each other hopefully. "Walt?" David yelled as he ran for the door.
Realizing that it couldn't be Walt because she was right in front of their unbelieving eyes, Christina concluded that it was the police. "Mother? Please don't do this to me? Don't send me away! You told me yesterday that you wanted me to focus on my schoolwork! How can I do that if you send me away? Please, Mother! You have to know it's me!"
Hearing the girl refer to a conversation she'd had with Walt when they were alone the evening before was unnerving. How could she possibly know that! Concluding that Walt must have told her, the only rational explanation, she looked sternly at the girl. "Tell me where Walt is! I know he told you those things, so he must be part of this ludicrous joke that's gone on way too long!"
Giving up, Christina just lay back down and closed her eyes before the tears began to flow once more. God? Please help me! Take it back! Please!
As she lay there crying, two police officers and two paramedics came in the room, the latter two beginning to examine her by shining lights in her eyes and taking her blood pressure, temperature, and heart rate. Satisfied that she was in no immediate danger, they told her to just lay back.
Meanwhile, David was explaining in detail the last time he'd seen Walt, the odd feeling that someone had gotten into their home the night before, then the bizarre tale that Christina had been telling them both.
Seeing a lull in the conversation, the lead paramedic took one of the officers aside. "She has a mild concussion. It could explain mild delusions, but someone more qualified would have to attest to that, Officer Martinez."
"Is she safe to move?" he asked bluntly.
"We'll need the stretcher in here, but yeah. She's otherwise healthy as a horse! Top physical shape for her age, I'd say."
"How old?" the senior patrolman asked.
"Hmmm... ten to twelve I'd guess. Probably hasn't reached menarche yet."
"Great!" Christina grumbled. "I get torn away from my parents and now I'm gonna have to look forward to going through that alone!"
"What are your parent's names, Christina." the junior patrolman asked, hoping to catch her out with an honest off-the-cuff answer.
Looking up at him, she shook her dizzy head. "David and Ruth Cocoran. Twelve-twenty-six West Arctic Street." Seeing the irritated look on his face, Christina shrugged and looked at her parents. "What? Did you expect me to lie?"
"I... I wouldn't expect Walt to." Ruth admitted. "He was always honest."
"I still am, Mother." she stated sadly. "I just wish you'd believe me."
Turning to her husband, the confused woman shrugged. "She does sound an awful lot like Walt, David."
Looking at her as though she'd lost her mind, he shook his head. "No, Ruth! That's crazy! That is not our son!" he insisted, pointing at the girl.
"But maybe she's our daughter, David! Maybe we should send these people away and talk to her!"
Holding up his hand to forestall further debate, Officer Martinez settled the argument. "Let's not get hysterical! Until we can positively identify the girl, you two have done all you can. We'll take her to the hospital, then to juvenile services to have her fingerprints and footprint checked against the database for missing and exploited children. We'll find out who she is and get her home! As for your son, we've put out an Amber alert. I bet we find him soon!"
Picked up and placed on the gurney, Christina was catatonic with shock, only vaguely cognizant of her surroundings and what was happening to her. Her mind in a fog, she was barely aware that she'd been put in an ambulance and taken from her home and parents, then poked, prodded, and otherwise treated like a piece of meat. When a doctor tried to use a rape kit on her though, she came out of it as they began undressing her.
Her scream could be heard throughout the emergency room.
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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Pacing her exam room like a caged animal, Christina had a fist balled up and ready to strike out again at the next person to touch her, even as her other hand held up the loose-fitting pajama bottoms and boxer shorts. Her breath came in rapid intakes through her nostrils and out her mouth.
"Miss?" Doctor Ramsey tried to calm her down as he held his bruised cheek. "Please sit back down so we can continue the exam!"
"Next person that tries to touch me there eats my knuckles again, buster!" she growled. "Daddy taught me how to defend myself, so don't even think you can get away with anything without losing an eye you're fond of, doc!"
Looking at the two officers, he shrugged. "Patient is refusing treatment. It's not a medical emergency, I don't have consent from their guardian, and you don't have a court order, so... that's it. We're done here."
"Wait a minute!" Officer Raul Martinez told the doctor. "Let me talk to her!" Seeing the doctor hold up his hands in mock surrender, Raul turned to her and smiled kindly. "Hi! Remember me? I'm Raul! Officer Raul Martinez!"
Narrowing her eyes, she looked at him evilly. "Yeah, I remember you! You're the one that took me away from my mother! She was about to let me stay and listen to me!"
His friendly smile melted and he turned serious. "That's right. It's my job to protect kids like you! Now the doc here isn't going to hurt you, OK? He's just going to collect evidence from you in case you've been raped..."
"I think I'd know if I'd been raped... Raul!" she snarled. "The closest I've ever come to that is what handsy there was about to do to me! No!"
"You might not know, young lady!" he countered. "You lost consciousness!"
"For about ten seconds!" she snapped back. "Ten seconds alone with my mother!"
Loosing patience, he tried to be blunt and use scare tactics. "Look, kid! Those people aren't your parents! They admitted that and are accusing you of aiding in their son being missing! Now are you gonna be a good girl and cooperate or do I have to put you in handcuffs?"
Scoffing, Christina turned away from him. "You don't scare me, mister! I know you can't touch me for medical stuff without my parents' permission or a court order! Let me see it!"
"See what?"
"The piece of paper that lets Doctor Feelgood over there stick his hands up my yahoo against my will! Nobody's touched it yet and he certainly isn't going to be my first! I'm only eleven for crying out loud!"
Smiling, Officer Martinez took out his notebook. "There! You're eleven! One piece at a time! Why don't you just tell me your full name and who your parents are and I can take you home. Is that were Walt is? At your house?"
Rolling her eyes, she put a hand on her hip and struck that pose that women have been using for centuries that tells a man, 'Oh really? You think so?'
Stymied by her obstinate refusal to cooperate, Raul shook his head. "Alright! Fine! We'll skip the rape kit! The nurse there was going to make sure nothing bad was going to happen to you, but we'll do it your way, OK?"
Calming down, she slowly edged her way closer to the exam table.
Tiffany Downs had been a nurse for ten years and thought she'd seen it all. When this wisp of a girl was brought in for a full exam, they'd managed to do everything except the x-rays and rape kit without even so much as an acknowledgement of their existence from her. Tiffany knew a little of the girl's circumstances, but with her fully awake and combative she was sure of how to proceed.
"Doctor Ramsey? Officers? Would you step out for a moment so I can talk to her?" Seeing the policeman's hesitancy to leave his charge alone without police observation, she held up her hands. "Where can she go? The only way out is right by you if you wait outside!"
Seeing her point, Raul huffed and stormed out with his silent partner in tow. "Damn kids! We bust our butts trying to look out for them and..."
With just a withering stare at the attending physician, Tiffany made him go without a word. Turning at last to the obviously terrified little girl, she smiled warmly. "There! Now that there are no men around, why don't we have a chat! Hmm?" Sitting on the exam table, she patted the space next to her.
Still nervous that this was some sort of trick like the officer had tried to play on her, Christina slowly moved next to her and took a seat. "Thanks."
"Men are brutes." Tiffany stated with a chuckle. "They have the sensitivity of the average bulldozer!" Seeing that it made the girl smile slightly, she returned the grin. "So why don't you tell me what happened? How did you hit your head?"
Suddenly embarrassed, Christina bit her lower lip nervously. "I... I fell out of bed."
Nodding, the nurse looked at her wisely. "Whose bed?"
Shocked at the insinuation that even she could follow, Christina's jaw dropped. "Mine!" she insisted after a moment.
Shrugging, Tiffany looked away. "Listen. Christina, right?" Seeing the girl nod, she continued. "Christina, I can't help you if I don't have all the facts. So start at the beginning."
"You'd never believe me!" Christina moaned. "Nobody will believe me! Heck! It happened to me and I don't believe me!"
Laughing with the girl's self-deprecating sense of humor, Tiffany bumped shoulders with her. "Try me! You never know, right?"
Knowing that she had to tell the nurse something, she was about to try making something up when she noticed the fringes of a tattoo on the woman's left arm. "What's that?"
"Oh!" Tiffany smiled as she lifted her sleeve, exposing the full image. "That's Lisbeth, Angel of Lost Souls. It's said that when a person is suffering and is truly deserving she'll grant them their heart's desire. My mother used to tell me stories about her! When I went to nursing school, I had her put on my arm so that she'd always remind me to do whatever kindness I could in life."
Stunned once more, she looked into the woman's eyes. "I... I know she does. She... she did that for me. I couldn't remember her name, though."
Thinking the girl was having fun with her, Tiffany played along. "So then, what was your heart's desire? Don't worry! It's not like a birthday wish! When Lisbeth grants a wish, there's no way to lose it!"
With a hard swallow, Christina took a breath and trusted this strange woman with the image of her savior and tormenter on her arm. "I... I wished I could be a girl. I... I was born a boy. My legal name is Walter."
Tiffany's eyebrows shot up at that. Of all the things she'd expected her to say, that never would have even crossed her mind. "Um... OK! Well, you wanna tell me the whole thing? Just start at the beginning and go slow."
Twenty minutes later, Christina was nearly hysterical again. "And then they just wheeled me out and brought me here while my parents stood by and did nothing! They let the cops take their own daughter away! Then lots of stuff happened and the next thing I know that guy is trying to pull my boxers off!"
Listening intently, Tiffany looked away. "Well, if your story were true, I think I could understand why you freaked." Looking back at her, the nurse tried to see the child ever being a boy. "Lisbeth sure did a number on you!"
"What do you mean?"
With a low laugh, Tiffany looked at the girl. "Look at you! You don't look anything like a boy!" She wasn't sure if she believed the girl's story or not, after all, Tiffany did believe in angels, but it was a stretch even for her.
Nodding sadly, Christina sighed. "So now what can I do? I have no birth certificate, no parents, no school enrollment... Heck! I don't even have my shot records to prove I've had all my shots to go to school! They'll probably deport me for being an illegal alien!"
Grimacing, Tiffany looked away. "You might not be wrong. Though they'd have a hard time proving what country you do come from! Your accent is typical Southwestern and no one is going to believe a blonde-haired blue-eyed girl came from Guatemala!" Seeing that it made the glum girl perk up some, she thought for a moment.
"OK, so let's say I believe you." Tiffany began. "I'm not saying that I do, but just for the sake of argument, you say your mom was close to believing you?"
"Yeah." she nodded glumly. "But that greasy tyrant outside basically told them to mind their own business and shipped me here to have my virginity taken by a guy three times my age!"
Laughing gently to show understanding, Tiffany furrowed her brow after a moment. "So, we just need to make Officer Martinez drop his investigation and let you go back home." Tsking, she shook her head. "That's a tall order, girlfriend! See, Officer Martinez really is a good and dedicated cop. All he wants is to see you get home so he can know that you're safe and arrest the scumbag he thinks kidnapped you, did awful things that you can't remember, and dumped you at that house and took Walt."
"So... I'm basically dog-meat." Christina sighed. "A nobody that's gonna end up in a foster home 'till I'm thirty... living under the stairs and eating gruel. That what you're saying?"
"You watch too many movies." Tiffany smirked with a bump of her shoulder. With a mischievous grin, Tiffany put her arm around the girl. "Sorry, girl! You're gonna have to come up with a better story. That one will get you locked up!" Hugging Christina with one arm, she shook her gently. "Why don't you tell me what really happened? I promise, whatever it is, it has to be better than getting labeled as a nut!"
Seeing that even an adult that might believe her wouldn't, Christina shut down and refused to talk. When nearly ten minutes went by with no response, Nurse Downs shook her head and left. After a few minutes alone, Christina got up and moved a chair next to the door to look out the window. Seeing no one outside, she got down, replaced the chair, and slowly cracked the door open.
"What do you mean she's not in the system?" Officer Martinez shouted at the phone. "She has to be! I mean, she's got to be a runaway or something! She has to have a record! She's already a professional con artist!"
Seeing no one directly watching, she quietly slid out of the exam room and down a short hall. Seeing a sign that said, Hospital Staff Only, she pulled the door open and slipped inside.
The room was dark, smelled of sweat and hand sanitizer, and she heard the sound of slow breathing from somewhere off to her left. After her eyes adjusted she saw a resident lying on a couch, light snores coming from the man who'd been at the hospital for thirty hours. Creeping slowly by him, she made her way around a corner until she saw a number of lockers. At the back of the room she saw her one chance at freedom.
There was a door with an exit sign above it.
Gently opening it, she saw daylight beyond and quietly sneaked out. Looking down at herself, she knew she had to find different clothes fast or she'd be right back where she started. Where can I get clothes without money? she wondered. If I just had my cell phone I could at least pawn it, but I have nothing! Even as she considered her problem, she came around a corner and spotted her salvation.
There at the corner of the employee parking lot was a clothing donation bin that was open. Moving quickly, she grabbed the first things she could get before ducking behind the dumpster-sized bin to hide as she changed. Luck was with her when she found she'd grabbed a pair of girl's jeans and a sweater. Changing quickly, she left the pajama bottoms on the ground.
The jeans were too long and loose, but the belt they had with them solved one problem and a few minutes rolling up the cuffs solved the other. The sweater was too hot for the high temperature, but it was enough to give her more time searching through the donations without looking so conspicuous.
Within twenty minutes she had found a pair of girl's shoes, socks, and a pink top that fit. Not long after that she was well on her way down the street and trying to look as nonchalant as possible, even as the hospital was being turned upside down trying to find her.
It took her hours to walk back to her own neighborhood. At first, she wasn't sure where she was going to go, but she figured that starting with her own neighborhood was the best place to begin. As she walked, she kept her eyes open and managed to find some lost change in a gutter. Eventually she began to see a familiar sight; the only payphone within ten miles of her house. She had seen it before, but never had need of it. I'm not even sure how to use it!
Looking around, it was an odd sensation. She knew this gas station. She walked by it on the way to school every day and sometimes even bought gum, sweets, or soda on the way. Now though, the building seemed huge, and the payphone seemed too impossibly tall to use. Her former five-foot-two height would have made it a breeze, but now at a hair under four-foot-five, reaching the coin slot was impossible.
Looking around, she saw a wooden pallet and thought it just tall enough to stand on and use the phone. Trying to pick it up, she nearly jerked her arms out of their sockets. It couldn't weigh more than twenty or thirty pounds, but to her it might was well have been five hundred. The upper body strength that came so easily to her before was simply gone. For the first time in her short life, Christina felt vulnerable.
Being big for her age, at the upper end of height for eleven-year-old boys, she was never picked on, despite her gentle nature. Now at the lower end of size range for eleven-year-old girls, she was pitifully weak by comparison. I hadn't counted on that part. she pondered. Maybe that was one of the questions Lisbeth thought I should ask. She tried reaching the coin slot on tiptoes, but it was just barely out of her reach. She needed help.
It was then that Christina noticed the kids walking home from school. She hadn't realized until just that moment how long she must have been walking, nor how hungry she was, having never gotten breakfast. Holding her stomach, she started looking for anyone who might help her. Spotting Kathy, Lindsey, and Beth walking home together, before she even thought, she heard herself yell out, "Kathy!"
Instantly she realized what she'd done wrong. Kathy and her other friends at school knew nothing about Christina and certainly would never believe that their giant protector who kept the bullies away could become a girl so small she couldn't use a payphone. Her smile evaporated like an ice cube at noon as the three girls turned toward her.
Kathy was especially incensed. Not only was it her that this strange girl had called out to, she'd interrupted the story she was telling about Walt not just being absent, but actually missing. Her eyes narrowed and she turned toward the small girl, storming up to her angrily. "Just who are you that you know my name, little girl? Did I used to baby-sit you?"
Hurt that her best friend was being so mean to her, she tried to hold back the tears, but they came anyway. The stress of the day was just too much and she collapsed onto the pavement, an emotional mess.
"Way to go, Kathy! Wanna take her money, too?" Lindsey admonished her as Kathy just stared with her mouth hanging open at the sobbing girl.
Unable to stem the tide, words just started falling out of Christina's mouth unbidden. "How could you be so mean?" she sobbed. "You were my best friend! I protected you from Jim Sullivan last summer! Now you yell at me when my whole life is falling apart!"
Unable to follow what the girl was saying, even the few words she did catch didn't make any sense to Kathy. "Look, I'm sorry, OK? It's just... my best friend is missing, so I'm really uptight right now! Please don't cry!"
Bringing her tears under control after a moment, she understood Kathy's concern as Beth helped her up off the ground. "I... I'm sorry! I just... I don't have my cell phone and I can't reach the coin slot to use the payphone! Could you guys help me move that wooden pallet over to the phone so I can use it? Please?"
"Here." Kathy offered as she reached into her backpack and retrieved her cell phone. "You can just use mine. Just... be quick OK? I'm hoping to hear back from my friend to know if he's OK!"
Nodding, she looked at her friend's phone that she'd seen a thousand times before. It was eerie looking the Amber alert with her old name on it. "Um... it's kind of an embarrassing call. Can... can I use your phone in the gas station bathroom? That way I can have some privacy?"
Understanding the girl's position, Kathy nodded as the four headed toward the vacant bathroom. "Sure. By the way, I don't remember your name."
"Um... it's Christina. I don't think you know me, but I know you though... through Walt. He... he and I are sort of related."
The three girls immediately brought Christina to a halt, Kathy physically taking the girl by the shoulders to make Christina face her.
"You're related to Walt?" she cried. "Where is he! IS he OK? Please!"
Seeing the near panic and desperation in her best friend's eyes, Christina couldn't let her worry. "He... he's OK. They found him. He... he'll have to go away for a while though. Maybe a long time. He kinda got hurt when someone got in his house last night. I can't say how. He won't let me." She was trying to pick her words carefully so as to not lie to her friends.
"Oh, God!" Kathy nearly broke down herself. "My Walt? Hurt? No!"
Seeing her even more distraught, Christina tried to lessen it. "It's OK! He'll be fine! He just... he needs time to heal is all! He had to go to the hospital, then he went someplace else, but I promise he'll be OK! Please don't cry, Kathy!" Her friend's tears were threatening to make Christina's return. Why am I crying so much! I never used to cry this much before!
Getting herself under control, Kathy nodded. "OK. If you say so, Christina. Go ahead and use the bathroom. I'll wait out here." Turning to her other two friends, she sniffed back her tears. "Why don't you guys go on home. I... I'll call you later, OK?"
As Beth and Lindsey left the two alone, waving goodbye, Christina entered the filthy bathroom and locked the door behind her. Dialing her mother's cell phone number, she waited anxiously as it rang. She jumped when the line picked up, she was so nervous.
"Kathy?" Ruth answered desperately. "Kathy, do you know where Walt is? I promise he's not in trouble! I... I just need to know he's OK!"
Lowering her voice as low as it would go, Christina did her best imitation of her old voice. "Mother?"
"Walt!" she screamed into the phone. "Walt, baby! Where are you? Are you with Kathy?"
"Um... yeah." Christina growled. "I... um... I'm sorry I worried you, Mother. I didn't mean to."
"What's wrong, sweetie?" she begged. "You sound sick! Why won't you come home? Who was that girl in your room? Talk to me baby!"
"Um... I can't come home Mother. I was... changed."
More confused than ever, Ruth could only listen as words utterly failed her.
"Mother? That girl was me." Slowly, she let her voice shift up to her new normal tone. "When I was five, you asked me if I was a girl and I said no. Then I told you that boys were stupid and one of them pushed Kathy over at recess and I told on him and got him in trouble. When I was seven, you asked me if I liked boys and I told you boys were gross and I couldn't marry a boy because I was one." Pausing a moment, she waited for a reply.
Slowly lowering herself into the chair at the dining room table, Ruth still couldn't answer. Logic defied what she was hearing, but still she was starting to have a hard time letting it make sense any other way.
"Mother? Are you still there?" Christina begged. "Mother, I want to come home! I... I ran away from the police. Can... can I come home, Mother? Please?"
Unable to handle what she was hearing, that 'Walt' was somewhere with Kathy and that Christina girl and her 'son' was feeding the girl things to say that would convince her that the impossible was true, she hung up. Ruth was stunned that the child she knew and loved was trying to pull off such a cruel trick. Why is he doing this to us? she wondered. What did we do? Where did we go wrong?
"Bye, Mother. I love you." she said to dead air. Noticing that her cheeks were wet, she used some toilet paper to dry them before opening the door to return Kathy's cell phone. When she looked up at Kathy, she saw the astonished look on the bigger girl's face.
"C... Christina?" she asked in astonishment. "Is... is that really you Walt?"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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Staring into Kathy's eyes, Christina knew her best friend had listened in on the conversation with her mother. "You... you remember Christina? Kathy! I'm sorry I didn't tell you! I didn't think you'd believe me!"
Looking the girl up and down, Kathy could see nothing of the boy she'd called her best friend since before she could remember. The girl before her was pretty, way too pretty and small to be Walt, but somehow she knew things only Walt could know. A memory even she forgot. "I'm not sure I do yet. This had better be unbelievably good!"
Christina took a moment to collect her thoughts. "Um... well, do you believe in angels?"
Thinking a moment, she looked at the girl who stood six inches shorter than she did that used to stand three inches taller. "Um... you mean like with white robes, wings, and halos?"
With a nod, Christina tried to explain. "Yeah, but they don't have to look like that. Lisbeth just looked like a beautiful woman. She's the Angel of Lost Souls. She came to me last night and offered to grant me my wish."
"Why you?" Kathy almost spat. "And how did your wish end up making you into a girl? Admittedly you're a pretty girl, but..." Seeing her best friend blush at the compliment, she paused a moment. "Is it like one of those 'be careful what you wish for' things? I mean, did she like, trick you?"
"No." Christina admitted. "I... this is exactly what I wished for. I just didn't count on the side effects, like being a weakling midget and my own parents and friends not knowing who I was!"
Her familiar humor made Kathy giggle. Stopping after a moment, she looked deeply in Christina's eyes, as if searching for something. Finally her serious mien slowly grew into a gentle smile and Kathy's eyes lit up. "I... I can see you! In your eyes! They're the wrong color, but it... it's still the same! It's... you! You're really Walt!"
Tilting her head curiously at her, Christina knotted her brows. "How can you tell that? My own mother couldn't see it!"
Blushing and turning to start walking toward her parents' house again, Kathy answered, "I... I guess she never spent as long as me looking at your eyes."
Stopping their progress, Christina looked at her with wonder. "K... Kathy? Do... um... did you like me as Walt? I mean like-like me?"
Shaking her head slowly, Kathy resumed walking. "No. I... I loved Walt. Didn't you know?"
Suddenly feeling sick to her stomach, Christina sat on the curb a moment. When Kathy sat next to her, she noticed the smaller girl had started crying.
"Oh, Christina! Don't be sad! I... I'm sad enough for the both of us!" After a moment, she took Christina's hand. "Can... can I ask you something?" Seeing the girl nod and sniff back tears, she pressed forward. "Um... why'd you wanna be a girl? Is this about me calling you Christina when we were little?"
Shrugging, Christina tried to explain, but ended up asking, "I... I thought you forgot about Christina? When we started Kindergarten, you acted like you didn't know who she was!"
Kathy looked away, embarrassedly. "I... I didn't... until I heard you talking to your mom... and then it just sort of... clicked... and I remembered it." Turning back to her, her tone turned harsh. "Besides, you're the one that started insisting you were a boy all the time!"
"I... I thought I had to." she admitted. "Walt could never be seen as a girl!"
Putting her arm around her best friend, Kathy tried to console her. "It's alright. I... I think I understand. When you were Walt, you were pretty much a girl still, but you couldn't really ever look like one." Hesitating a moment, she asked a new question. "So... um... does this mean you like... boys?"
Going quickly from crying to laughing, she shook her head and giggled. "No! Being a girl is just what I've wanted since I was three! Lisbeth told me that becoming a girl wouldn't change who I am or who I would like, but I... I thought it would be like in a fairytale... like suddenly, whoosh! I'd be a girl and everyone would know that I was always a girl and I'd live happily ever after!" Getting up, she resumed walking toward Kathy's house. "What I didn't count on was that I would become a girl, but everything else would stay as it was. I also didn't know that you were falling for me as Walt. I'm sorry!"
"Yeah! This totally sounds like one of those 'be careful what you with for' things, like that old cartoon, The Flying Mouse. You shoulda got three wishes so you could use your second wish for everyone to know you as a girl, and then use the third wish to... um... maybe be to be rich... or something."
Noticing she'd cut herself off and switched mid-sentence, Christina looked over at her earnestly. "Kathy? Secret shake!"
This was something sacred between the two girls. Whenever one of them called for the secret shake, it meant that there could be no secrets between them. Gripping each other's fingers in a crisscross, the two went through an elaborate range of hand and finger motions until their hands were on the other person's heart.
"I promise..." Christina began and Kathy picked up, still amazed that this girl knew her and Walt's secret shake, "...that I will have no secrets from my best friend." they finished together.
"What do you think my third wish should have been, Kath?"
Embarrassed, the girl wanted to run and hide, but the oath had been sworn. "Um... your third wish could have been for me to be a boy so we could still... um..."
Stunned, Christina resumed their slow walk. "Do... do you want to be a boy, Kath?"
With a shrug, she looked away. "No, but... um... it'd be worth it so that..."
Now sadder than ever as the two turned up Kathy's walkway, the new girl shook her head. "It was a stupid wish! I wish I could take it back!"
"Can you?" Kathy asked hopefully. "Like a money-back guarantee?"
"Nope." Christina admitted. "Lisbeth warned me there was no going back."
"Oh."
Coming up to her door, she turned to Kathy. "Could... could I come in with you Kath? I... I don't really have anywhere else to go... Oh! and the cops are after me!"
Kathy's eyes widened. "The cops? How did that happen?"
"It's a long story."
Nodding, Kathy took Christina's hand. "Sure. I'd do anything to help... um... a friend."
Christina could see the sadness wrapping around Kathy like a blanket. She never knew how much Kathy liked her, and was only just then beginning to suspect that was the reason Kathy had started dressing more provocatively around her. And I had to go and ruin it for her!
Entering Kathy's home, one Christina had been in almost as often as her own, she found it both familiar and yet alien, like the building had grown overnight.
"Come on." Kathy led her towards the kitchen. "Mom won't be home until four. You hungry?"
"Starved!" she admitted. "I never got breakfast before... um... well, I guess I should start at the beginning."
While Kathy made them sandwiches, Christina told her about her dream, waking up and her parents' reaction to her, being taken to the hospital, and her 'daring escape'. As soon as she finished, Kathy sat next to her and slid the small plate over to her.
"Wow!" Kathy managed as Christina tore into her sandwich. "I can't believe your own parents didn't know you! I mean, now that I remember it all, you were Christina for like a year!" Seeing that the girl wasn't listening but just focused on inhaling her food, Kathy slapped her shoulder lightly. "Hey! Slow down or you're gonna choke! You act like you've never eaten before!"
Pausing to chew and swallow, Christina considered that. "Well... I guess in a way I never have. Walt ate dinner last night. I don't know what Lisbeth actually did to me. I think this is a whole new body. If so, it's never eaten anything before!" Looking at the sandwich, she shook her head. "Has peanut butter always tasted this good?"
Tilting her head, Kathy had to think a moment. "No... you actually didn't used to think so! Remember? You used to trade them with me for my bologna sandwiches until you told your mom you didn't really like it and she stopped making them for you? It's been a few years since then, though. I guess you forgot."
Thinking back several years, she recalled the time. "Oh yeah!" Turning to her hostess, she furrowed her brow and asked, "So why'd you make me one?" before taking another huge bite.
Kathy giggled and shrugged. "I don't know! I forgot! So did you!"
"Well, I like 'em now!" Christina pointed out. "They taste totally different!" Once she finished the sandwich and a glass of milk, she turned to Kathy. "I can kind of understand why my parents didn't know me." she admitted. "I... um... I never told them about Christina... not even when I was little."
Getting up and heading for her room with her guest following, Kathy shook her head. "Why not?"
As Kathy sat on her bed, Christina sat at her friend's desk. "Well, at first it was just between us. You just treated me like another girl, then one day you told me that Walt wasn't a good name for a girl and started calling me Christina, but only you ever did that. When I went home I was Walt again. I was close to asking Mother and Daddy if I could change my name when they started getting worried about me being girly. By then I knew I could never look like a girl, so I just told them I was a boy... which was true. I was a boy... on the outside, anyway."
Nodding in understanding, Kathy looked off into the distance. "Oh. I... I guess I remember that. Not really, though. It's kinda vague. I remember I was a sad when you started saying you were a boy, so I stopped calling you Christina... then I just sorta forgot after a while." Tilting her head slightly, she chuckled a little. "Huh! It's funny, though. Even after I started calling you Walt, you were still my best friend, even though you were a boy."
"Well..." Christina pointed out, "I didn't change how I acted. I just stopped calling myself a girl and you stopped calling me Christina. Nothing else changed. I could still beat you at jump rope!"
"That wasn't fair!" Kathy pointed out with a giggle. "You were stronger and had more endurance than me! Stupid testosterone, anyway!"
"Well, you don't need to worry about that now." Christina looked at her thin arms and down at her tiny stature. "I doubt I'm going to be beating anyone at anything athletic anymore." Pausing a moment, she started to giggle. "Besides, I don't think my football uniform will fit anymore!"
Laughing together a moment, Kathy grinned at her. "Well, you could always join me on the cheer squad!"
"Are you kidding?" the new girl asked incredulously. "I've seen you guys working out! No way is this body going to keep up with that! Besides, the skirts are way too short!"
Her smile disappearing quickly, Kathy looked hurt. "Is... is that what you think of me, Christina? Is that what Walt thought? Is that why you made those jokes about my outfit yesterday?"
Looking away ashamedly, Christina felt her tears welling up again. "I... I'm sorry I said those things, Kathy. I... I was... um..."
Seeing her struggle to get it out, Kathy got up and stood in front of her. "You were what, Christina? What?"
"Jealous!" she blurted out after a moment. "I was jealous of you, OK? You're so pretty... and popular, and graceful, and... and... you were free to wear whatever you wanted! If you felt like it, you could come to school in gear you bought from the boy's department and no one would say anything except, 'I guess she's feeling grungy today.' right?" As she vented years of frustration, Christina began to cry. "Meanwhile I was huge, lumbering, my only friends were you, Lindsey, Beth, and a few other girls, and... and... and I could only ever wear frumpy boy clothes! I could never wear an outfit like that! I wasn't allowed to!"
Seeing her best friend reduced to tears of frustration, she wanted to console her. Rubbing Christina's back gently, she knotted her brow. "I'm sorry, Christina! You're right! It is unfair that you can't ever be pretty when..." Stopping mid-thought, she smiled. "Hey! What are we talking about! You're gorgeous now! And a girl who can wear whatever she likes, now!"
Sniffing back the tears, Christina shrugged. "Not that it matters. I'm homeless and penniless! I don't even know where I'm going to eat dinner or sleep tonight! So yea! I'm free now to wear girl or boy's donation clothes!" As she finished, she picked at the top she wore.
Finally looking over her outfit, her eyes widened. "Oh! I didn't even think about your clothes! Did... did you get them from a donation bin?"
Nodding sadly, Christina looked at the floor. "I... I stole them from one! Now I not only am a nobody, I'm a thief and a sinner!"
"Hold it right there!" Kathy snapped. "Christina! Those clothes were donated to the less fortunate, right? Can you think of anyone less fortunate than you right now? Are the people that get those donations stealing them, too?"
With a shrug, her friend looked away. "I... I guess you're right. OK, so I have just as much right to them as anyone. Still, as of right now, this is my entire wardrobe, Kathy! It's not exactly high fashion! Plus those cops at the hospital are probably still looking for me. Eventually they'll find my old PJs behind the donation bin. Officer Martinez isn't exactly Sherlock Holmes, but he's not stupid!"
"Wait! You were taken to the hospital in pajamas?"
"Worse. I was taken there in Walt's pajamas!" Christina pointed out. "When I woke up, I was still wearing the same PJs I went to bed in, but they were the size I used to be while I shrank. I had to hold up the bottoms! When I snuck out, I was lucky enough to find this open donation bin, so I snagged what I could find that would fit and stashed my old PJs behind it. When they find them, they'll know I'm in the city."
"Phoenix is a pretty big place to get lost in, Christina." Kathy pointed out. "There's like over a million people here!" Really looking at her friend, Kathy puzzled over something. "Um... so, did the angel pick how you'd look?"
"No." she answered half-heartedly. She was still very unsure of her chances of avoiding the police once she left to find a place to sleep. "This is always how I imagined myself as a girl."
"Really?" Kathy was surprised. "A blonde?"
"Just like my... um... like Mother." she explained sadly.
Realizing she'd missed something Christina had mentioned earlier, Kathy looked earnestly at her. "Um... Christina? Why did you say I was pretty earlier?"
Rolling her eyes at Kathy, she smirked. "Please! You know that you're gorgeous, Kathy! Tom Bates has only asked you out like a zillion times!"
Embarrassed, Kathy looked away. "Oh. I thought..."
Seeing that Kathy had been hoping she liked her the way Kathy liked Walt, Christina blushed. "Oh! Um... well, it... it's sorta weird with you. You're like, really pretty, but you're my best friend. Before you told me that you... um... you loved Walt, I didn't even think about you that way."
Turning to look at Christina, Kathy had to know. "And now that you know?"
"Now I feel awful!" she admitted. "It's like I took him away from you! It's so not fair! I didn't even think how my wish might affect everyone else! You, my parents, everyone! It's like I killed him and took his place, and he's me, but I'm not him! I want to fix it, but I can't! I'm stuck!"
"Are you happy, though?" Kathy asked hopefully.
"Not really. I mean, I'm happy that I'm finally a girl, but the cost was way too high! I wish I could take it back! I just want to go to sleep so I can wake up and find out it was all just a big nightmare!"
"Speaking of sleep..." Kathy segued, "Got any idea where you're gonna do that tonight?"
"No!" the smaller girl snapped. "I don't know what I'm doing for dinner either... or what I'm gonna do tomorrow, or the next day..."
"Aren't you gonna come back to school?" Kathy inquired.
"I can't exactly go to school and tell everyone I'm Walt!" she pointed out. "Christina Cocoran isn't even enrolled at our elementary school, and she can't even get enrolled because she doesn't have a birth certificate, shot record, or more importantly, parents that can enroll her! On top of that, I only have this one outfit! I'm doomed because my parents don't know me."
"Well, I think I can solve the clothes problem." Kathy opined. "Mom still has a lot of the outfits I outgrew last year in a box in the storage shed. You can have your pick of 'em. As for where you can have dinner and sleep, you can stay here tonight... if you like." Even as she offered it, her cheeks flushed at the idea that she might share a room with the person she'd been slowly falling in love with for the last several years.
"I can't, though!" Christina exclaimed. "I mean, if you ask your parents if I can stay, they're going to want to call my parents and find out if it's OK, right? I can't exactly give them my parents' phone numbers! They've disowned me, effectively! I don't even have a last name I can give them!"
"What was your mom's maiden name?"
Thinking for a moment, she tried to remember her maternal grandparents' last name. She hadn't seen them in so long, it was difficult. "Um... I think it was Robbins. Yeah! That's it! Grandpa and Grandma Robbins! I haven't seen either of them in like six years. They live back east where Mother grew up. Boston, I think."
"So why not Christina Robbins? Do you have a girl middle name?"
"Yeah." Christina grumbled. "Joy, ironically."
"So, now you're Christina Joy Robbins! As for getting my parents' to give their permission for you to stay, I have an idea. There's a website where you can text cell phones. I can just use that, text them like I'm your mom and say that you asked to stay at my house since 'she' has to work late tonight and 'she' just wanted to text and find out if they're OK with it... or something."
Thinking about the idea, Christina shrugged. "OK. I guess it might work. It means doing an awful lot of lying, though. I don't like that. I'm supposed to be the best girl I can be, and lying isn't exactly a good way to start my new life off with!"
"What other choice is there, Christina?" Kathy asked as she moved closer. "I mean, it's either that or you sleep on the street tonight! Do you know the kind of things that happen to a girl living on the streets of a big city? You aren't Walt anymore! You wouldn't last five minutes!"
Seeing no other options, Christina sagged her shoulders and nodded. "OK."
With a cheerful grin, Kathy set to work on her plan. When the website asked her to confirm that she was thirteen years of age or older, she just checked the box and moved on. Setting up a free account with the name Marie Robbins, she spent a few minutes composing a text to send to her mother. When she was sure it was perfect, she hit send and waited.
She didn't have to wait more than a minute before the site pinged that there was a reply. Reading it, she looked up at Christina and grinned. "We're in!"
Reading the brief text exchange with Kathy's mom, Christina felt a lump raise in her throat. "I don't know, Kathy! I have a bad feeling about this! Why did you tell her that my mom was going out of town for three days? I know your mom said it was fine, but I can't go to school with you! What do I do when I'm supposed to be gone all day?"
Shaking her head, Kathy rolled her eyes in disbelief at how innocent her best friend could be sometimes. "Look! We'll get ready for school, you'll leave with me, I'll give you my house key, then when we get close to school you head back here and go through my old clothes until I get home! Mom leaves for work about fifteen minutes after I leave, so by the time you get back here she'll be gone!"
"Yeah? Isn't it going to be a little odd that I won't have a change of clothes?" Christina pointed out. "I mean, if my mother sent me here, she would have at least packed me a few days of outfits, right? Not to mention a nightgown or two. Underwear? A toothbrush? I don't have any of that, and I can't use your old clothes because your mom would recognize them! It won't work!"
Kathy bit her lower lip. "Oh yeah. I hadn't thought of that." Looking at the texts that she'd exchanged with her mother, she tried to think of any way to solve these new issues, but couldn't. "I guess I'll have to text her and tell her that your 'mom' made other arrangements... like staying with your uncle or something." Typing out the reply, she glumly sent it and put her phone away. "So... what're you gonna do then?"
Thinking hard, Christina shook her head slowly. "I don't know."
Meanwhile, four blocks away, David and Ruth Cocoran sat at their kitchen table staring at their phones, hoping and praying that they would get some word from the police that their son had been found and was OK.
The day had been an absolute nightmare. Both calling off work, they had spent all day driving around to the places where they thought Christina might be. When Ruth had received the call from Kathy's cell phone, it only reinforced with the two of them that 'Walt' was doing this to them for some reason. Now they were just waiting to hear back from the police to find out what they learned from Kathy.
The knock on the door caused both girls to jump in fright. Looking at her friend, Kathy's eyes went wide. "Who could that be? Mom's not supposed to be here for another half hour, and she wouldn't knock!"
In a near panic, Christina stood up and grabbed Kathy's shoulders "Please! You have to hide me!"
Hearing another louder knock, Kathy looked toward the door and then back at Christina. "OK! Calm down!" Thinking fast, she looked around her room before her eyes settled on her dresser. Looking Christina up and down, she pulled her over to the white oak piece of furniture, opened the bottom drawer, moved her sweaters underneath her bed, and stood back. "Climb in! Quick!"
Hesitating only a moment, she got down on all fours and slowly shifted her weight into the tiny space. Curling up in a ball, she lay down until she was all the way in.
Kathy sat down and pushed with her legs against the drawer, using her bed as a brace against her back. The drawer groaned, but soon was closed. Getting up, she ran to the front door just as someone knocked very loudly and she heard a voice from the other side of the door.
"Police!" the man's voice yelled. "Open up!"
Pausing in fear, Kathy calmed herself before opening the small door in the large oak door. "Yes? Can I help you?" she asked politely.
Raul Martinez looked at the little opening, but couldn't see anything inside. "I'm Officer Martinez. This is my partner, Officer Johnson. Are you Kathy Grant?"
"Yes." she answered simply.
"May we come in, Miss Grant?"
"My mother's not home, officer." Kathy stated honestly. "I'm not supposed to open the door to anyone! You might be faking being police officers!"
Irritated, Officer Martinez held his emotions in check. "Look, we're searching for a missing boy! Walter Cocoran! His parents received a call from your cell phone a short time ago. It was someone who obviously had Walter with her. Was that you, Miss Grant?"
Thinking quickly, she pulled out her phone and shut it off, knowing the officers couldn't see her. "No. I lost my phone sometime today. Somebody must have taken it."
Pulling out his own phone, he dialed the number he was given for Kathy's cell and heard as it went directly to voicemail. "Damn!" He'd hoped that on hearing the phone ringing from the other side of the door he could catch the girl in a lie. "Look, we need to ask you a few questions about Walter. May we come in?"
"Not unless you got a warrant!" Kathy shot back. "Even then, you'd have to wait for my mom to get home! I'm not opening this door for anyone! If you try and break in, I'll call the cops!"
"I thought you didn't have your phone?" he tried again to trick her.
"I can use the house phone, stupid!" she fired back. "My parents still have one! I'm calling the cops!" Running to the old landline phone, Kathy dumped her cell into the drawer of the table it sat on and picked up the receiver. Dialing the emergency number, she only had to wait a moment before a voice came on the line.
"Nine-one-one. What's your emergency?" the woman's calm voice asked.
"My name's Kathy Grant. There are two men on my porch claiming to be police officers and they want me to let them in, but my mom's not home!"
"OK. You did the right thing, Kathy. Don't let them in." Getting the girl's address, the woman reached out to the police department to advise them and find out if they were actually police or if a unit needed to be dispatched there quickly.
"I'm on the phone with the police!" Kathy shouted. "You better get outta here!"
"Kathy?" the woman called out to her.
"Yes ma'am?"
"OK. I contacted the police and they verified that Officers Martinez and Johnson were in fact last reported heading to your house. Is that who they said they were?"
"Yes ma'am."
"OK. Make them show you their ID, and if it is them then it's alright. OK?"
"Am I gonna get in trouble for calling since it's legit?"
With a smile the girl could hear in her voice, the woman shook her head. "No, sweetie! You won't! You did the right thing, OK? Go check their ID and if it's OK then tell me and I'll hang up."
Putting the phone down, she walked back to the door. "Show me your ID. Hold it up to the little window!"
Frustrated by having to jump through hoops just to talk to the girl, he pulled out his department ID and held it up. "There! See?"
When the other officer did the same, Kathy ran back to the phone. "It's OK! Thanks!"
"I'm glad it was really the police, Kathy!" she replied. "Don't hesitate to call if you need us! Goodbye!"
Hanging up, she slowly walked back to the door and unlocked it. Opening up only just enough to let them see her, she sighed. "Sorry, officer. I was just doing what my parents told me to do."
Calming down, Raul smiled and turned on his charm. "That's OK, Kathy! You did good! Can we come in?"
"No." she denied them. "I'll come out, though." Slipping out the door and closing it behind her, she turned to them. "So... what do you want to know about Walt?"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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Scared and alone, Christina huddled in the dark of her best friend's bottom drawer, unsure how long she would have to wait there. Praying silently, she tried not to cry.
Please God! I... I wanna have my old life back! I want Mother and Daddy! Just... make it all go back to the way it was! I don't care if I have an ugly boy's body! I don't know what to do! I've had to do a lot of things I don't want to do just to survive! I ran away, I've lied, I took these clothes! I feel like I'm doing everything wrong! What should I do? Waiting in the silence, she could hear muffled voices, but not what they were saying. It was then that she felt a new terror. Oh no! I gotta go to the bathroom!
At that, she began to silently cry.
She lay there for what seemed like forever, her legs cramping and her bladder feeling like it was about to burst. Hearing movement in the bedroom, the voices became clearer.
"I told you, officer! He's not here!" Kathy insisted.
Opening the closet doors, Raul pushed the girl's clothes out of the way to see if anyone was hiding in them. Seeing nothing unusual, he looked around the room. Leaning down to look under the bed, he saw nothing but the girl's sweaters and stood back up, sure now that there was no one else in the room. "Your mom said I could look around, Miss Grant." Turning to the girl, he tried to see if she was looking anywhere particular.
Knowing where Christina was, Kathy couldn't help but look at the drawer, wondering how long the poor girl could stand being in that tiny space.
Seeing her glance, he looked at the dresser. Narrowing his eyes, he stepped closer to look it over, opening the top drawer.
"Hey!" Kathy yelled. "That's my underwear! Get your pervy hands off! Mom!"
Linda Grant came into her daughter's room and saw the officer searching her drawers. "Officer Martinez!" she shouted at him. "You said you were looking for the Cocoran boy! He's nearly as tall as I am! He can't possibly be in one of my daughter's drawers! What are you really looking for? That's enough! Get out!"
Closing the drawer, Raul turned and tried to de-escalate the situation as he'd been trained. "Mrs. Grant, you said we could search your premises. Your daughter was looking over here, so I looked too. Unless you have something to hide..."
Now furious, Linda stepped into the room fully and pointed to the door. "Out, Officer! You don't have a warrant, Walt is obviously not here, and now you're fishing for something else! I want you out of my house now or I'm gonna call and report you for an illegal search! Out!"
Knowing he couldn't continue to try and find the girl's cell phone to prove she was in on this odd conspiracy, Raul sighed in defeat and left the room, Linda following him to the front door. "Very well, Mrs. Grant. Please let us know if you hear anything."
As soon as the two were out of sight, Kathy knelt down. "Christina? Are you alright?"
Nodding, the trapped girl squirmed. "Yeah. I gotta go to the bathroom, though! Bad!"
Grimacing, Kathy was torn, knowing that if she let the girl out too soon she might get caught. "Just... try and hang on a few more minutes, OK?"
"OK." the girl replied. "Just... hurry! I don't know how long I can hold it!"
Running out into the living room, she saw her mother on the porch talking with the officers. Racing back to the dresser, she pulled on the drawer.
It wouldn't budge.
"Um... I can't open the drawer, Christina! Can you help from inside?"
Reaching up with her hands, the folded girl tried to push her fingers out of the drawer to pull, but there was no room. "I cant get my fingers out!"
Trying once more, Kathy pulled as hard as she could, giving a tiny space for Christina to get the slightest grip on the edge with her fingernails. With the added help, the drawer slid out slightly, just enough for Christina to slip her fingertips out and get a better grip. With another pull, the drawer slid out more, inching enough for Kathy to put her whole body weight against the drawer. With one last heave, the two managed to open it once more.
Climbing out carefully, trying not to wet herself, Christina was finally standing next to Kathy. "Thanks!" she whispered, wrapping the other girl in a tight hug with her legs crossed.
Hugging her back briefly, Kathy let go and ran back out to see if the coast was still clear. Seeing her mother still on the porch, but not the officers, she knew time was short. "Quick! Go!" she whispered.
Wasting no time, Christina walked with just her knees and feet, holding her thighs together as tightly as she could. Reaching the bedroom door, she quickly crossed the hallway into the bathroom and closed the door. Close to losing control, she quickly got her pants down and sat.
What she experienced next was the most wonderfully bizarre sensation of her life. Having not even looked at what was between her legs, and having no experience at actually being a girl and all the physical complications involved, she nearly panicked at the simple act of going to the bathroom.
That was when she started to cry again, which made her cry even harder. I am so sick of crying at everything! What is my deal? Why can't I control my feelings anymore?
Heading out into the living room, Kathy slipped her phone out of the table drawer and into her pocket again just before her mother came back in. "So, what's their deal, Mom? Why was that guy looking in my drawers?"
Shaking her head, Linda closed the front door behind her. "He says you told him you lost your cell phone, but he thinks you still have it and were lying to him. Did you?"
"Did I lose my phone?" Kathy asked to buy time. "Um... yeah. Somewhere at school today. I'm sorry Mom! I wasn't gonna tell you! I was hoping I'd find in the Lost and Found tomorrow so I wouldn't get in trouble! Daddy told me that if I lost my phone, I wouldn't get another one 'til I was sixteen!"
Hearing what she believed to be a confession of the truth, Linda just looked at her with a frustrated smile. "Well, at least you didn't lie to me! OK! You see if it's in the Lost and Found tomorrow. If it isn't though, I'll get your dad to agree to give you a second chance. It won't be a smartphone, though! We'll dig out your old flip phone and you can use that until you learn to keep a better eye on where your phone is!"
Beaming at how nice her mother was being about the invented situation, Kathy hugged her quickly. "Thanks, Mom!"
"I just don't like you not having a phone if you need one!" Linda explained.
Pulling away quickly, Kathy backed away toward her room, not wanting to turn around as the phone in her back pocket would be easily visible. "Still, you're the best Mom ever!"
Heading toward the kitchen, Linda tried to get the whole situation with the police out of her head. Thinking of the Cocoran 'boy' being missing scared her more than she wanted her daughter to know. He and Kathy have been close friends for so long! "I'm going to start dinner, sweetie. Your homework done? If not you better get at it!"
Still backing away, even though her mother was turned away, Kathy crept her way toward her room. "No. I... I was worried about C... Walt... and then those cops came... so I better get started."
Hearing Kathy head off into her room, Linda sighed. She doesn't seem that upset about Walt. In fact, she seems pretty unfazed about it, as though she... Pausing mid-thought, the woman looked toward her daughter's room and remembered what Officer Martinez had said about Kathy's phone having been used by a girl named Christina who was trying to make people think she was Walt. That's the truly weird part. she pondered. Christina is the name of that girl that her mother was asking if she could stay here a few days before canceling... and it's also what Kathy used to call Walt when they were toddlers. I wonder...
Christina finally pulled up her jeans and baggy boxers. Having taken several minutes trying to figure out how to clean herself after going, she was finally satisfied she was dry enough and dressed. The experience was both amazing and terrifying. Having wanted that part of her to be like a girl for so long, and feeling uncomfortable about what she used to have there, finally having the body parts she'd always wanted still left her feeling mildly perverted for even touching it with toilet paper. It didn't even matter that it was her own body now; it somehow felt wrong.
Pushing those thoughts aside for the moment, Christina started toward the door after flushing when she caught sight of something out of the corner of her eye. Stopping, she turned and looked at herself in the mirror. It was the first time since waking up that she'd had the chance to see herself when she wasn't busy trying to survive.
The sight that greeted her was astonishing.
In place of the normal features she'd hated seeing in every mirror, her face was the exact image she had of herself in every dream she'd ever had. At the same time it was familiar, it was eerily disquieting to see it in her waking life in a real mirror. Unlike her dream self, the real thing looked a little dirty and her hair had become unkempt and scraggly. It was still naturally curly and a lovely golden yellow, but it was wild and unstyled. I look like I've been living on the streets for a month already!
Fascinated by the image in the mirror, Christina was hardly even aware that the bathroom door had opened.
"Oh!" Linda startled at the strange girl in her bathroom. "Who are you!?"
"Walt!" Kathy yelled as she saw her mother discovering their hidden guest.
"Walt?" Linda asked in confusion, turning to look at Kathy and then Christina in turn. "Alright, young lady! Who are you and where is Walt!? His parents are worried sick!"
"Mom!" Kathy interrupted. "That is Walt! She turned into Christina this morning, but no one will believe her except me!"
Trying to wrap her mind around what her daughter was saying, she watched as the strange girl in her bathroom descended through surprise, then shock, terror, and finally falling to the floor in wracking sobs.
Ten minutes later, the three of them sat at their dining room table; Kathy and Christina on one side, Linda on the other.
"You expect me to believe that Walter Cocoran, the boy who's been your best friend for eight years, just woke up this morning in the body of a girl? Do I look that gullible?"
"Mom!" Kathy whined. "You gotta believe me! It's her! I mean, him... No! I mean her! Walt always wanted to be a girl and she got her wish, but now her own parents don't know her! She never told them she wanted to be a girl, so now they won't believe her!"
Looking up slowly after drying her eyes, Christina looked at her best friend's mother. Sniffing back more tears, she took a frustrated breath, having to explain it all over again wearing on her heavily. "It's true, Mrs. Grant. I... I'm Walt... or at least, I used to be. I prayed every night for seven years to be a girl, and last night the angel Lisbeth gave me my wish, but didn't tell me that no one would know it was me!"
Hanging her head guiltily, she had to admit everything. "Well, she did give me the chance to ask her questions about it first, but... um... I didn't think to ask much of anything before jumping at the chance. I... I wanted it so bad, I didn't think! Ask me anything! I know everything I knew as Walt!"
Shocked that both this strange girl and her daughter were trying to tell her something as unbelievable as the idea that the sky was pink, Linda shook her head. "OK. What's your name?"
Sighing, she hated any time she had to say her given name. "Um... Walter Devon Cocoran is what my parents called me. Really though, I'm Christina Joy Cocoran. Kathy gave me the name Christina when we were little so I'd have a girl's name. I picked Joy because anytime I could be Christina, I was happy, but that was only ever in my dreams. When I was awake, all I could ever be was... was Walt."
Being a saleswoman for an electronics supply company, Linda was very good at reading people. She read every potential client she had and could tell when they were lying to her, when they were trying to downplay interest in her products, and a dozen other hidden body language clues. Everything she knew about subconscious social queues was telling her that Christina was telling her a truth she normally tried to hide. On top of her knowing it was Kathy who named her Christina, and what she'd suspected of her daughter's best friend for many years, led her to only one logical conclusion. The girl totally believed what she was saying and it all fit the facts... except one.
Boys don't magically change into girls overnight. Ever.
"Listen, I think you actually believe what you're saying, but..."
"So you believe her, Mom?" Kathy interrupted.
"I didn't say that, Kathy." Linda retorted. "I said I believe she believes it's true! People trick themselves into believing things that are impossible all the time!"
"Why do you say it's impossible, Mom? Didn't you tell me that angels are real? That they watch over us and help when they can? So why can't you believe that an angel helped Christina?"
Caught with her own words and beliefs, Linda considered the question. Why can't I believe it? I know an angel saved my life that day. There's no way I could have gotten out of that car on my own, and I know someone opened the door and pulled me out before it started to burn, but no one was around for another minute or two, and by that time the car was burning and Daddy...
Her thoughts turning sad at the memory of the day her father Henry died, she remembered all the justifications people told her back then for what must have really happened. The police investigator said that someone must have been there, but they never came forward because they were a criminal... but Linda saw nobody there when she looked around after they put her down. Her emergency room doctor said that Linda must have opened her own door with a burst of adrenaline... but the accident had jammed it shut so tightly that it would have taken the Jaws of Life to open it.
In the end the only one to believe her was her own mother, Judy. She told Linda that since her father was killed instantly in the crash, it must have been him as an angel who had saved his only daughter. Linda had never stopped believing that.
"Well, Mom?" Kathy asked impatiently.
Shaking herself back to the present, Linda took a breath and let it out slowly before answering. "OK. You're right, sweetie. I do know that angels are real and help us when they can. But this?" She turned to the small girl looking like she was trying to be even smaller to avoid Linda's gaze.
"I wish I could take it back, but I can't." Christina mumbled as tears fell from her eyes. "I'm a nobody now! I might as well be dead! No one would even miss me! All they want is stupid Walt!"
"No!" Kathy screamed. "Don't even think that Christina! I love you!" Even as the words escaped her lips, Kathy's eyes went wide and she clapped her hand over her mouth in a vain effort to stop them after the fact.
Both Christina and Linda turned to Kathy in utter shock at her revelation. After a moment, Christina swallowed hard and asked, "You... you love me? I thought you loved Walt. You mean, like a best friend, right? Like a sister?"
Linda didn't need to hear her daughter's reply. She knew. She'd known for several months that her daughter was falling for her best friend and falling hard. It went beyond a simple crush. Their years of spending time together and the ease of their relationship just fed into the girl's attachment to 'Walt'. With her having just started her first menstrual cycle that winter, her budding womanhood had made her see her best friend in the new light of attraction. Now she had transferred that growing love onto the girl who truly believed herself to be Walt, which meant her daughter's heart believed it too.
"Sweetie?" Linda probed delicately. "That's not what you meant, was it?"
Looking from one to the other, Kathy still held her hand over her lips, trying to decide who was right, unsure even herself. Do... do I love Christina the way I loved Walt? I mean, how can I? Christina's a girl! Realizing how much of a girl 'Walt' had always been, she found the internal argument silly. What difference does it make what she looks like if she's still Walt? I... I mean... Christina! It wasn't Walt's body I loved, it was... it was her! I loved Christina the whole time! I just forgot she was there! Suddenly in a mild bit of shock, Kathy panicked and ran to her room, terrified of her own feelings.
Looking down and resuming her self-loathing, Christina shook her head and began to cry again. "I just cause problems for everyone! Becoming me killed the boy Kathy loved, and she can't love me the same way! I... I gotta go!" At that she got up and started quickly toward the front door.
"Christina!" Linda shouted. "Stop! Please!" Chasing after the girl, she caught her just opening the door. "No! I can't let you leave! Not like this! You might do something... terrible!" Pushing the door closed, she took Christina in her arms and held her as the girl broke down and sobbed openly.
Wrapping her arms around the woman in a desperate need for comforting, Christina was devastated. Kathy loves me, but she can't have me 'cuz I'm a girl like her and she doesn't like girls that way! Remembering what Kathy had said about Samantha, a girl in their school who admitted she liked other girls, Christina was certain she'd put her best friend in the worst position possible; loving someone she could never have.
"It's OK, Christina!" Linda soothed her, petting the back of her head the way she did to her own daughter when she was upset. "Shhh! It's OK! It's not your fault! OK?"
Trying to calm down, Christina felt her fear and anxiety melt away in the woman's motherly embrace. I wish this was Mother! she thought. Accepting the affection nonetheless, the preteen just let go of her fears and relaxed into the moment, feeling safe and cared for as she cried heavy sobs.
While her mother consoled Christina's raw emotions, Kathy lay on her bed sobbing into her pillow. Holding it with the same desperation Christina held Linda, Kathy found herself wishing that the pillow was her best friend, but at the same time conflicted with that image in her mind; at once drawn and repulsed by the idea.
After several minutes, Linda felt Christina calm down and pull away. "Are you better now, Christina?"
Nodding, the girl wiped her cheeks. "Yeah. I'm OK now. Thanks."
Looking toward her daughter's bedroom, she desperately wanted to comfort her child, but was afraid to leave Christina alone in fear that she would leave and might even hurt herself. "Christina? I... I need to talk to Kathy, OK? I need to talk to her alone. Will you wait at the dining room table for me?"
Pressing her lips into a line, the depressed girl nodded glumly. "Yeah. I... I understand."
Shaking her head, Linda held Christina at arm's length by the shoulders. "No, I want you to promise that you'll wait at the table. OK?"
Looking at the floor, she shrugged and nodded. "OK. I promise. I'll wait at the table 'till you come out." Walking back to the dining room, she sat down sadly, wondering what new torture awaited her next.
Linda hesitated only a moment, looking at the sorrowful girl and wondering if she was doing the right thing in leaving her alone to attend to her daughter. Steeling herself, she turned away and headed for Kathy's room.
Hearing the gentle knock on her door as she continued to wrestle with her mixed emotions, Kathy shouted into her pillow. "Go away! Just leave me alone!"
Opening the door slowly, Linda saw her daughter stretched out on her bed face down. "Kathy, dear? I can't do that. We need to talk about this!"
"What's there to talk about?" the girl spat. "I'm a freak! An eleven year old lesbian, Mom! That's Walt out there, and I love him! Her! I love her! I... I can't love her, Mom! I just can't!"
Stepping into her daughter's room slowly, Linda wanted to comfort her, but felt there was nothing she could say to fix this problem. "It's OK, Kathy. I... I know how you feel about Walt. I've known for a while." Approaching the child's bed, she sat on it and ran her hand between the girl's shoulder blades, rubbing gently to try and sooth away Kathy's pain.
Her mother's mollifying tone and the feel of her near helped calm the girl enough to think more clearly. Sitting up, she turned and looked up into the woman's eyes; her view distorted by the wetness in her own. "That is Walt, Mom! I know you don't believe us, but I know it's her! I can feel it! She... she knows everything about him! And her eyes! I can see Walt in them! It's her!"
Taking a breath, Linda shook her head in her own disbelief at what she was about to say. "I... I believe you, sweetie. I know it's insane, but... I think I can see him in her too!"
Getting up, Kathy wrapped her arms around the woman's neck. "Oh Mom! What're we gonna do? She's alone! And scared! Her own parents didn't believe her and called the cops on her and let them take her away! She doesn't have anywhere to go!"
Hugging her daughter and petting her head, Linda shook her head. "I... I don't know, sweetie! Honestly, I'm more concerned about you and what this must be doing to you! This is obviously very hard for you to handle. You're only eleven and dealing with things far too difficult even for us grownups! I... I wish I could tell you something that would help, but I just don't have any words that will help."
Hugging her even harder, Kathy relaxed some, content in the knowledge that at least her mother wasn't angry that she had such strong feelings for another girl and didn't think she was crazy for believing Christina's incredible story. "I... think I'd die if I lost her, Mom! I'd do anything to fix this for her, but I can't! I... I can't even deal with my own problems with her being a girl now, let alone hers! I... I tried, but they're just too big! What'll we do?"
Thinking a moment, Linda started going through everything she knew. After a moment, she broke the hug and looked at Kathy seriously. "You're the one that sent me that text from Marie Robbins, aren't you?"
Turning away embarrassedly, Kathy nodded in admission. "I'm sorry, Mom! I... I just didn't know what else to do! She had nowhere to go! You know that the cops are looking for her. They think she knows where Walt is. She snuck away from them when they took her to the hospital."
Parsing the situation, one part still didn't make sense. "OK. So why did you say she was going to her uncle's house? I already said she could stay a few days. You fooled me completely, which we'll deal with that later." she added with just a hint of irritation and menace.
Kathy shrugged. "Christina made me. She didn't like my lying to you and pointed out you'd be suspicious that she didn't have any other clothes and stuff. She has nothing, Mom! Even the clothes she's wearing she got from a donation bin! I think the only thing she has that's hers is Walt's underwear! Can I give her my old outfits from last year so she has something?"
Nodding in understanding, Linda pursed her lips. "Walt always was honest to a fault. He... um... she... wouldn't let you get away with much! It's one of the biggest reasons I let hi... her... hang around you so much, even though he was a boy. I thought he'd be a good influence on you!" Thinking a moment, she added, "I think it'd be OK to give her some of your old outfits. I was going to donate them when the box was full anyway."
Making the girl smile a little, knowing Christina had at least one grownup on her side, Kathy's smile melted quickly. "Um... what am I gonna do, Mom? I mean, Walt's a girl now! I mean, she was always a girl, but now she's a girl-girl! I can't be in love with her! I just can't! But I am!"
Smirking slightly at the girl's innocent selfishness in the face of much bigger problems, Linda was blunt. "Why can't you love her, sweetie? It's not like you have much of a choice in the matter! The heart wants what the heart wants! You can't just turn it off! Did you love Walt's body or who he... she... was... is... as a person?"
Having her own internal debate asked out loud helped Kathy parse the issue. "Um... I love her! The person Walt always was! But now she's in a girl's body! When she was Walt I could have done something about it. Now? I... I just can't, Mom! I... I don't like girls that way!"
Sighing, Linda shook her head. "What exactly were you going to 'do about it', sweetie?"
Suddenly embarrassed, Kathy turned away and looked at her nightstand. "Um... you know! Stuff! Maybe getting her to notice me? Dating? Stuff!"
Using her fingertip, Linda turned her daughter's head to face her once more. "You don't need to be ashamed of how you feel, sweetie! How does... um... does Christina feel about you?"
With a shrug, Kathy looked at her lap. "I... I told her how I felt about Walt before we came home. She said she never thought of me that way before. Now I just like, confessed in front of both of you that I still love her, even though she's in a girl's body now. I... I just don't know how I feel about that part. It's not like Walt was a hunk or anything! I mean, she was cute, but that's not why I loved her! It was because she was so nice... and sweet... and... and..." Sighing heavily and dreamily, she smiled. "...and wonderful!"
Taking her daughter into another hug, Linda held her for a moment while she sorted out what to say. "Well, what you do now is up to you, sweetie. There's no reason why you can't date her though, if you want to. Once you're old enough, that is! Eleven is a little young to start a serious relationship! But honestly sweetie, you're not the first girl to have the problem! A lot of girls have found themselves falling for someone who they weren't necessarily attracted to. When I first met your father he was... well... sort of... um... geeky, if you can believe it! Why don't you just give it time? See how you feel in a few months when you both turn twelve? How does that sound?"
Swallowing hard even at the idea of dating another girl, she saw the wisdom in her mother's words. "OK, Mom. Thanks."
"Feeling better now?"
Kathy nodded and stood up along with her mother. "Yeah. I feel bad, though! Here Christina is dealing with huge problems and I'm worried about me!"
Heading toward the bedroom door with her arm around Kathy's shoulder, Linda laughed lightly. "It's natural, sweetie! You're still just a little girl and this is a big problem! I'll help how I can, though! OK?"
Smiling up at her mother, Kathy knew that somehow, someway, her mom would find a way to make it all work out. "Thanks, Mom! I know she'll appreciate the..."
As she was about to finish, Kathy looked at the living room with the dining room table visible just beyond. What she noticed first was the silence. That's when she noticed what she wasn't seeing.
Christina was gone.
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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Sitting at the Grant's dining room table, Christina felt the weight of her change weighing on her more with each passing minute. Kathy is still in love with me, but she can't even face me! Mother and Daddy don't even know me, I have no future, no past... no hope. If I didn't promise Mrs. Grant I'd wait, I would just leave. Biting her lower lip, she waited.
When the front door opened, the girl jumped in a start. Seeing Mr. Grant come in, the two locked eyes for a moment before Christina looked down.
"Hello!" George Grant greeted the new girl as he closed the door. "Are you a friend of Kathy's?"
With a shy nod, Christina stared at her lap. "She's in her room, talking to Mrs. Grant. She asked me to wait here."
Looking at his watch, George shook his head. "It's getting kind of late. You should be getting home... uh... what's your name?"
"Christina." she mumbled. "I promised Mrs. Grant I'd wait here until she was done talking to Kathy."
Pursing his lips, George shook his head. "Well, I think you should be getting home, Christina. It's seven-thirty. Don't worry! I'll explain to Linda... Mrs. Grant. Whatever it is, it'll wait until tomorrow." Walking over to the door, he put his hand on the knob and looked at her expectantly.
Getting up reluctantly, Christina made her way over to the door and looked up at the man she'd known almost as long as her own father, and loved nearly as much. "I shouldn't leave without Mrs. Grant saying it's OK, Mr. Grant. I promised her!"
Opening the door, George smiled but was stern. "Go on home, Christina."
Walking out the door, the girl heard it close behind her, heading down the walkway and down the street, nowhere to go as the sun began to set and her tears began to fall.
"What do you mean you told her to go home?" Linda yelled. "Christina has nowhere to go, George!"
Her husband was stunned. After he told Christina to go home, he went to his bedroom to change out of his work clothes. He'd just finished changing when he heard the commotion in the living room. Hearing his daughter Kathy yelling at his wife, he'd charged out to put a stop to it. What he'd seen baffled him. His wife stood there speechlessly with tears rolling down her cheeks while Kathy berated her and the woman just took it.
After getting Kathy to calm down, she told him the argument was all about Christina leaving. When he told Kathy that he was the one to make the girl go home, it was Linda who'd turned on him.
"How was I supposed to know that, Linda!" he shouted back. "You didn't call or text me to say Kathy had a guest over tonight! It's a school night! She's never allowed to have friends over on a school night!"
"Christina's a special case!" Linda shouted. Calming down, the woman tried to explain in a way that he wouldn't think was insane. "Her... her parents aren't available. I'm sorry I didn't let you know, but it was all last-minute!"
Shrugging, George didn't look concerned. "OK, so call her and tell her to come back! I'll explain that it was my fault and..."
"Christina doesn't have a cell phone, Daddy!" Kathy shouted. "We can't call her! Who knows where she went! She couldn't go home!"
"Why didn't she tell me that?" he snapped.
"It... it's complicated, dear." Linda hedged. "Her... her parents are having... problems. I said she could stay here. We've got to find her, George! In her state, she might hurt herself!"
"We should call the police." he stated simply as he headed for the phone.
"No!" both Kathy and Linda shouted together.
Stopping short, he looked at them as if they'd both gone crazy. "Look, what's going on here? Why don't you want me calling the police? That's what they're there for!"
Stepping up calmly, Linda tried to explain without explaining. "George? Do you trust me?"
"Of course I do!" he answered, hurt that she would even have to ask.
"Then I'm asking you to do what I ask without knowing why. When did she leave?"
"Right after I got home. About fifteen minutes ago."
Grabbing her purse, she headed toward the door. "I need you to get in your car and start looking for her, George! I'll take mine. Kathy? You stay here in case she comes back!"
Wanting to help look, Kathy ran up to her. "I wanna come with you Mom!"
"No!" Linda shouted. "You have to stay! If she comes back, you need to be here to make sure she doesn't leave again! Please, sweetie! The more time we waste, the worse our chances of finding her before..." Pausing, she tried to say what she feared without scaring Kathy. "...before she gets in trouble!"
Nodding, Kathy backed away while her mother ran out the door, George right behind her after grabbing his keys and wallet. Once they were gone, Kathy went over to sit by the phone and began to pray while she cried. God? Please don't let Christina get hurt! I'll do anything! You can have me instead! Please! I'm begging you! Protect her?
Walking the few blocks to her parents' house, Christina didn't know where else to go. Standing outside her home, she watched in the windows, hiding in the bushes. She could see the strange car parked on the street, occasionally seeing a couple of strange men walking around her living room like they were searching for something. When she saw her mother Ruth, she nearly cried at how distraught the woman looked.
Hearing a car coming, she ducked further out of sight until it passed slowly. Peeking out, she saw it was Kathy's mother's car. She was about to come out to wave her down when her front door opened, sending her back into hiding.
"Try not to worry, Mrs. Cocoran." one of the men tried to reassure her. "We have this Christina person's fingerprints, as well as video and pictures taken at the hospital. Whoever's behind your son's disappearance, the girl is the key to finding them and Walter. We have pictures of her out to every officer in the area. One of them is bound to spot her sooner or later."
"Thank you, Agent Stewart." David responded as he held Ruth, who looked like a hollow shell. "We'll be here if you need us for anything."
Watching the two FBI agents leave, Christina turned and saw her parents still standing outside their door. When the agents' car finally pulled away, the two turned and went back inside.
Remaining in her hiding place, Christina cried for her lost life and home, as well as for her devastated parents. Remaining there for some uncounted time, the darkness of the night deepening, the girl slowly started walking away, not even sure where she was going.
Christina found herself behind a supermarket in a strip mall. Smelling the food from the restaurant next door, her stomach growled as she thought how that simple sandwich and glass of milk might be the only meal she would have for some time. Spotting a cardboard box that must have been for a stand-up freezer, she headed toward it; the heat of the late spring day sapping away in the dry desert air and turning cold.
Tipping the box over, she crawled inside it and pulled the flaps closed behind her. Crawling to the far end, she leaned on the bottom until the box tipped back upright, spilling her on her head and making her dizzy. Sitting down in the bottom of the box, she settled in, laced her fingers together, and closed her eyes.
God? It... it's me... Christina. I'm an idiot! I thought becoming a girl would make me happy, but it's terrible! I have no home, no family, no past, and no future! I've tried all day to be good, but it's just getting harder! Everything always goes wrong! I don't want to complain, because this is what I always wanted... being myself, I mean... but it's too hard! I don't know what to do! If I get caught, the police are gonna throw me in jail for helping kidnap me! No one'll believe me if I tell 'em the truth, so I'll probably end up in a foster home! Even if it's not like on TV or in the movies, it still won't be with Mother and Daddy, and they'll be heartbroken when I never come home!
Sighing in defeat, she continued. I know praying isn't supposed to be all about me, so can you do something for me? Can you make Mother and Daddy not be so sad? I know you can't like, make them forget me, but can you maybe give them happy dreams of having Walt back? That way they at least get a little time with the son they really love... not me.
Anyway, I guess I should thank you for letting Lisbeth make me a girl, so... um... thanks... I guess. It's my fault it turned out so terrible. I guess I wasn't a good enough girl. I'll try to be one from now on. I promised, though I don't know how long I can be good alone. I love you, God. Amen.
With nothing else to say and nearly exhausted from walking and lack of food, she curled into a ball to stay warm, crying herself to sleep.
It would be the second night in a row that Christina would be watched over by unseen eyes as she slept.
Walking through the same field of wildflowers as the night before, Christina wandered aimlessly. Usually when she would dream, because she was always herself, she would invariably be happy. This time though she walked without purpose or enjoying being a girl.
After some time, she heard footsteps running up behind her. Turning quickly, she saw Officer Martinez running straight at her. Terrified, she froze in place. Just as he got close, he jumped to catch her and flew right through her body as though she wasn't there. Turning around, she was once more alone in the field, her heart pounding.
Breaking into a run, Christina ran and ran. It seemed like hours went by and still the only thing she could see was wildflowers, as though she hadn't gone anywhere. Stopping to catch her breath, she sat down and breathed heavily. Once calmed down, she looked up to see a strange man looking at her. It startled her, but at the same time he didn't seem dangerous, and in fact looked familiar somehow.
"Who are you?" she asked tentatively.
"No one you'd know, Christina." he answered. "Just a friend. Why were you running away?"
"Officer Martinez was gonna catch me." she explained. "I... I don't know why he didn't. It was like he just disappeared when he tried."
Smiling gently, the man walked up to her and held out a hand.
Taking it nervously, Christina felt him pull her to her feet with ease, her exhaustion suddenly gone and she felt refreshed. "What's your name?"
"You can call me Hank." he smiled down at her.
As the two began to stroll together through the flowers, she looked up at him several times before settling on what she wanted to ask him.
"Yes. I am." he answered with a smile before she asked.
Stopping suddenly, Christina stepped back away from him in fear. "You... you're an angel? Like Lisbeth?"
Wincing slightly at her reaction, Hank took a breath and blew it out slowly. "Not exactly. Lisbeth has always been an angel. She doesn't know what it's like to be a person. I... well... I was a man once. That's why I know how to talk to you with words!"
Her fear diminishing, she stepped closer to him again. "Can... can you undo it? Turn me back into Walt? It... it's too hard being a girl! I lost everything!"
Looking down sadly, Hank shook his head. "I'm sorry, Christina. No, I can't. Lisbeth told you as much. Once a miracle has been performed, it's because God wanted it to happen. For whatever reason, He wanted you to be a boy that got turned into a girl through a miracle. Who knows why, but I know to trust Him on these things!"
"But I could have said no!" she pointed out. "If God wanted me to be turned into a girl, why did He give me a choice?"
"Because you could have said no." he explained vaguely. "He values free will over almost everything, even His plans for people. If you'd have said no, you would have stayed Walt and not gone down the path that He wanted for you to follow. That's always your choice. That's what makes us different from everything else in the world. We can choose. Everything else is His doing."
Not able to really follow what Hank was telling her, she looked up at him again. "So... why're you here then?"
Hank seemed lost in memory for a moment. "Someone I care about very much asked Him to watch out for you. Make sure you stayed safe."
"Who?"
Looking at the infinite horizon, Hank remembered the day he died. Suddenly the field of flowers was gone and the two stood on a street next to a wrecked car, rain falling all around them but neither one getting wet.
As Christina watched, a second version of Hank ran from around the car and almost ripped the door off its hinges, the sound of metal groaning before it popped open with a crack. Reaching in, the double came back out with a girl in his arms. Carrying her a short distance away from the car that had just started to burn, he put the crying and dazed girl down gently on the grass nearby and vanished as though he'd never been there.
Staring at the girl as she fruitlessly looked around for her savior, Christina noticed that she looked a lot like Kathy, but not quite the same. "Who... who's that?" she asked vacantly.
"My daughter Linda." Hank replied. "This was the day I died... and she very nearly did as well."
Confused, Christina slowly walked up to the sobbing girl who didn't seem to notice her. Looking carefully, Christina turned back to look at Hank. "Is that Mrs. Grant when she was little?"
Nodding, Hank walked up, took Christina's hand, and once more they were in the field of wildflowers. "You're a pretty smart young lady! You're also empathetic and compassionate. I know what my granddaughter sees in you!"
Pulling her hand away, Christina turned away from him. "I... You should go. You should watch over her. She deserves someone better than me! I didn't even think how me becoming a girl might hurt her! I'm a selfish monster!"
Putting his hands on her shoulders, Hank gently turned her around and sank down to his knees to look her in the eyes. "Christina! Now you know that's not true! You're a very kind and considerate young lady, and Kathy loves you because you earned that love. You becoming a girl doesn't change that."
"But I hurt her, Hank!" she cried. "Me being a girl hurts her and my parents! I didn't think about any of them when I said yes! I just thought about myself and what I wanted! What kind of a person does that make me?"
Laughing, he hugged the girl warmly. "It makes you human, Christina! You hurt every time you saw yourself as Walt. Many girls like you become bitter, angry, jealous, and even make a mockery of their feminine gift. Others let the hurt rule them and take their own lives. You... you were special. You never let the pain tear you down, even when it was intolerable."
Pulling away a little, she looked at him curiously. "How do you know all that about me? How long have you been watching over me?"
"I knew all that the moment I touched your hand." he answered. "Every time you hurt, it burned into your soul and I could feel every one of them. You have an amazing strength! You never let the hurt corrupt your heart."
Shyly looking down, Christina blushed at the compliment. "Thanks." After a moment, she looked up at him again. "So... now what happens?"
Smiling, Hank let her go and stood up, backing away. "Now you rest, wake up, forget all this, and go back to my daughter's home. She was up half the night looking for you. I'll keep you safe until morning. Just rest."
Getting a sleepy feeling again, Christina lay down in the flowers and watched Hank looking down at her, closing her eyes and feeling safe.
The loud bang of the garbage truck emptying the dumpster only ten feet from her hiding place woke Christina with a start. Her heart racing, she looked up to see sunlight peaking in from the mostly closed flaps of the box she'd slept in. Her body was sore and her stomach ached from lack of food, but it wasn't long before she heard the clamorous truck drive away and the only noise she could hear was the distant sound of traffic.
Leaning on the side of the box, it once more tipped over so that she was on all fours and able to crawl toward the opening. Peering out carefully, she saw no one around and quickly climbed out. Feeling like she'd just closed her eyes, she was surprised that she didn't remember her dreams like she usually did. Reaching into her front pocket, she retrieved the change she'd found the day before.
"Sixty cents." she grumbled. "That wouldn't even get me a taco!" Wondering where she could go to get something to eat, the only place she could think of was the last place she'd eaten. Kathy's house. she sighed inwardly. Starting to walk without a destination in mind, she felt guilty for not going back to their house last night. Maybe that's why she was driving around... looking for me. Mrs. Grant understands, and I think she actually believes me that I used to be Walt! For a grownup, that's pretty amazing!
Before she realized it, she noticed she was walking back to Kathy's house without thinking. Lacking any better ideas, and weary of her circumstances, she continued her journey until at last she stood in front of the home once more. Almost unconsciously, she knocked on the front door.
Kathy ate her cereal in silence. Last night had been horrible. She waited by the phone for hours without word, crying and praying. When her father came back at ten o'clock, he called Kathy's mother, who insisted on continuing her search well into the night. When she got home at two in the morning, Kathy was asleep on the couch next to the phone, George snoring next to her.
Taking another bite, Kathy looked across the table at her parents. Her mother looked ragged and worn, having gotten too little sleep, while her father just appeared worried. Finishing her bite, Kathy sighed. "You think she's OK?"
Looking over at Linda, her father furrowed his brow. "I... I don't really know, sweetie. I don't know if any of us are OK."
"George!" Linda almost whined. "Are we going to go through this again? I tell you, that girl is Walt! As crazy as that sounds, I know it's true!"
"Changed into a girl by an angel, Linda?" he scoffed.
"Yes!" she insisted. "Just the same way my life was saved by one, George! You said you believed me when I told you that story when we first started dating! Was that a lie?"
Caught in a trap of his own words, he just sat there a moment, relieved when there was a knock at the door. "I'll get it!" he jumped up and ran for the door. Opening it, he looked down and saw Christina standing there, disheveled, pale, drawn, and with dark circles under her wide eyes.
Seeing the man who'd made her leave the night before at the door, Christina started to back away. "I... I'm sorry, Mr. Grant! I'll go!"
"Wait!" he yelled softly, running after her and stopping her retreat by gently grabbing her arm. "Please! Come inside, Christina."
Hesitantly, she let him guide her back into the house. When she saw Kathy sitting at the table eating breakfast, she looked away from her in shame and self-loathing.
Linda jumped out of her seat when she saw George escorting Christina in. "My God, Christina!" she cried, running up to the girl and wrapping her in her arms. "What happened to you! Where were you?"
Hearing her best friend's new name, Kathy turned in her seat quickly to see Christina standing in front of her father George. Shock overwhelmed her at the sight of the girl. She looked emaciated and like someone had kicked her into a gutter. Seeing her mother embrace the girl with the thousand-yard stare, Kathy slowly got up, her tears barely held at bay.
Overwhelmed, Christina accepted the affection and hugged her back, albeit weakly. "I... I found a box in back of a strip mall. I slept in there. I'm sorry you were worried. I... I didn't think you wanted me here." She glanced up at George with a look of fear. "You shouldn't worry about me. Kathy's the one who got hurt by what I did."
Quickly examining her, Linda satisfied herself that the girl was unharmed, though in need of a bath, clean clothes, and a meal. "It's alright, Christina! We care about you! You look starved! When's the last time you ate?"
Looking over at Kathy, she swallowed hard. "Um... yesterday afternoon. I... I had a sandwich with Kathy after she got home from school."
Seeing there was more to it, Linda pressed. "And before that?"
"Um... the night before... when I was still... um... you know."
"When she was Walt." Kathy finished for her, stepping closer. "Christina? Are... are you OK?"
Nodding, she looked away embarrassedly. "I'm fine. I was kinda sore this morning, though."
"It was in the low sixties this morning." George pointed out. "Too cold for just sleeping in a box."
"You didn't cover yourself with anything, did you, sweetheart?" Linda asked.
"The box was closed." she pointed out. "There were holes in it, though."
Taking the girl by the hand, she started toward the bathroom. "Come on sweetie. We're gonna get you a warm bath."
"What about work, honey?" her husband asked.
"I think the family just came down with a twenty-four-hour cold, George!" she answered without stopping. "Make the calls. I'm going to need your level head today! We have a lot of things to figure out!"
Guiding the new girl into the bathroom, she noticed part of the stink on her was that at some point in the night Christina had wet herself. It had dried quickly in the desert air, but the smell lingered. "It's OK, sweetie. I know you had an... accident. We'll take care of things, OK?"
Nervous, Christina looked at the bathtub. "Um... Mrs. Grant? I... I've never seen a girl naked before! Not even me! I've only ever gone to the bathroom once since all this happened, and even then I didn't look!"
Pausing after she started the water running, she looked at the girl curiously. "Oh! Um... no... I guess you wouldn't have, would you?" Realizing that it also meant the poor child had no idea how to take care of herself as a girl and knew nothing about feminine hygiene, she resolved to teach her what she needed to know. "Sweetie? There's some things about being a girl you need to know, OK?"
"I know some stuff, Mrs. Grant." she admitted shyly.
"Not enough." she stressed. "OK, we'll start with the fact that since you are a girl, looking at your own body isn't dirty, OK? You need to be able to look at yourself to make sure you're clean. So we'll start with getting undressed."
Gulping, Christina knew she was right. I gotta be able to look at myself and know that it's OK. It's not like I can go my whole life and never get naked! Sitting down, she removed her worn shoes and socks. Taking a breath, she closed her eyes and pulled the dirty pink top over her head. Cracking her eyes open, she saw Linda standing there looking at her expectantly.
"Pants and underwear, too?"
"Do you know another way to take a bath, sweetie?"
When she looked down at her jeans, even the thought of taking them off nearly made her hyperventilate; images of Doctor Ramsey undressing her filling her mind.
Seeing the girl begin to panic, Linda knelt down in front of her. "It's OK, Christina! You're safe! What's wrong, sweetie?"
Explaining about the hospital, Christina took a breath. "When I changed behind the donation bin, I was in such a hurry and so scared I didn't even think about it and kept my eyes closed! Now when I think about taking off my pants, I just see his face! What's wrong with me?"
Taking the girl's hands, she tried to calm her down. "Nothing's wrong with you, Christina! It was a traumatic experience! Do you want me to leave? Would that make it easier?"
Thinking about it, she nodded. "I think it would, Mrs. Grant. Is that OK?"
Nodding in understanding, Linda stood up. "I'll be right outside, OK? Once you're in the tub, I'm going to have to tell you how to clean yourself, so I'll have to come in when you get more comfortable with yourself. Understand?"
"Yeah." she sighed. "I'll try to be quick."
Exiting the bathroom, Linda stood outside the door and waited. After a few moments, she saw her husband approaching.
"What's wrong, honey?" he asked concernedly.
"Christina's never seen her body naked or bathed as a girl." she explained. "She's getting undressed and in the tub so I can tell her how to clean herself. Still think it's crazy?"
"More than ever." he shook his head. "This is nuts, Linda! I don't mean you or Kathy, or even Christina... I mean the whole situation! What kind of sick joke is this! Assuming she's telling the truth, what kind of miracle is this? Ripping the child out of her home? No birth record? How's she supposed to get into school? What about a job later? This is insane!"
"I know!" Linda admitted. "That's why she's gonna need your help, George."
The man's face fell like a stone. "No! You aren't suggesting..."
"What choice does she have, love?" Linda argued. "You're the only one who could do something about her biggest issue... no birth record!"
"It's illegal!" he shouted in a whisper. "I could go to prison, Linda!"
"She needs our help, George! You work in the Bureau of Vital Records! Who would know? Couldn't you do it so it can't be traced back to you?"
Thinking for a moment, he thought of several ways to insert a birth record into the system in such a way as to leave no trace that he'd been the one to do it. Shaking his head in disgust at the idea, he got mildly angry that she would suggest it. "It's wrong, Linda! Even if I could get away with it, it's still wrong! It's fraud! Besides, who do we say her parents are, huh? From what you told me, Ruth and David weren't exactly open to the idea!"
"That was when she was telling them alone with no one to support her story, George!" she countered. "If we go to them, tell them she really is Walt, don't you think they'd at least listen to her?"
"Or they might think we took Walt!" he pointed out. "Linda, this could ruin us! We're talking federal prison here! For kidnapping! Maybe even human trafficking!"
"Don't they need Walt for that? How can they prove we did anything if he's just gone and never seen again?"
"What if she isn't Walt?" he countered. "What if he shows up? Then what?"
"She is! I know it in my heart! She doesn't know anything about actually being a girl! She almost had a panic attack just taking off her pants! More importantly, Kathy knows it." Explaining that their daughter had been falling for her best friend, and how that love had transferred to Christina, she sighed. "She's Walt, and Kathy loves her, George. I saw this coming... her feelings for Walt, I mean."
Absorbing this new information, George's head spun. "OK, that only means that Kathy believes she's Walt. She's eleven!"
"So's Christina, George! Do you think she's some sort of junior con artist?"
"Mrs. Grant?" came the girl's voice from the bathroom. "I... I'm ready now."
Giving her husband a look, she whispered, "We'll finish this later!"
Walking back out into the living room, George sat back down at the table with his daughter to talk about her relationship with Christina.
Knocking gently, Linda opened the door. "Coming in." she announced before entering. Looking at the tub as she closed the door behind her, she saw the girl in the steaming warm water covering her chest with her arms. Taking a breath, she pressed forward. We've got a lot to do!
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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An hour later, Christina emerged from the bathroom clean, in new clothes that used to be Kathy's, and with her hair dry and styled nicely. Making her way over to the dining room table, she saw no one there.
"Um... where's Kathy?" she asked nervously. "School?"
"In the kitchen!" her best friend answered loudly. "Daddy and I are making you something to eat!"
Smelling eggs, bacon, and toast, Christina's mouth watered so much it ached. Following her nose, she entered the kitchen and saw George and Kathy at the stove, Kathy giggling at something her father had just said. "Kathy?"
Turning quickly, the girl wasn't wearing the jeans and T-shirt Christina had seen her wearing before her bath. She'd changed into a cute top and knee-length skirt that made her look a little older and a lot more attractive. Smiling at the sight that greeted her, the sadness that had seemed to surround her since Christina's transformation seemed to have melted away. "Christina! You look gorgeous!" she stated dreamily.
Blushing, the girl looked down at herself. It had taken her quite some time in the bathroom to just strip down and look at herself. After a few minutes of anxiety, she started to get used to seeing her body as her own and climbed into the tub. When Kathy's mother came in and explained how to wash her new body, and a lot of other things she should have learned long ago as a girl, she found it easier to be around her while undressed. By the time Linda suggested the new outfit, Christina agreed and let the woman stay in the room as she dressed, accepting help as needed.
Looking down at the white blouse and cute black skirt she wore, Christina sighed with a kind of contentment she'd never known in her life. "You really like it, Kathy?" she probed hesitantly.
Looking at her best friend, Kathy felt a tingling in her tummy like when she would think of her best friend when she was called Walt. Now she felt it again, this time with the girl Christina had become. "Y... yeah, Christina! You look totally adorable!"
"You too!" Christina replied shyly.
Scraping some scrambled eggs onto a plate with four strips of bacon and a small slice of toast, George picked up the plate. "Grab the milk, pumpkin?" he asked his daughter.
Tearing her eyes away from Christina, she complied, pulling the milk out of the refrigerator and grabbing a glass from the cupboard. Following her parents and friend to the table, she set the glass down and poured it for her. "Here you go, Christina! I hope you like it!"
Seeing the food, she wanted to dive in and devour it quickly, but somehow restrained herself and took a normal bite of eggs, which even when she had been Walt was always small. Savoring the flavor that struck her as more full and rich than any eggs she'd ever eaten, she picked up a slice of bacon and bit into it, the salty tang mixing perfectly with the eggs and making her eyes roll back in her head. Chewing and swallowing, she took a drink. "This is so good, Mr. Grant! I don't think I've ever eaten eggs this good before!"
Raising an eyebrow, he smirked. "I didn't do anything special to them."
Watching Christina eat, Kathy smiled. "She did the same thing yesterday when I made her a peanut butter sandwich! She said it's probably because she's never really eaten anything before!"
Linda joined the three at the table after returning the milk to the fridge, putting a bowl of mixed fruit down next to Christina's plate.
"Why don't we give Christina a chance to eat, George?" Nodding toward their bedroom, she hoped he would take the hint.
Looking at his wife curiously, he furrowed his brow in confusion, but got up anyway; the two of them disappearing down the short hallway toward their room without a word.
Finally alone again, Kathy turned back to her guest. "I was really worried about you last night, Christina. I mean, really worried! I... I thought I might never see you again, and... um... it made me decide some things."
Finishing another bite, the girl turned to her. "Like what kind of things?"
Taking a breath and remembering the things her father talked to her about while Christina had taken her bath, as well as what her mother had said the evening before, she forged ahead. "Um... well, you know how I felt about you when you were Walt, and then last night I sorta let it slip out that I still feel that way about you the way you are."
Taking another breath as Christina stopped eating to listen, the girl continued. "Well, I sorta freaked when I did that. I never thought about another girl like that before. Then the more I thought about it, and after talking to Mom, I realized you were always a girl, even when you were Walt. It'd be shallow of me to... to love you when you were stuck being Walt and then not... um... love you... now that you can be yourself... the person I really loved."
Swallowing hard, Christina realized what Kathy was saying. "Um... so you... you still... um... love me? Even though I'm a girl now?"
Scooting a little closer, Kathy smiled shyly. "Um... yeah. I'm really glad you can be yourself now, Christina! I... I remember how much fun we used to have before I stopped calling you that! I mean, we still had fun when you were stuck as Walt, but... I mean... you were a little more... free back then."
Taking another bite, Christina tried to think about how she felt about Kathy. She's my best friend. she mused. Kathy's always been with me. When we started Kindergarten together and we went out to recess that first day, Miss Carter suggested I go play with the boys, but they were playing some dumb kickball game and I didn't want to. That's when Kathy took my hand and led me over to play jump rope with Beth and them. She made me so happy!
Remembering a dozen other times Kathy had been there for her when she was stuck in a boy's body, Christina felt that warm feeling in her belly once more. Looking over at the other girl, she felt a pang of regret that she hadn't seen sooner how much Kathy cared for her. She had always liked the girl, but before yesterday she was almost considered 'off limits' to Christina. But now? she asked herself.
Pausing her breakfast, she took a drink to collect her thoughts. Turning once more to Kathy, she cleared her throat. "Um... Kathy? I... I was thinking, I've always really liked you! You're like, my best friend! I... I'm scared to try being more than that, because if something were to happen and we broke up, I'd lose more than my... um... girlfriend. I'd lose my best friend too!"
Hearing what she took to be Christina letting her down easy, Kathy scooted away again. "It's OK, Christina." she lied sadly. "I understand. I mean, you just like me like a friend! Like... like a... um... a sister." Inside her heart ached and her feelings nearly overwhelmed her.
Scooting closer once more, Christina took Kathy's hand. "Well, not like a sister! I like you more than as a friend, or even a best friend! I am scared to try being more, but I think I'm more scared to not try!"
Overcome with joy, Kathy brought their joined hands up to her lips and delicately kissed the back of Christina's hand. Afraid to try anything else, she just reveled in the feeling for a moment.
Feeling Kathy's lips on her skin, Christina felt a rush of pleasure unlike any she'd ever imagined, but not a small amount of fear. What if we break up? I won't just lose a girlfriend, I'll lose my best friend and the only people in the whole world that believe who I am! Pulling her hand free with a weak smile, she sighed. "K...Kathy? Can we go slow? I... I know you like me way more than I like you! I... I just need some time to catch up, OK? I'm still trying to get used to all this!"
Smiling that she at least had a chance, Kathy nodded. "I understand! I... I'll try! You make it kinda hard, though! You're just too nice!"
Sighing contentedly, Christina returned to eating her breakfast.
After a few minutes, Kathy's parents came back out of their bedroom, having spent the time continuing their debate over what to do about Christina.
George looked at the small girl eating at his dining room table and wondered. Is it possible? Can that girl be Walt, the boy who's been in and out of here since Kathy was three? Watching the girl eat, the only thing even close to similar was the small bites she took. All girls eat like that! he dismissed the notion, but in addition to Christina's behavior growing up, it did make him consider that maybe 'Walt' was always more a girl than a boy.
Glancing over to his daughter, he noticed that Kathy was watching Christina eat like it was a romantic scene in a movie. Having missed the signs that Kathy had begun to fall for Christina before her transformation, George just shook his head and sat down.
"So..." he began, only to be interrupted by his wife.
"At least let the girl finish eating, George!" Linda mildly chided him.
Holding up his hands in mock surrender, the man sat back, folded his arms, and waited in obvious impatience.
Seeing him waiting, Christina picked up her pace. Even as hungry as she was, she almost didn't want to as the food tasted so good to her fresh senses. At last taking her final bite of fruit and finishing her glass of milk, she sat back and looked at the adults that sat across from her and Kathy.
"That was delicious! Thank you so much Mr. and Mrs. Grant!"
"It was nothing!" Linda downplayed the gift of feeding her. Looking over at George, she nodded.
Taking a breath, her husband looked over at the two children. "I want to start by saying that I'm not entirely convinced that you're Walt, Christina."
"But Daddy..." Kathy whined.
"Don't 'but Daddy' me, young lady!" he interrupted. "This whole nutty idea is insane, but... well... nothing else makes any sense, as nonsensical as that sounds, itself." Looking over at Christina, he shook his head. "All my life's experience is telling me that you're either crazy or the best midget con artist in the world, but you've managed one way or the other to convince both my daughter and her mother that it's true, and convincing her of anything she doesn't want to is a bigger miracle than a boy turning into a girl overnight!"
Nervous as to where this was all going, Christina fidgeted in her seat. "Mr. Grant? I know it's unbelievable! I hardly believe it and it happened to me! I really was the person you knew as Walt! I... I always wanted to be a girl, and now I am one! I just didn't have any idea how much it would mess up my life, and everyone else's at the same time! If I could take it back, I would, but I... I can't. Now I don't know what to do."
"We have an idea." Linda interjected, getting a look from George that made her amend her statement. "Well, I have an idea, but it means a big risk, firstly to you Christina, and then, if things work out, to us." Pausing a moment, she explained her plan. "Mr. Grant works for the Bureau of Vital Records. He could create a record of birth for you and insert it into the system. If he gets caught doing it though, he could go to prison."
"Then we shouldn't do it." Christina sighed. "I can't let anyone else get hurt in this mess I made. I won't do it!"
Leaning back in his chair, George whistled low. "OK. I'm convinced. That's Walt! He always was honest to a fault and wouldn't think of doing anything that sneaky." Looking at her, he cleared his throat. "Sorry... Christina."
Smiling weakly, the girl in question shrugged. "It's OK Mr. Grant. I'm used to people calling me Walt. You've been doing it for over eight years! I don't mind, really! I mean, it's nice that people can look at me and know I'm a girl now, but it wasn't your fault you thought of me as a boy before! I said that I was because, physically anyway, I was one, even if I wanted to be like this." she gestured to herself.
"You've always been very forgiving, dear." Linda pointed out with a smirk and a glance at her husband, who held his hands up again.
"There's still the problem of getting you back with your family, Christina." he pointed out. "You're going to have to go home eventually."
Shaking her head, Christina was near to tears once more. "They... they won't believe me, Mr. Grant! I... I tried... twice! Once when I first woke up, then again after I ran away from the hospital. Mother hung up on me and it very nearly got me caught!"
"How did you hide from that officer?" Linda had to know.
"I did it." Kathy admitted. Seeing her parents turn to her, she shrank back slightly. "I... um... I hid her... in my dresser."
Astonished, the two looked over at Christina who just nodded. Looking at the girl, they both concluded that she might be small enough for it to work.
"Sweetie, don't you know she could have been hurt doing that?" Linda gently admonished her daughter.
"She was fine afterwards!" Kathy tried to defend herself. "I mean, other than the fact that she had to go to the bathroom and almost had an accident, but it was an emergency!"
Laughing quietly, George just shook his head. "Moving on... we do have a plan for getting you back to your family, Christina. We're going to take you to them and support you when you try to convince them you're their child. If it doesn't work though, if they won't listen, it'll mean that you'll be back in police custody and we'll have some very ticklish questions to answer. So long as we stick to the truth, that you convinced us all that you used to be Walt, we can't get in any legal trouble. Believing you isn't a crime."
Thinking a moment, Christina looked over at the two. "My parents had some men over at the house last night. I think they were FBI. I heard Mother call one of them Agent Stewart. I heard them telling Mother that they think I'm the key to finding who kidnapped Walt. They won't just give up looking, either for Walt or me... as weird as that is to say!"
George sat back. "That complicates things. If the FBI is investigating Walt's disappearance, then your parents probably told them all they knew about you. Most importantly that it's impossible that you're their daughter." Turning to Linda, he shrugged. "That blows my idea for fixing things."
"Not necessarily, love." Linda countered vaguely. "I mean, they would still know, right? Wouldn't that be enough?"
"For them, sure." he answered. "What about the authorities, though?"
"What choice do we have?" his wife pleaded. "She needs her family!"
Looking at the scared girl, he took a breath and let it out slowly. "Alright! You're right! She can't just hide out here forever, and the longer this goes on, the worse it's going to get. Christina? I want to call your parents and set up a meeting, then we'll all go over there and you can try to get your family back. Are you up to this? Like I said, if they don't believe us, they'll probably call those agents and turn you in and we wouldn't be able to stop them. We'd have to let them take you away. What do you say? It's your life."
Turning to Kathy, Christina took her hand and saw the fear in her friend's eyes. Thinking it over, she turned back to George. "OK, Mr. Grant. It seems like the only way to go. It's honest, so my heart is telling me that it's what I need to do anyway. Having you three there will help a lot."
Nodding curtly, the man got up and headed for the phone. Picking up the receiver, he dialed the number that he'd memorized years ago due to the girls' friendship. Hearing the line ring, he hoped he had picked his words well.
Ruth Cocoran sat at her dining room table staring at her smartphone. Dark circles surrounded her eyes and her complexion had turned ashen, sallow, and drawn. She hadn't eaten anything more than toast or drunk anything more than a few cups of coffee in the last day. She'd only slept a few fitful hours, haunted by dreams of finding Walt and their happy reunion, only for it to be spoiled by waking back into her living nightmare.
Her husband David sat across from her, looking not much better. His large frame seemed to sag under a weight he couldn't carry, his shoulders hunched over and his normally happy eyes darkened with worry. His finger flipped through pictures the FBI had sent them of known pedophiles in the area in an effort to see if the distraught man or his wife might recognize one of them as having been in the area. The sheer number of them just made the two fear that even if they got their child back she might've had to endure a horrifying ordeal... and there was nothing they could do about it.
The two were also barely speaking to one another. After the two FBI agents had left the night before, they'd argued. Ruth wanted him to go out putting up Missing posters around the neighborhood, but David refused as they'd been advised to just stay at home in case 'Walt' came home or the kidnappers contacted them. David ended up sleeping on the couch that night, his dreams similar to those of his wife. This new task didn't improve their mood.
As soon as Ruth's cell phone began to ring, the two looked up at each other. Neither one had to say anything. They both were thinking the same thing; that it was someone calling to say they'd found their child's body.
Swallowing hard, Ruth looked down and sighed in relief. "It's Kathy." she sighed. "They probably want to check on us."
"Make it short." David said more snippishly than he'd intended. Turning his tone softer, he sighed. "I mean, they said to keep the lines free... just in case."
Glaring at him briefly, Ruth's expression lightened. "Alright." Tapping the icon, she put the phone up to her ear. "Hello?"
"Ruth? It's George."
"George? I know you're probably wanting to help in some way, but we're holding up OK and we need to keep the phone free, so..."
"Ruth!" he snapped. "I'm sorry, but this is important! We... we have some information that will help, but we need to talk to you alone... just you two and us. Would it be OK to come over there?"
Confused, Ruth was desperate. "O... OK, George. We'll be expecting you."
"We'll be there in ten minutes, Ruth. Just... just hang in there, OK? Bye."
"Bye." she answered vacantly. Closing the call, she looked up at David. "They said they have some information for us."
"I'll call Agent Stewart!" he stated eagerly.
"No!" she shouted weakly. "He... he said it had to be just us... no one else."
Furrowing his brow, David shook his head. "That doesn't sound right! We should call, Ruth! He might be in on it! We need help!"
"Don't you even think about jeopardizing this chance, David!" she barked. "You call anyone and we're through! Do you understand me?"
Bristling at her threat, he very nearly called the agent just out of spite, but his need to try and restore his family overrode his ego and he put his phone down. "Alright, Ruth. You win. We'll do it your way."
Calming down, Ruth only didn't cry because she had no more tears left to shed. She'd cried so many times in the last twenty-four hours that she was emotionally drained. The only clue they had to their child's disappearance was the crazy girl who tried to make them think she was 'Walt', and she was missing as well, having escaped police custody. Ruth was so desperate for information, she'd gladly take a call from kidnappers and entertain them as honored guests, if necessary.
The drive over to the Cocoran home was done in total silence. The whole way, Kathy wouldn't let go of Christina's hand; the worry and fear obvious in her expression. Pulling in front of their house, Christina looked out the car window at the familiar edifice and gulped. Well, here goes! Walking up to her door, it felt odd to knock instead of just walk on in.
Ruth was already at the door, having watched the car pull up. David stood behind her ready to pummel the man if he knew where his child was and wouldn't tell them. When Ruth opened the door, she looked down to see Christina standing and holding hands with Kathy, her child's best friend; her parents standing behind the both of them.
Seeing the crazy girl with her child's best friend made Ruth suspicious. She was not at all convinced that this wasn't some elaborate hoax that her 'son' and the Grants were playing. Still, even if it was, the only way to get it to stop seemed to be to play along. "Won't you come in?" she asked politely.
Christina could feel the coldness in the room. Her mother had no feelings for her other than polite tolerance. "Thank you, Mo... um... thanks."
Leading the four over to the dining room table, the five sat together a short time in silence, none of them sure what to say, with David standing behind Ruth with anger visible on his face. Finally, Christina spoke up.
"I guess you want to know what this is all about. I know you don't believe me, but... um... I used to be Walt."
"Go on." she answered bitterly. "I assume there's more?"
"You don't believe me, do you, Mother?" Christina sighed.
Standing up, Ruth turned to look away from the girl. "How can I?"
"I've never lied to you in my whole life, Mother. Why would I start now?"
"Walt never lied!" she pointed out. "I don't know who you are!"
"I'm still telling you the truth." Christina insisted. "I'm here because I need you to believe me! Otherwise, I wouldn't risk getting caught to be here!"
Turning to look at the girl, she was near to hysterics again. "Look, obviously you've been coached by Walt to know things that only he would know! Why are you doing this?"
"Mrs. Cocoran?" Kathy interrupted. "She really is Walt! I know it's her! I... I can tell."
"You're all in on this!" Ruth snapped.
Linda tried to calm things down. "Ruth! Please! Just... just listen to her!" Looking over at her husband, seeing him nod, she turned back to face the woman once more. "We believe her."
Christina tried once again. "Kathy and them had nothing to do with all this, Mother! She's here 'cause I needed her to be here! She's been my best friend for eight years! How can you think that I'd put you and Daddy through all this on purpose? Haven't I always been good?"
Hearing the girl speak, it was hard for Ruth to deny that she sounded so much like her child. When she turned and looked at her though, nothing of Walt showed. "My Walt has always been good! Where is he?"
"I'm right here, Mother!" Christina sobbed. "What can I do to show you I'm Walt? I'll do anything you want!"
A pang of guilt washed over Ruth as she watched the girl reduced to tears at her harsh words. Thinking for a moment, she had an idea. "OK, if you're Walt, you'll have your birth mark on the bottom of your foot."
Shaking her head sadly, Christina sighed. "It's gone. I looked."
Throwing her hands up in hopelessness, Ruth turned away from the four. "Well, I don't know what to tell you then! You're not Walt!"
"No she's not." Kathy stated plainly. "She's Christina. Walt was just someone she pretended to be." Seeing the look on her friend's face, Kathy shrugged. "Well? It's true, isn't it?"
With a nod, Christina blinked at her. "Yeah, it's true." Turning back to Ruth, she tried once more. "Mother? Ask me anything. If you think Walt coached me, he couldn't have taught me everything about him, right? But, if I really am Walt like I'm saying, there can't be anything you could ask that I shouldn't know. Right?"
Thinking a moment, Ruth nodded. "OK. What's Walt's favorite color?"
With a smirk, Christina shook her head. "I say it's green, but you know it's actually purple and gold... the colors I picked for my birthday last year."
Pursing her lips, Ruth tried a different tactic. "OK, what was it your grandma Edith said to you the last time you talked to her?"
Christina giggled lightly. "Great-aunt Edith was Grandma Virginia's sister, and she never said anything to me 'cuz she died a week before I was born!"
"What did you do that last night before you went to bed?" Ruth probed.
Swallowing hard, Christina looked away as she answered, bolstered only by Kathy taking her hand. "We... we watched Angels in the Outfield again, even though it was your turn to pick, then afterwards I kissed Daddy on the cheek and said goodnight, then kissed you and said goodnight before you asked if I wanted you to tuck me in. I... I said no, that I was a big boy, but I almost slipped and said big girl. Then I went to bed after saying my prayers."
Looking at the girl that appeared and sounded nothing like her child but at the same time talked so much like him, Ruth shook her head. "Alright. If you're Walt, why did you lie to your father and I about wanting to be a girl?"
Christina shrugged. "It... it was pointless, Mother. I didn't look anything like a girl. Even trying would just make it feel worse, reminding me every day that I could never be pretty... like you."
"Not every girl is pretty." Ruth pointed out. "Why would it matter if being a girl is all you really wanted?"
"Because trying to be a girl would have just been a big joke. I was gonna look like Daddy when I grew up! No one would believe he could be a girl!"
"You might have at least told us the truth, even if you felt it was pointless trying to live like a girl." Ruth grumbled. She could hardly believe it, but the more she talked to this girl, the more it seemed that she really was her child. I must be crazy! she mused.
Listening to the exchange, David shook his head. "This is nuts!" Turning to George, his face clouded over. "Where's my son? You have this Christina girl with you, and you're trying to peddle the same story she is, so you're involved! I want to know where Walt is right now or I'm calling the cops!"
Shrugging passively, George looked back at him calmly. "Do that and you'll lose your child forever, Dave. They'll take her away from you."
"Oh stop it already!" he shouted back. "That is not my son, George!"
"You're right." Linda admitted. "She's your daughter, David! Yes! It sounds totally crazy! I didn't believe it either until she proved it to me half a dozen different ways!" Turning to Ruth, her eyes softened. "Ruth? You know me! Our kids have been best friends for most of a decade. Am I some crackpot that falls for every sob story or line of bull? Would I believe her if she hadn't proved it to me? My God, Ruth! The girl was too embarrassed to look at her body to take a bath because she'd never seen herself naked as a girl before!"
"Mrs. Cocoran?" Kathy chimed in. "I... I have something to tell you. I... um... I've sorta been falling for Walt for a while now. I... I think I love her."
"My Walt is a boy, Kathy!" she snapped.
"Not really!" Kathy retorted. "I mean, when was the last time you saw her act like a boy? Have you ever? I mean really? She told me about the times you sent her to that therapist! She knew you were worried about her being too girly, but she couldn't help it! She was a girl inside... and... and... and it was her that I was falling in love with!"
Facing her own doubts, Ruth looked at Christina. "Yes. We were worried that Walt was acting too... effeminate."
Stepping forward, David scowled. "Walt told us, over and over again, that he was a boy."
Shaking her head, Christina sighed. "Daddy? I already explained that to you. I could never be a girl before! It was pointless to even try! So I told you I was a boy because technically I was... at least my body was. But Kathy's right. Did I ever act like a boy? Even once? Even a little?"
The wind taken out of his sails, David looked away. "No. Walt never did."
Seeing them at least willing to listen now, Linda presented her husband's solution. "George figured out a foolproof way to prove to you both that Christina is your daughter, if you're ready to hear that truth."
Looking at the woman in surprise, Ruth stepped closer. "How?"
"Have her genetically tested against you two for paternity and maternity." Linda answered. Turning to see the surprised look on Christina's face, she smiled. "You told us that your angel made you to look like a mix of your parents, right? That means that you should be a genetic match to them, like the way you were when you were Walt."
Thinking about it for a moment, Christina just nodded with a smile.
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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"Wait a minute." David interjected with a puzzled look. "You propose we have this girl's DNA tested to see if she's our daughter to prove that she's actually Walt turned into a girl by an angel?"
"Exactly." George shrugged. "Think about it. If by some miracle your son was transformed into your daughter, she should still have your DNA, right? Alright, not the same DNA that Walt had, but even angels have to obey the rules of biochemistry! She had to give Christina someone's DNA! Why not her own parents?"
"You have nothing to lose and everything to gain by it!" Linda pointed out.
"Mother? Daddy?" Christina pleaded. "Please? If it doesn't work, I'll turn myself in to the FBI. I really won't have anywhere else to go if this doesn't work." Seeing their look of surprise at knowing they were talking to the FBI, she sighed sadly. "I... I was outside in the bushes last night when they left. I know they're looking for me because they think I know how to lead them to... um... well... me."
Ruth turned to look at David, hope in her eyes for the first time since her child disappeared. "What do you think, David?"
Pursing his lips, David tried to figure out if there was some way this could be a trick, but came up blank. "OK. It seems to be a fair test, if she's willing." Looking at the girl claiming to be his daughter, he sighed. "It's better than doing nothing."
"There's a downside." George pointed out. Seeing them turn with looks of concern, he laid it out plainly. "If it proves she's your daughter, you'll have some explaining to do to the authorities. Christina said you told them she wasn't. I don't know what can be done about that. Claim temporary insanity over Walt's disappearance? The DNA evidence will be irrefutable, though."
Suddenly, an idea sprang into Kathy's mind. "Hey! I know what they can do! Say that Christina is Walt's twin and that she's been away... um... with her grandparents, maybe? The ones that live in Boston?"
Thinking it over, David sighed. "That's no good. Even if the test proves she's our daughter, there's no explanation why she doesn't have a birth record. Or a school record... or why nobody has ever heard of her before."
Ruth looked at the defeated expression on Christina's face and recognized it. That's Walt's disappointed face! Stepping up to the girl, she sank down to her knees and turned Christina to face her, the woman's eyes wide and searching. "Walt? Is that really you? Is this what you really wanted?"
Smiling weakly, Christina nodded. "For as long as I can remember, Mother! I... I wish I could take it back, though! I never wanted to hurt anyone, and I ended up hurting everyone! Even myself! I'm sorry! I wish you could have the boy you want back!" Tears were spilling down her cheeks as she finished.
Embracing the girl, Ruth felt the weight of the last day evaporate in a flash. "Oh, Walter! It really is you, isn't it?" Tears once more shed from her eyes, this time in joy. "Oh, baby! I just want you back! I don't care what you look like! Boy or girl, I just couldn't stand not having you!"
Coming up behind Ruth, David took a knee and looked at the child holding his wife. Seeing the way the girl cried into her shoulder sent his memory back several years to a day Christina had come home from school. Some of the boys had been picking on her for not being tough because she wouldn't fight, even though she was already bigger than all the other second graders and many of the older boys. It was the next day that he'd started teaching her self-defense. For the first time, he saw 'Walt' in the girl, but he needed more than just his gut feeling. The tests will prove it, one way or another.
Going to his phone, David did a few searches while Ruth and Christina just held each other. Seeing what he was looking for, he grimaced. "Problem."
Letting go of her child, Ruth looked up at him. "What is it, David?"
"It says here that for a DNA test to be legally recognized, you have to give proof of the child's identity at time of testing... a photo ID, birth certificate, or Social Security card. Otherwise the results can be disputed."
Scoffing, Ruth looked at Christina happily. "I don't need the test, David! She's my baby! I know it!"
"Actually, you do need the tests." George pointed out. "The whole idea is to use the test results to get her a birth record. See, in order for Christina to get a birth certificate, which you need for things like school, you'll need to apply to the Office of Vital Records for one... and be rejected."
"Rejected?" Ruth puzzled. "Why apply to get rejected?"
"Because then you can file with the courts to have Vital Records issue her a delayed birth certificate." George explained. "Until they reject the request, the court won't accept a petition to do so. Once they reject the request, you can file for a court order, using the DNA evidence to prove that she's your daughter, and then Vital Records has to issue one."
"Isn't that a little... crazy?" Ruth asked.
"Crazier than Christina changing into a girl overnight?" he retorted.
"Good point." she admitted.
"Anyway, what Dave found throws a wrinkle in it. No DNA test, no proof, no birth certificate, no school, no jobs later, and so on. The downside is that if you do get the test done, you might get hit with not putting her in school or not having an affidavit of intent to home-school on file. This isn't going to be easy."
Looking worried, Ruth sat in the chair next to her daughter. "It's starting to sound like it would be easier to get her a fake ID."
George shrugged. "Not my call. All I can tell you is what I know. I'm not a lawyer. I just work for Vital Records as a Database Administrator." Seeing the look in the woman's eyes, George shook his head. "No. Linda already asked me to fake a birth certificate for Christina. I could go to prison if I got caught. I won't do that to my family. It wouldn't matter if I were willing to, though. Christina already said no to it."
Looking to his daughter, David nodded. "That sounds like Walt."
"Christina." Kathy corrected him, looking at the faint smile on the girl's face for backing up her change of name.
"Sounds like you're starting to believe." George smiled at him. "Don't feel too bad. It took me a while too, and I had these two working on me!" he quipped, pointing a thumb at his wife and daughter.
Shaking his head, David looked down at Christina who just looked up at him plaintively. "Let's just say I'm willing to be objective about the idea." he smiled down at her. "We'll see." Looking back at his phone, he noticed an option he hadn't considered. "Huh. Well, it won't help with the legal issues, but it'll sure settle the question as far as I'm concerned."
"What's that, David?" Ruth asked curiously.
"This place has a home DNA test kit. You swab the cheek of each person you want to test for parentage, send it in, and get an answer in five days." Tapping a few times, David sighed. "Well, it's an option, at least."
Looking to her mother, Christina asked, "What do I do until then?"
"You stay with us." Ruth smiled. "I don't need the test. I can feel it's you!"
"It may be the better way to start." George pointed out. "You can say that Christina came back and agreed to a DNA test to prove she's your daughter, then claim that you found out she is your daughter, as impossible as that seems." Pausing, he looked over at Ruth. "Who delivered Christina?"
"Doctor Young." she shrugged. "Ironic, since he was sixty-five at the time!"
"Is he still alive, do you know?" George continued his line of questioning.
"I heard he had a heart attack shortly after Walt... I mean... Christina... was born." Ruth answered, looking at her daughter with a pained expression.
"Well, you could always claim that Christina was Walt's fraternal twin that you were told was stillborn. Then it's all on a dead doctor. Could still get sticky with no Fetal Death Certificate, though. You'd have to blame that on him, too. Say that he told you he'd take care of it." Turning to Christina, he gave her a serious look. "This would mean you'd have to lie, sweetie. The authorities would be sure to ask you where you've been all this time... who raised you... where you went to school... and you'd have to say that you can't remember and stick to that story."
"What about the fact that she's been claiming to be Walt?" David wondered as he sat at the table. "I mean, that's bound to raise some eyebrows."
Considering the question, they all sat silently a moment until Christina spoke. "I was always called Walt, even though I'm a girl. The people that raised me were nice, but treated me like a boy. I found out my parents were Ruth and David Cocoran and was brought here. I don't know where I was before waking up in Walt's bed. I've never been to school. I don't know anything else." Christina stated to the surprise of everyone.
Seeing them all staring at her in shock, she shrugged. "Well? It's not a lie! I was called Walt, I am a girl, you two were always nice, I was treated like a boy, I must've figured out you were my parents at some point in time, Lisbeth brought my new body here, and I have no idea where it was before that. I don't know anything before waking up in my old bed and I've never been to school before because I'm Christina now and Christina didn't exist before yesterday... not this body, anyway. It's just like when you used to ask me if I was a girl and I could truthfully say no... because technically I wasn't. See? Not a lie!"
Her parents stared at their daughter in amazement while she made it sound like she was raised by people who'd abducted her, using nothing but the truth.
"You're gonna be a lawyer when you grow up!" David stated with a smile. "Just promise me you'll use your insidious powers for good and not evil!"
Making the five others seated around the table laugh, Christina blushed and looked away shyly. "Is... is it wrong to say that?"
His laughter diminishing, George shook his head. "There is no real wrong here in dealing with this situation the best and only honest way you can. If anything, you saying all that, and sticking to it, means you might be able to pull this off while being totally honest about it... all without getting locked up in the nearest psychiatric ward!"
Stepping outside a moment, needing a break from the heady conversation, David looked up at the sky. Is all this possible? he wondered. I mean, if my son was always a girl inside, and an angel of God turned his body into a girl, then that means God wanted him to be a girl... so why not just give us a girl? Why put us through all this? Dismissing the thought, he resolved to wait until they could get proof before tackling the bigger questions. With a deep breath, he turned and headed back inside.
"George!" Ruth shouted. "We can't do it until we get the test results back! They'll take her away! I just got her back!"
"Ruth!" he snapped. "You have to! If you don't, it'll look suspicious!"
"I don't care!" she retorted. "I won't lose her again!"
"Woah!" David interceded. "What's all this about?" Looking around quickly, he noticed the children weren't anywhere in sight. "Where are the kids?"
"In Christina's room." Linda explained. "George was just explaining that you two are going to have to call the FBI soon, today in fact, and tell them that Christina's here or else it'll look suspicious. Ruth doesn't want to."
"I won't do it, David!" she growled. "I won't lose her again! Not this soon!"
Trying to calm her down, David put his hands on her shoulders, only for her to shrug them off. Backing away, he sighed. "They're right, honey. You know they are. We need to call Agent Stewart right away or else we might get in even more trouble than we probably already will!"
"No, David!" Linda insisted. "They'll take her away!"
"Not forever!" he pointed out. "At least you'll know where she is and that she's safe! Can't that be enough for now, honey?"
Fuming, Ruth crossed her arms. "But why? Why do we have to tell them now? Why can't we wait until next week when we get the test results that proves she's my daughter?"
"What do we tell them when we do call them?" David queried. "If we tell them next week that she came here today and we did the test, what do we tell them when they ask why we didn't call as soon as she got here?"
"We can tell them we were waiting for the test results!" she insisted.
"That doesn't explain why we didn't contact them about their lead witness in Walt's disappearance!" her husband stated.
"Walt's not missing!" Ruth countered. "She's in her room!"
"You're forgetting that to the rest of the world, Christina isn't Walt, Ruth." Linda reminded her. "She needs to be Walt's fraternal twin as far as anyone else is concerned. That still leaves Walt missing. They'd want to know why you didn't report seeing Christina."
Shaking her head, trying to clear it, Ruth couldn't think straight. "I... I know that we have to pretend all this, but..." Turning to face Linda, she approached her. "If Kathy had been missing for over a day, and you got her back, could you let her go again so soon?"
Thinking about it, Linda shook her head. "No, I guess I couldn't." Searching for a solution, she brightened after a moment. "I have an idea!"
Agent Lyle Stewart climbed out of the car and groaned. He'd spent the last several hours trying to make something out of the samples the hospital had taken when Christina had been in custody. The photos and video had failed to match with any reported missing juvenile in the NCIC.
On a hunch, he'd had the evidence reviewed and had finally turned something useful. While Agent Richard Kent, his partner, was interviewing witnesses from the hospital, he got the call from David Cocoran and left for their home. Knocking on the door, he didn't have to wait long.
David opened the door and waved the FBI agent in. "Come in! We have some information about Christina!"
Looking around the room, nothing much seemed different, though when he saw Ruth Cocoran, he noticed she was not nearly as distraught as before. "Good. So do I."
Handing the FBI agent a letter, the agent began reading it but didn't get far before Ruth came up to him.
"Christina might actually be our daughter, Agent Stewart." she admitted.
Pursing his lips, he nodded. "I know."
Her face turning quizzical, she was at a loss. "What? How did you know?"
Sitting on their couch, he waited for the two parents to likewise sit down. "I was hitting a dead end on the evidence we got from the hospital, so I had it compared to everyone involved. One of our sketch artists noticed that she shared a remarkable resemblance to both you and your husband. So I had her do an age advancement on Christina. It turns out she'll probably look a lot like you do now in about thirty years, Mrs. Cocoran."
David breathed out heavily. "So then... what the note says may be true."
Skimming the childish handwriting quickly, Lyle nodded. "It would fit the facts, and explain a lot of things... her insistence that she was both your daughter... and named Walt, to start with. Did you do what the letter said?"
Shaking her head, Ruth looked at David. "We were thinking about getting one of those home DNA kits, but it takes days to get the results."
"We could pay extra to get a rush job." David noted. "We should know by Friday if we do it today."
"You'd be wasting your money, Mr. Cocoran." Lyle half-smiled. "Good thing you called me right away! Once I suspected that Christina was related to you, I had her DNA sample that the hospital took compared to the ones that you two supplied to me yesterday." Pausing, he looked at the two. "She is your daughter. No doubt."
Breathing a sigh of relief, Ruth turned to her husband who looked stunned. "I... I knew. I didn't need the proof, I just knew."
"Are you certain?" David asked. "I mean, how is that possible?"
"I have a theory." the agent opined. "It's a little out there, but it's the only thing that fits all the facts." Holding up the letter, he took a plastic bag out of his pocket and slid it inside. "It goes along with what the letter says, too. Walt had a fraternal twin sister. The only problem with that is that you've never mentioned it, and there's no record of her anywhere in any system."
"I... I had a daughter when Walt was born, Agent Stewart." Ruth answered honestly as Christina had asked her to do. "She didn't get a chance to live. At least, that's what we were told."
"Really?" he asked skeptically. "There's no record of that either. I looked. I also looked up your doctor. He died shortly after Walt and Christina were born, but there was something unusual about his estate. Probate court records show that ten thousand dollars in small bills was found in a safe in his home after his death. Could be he just kept it as emergency cash, some people do, but there were no large withdrawals to match it. It was never explained."
Seeing their shock, he nodded and smiled. "I suspect that your daughter was abducted by your doctor and then sold on the black market. Then he goes and dies before he gets them their faked birth certificate. Because the people who bought your daughter didn't have any documentation, they likely either got her a fake ID or they just never enrolled her in school. Doctor Young didn't file her death record because there was no body and the fact was quietly lost. It happens."
"So now what?" David inquired carefully. "What does this have to do with... um... Walt's disappearance?"
"I further suspect that your son was abducted by the same people, and that Christina was left behind as some sort of sick 'exchange' because they wanted a boy and not a girl, which explains why this Christina says she was called Walt. When we find her, we might be able to get enough information from her to track them down and get your son back!"
Clearing her throat, Ruth nervously asked, "What happens with Christina, though? I mean, we do get her, don't we? She's my baby, Agent Stewart! I can't lose her again!"
Furrowing his brow, he shook his head. "Well, she'll be in FBI custody while we question her. After that, well... the issue is that you have no legal proof she's your daughter... other than our DNA test. You'd need to go to court to obtain custody. She'll be remanded to Arizona DCS in the mean time."
"But why?" Ruth cried. "She's my daughter! You said so yourself!"
Thinking a moment, Lyle smiled again. "You could petition DCS to place her in your custody while waiting for your court date. The DNA evidence we'll give them and your stable home life should work to your advantage, but in the end it's their call... not mine." he explained. "Now, about this letter. I'll have it analyzed to see if we can get a clue as to where she is. The sooner we find her, the sooner we find Walt!"
"Thank you, Agent Stewart." David sighed. "What do we do now?"
"Do you have some vacation time saved up?" he asked. "Now might be a good time to take it. You'll need to stay available."
"I think I'll start looking for a good lawyer." David mused out loud. "It seems once Christina's found, we're going to want to get the wheels rolling right away. I don't want my daughter trapped in some foster home for a few years the way I've heard some kids end up. She's already spent enough time living a lie." At that he glanced over at Ruth who looked away ashamedly.
Getting up, Lyle shook David's hand. "I think things are starting to gel here, Mr. Cocoran! Call immediately if you have any contact with Christina! Walt's life may depend on it!"
Heading back to his field office, Lyle showed the letter to his partner before he turned it over to the Questioned Documents division.
"What do you think, Rich?" he asked. "It fits."
Nodding, his partner sighed. "Obviously a child's handwriting, either that or an uneducated adult. Let's see... 'Dear Mom and Dad, This is Christina, the girl that woke up in your son's bed. I was raised by two people who called me Walt growing up and treated me like a boy. They were never mean. I learned that you are my parents. I was brought to your house and Walt was taken away. I know you can use DNA to prove that I am your daughter. I got a Q-tip and put it in my cheek and taped it to the bottom of the paper.' Hmm! Smart kid!" he offered, noticing the swab at the bottom.
Reading the paper through the plastic was difficult, but he pressed forward. "Where was I? Oh! 'I have never been to school and don't know where I was before I was brought to you. No one ever told me. I knew I was really a girl, so I called myself Christina. I hope you will too. I am sorry Walt was taken away from you, but I want to be your daughter. I only ran away because I was scared. Signed, Christina Joy Cocoran' Wow! That's pretty heavy, Lyle! Poor kid!"
"Yeah." Lyle agreed. "Seem a little convenient? I mean, here we have this bizarre child abduction where another kid gets left in their place, with apparently no motive, and now this letter ties it all up nice and neat. DNA proves she's their daughter, then the deal with their doctor. Doesn't it all just seem a little... I don't know... easy? I don't like it, Rich! I think the parents are in this up to their eyeballs!"
"So prove it!" Richard answered back. "How? Why? Where'd their kid go? Where'd this girl come from? Why doesn't she have any paper trail? How is it no one's ever even heard of this Christina before yesterday? You wanna hear what I dug up while you were getting the smoking gun here? I got to listen to some nurse tell me a story about an angel that grants wishes! She had a totally different idea of where Walt went and where Christina came from! Get this! According to her, they're the same person! Claims Christina told her that an angel turned him into a girl, and she believes it! Wanna go with that theory or stick with the rational?" He held up the letter for emphasis.
Sighing, Lyle shook his head. "Fine! We'll go with this until we have some reason not to! I'm telling you though, Rich! My gut is telling me that these people know something about where their kid went that they aren't telling us! I don't know! Maybe they sold their daughter to Doctor Young and the ten grand was his cut. I'll dig into the family's financials. In the mean time, get that letter down to Q.D.! We need to know everything about it!"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Highly Emotional Content (have tissues handy)
---
Waiting for word from her parents, Christina sat with Kathy in her room at the Grants'. When Linda suggested she write the letter, she insisted that she not lie, even insisting on taping the Q-tip she swabbed inside her cheek to the paper herself. Leaving to return to the Grant home, she and Kathy spent the time watching videos online. Hearing the phone ring though, she jumped up and practically ran out into the living room.
"Is it Mother and Daddy?" she asked anxiously. Seeing Linda nod with a smile, she relaxed. "Finally! I thought they'd never call!"
Linda listened carefully, her smile dimming as she glanced over at Christina occasionally. "OK. Well, we knew that might happen. Well, she's standing right here, waiting to find out. OK. We'll see you soon, then. Bye." Hanging up, she turned to the girl who had so complicated all their lives.
"Is something wrong, Mrs. Grant?" she inquired meekly.
"Nothing we weren't expecting, Christina." Linda smiled. "You'll get through it! Just be patient and have faith that it'll work out in the end! I'm going to take you back to your house. You should get ready."
Feeling Kathy take her hand, she gripped it tightly, afraid of what lay ahead of her. Turning to her best friend, she smiled weakly. "So long as I have you, Mother, Daddy, and your parents, I think I can get through anything!"
Taking Christina into a warm hug, Kathy felt like she was saying goodbye forever, but managed to keep back the tears. Gripping her tightly, she didn't want to let go, but eventually released the girl. "I... I was looking forward to you spending the night again! You haven't done that since we were eight!" Lowering her voice, she confided in a whisper, "That's when I started to like you as more than a friend... that last time you slept over!"
Smiling happily, Christina gave her one last hug before backing away. Back in the very same clothes she'd taken from the donation bin after they'd been laundered, she turned to Kathy's mother. "I... I'm ready, Mrs. Grant."
After dropping her off, Linda waited long enough to see Christina go in the front door just after sunset before driving back home. Unsure and fearing for the girl, she tried to just focus on helping her daughter get through these next few days once she found out what was going to happen. This will be hard for Kathy. she sighed. I hope she can take it.
Sitting on her parents' couch, Christina nodded absently. "I... I understand. I'm glad Agent Stewart was able to let you know I really am your daughter, so that's good!" Swallowing hard, she looked up at her mother and father who sat on either side of her after calling the FBI. "Will... will I be away from you two long?"
Ruth sniffed back a tear. "We... we don't know, sweetie." she admitted. "If there was any other way to do this, I'd take it in a heartbeat!"
David wrapped an arm around her and squeezed. "It'll be fine, sport! Um... I guess that doesn't work very well anymore." Guilt washing over him, he looked away. "I... I guess it never did."
"It's OK, Daddy!" she smiled, hugging him back. "I don't think football is gonna work out, though!" she giggled, happy to see it brought a smile to his face.
Unable to hold back her fears, Ruth began to cry. "I... I'm sorry, baby! I'm just so scared for you! You... you might end up in a foster home, and getting you back from there isn't easy and will take time. Time that we'll never get back! I won't be able to protect you there!"
Taking a turn to hug her mother, Christina tried to cheer her up as well. "It'll be OK, Mother! Daddy taught me how to defend myself! I bet it's nothing like you see in movies or on TV! I bet whoever they are, they just want to help kids like me that need a temporary place to stay! It's better than living on the streets, right?"
Hearing the car pull up in front of their house, Ruth stood up in a near panic. Wringing her hands, she sat back down quickly and hugged her daughter. "I love you Christina! Always know that!"
Returning the affection, Christina nodded and hugged her as fiercely as she could. "I love you too, Mother! You're the best mom I could ever hope for!" Turning to her father, she hugged him as well. "You too, Daddy!"
"Love you... beautiful!" David managed to get out before the knock came, making him break the embrace and get up to answer the door.
Returning to her mother's arms, she watched as David opened the door and let the two men in. Seeing the first man's eyes meet hers, Christina felt a shiver go down her spine. Fear gripping her throat, she didn't think she could speak then, even if she wanted to.
"Come in, Agent Stewart, Agent Kent." David stated politely. Gesturing to the couch, he led the two men over. "This is... um... I guess our daughter, Christina. Christina? This is Agent Kent and Agent Stewart. They're with the FBI and looking for Walt."
Lyle took a knee in front of the girl and smiled. "Hi there, Christina! We've been looking all over for you, sweetie!" Seeing the way she gripped Ruth in fear, and the way the woman held her in return, he felt certain that there was more going on than there seemed to be. I'll be damned if I can figure out what it is though! Clearing his throat, Lyle tried to calm her. "What's your favorite ice cream, Christina?"
Gulping, the girl tried to relax. "S... strawberry." she eked out.
"I thought so!" he almost laughed. "My daughter loved strawberry when she was your age! She's all grown up now, though! She's in college studying law. She wants to be a lawyer. What do you want to be when you grow up?"
Biting her lower lip, Christina shrugged. "I dunno. Maybe a teacher?"
"A teacher!" he said happily. "Do you know any teachers?"
Looking up at her mother, Christina slowly looked back to him. "I... I've never been to school, Agent Stewart. Teachers help kids learn. I'd like that."
Watching her for signs of deception, he saw none and backed off, standing back up slowly. "Do you know what the FBI is, Christina?"
"You're like the police... like Officer Martinez." she answered, her hard tone betraying her negative feelings. "He's the policeman that took me away from my mother when I was brought here to her. Are... are you gonna take me away from her, too?"
Looking up at Ruth and seeing her barely restrained anger, he shifted his gaze back to her daughter. "Do you know you have a brother, Christina?"
"I... I know that my Mother and Daddy raised a boy named Walt. I was called Walt. The people that raised me treated me like a boy."
"Did that make you sad?" Lyle probed delicately.
Shrugging, Christina looked away. "Sorta. Mostly I just tried to make them happy. I knew I was really a girl, though. I... I tried not to let the pain tear me down, even when it was intolerable." Looking up at Ruth again, she saw her start to tear up and look away. "Don't be sad, Mother!"
Grabbing a tissue from the box on the end table next to her, Ruth dabbed her eyes. "I... I can't help it, sweetheart! I feel like I failed you as a mother! You were hurting and I couldn't help you! I... I didn't know! If I did, I could have done something about it!"
Trying to get back on track, Lyle changed the subject again. "Christina? Your brother was taken away by the people that raised you and we want to get him back to his mother and daddy. What were the names of the people that raised you?"
Looking at her parents, Christina sighed and looked at the floor. "I only ever called them Mother and Daddy."
"Did you ever hear them call each other by a name?" he pressed her.
Now caught, Christina couldn't answer his question without lying, so instead she just shut down and stared at the floor.
Frustrated, Lyle turned to David. "She's obviously repressing something... holding it in because of some trauma. The hospital cleared her of most abuse, but she'll need a full set of X-rays and a pelvic exam to know for sure."
Hearing that, Christina looked up with fire in her eyes. "Nobody is going to touch me down there! Nobody! I'll sock you just like Doctor Ramsey if you try and make me!"
The severity of her reaction made him certain there was cause for it. Leaning in close to David, he whispered, "I'm sorry, Mr. Cocoran. She's probably been sexually abused, given that reaction. She'll have to be examined."
Trying to protect his daughter, David shook his head and whispered back. "Couldn't it just be because they treated her like a boy? I mean, if they pushed her to be a boy, they might have made her fear that part of her, right?"
Shrugging, Lyle leveled with him. "There's no way to tell until she's been examined, Mr. Cocoran. I promise, she'll be treated with respect and dignity."
"No!" Christina shouted as she practically leapt from the couch and her mother's embrace. "You're just like Officer Martinez! You don't care what happens to me! You only care about Walt! You can't touch me there without permission! Well, you're not getting it!"
"Just calm down there, Christina!" Agent Kent finally spoke, moving in to keep the girl from getting violent. "Nobody is going to hurt you anymore! We only want to help you! We care just as much about you as we care about Walt, alright? You have to cooperate so we can get him back to his parents!"
"You're lying!" she yelled, backing away from him. "You wanna take me away from my parents! You don't care about anyone!"
Seeing the situation getting out of hand, Lyle shook his head. "We're going to have to take her to our field office, Mr. Cocoran. We're not going to get anything else out of her here." Nodding to Richard, the two worked together to prevent her escape as Lyle tried to take her hand. What he got was a jab to the nose that surprised him so much he had to back away.
Trying to restrain the girl alone, Richard wasn't prepared for the heal stomp to his instep, wincing and retreating.
"Christina!" Ruth shouted. "Please, baby! Try to calm down!"
Turning on her mother, Christina was in a rage. "I won't let them, Mother! I won't! It's wrong!"
"Christina!" David barked loudly enough to make the girl jump and turn to him with eyes wide. "That's enough! Sit!"
Swallowing hard, the cowed girl sat down as ordered, expecting the men to move in again and take her away.
Turning to the lead FBI Agent, David calmed his voice. "Agent Stewart? If I may suggest, she won't do you any good if you treat her like... evidence!" Try as he might, his voice had turned harsh. "She's a scared eleven-year-old girl and my daughter! I won't let you hurt her trying to get Walt back!"
Seeing the way the girl responded to her father, Lyle had a new idea. "Mr. Cocoran? Would you be willing to go with us down to the field office? She seems to listen to you and you can ensure that she's well-treated while there."
Thinking about it a moment, he looked hard at the man. "How long can I stay with her?"
"As long as you can stand the coffee!" he tried to lighten the mood.
"I'm going, too!" Ruth insisted. "You're not leaving me here all alone!"
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Cocoran." the agent apologized. "Your influence isn't helpful to the investigation. Besides, you need to stay here in case Walt comes back, remember?"
"But Walt is..." she began before remembering that in their eyes, Walt was a different person than her daughter.
"Walt is what, Mrs. Cocoran?" Lyle jumped on her near slip.
Thinking quickly, she looked at Christina and tried to calm down. "Um... I was going to say Walt is not coming back on his own. We know that now, don't we?"
"We just don't know." Lyle admitted. "Walt could get away from them. If he does, he's most likely to try and come here. Would you want him to come home to an empty house?"
Caught in their own deception, Ruth sadly shook her head.
Turning sympathetic, Lyle stepped up to her. "Believe me, Mrs. Cocoran. I do understand what you're going through. You just found out that Christina is your daughter, a daughter you didn't even know you had until today, and now I'm asking you to let us take her away, so soon after losing your son. I promise you, I'll do everything I can to see to it that you'll get her, and Walt, back as soon as possible. OK?"
Swallowing hard, Ruth straightened up. "A... alright. I'll stay." Reaching out to Christina, she folded the girl into a loving embrace. "I just found you, my baby girl! I promise I'll do anything I can to get you home again!" Looking up at Agent Stewart, her soft expression turned hard. "Anything!"
Letting her mother go, Christina sighed. "Don't worry Mother. Daddy will be with me. I'll be OK."
Taking his daughter's hand, David smiled down at her. Ready to go, s... sweetheart?" he self-corrected, nearly calling her 'sport' again. Seeing her nod, he looked up at Agent Stewart. "Do we go in your car or can I take her in mine?"
"You'll have to come in ours, Mr. Cocoran." Lyle explained. "We can't let her out of our custody... not even for a car ride." Nodding to Ruth, he turned and headed for the door. "Come on, Rich! We'll get you patched up at the office!"
Limping after his partner, Richard shook his head. "Man! I'm never gonna live this down! Taken out by a junior Sarah Michelle Gellar!"
The four made their way to the agency car, David and Christina sitting together in the back seat. Once they were on their way, Lyle struck up a conversation.
"So where have you been, Christina? We sure looked all over for you!"
Looking up at David, she then turned to face the back of Agent Stewart's head. "I... um... I slept in a box behind a strip mall last night. Then I wrote that letter to Mother and Daddy. I was getting tired of running, so I went to their house and then you came."
Nodding, he saw how it could have happened. "Your clothes look clean for having slept on the streets last night. Did Mrs. Cocoran wash them for you?"
Not expecting that, Christina shrugged. "I took a bath and they were clean when I went to put them back on." It was the closest thing to the truth that she could manage.
After twenty minutes of near silence, the car pulled into the parking garage. A short walk later Christina was shown into an interview room, while David was permitted to watch through a one-way mirror in the next room.
Lyle smiled when he sat down across from Christina and the caseworker assigned to her by the Arizona Department of Child Safety who was there to ensure the girl's rights were protected. He knew Nancy Boyd and had worked with her on other cases involving child witnesses. "Hi, Nancy."
Looking over the paperwork that she'd been handed less than five minutes earlier, she was still trying to get caught up on the case. "Huh? Oh, hi Lyle. Give me a minute?" Taking it, the three sat in silence for a moment before her brow furrowed. "She has no documentation?"
"None." Lyle admitted. "No birth record, school transcripts... nothing."
"Then she's an illegal." the woman assumed, not even having looked at the girl seated next to her.
"Not unless she snuck in from Sweden, Nancy!" Seeing the caseworker look at her charge, he laughed. "No, this is a weird one. We believe Christina there was abducted at birth and sold to a family involved in another child abduction case. She's the new victim's twin sister. It's all in there." he pointed at the thick folder she was holding.
"OK. So what's the situation? Just give it to me in brief, Lyle. I don't have time to read through all this!" Spending five minutes on the particulars of the case, Nancy listened as she continued skimming the files. "OK, I think I've got it now." Turning to Christina, the woman looked serious. "Alright, Christina. You need to tell Agent Stewart there everything he asks about so we can find your brother." Sitting back, she let Lyle take over.
"Tell me about where you grew up." he started.
"I... um... I don't know where I was before I was taken to my parents' house. Honest! No one ever told me where I was before then!"
"Do you know where you are now?" he probed.
"Yeah. This is Phoenix." she replied easily.
"Earlier I asked you if you knew the names of the people that raised you, but you got quiet. Do you know who they are?"
Looking in his eyes, Christina hit on an answer she could give. "I only ever called them Mother and Daddy. I didn't hear their names growing up. They called me Walt and treated me like a boy growing up, even though I'm a girl."
Nancy looked up at that. "You didn't mention that, Lyle!"
"Sorry! There's a lot to this case!" he apologized. "It's..."
"...in the file." she finished with him. Turning to Christina, she looked at her carefully. "How is it you have long hair and look so much like a girl, but you say they raised you like a boy?"
Thinking a moment, Christina looked over to her. "When I was brought here, I was allowed to have longer hair than I used to have. It was normally short. I never had long hair before then."
"They must have been planning on switching out the kids for a while." Lyle noted. "Christina? How long did it take to get from where you grew up to here? Hours? Days?"
"I went to sleep the night before and when I woke up the next morning I was in Walt's bed. I don't remember being moved at all." she gave him.
"What time did you go to bed the night before?"
"Um... around nine. That was my usual bedtime."
"That's less than nine hours travel time. Assuming they don't have access to a plane, that puts them within four hundred miles of here. Could be anywhere from LA to El Paso and almost as far north as Salt Lake! Damn!" Thinking a moment he added, "Was the place in the desert?" Seeing her nod, he asked, "Was it a big city or out in the country?"
"It was a city." Christina admitted vaguely. "The first time I could walk around streets though was after I was brought here."
"How did you evade the police so long then?" he pressed, feeling she was keeping something back.
"I guess I just got lucky." she answered with a smile. "You'd have probably caught me sooner or later, though. I really didn't know what I was going to do after I ran away from Officer Martinez."
Trying to keep up, Nancy looked at Lyle. "How sure are you that Christina is the biological child of the Cocorans?"
"Fifty percent match to both parents. That makes it a ninety-nine point nine-nine percent chance that she's their daughter. Her age fits with her being Walt's fraternal twin as well, so we consider it a done-deal."
"Well, I'll need to look into it, but I think child abandonment charges might be brought against them." she shook her head.
"That doesn't fit the facts, Nancy!" Lyle argued. "Everything points to their doctor being the one to abduct their child!"
"Which they failed to report!" she countered.
"They were told she was stillborn!"
"There's no Fetal Death Certificate filed! We only have their word that they were told that! That's not enough! They may be guilty of human trafficking by selling their own child and are trying to cover it up now! Don't say it can't happen, Lyle! I see it all the time!"
"My parents didn't give me up!" Christina shouted. "My parents never knew they had a girl! The people that raised me told me that my parents thought that Walt was their only child!"
Leaning back, Lyle shook his head, amazed that he was the one standing up for Christina's rights here instead of the one appointed to the task. "Nancy! I already checked on the Cocorans! Their full financial report is in the file! No irregularities! Not a cent unaccounted for! Ruth Cocoran is an accountant that keeps meticulous records... that they turned over to us freely!"
"That in itself is suspicious!" she said in a raised voice. "Nobody accounts for every penny! They're obviously faked! She's an accountant, so she has the knowledge of how to do it! I'm going to start proceedings against them as soon as I get back! This interview is over! Christina is coming with me!"
Standing up quickly, Lyle glared at her. "Like hell she is! She's a material witness in a child abduction case! You take her from this building without my release and I'll have you arrested for obstruction!"
"You can't do that!" she snapped. "I have immunity from prosecution!"
"Only under Arizona law, not under Federal law!" Lyle burst her bubble. "What the hell is going on, Nancy?"
Cowed, the caseworker took a moment to collect her thoughts. "Um... Lyle, I'm under a lot of pressure to see to it that any potential case of abuse is fully investigated. In my view, the Cocorans need to be investigated. If I let this go, I could lose my job!"
"Fine!" he barked. "Do your investigation! But I'm telling you this, Nancy! I know these people! They've already lost one child I intend to get back for them, and they lost Christina here for eleven years! You try and take their daughter away without an absolutely airtight case against them and I'll testify in their hearing as both a character witness on their behalf, and also as an impeaching witness against you as her caseworker!" Sitting back down, the agent took a breath and looked over at Christina, who'd sat silently and just watched the exchange. Winking at her, he smiled when she winked back.
"Now, shall we get back to the interview?" he urged calmly.
An hour later, Nancy Boyd stormed out of the interview room with nothing but her briefcase; the case file left on the table and Christina left in Lyle's custody. Escorting the girl out of the room and over to her waiting father, he smiled as David took her in his arms and lifted her easily into a hug; the happy sound of giggling filling the normally somber work area.
Walking over to the agent with his daughter walking hand-in-hand next to him, David smiled at him. "You're a good man, Agent Stewart! That was incredible! I swear, when she threatened to take Christina away, I almost lost it! Thank you!"
Dismissing the thanks with a wave of his hand, Lyle scoffed. "Bah! Don't sweat it. I've worked with her before. Nancy is a good lady, but she sees too many bad situations. So now she sees every parent as guilty until proven innocent. She hung herself when she threatened to have Christina moved to Tucson to ensure she had no contact with you or Ruth. Until we find Walt, Christina's our only lead." Sighing and looking down at the girl, he shook his head. "I just wish she could give us more to go on."
"I'm sorry, Agent Stewart." Christina apologized. "I just can't tell you any more than what I already have." Looking up at her father, she frowned. "Are Mother and Daddy going to get in trouble because of me?"
Looking up at David, he answered her truthfully. "They're going to need a lawyer sweetie, but I think they'll be OK!" Finishing with a smile, he petted Christina's head. "DCS will be sending over another caseworker later. Until then, she's still in my custody. I'm gonna call a friend of mine over there. I'll make sure Christina gets a fair shake!"
"I believe you!" David smiled back. "What happens until then?"
"How about lunch?" Lyle offered.
Sitting together in the cafeteria, the three sat in silence for a few minutes before Lyle asked what was on his mind.
"Mr. Cocoran..."
"Please!" David interrupted him. "Call me Dave!"
Nodding, the agent started again. "Lyle. Dave? I get the feeling that there's more going on here than you've told me. Do you have any idea who might have taken Walt now that you know about Christina? I ask because I just can't get my gut to shut up... and my gut is telling me that I'm not getting the whole story."
Shaking his head, David sighed. "I wish I could tell you more, Lyle. I really do. I just want my family back." Turning to his daughter, David looked at her. "I honestly have no idea where Walt's been taken, and at this moment, Christina's gotta be my priority. Today I found out I had a daughter... and I'll be damned if anyone's gonna take her away from me again!"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Emotional Abuse and Discussed Physical Abuse
---
Looking in the mirror, Christina sighed and tried to bring her smile back. It had been two weeks since she'd last seen David or Ruth and her optimistic attitude had begun to wane under the stress of missing them.
After the new caseworker had arrived, Lyle had resumed questioning her, hoping to glean some new piece of information about her 'abductors'. She did her best to answer every question without lying, but several times she'd been stuck for an answer and just shrugged or remained silent.
As evening approached, Lyle had given up for the day and remanded custody over to her caseworker with instructions to produce her the next morning for further questioning. Thinking about Charlene Dawson, her caseworker, she smiled a little. Unlike Nancy, Charlene actually seemed to care about her. While she still insisted that DCS needed to conduct an investigation into her parents, she wasn't as eager to see the worst in everyone.
"Hey Christina!" Robert pounded on the bathroom door. "Move it or lose it! Some of us need to get ready for school!"
Rolling her eyes, Christina finished brushing her teeth quickly before unlocking and opening the bathroom door.
Pushing his way in, Robert Beck pinned her against the door. "No need to lock the door, Christina! You should be more... open!"
Christina sneered as she shoved the fourteen-year-old foster child away. "In your dreams, Robert! Don't make me repeat my lesson on bad touches! I don't think your manhood could take it again!" Stalking away, she stormed into the bedroom she shared with Lisa, the natural child of Sarah and John Hollander... her foster parents.
"Robert being a dick again?" Lisa asked as she packed her backpack.
Shying away from the thirteen-year-old's typical vulgar language, Christina nodded. "He just won't quit! Why won't your mom do something about it?"
Shrugging, Lisa flung the pack onto her shoulder while Christina sat on her bed. "Nothing she can do. She lays a finger on any of us and it's 'adiós, muchachos' to all four of us! DCS will have us all out of here and in foster homes faster than you can say, 'federal funds'."
Stepping up to the girl, Lisa poked a finger at her. "So don't rock the boat! Mom and Dad were nice enough to give you a place to stay when you didn't have squat! Not even more than one outfit!" Hearing her brother Don honk his horn, Lisa backed out. "And don't touch any of my stuff today! I see one sock out of place and you'll be sleeping without a blanket tonight!" At that she ran off, along with Robert, thundering down the hall and slamming out the door.
Trying to see the positive and failing, Christina knelt down next to the bed she used, which was really nothing more than some foam padding with a sheet and blanket.
God? It's Christina again. I know you must be sick of hearing from me with the same thing every time, but it's getting so hard to be a good girl here! Lisa is mean and Robert is scary! Mrs. Hollander won't do anything to protect me, and Mr. Hollander is hardly ever here! I didn't want to kick Robert! Since then though, Mrs. Hollander's been using it as an excuse as to why I can't see Mother or Daddy! She says I'm violent and need to be kept home, and she won't let them come here!
The only one who is even a little nice is Don. He won't let Robert near me when he's around, and Lisa needs him to drive her to school so she doesn't have to use the bus, so she does whatever he says. I'm just glad he says for her to leave me alone!
I'm doing all my schoolwork! I like school 'cuz I can use the computer where I can email Kathy! I miss her so much! She's been so sad lately. I haven't been able to see her since Daddy first took me to the FBI office. I know that you know all this stuff, but I just wanted to ask if you could cheer her up.
I'm going to see Agent Stewart again today, that's why I'm not in school. I think I should tell him about how bad it is here, but I don't want to worry Daddy. I know he watches from behind the glass.
I have to tell you something. If Robert tries to touch me again, I'm going to hurt him. Bad. It was bad enough when Agent Stewart made me get touched there to see if I'd ever been molested. At least the doctor was a woman, so it didn't feel so icky, but I won't let a boy touch me. Ever! I don't care about my promise! It's...
"Chris!" Sarah Hollander shouted from the door of the bedroom. "What have I told you about that shit? Get up off your ass and get started on the dishes! I won't have you wasting time praying to your 'invisible friend' when there's work to get done! Move it, missy!"
Christina quickly said "Amen." under her breath before getting up to go to the kitchen.
"Just for that, you get to vacuum the floors after I take you downtown!" she barked as she followed the girl down the hall. "I won't have religion in this house! I'll work you to death if I have to, until you grow up! There is no God! There's no Santa, no Easter Bunny, no Tooth Fairy, and no angels watching over you! This is all there is until you die and then there's nothing!"
Continuing her lecture on atheism, Sarah watched as Christina did all the breakfast dishes and the dinner dishes from the night before. By the time she finished, it was time to go. Even as she rode in the car, Sarah continued to berate her for believing in anything she couldn't prove empirically. Walking into the building with the woman, she finally smiled when she saw her father.
"Daddy!" she yelled as she started to run to him, but Sarah kept hold of her hand and wouldn't let her go. When the woman slowed down, it made getting to her father take that much longer to the impatient girl. At last reaching him, her enthusiasm was lost; the weight of her situation crushing her spirit.
"Don't I get a hug?" David asked hopefully.
"That's inappropriate, Mr. Cocoran!" Sarah snapped. "Ask again and I'll tell DCS that you're trying to molest her! It's bad enough that her head's been filled with fairytales! Don't worry though! I'm getting her straightened out! DCS told us you sold her when she was born! It's your fault!"
"Mrs. Hollander, we were cleared of those charges! she was... hidden... from us!" Calming down, he looked at his daughter. "How you doing, kiddo?"
Swallowing, she shrugged. "OK, I guess."
Reaching out to take her hand, he watched as Sarah pulled her away from him. The disappointment on her face crushed the huge man's heart.
"No touching, Mr. Cocoran!" she snapped. "I'm warning you! If I had my way, a man like you would never be allowed around children! You let your son be abducted and you're not even doing anything about it! I don't even know why you come here anymore! Agent Stewart doesn't need you! I can keep Chris under control!"
"Any chance to see my daughter, I'll take it, Mrs. Hollander." David growled. "Even if it means putting up with you! And her name is Christina!" Looking down at her, he smiled. "Chris is much too boyish a name for her. She's had quite enough of that in her life."
Scoffing, Sarah walked around him, nearly dragging Christina behind her. Following his daughter, David ached to hold her, but kept his distance so as to not raise the ire of the hopelessly corrupt DCS. Eleven days. he reminded himself. Reaching the interview room, Charlene and Lyle were already there. Dragging Christina in, Sarah practically threw the girl to them.
"You're late." Lyle stated evenly.
"Chris was dawdling." Sarah snapped back. "Bad enough that you have to disrupt our schedule for me to drag her down here again. I do have other children to take care of! When do I pick her up?"
"Five o'clock." Lyle answered. "Don't be late."
Turning with a frustrated huff, Sarah stormed out of the room, nearly running into David as she did. "Get away from me, you goon!" she yelled, shoving him away before storming past him and walking quickly from the building.
Smiling at the morose girl, Lyle shook his head and made a note. "How are you, Christina?"
Turning to see her father standing just outside the door, she sighed and turned back to him. "Fine, Agent Stewart."
Lyle nodded towards David. "There's a man outside who looks like he could really use a hug!" Seeing her finally smile, he delighted in watching the girl turn and run to her father.
Kneeling down, David wrapped his massive arms around Christina as her own flew around his neck. "That's more like it!" he sighed in contentment.
Barely keeping her tears at bay, the affection-starved girl just reveled in his warm embrace. "I... I missed you, Daddy! I'm sorry that I messed up and now I can't visit you and Mother!"
"You did nothing wrong, beautiful!" he encouraged her. "Just like I taught you?" he whispered.
"Yes, Daddy!" she whispered back. Letting him go, she turned and entered the interview room.
Hours went by with Lyle asking the same questions he'd asked dozens of times before, each time comparing it to her previous answers, hoping that this time she might have some new nugget of evidence that he could turn into a lead. The case hadn't had any movement since the day she was taken into custody and he needed a break.
With only thirty minutes left until five o'clock, Lyle turned and looked at the one-way mirror. "Dave? Come on in here." Waiting a moment, he saw the girl's father fill the doorway. "Take a seat." he gestured to one of the empty chairs.
Taking the one next to Christina and opposite Charlene, he looked at Lyle with concern. "What's up, Lyle?"
Taking a breath, the worn out agent grimaced. "I'm sorry, Dave. Christina hasn't come up with anything I can use, it's been a month since Walt was taken, and I'm getting pressure from my supervisor to move on to other more active cases. I won't be calling Christina down for any more interviews. She just doesn't know anything useful."
"You're giving up?" David asked, trying to keep his tone even.
"I'm sorry!" Lyle ached. "We just don't have any leads! There's no camera footage, no clue to their identity, no trace evidence, and Christina's composite descriptions are so generic it could be you and Ruth! There's just nothing left! The case will stay open, but... I just can't justify any more time on it. His picture is out there, so maybe we'll get lucky, but until then we just have to move on. You do too."
"We can't." David sighed. "Not until we at least have Christina home."
"How's Ruth holding up?"
Shrugging, David glanced at his daughter and shook his head subtly. "She's OK. Working. Better than me these days! I'm on temporary Leave of Absence from the dealership. I'm welcome back anytime, but he gets it. Good thing I got an understanding boss!"
"Lucky you!" Lyle quipped.
Listening to their exchange, Charlene checked her notes. "Well, if that's the case, I want to advise you Mr. Cocoran that DCS will be moving to relocate Christina to Tucson in the next ten days. There's a foster family there that's been waiting for a preteen girl for three months."
Having read about other incidents with DCS in the news, David was actually expecting this. "We have our custody hearing next Friday." David pointed out. "That's in eleven days! She's required to appear! We have a subpoena!"
Looking over her paperwork, she nodded. "OK, I see that. I have it here. I have a lot of cases! I was told we needed to move her out of the Hollander home within the next ten days because they'll be going out of state and won't be able to care for Christina or their other foster child for a time."
"They're all going to go on vacation to Disneyland." Christina offered in explanation. "Just them, though."
Seeing an opportunity, Lyle looked at Charlene. "Ms. Dawson? Might I make a suggestion? Rather than uproot Christina to Tucson only to have to bring her back in a few days for the hearing, why not place her in the custody of the Cocorans? After all, they are her biological parents, have a stable home life, and I can vouch for their character. Can they be considered a form of kinship foster family in their unique case?"
"Unfortunately, no." Charlene explained. "Per state regulations, a kinship placement must be a person or persons with a significant relationship to the child who are not the birth parents."
Ready with his own plan, David nodded. "How about Ruth's parents? Would they fall into those guidelines?"
Looking at him in surprise, Charlene was speechless for a moment. "W... why weren't they brought up for placement before now?"
"By the time we could reach them to tell them they had a granddaughter, Christina was already in the Hollander home. Since everything seemed OK there at first, we didn't ask them to come from Boston. With recent events, they agreed to come here to care for Christina. They just rented a house."
Thinking a moment, Charlene nodded. "Alright. They'll need to submit their fingerprints for a background check and the house will need to be inspected before placement." Checking her calendar, she winced. "With doing all that, the soonest I have for the home inspection is three weeks from now. We'll have to go forward with the move to Tucson and then address this when they're ready."
"What if I could get you their background check today?" Lyle offered.
"What?" she asked in astonishment.
Opening the thick folder in front of him, Lyle leafed through it, stopped, and pulled out several sheets. "Here. I have other copies." Seeing her surprise, Lyle shrugged. "When Walt first went missing, we looked into the idea of a family abduction. I ran a check on Ruth's parents as a matter of course."
Smiling as she read the reports, Charlene nodded. "Perfect! Let's see... in that case, I can do the home inspection next Monday instead of processing the background check! She has to be out of the Hollander home by Thursday evening, but if the home check is OK, we can have her transferred to their custody Monday night!" Happy that she was able to help, it also saved her the paperwork of transferring Christina to Tucson and then more work to have her brought back for the hearing, then even more work later to transfer her to her grandparents' custody.
Nancy Boyd fumed with anger. She had finally arranged to get Christina transferred to Tucson and placed into the foster home she'd selected; one that would ensure Christina would quietly disappear in a series of rapid transfers from one home to another. To have it stopped just days from the transfer was infuriating. That idiot Charlene! Damn it! Just when I had everything perfect, that goodie-two-shoes goes and blows it! Those monsters are going to get her back if Christina ends up with her own grandparents! I can't even louse up their background check!
Livid that the DA refused to prosecute the Cocorans due to lack of evidence, Nancy had thought that she'd set up the perfect way to keep Christina in the system for six years, getting much needed federal funds for each year. The real pleasure though was ensuring that her parents could never see her again, getting justice in her mind for them allowing Walt to be abducted and for Christina being sold at birth. It's all their fault! she raged internally. I know they're guilty! Good people are never who we deal with! We wouldn't be called in unless they were bad! These two are no different!
Trying to think of a way to stop the transfer, she smiled wickedly. If they fail the home inspection, Christina goes to Tucson and I keep another name on the rolls for the next six years! In a few months she won't even want to go back to them, even if they do find her! Typing at her computer for several minutes, she set things up to make sure that the Robbins' home inspection was going to fail.
Walking down the hall to her shared room, Christina was worn from work. True to her word, Sarah had made her vacuum all the floors before she was allowed to eat. Remembering the day before her transformation, she shook her head at the difference love made. I was happy to do it for Mother and Daddy. Mrs. Hollander makes it a punishment.
"Christina?" came a voice from the room across from hers and Lisa's.
Pausing, the girl went up to the partially open door and slowly pushed it clear, seeing a sight that made her almost smile. Almost. "Hi, Don."
Lying on the bed and holding a magazine, the sixteen-year-old got up and smiled down at her. "What'd you do that made Mom so mad she had you vacuum the whole house?"
Wandering into his room, Christina shrugged. "She caught me praying to God again. I had to do the dishes this morning, too."
"So why do it?" Don sneered. "Nobody's there anyway!"
About to leave at hearing such raw anger, Christina stopped and looked at Donald. Tilting her head curiously, she instead stepped closer, looked around the room to see if anyone was around, and pushed the door nearly closed. "Don? Why are you so sad when you say that?"
Sitting down in a chair frustratedly, the teen stared at the ceiling. "I don't know. Probably because I wish there was somebody there!"
"There is, Don." Christina stated. "I know there is. He... um... let's just say He helped me once. Once I was sad all the time. I tried not to be, but the hurt never stopped. Not ever! I don't want you to be sad! You should never let the hurt corrupt your heart!" Suddenly seeing something new in Don, she really looked at him. "Don? Why are you really so sad?"
With a shrug, Don looked at her and sighed. "Doesn't matter. I can't fix it!"
Stepping closer, she looked around the teen's room again, this time seeing it was very familiar. There were no pictures on the walls; no personality to the room at all. It could belong to anyone. It was orderly, but cluttered with things that looked like they might as well be props on a movie set, they were so randomly but carefully placed.
It was just like the room Christina grew up in.
Looking to the teenager who was staring at the ceiling once more, Christina tried to imagine him as a her... and everything clicked into place.
"Don?" she began delicately. "Do... do you know why I'm here?"
Looking at her emptily, Don shrugged again. "Something about your parents selling you to some other people when you were born, you were raised by them, then they dumped you back with your parents."
"There's more." she expanded. "I was raised as a boy. They called me Walt."
Sitting up, Don looked at her with eyes wide. "No way! Oh man! That is just so messed up! I know just how... I mean... you're way too much of a girl to be raised as a boy! You're so... pretty."
Hearing the jealousy and slight feminine inflection in the reaction, she knew she was right. "Don? Um... I... I want to ask you something, but I don't want you to get... upset. Can I ask you without you getting mad?"
Looking over the girl, Don felt the jealousy raging, but was intent on keeping it in check. "Um... sure."
Stepping closer, Christina nearly shook with fear. "Do... do you wish you were... um... pretty? Like me? I wouldn't mind at all! I... I understand that."
About to yell at her to get out, the teen stopped and saw her hopeful and knowing eyes. Oh shit! She knows! That means I'm acting too girly again! If she can tell and she's only eleven, it must be obvious to everyone! Fear gripping her heart, she almost shrank away from Christina. "W... why would you say that?"
"Because I was just like you before I was brought to my parents... I knew I was a girl, but I had to live like a boy. I... I guess I just recognize something familiar in you. Am... am I wrong?"
Glancing at the door, she got up and moved down on one knee close to Christina and took her gently by the shoulders. "You can't say anything about that, Christina! I... I can't let anyone know! I have to be a boy! Mom would kill me if she knew!"
"But why?" she pressed quietly. "I mean, you'd be a beautiful girl, Don! You would totally pass for a natural girl!" Pausing a moment, she bit her lower lip. "What's your real name?"
"Still Dawn, just with an 'a' 'w' instead of an 'o'." she explained. "That's why I started making everyone call me 'Don' instead of... um... 'Donald'." She spat her given name like a curse word.
Smiling, Christina took Dawn's hands. "That's a really pretty name, Dawn! That why you grow your hair long, too? It's beautiful when it's out of that pony tail!"
Blushing, Dawn looked at the floor. "No! If anyone here is beautiful, it's you, Christina!" Sitting on the floor with one leg tucked under her rear, the teen waited while Christina did the same. "I... I wish I could be a beautiful girl like you! Then my life would be so perfect!"
Sighing at her blissful ignorance, Christina shook her head.
"What?" Dawn tilted her head.
"No you don't, Dawn!" the little girl answered. "Think about it! If you woke up one morning and were actually a girl, would anyone even know you?"
"Well, if it did happen, like with magic or something, everyone would know I was always a girl!"
"You so sure about that?" Christina pressed. "That would mean changing history... which means you wouldn't be you anymore! You'd be someone else that took your place!"
"OK, so just my body, then! If I could be a real girl, even if no one knew how, at least I'd be happy for once! Everyone would have to accept me as a girl then!"
"Why would they? This is the twenty-first century, Dawn! No one believes in miracles anymore! They would just think you were someone else and that you were missing!"
"But I'd be a girl!" Dawn insisted. "Eventually they'd have to accept that I'm still me and that I turned into a girl!"
"No, they'd insist it's impossible!" she pointed out from experience. "You'd end up in foster care because your own parents wouldn't know you!" Going over all the problems she'd had in the last month, Christina used them as hypothetical examples.
"Wow!" Dawn was impressed. "You've really thought this through!"
Biting her lower lip, Christina glanced at the door, thankful she could still hear the TV in the distance, meaning the others were zoned out in front of some show. "Um... Dawn? If I tell you a secret, will you promise not to tell?"
Scooting in closer, Dawn reveled in the idea of letting her hair down and having 'girl time' with someone who saw her for who she really was. "Sure! I promise I won't tell!"
Taking a moment, Christina closed her eyes. "I... um... wasn't abducted when I was born. I was like you. I was born a boy." Going through the entire incredible story, Christina watched Dawn absorb it all with a skeptical expression, but never interrupted.
When at last the little girl had finished her story, Dawn shook her head. "But that's impossible! There's no such thing as angels!"
"See?" Christina sighed and looked at the floor. "That's what I was talking about. You want it to be real and you don't believe it! It happened to me and sometimes even I don't believe it! Sometimes I even think that my life as Walt was just a big delusion and I always was a girl on the outside. If it weren't for the fact that I don't have a birth certificate, which is why I'm here, I'd give up and stop believing in God. I miss Mother and Daddy... and my best friend Kathy! I just... I want my old life back, but I can't have it."
"Are you crazy?" Dawn scoffed. "You got the best thing ever! You get to be a girl!"
"Sure." Christina moped. "I get to be a girl that lives in foster care with nothing while my parents go nuts trying to get me out! Hurray."
Seeing how sad she was, Dawn grimaced. "Well, it's a cool story, anyway. Kinda like some of my sci-fi books! Maybe you should write it! There aren't enough stories out there about girls like me, except porn."
Blushing, Christina looked away. "Um... why do you think you can't tell your mom? I mean, she can't exactly use religious arguments against it!"
Looking toward the door, Dawn shuddered. "Mom caught me wearing some of Lisa's clothes a few times when we were still close to the same size. She totally flipped! She said that if it got out that I was trans, she might lose her position as a foster parent and they'd lose the money they get, so she'd have to go back to work." Looking at the floor, Dawn felt the tear rolling down her cheek. "She... um... she punished me. Bad."
Reaching out to the trapped girl, Christina put her hand on Dawn's knee. "How bad?"
Dawn looked away and just shook her head, refusing to say.
"Oh, Dawn!" Christina cried as she leaned forward and hugged the teen. "I don't know what to say! I wish I could help, but I can't even help myself."
Returning the affection, Dawn sighed in relief. Even though she's a little wacky, it still feels so good to just let go and be me! I wish I could have this all the time!
Breaking their embrace, Christina looked back toward the door. "I better get back to Lisa's room. It wouldn't be good for you if anyone knew what we were talking about!"
"Yeah." Dawn sighed unhappily. "Thanks for understanding, Christina. I... I'm gonna miss you after we go!"
"I'll miss you too." she replied. "At least I'll be going to my grandparents' house, and you'll be going to Disneyland!" she tried to see the best of their separation.
Shrugging, Dawn moved back to her bed. "Yeah, but not the way I want to go. I wish I could be a Disney Princess just once!"
Heading for the door, Christina smiled. "Just be patient. Maybe someday!"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
CAUTION - Referenced Sexual Abuse of Minors
---
Climbing out of the car, Lyle knew he was on shaky ground. Officially, as an FBI agent, he had no reason or jurisdiction to be at the inspection of the home Ruth's parents had rented in order to take custody of Christina. Still, he hadn't been able to shake the feeling in his gut that if he didn't look into it, something terrible might happen. After twenty years of first being a cop and then an FBI agent, he'd learned to trust that instinct as it'd saved his life countless times. His hunch had paid off when he'd looked into Nancy's file.
The biggest red flag was when he found out that Nancy Boyd would be part of the inspection team. When the woman blew up in his interview room, he knew something was 'off'. Charlene's notice that Christina was being moved to Tucson was the clincher. Seeing she could bar the Robbins from taking custody to ensure it, he did some digging and found several irregularities. Twice she'd been in his interview room when her public records showed she'd been on home inspections. Digging further, he'd found an unusual number of visits to one foster home in Tucson, but it was her most recent activity that had told him what to expect today.
Walking up to Charlene and Nancy as they got out of their vehicle, Lyle smiled. "Morning, ladies!"
"What are you doing here?" Nancy asked in surprise.
"Just a follow-up on the Cocoran case." he stated nonchalantly. "This is my partner, Agent Kent." he gestured to the man in the walking cast.
"Morning." Richard grumbled.
"You don't have jurisdiction here!" Nancy growled. "You can't interfere!"
"Oh, we won't!" Lyle sang happily. "We're just here to observe and meet with the Robbins. I want to make sure they jive with their background checks."
"Just so long as that's clear!" the woman barked.
Walking up to the front door together, Nancy took charge and knocked on the door, only to have Charlene tap her on the shoulder.
"Excuse me, Ms. Boyd. I believe I'm the lead caseworker on this! Don't you think I should..."
"No." Nancy interrupted her. "I'm the senior caseworker! This is a home inspection! I've done hundreds of them! How many have you done?"
Cowed, Charlene cleared her throat. "Um... only two, but..."
"Then keep quiet and do what I tell you, Ms. Dawson!" Nancy ordered.
Just then the door opened to reveal a woman in her mid sixties, but her demeanor was anything but frail. Strength of will practically radiated from the woman. "May I help you?" Virginia Robbins intoned coldly.
Her turn to be unnerved, Nancy tried to bully her way through it as usual. "We're from the Arizona Department of Child Safety here to inspect your home before placement of Christina Doe. Let us in so we can get this done!"
Raising an eyebrow, Virginia stood silently.
"Christina Doe?" Charlene puzzled. "My records show her name as Christina Cocoran. That's the basis of this kinship placement."
"I redacted the files." Nancy smirked. "There's no corroborating paperwork showing a legal last name, so she has none. She's officially Christina Doe."
Walking up to the door next to his wife, Walter Robbins was holding a stack of papers. "That's funny, I have several FBI reports here, one of which is a DNA report, that says her name is Christina Cocoran. That sounds like a legal surname to me."
Angry that her attempt to deny kinship placement by claiming there was no significant relationship was being thwarted by others having the DNA test results, Nancy tried to resolve the issue. "Reports created for DCS are not public records!" Nancy shouted, "You'll have to turn those papers over to me immediately, Mr. Robbins!"
"Those reports weren't created for DCS, Nancy." Lyle pointed out. "We gave them to you as a courtesy."
Wincing at being caught out, Nancy turned back to the older couple still standing behind their screen door. "Open the door Mr. Robbins, or I'll report that you refused us entry and your application as a kinship foster family will be denied! Do you want your grandchild today?"
"Sure thing." the man offered. "Just show me the paperwork."
"That's privileged information, Mr. Robbins! You aren't allowed to see it!"
"No, you're required by Arizona law to present it on request." he countered, citing the statute. "Do you want me to call your supervisor today?"
Frustrated, Nancy held out the order for home inspection. Opening the screen door, Walter took the paper, scanned it quickly, and handed it back to her. "I'm sorry, this order is invalid. The case number doesn't match the one for my granddaughter and her last name is filled in incorrectly. There are also several spelling errors throughout it." Leaning toward her, he changed to a conspiratorial tone. "Premises has an 'i' in the middle, not three 'e's."
"Very well then!" Nancy sneered. "You can either accept the order as-is or we'll have to go back and change it and come back next week!"
"Actually, I have the copy of the inspection order that I made, Ms. Boyd." Charlene interrupted. "I double-checked it and it looks to be in order." Handing the paper to Walter, she smiled in satisfaction of being right.
Scanning it, Walter grinned at the woman ten years younger than Nancy. "Looks good to me!" he handed it back to her. "Please! Come in!"
Storming in past the couple, Nancy still had an ace up her sleeve to disqualify the home, but it was riskier. Pulling out her checklist, she started checking off items as she began making her way through the house while Charlene talked to the couple about their legal rights as a kinship foster family. Seeing her opportunity in their kitchen, Nancy reached into her pocket and pulled out the bag, intent on 'finding' it there.
"Well, well, well!" Lyle surprised her as his hand wrapped around hers with the bag still in it. "Rich! Come here! I need you to see this!"
Stunned that he'd caught her, Nancy immediately resorted to her usual bully tactics. "Get your hands off me Agent, or I'll have you arrested for assault!"
Richard came up to him and nodded at her trapped hand. "What is it, Lyle?"
Turning her hand over, he pried her fingers open and took the baggy. "I don't think that's sweetener, Rich!" Lyle quipped as he handed it to his partner.
Opening the baggy, he dipped a pinky in and tasted it. "Cocaine." Richard confirmed. "Looks like a couple grams."
Pulling out handcuffs, Lyle took great pleasure in what he did next. "Nancy Boyd? You're under arrest for possession!" Ratcheting them on her wrists, he pulled her into the living room while reciting her Miranda Rights.
"What's going on?" Charlene asked.
"I just arrested Ms. Boyd for possession of a narcotic." he stated calmly. "She pulled out a baggy of cocaine in plain sight in front of a federal agent. It's my belief she intended to claim she found it in their kitchen."
Looking at her co-worker, Charlene was stunned. "Why?"
"I don't have to say anything!" Nancy fumed. "I want a lawyer!"
"Makes me glad I retired!" Walter quipped.
"She's been trying to get Christina to Tucson since day one." Lyle offered in explanation. "Now what I wonder is why, and why she makes monthly visits to that particular foster home? Isn't it supposed to be semi-annual? Rich? You wanna see Ms. Boyd out? I'll stay and see that everything's what we're expecting." Seeing his partner nod and take the woman out to their car, he stepped up to the DCS caseworker. "Sorry about that, Charlene. Her being at a home to remove kids because of drug abuse that wasn't one of her cases told me her basic plan, so I knew what she was going to try to do, but I had to catch her in the act and I couldn't tell you beforehand."
Sitting down, she looked at him numbly. "I understand Agent Stewart."
Taking a seat across from her, he looked at Charlene. "I suspected something was wrong when Tucson came up twice for the same girl. I think something very bad is going on in that house. I have no probable cause to perform a search, but you can enter on demand on fear of revoking the foster family's license. Consider this an official 'tip' of suspected abuse."
Taking it all in, Charlene nodded. "A...Alright. I'll see what I can do."
"It'll be noted in Nancy's arrest report." he stated in a veiled threat that if she didn't follow up it would be on record somewhere that she knew and didn't do anything about it. "Anyway, let's get this inspection done so we can get Christina home!"
Putting the few clothes that DCS had given her in a plastic grocery bag, Christina was mostly happy to get out of the Hollander home. The one thing she would miss sat across from her on Lisa's bed.
"I'm sorry you have to go so soon." Dawn sighed. "I mean, we just got to know one another and now you're going! Who can I talk to that will get it?"
Putting aside one bag, the girl picked up the second to hold her underwear and socks. "I know! You could always look online! I'm sure there's more out there than just... um... pornography."
Dawn looked away sadly. "It won't be the same!" she complained. "I mean, you totally get it! I think I might even believe you about that crazy magic stuff! You understand being TG from a perspective only we can get!"
Setting down the second bag after finishing, she went over to Dawn and gave her a hug. "There! Now when you get lonely, you can know that someone knows you and cares!" Hearing a honk from outside, Christina brightened. "They're here! Come on!" Grabbing Dawn's hand, she dragged the girl down the hall and out the front door; Sarah, Lisa, and Robert nowhere in sight.
Charlene stood with Walter Robbins next to her car. Seeing the two run out the front door, Christina carrying all her worldly possessions in two plastic shopping bags, Walter nearly cried at the sight of her. She looks just like Ruth when she was little!
Running up to her grandfather, her pace slowed when she didn't see her parents. "Where's Mother and Daddy?" she asked Charlene.
"Your parents are fine!" the caseworker told her. "Christina? This is Walter Robbins. He's... well... your grandfather."
Kneeling down in front of her, Walter smiled weakly. "Hello, Christina!"
"Hi." she mumbled. "Um... this is Dawn." she glanced back at her friend. "Dawn's parents are the ones who've been taking care of me ever since... um... since I was taken from Mother and Daddy." she finished, looking at the ground.
Looking at the teen, Walter nodded. "Hello, Don. Come to see her off?"
"Sorta." she answered, sticking her hands in her front pockets and kicking a loose stone lightly. "Christina's a pretty special girl. I tried to look out for her and help her as much as I could. I... I'm kinda sorry to see her leave, but I'm glad she's going to be with her family. She deserves it after what she's been through."
Nodding at her, Walter stood back up and extended a hand to Christina. "Here. Give me those bags and you say goodbye to your friend."
Handing off her meager belongings, she turned and hugged the teen who'd taken a knee to get down to her level. "I... I'll miss you, Dawn!"
Returning the hug, she felt the warmth of the sun leave her back. Looking up, she saw Charlene standing over her.
"That's enough, Don." the social worker warned her. While she understood that the two cared for one another, she had rules to enforce. One of them was to limit physical contact between older and younger foster siblings.
Letting the little girl go, Dawn stood up and stepped back. "It's OK. I get it. You got your rules."
"It's a pretty dumb rule that says I can't hug a friend!" Christina grumbled.
"I know, sweetie!" Charlene agreed. "Not my decision, though. You ready?" Seeing her nod, she took the girl's hand and led her to the open car door.
"Goodbye, Dawn!" she cried out as she got in. Once the door was closed, she rolled the window down and leaned out. "Remember! Someone knows and cares! Just... have a little faith!"
Seeing the girl disappear from the window, Dawn stood outside and watched as the car drove away, waving as it shrank into the distance before hanging her head and turning to go back inside. Faith, huh? What the hell! I got nothing to lose! Besides, it'll irk the crap outta Mom!
Christina rode in the car in silence while Walter and Charlene talked in the front seat; the caseworker reminding him of the rules they had to follow. When they finally got to the Robbins' residence, she began to get nervous. The last time she'd seen her grandmother had been her sixth birthday. Now she'd be living with the woman and didn't know what they knew of her circumstances. Did Mother and Daddy tell them the truth or do they think that Walt is still missing? she wondered.
Helping Christina out of the car, Charlene walked the girl up to the front door and into the house just behind Walter. Entering the living room, she saw Virginia standing there and was instantly intimidated by the woman's ramrod posture and overpowering presence. "Mrs. Robbins? I'd like you to meet Christina, your granddaughter."
Looking down at the girl, Virginia Robbins saw her daughter all over again. Walking up to the girl, she smiled. "It's good to finally meet you, Christina. You may call me Grandma Robbins."
Blushing at the woman's formal attitude, Christina remembered the last time she'd seen her. I was always so afraid of Grandma Robbins! It was like she could see right through you! "Um... h... hello, Grandma Robbins."
Reaching a hand out, the older woman waited until Christina took it before guiding her delicately to the couch. Sitting next to the girl, she sighed and petted her head as the proper woman's air of dignity dissolved. "You... you look like your mother! I think I'd know you were my granddaughter if I met you on the street!" Leaning over, she wrapped her arms around the girl and cried in contentment when Christina returned the embrace.
Smiling at the loving scene, Charlene turned to Walter, who'd just put the few things his granddaughter had brought with her on the girl's bed before returning to the living room. "Alright, Mr. Robbins... one last time. The Cocorans are not to have any contact with Christina. Her court-appointed lawyer will be here tomorrow to go over the particulars of the hearing this Friday. It's unlikely they will be given custody, so you need to be prepared to raise Christina for the foreseeable future." Pulling out a pamphlet, she handed it to him. "If you need financial assistance, this will tell you who to contact. Support groups exist to help you, so you should make use of them. I'll be available if there are any problems, but if the birth parents try to take her, just call the police. Let them handle it!"
Raising his chin, Walter nodded vaguely. "Very well, Ms. Dawson. We won't be needing any financial assistance, though. I did very well in life and have more than enough set aside."
Smiling, the woman turned to see Christina and her grandma still hugging. "Well! I can see this is going to work out very well! Goodbye, Mr. Robbins!" Holding out her hand, she shook the ex-lawyer's and let him escort her to the door.
At last alone, Christina pulled out of Virginia's hug. "Grandma Robbins? Um... what were you told about me? I mean, about what happened to me?"
Noticing the concern on the girl's face, Virginia's expression returned to her usual impassive look. "We were told many things about you, Christina. The young lady who just left told us that you are our grandson Walt's fraternal twin, spirited away at birth. That the people that raised you called you Walt and raised you like a boy, and are the same people that abducted him."
"Oh." the girl looked at her lap. "Yeah. All that."
"It's much the same story my daughter told me." Virginia sighed as her husband returned to join them. "Walter? Would you be a dear and get us some tea?"
"Of course, love!" the man smiled before heading into the kitchen.
Alone once more, Virginia wryly grinned at the sad girl seated next to her. Reaching out, she lifted Christina's chin until she was once more looking in her eyes. "I am, however, not a stupid, nor unobservant, woman... Walt."
Swallowing hard and unsure how to take that, Christina looked at her face. "Um... that... that's what the people that raised me called me. My name's Christina, though. I... I always knew I was a girl!"
"I know." she stated emphatically. "I saw it in you at your sixth birthday. The look in your eyes each time you opened a present meant for a boy spoke volumes! I see that same look in your eyes, Christina." Looking away, the woman sighed. "I was the one to tell your mother of your problem. It's the reason she spent six years with not much more than a phone call on holidays. She... she didn't want to hear what she needed to do about it."
Stunned, Christina got her thousand-yard stare again. "So... you knew I was a girl inside... and you know that I used to be Walt?"
"I know what my eyes and ears tell me." Virginia answered. "Since the first moment I heard your story, I was suspicious. My daughter would not have kept the fact of a stillborn daughter from me back then. Add to that the fact that you were naturally effeminate as a child, the way you move, speak, and the expressions on your face, and I see my grandson in you. I do not pretend to know how, but I still know."
Taking a breath, Christina laid it all out.
Listening intently, Virginia took it all in with equanimity and aplomb. When Walter returned with the tea, just after Christina had finished and before she could respond, she smiled up at her husband of forty-three years. "Walter, dear? Would you show... Christina... to her room? I... I need a moment."
In all their years together, the man had rarely seen his wife unsettled about anything, and he knew her well enough to see it when others couldn't. The last time had been the day their daughter and their family had left to return to Phoenix, Ruth saying that it would be better if the two families kept their distance from then on. "OK, love." he replied calmly. Extending a hand to his granddaughter, Walter smiled. "Come on, Christina! Let me show you where you'll be staying!"
Led down a short hallway, she was escorted into a room that took her breath away. Everywhere she looked said, 'this is a girl's bedroom', from the white and pink canopy bed to the wooden dollhouse in the corner. It was a little juvenile for an almost twelve-year-old, but to her it was all the things she'd ever wanted. Everywhere she looked she saw things she'd craved growing up. "Is... is all this for me?" she asked in wonder.
"Well, Grandma Robbins is a little too mature for it anymore, sweetie!" he laughed. "It's not too 'little girl' for you though, is it? We know you're almost a teenager."
Seeing her begin to explore the room, he stood back and happily relived his daughter's childhood in his mind. The hours spent playing tea party with her dolls, her smile when he would come home from work that rejuvenated his worn soul, and the extreme pride at seeing her excel in school. A tear escaped his eye, which he surreptitiously wiped away.
Learning where everything was, and how much her grandparents were intent on spoiling her, Christina was in shock. When she opened the closet, she saw enough clothes to provide a whole dorm full of girls with several outfits each. Turning to the dresser, she was about to open a drawer when it reminded her of Kathy. Stepping away, she returned to her guardian. "Thank you, Grandpa Robbins." she stated politely. "You really didn't have to get me so much."
Smiling down at her, he petted her head. "If we'd have had you around your whole life, we would have gotten you this much and more, just for birthdays and Christmases, sweetie!" he excused the extravagance. "Honestly, I think we got off easy!" he laughed.
Giggling at his joke, she hugged his waist. "Thank you just the same!" she nearly cried. After a moment, she stepped back. "May I have a moment alone, Grandpa Robbins? I... I want to change."
"Of course!" he grinned, grabbing the doorknob. "We'll be out in the living room!" At that he stepped out, pulling the door closed behind him.
Almost running to her bed, she practically skidded to her knees as she closed her eyes and clasped her hands together. God? It's Christina again! This is so amazing! Grandpa and Grandma Robbins are giving me everything I ever wanted! I have an actual girl's bedroom! With clothes and everything! I know you know all that, but I just wanted to say thank you! I know they're the ones that got it all, but you made me a girl, so I owe it to you first!
It was so hard for so long, I thought I'd never be able to take it! The only problem now is that I can't share my happiness with Mother and Daddy... or Kathy and the Grants. I miss them so much! I'd be happy to give up all this to be able to go home! If you can help with that, I'd really appreciate it! Of course if you can't, that's OK. I'll understand.
Oh! Before I forget, I was wondering if you can do something to help Dawn. She's all alone now! She needs your help way more than I do! So if you can only help one of us, help her instead. Please?
Anyway, I just needed to say thank you! You didn't have to make me a girl, and I know that for a while I wanted you to undo it, but I think you know what's best for me, and you wouldn't have done it if you didn't think it was a good idea. So... thank you. Thank you for making me a girl. Not just a month ago, but for making me always be a girl! I love you! Amen!
Getting up off her knees, the girl looked at the bags on her bed, then at the dresser and closet. Giggling happily, she ran to her new things and started to change.
Coming out of Christina's room, Walter made a beeline to his wife. Seeing her still sitting on the couch, he slowly approached her. "Love? What's the matter?"
Gathering her wits that had been completely shattered by the fantastic tale her granddaughter had told her with utter conviction, Virginia tried to re-assert her stoic attitude. "It... it's nothing, Walter. Just... just having her here, and knowing what's happened to her, and what could have happened if that horrid Ms. Boyd had her way is... unsettling."
"I know." he agreed as he sat next to her. Picking up her untouched tea, he offered it to her. "Here. Drink this and you'll feel a little more yourself."
Taking a sip, Virginia felt somewhat better. It was normal and predictable. "Walter? How strong is your faith? I mean, how strongly do you believe in the things we were taught as children about God?"
Taken aback at her question that seemed to come from out of nowhere, her husband had to think for a moment how to answer. "Well, I guess I'd have to say that I believe something lies beyond this world. I don't know what it is, or how closely it matches with what I was taught, but in the end it doesn't matter. We'll all find out sooner or later!" he finished with a smile.
"Walter?" she began as she put down her tea. "I want to tell you something."
Lyle knocked on the door, hesitating only a moment. Waiting impatiently, he rocked on his heals until the door opened.
David wasn't expecting anyone. When he opened the door and saw the FBI agent in charge of the case of his missing 'son', he was momentarily stunned. "Lyle! Um... come in! Please! Is there anything new?"
Entering quickly, his brow furrowed. "No. Nothing new." Stopping and standing in the living room, he looked around and saw they were alone. "Ruth still at work?"
With a quick nod, David gestured to the couch. "Please! Sit! Can I get you anything? A drink? Lemonade? Coffee? Scotch?"
Chuckling as he sat, Lyle shook his head. "No... no thanks, Dave."
"So what brings you by?" David asked sitting in a chair across from him.
"My gut." he answered cryptically. "See, it's rarely wrong." Telling the man about how his gut instinct had not only led to the arrest of Nancy Boyd, but five others involved in a child sex trafficking ring being run out of the foster home in Tucson where Christina had nearly been sent, he paused only to be interrupted.
"Oh my God!" David exclaimed. "That... that was where she was going to send Christina! She almost..."
"But she wasn't sent there, Dave!" Lyle reassured the man. "And the attempt to do so stopped a lot of kids from being hurt even more. It's a good thing, Dave! You helped save them and every kid that could have ended up there after her! So... thank you!"
Sighing heavily, he looked over at Lyle. "So... is that what you wanted?"
"No." he admitted as he stood and paced the living room. "See, I just can't shake the feeling that there's something about this case that you know that you haven't told me... haven't told anyone! My gut is screaming it at me, Dave! What is it? I don't think you're involved! Believe me! If you are, I might as well hang up my gun and badge now... less than eight years from retirement! I can't be an agent and be that bad a judge of character!"
Looking away, David tried to parse his answer carefully. "Look, Lyle. If I knew anything that could help get my child back home, don't you think I'd tell you?"
"See?" Lyle almost shouted. "That right there! You're being hyper-selective about what words you choose! 'my child'! Why don't you say 'my son'? It's more than that, though! You're not the only one doing things like that! Ruth does it, too! I had that letter from Christina analyzed by a writing expert? He pointed out the same thing in her word choices! Tell me the truth! Did you coach Christina on what to put in that letter?"
"No!" David truthfully denied. "Of course I didn't! She wrote that all on her own! We told you that!"
"I know!" he stormed around the room frustratedly. "She did it in interviews, too! It was always, 'the people that raised me' or 'the place I grew up'! It's like she's always dancing around something! You all are! What is it, Dave? What aren't you telling me? What are you all hiding?" Looking at him, Lyle shook his head. "Please tell me you didn't sell your daughter, Dave!"
Incensed, David stood and confronted the agent. "Of course I didn't! I would never do something like that, Agent Stewart! Is this an official interrogation? Do I need a lawyer?"
"No!" Lyle turned away. "I... I'm not even on duty right now! My supervisor won't let me put any more time on it unless we get a fresh lead!"
"So what's this all about, then?"
Turning back around, Lyle looked David in the eye. "It's about my gut telling me that you know something and I can't let it go until you tell me, Dave! Come on, man! Trust me! What is it? Is it thinking Christina was dead all these years, only to learn she wasn't? Did you suspect Dr. Young of stealing her, but because he died you didn't press the issue? What?"
Blowing out a breath slowly to calm down, David shook his head and looked away. "It's nuts, Lyle. You'd never believe it! You'd think we're all nuts, and you might not be wrong! I think it's nuts and I'm a part of it!" Turning back to the agent, he smiled. "Wanna beer? Trust me, when I tell you this, you're gonna need it!"
Lyle thought a moment before nodding. "OK. Sure." Watching the man get two beers out of the fridge, he took the offered bottle and took a drink as he sat back down. "OK, so what's so totally nuts that you won't even tell me?"
Sitting back down, David took a drink. "You a faithful man, Lyle? I mean, do you believe in God?"
The agent raised a brow, not having expected that question. "Well, I was raised Catholic. I don't get to church much anymore, though. Why?"
"Catholic!" David smiled in surprise. "That may actually help! You already believe in miracles."
Shifting uncomfortably, Lyle shook his head. "I wouldn't go that far, Dave. I mean, I'm a rational man! Everything has a cause! Maybe we don't know what it is, but it's there somewhere!"
"OK, so what besides a miracle could make my son turn into my daughter?"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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As Christina walked into the courtroom, she was nervous. Living with her grandparents these last five days had been both wonderful and heartbreaking. That first day they'd been loving toward her, but after her grandmother knew the truth of who she was and told Walter, she'd lost all hope of acceptance.
Christina walked out of her bedroom wearing one of the dresses they had bought for her. The shy smile she wore slowly fell the closer she got as she approached the two still sitting on the couch.
"It's true Walter!" Virginia insisted. "She's Walt! I know it! What's more, she knows it, and I think our daughter does, too!"
Clearing her throat, Christina watched the two turn to her. "Um... I wanted to thank you for all the things you got for me. You... you didn't have to do that." Turning in place, she showed off her dress. "W... what do you think?"
Virginia knew that she'd overheard them. "It looks very nice... Walt. Wouldn't it be better if we got you some boy clothes?"
Gulping, Christina looked at the floor. "You just want Walt back now that you know. I'll go change into pants for you so I won't make you upset. I'm sorry." At that, the girl headed back into her room and changed back into her donation clothes; her grandparents unable to say anything to stop her.
Today though, she wore her best dress. Her lawyer had told her grandparents that it would make a good impression and help ensure that Christina stayed in their custody, and under the 'protection' of DCS, for the next six years.
Following her grandparents, she sat in the gallery as others assembled. When her parents came in, it took all her willpower to not jump up and run to them. Seeing her father wink and smile at her gave her badly needed hope. When she saw Ruth though, her heart sank. Her mother looked like a broken toy, walking into the court vacantly and without any sense of feeling from her. She didn't even look over at her. I'm never gonna see them or Kathy ever again! she told herself. This is my punishment for wanting to be a girl! I have to watch everyone that I care about get hurt because of my stupid wish!
"Call the next case." Judge Marcus Fallon stated clearly.
"Cocoran versus Arizona Department of Child Safety, your honor." the court clerk told him. "Custody case."
"Counsels may approach the bench." he sighed, hating these sort of cases. In light of recent news stories, he knew the public would be watching. "So what's the story here, counselor?" he asked Kyle Smith, the DCS counsel.
"Complex, but it boils down to the fact that the Cocorans want custody of their daughter, your honor. She is presently in DCS custody following a child abduction case where she was recovered. The state contends that they aren't fit parents on the grounds that they sold her at birth. We would like to move for dismissal, your honor."
"Very well." he sighed, glad that he could clear the docket quickly and avoid the publicity. "Unless counsel for defense has objection..."
"I do, your honor." Lisa Everett spoke up. "The charges against my clients for allegedly selling their child at birth were dropped by the DA for lack of evidence. They have no criminal history and are well-established members of the community, your honor." Handing him a brief showing the disposition of the allegations, she waited patiently.
Glancing at the brief, Judge Fallon sighed. "Very well. Motion to dismiss is denied. You may proceed." he directed at the Cocoran's lawyer.
"Thank you, your honor." Lisa smiled as she returned to her desk. "The case here is not as complex as the opposing counsel indicated. On July twenty-second, two-thousand-five, Christina and Walter Cocoran were born to Ruth and David Cocoran; fraternal twins. Their doctor, one Fredrick Young, told the Cocorans at the time that Christina was stillborn."
"Objection, your honor!" Kyle interrupted. "That's pure hearsay. No Fetal Death Certificate was ever filed by Dr. Young, your honor. The plaintiffs have no proof that he told them anything."
"Your honor, if I may be allowed to proceed, I can offer evidence." Lisa stated calmly. "I offer into evidence the following FBI investigation report. It shows that Dr. Young had in his possession at time of death a substantial amount of cash in his home. It was the finding of the FBI that Dr. Young had abducted Christina Cocoran, sold her on the black market, and died before he could submit falsified birth or death certificates. The FBI agents who prepared the report are considered experts in this area and I can call them as witnesses to support that conclusion, your honor."
"Objection overruled." he gaveled after skimming the report. "Proceed."
"Thank you, your honor. As I was saying, after being told by Dr. Young that their daughter was stillborn, the Cocorans took their son Walter home and raised him, believing that he was their only living child. Then sometime during the night of May second of this year, Walter Cocoran was abducted from his home by the same people who had purchased Christina Cocoran from Dr. Young."
"Objection!" Kent almost shouted. "Counsel for the plaintiffs is spinning a story here, your honor! None of this has been substantiated! The facts are that on the date in question, Walter Cocoran went missing from his home! No evidence has surfaced to show abduction, your honor!"
"Your honor, I submit this FBI report, in addition to the Police report taken by Officer Raul Martinez, showing that my clients reported the abduction immediately on discovery." Handing him the papers, she stepped back.
Glancing at the two reports, Judge Fallon nodded. "Overruled. Continue."
"Thank you, your honor. The key to this abduction and knowing it was done by the same people who'd paid Dr. Young for Christina Cocoran is that the fact that the child in question, Christina Cocoran, was left in the Cocoran home after abducting her twin brother."
Looking up from the papers he was skimming, Judge Fallon interrupted. "They gave her back? After more than eleven years?"
"Yes, your honor." Lisa nodded to him. "On waking and finding Christina in their home, and believing her to be an unrelated person, they turned her over to Phoenix PD. She was then taken to the nearest hospital with a mild concussion."
"How was the injury received?" the judge inquired.
"The police report shows that the injury was received when Christina fell out of her brother's bed, your honor. She was trying to tell my clients that she was their daughter, but they were understandably skeptical, believing her to have not survived birth. She became agitated and fell."
"Objection!" Kyle shouted again. "The police report only alleges that this was the case. DCS contends that the injury may have occurred by abuse of the child, your honor! This can be substantiated by her history of violence!"
"How can the child have a history of violence if she's only been recovered for a month, counselor?" Judge Fallon probed.
Pulling out his own reports, Kyle handed them to the judge. "The child in question assaulted the attending physician, one Dr. Ramsey, in front of two police witnesses, as well as the attending nurse. Later, in DCS placement, the child assaulted a fellow foster child without provocation. This clearly establishes that the child has severe emotional trauma and needs to be kept in DCS protection, as well as casting serious doubts as to how her injury was sustained. Considering that it was the plaintiffs who are the only witnesses to this alleged 'fall', it's inadmissible!"
"Your honor!" Lisa insisted. "The police report shows that Christina herself admitted to the attending nurse that the injury was a result of a fall! Further, the medical exam conducted at the time showed no signs of abuse! Counsel for DCS is making unsubstantiated allegations without evidence or charge!"
"Abuse victims commonly go along with whatever story their parents tell them to say, your honor!" Kyle countered. "It would require an expert to say if the child was coached or not. We move for postponement to allow time for the child to be examined by a competent authority to determine the truth."
Reading that part of the police report carefully, Judge Fallon grimaced. "This report shows that a licensed physician, two police officers, a registered nurse, and two EMTs all agree that the injury was a result of a simple fall with no signs of abuse in evidence. Objection overruled. Proceed, counsel."
"Thank you, your honor!" Lisa sighed in relief. "On follow-up investigation, the lead agent of the FBI team looking into Walter Cocoran's abduction, one Lyle Stewart, found evidence substantiating Christina's claim that she was in fact their daughter. While hospitalized, a DNA sample was taken from Christina. This was compared to the DNA of the Cocorans, provided voluntarily by them in the course of the investigation."
Handing him the DNA results, Lisa stepped back again. "The report shows that she is in fact, the daughter of Ruth and David Cocoran, your honor. Once presented with this evidence, my clients were immediately concerned that she be returned to their custody. Acting on the advice of the lead agent in charge of their son's case, they allowed DCS to take custody, with the expectation that she would be returned to them in due course. DCS has thus far failed to even allow reasonable visitation. In the last month, my clients have only been allowed one visit with their daughter."
"Objection, your honor." Kyle stated a little less enthusiastically. "The child in question was undergoing therapeutic observation with a DCS authorized representative following the unprovoked assault on another foster child! Acting on behalf of the child's best interest takes precedence over parental visitation rights!"
"Your honor, counsel for DCS has refused to provide the credentials for their representative! This is a violation of my clients' rights to all material relevant to their child's care! Failing to provide this won't allow my clients to review their qualifications and may include impeachable evidence!"
Looking at the counsel for Christina, Judge Fallon noticed she had not said a word since the hearing began. "Does counsel for the child have anything to add?"
Janice Taylor looked up from her notes. "Not at this time, your honor. My client substantiates the facts as presented by counsel for DCS."
"Very well. Objection sustained. Counsel will refrain from impugning the Department of Child Safety by alleging unfounded failure to provide reasonable visitation. Move on, counsel."
"Yes, your honor." Lisa sighed. "Your honor, this case boils down to the simple fact that my clients, having only just found out that their daughter was alive after nearly twelve years, allowed DCS to take custody on the presumption that she would be returned to their custody once her identity could be established in fact. Counsel for DCS has not made any objection to the fact that Christina is in fact my clients' daughter. They have gone so far as to place her in a kinship home with Ruth Cocoran's parents on that assumption! No charges are pending against my clients alleging they abused or neglected her. There is simply no reason not to return her to their custody! That is the basis of the petition as filed, your honor. My clients move to have their parental rights reinstated and to have Christina reunited with them as soon as practical." At that, Lisa took her seat.
Turning to the DCS representative, Judge Fallon pursed his lips. "Counsel has made a motion to have their parental rights reinstated. Does counsel for DCS or for the child object?"
"Yes your honor." Janice finally spoke up. "My client is happy in the home she is in, her guardians are financially secure, she's healthy, the home is safe and secure, and we see no reason for a change in custody at this time."
Kyle stood, clearing his throat. "Counsel for DCS also objects, your honor. Counsel for the Cocorans is asking us to reinstate parental rights. That's quite impossible when they never had parental rights to begin with. Since there is no record of live birth for the child, and thus no registered proof that they are in fact her parents, DCS cannot reinstate rights that weren't taken from them in the first place. DCS moves to make Christina Cocoran a ward of the state until such time as she reaches the age of majority."
Lisa stood up to refute his claim. "Your honor, my clients are established as the biological parents of Christina Cocoran. DCS has already stipulated as such in their own records!" Handing a brief to the judge she continued. "This brief shows that on May thirtieth of this year, DCS filed a report to the District Attorney alleging that my clients engaged in human trafficking by selling their daughter to another family. The very basis of that allegation begins with establishing that my clients are in fact Christina's parents."
Judge Fallon read the brief quickly. "Agreed, counsel. Mr. Smith? You're already on very shaky ground here. Trying to play both sides of the question by claiming that the child both is and isn't the child of Mr. and Mrs. Cocoran is wasting this court's time. Motion denied. As for your motion, Miss Everett, I'm afraid I can't grant it, at this time. Counsel for the child has indicated that she does not wish to reunite at this time. If you wish, you may call character witnesses on their behalf, or impeachable witnesses against the current guardians. The court will consider their testimony before making a final ruling."
"Yes, your honor. I would like to call Christina Cocoran."
"Objection, your honor!" Kyle stood up. "The child is violent, mentally unstable, and should be considered an unreliable witness until such time as her mental state improves with therapy! By the plaintiff's own admission, Christina Cocoran was abducted from her parents and raised by her captors. She has had insufficient time to cope with these traumas and needs intensive therapy before her testimony can even be considered! Counsel for the child has already indicated that her client does not wish to be reunited with her birth parents and is happy, healthy, and safe where she is!"
"Your honor, it has not been established in fact that Christina is needlessly violent or mentally unstable. I have here a transcript of the recording made at the hospital on the date of her examination where counsel for DCS states she struck her attending physician. It shows that Christina reacted to Dr. Ramsey attempting to begin a pelvic exam without her consent. Your honor, if that isn't just cause to slap a man, then self-defense as a legal defense must be called into question as well."
"Further, it is my clients' contention that Christina's wishes in this matter have not been considered by either counsel for DCS or even her own counsel. It is entirely possible that counsel for the child has misinterpreted her client's wishes. We would like that clarified for the record. If Christina sustains her counsel's statement, my clients will withdraw their petition."
"Your honor!" Kyle raised his voice. "You cannot allow the child to testify against her own best interests! The child cannot be allowed to testify!"
Seeing a way that the hearing could be brought to a quick end, Judge Fallon nodded. "Very well. Objection overruled. The witness will take the stand."
Swallowing hard, Christina stood up and walked toward the bench. Passing her parents, she smiled at them briefly before resuming her walk to the witness stand.
Turning to her, Judge Fallon smiled. "Hello, Christina! I'm Judge Fallon. Now, this isn't a trial. It's just a hearing to determine where it's best for you to live. Do you understand?"
Nodding quickly, Christina managed to stammer, "Y... yes, your honor, sir."
"Do you know the difference between telling the truth and making up a story, Christina?" he probed.
"Yes, sir." she replied quietly. "I always tell the truth. The people that raised me told me that lying was a sin. I want to be a good girl, so I never lie. Not on purpose, anyway!"
Nodding, he turned to the Cocoran's lawyer. "You may proceed, counsel."
Stepping up to her, Lisa smiled. "Hi, Christina! I just have one question for you. If you could chose, where would you want to live?"
Looking at the judge, Christina cleared her throat that was threatening to close with fear. "Um... well, if it was up to me, I'd live with my parents. It's always better when a kid lives with their parents, right?"
"Not always, Christina." Judge Fallon answered. "Sometimes parents are mean to their kids and it's our job to make sure they never get hurt again. That's why this court exists."
"No further questions, your honor!" Lisa beamed and returned to her seat.
"Counsel for the child?" Judge Fallon offered.
"Um... no questions, your honor." Janice stated nervously. At first sure that siding with DCS was the safe way to get a winning case, she was beginning to see the wind blowing the other way. "Permission to recall this witness at a later time, your honor?"
"Granted. Counsel for DCS?"
Stepping up to Christina, Kyle smiled at her with a grin that didn't reach his eyes. "Christina! You just said that the people that raised you told you that lying was a sin, right? That would be the same people that took you away from your parents, right? Now these people told you that your name was Walt and that you were a boy, right? Well, if that happened to me, I know I wouldn't do anything they told me after that! So, you aren't telling us the truth when you say you want to live with your parents, are you?"
"Objection, your honor!" Lisa shouted. "Counsel for DCS is badgering the witness! Counsel asked, by my count, four questions without giving the witness a chance to respond, and the final question impugns the witness's honesty!"
"Objection sustained. Rephrase, counselor."
"Your honor, this witness is a victim of a lifetime of mental abuse!" Kyle contended. "The witness won't answer honestly, because the witness doesn't know fantasy from reality! Just over a month ago, the witness believed that she was a boy, that the people who raised her loved and wanted her, and that they were her birth parents! Since then, the witness has not only learned they never were her parents, but that she was in fact a girl! Having her whole world turned upside down, she's since had violent episodes, escaped police custody, evaded pursuit like an expert, and shown nothing but contempt for the law! Your honor! End this! Dismiss this witness and her testimony!"
"I knew I was a girl." Christina mumbled.
About to reply to the DCS lawyer, Judge Fallon heard her and stopped himself. "What was that, young lady?"
"Your honor!" Kyle interrupted. "The witness was not asked a question by counsel! Her statements are inadmissible!"
"Mr. Smith!" Judge Fallon barked. "You are dangerously close to contempt of court! Step back, counselor!" Turning to Christina again, he lowered his voice. "Now, what was it you said, Miss?"
Gathering her courage, Christina raised her chin, sat up straight, and spoke clearly. "I said that I always knew I was a girl, your honor. He said that I used to think I was a boy. That's not true! They called me a boy, but I always knew that I was a girl!" Turning to face Ruth, she smiled. "Just like Mother."
"Your honor?" Kyle tried once more to make his point. "All of this is entirely irrelevant, except to show that DCS has made its case. The combative and hostile behavior of the witness proves that the child needs to stay in DCS protective custody. No questions, your honor." Heading back to his seat, his smug smile made Ruth want to slap him.
"The witness is excused." Judge Fallon stated. "You can go back to your grandparents, Christina!"
Looking at him plaintively, Christina gulped. "Please! Just let me go home to Mother and Daddy!" At that she got up and returned to her grandparents.
"Your honor, move to strike." Kyle stated quickly. "Witness's statement was made after being dismissed and not in answer to a question asked by any counsel!"
"Objection, your honor!" Lisa stood up. "The testimony was asked for by counsel for the plaintiffs! Witness was simply restating their answer!"
"Overruled." the judge sighed. "All comments made by the witness after being dismissed will be stricken from the record. Call your next witness, counsel."
Spending the next hour calling Agent Stewart, Linda, George, and several other character witnesses, all testifying that David and Ruth were good and loving parents, and after calling both Ruth and David to the stand, Lisa sat back down. "No further witnesses, your honor." The most damaging cross-examination came when Agent Kent took the stand and Kyle made him admit that his walking cast was due to Christina stomping on his instep.
"Counsel for DCS? Do you have any witnesses to call?" Judge Fallon asked.
"Yes, your honor. We call Charlene Dawson, the child's DCS caseworker."
Taking the stand, Charlene was torn. It had been made clear to her that her supervisor wanted Christina to stay in the system, no matter what. He even alluded to the idea that she might 'be creative' when it came to making any notes about the Cocorans, and that her job was on the line. At the same time her conscience was screaming at her that keeping the girl away from her parents was wrong. Consequently, she was nervous as she sat down.
"Ms. Dawson, have you had occasion to record bouts of violence from the child in question?" Kyle inquired.
"Yes, I have." she stated meekly.
"Can you elaborate?" he pressed.
"Um... well, a few weeks ago, she assaulted another foster child staying in her foster home."
"What exactly did she do, Ms. Dawson?" Kyle insisted.
"Um... she... uh... she kicked him in the privates." she stated embarrassedly.
"I see." Kyle smirked. "Ms. Dawson? How does the child seem in her current home? Is she happy there? Well cared for? In fact, doesn't she have anything a young girl could want there? Clothes? Toys? Loving and protective family members?"
"Objection, your honor!" Lisa stood up. "Counsel is leading the witness!"
"Sustained." Judge Fallon growled. "Watch it, counselor! Restate."
"Yes, your honor. Ms. Dawson? Tell the court how the child is in her current home environment."
Thinking a moment, Charlene sat up. "Christina's healthy, well cared for, provided for, and does have a loving family taking care of her. However..."
"Thank you!" Kyle interrupted her as he headed back to his seat. "That will be all. No further questions."
Lisa jumped on the unfinished testimony. "Ms. Dawson, what were you about to say in your last testimony before counsel for DCS cut you off?"
"Objection! Counsel is fishing, your honor! Let her ask her own questions!"
"Sustained. Ask your questions, counsel."
"Ms. Dawson? How does Christina seem in her current home?"
"Objection! Asked and answered, your honor!" Kyle snapped.
"I'll allow it, counselor. The witness is directed to answer."
More nervous, Charlene coughed and fidgeted. "Um... like I said, she's well cared for, the home is clean and well-kept, she has all the things she needs, and her grandparents obviously love her very much."
"Your honor, the witness isn't answering the question. I asked how Christina seems in her current home, not about the home itself or the other people in the home." Lisa pointed out.
"The witness is directed to answer the question asked." he agreed.
"Um... well, she seems... unhappy." Charlene admitted.
"Is there any indication of why Christina, in a clean, safe, well-provided-for home with loving family in it, could be unhappy?" Lisa probed.
"Yes. She... um... she misses her parents. This is a normal reaction that will fade in time as the bonds are broken and new, healthy bonds are formed." she quoted the DCS manual.
"What bonds, Ms. Dawson?" Lisa attacked her point. "Christina's only spent a few hours with her parents since birth! How could she possibly be suffering from broken bonds with people she hardly knows?"
Unsure how to answer, Charlene looked at the DCS lawyer. "Um... well, she may be suffering from a form of attachment disorder. Since discovering that the people she thought were her parents actually weren't, she may be making inappropriate attachments to Mr. and Mrs. Cocoran."
"Inappropriate attachments to her parents, Ms. Dawson?" Lisa argued. "Are you referring to some sort of sexual attachment?"
"No!" Charlene insisted.
"Some sort of Reactive Attachment Disorder, then?"
"No, this is actually the opposite of that. RAD presents as a lack of need to be close to one's caregiver, which is the normal behavior. Christina seems abnormally attached to people she barely knows!"
"It's abnormal to seek affection from your birth parents." Lisa challenged. "Isn't it an established fact that many adults who find they were adopted seek out and form attachments with their birth parents, Ms. Dawson? Isn't that in fact what you yourself did on reaching the age of eighteen when you were informed that you were adopted?"
Sweating, Charlene nodded. "Y... yes. I did. But I was an adult! Christina can't make that determination at her age! We need to keep her in the system... I mean... we need to do what's in her best interest and keep her protected in DCS until she reaches the age of majority! Then if she wishes to seek out her birth parents she should be free to do so!"
"Your honor, the witness is obviously unreliable." Lisa turned to the judge. "For whatever reason, she seems to think that DCS has to keep all children placed in their care for any reason! No one has abused or neglected Christina, your honor. Yes, she was abducted, but by all accounts her abductors were kind, affectionate, caring, and even loving! No abuse of any kind has been in fact established! What are the grounds for terminating my clients' parental rights? I move for summary judgement, your honor."
"Objection, your honor!" Kyle spoke up. "The child in question was made to live as a boy for eleven years! If that isn't abuse, I don't know what is!"
"Your honor, counsel for DCS is attempting to cloud the issue! Christina is not a case study in transgender legal precedent! It hasn't been established that denial of transgender care to children, nor guardians choosing to support their transgender children can be classed as abuse! The question is at best controversial and subjective. Similarly, having a girl wear boy's clothes or giving a boy a feminine name haven't ever been considered abuse!"
Judge Fallon looked at Lisa a moment. "The 'boy named Sue' defense? Seriously, counsel?"
"Your honor, the counsel for DCS is alleging that Christina was abused by her original caregivers, and that this abuse is the cause of Christina's desire to be with her family." Lisa argued. "It's directly relevant!"
Considering the arguments a moment, Judge Fallon turned to Charlene. "Ms. Dawson, are you prepared to state as a matter of court record that Christina Cocoran is suffering some sort of attachment disorder?"
Looking at the judge, Charlene was near to hysterical. "Um... well, it... it's just a theory, really! I... I'm not a psychologist, your honor! C... Christina does exhibit signs of depression, likely the cause of her attacking the Beck boy. She... um... she needs DCS protection! She needs therapy and to remain in our custody! Otherwise I might lose... um... I mean, she might lose... um... she might lose..." Stymied for how to correct her faux pas, Charlene broke down and simply looked at the floor.
"No further questions, your honor." Lisa stated calmly. "Move to have the witness's testimony stricken."
"Objection!" Kyle stood up quickly. "The witness is the DCS representative in this case, your honor! If her testimony is stricken, we'll be forced to request a continuance pending assignment of a new caseworker!"
"Overruled, counselor. The witness's statements are to be stricken from the record, and counsel for DCS's motion for continuance is similarly denied. The witness may step down. Call your next witness, counselor."
Sitting down heavily, Kyle shook his head. "No further witnesses, your honor."
"Very well. Does counsel for the child wish to call any witnesses?"
"Yes, your honor. We would like to recall Christina Cocoran to the stand." Janice stated calmly. When the girl was once more in the witness box, she approached and smiled at the girl. "Cristina? Do you like living with your grandparents?"
"They're OK, I guess." she sighed. "I mean, they're nice. I have my own room and toys. I love them because they're my grandparents, but... um..."
"Go on, Christina." she encouraged her.
"Um... they're not Mother and Daddy." she stated simply.
"What do you think of the people that raised you?" she questioned.
"They were nice to me. They loved me." she stated, looking at her parents.
"But they made you dress like a boy. They called you Walt, your brother's name. Why do you say they loved you?"
Shrugging, Christina looked at her. "They took good care of me. We played games, we laughed, we had birthday parties, we watched movies together... it didn't matter that they treated me like a boy! I... I loved them and they loved me!" Hearing her mother begin to cry, Christina felt a tear slip down her own cheek.
"So, where do you want to go?" she asked.
"Home." Christina cried. "I wanna go home to my Mommy and Daddy!"
Link: The Wisher's Paradox Title Page and Description
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After a brief recess, Judge Fallon returned to his bench. "Be seated." he stated wearily. Looking out over the assembled people, he blew out a breath. "This case has been full of esoteric questions. Has Christina been abused by being made to live as a boy, even though she didn't seem to mind much? Did the plaintiffs ever have custody of their child, even with no birth record? Thusly, can parental rights be reinstated, even though they were never legally severed to begin with?"
"All of these questions dance around the central question this court is tasked with answering... where is the best place for Christina to live? She's asserted a desire to live with her birth parents. DCS has made their case for the child to remain in their care and in the custody of her grandparents. This court has to also consider the ramifications of either ruling. If I find for the plaintiffs and award them custody, any issues that arise from that judgement will be the responsibility of this court. However, if I deny the petition and remand custody to her grandparents and DCS, it could very well damage future claims biological parents have on their own children."
Taking a moment, he looked at David and Ruth. "After reviewing all the evidence presented, and after reviewing all relevant case law and precedent, this court awards custody of Christina Cocoran to David and Ruth Cocoran, her birth parents. Furthermore, with no claims of abuse of their abducted child, Walter Devon Cocoran, and no indications that they are likely to abuse in the future, this court orders DCS to close its case regarding Christina Joy Cocoran within the next thirty days unless further evidence can be found to substantiate claims of abuse. This court stands adjourned." Slamming the gavel down, he rose and left the room.
Hearing the judge's decision, Ruth Cocoran began to sob tears of utter joy. Wrapping David in a desperate embrace, the two held each other while the court began to clear. After a moment, David felt a tap on his shoulder.
Walter Robbins stood straight and tall, despite his nearly sixty-six years. "Ruth? David? I'd like you to meet Christina, your daughter." Watching the two drop down on their knees and hug their elated child, he turned to Lisa. "Excellent job, Miss! First-rate representation! My God, you're good!"
Blushing slightly, Lisa looked away and began picking up the papers she had spread across her table. "I appreciate that, sir!"
Virginia watched as her daughter hugged Christina and waited patiently while Walter made legal talk with their lawyer. When at last the small family released one another, she cleared her throat to announce her presence.
"Mother!" Ruth sighed, wrapping the woman in a tight embrace. "Thank you so much for taking care of Christina! If you hadn't been there for us, she might have..."
"Yes. I know what might have happened." Virginia stated evenly. Lowering her voice she stepped close. "I just wish it hadn't taken a miracle to make us see her!"
Looking at her mother in astonishment, she whispered, "How do you know?"
"The same way I knew you were seeing that Donaldson boy when you were fifteen, dear. A mother knows!" she smiled wryly.
Walking out of the courtroom with Christina in hand, Ruth shook her head. "But... I mean, how did you know..."
"Later, dearest." Virginia said below her breath. "When we're not someplace we can be overheard."
After stopping at the clerk's office for copies of the order, and presenting a copy to Charlene 'officially', Lisa got a signed release from the caseworker showing that DCS no longer had any custody over Christina and that Ruth and David were her sole guardians.
"I hated fighting this. I didn't have any choice. It's required by regulations. I... I'll have the case closed later this afternoon." the stricken DCS worker stammered. "I'm afraid if I don't, someone might post new allegations to your case. Once it's closed, allegations would need to be logged as to who made them and when, and I don't know if I'll be working for DCS tomorrow."
"What makes you say that?" Ruth asked curiously.
Looking from side to side surreptitiously, Charlene lowered her voice. "I... I was told, in no uncertain terms, that my job rode on keeping Christina in the system! See, every child we handle means a quarter million dollars in federal revenue to the department! They never want a child leaving DCS custody! Since the order is contingent on there being no new evidence, I want to make sure no one invents some, just to keep Christina pumping out cash."
Lisa handed the woman her card. "If they fire you over this, call me. I think you'd have a pretty good civil suit against the state and county! I'll work on a percentage, so don't worry about my fee!" Turning to David, she grinned. "You, on the other hand, will be getting my bill next week after I file to get Christina her delayed birth certificate! She's going to need to go to school after the summer break!"
Laughing together, each of them shook Lisa's hand, Christina being last.
Looking up at the woman, Christina grinned. "Thank you so much, Miss Everett! You saved me!" Hugging her waist, the girl nearly cried with joy.
Hugging the back of her head, Lisa sighed in contentment. "It's the least I could do, Christina! Now... why don't you go home!" Stepping back, the attorney waved goodbye before turning to walk away.
With that, the five family members left the courthouse for home.
Climbing into her parents' car, Christina reveled in the familiarity of it all. Home! I get to go home! To stay! As a girl! Thinking about all the things to come in her life as her parents drove her home, the girl smiled.
Pulling into the driveway, David killed the motor. "We're home, beautiful!"
"Hurray!" she shouted as she practically leapt from the car and ran to her front door. Waiting for her parents to let her in, Christina bounced on the balls of her feet, giddy as a schoolgirl. As soon as the door opened, she ran inside and headed for her room to get her smartphone where she left it the night before her transformation. I gotta call Kathy and tell her!
Entering the room made her come to a screeching halt. Her room no longer was the stark and sterile place it had been the last time she was home. Instead her covers and pillowcases had been changed to white ones with little pink hearts, her bed frame was now a shiny gold instead of the wooden frame it had been, her carpet was now a lovely shade of pale violet, lace curtains had replaced her old venetian blinds, and the room smelled faintly of lilacs. Compared to her room at her grandparents, it was more sedate and had fewer things in it, but it still left her awestruck.
Looking around slowly, Christina took it all in. Going over to her closet, she reached out with a trembling hand and opened it. It wasn't like the one she had back at her grandparents' house, packed with pretty clothes, but there were a few nice outfits for her to chose from and even a couple dresses.
"How do you like it?" Ruth said nervously from the doorway. "I... I mean, if you don't like something, we can see about changing it."
Turning to her mother, Christina's eyes were wide with astonishment and her tongue was so tied, she couldn't speak.
"I... I've been redecorating a little at a time while you were gone." Ruth explained cautiously. "The clothes should be the right size, but if you don't like the style we can return them!" Looking at her daughter. she swallowed hard. "Well? Is it too much? Too girly? I'm sorry, sweetheart! I... I was really trying to listen to all those things you told me when you were growing..."
"Oh, Mother!" Christina cried her own tears of joy. "It... it's perfect! It's... it's... me! You do love me for me! You did see me!" Falling into her mother's arms, she continued to sob. "Thank you, Mother! Not for the things, but for seeing me and loving me as your daughter! It's all I ever wanted!"
Hugging and crying together, Ruth had to restrain herself or risk hurting her child. "Of course I love you, Christina! I've always loved you! Even when we thought you were a boy but acted so feminine, I still loved you! Don't ever doubt it, baby girl!"
Wracked with sobs of relief over fears she dared not even reveal to herself, Christina stayed like that for uncounted minutes until her feelings were once more under control. "Th... that's one of th... the downsides of b... being a girl! I... I can't s... seem to s... stop crying a l... lot of the t... time!"
Ruth laughed gaily. "Welcome to the estrogen club, baby! Wait a few years! I'll think you've gone crazy and you'll think I'm an unreasonable tyrant!"
Laughing together a moment, Christina looked around the room. "Um... where'd you put my phone, Mother? It's not where I left it... charging on my desk. I... um... I wanna call Kathy! I gotta tell her I'm finally home!"
"Why don't you just tell me in person!" Kathy said with a smile.
Turning toward where the voice had come from, Christina saw her best friend standing in her doorway. Wearing a nice top and pretty knee-length skirt, she looked nervous to Christina's eyes, but immediately she felt the same warm butterflies flitting around her stomach, only this time they were much more powerful. "Kathy!" she breathed out like a song. Unable to even move, she stood in her room awestruck at her own feelings.
Looking from one girl to the other, Ruth took a breath, let it out slowly, and walked to the doorway. "I... I'll let you two have a moment alone to... say hello. We'll be in the living room. Don't be too long, sweetheart." At that, she maneuvered around Kathy and left the room.
Slowly stepping into the new bedroom, Kathy swallowed hard. This is my best friend! My Christina! My Walt! The girl I... love. Moving up to stand in front of the petrified girl, Kathy leaned in, wrapped her arms around her, and began to cry. "I... I was so afraid I'd never see you again, Christina!"
Returning the affectionate embrace, Christina relaxed into the moment. "I was afraid I'd never see you again either! I mean, according to the 'official story', you and I have never met!"
Giggling, Kathy hugged the girl even tighter. "Well, we'll have to fix that!" Releasing her, Kathy stepped back and stuck out her hand. "Hi! I'm Kathy! I was best friends with Walt! Now that he's gone, I think I'm going to have you as my best friend from now on!"
The girl giggled with her as she shook Kathy's hand. "Pleased to meet you, Kathy! I'm Christina! I... I'm sorry Walt went away and made you sad. Has anyone ever told you though that you have gorgeous hair and eyes?"
Stepping closer, Kathy was overcome. Her heart near to bursting with love and affection for the best friend she ever had, the thought of nearly having lost her forever drove her to do something she thought impossible just a short time ago. Taking Christina's hands in hers, Kathy sighed. "Christina? I... I want to kiss you. Will you let me? It's OK if you say no! I... I know you... you don't feel the same as me... and that's OK! I'd rather die than hurt you! But... um... if you wouldn't mind so much... I.. um..."
Smiling, Christina stepped even closer. "Kathy? This last month I missed you so much! More than I ever thought I could miss anyone! More maybe than my own parents! I... I don't know what to call what I feel for you, but I don't think I could say no to you if I wanted to... so... um... OK!"
Leaning forward, Kathy closed her eyes just as Christina did. When their lips touched for the first time, a hunger swelled in her that frightened her. Pulling back quickly, her eyes snapped open as she saw Christina slowly open hers.
"Um... what happened?" her best friend asked confusedly. "What's wrong?"
Kathy was dumbfounded to express how shocked she was at her own feelings of attraction to the girl she'd known forever. Trying to give them words, she stammered a moment before closing her eyes to focus. "Um... that was... nice! Very nice! Kinda scary, though!" Opening her eyes again, she had to know. "How about you?"
Similarly perplexed at how to express herself, Christina bit her lower lip. "I don't know. You're right! It was nice! Kinda like a warm feeling all over! It wasn't scary for me though. It made my heart beat and my toes tingle!"
Looking at her arm, Kathy swallowed. "I.. I have goose-bumps all over!" Turning to look at Christina, she giggled. "I... I really liked that, Christina! A whole lot! Can... can we do that again sometime?"
Pulling her into a tight hug, Christina reveled in the pleasant warmness and familiarity of her embrace. "Sure! Anytime you like, Kathy! I liked it a lot, too!" Giggling happily, she stepped back. "Not today, though! Everyone's waiting for us!"
Taking Christina's hand, Kathy sighed lovingly. "I love you, Christina!"
"I... I think I love you too, Kathy!" she blushed. "Come on!"
The two came out of the bedroom holding hands and saw all the adults turn and look at Christina. There was one more here than had been when she got home. Somehow, Agent Stewart had joined them.
Kneeling down and looking at Christina carefully, Lyle couldn't reconcile the girl in front of him with the boy in his many reports. Trying to reconcile his faith with the idea that God had made a miracle to make a little boy into a girl seemed even more impossible than the fact itself. Gathering his wits, he asked what he needed to know.
"Christina? Your father told me something I'm having a hard time believing, but it explains all the problems I had with the case of your missing brother. He... he's not missing... is he?"
Looking at her father, Christina saw him nod. Turning back to the agent that she owed her freedom to, she took a deep breath. "Sorta. Except it's not he... it's she... and I'm not missing. I... I never was."
Hearing it from her own lips, Lyle nodded. "Alright. How?"
Taking him by the hand, she led him to the couch and waited for him to sit next to her. When the other six adults took seats around the room to listen, Christina turned back to look him in the eyes. "Her name's Lisbeth and she's an angel."
Half an hour later, the seven adults sat around the kitchen table while Kathy and Christina watched a movie on TV.
"I still have a hard time believing it." Lyle shook his head. "It's the only thing that fits all the facts, though! No evidence, doors locked, no witnesses!"
"Kathy saw Walt in her right from the start." Linda admitted. "Even though I know an angel saved my life, even I have a hard time accepting it!"
Shrugging, her husband George smiled at her. "You weren't nearly as pig-headed about it as I was, love! It took a ton of convincing for me!"
"I didn't want to see it." Ruth confessed. "I... I was so scared that she would be hurt, I didn't even want to see Christina when she was right in front of me, let alone for the last six years around the house with her growing up."
"Nearly twelve, dear." David corrected her. "She's always been Christina. We just didn't notice it until she made us see it!" Hanging his head, her husband shook it in shame. "At least you saw it eventually. I had to be shown the DNA evidence to believe. What kind of a father does that make me?"
"A rational one." Walter groused. "I still don't know that... Christina... is my namesake! You say she is... that the whole story about her being stillborn was made up to explain her to people that won't believe a miracle right in front of their eyes, but it still won't gel in my head! I'll accept it! I don't have much choice, but..."
"When Christina told me her story, I... I believed her, but I still wanted Walt back." Virginia conceded. "In the short time we had her, I made her feel unwelcome in her own home... that she had to be someone she could never be in order for me to love her." Looking at her daughter, she sat up straight. "I'm sorry, Ruth. I was wrong. You were right. Suggesting you 'fix' Christina with those Conversion Therapy places was wrong! She was always meant to be a girl! You were right to keep her away from me!"
"It's OK, Mother!" Ruth comforted her. "We all made mistakes when it comes to Christina."
Lyle took it all in. "OK. so it seems we have two groups here. Skeptics like Walter, David, and myself... and the rest of you who saw it sooner. I still don't really believe what you all are saying. I have to accept it because you tell me that Walt wasn't a twin... and my gut tells me you're not hiding anything anymore. That leaves a problem hanging, though."
David turned to the man who'd become a good friend to him over the last month. "What problem?"
"Walt." Lyle explained. "The investigation is still open. He's still listed as missing. If anyone starts digging into it, they're going to find one glaring discrepancy."
"What's that?" David worried.
"You stopped pushing to find him." Lyle pointed out. "After Christina was brought in, all your efforts shifted to getting her home. You didn't push to find Walt at all after that. Taken at face value, an investigator could conclude that you willingly gave him up to his abductors in exchange for Christina. I know because I considered it myself. I just knew you well enough to not press the issue."
Thinking about all that they'd done to get Christina home, David sighed. "We also kind of threw poor Dr. Young under the bus. I'm only glad he never had any family."
"Don't feel too bad." Lyle comforted. "Dr. Young was into some shady stuff. He was indicted four times for providing drugs to criminals, but the DAs could never get it to stick. He'd just move to a new area and start again."
"So, what can we do about Walt's case?" Ruth asked. "The only way to close it would be to find him, but he's not out there to find. She's in the living room!" Distraught that all their work might be undone, she began to cry. "Why is all this happening? Why is God punishing us like this?"
Walter considered the issue silently. After a moment, he stood and walked over behind his daughter, massaging her shoulders gently. "If we accept the only conclusion possible, that my namesake was a girl all along, and that He turned her body into a girl, then it stands to reason that He had a plan for it all. Let's look at the facts. What were all of the ramifications of Walt going missing and Christina being left in his place?"
Sniffing back the tears, Ruth thought hard. "Well, the police and FBI started searching for Walt. That's the problem! Now they won't stop!"
"OK." he conceded. "What else?"
"Well, I got credit for busting a child sex ring." Lyle added.
"Ah!" Walter jumped on the suggestion. "So, because my grandchild and all of us had to go through all this, an untold number of children won't be abused anymore! Not just the ones who were freed from it a few days ago, but all the ones that will never end up there to begin with... like my granddaughter." Leaning down next to his daughter, Walter tilted her chin to look at him. "Does that make all this worth it?"
Nodding, Ruth smiled at him. "Yes, Dad. It does, but what do we do now?"
Adding his thoughts, David smiled. "Lyle... I once told you that I had to focus all my efforts on getting Christina home, right? Can I assume you noted that in the file?" Seeing the agent nod, he resumed his thoughts. "OK, so we have to make efforts to find 'Walt' now that we have Christina back! Since the trail's gone cold, even small efforts would be noticeable, right? I'll see to it that we send out missing person flyers all over Arizona! It's a small price to pay to not look guilty of something we never did!"
"That's a good idea, Dave." Lyle acknowledged. "You might want to add New Mexico, Southern California, Utah, and Southern Nevada. I'll be sure to note in the file that I told you that this was the working radius we had for where Christina had to have been growing up."
While the adults made their plans to see to it that no one would know they'd covered up a miracle, Christina slipped into her room and closed the door. With Kathy waiting for her return, she knelt next to her bed and prayed.
Oh, God! Thank you so much! I was so scared when Ms. Boyd tried to get me sent away to Tucson! All the grownups don't know I know, but I saw the news on the internet! I read what was happening to the kids in that house!
I was afraid that I'd have to stay with Grandpa and Grandma Robbins, which they're nice and all, but sooner or later those DCS people would move me to another home like that one and I'd be lost forever! Miss Everett was so nice! Can you do something nice for her? I mean, just something she would like?
So this all must have been what Lisbeth was talking about! My decision did have consequences, but it all worked out, thanks to a lot of people like Miss Everett and Agent Stewart! So... thank you again! I love you, God! Amen!
As she prayed, she was once more being watched. That night when she went to sleep, Christina found herself one last time in the wildflowers. Looking around, she came face to face with Lisbeth again. "Oh! You... you're back!"
Smiling at her, Lisbeth made Christina know her thoughts. Yes, little one! I don't often come back. The Creator sent me back to tell you that your path is now set in front of you... the one the Creator meant for you all along.
Approaching her slowly, Christina needed to know. "Um... why did He have to make it so hard? I mean, I almost ended up in an awful place! Couldn't you have, like, made it so I was always a girl, or at least warn me?"
Your difficulties were not the Creator's doing. Lisbeth clarified. They were the free decisions of people. As for the rest, if you had always had a female body, you would never have prayed for one, so you wouldn't have gotten one. That is the paradox of wishes people like you often make. I could not even warn you of the dangers, lest it dissuade you from your path. Instead you are here, events followed the Creator's plan, and you learned what you needed to follow your path. It will be long and difficult, but you will do so much good!
Looking at her curiously, Christina puzzled over the ideas filling her mind. "I... I'm supposed to help kids like me? The ones who're taken away from their parents? No... not just kids like me that way. Kids like I used to be that are in the system! Am I right? I'm supposed to help kids that're taken away from their parents that are trans? Why? I mean, how many could there be?"
Taking Christina's hand, Lisbeth made her see. With eyes wide, the girl saw that every flower in the field was a child taken from parents who had done nothing wrong, but someone had alleged abuse... millions of them. After looking at them in awe, she noticed something. While most of them were yellow, one in seven was pink. Looking at Lisbeth, her voice became soft.
"The... the pink ones are like me and Dawn... aren't they?"
Yes. she thought at the girl. You must help them. That is your path. Releasing her hand, Lisbeth stepped back.
"But how?" Christina whined. "I'm just a kid!"
You won't always be. she answered with a smile.
Thinking hard, Christina looked at the flowers. "Oh. So when I grow up, I can help them." Trying to think how she could help, she turned back to the angel with a smile. "I know! I could be a lawyer like Grandpa Robbins and Miss Everett! She helped me, and I can help others the way she did!"
Whatever you choose, Christina Cocoran, just remember that they're there. Never forget them! They are you!
As the dream faded away, Christina stirred in her bed and settled down. One thing was for certain, she would never forget the field of wildflowers.
--
If you have enjoyed this story, I would ask that you pay a small amount for the entertainment it has provided you. Nothing worthwhile in life is free. A one-time donation of $5 to the site makes it cost less than most paperbacks. Even if you regularly donate, this is the price I ask you to pay to see to it that this and stories like it can remain available.
Thank you and may God bless,
Roberta Elder
John Henderson was a normal guy, married to a loving and understanding woman for the last eight months, with a successful career in Real Estate... or at least he seemed to be. When a chance encounter with the supernatural comes into his life, he may find he's not only bitten off more than he can chew, but some things he'd forgotten about himself along the way.
Set in Ontario, Oregon in the Fall of 2012, Curse of the Werewoman is a comedic short story showing that getting what we sometimes want in life means learning to like it, even if it's not exactly what it was billed to be.
This story is dedicated to my wife, Rachel.
It's all HER fault! The whole thing was HER idea!
She MADE me write it! Don't blame ME!
This short story (if you can call it that) is complete and has been released in 3 parts of 2 chapters each. Enjoy the silliness!
27,752 words
Copyright © 2021 Roberta Elder - All Rights Reserved
This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents herein are solely the products of the author's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any connection or resemblance to actual persons, living, dead, undead, or subject to lunar transformations, or actual events, firms, curses, or covens is purely coincidental. If you find yourself taking this story seriously in any way, or begin empathizing with these characters, seek professional help immediately. Lighten up! No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing and signed by the author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent publisher. No actual women, children, TGs, or other human beings (except men, but they don't count though... I mean REALLY!) were harmed in the writing of this story. Void where humor is prohibited.
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Link: Curse of the Werewoman Title Page and Description
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Chapter 1 - Scratch One Guy
Looking up from his newspaper, John smiled at the woman approaching his desk. She was fairly attractive and in her late twenties, brown hair cascading around her shoulders that bounced as she moved. Quickly glancing over her, he couldn't help but sigh.
"May I help you, Miss?" he intoned evenly, keeping his emotions tightly controlled.
"Yes, maybe you can." she stated nervously as she sat in the seat on the far side of his workspace. "I... I'm looking for a new house. Well, it doesn't have to be new, just new to me, I mean... um... know what I mean?"
Nodding slowly, he tried to put her at ease. "Well, we do have a number of houses available for sale, Miss..."
"Um... Mrs., actually." she corrected him as she fidgeted in her seat. "Mrs. Brookes. Janice." she added her first name on, almost in afterthought.
With a hand extending to her cordially, he shook hers briefly before sitting back down and clearing his throat. "Nice to meet you! Do you prefer Mrs. Brookes or Janice?"
"Janice, please." she answered, only slightly more at ease.
"Very well, Janice!" he settled into his usual spiel. "What exactly is it that you're looking for in a home? Lots of rooms? Storage space? Location?"
"Storage space... I guess." she almost stammered. "I don't really care where it is. I... it needs to have a basement... or a wine cellar... or something."
While a few places in his listings sprang to mind right away, his curiosity was piqued. "Alright, we have a number of homes that could fit that bill! May I ask what it is you need below-ground storage for? I ask because an actual wine cellar is different from a basement, so if you intend it for storing actual wine bottles..."
"Oh!" Janice interrupted him. "No, no! Nothing like that! I just... I need a secure storage space for some... um... valuables. I just need to make sure that no one can get out... I mean in... easily!"
Pursing his lips a moment, John thought briefly about her slip of the tongue and nervousness and wondered if he should go forward with his usual sales pitch or excuse himself and call the police to report a possible kidnapping. Figuring that no one would be that obvious, he chalked it up to the typical homeowner's worry about spending so much money on a place to live.
"Here! Why don't you take a look at these property listings..." he offered as he printed out a short list of homes that had basements and cellars in the area. "...meanwhile can I get you something to drink? Water? Tea?" with a Valium dissolved in it? he concluded to himself.
"Water is fine!" she half laughed, taking the papers with a shaking hand.
Going off to the refrigerator, John shook his head and ran a hand through the short dark hair on his head. That lady's almost a basket case! he mused. Wonder what her deal is? Deciding that he didn't care so long as she had a good credit score and a down payment, he grabbed a water and checked himself quickly in the mirror on the front of the fridge door. Picking a tiny speck of sleep out of his soft brown eyes that he'd missed that morning, he nodded curtly at the image before turning to head back to his desk and the strangely nervous woman. Sitting down across from her again, John waited for her to finish going through the papers as he placed the bottle of water in front of her.
Handing the papers back, Janice shook her head. "I... I'm sorry. I realized that the basement needs to have a bathroom as well. These won't work."
Checking his computer and running a few filters, John shook his head and frowned. "I'm sorry, Janice. It doesn't look like any properties in this area have what you're looking for." Thinking a moment he began to smile a little. "Of course, if you'd be willing to remodel, I have one property that could fit your bill!" Printing out the listing that was for a home that hadn't sold for two years, he mentally crossed his fingers as he handed it to the woman.
Glancing over the listing, Janice's nervous frown very nearly smiled for a moment. "Um... yes! I... I think that might work! It's a little cheap for so much square footage, though. Why is that?"
"Because it's so far out of town." he sighed, expecting the usual decline at this point in the offer of the seemingly cursed property. "Six miles out of town. The nearest neighbor is a quarter mile away, and it's on the highway." He was astonished when the usually bad news brought a genuine smile to her face.
"Really!" she almost sang. "It sounds perfect! My husband won't disturb anyone out... um..." Her smile began to falter briefly before she recovered. "That... that is, he does... um... shop... things... that are sometimes noisy. No close neighbors means no complaints!" she recovered quickly.
Shrugging, John stood up. "Well, I see in your application that you already own a home in town, one valued at twice the price of the old Foster place. With your equity and good credit, even in this depressed housing market, I think we can make a good deal on it quickly and leave you enough financing for a ten thousand dollar cash-out of your current equity, which would let you do the remodeling you're after!" Smiling at her softly, he turned on the charm. "When would you and your husband like to go see it?"
"No!" she nearly shouted. "That is, my husband is too busy for that! I... I can look at it myself and just take pictures for he... him to look at later!"
"O... kay." John sighed. "When would you like to see the property, then?"
"Is today too soon?" she inquired hopefully.
Grabbing his jacket and keys, John shook his head. "Not at all! You can follow me over and see if it's your new dream home!"
Opening the door to his own home that evening, John closed it behind him quietly. Nearly an hour late from work, he could smell the pasta and bread cooking. "Honey! I'm home!"
"Finally!" Diane shouted from the kitchen.
"I'm sorry, honey!" he apologized as he dropped his keys and wallet on the table near the door. "I had to run out to the Foster place this afternoon!"
"That place way out on the highway out of town?" she scoffed. "Who wanted to look at that place!"
Making his way into the kitchen, he smiled at the sight greeting him. Diane was already out of her nurse's scrubs and had changed into a nice blouse and skirt. Still in the 'honeymoon' phase of their eight-month-old marriage, he sighed at the lovely sight of the gracious curves of her body. Slipping up behind her, he wrapped his arms around her waist and nuzzled her honey-blonde natural curly hair gently out of the way and kissed her neck lovingly.
"Thanks for making dinner tonight, honey." he almost whispered. "I know it was my night. I was actually looking forward to pampering you tonight, not the other way around!"
"Yeah, likely story!" she dismissed his apology humorously. "Why don't you go get cleaned up for dinner? You're a little ripe and need a shave!"
"Mmm!" John held her a little more tightly. "Feeling good tonight?"
Shrugging off his obvious advances with a laugh, Diane pushed him away playfully. "I'm serious, John! Go get clean! Fun later!"
"Anything you say, love!" he bowed deeply toward her. "Back in a few!"
Running quickly through a shower to get the sweat of the day off and hastily dressing in a nice polo and slacks, John managed to return to the main room in time to see his loving wife setting the table for two, complete with candles. Noticing the squishy feeling in his belly at the romantic gesture, he quickly shook it off and headed into the dimly lit room with a jaunty strut.
"Let me help you with that!" he offered, taking the shrimp pasta out of her hands.
"Don't think that gets you out of making dinner tomorrow!" Diane joked as she watched him delicately place the bowl between the two place settings. "We'll switch up the meals so it's something you don't burn, but after tonight you owe me two nights of cooking!"
Turning back to face her with a smile, John nodded. "Of course, honey! I wouldn't try and weasel out of our deal! Equal partners with an equal split of the housework! You know I love taking care of you when you get home after a hard day!"
"I know." she answered skeptically. "Makes me wonder if you're human!"
Wrapping his arms around her waist again, this time face-to-face, he put a gentle and quick kiss on her lips. "Very funny! Shall we sit and eat or just take pot-shots at each other all night while your delicious food gets cold?"
Sitting together and after a brief time of quiet while they dug into the meal, Diane broke the silence. "So... the old Foster house, huh?"
With a bite still in his mouth, John nodded and chewed quickly to answer after taking a drink. "Mmm Hmm! Couldn't believe it! She almost jumped at it after barely looking around for five minutes! Took a few pics with her phone for her husband to look at, and said she'd take it! Just need to finalize the paperwork, get them both down to the office to sign, and it's a done deal! The company stands to make twice what that place is worth when we sell her old house!"
Taking it all in, Diane knew a little about real estate from what John had told her. "So no credit problems? I mean, what's the downside?"
"None, as far as I can tell." he answered with a shrug. "Apparently he does a lot of things in a shop, probably woodworking or something, and I guess their old neighbors were complaining about the noise, so moving a bit out of town is what they needed. It's win-win! Should close before the end of the month! After that, I'll need to run out there again and do the whole agent bit... turning over the keys and all that. This sale should net me a good bonus next month!"
"Good enough to make a down payment on our own house?" Diane asked, glancing around their tiny apartment.
"Maybe!" he answered coyly. "Remember that place down the street from your parent's house? Just off Eighteenth Street?"
"The Jackson's house?" she clarified. "The white one with the lavender trim and beautiful huge yard?"
"I have a surprise!" he smirked. "The Jacksons are moving next month to Portland so they can be closer to little Davie now that he's in college! I've put a clamp on their listing with Barbara! All I need is your OK and I'll pull a thousand from our savings for earnest money to hold it and next month's bonus check plus our savings will get the down at less than four percent!"
Stunned into disbelief, Diane stopped chewing her bite and just stared at him. Swallowing hard, she took a deep breath. "Really? So soon? I mean we have a year lease here that isn't up until January! That's four months from now! How can we afford it if we break the lease?"
"I have some money squirreled away." he blushed as he picked up his wine-glass and swirled it around slowly. "Just a little bit from each bonus check I made, but it added up to enough... if you want the Jackson house, that is."
"John!" Diane dropped her fork with a clatter. "Are you serious? You know I've wanted that house since I was ten!" Getting up quickly, she rounded the small table quickly and kissed him fiercely. "Yes! Oh, John! You're wonderful!"
Enjoying his moment, John smiled as he looked up into his wife's eyes. "No, you're wonderful! I just want you to be happy, honey! You're not mad that I was holding back on some of my bonuses? I... I just wanted this to be a surprise!"
Pulling him to his feet, Diane's expression turned from joyful to seductive. "Oh, I'm surprised, alright! Now, how about I surprise you!" Leaning in, she kissed him passionately for several minutes, getting both of them quite in the mood.
Just as she started to pull him toward their bedroom, John leaned over and blew out the candles.
Three weeks later, the sale was closed on the Foster home, ensuring John's September bonus. It was a warm and sunny afternoon the following Monday when he called Janice to give her the good news.
"Janice! This is John Henderson at Blue Moon Realty! Great news! We're ready for you and your husband to come down and sign the final papers! And what do you know, last night was a Blue Moon!" he added cornily.
Sighing in relief, Janice glanced over at her husband who had called in sick that morning, as he had more and more often lately. "That's great, John. Listen... can... can we make it for later this afternoon, Frank isn't feeling... so good, today."
"Nothing serious is it?" John asked concernedly.
"No!" she replied quickly. "Nothing catching, anyway. Just one of those stomach things, you know?"
Laughing lightly, John nodded. "That's fine! I've had my shots! We close at seven, so I'll need you to be here by six-thirty to sign everything. Then we can go out to the house and finish up there!"
Glancing at the time, Janice tried to figure out how quickly they could get down to sign the papers so as to not be so close to sunset when they would be finished. "Um... we'll try to be down there by three... four at the latest."
"That's fine!" John sighed with a smile. "It'll only take about half an hour, then the drive out to the house to go over a last few things, turn over the keys and she's all yours! You'll have until the end of October to move out of your old house, so that gives you plenty of time to get things..."
"Yeah, OK." she interrupted impatiently. "We'll see you then! Bye!" Closing the call quickly, Janice stared at her husband Frank, holding his stomach and rocking gently back and forth as beads of sweat ran down his brow. "Frank? We got the Foster place!"
"Great!" he moaned through gritted teeth. "Perfect timing!"
"It'll be fine, Frank!" Janice chided him. "Once we're out of town and have the room set up, we'll have somewhere to be that'll keep us safe each time! No more breaking out to cause chaos and end up a laughing stock!"
"Sounds perfect!" he grunted through another spasm of pain. "A nice little cage to lock the bitch up!"
"You know, this would have been easier on you if you'd only have..."
"Never!" he barked at her. "I can tough out anything! Even this!" Groaning as another spasm rocked his belly, he fell to the floor in the fetal position.
"Don't be such a baby, Frank!" Janice chastised him. "We need you to get up, get looking presentable, and go down with me to sign! I can't sign for both of us! You need to man-up and do it!"
Gathering his ebbing strength, Frank pushed past the pain, crawling up onto his knees before taking a moment to rest. Inhaling, he held his breath and planted a foot firmly on the floor and pushing himself upright while his hands still held his aching belly.
"Right." he mumbled. "Time ta' man-up!"
When John looked up at the clock and saw that it was a quarter after six, he nervously looked down at his watch, and then at the time displayed on the computer's clock. Each agreed with the other, making his stomach tie into nervous knots. Checking the paperwork again, he made sure everything was perfect and ready for the initials and signatures that would make his love's childhood dream come true. If they don't sign today, the deal's gonna fall through, I'll miss my bonus goal, we won't be able to make the down, and we lose the earnest money!
Just as he was about to pick up the phone and call the Brookes residence again, he heard the distinctive chime of the front door opening. Snapping his head up, John sighed in relief as he saw Janice walking in with a man, presumably the mysterious mister Brookes. Standing quickly, he smoothed his hair back unconsciously and straightened his shirt and tie.
"Mr. and Mrs. Brookes!" he exhaled in greeting. "Glad you made it! We have plenty of time to go over the papers and..."
Frank dropped into the chair opposite the real estate agent like a sack of wet wheat. "Just show me where to sign!" he grumbled while holding his stomach and sweating bullets.
Shaking John's outstretched hand briefly, Janice gracefully sat in the seat next to her husband. "Sorry about that, John. Frank's just... not well. You might not want to shake his hand. It's not catching... right now... but no taking chances, right?"
With a heavy gulp, John sat back down. "Alright. We'll just get right to it then! I'll go over each section, you'll initial that you understand it, and we'll get through them as quickly as possible to get you signed and done!"
At a few minutes to seven, Frank Brookes scrawled his name onto the final line, followed closely by Janice signing hers. Taking the papers and giving them a quick review, John smiled.
"All done! Congratulations, Mr. and Mrs. Brookes! You have your new home!" Affixing his own signature to the documents, he tore out the copies for the homeowners and filed the originals for processing. Grabbing his coat and keys, John nodded toward the door. "Shall we get going?"
Looking toward the front door nervously, Janice looked back at the agent. "Can't... can't I take care of the rest tomorrow? I'd like to get Frank home! Right away!"
Seeing the man obviously in severe distress, John nodded. "OK, if that's what you'd prefer. We usually do this at the new home, but..." Holding out the keys to the house and other locks, John smiled. "Welcome to your new home for a hundred Blue Moons together, Mr. and Mrs. Brookes!"
Snatching the keys away violently, Frank barely missed nicking John's hand with the doubled-over man's longish fingernails that their real estate agent was sure only a moment earlier had been neatly trimmed. "Thanks! Let's get, Janice!" he growled with a slight hiss as he hobbled toward the door.
Escorting the two all the way, John saw them get in their car and waited until Janice drove them away. Turning back inside, he glanced at his watch, turned the sign around on the door to say 'closed', locked it, and headed for his desk to collect his things.
"John!" Barbara Moon caught his attention before he passed her desk. "What was going on there?"
"Those were the Brookes." he explained briefly. "The ones that bought the Foster house! They just signed! Deal's closed!"
Furrowing her brow, she glanced out the door before turning back to face him. "John, you know company policy! Keys are to be turned over, and the gift basket presented, at the new home! They didn't even take the basket!" she snapped, waving a hand at the stack of plastic-wrapped crackers, cheeses, meats, and bottles of moderately priced champagne.
"Mr. Brookes is ill, Barb!" he tried to explain. "They insisted on taking the keys here and not waiting to go out to the house! They didn't even give me a chance to give them their basket!"
Shaking her head, Barbara sighed. "Policy is policy, John! No gift basket at their door, no bonus! It states that clearly in the bonus structure! All company policies must be followed for each sale during the month or all bonuses are forfeit! So either hustle up and get a gift basket over to their house pronto or you aren't getting a check for September!"
His shoulders slumping in resignation, John nodded. "Yes, Mrs. Moon."
Handing him a basket with a smile, Barbara seemed content. "Thank you, John! You're always so cooperative! None of that macho posturing! Off you go then!"
Taking a breath, he shook his head and went out the door after gathering his things. Putting the basket in his passenger seat, John started his car and waited a moment for it to warm up a little. After a minute, he put the vehicle in gear and headed toward the highway out of town.
It was seven thirty when he finally made it to the Foster house, having been caught in traffic. With the sun beyond the horizon and the full moon rising, John was happy to see the Brookes' car parked in the driveway. Good! I don't have to just leave it on the porch! Pulling up behind their car, he killed the motor and grabbed the basket before opening the car door and walking up to the entryway.
Knocking on the door as there was no bell, John rocked on his heels and put a smile on his face. When the door opened though, it was neither Frank nor Janice Brookes who greeted him. Instead what he saw was a woman in her late-thirties, her wild and unkempt hair sticking out every which way like the snakes of Medusa, a crazed expression on her face, and wearing a man's flannel.
"Mine!" she screamed with a voice so shrill it threatened to shatter the glass of his car windshield. Snatching for the basket, it was withdrawn at the last moment by the shocked real estate agent.
"Woah, lady!" John shouted. "Where's the Brookes'? This is for them!"
Infuriated, the wild-eyed women leapt at him, scrabbling for the basket like a wild badger defending its burrow. "Mine!" she screamed again as her long and sharp fingernails dug into his flesh straight through the shirt he wore, snatching the basket away when he recoiled from the pain.
Just as the wild woman made for the interior of the house, basket in hand and cackling like mad, John saw Janice Brookes move into the doorway, just missing catching the crazed lady's arm to stop her.
"Francine!" she shouted. "Stop that! Get back here with that!" Hearing yet another shrill 'Mine!' from the basement steps, she turned back to see who she needed to apologize to. "Oh! Mr. Henderson! Wh... what are you doing here?" she stammered in surprise.
Holding his right hand over the gouges in his left arm, John looked at her, then past her into the blackness beyond, then back to her. "Um... I... I forgot to give you your gift basket, Mrs. Brookes! Who was that lady?"
Thinking quickly, Janice bit her lower lip. "Um... Frank's sister, Francine. Twin sister! She... um... she came to stay with us. She's leaving Wednesday."
Calming down, John realized that he was in the clear as far as his boss was concerned. "Well, I just wanted to make sure you got your basket. Unless you need anything else, I... I'll be seeing you, Mrs. Brookes!" he stammered as he backed away from the door.
Hearing a raucous cry from the basement and the sound of shattering glass, Janice just shook her head and slammed the door, not even noticing the man's injury before racing off to find out what new disaster awaited her.
Making his way back to his car, John examined his wound briefly before determining that it could wait until he got home and Diane could help with antibiotic cream. Pressing the bleeding area against his stomach to keep it from getting all over the car, he returned home driving one-handed.
"John!" Diane cried as she came up the front steps just as he was unlocking the door. "What happened to you! Were you bitten by a dog?"
"No!" he groused as he opened the house and dropped his things at the door, making a beeline to the bathroom. "Crazy lady staying with the Brookes! She clawed my arm up taking their gift basket away from me!"
Following him into the tiny bathroom, Diane clucked her tongue. "Awe! Poor baby! Here, let me see." Examining it briefly, she scowled. "Sweetie? How long ago did this happen?"
With a shrug, John glanced at his watch. "Um... about half an hour ago, maybe? Just about seven thirty. Why?"
Shaking her head, Diane picked up the antibiotic cream. "Funny. It's red and splotchy, and a bit of a scab is forming... like it happened yesterday. You sure this was today?"
Laughing at her suggestion that he could have lost a day on his way home, John winced when she started rubbing the cream on. "Ouch! Yeah! It was today! Yesterday was Sunday! I spent all day with you!"
Finishing applying the cream like the professional she was, she opened up some gauze pads and lay them carefully over the long cuts before wrapping them loosely in an elastic bandage. "Yes, you did. Funny. We should have Doctor Kelly look at this if it's still looking like that tomorrow."
"It's just a scratch!" John insisted, pulling his arm free. "Besides, you missed the bigger news in all the hubbub!"
Pausing a moment, Diane ran the events of her homecoming back in her head until a smile began to creep across her face. "You closed the Foster house?"
"I closed the Foster house!" he beamed. "You get the house in ten days!"
Screaming in delight, Diane completely forgot John's injury and wrapped her arms around him tightly.
"Hey! Hey! Hey! Watch it, Diane!" he complained as her arm crushed his covered wound. "My arm!"
"Oh!" she sprang back as though he were a rattlesnake. "Sorry, sweetie!" Carefully this time, she wound her arms around his chest and hugged him tightly. "Thank you, sweetie! You're the best man and husband in the world!"
"Remember that when you're nine months pregnant someday and hating me for what I did to you!" he sparred.
Foregoing lovemaking that night as John's arm was still aching, the two lay in bed next to one another falling asleep peacefully.
It would be the last full moon in a while that either of them would have any peace.
Chapter 2 - Unpacking the Baggage
With a heave, John shoved the last empty cardboard box into the trash bin. Satisfied and weary, his usual get-up-and-go had got-up-and-went. Not any weakling, the man had kept in shape and, at only twenty-seven, was usually in better shape than most men a decade younger.
The day he and Diane had finished unpacking the last of their moving boxes however, he just felt flabby, out of sorts, and irritable. Having worked most of the day, snapping at Barbara twice and having to apologize, then coming home to more work, he bit his tongue and chipped in the same as Diane had, ignoring his odd condition.
Coming back in the house, John flopped on the sofa with a crash. Exhausted and glad the day was done, he closed his eyes. When he opened them again, his body felt strange all over and his arm where the strange woman had scratched him almost four weeks earlier ached like the day it had happened, just as the last light of the sun disappeared over the horizon.
Sitting up slowly, John felt dizzy and his stomach ached almost as bad as his arm. "Diane?" he called out, his voice squeaking half an octave too high as though he were talking in falsetto. "D... Diane!"
Coming from the kitchen where she'd started dinner, it being her night, his wife was mildly irritated at the interruption after such a hard day. "What is it, John! I'm right in the middle of... Ahhh!"
Seeing her stop in front of him with her hand over her mouth and her eyes wide as saucers, John knew there was something terribly wrong with him. "Am... am I habbing a stoke?" he tried to ask, but his lips didn't seem to want to cooperate, having swollen slightly.
Watching in horror, Diane saw her husband's face squish down from the chiseled features she recognized to a rounder and softer proportion. Even as it did so, the hair on his head seemed to grow in time-lapse, going from his normal half inch to over eighteen inches in seconds.
Looking at his hands, John saw them shrink from the size he'd been used to since high school to thin frail twigs, even as his fingernails grew an inch as though to make up for their smaller size. Feeling a pain in his chest, he looked down to see his pecks swelling under his shirt until it burst the top two buttons and exposed the newly grown breasts.
Looking at his wife for any kind of help, it was then that he noticed that his rear seemed rounder and he wasn't feeling something between his legs that he'd grown used to his whole life. "Ahh! Mine!" he screeched, instantly recognizing the sound as the same as he'd heard that night at the Brookes' new home. "No!" he squealed, trying to hold on to his sanity. "Help me!"
At a loss for what to do, Diane could only watch while the transformation completed. When the wedding band fell off her husband's shrunken finger, she fell to her knees and began to sob. "No! John!"
At last done changing, he first noticed that he couldn't feel the pain in his arm anymore, but that was only because the pain in his belly made him forget everything else. Worse than any case of food poisoning he'd ever had, he doubled over and rolled into a ball on the couch. "Diane! Help me! It hurts so bad!"
Finally gathering the shattered remains of her brain back together, his wife stood up and stopped crying. "I... I'm here... um... John. You... you're a... a w... woman!"
"It hurts!" he repeated his plea in his now screechingly high voice. "God, Diane! It hurts a lot!"
"O... OK." she stammered, stepping closer. "Show me where."
Looking up at her as he held his belly, rage and fury overtook him. "In my f-ing stomach, stupid! Where does it look like?" Instantly remorseful of his harsh words, he began to cry like he hadn't since he was eleven. "Oh, Diane! I'm so sorry! I... I don't know what came over me! I... I just got so mad that you'd even had to ask! It... it's my stomach! It aches like someone just kicked it wearing cleats!"
Diane turned clinical and knelt next to him. "Move your hands. Let me look." When he didn't comply, she used her nurse's authoritative voice as she took his arms by the wrists and pried them away. "John Henderson! Move your hands! I can't help if you don't cooperate!"
Hearing her voice and knowing he needed help, John slowly relaxed and let his wife look him over. Wincing when she pressed on his belly, he was relieved when it didn't hurt worse, but actually felt better. "Oh!"
"Does that hurt?" Diane asked calmly.
"Y...yes." he answered in his suddenly screechy voice. "Not as bad when you pressed on it, though."
Satisfied that he was in no immediate medical danger, she began examining him more thoroughly. It was then that she noticed the stain on John's pants. "John? I need to you come with me, OK? Do you think you can walk?"
Nodding in reply, he didn't want to speak and hear the awful voice he had. Getting up slowly the pain increased, but he bore through it and followed his wife's guidance to the bathroom. When she began to strip off his clothes though, he started to panic. "No!" he screeched, gripping them to himself tightly.
"John, I have to examine you!" Diane insisted. "Now, don't panic, but you're bleeding somewhere and I need to find out where, OK?"
Slowly relenting, he nodded and let her strip him down to his underwear. Unable to handle the complex emotions raging through his mind, John closed his eyes and tried to think of anything other than his current predicament.
When she had him down to his last garment, Diane finally realized where the blood was coming from. Swallowing hard, she guided her husband to the bathtub; his eyes squeezed tightly shut. "Step into the tub, sweetie." she soothed him calmly. After he complied, she removed his underwear and drew in a sharp breath.
"What!?" he shrieked as he sat in the empty tub to keep from falling down.
"You... you're definitely a woman now, John." she stammered as she helped lower him down to sit in the tub. "And I know why you hurt. You... you're menstruating, sweetie. You're having your first period."
His eyes popping open at that revelation, John looked down his body for the first time and saw the slow trickle of blood seeping from underneath his seated rump. He also saw the C-cup breasts that hung freely from his chest. Slowly, he moved his hands up and cupped the fatty tissue. The aching pain touching them caused made him immediately pull his hands away and suck in a breath through his teeth.
Seeing his reaction, Diane nodded. "Do they hurt a little to touch?" When he nodded, she smiled a little. "That's actually normal, sweetie." Sitting on the toilet next to him, she wondered what to do next. "I... I don't understand what's happening, John! Why is this happening to you?"
Looking up at her concerned face, he had an inkling of an idea. "I... I think it's the Brookes'." his throat squealed. Clearing it, he tried harder to control his speaking. "I... I think Francine Brookes did this to me!"
Hearing his voice sound more normally feminine, Diane almost didn't pay attention to the words he'd said. "What? How?"
"I don't know!" he shrieked again. "I sound like her, though!" Feeling the ache in his belly overwhelm him, he clutched his stomach and moaned.
"Bad cramps?" Diane winced in empathy. Seeing him nod, she slowly reached out and petted his long dark hair to try and sooth him.
"Don't touch me!" he snapped, instantly regretting it as he began to sob. "I... I'm sorry, Diane! I... I don't know what came over me!"
After several minutes, he started to regain his composure and looked up at her again. "So... now what?"
Biting her lip, Diane thought for a moment. "Well, you should start by getting cleaned up a bit." she suggested. "A shower or at least cleaning up your... um... your mess." she put delicately. "After that... um... I'll... I'll think of something!"
Nodding in agreement, John slowly started to get up, the pain in his stomach getting worse when he did and sending him straight back down to sit again. "Oh!" he moaned, unwilling to do anything that made the cramps worse.
Diane struck on an idea. Getting up, she opened the medicine cabinet and took out her bottle of Midol. Grabbing the plastic cup from the side of the sink, she filled it with water and took it and the pills to the tub. "Take this." she ordered simply, handing him two tablets and the cup.
Doing as instructed, John swallowed the pills and washed it down. Handing the cup back, he winced as a cramp overwhelmed him again.
"You're just going to have to put up with it until the pills kick in." Diane chastised him gently. "Every... woman... does." she barely managed to say.
"You hate me!" John croaked. "I'm disgusting!"
"No!" she replied sympathetically. "Of course I don't hate you, John! This isn't your fault! It just... happened!"
Nearly overwhelmed with the desire to snap at her, John barely managed to bite his tongue and say nothing.
An hour later, after a shower and a bit of his self-control re-asserting itself, John opened the curtain to see Diane waiting for him with a towel. Helping him dry off, she began to explain her thinking.
"I don't pretend to know what you're going through, sweetie. I just know we have to deal with it the way things are." she began. "To start with, you can't just ignore it and hope it goes away. You're a woman and you have practical concerns that trump any other consideration." At that, she handed out a pair of her cotton briefs and a sanitary pad.
John reacted viscerally to the suggestion. "No!" he screeched.
"John! You can't just stay in the tub for the rest of your life!" she pointed out. "You have to face it!"
Breaking into a sob, he stared at the briefs and shook in fear. "No! I... I can't, Diane! I promised!"
Taken aback, Diane wasn't expecting this reaction. "What? Promised who? When? What're you talking about, John?"
"Mom!" he sobbed. "I promised her I'd never wear girl things again!"
Stunned, Diane actually took a step back. "When was this? What do you mean again?"
Sitting in the tub, John cried openly. The cramps were manageable, thanks to the miracles of modern medicine, but the emotional trauma was too much to bear. "I... um... I used to try and wear Vicky's clothes when I was little!" he recounted an all but forgotten time of his life.
Furrowing her brow, Diane stepped closer again. "Your sister?" Seeing him nod, she pressed for more. "Why were you wearing Vicky's things, John?"
With an absent shrug, he turned away from her. "I... I used to think I was a girl... when I was five or so. I didn't want to be a boy like my brother Dave. I... I wanted to be a girl like Vicky."
"Why didn't you tell me?" Diane gasped.
"I forgot about it!" he snapped with a shriek that made him wince. "Sorry." he stated more softly. "OK, I didn't so much as forget about it as much as I just ignored it. I mean, I'm a guy!" Looking down at the bulges in the towel on his chest, he sighed. "Well... I used to be one, anyway."
Sighing in sympathy, Diane shook her head. "Alright. We'll deal with this one thing at a time. First is the practical, though. Agreed?" Seeing him nod, she once more held out the underwear and pad.
"Fine!" he snapped, snatching the items away from her. Swallowing hard, he reached down into himself and drew up the inner strength that he'd drawn on the last quarter century to push his feelings aside and become the stoic boy and man he'd been since Kindergarten. "I apologize, honey." he said evenly. "You're just trying to help."
Waiting for him to partially dress, Diane helped teach him how to place the pad and make certain that it was fully seated to stay clean. Handing him her terrycloth robe, she helped him out of the tub and back to the living room. Once seated back on the couch, she returned to the kitchen and put away the dinner she hadn't yet started making when all hell had broken loose.
Sitting next to the morose man, Diane took his tiny hand. "John? We have to talk about what we're going to do now."
"You're dumping me!" he wailed as he pulled away from her. "I'm a woman now and fat and ugly so you're just going to leave me!"
"John!" she snapped. "Stop it! I'm not leaving you, OK? I love you!"
"You're just saying that because you think you have to!"
Controlling her temper, Diane closed her eyes and counted to ten silently. Looking at her husband again, she drew her mouth into a line. "John, I am not leaving you. You are not fat or ugly! In fact, you're quite attractive, if you could be objective about it! I do love you, but I soon won't if you don't start behaving like the... person... I fell in love with!"
Regaining his composure, he sat up and wiped a sleeve across his damp eyes. "S... sorry. I... I don't understand why I'm flying off the handle like this so much! I don't want to, but I can't seem to stop it! Then the next thing I know, words are coming out that I'm actively trying not to say! Why?"
"Hormones." Diane sighed with a weak smile. "Welcome to the wonderful world of being a hormonal woman, John! It takes a long time for us to learn to cope with the overwhelming feelings pushing us around all the time!" she giggled lightly. "I'm not making light of this, sweetie! Honest! It's just... well, I guess every woman has thought a time or two, 'I wish he knew how hard it is to not rip his balls off right now!' when we get those feelings! It gets easier with time. Does knowing that help?"
"A little." he admitted grudgingly. "So what happens with us? I mean..." His voice trailed off as a dozen problems came to mind and he wasn't sure which one to deal with first.
Seeing the fear in his eyes, Diane smiled and put a hand on his knee. "Let's start with the easy one, OK? I'm not going anywhere! I promised to love you and stay with you in sickness or health! If this is some sort of illness or curse or whatever, I'm not bailing out at the first sign of trouble!"
"Thanks!" John sighed. "I... I guess that was my biggest worry!" His brow furrowed when another popped in its place. "Um... what about kids? I mean, if I'm like this from now on..."
"We'll deal with that later." she interrupted. "Right now we have other more immediate concerns. We have the weekend, but on Monday you're supposed to go back to work. We need a plan, sweetie."
"Work!" he threw up his arms. "There goes my whole career! All that work building up good connections gone to waste!"
"Stop thinking so negatively!" Diane scolded him. "You're still you, right? OK, so you can't keep your old connections! You can make new ones! And saleswomen have an advantage over salesmen! We have sex appeal!"
Scoffing, John turned away from her. "I'm not flirting with guys just to get a sale! Besides, in real estate, most of the biggest decision-makers are the women! They decide if a house feels right to them and are willing to buy!"
"Who says you can't use sex appeal on women?" she countered. "I see it all the time! Oh, I don't mean flagrantly, but subtly. Anytime I'm buying a new outfit, the saleslady will make some comment about how beautiful it looks on me! It's not blatant flirting, but it's still there!"
"OK, I see your point." he grumbled. "Still, I want to find a way out of this, not just roll over and accept it! If I can be turned into a woman, I can be turned back into a man!"
"In the mean time, you need something more than a robe to wear."
Looking down at the cream terrycloth covering, he felt the vague sense of longing he'd so long ago suppressed. "I don't think that's a good idea, Diane. What if I go back to normal? You'd never look at me the same way again!"
"Let me worry about that!" she half laughed. "We'll order some take-out tonight, get you dressed, and try and figure out a solution to this. OK?"
Taking her hand, John wanted to cry at the sweet and understanding way his wife was taking all of it. "I love you, Diane! I don't deserve you!"
"No, you don't!" she quipped. "But then, I don't deserve you!" Leaning over close, she hesitated only a moment before she kissed his cheek gently. "After all, you got me my dream come true, let me see if I can return the favor!"
After calling the local pizza place, Diane led John into their bedroom and had him sit on the bed while she opened her side of the closet. Picking and discarding things in her head and without a word, she eventually settled on an idea. Opening the drawer in the huge closet that included a full dresser, she pulled out a set of stretchy sweats in gray. It was the closest thing she had to something gender neutral.
When his wife offered over the outfit that he'd seen her wear a dozen times, his first instinct was to scream at her and run away. Swallowing that feeling and pushing it aside, John took a breath and nodded. "Th... thanks."
Setting it next to him, Diane took a breath before opening her bra drawer. Biting her lower lip, she knew it would be necessary and took the plunge. Grabbing the plainest bra she owned, a white sports bra, she closed the drawer and turned to face her husband. "You... you'll need this." she added.
"Are you serious?" John scoffed, his voice close to cracking into the horrid screech he hated hearing from his own mouth.
"Yes!" Diane insisted. "You have breasts, John! At least a C or maybe a D, by my guess. You'll need something for support and to keep my top from rubbing you raw. You have to, sweetie! Trust me, OK?"
About to snatch it away from her on instinct, he hesitated before taking it graciously. "Alright, honey." he acquiesced softly, for the first time hearing his new voice and not despising it.
Helping him into the support garment, Diane aided in getting it properly in place, eliciting a few gasps and shocked looks from John in the process that only made her smirk in knowing sympathy. "Every time I start, my breasts are super sensitive too, sweetie!" she offered in consolation. "I understand!"
"I'm never gonna complain about you wanting me to leave you alone at this time of the month ever again!" he promised. "How can you stand it? I wanna crawl out of my own skin!"
"You get used to it." she stated simply as he helped him on with the top that was slightly baggy on her, but fit more nicely on her husband. Having him stand, she helped him into the sweatpants and took a moment to look him over. "You could use a styling in your hair, but other than that, you look... um... nice, John!"
Rolling his eyes, he shook his head. "Gee... thanks!" he squealed, biting back his tongue before taking a breath and looking at his wife sadly. "Sorry! It... it just keeps coming out!"
"I get it!" she laughed, leading the two of them back out to the living room. "One other thing. I... I can't keep calling you John looking like that! Do... or I guess... did you ever have a girl's name? When you were young, I mean."
Shyly glancing away, John nodded. "Um... Joan. Joan Anne."
"...instead of John Abel." she nodded. "OK, Joan. Where did you get it?"
"Vicky gave it to me." he admitted as he sat gingerly on the couch again. "She was seven and thought I needed a girl's name when we'd play dolls and things."
"You played dolls with Vicky?" Diane asked rhetorically. "Um... how seriously did you think you were a girl, sweetie?"
"It was pretty serious to me at the time." he confessed. "After... um... Mom straightened me out though, I just sorta pushed those feelings away. This was back in nineteen ninety or so. Back then no one ever heard of things like 'transgender' or anything... not in this neck of the woods, for sure!"
About to ask more, Diane was interrupted by a knock at the door. "That'll be the pizza." she commented as she grabbed her purse and went to get their food. Opening the door, she smiled when she recognized the young man. "Hi, Dennis!"
Smiling in return, the eighteen-year-old handed her the stack of food she'd ordered. "Hiya, Mrs. H!" Looking over her shoulder, he spotted the strange woman sitting on the couch. "Where's Mr. H? Out while you have company over?"
Glancing back toward her husband who looked stricken, she turned back to him and handed him the cash. "Um... yes. John's... out... now. Keep the change, Dennis!"
With a nod and a smile he backed away from the door, taking one last glance at the woman behind her. "Have a good evening, Mrs. H! Same for your lady-friend!"
Closing the door, she took their food to the kitchen, got out paper plates, and served it up before bringing two plates into the living room. "Sorry, Joan! I didn't know he'd see you from the door!"
"It's fine, I guess." he muttered. "Cute turn of phrase, though! 'He's out now'? I guess I am as far as you're concerned!" he giggled, surprising himself and suddenly covering his mouth with a shocked expression.
Looking at him a moment, Diane couldn't help it as she cracked a smile and giggled back, which made him join in after a moment. Soon the two were cackling like a couple of happy hens before starting to stuff their faces with pepperoni and cheese.
When at last they were fed and calmer, the two sat together and hashed out a vague plan for the weekend.
"You're going to need your own clothes, Joan." Diane pointed out as she held her husband when he cradled his back against her front. "My bra barely fits you, and other than those sweats, nothing else I have will fit you. You're a little... fuller... than I am."
"You mean fat." he squawked, rubbing the dull ache in his belly.
"I mean more curvy, sweetheart!" she corrected him. "Your figure is actually very nice! I'm a little jealous, to be honest! Dennis was practically ignoring me to look over my shoulder at you!"
"Blech!" John stuck his tongue out. "Men are so crude!" Realizing what he was saying, he stiffened. "Um... I mean... other men... besides me."
Petting his hair, Diane smiled and shook her head. "Yes, sweetie. Other men."
After getting a working plan for the next day, which included measuring Joan for 'her' own clothes, the two headed for their bedroom. When Diane started to change out of her clothes, John sat on the bed nervously.
"Um... honey? Can't I just sleep in these? I mean... they're sweats, they're comfortable, and... um..."
"Not too feminine?" his wife finished for him. Seeing him nod shyly, she shook her head. "And what do you wear tomorrow? Like I said before, those are the only things in the house that'll fit you right now. Well... that and my pink sweats."
"What about my clothes?" he grasped. "I mean, I was wearing some of my clothes when this happened! It can't be that much of a difference in size!"
"Size, yes. Shape, no." Diane explained as she pulled out a nightgown to wear. "You popped the buttons on your shirt, sweetie. You may be able to wear your old pants, but even they were straining against those hips you have now!"
Looking down at his rump, he couldn't stop himself from asking, "Is my butt too big?"
With a stunned look, Diane stopped dressing for bed and just stared at him a moment. "Wow! I never thought I'd be caught on the other side of that trapped question!"
Blushing and turning away as she resumed getting ready, John shrugged. "I don't even know why I care! I just want to get started on figuring a way out of this mess!" Feeling a pang in his tummy, he groaned a little.
"Cramps getting worse?" she asked. Checking the time, she went into the bathroom and got out two more pills and some water. Returning with it, she handed them over. "Here. This should help you get through the night."
Taking them and washing them down, John tried to relax. "Thanks, honey. You've been so understanding through all this mess!"
Turning around after retrieving something from her dresser, Diane pointed to the bathroom. "Now it's your turn to be understanding. You need to change your pad, get clean, and get dressed for bed. We need those clothes for tomorrow." At that she handed him her least feminine nightgown.
Taking the article, he nodded and went to the bathroom to do as instructed. Coming out after brushing his teeth and getting dressed, he stood nervously by the bathroom door. "H... how do I look, honey?"
Seeing him wearing the cream satin nightshirt that he'd bought her a year earlier but was always just a tad roomy on her, Diane felt a small twinge of arousal. Knowing that this woman was hers, her mind couldn't help but flash through the many times they'd made love together, but after a moment shook herself back into clear thinking.
"You... um... you look very nice, sweetie! Very... um... lovely."
Blushing again, John made his way to his side of their shared bed. "You sure it's OK for me to sleep next to you still? I mean, I wouldn't want to weird you out or anything."
"You're my... spouse." she stopped herself from saying 'husband'. "I love you and you've been through quite enough for one night! I won't have you feeling rejected on top of all that! Come to bed, sweetheart! Please?"
Climbing in as asked, John scooted into his usual position, but found it too uncomfortable to sleep on his left side as he normally did. Rolling over so that his back was to Diane, he sighed as he tried to just relax. All that flew out the window when he felt his wife roll over and spoon against his back.
"Goodnight, Joan." she sighed as she relaxed and held him gently.
"Goodnight, honey." he murmured as his body reacted to her touch, making sleep impossible for the next several hours.
Link: Curse of the Werewoman Title Page and Description
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Chapter 3 - I'm A What?
John awoke slowly at first, disturbed by his wife's movement in bed next to him. Not quite remembering the night before, he only knew that he felt something he'd never felt before as she snuggled up next to him and wrapped her arm around him once more.
He felt beautiful.
The closest he'd ever come to that degree of contentment was when he was five and his sister Vicky had dressed him in one of her old dresses so they could have a tea party. That was feeling pretty, though. John felt beautiful as his mind slowly began to work again.
Suddenly his eyes snapped open as the previous night's festivities came back to him in a jumble of disjointed thoughts and memories, some of which he wasn't sure were real or not, until he felt the newly familiar ache in his belly. Groaning a little, he moved to try and lie on his back, hoping it would lessen the throbbing. When he felt Diane move to lie on top of him as she did so often, he felt the slick satin of the nightgown he wore on his chest along with his wife's sleeping head.
What he didn't feel were the breasts that had been there the night before.
Sitting up suddenly, forcing Diane awake and to move off of him, John looked down and saw he was wearing the nightgown, but his arms and hands looked like their normal self. "Diane!" he shouted. "I'm me again!"
Woken too quickly for her mind to be working well, his wife looked at him bleary-eyed and confused. "John? Why're you wearing the nightgown you gave me?"
Quickly running his fingers through his hair, he found it once more the half-inch length he was used to. Moving to his face, instead of the rounded shape of the night before it was the familiar angular lines he'd been used to for most of the last decade. Moving his hands down to his chest, the breasts were gone, but the sensitivity remained, making him wince and his belly to ache even more than it had been since waking up.
"Don't you remember last night?" he asked her. "I... um... I turned into... a..."
"A woman." Diane finished for him. "I... I thought that was a dream."
"If it was, we were having the same one." he mumbled. "In your dream, did I tell you about Vicky and me when I was five?"
Nodding, Diane tied to focus better. "Um... yeah. You played girl games with her."
"Then it wasn't a dream." he admitted. "I... I never told you that before. I barely remembered it! I don't remember much from back then and nothing before Kindergarten."
Looking at her restored husband, Diane sighed in relief. "Thank God it's over, sweetie! I was so scared for you!" Wrapping her arms around his neck, she pulled him into a tight embrace. After a moment she felt him tense up and pulled back. "What's wrong?"
Wincing again, John got a pained expression. "I... I don't know that it is over, honey! I... I'm still having cramps! As bad as last night!"
"OK." she thought a moment. "Maybe it's just some sort of residual effect of whatever happened to you. I'll get you some pills to help for now and you can just wait until they fade away." Getting up, she did as she suggested and returned with two pills and water.
Taking them quickly, John sighed in relief. "I sure hope you're right, honey! I don't have the equipment for cramps anymore!"
"It's probably just a buildup of prostaglandin in your system." she guessed. "That's the chemical that causes cramps in women. In men it causes gastric upset, so it's likely just an upset stomach!"
"It doesn't feel like gas!" he complained. "It feels like it did last night, only worse!"
"Just give the pills a chance." she rubbed his back to help soothe him.
Feeling her rubbing the satin against his skin gave him mixed emotions. On one hand it felt very relaxing, but on the other it reminded him that he was still wearing his wife's nightgown for no good reason. "Um... I guess I can lose your nightgown, honey."
Suddenly very conscious of the fact that he was still wearing it, and seeing him blush heavily at mentioning it, Diane stopped rubbing his back. "Oh. I guess it's a little upsetting that you..."
"...that I'm wearing your nightgown and underwear? Yeah!" he concluded her thought. Getting up, John made his way to the bathroom. Removing the gown, he noticed blood stains on it. "Oh crap!" he whined.
"What's wrong?" his wife asked concernedly as she followed him in.
"I got blood all over your nightgown!" he nearly cried. "It... it's ruined! This won't ever come out!"
Giggling at his highly emotional outburst, she wiped the smile off her face when she saw him turn to her with an upset expression. "Sorry! It's just... well... after last night, I think losing a nightgown rates pretty low on the things to be worried about! You can try and clean it!"
"Good point." he sighed, tossing the gown in the hamper. "I'll try, anyway."
After changing out of her underwear and disposing of the soaked pad, John found he needed a shower to clean blood that had gotten all over his privates. By the time he was done the pills had taken effect and he almost felt normal, other than the fact the he could tell they were still there, just that the pain was masked.
Just before lunch, when he excused himself to use the bathroom, he secretly took two more pills as the cramps were starting to return. Pushing through the pain until they kicked in, John was trying to pretend that everything was back to normal as they resumed settling into their new home. As they ate their mid-day meal together, Diane wanted to talk.
"John? About last night."
Sighing and trying to hide his pain, he put down his sandwich. "What about it?" he asked irritatedly. "Can't we just forget it ever happened?"
"Well, we have to deal with one part of it." his wife pressed. "Vicky."
"Oh." he looked down embarrassedly. "We... we don't ever have to bring that up again, honey."
"That's going to be hard for me to do, sweetie!" she admitted. "I mean, we're supposed to see your sister at the Halloween Party! I'm going to have a hard time looking her in the eye and not be thinking about it!"
"It just one of those stupid things kids do!" he snapped. Biting his tongue, he winced at another cramp and sighed. "I'm sorry, Diane! I... I guess maybe we do need to talk about it."
Pushing her plate aside, she reached out and took his hand. "It's OK, sweetie. Just... just tell me about it. Was it something you two did a lot? Just once in a while? Was it ever your idea or was it only ever hers?"
Shrugging as the pain began to lessen, John looked away shyly. "Um... I think it was my idea most of the time. Like I said, I don't remember back that far too well. I don't think it was very often, at least I don't remember it being all that often. It made me sad when it would be a long..." Stopping, he swallowed nervously. "Um... what I mean is... um... it... um..."
Squeezing his hand and smiling, Diane tried to reassure him. "It's OK, John! I'm not mad, OK? Just... just finish what you were going to say."
Nodding and pursing his lips, he took a breath. "Um... I think it made me sad when she wouldn't want to play girl games with me for a while. I... I remember one time right before Mom caught us that it'd been a long time since the last time and... um... I... I kinda almost begged her to play... um... to play... uh... dollhouse."
Giggling lightly, Diane stopped when she noticed it made him blush. "Oh, John! I think it's cute!"
"It's also embarrassing for me now!" he retorted. "I don't want you to think I still feel that way! You married a man!"
"I married you." she corrected him. "If that's a man or a woman, I don't care! I fell for you after the first time we talked, not the first time I saw you!"
Smirking at the sentiment, he took a tiny bite. "It's fine. It's all over now and we can just forget the whole thing!"
By five-thirty that afternoon, John was lying on the couch and sweating as though it were a hundred degrees in the house instead of the cool seventy-two that it was. Curled up in a ball, his moans were nearly constant.
Diane checked his temperature again, just to be sure. "It still says you only have half a degree of temperature! How bad are the pains now?"
"Worse than ever!" he almost cried. Feeling another sharpness in his belly, he withdrew his hand and stared at it with eyes wide. "Diane! Look!"
As the two watched, John's nails began to grow visibly. Over the next several minutes as the sun finished setting, the two once more saw John revert to Joan. When it was almost finished, a large stain appeared in his pants; much more than would be normal for the woman he was once again.
"John!" Diane gasped. "Bathroom! Now!" Taking his thin feminine arm, she almost carried him to the tub and stripped his clothes off, unleashing a minor torrent of blood once clear of obstruction. "This is too much!" she nearly panicked. "You're bleeding as much as a woman does during a whole day!"
Grabbing the shower wand, she washed the collected blood away and shut off the water to see if the bleeding continued. When it didn't, she breathed a sigh of relief. "It... it's OK, John! You... you've stopped for now!" she panted as she began to calm down.
Sitting up in the tub, John held his stomach. "The... the pain is a lot better now." he panted in his once more feminine voice. "It still hurts, but not nearly as bad as before." Wincing slightly, he regretted saying anything about the pain.
Going through the motions once more, an hour later the two ended up on the couch cuddling with one another with John wearing the gray sweats and sports bra again.
Running her fingers through John's long hair as it seemed to help soothe him, Diane shook her head. "OK, let's think this out logically."
Turning to face her, John's feminine features showed incredulous disbelief. "Logically? Diane... I'm a woman again! What's logical about that?"
"Just hear me out!" she stated calmly, making him turn and lay against her once more. When he was relaxed again, she resumed her line of thought. "OK... so a month ago, this Francine lady scratched your arm. It healed very quickly, too quickly really, but then yesterday you turned into a woman."
"Last evening, you mean." he pointed out calmly and softly.
Stopping suddenly, Diane realized she'd failed to notice the time. "Joan? Um... what time did all this start? Yesterday, I mean."
"You were just starting dinner, so about five-thirty." he answered. "Why?"
Sitting him up, Diane turned him to face her. "That's the same time it started tonight, Joan! Right..."
"...at sundown!" they chorused.
Following her gut, Diane grabbed her smartphone and did a quick search. Getting her result quickly, her eyes widened. "No! That's... that's impossible!"
"What the hell, Diane!" he screeched. "What happened to me? What am I?"
Swallowing hard, Diane's eyes were wide. "Um... Joan? Remember all the myths and stuff about werewolves?" Seeing the confused look on his face, she pressed on. "Sweetie... the day you were scratched was the third night of the full moon... and last night was two nights from the full moon!"
"So what!" he shrieked again.
"Don't you see?" she pleaded. "What exactly did Mrs. Brookes say to you about Francine, sweetie!? Exactly! It's important!"
Calming himself down, John thought back. "I... I'm not sure." he whined.
"Think, sweetie!" she insisted. "You've got to remember!"
Closing his eyes, John took a breath and pushed all his feelings aside. "OK. After Francine grabbed the gift basket and ran, Janice came to the door. She said something like, 'Oh! What are you doing here?' and I said I was there to deliver the basket. Then she said something about Francine being Frank's twin sister and that she was only staying until Wednesday."
Looking at her phone she nodded and put it down, now sure she was right. "Sweetie? I... I don't think there is a Francine! I think that was Frank!"
His complexion paled as he began to absorb the idea. "W... whaddya mean, that was Frank? You mean... he's like me?"
"More like you're like him now, sweetie!" she slightly corrected him. "You were scratched during the full moon by Frank's 'twin sister'." she emphasized with air quotes. "A sister that was going away two days later. Then two days before the first night of the full moon, you turn into a woman! The full moon lasts three days! Don't you see it, John!"
"No!" he squealed.
"Two days before and after the three days of the full moon! That's seven days every month, John! What happens to me for seven days out of every month!?"
Slowly the thought processed in his clouded mind. His eyes widened and he shook his head fearfully. "No!" he whispered. "That... that's impossible!"
Nodding her head, Diane made him listen. "It's true, sweetie! It starts as the moon rises and the sun sets... then the next morning you're normal again... only for it to start again after the next sunset! John... it's true! You're a... a... a werewoman!" she almost whispered in fear.
"I'm a what?" he furrowed his brow in confusion.
"A werewoman!" she repeated herself more emphatically. "Like a werewolf, only instead of a snarling beast, you're a..."
"...snarling bitch!" he interrupted her harshly.
"Joan!" Diane whined. "That's not funny! I'm serious!"
"The hell it isn't funny!" he retorted. "It's a joke! This whole thing is a joke! A werewoman, Diane? Really?"
"It's the only thing that fits!" she insisted.
Taking a breath, John closed his eyes and centered himself. Breathing slowly and deeply a few times, he considered all the facts. Finally opening his eyes slowly, he looked at his wife. "OK. You're right. It does fit and it is serious. What do we do? The werewolf stories say that the only way to end the curse is to get shot by a silver bullet! That would kill me!"
"I don't think it's exactly the same, Joan!" she answered snidely. "Maybe there's another way to end this curse! We should go see the Brookes'!"
"Why them?" he snapped more shrilly than he'd intended. "I mean, if they knew how to cure it, wouldn't they have done it already?"
"Maybe they just hadn't done it yet last month!" Diane offered hopefully. "I mean, you haven't talked to them since closing have you?"
Shaking his head slowly, John gave in. "No, I haven't... and you're right. They're the only ones who could possibly believe us and might know the answer. It's a place to start, anyway." he sighed.
Getting up, Diane helped John up as well. "Come on, sweetie! We're going to the old Foster home! Put some shoes on."
"What, now?" John squeaked. "I can't leave the house looking like this!"
"You look fine!" she tried to reassure him. "We need to fix this, John! You bled so much tonight! I'm afraid it might kill you!"
Realizing her fear was well founded, John nodded. "Alright. We'll go. I'll need my jacket, though."
"It's not that cold out tonight, Joan!" Diane scoffed as she grabbed her purse and slipped into her flats.
"Not for the weather, honey!" he explained as he pulled the jacket on and grabbed a baseball cap. Twisting his long hair until he could coil it on top of his head, he covered it with the cap and slipped into his oversized shoes. "We can't let anyone see Joan leave the house, Diane! People'll start asking who she is and I'm not ready to face that kind of scrutiny!"
Conceding the point, she led him to the door. "OK. You look reasonably like your old self. Let's go!"
Creeping out the door, John pulled the jacket in close around his shoulders. When he tried to walk like a man however, the wide gait of his hips made it almost impossible. Immediately he doubled over in severe pain, falling to the sidewalk and nearly passing out before Diane caught his arm.
"John!" she whispered loudly. "What're you doing!" Grabbing his arms tightly, she held him and made him look her in the eyes. "John!"
The pain ebbing as he felt the comfort of his wife, he slowly regained control and decreased his rapid breathing. "Sorry!" he whispered. "I... I don't know what just happened! I was just trying to walk like my normal self, but I... I couldn't and then the cramps hit really hard!" he began to sob. "The pills didn't even touch it!"
"It's OK, sweetie!" Diane calmed him as she wrapped her arms around him, pressing them together tightly. "Shhh! It's alright! I've got you!" After she saw he was calm and himself again, she released her grip and slipped his arm into hers, linking their fingers together and helping him to stand once more. "Come on! We can do this!"
Making it to her car, she opened the passenger door and guided him into the seat carefully. Closing it, she ran around to the driver's seat and hopped in, starting the car. Once belted and ready, she pulled out and turned down the road, heading for the highway that exited the north side of town.
Pulling up to the darkened building, Diane slowed to a stop. "Doesn't look like anyone's here, sweetheart."
"They're here." he said barely above a whisper. "I... I can feel her near! Her heart hammering away! I... I can feel her anger! Her rage! Why is she so angry?"
"I... I don't know, sweetie." she took his hand. "Let's see if we can find out."
Getting out carefully, Diane raced around the car to take John's hand again, terrified that if he ran off this far out of town, she might not find him before morning. Walking up to the door, the two could hear thumping from deep inside the house; rhythmic and steady, nearly matching the footfalls of their slow approach. The chill in the air and overcast skies cast an ominous feel.
Stopping at the door, the two looked at one another a moment before Diane gathered her courage and knocked gently, feeling John's hand practically vibrating with fear.
"She's trapped!" he whispered in terror. "That's why she's angry!"
"It's OK, sweetie." she soothed him and squeezed his hand reassuringly. "I'm right here!"
Hearing footsteps approaching, the two waited a moment before the porch light came on.
"Who is it?" came a woman's voice from the inside.
"My name's Diane!" she said with a slightly raised voice. "Diane Henderson! We need to talk to you, Mrs. Brookes! It's urgent! Please open up!"
The door cracked open slightly as Janice Brookes looked at the two women at her door. "Did you say Henderson? Are you related to John Henderson?"
"I'm his wife, Mrs. Brookes!" Diane cried. "Please let us in! We need to talk! Something terrible has happened to John!"
Opening the door fully, she looked carefully at the woman standing next to her real estate agent's wife, eyeing John carefully. "Who's she? Does she know what's going on, too?"
"Of course she does!" Diane answered without thinking. "I mean... he does!"
"She your daughter or something? I didn't think you were old enough..."
"Janice?" the shivering man pleaded. "It... it's me! John!"
Her eyes growing wide, she immediately tried to shut the door. "No! Get her away! She's crazy!"
Stopping the door with her foot, Diane pushed her way in with John in tow. "Mrs. Brookes! We need your help!"
Backing away from John in terror, she was startled when the beating on the basement door became frantic, making her turn away from the intruders a moment before turning back to face them once more. "G... go away! We can't help you! John's too early! He's still crazy!"
Closing the door behind him, John pulled the cap and jacket off, letting his true appearance show. "Janice! I'm not crazy! I'm scared, yes! Terrified really, but not crazy! I need your help, Janice! We need your help!"
Swallowing hard, Janice looked in his eyes carefully. "You... you have full control? So fast? How's that possible? You must have gotten infected last month! This should only be your second night! How can you have control already?"
"Please!" John begged. "What's happening to me! Why is it happening?" Hearing the pounding grow louder and more furious, he couldn't help but turn to the locked door as it shook and threatened to fly apart.
Shaking her head, Janice rushed up to the two. "Please! You have to go! I'll explain tomorrow, alright? You can't stay though or she'll kill him trying to get free... to get to you!" she cried, finishing by looking at John.
Taking John's hand, Diane nodded in understanding. "We... we'll be back tomorrow! Come on, Joan!" she ordered, pulling the terrified man out the door and back to their car. Once both were back in and she was about the start the engine, they heard the pounding slow to a stop. Pulling back onto the highway, she took a breath and let it out slowly.
"That was... intense!" she stated obviously.
Unable to hold back the emotions anymore, John cried heavily. "He... she was a monster! That's what's going to happen to me! You have to leave me, Diane! Run! Just... drop me off here, drive away, and never come back!"
"Stop it!" she shouted. "Damn it, Joan! I'm never leaving you! Get that through your head! You can't make me go! There's a way out of this and we're gonna find it together! You hear me?"
Sniffing back the tears, John nodded. "O... OK. I... I just... I saw the look in Janice's eyes! She was so... scared! Not for herself, but for Frank! I couldn't stand to see you like that!"
Driving in silence a moment, Diane shook her head. "...for as long as we both shall live, Joan! No backing out! I'll be damned if some stupid curse is gonna ruin the life we want! You're just going to have to tough it out until we find the way to break it!"
Returning home, the two settled in once more, this time Diane insisting that John wear her long cotton nightie.
"Diane!" he whined. "I shouldn't! I can just sleep in the sweats! We know I'll be back to normal by morning!"
"...and leaking all over everything, and ruining my sweatpants!" she pointed out. "At least this can be bleached! We'll put a towel on the bed under you, too... just in case."
Giving in, John grabbed the nightie and trudged off to the bathroom to get clean once more, change, and take his final pills. Returning fifteen minutes later, he saw her lying in bed and looking at him as he came out. "What?"
Sighing as she turned over to watch him go over to his side of the bed, Diane smiled weakly. "Just remembering our first night here, love."
Scoffing, John shook his head. "Yeah... before I became a freak!"
"That's not what I meant!" she raised her voice. "And don't call yourself a freak! That my husband you're insulting!"
Pausing before climbing into bed, John took a breath and calmed himself. "I know. I'm sorry, honey. I... I'll try to be better." Getting into their shared bed, he once more found it impossible to get comfortable on his left side. "I miss holding you at night." he choked up.
With a gentle pull, Diane rolled him onto his back before laying her head on his cushioned chest carefully. Settling in as he wrapped a thin arm around her back, she nuzzled his neck. "I miss you holding me, too."
Lying in silence a moment, John pushed away the desire to get her away from touching his skin; the sensation making his skin crawl. Enduring it a bit, he tried to think of something, anything else. "Honey? Why were you thinking of our first night here?"
Smiling happily, his wife hummed. "Mmm!"
"Oh!" he began to understand. "I... I just wanted our first night here to be... um... memorable." his soft voice lilted almost happily.
"It was!" she cooed.
When at last he started to feel sleep begin to claim him, his eyes drifting closed heavily, his last thought was of Diane and how wonderful it felt that first night in her dream home to make her so happy and fulfilled.
That's what love's all about. he thought. Making her happy!
Chapter 4 - The Curse of the Werewoman
Pulling up in the same driveway they'd been in the night before, John turned off the motor and sighed. "OK, so lets go find out what the hell we can do about this mess!"
Both climbed out of John's car and walked up to the door together. The morning was still cold from the near frost of the night before and the early morning fog had only just lifted before getting in the car to drive to the Brookes' new home.
Knocking on the door while Dianne shivered and kept her arms wrapped around herself, John wrapped an arm around her and waited.
Opening the door quickly, Janice waved them in. "Come in! Come in! It's freezing out there!"
Entering and relishing the warmth of the room, Diane took her heavy coat off. "Thanks!" she stated through chattering teeth.
Stamping his feet to get warm, John likewise took his coat off and hung it on the hook before taking his wife's and doing the same.
"Cup of coffee to get warm?" Janice offered as she headed for the kitchen.
"Please!" Diane begged. "Anything to wrap my hands around something warm!"
Sitting at the kitchen table, the two waited while Janice prepared her guests' drinks. As she did so, there was a harsh knock on the basement door.
"Janice! Lemme out!"
Moving quickly, she unlatched the bolt that was keeping the wooden bar in place. "Sorry, Frank!" Lifting it free, she unlocked the knob and threw the deadbolt open before stepping back quickly.
"Well it's about fu..." Frank began before seeing that they had guests and stopping cold.
"Frank?" Janice tried to calm him down. "You remember John Henderson, right? The man that sold us this house?"
Stepping into the room and slamming the basement door closed, he grabbed a kitchen chair and turned it around to straddle it backwards. "So what's the beef? We forget to sign somthin'?"
Diane took the initiative to try and thaw the man's icy mood, sticking her hand out toward him. "I'm Diane Henderson! I'm glad to know you, Frank!"
Looking at her hand suspiciously, Frank slowly took it and gave it a single shake. "Mrs. Henderson." he said curtly. "This some kinda 'welcome to the neighborhood' social call, then?" Seeing his wife put down two cups of coffee for their guests, he nodded toward the kitchen. "There more o' that?"
Looking at him sternly, Janice narrowed her eyes. "Yes, and you know where the cups are!" she snapped, taking a seat of her own.
Holding up his hands in mock surrender, Frank stood up and headed for the kitchen in silence. Making his own cup, he glanced over at the two intruders. "So then... why're ya' here?"
Standing up, John stepped closer to the man. "The day you closed on the house, I forgot to give you your complimentary gift basket. My boss insisted I deliver it, personally, so I drove out here and arrived... just after sunset."
Snorting, the man poured sugar in his cup. "So you met Francine, I take it."
"More than met her, I'm afraid." John sighed. "She... um... you scratched my arm... pretty badly." he hinted, rubbing the long-healed wound that might never really heal.
His innuendo brought Frank's head up with an almost audible snap. "I... I mean, she scratched ya'?" Seeing John nod, he pursed his lips and walked back to the table with his cup. "Let's see... that was 'bout a month ago, so... welcome to the suckage club, Johnny!" Taking his backward seat once more, he sipped the beverage calmly. "I hope ya' weren't comin' here to figure out how ta' get out of this mess, 'cause it's impossible. You can't."
"That's not true, Frank!" Janice barked. "Just because you couldn't break the curse doesn't mean..."
"No man can do it!" he snapped back. "It's impossible! That stupid witch knew that when she did it! It's unbreakable!"
"Wait a moment!" Diane interrupted their argument. "What witch? What curse? I mean, what's actually going on? Why is John turning into a woman every night? I thought it was something like a werewolf, but as a woman!"
"She calls it a werewoman." John quipped as he sat back down with the other three.
Snorting his coffee, Frank sputtered for a moment before grabbing a napkin and wiping his face. As he did so, Janice started to giggle with Diane shortly behind her. John just smiled weakly.
Throwing the napkin down, Frank huffed. "Fine! Make fun a' the cursed guys! OK, yeah! She is like a freakin' werewolf, only worse! At least a wolf serves a purpose! This bitch is jus' a shriekin' harpy! Right, John?"
Their laughter dying, John furrowed his brow. "I... I saw you that way."
Shaking his head, Frank scoffed. "Hate ta' tell ya' buddy, but you did the exact same thing last night! Don't feel bad, I didn't remember at first either. Now I'm glad I don't!"
"Frank?" Janice interjected. "Um... John was here last night... in control!"
Looking shocked, he turned to the man sitting to his left. "How the hell ya' manage that!? Took me four months ta' get control, for all the good it did! I'm glad I lose control now! At least outta control, I don't remember nothin' and all I 'member is bein' a guy all the time!"
"What about Janice, though?" Diane wondered. "She was so terrified for you last night!"
"Better that than the alternative!" he muttered.
"What alternative?" John wondered.
"Being a chick!" he shouted. "Worse, being a chick on the rag every time! The PMS is bad enough!"
"You get PMS?" Diane asked clinically. "I mean, how it that possible?"
"That's just what Frank calls the bleeding when he's in guy form during the days that's he's Francine at night." Janice explained. "It's not really PMS."
"How can Frank bleed during the day?" she pressed. "I'm a nurse. I know enough to know that's not possible."
Looking at her blankly, Janice furrowed her brow. "Didn't John have the pain before the change last night? Followed by a lot of blood?"
"Yes!" Diane answered. "Way more than menstrual bleeding!"
"Not if you can't get rid of it all day!" Frank grumbled. "That's why it all comes out at once when ya' change on the second day... and the third... fourth... fifth... sixth... and seventh days! By the time the change gets close, it feels like yer belly's 'bout to burst!"
Finally understanding what happened the evening before, Diane nodded. "I see! Yes! That makes sense! Except where's the blood coming from during the day? Men don't have an endometrium to shed!"
"We do." Frank groused. "Even in guy form that week, we got all the internal plumbing! Just no way in or out! It goes away after the week's over and we get three whole weeks ta' just be normal guys!"
"How do you know this?" John asked in awe.
Blushing, Janice looked away. "We... um... we stole a sonogram machine last year, when we were still trying to end the curse!"
"Not too hard to figure out how ta' use if you have the time..." Frank pointed out. "...and the motivation!"
"Plus there's the book." Janice offered.
"Janice!" Frank yelled. "Now don't go gettin' their hopes up with that stupid book nonsense! It didn't work for me!" Grabbing his belly, he groaned.
"Bad already?" Janice winced in sympathy for him.
Nodding silently, her husband settled his nerves and was able to relax. "One of the worst parts! The more ya' fight it, the worse it gets!"
Getting up, Janice headed into the living room briefly to return with an old leather-bound tomb. "We found this in the library in town."
"Supposedly, it was brought here by the rat bastard that brought the curse with him! Then made sure ta' spread it around a little!"
"How did you get the curse?" John wondered.
"Pft!" he half-heartedly laughed. "I was working late at the shop one night and this crazy bitch starts bangin' on the door. Thought maybe she was in trouble, like bein' chased by a rapist or somethin', so stupid me goes and opens the door! Then she bit me and ran off!"
"So you have no idea who it was?" Diane queried.
"Not a friggin' clue!" he spat bitterly. "If I knew, I'd of beat his fool head in by now!"
Taking the book carefully, Diane opened it to a dog-eared section. "The Curse of Maggie Greendale." she read aloud.
"That's the bitch that started the whole thing!" Frank hissed.
"Maggie Greendale lived in East Lyme, Connecticut in the mid to late sixteen hundreds." she continued. "She was accused of witchcraft in sixteen-eighty and was said to have cursed her accusers, specifically the men of the village, with an unending torment that she claimed no man could escape."
"They ain't kiddin', neither!" Frank continued to complain. "There's no way any man could ever do what she demanded!"
"The next page has the actual text of the curse." Janice offered. "That's the only important part."
Turning the crackling paper, Diane started reading.
"Swift curse shall doom yer' childless men,
taken by the moon and then,
stricken by the blood they'll be,
sev'n days, the same as we!
No man can face the lunacy!
His mind would break and rage she'll see!
With ev'ry push to fight his fate,
the ire shall take him from his mate!
Only way to fight this curse,
to bend on knee will quench its thirst!
A year plus one she will abide,
and her face he must not hide!
'Er by that day she must control,
by night she lives, the day's his role.
What more, he must accept his place,
abiding hap'ly with her face!
One last task, to end this way
his wife must give her heart away
to she alone, else face the rage!
Their hearts entwined shall be assuaged!
By day the man, by night the she
which one to chose, his choice must be!
Guess the hidden hope of wife
and locked he'll be that way for life!
But guess he wrong and break her heart
then ne'er shall go his counterpart!
For only death shall stop their blood
each lunar time, her frenzied flood!"
Silence filled the room as the four pondered the words a moment.
Janice cleared her throat before continuing. "According to some experts on the occult, if anyone could ever meet the conditions of the curse and break it, it would free everyone afflicted! Something about the way she worded the second-to-last line."
"Hogwash!" Frank spewed. "We did everything there and it didn't work!"
Looking at her husband, Janice shook her head. "You never really embraced being Francine, Frank! You couldn't just pretend to! I told you that!"
"What's this?" John asked curiously.
"It's a reference to the fourth stanza." Janice explained coolly. "See? 'What more, he must accept his place, abiding hap'ly with her face!' It means that a man with the curse has to learn to embrace being his female half."
"Fat chance of that!" Frank scoffed. "Hard to embrace it when it's nothing but bleeding, bloated, misery! I ain't heard you ever 'embrace' being a woman when it's your time bleedin'! You complain nearly as much as me!"
Closing the book carefully, Diane put her hands on it protectively. "May... may we take this with us? I'd like to study it more."
"Take it and good riddance!" Frank waved at the book dismissively. "It's just a bunch of hooey! Some nonsense some geek wrote down about local folklore that prob'ly ain't got nothin' ta' do with this bloody curse! It's like you said! It's like werewolves! Only way out is ta' eat a silver bullet!"
"Frank!" Janice whined. "You know it's true! It all fits together too well!"
Dismissing her insistence with a wave, he got up and walked away.
Hearing the bedroom door slam, Janice winced. "He's always a little cranky after a night... um..."
"We understand." Diane smiled sympathetically. "We should go. You've told us pretty much all there is to know and you've got your own problems to deal with! Can we have your number if we have any other questions?"
Giving Diane her cell phone number, the two got ready to leave before Frank re-emerged. As they walked out the door, Janice smiled weakly at Diane. "I heard you call him Joan last night. It's nice! Maybe Joan can do it... break the curse, I mean. It... it's all the hope I have left. Frank used to be so sweet and nice before all this. Now he's frustrated and angry all the time."
"We'll try." Diane offered, giving the woman a quick hug before departing.
Driving them back home, John started thinking. "Honey? About tomorrow. How'm I gonna work it? The office doesn't close until seven, which is an hour and a half after sunset! Same for all this week!"
Thinking hard, she smiled. "Remember when you started at the agency, sweetie? Remember what Mrs. Moon said to me?"
"Um... something about if you ever needed anything, she'd be glad to help?"
"She said that if I ever needed you home earlier she'd arrange it so you'd be home when I needed you to be! She knew we were newlyweds and was probably thinking of how people usually are when they're just starting out! You know, can't keep their hands off each other?"
"Most newlyweds haven't been dating six years first." he pointed out. "Not much around here, anyway! You get two kinds... the ones that get married right away so they're not 'sinning out of wedlock' and the ones that never get married and just shack-up the rest of their lives!"
"I thought you'd never say yes!" Diane beamed.
"Yeah, well I had to quit shaming the family!" he quipped before chuckling lightly. Regretting it almost immediately, John grabbed his stomach. "Ooo! That one hurt!"
"Don't they all?"
Nodding sideways, he conceded the point. "True enough. That one tried to reach out and grab me though."
Lost in thought a while, the rest of the trip home was quiet. When they at last were back inside, Diane put the book down and opened it to the curse. "John? I was thinking about your cramps and the curse. Listen to this part. 'No man can face the lunacy. His mind would break and rage she'll see.' I think there's something to that."
"So that's why I keep feeling those drives to be angry like Francine?" he wondered as he sat on the couch.
"I don't think 'rage' means anger in this case." she supposed. "Look, in the other passages, anger is written as 'ire' or 'frenzy'. Rage appears twice, here and here." she pointed at the text.
Nodding, he accepted her point. "OK, so what does rage mean then?"
"I think it might be some old-world way of saying cramps, John! Think about it! When are your cramps the worst?"
"Right before sunset." he shuddered.
"I mean just the cramps, not the pressure because you can't release until you change. Isn't there a difference between the two?"
Thinking hard, he nodded. "Come to think of it, yes. There is a difference. The cramps are more... spasmy... like a Charley Horse in my belly. The ones before sunset are more like when you're badly constipated. It just hurts."
"I think we can reduce the cramps, John!"
"How?" he asked her seriously.
"Um... you won't like it." she warned him.
"Just tell me, honey!" John almost begged.
Taking a breath, Diane put her idea forward. "I think Maggie was saying that when you fight the curse, it brings the 'rage'... the cramps. See the word lunacy there? As in Luna? The Moon?"
"So that's what ties the change to the phase of the moon?" he asked.
"No, that's the line, 'taken by the moon'. What I think this line means refers to when people used to think that the Moon caused madness. That's why they called it lunacy. Another word for crazy back then was hysterical, from the Latin word hystericus, meaning 'of the womb'. Tie the two together and..."
"...you get 'No man can face the womb'." he filled in her blank. "OK, so if he can't face it, then his 'mind would break'. He... um... he goes crazy?"
"I don't think so. I think 'break' there is more like rebelling... like breaking free? So the line then reads, 'No man can face the idea of being a woman, he'll rebel against it and get cramps'!"
Looking at her, John thought a moment before his eyes went wide. "Like that first night we went to the Brookes' and I tried to walk like myself... like a man... and I got that bad cramp!"
"Exactly!" Diane smiled.
John's enthusiasm died as he followed the thought to its ultimate conclusion. "That means to make this bearable, I have to stop trying to act like myself!"
"...and stop fighting it." she added. "That line, 'Only way to fight this curse, to bend on knee will quench its thirst'? To 'bend on knee' means to submit to what someone or something else wants, and not what you want."
Taking it all in, John nodded. "So in order to reduce the cramps and hope to end the curse, I have to be a woman seven nights a month... willingly... and eventually learn to like it, in spite of the fact that that the only time I am one I'm menstruating?"
"I think you can do it, John!" his wife took his hand and squeezed it. "Of all the men that have ever gotten this, how many of them wanted to be a girl when they were little? You just have to reach back and embrace that little girl inside you and let her loose!"
"There's more to it, though." he scowled. "It says, 'A year plus one'. I have to keep it up for a year and a day, I'm guessing, and I can't hide away like she's not there."
"So Joan has to become part of our household." Diane accepted. "We have to treat Joan when you're her like it's normal and not keep it hidden away, the way Frank locks himself up when he's Francine." Reading on, she bit her lower lip. "This part's interesting. 'his wife must give her heart away to she alone, else face the rage.' Does that mean what I think it means?"
Nodding, John looked away embarrassedly. "I... I think so. It... it means you have to fall in love with Joan. So that's it, then! I'm doomed! That's not even fair! That's not anything I can do anything about!"
"Yes it is!" she insisted. "Sweetie, it means you have to want me to love Joan! If you don't, I can't... but if you do..."
Looking in her eyes, John smiled shyly. "Their hearts entwined shall be assuaged."
"It's the way out!" Diane smiled back. "We just go on with life as though you being Joan is normal. You accept it and just enjoy being a woman without fighting it or trying to 'man-up', we continue loving each other as though this is a good thing, and then..." She paused as she looked at the last stanzas and furrowed her brow. "This part I'm not sure about. Can you make sense of it?"
Nodding, he turned away. "I'm pretty sure it's saying that at the end of the year and a day I have to pick if I want to live the rest of my life as a man or as a woman. Even more, I have to pick what you want me to be without you telling me. See that part, 'Guess the hidden hope of wife'? So after a year of living and loving together as both man and wife and woman and wife, I have to guess which one you love more."
"That's easy!" she purred, wrapping an arm around his shoulders. "I'll want whatever you want!"
"I don't think it's that simple." he grimaced. "I think the curse knows what we hide even from ourselves and that after a year, you will want one over the other... even if you don't know it! That's the 'hidden hope' part. I guess I'm supposed to know you well enough to be able to tell, even if you can't."
Hugging him one-armed, Diane still smiled. "Why don't we cross that bridge when we get to it! In the mean time, we know Joan is here to stay for a week out of each month. Back to practical concerns."
"The one I can't get out of my head is what the hell I'm supposed to do about the Halloween party Wednesday!" John whined. "I mean, Vicky's expecting me and I won't be done this month until Friday morning!"
Smirking, Diane couldn't help herself. "Well, you could always go as Joan! I mean, there is a resemblance!"
"Ha, ha!" he sneered. "I don't look anything like John as Joan!"
Raising an eyebrow, his wife looked at her carefully. "Referring to yourself in the third person now? Or is John someone else now?"
Scowling and biting his lower lip, John tried to explain. "I almost have to think of Joan as a different person. I need to just go with the flow here and not fight what comes naturally to me. Getting back to Halloween though, I don't think Joan could pass as John in drag!"
Thinking about how Joan looked critically, Diane shook her head. "No... I think you could pull it off! Your face is generally the same... a little rounder, but your eyes, nose, and general facial structure is still there. If I unfocus my eyes and ignore the hair, it's hard to tell the difference. Add a lot of makeup and people could fall for it! Besides, I don't think you have any choice! You don't show and your sister will kill you!"
"I know!" he sighed. "I wish I could remember being Joan when I was little better, though. It might help."
"Maybe you should ask Vicky. She was older, so maybe she remembers more than you do. Going to the party as Joan should help break the ice!"
"You still plan an going as 'the naughty nurse'?"
"No." Diane sighed. "Given that you won't be going as Dr. Feelgood, it just seems trashy! I need something that matches with you! I can't pull off a guy costume, though!" Thinking a moment, she got a devilish look on her face. "Sweetie? What would you think if we went as hookers?"
Looking at Diane as though she'd gone 'round the bend, John slowly shook his head. "Are you serious? I'm just getting used to the idea and you want me to go out in public dressed like a tramp? With guys ogling me?"
"You didn't seem to mind the idea of guys being able to ogle me as your naughty nurse!" she countered. "Turnabout's fair play, sweetie!"
Blushing heavily, John looked away. "You're right. It is fair. The difference is that you've had years to get used to the idea of being stared at! I've had like two days!"
"Trial by fire, sweetie!" Diane chuckled. "Every girl has had a first time out wearing something a little less than 'proper', and did it without practice! So welcome to the club, sweetie!"
Smiling slightly at feeling included, John thought about it a moment. "Um... a... alright. If it's what you want to do, honey."
Leaning over, Diane kissed his cheek gently. "Trust me, love! You'll have a blast! Now about work..."
Spending an hour looking at online lunar calendars, sunrise and sunset times, and when Joan's 'time of the month' was due to start and end for the next several months, the two managed to hash out a workable schedule.
Grabbing her phone, Diane looked through her contacts and pressed a button. Putting the phone to her ear, she only had to wait a moment. "Hello, Barb? It's Diane!"
"Diane!" Barbara Moon smiled. "Good to hear from you! How's John?"
"Oh, John's fine!" she replied absently. "Listen, remember when John started and you offered to let him work a different schedule if I needed him to? Well, I need him to! He can't work past five for a while. I'll need him home by five-ten at the latest for the foreseeable future!"
"Scheduling problems at the hospital?" Barbara asked curiously.
"You know how it is!" she didn't really answer. "They think nurses are just machines! Wind us up and we can go for days, right?"
Laughing, Barbara nodded. "Yes! My mother was a nurse, so I understand! That's why I offered! I knew it was just a matter of time before you needed his schedule to be flexible! Looks like he'll be doing most of the cooking and cleaning around the house for a bit while you wear the pants in the family!"
"You have no idea, Barb!" she quipped lightly. "I just need some extra help for a bit while we get our schedules sorted out. Probably just over the winter. After that he should be able to go back to the later schedule."
"That's fine with me!" Barbara beamed. "We usually have shorter hours in the winter anyway because so few people move that time of the year, these last few especially! We'll just move to the winter schedule a little early!"
"Sounds like it'll work out good for everyone then!" Diane pointed out. "So John will be in a little earlier tomorrow, then. Sound good?"
"Sounds fine, Diane! Tell him I'll see him at eight-thirty and he can leave at five! Since you live so close, he should be able to get there in time to cook dinner for you every night!" she giggled.
"Thanks, Barb! See you later! Bye!" Hanging up, she smiled at John. "There! You're working eight-thirty to five from now on, so work is solved!"
"That still leaves Christmas Night and New Years Eve as problems, though. I can't exactly have dinner at Vicky's house as Joan!" he complained. "Dad would have a conniption and think of her kids!"
"That's a problem for two months from now." Diane calmed him. "As for New Year's, you won't be up for going out that night anyway since the first few days are always the worst."
"But it's our first New Year's Eve!" John fussed. "I wanted it to be special!"
"We'll have other New Year's Eves together!" she comforted. "Besides, it's not like we haven't spent the last six together!"
"But this was the first one together as a married couple!"
"We'll just have to beg off party invites and say we want to spend it alone! People will understand!"
Nodding in reluctant acceptance, John looked at their rough schedule. "I guess those are all the major problems for now."
"Nope!" Diane continued. "There's one more. We'll need to set aside this evening to go shopping for clothes for Joan. We can't go with you as John because you'll need to try things on, so we'll have to wait until sundown. You'll get dressed and we'll go out and get you the things you'll need. Just the basics... bras, underwear, some simple tops and pants... Oh! and a really sexy outfit for Halloween!"
Groaning, John leaned on his hands. "You're really serious about that, aren't you? You seriously wanna see me dressed all slutty?"
Wrapping her arms around him, Diane kissed him deeply. "Sweetie? I can't wait to see it!"
Link: Curse of the Werewoman Title Page and Description
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Chapter 5 - Holiday Surprises
The shopping trip Sunday evening wasn't nearly as bad as John thought it would be. He'd had difficulty at first, thinking at any minute people would start pointing and laughing at him, shouting 'dude looks like a lady' or things like that, but his transformation was flawless once he'd stopped fighting it and just went with the flow.
By the time they'd reached Mauricio's, a local women's clothing store, after having gotten more to wear than sweats at the local Penny's and changing at a gas station, Joan was starting to come into her own.
The next morning Joan was still there when the alarm went off.
"Sweetie! Time for you to get up!" Diane groaned as she shook the woman's shoulder. "Joan! Come on! Wake up!"
Her eyes cracking open slowly, Joan looked at her wife bleary-eyed. "Huh? What is it?"
"You need to get ready for work." Diane yawned as she reset the alarm for her own wakeup two hours later.
Dragging herself into the bathroom, Joan stopped and looked at herself in the mirror. Her mind only slowly returning to reality, she gasped in panic a moment before remembering that the moon wasn't supposed to set and the sun rise until nearly eight-twenty, the time when she would revert back to John and leave to get to work on time.
Showering and drying off quickly, she took a few minutes to dry and style her hair, even knowing it would soon be gone. Dressing in her women's underwear and a pad, just in case, she put on John's pants and shirt, waiting to button them up after she changed back. Grabbing a bite to eat, she waited patiently as the sky brightened and she felt her body begin to change.
With an almost melancholy sadness, she watched her breasts vanish into her body and felt her hair withdraw into her scalp. Buttoning up her top and pants, she grabbed her wallet and keys, giving Diane a quick kiss before running out the door to another day of work.
All day Joan felt different. Her cramps were minimal, her attitude was more relaxed, and she even engaged in a little 'girl talk' with Barbara when on a break. By the time five o'clock approached, she could barely notice the feeling in her belly, like she'd held going to the bathroom too long instead of feeling like she was about to explode.
"Can you lock up on the way out, John?" Barbara asked, grabbing her purse.
"Sure thing!" Joan chirped. "I'll be leaving right at five! Just finishing up a few things before I close out! Have a good night, Barb!"
Pausing to look at her most dedicated employee, Barbara had noticed Joan's change in behavior all day, but couldn't figure out just what was different. Shrugging it off, she smiled back. "Alright, John! You better get on home! Diane needs you! See you tomorrow! Oh! One more thing! Wednesday I'll expect you to be in costume! We're having a long Halloween lunch and all the girls in the office will be dressing up, so I expect you to as well!"
Pausing a moment, he nodded briefly. "O... OK, Mrs. Moon. I'll try not to disappoint!"
Driving home after locking up, Joan could feel the change coming. The ache in her arm was noticeable since the one in her belly wasn't as much. When she pulled into her driveway, she glanced up to see the last rays of the sun wink away. Looking over her shoulder, she saw the full moon rising and felt the pressure on her chest. Racing quickly, she barely managed to get inside and to the bathroom before her privates shifted and released a full day of menstruation at one go into the toilet.
Sighing in relief, she stripped John's shirt, tie, shoes, and pants off. Running a hand through her hair, she smiled at the feeling as she got re-dressed in her own slacks and top. Looking at the pants and they way they hung on her hips, she thought, I wonder if I could just wear these slacks to work? I think they'd fit John all right with a belt to keep them up. I should try that tomorrow!
Smiling as she began getting dinner ready, she found herself humming a tune from her childhood and thinking how happy Diane would be to come home to a nice meal, clean house, and attentive wife. Pausing on that last thought a moment, she dismissed her concerns and resumed her happy homemaking.
Diane came in the door tired and irritable. Expecting that she'd have to start dinner as it was her night, she was surprised by the smell of something she loved. "I'm home!" she shouted toward the kitchen, rewarded by the sight of Joan almost skipping over to the front door to greet her.
"Welcome home, honey!" Joan sang, taking the woman's purse and jacket to hang them up. "Dinner should be ready in about fifteen, so if you want a shower first, you have time... or you could just relax and I'll bring dinner to you when it's done! How was your day?"
Stunned at the cheery and almost bubbly attitude on display in front of her, Diane shook her head to try and clear it. "Um... no. I'd love a shower! I stink of hand sanitizer! I thought it was my night to cook?"
"Oh! Well, I was home, I had nothing better to do after straightening up a little, so I thought I'd save you the trouble and pamper you! Did you have a hard day, honey? You look tired!" Wrapping her arms around Diane, Joan put a quick kiss on her wife's lips without even thinking.
The stunned feeling she felt flew into overdrive as the woman her husband had become kissed her as though it was all a perfectly normal and everyday occurrence, ignoring the fact that it was the first time she'd ever been kissed by a woman in her life. Unsure how to react and not wanting to hurt Joan's feelings, she tried to address the issue delicately.
"What the actual hell, Joan?" she asked calmly. "Um... you just kissed me."
Furrowing her brow, Joan shook her head in confusion. "I don't understand. I kiss you all the time!" she finished with a loving smile.
Taking Joan's hand, Diane led her to the couch to sit next to her. "Joan, I've never actually been kissed by a... a woman... before. I thought we'd sort of work up to that... eventually."
Her eyes widening as realization dawned on her just how easily she'd slipped into the life of Joan without a thought, she felt guilty that she'd abandoned her masculine traits, followed immediately by a severe cramp that doubled her over. "Oh! I... I'm so sorry, Diane! I... I wasn't thinking about it! I... I just did what felt normal! I'm sorry!" she winced through another cramp.
Seeing the instant change in her spouse and the wracking pain she was now in trying to not be feminine, Diane felt her heart drop. "No, sweetie! It... it's my fault! You were doing exactly what we talked about, and I just messed it all up because... well... you sort of blew my mind back there! Please don't think you need to be manly for me to love you, OK?"
Relaxing as her wife back-peddled on her reaction to Joan's behavior, she closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and did what felt right. Opening them again, she smiled widely as the cramps faded. "It's OK, honey! I understand! I didn't mean to rush things! We'll go at your pace, alright?" Getting up, she helped Diane to stand as well. "Let me go finish dinner, you go relax and get clean, we'll eat, talk, and see what we want to do after I do the dishes!"
Watching Joan trot off to the kitchen, Diane bit her tongue and went off to take her shower and think.
While they ate, Joan couldn't help but watch Diane eat; a dreamy expression on her face the whole time and nearly forgetting to eat herself. Nibbling at her salad, Joan began humming the tune again, lost in the moment.
For her part, Diane was nervous. Joan's behavior was bordering on bazaar. Finishing a bite of spaghetti, she put her fork down. "Joan? Why'd you offer to do the dishes after cooking and cleaning? You know our rule! Whoever cooks, the other one cleans up!"
"I'm just trying to do what comes naturally, honey." she explained simply. "It's funny... but I think Maggie put that thing about the cramps in to act as some kind of guide. I... I think she actually just wanted men to understand women! If they would have just used the cramps the way Maggie intended, they would have ended this curse long ago!"
"What're you talking about?" Diane puzzled. "Using cramps as a guide?"
"Yeah!" Joan sang. "See, anytime I think about what I should be doing or how I should be acting, I think about them and feel for a reaction. If I start to feel a cramp coming on, I know it's the wrong thing! If I don't feel one, I know it's OK! See? And it works! I've hardly had any cramps all day!"
Seeing the logic of it, Diane shrugged and took another bite. "Still, you don't have to become some stepford wife! I can still do my share!"
"I... I don't know that you can." Joan lightly objected. "Remember, Maggie lived in the seventeenth century. Back then, women were expected to be domestic and subservient. If Maggie tied the curse to those ideals, then I'll have to comport myself to those ideals if I want to avoid the cramps."
"Surely that doesn't mean I can't be an equal partner in the housework!" Diane rejected the idea. "Look, after dinner, I'll do the dishes and you can relax! You worked all day, too!"
"Speaking of work," Joan segued, "Barb told me that Wednesday I have to wear a costume. She doesn't want the other girls in the office to think I'm trying to make them look bad if I don't wear one too."
"Well, you still have that Doctor's costume." she pointed out, deciding to not even touch Joan's use of 'other girls'. "At least it won't go to waste! By the way... how did work go?"
"It was fine!" Joan chirped happily. "Getting there on time was tricky. I didn't change back until it was almost time to leave, so I had a bit of five-o'clock shadow when I got there. I'll have to try and shave before I change tomorrow to see if I'm still fresh-shaven the next morning. Not enough time to squeeze it in! Oh! I was also going to try and just wear my slacks to work instead of John's slacks, so I can be ready quicker! What do you think?"
Pausing to consider the question, she nodded and took another bite. "Slacks are slacks." she talked around her food. "I doubt anyone would even notice the difference. If it helps you, I'll support you!"
Giddily smiling, Joan took another bite of salad and resumed her starry-eyed observation of Diane enjoying her meal. When her wife began doing the dishes however, the cramps returned with a vengeance.
"Honey?" Joan moaned. "I... I think I need to do that!" she held her belly.
Turning the water off, Diane moved over next to her and held her. "Oh, Joan! This just isn't fair! You work all day, then come home and have to do all the housework and cooking! Maybe I should talk to Barb about cutting back your hours?"
"No!" Joan whined. "We need my job, honey! If we ever want kids, we need to plan ahead and save! You make more hourly than I do, but my bonuses are our future! I can't earn them as a part-time agent! Only full-time agents get sales bonuses!"
"Alright!" she threw up her hands in surrender as she watched Joan put the apron on and begin doing the dishes; the pained look on her face dissolving into one of relief as she started cleaning. Shaking her head, she wandered off to the living room to pick a movie for them to watch together, as was their usual habit.
That night as they lay in bed together, Joan chewed her lip as Diane began snuggling in close. "Um... Diane? You... you haven't given me a goodnight kiss since this all started."
Stiffening at the suggestion that she didn't love Joan, she pulled away. "I... I know. I... it's hard for me, OK? I love you, but... um..."
"You aren't attracted to me." Joan sighed. "It's OK. I... I'll learn to live with it. I'm sorry I brought it up. Goodnight, Diane. I love you."
Feeling Joan roll over so that her back was to her, Diane felt terrible. Here I am, with Joan stuck having to follow some seventeenth-century witch's idea of showing a man what it's like to be a woman, and I can't even give her a little encouragement or hope! Resolving to fix it right away, she pulled on Joan's shoulder until she lying on her back again. Without a word, Diane slowly closed in close to Joan's sad face. Remembering just who the woman in bed with her was, she closed her eyes and pressed her lips against Joan's.
Melting into the kiss, Joan's body exploded in desire. Wrapping her arms around Diane, she pulled her close and returned the kiss with fervor. When at last it ended, Joan panted with a hunger she'd never known as a man.
"Wow!" she sighed. "Is that what I do to you when I kiss you?"
"What's that?" Diane asked playfully through a smile.
"You melted my brain!" Joan laughed.
Smiling down at her, Diane brushed the woman's bangs aside slowly and gently. "Something like that, yeah!" Caressing Joan's face, she sighed. "Feel better, now?"
"I'd have been happy with just a peck on the lips!" Joan confessed. "That went way beyond happy!"
"Good" she replied as she moved down to snuggle with Joan. "Then go to sleep! We have early mornings from now on!"
The next day was fairly uneventful. Joan got up, dressed in a clean pair of women's slacks, put on her bra and a camisole, then put one of John's shirts on over it with the buttons waiting for her breasts to vanish again. As she sat waiting, the feeling of loss was palpable as she felt the change coming. When at last it was done and she was John again, she buttoned down the shirt, straightened her tie, and headed off to work.
When she left work promptly at five that evening, she hurried home and managed to change to a nice blouse and shave before the change filled her with a warm sense of fulfillment. Making her way through the house, she picked up and cleaned happily, content to just follow her heart and make their home nice for Diane's return. Starting dinner just as the night before, she made sure to use as few dishes as possible so as to not make her wife feel bad when she cleaned them later.
After dinner, the two ladies played at trying their 'costumes' on, Joan getting her first lesson in makeup by being shown what not to do; making her look overdone and cheap on purpose. Laughing together, they cleaned up and got to bed early, Diane making sure to kiss Joan goodnight with more than a little passion.
Getting up to the alarm on Halloween morning, Joan again went through her routine, waiting for the sun to rise and drive the woman she'd become back under her skin to hide behind John. Breathing slowly, she tried not to cry as the sun began to peak over the eastern horizon.
Staring at the bright rays, she sighed and began to button John's shirt, only to find that her breasts were still there. Looking at the time, she saw it was getting close to eight-thirty, the sun was well up, and she was still Joan. In a panic, she ran to the bedroom and shook her wife desperately.
"Diane!" she screeched. "Diane, I'm in trouble! Wake up!"
Rousing and looking at Joan, Diane furrowed her brow. "What's wrong? Waiting for the sun to come up still?"
"It is up, Diane!" she cried. "It's been up for five minutes and I'm still Joan! I have to be at work in like three minutes! What am I going to do?"
Suddenly wide-awake, her wife tried to calm her down. "Alright! Don't panic! Let me think!" Processing their options, Diane grabbed her phone. "I'm calling Janice! Maybe she knows what's going on!" Looking up her number, she dialed it and waited.
Answering the phone exhaustedly, Janice Brookes didn't even look to see who it was that was calling. "Hello?"
"Janice? It's Diane! Joan didn't change back into John this morning! Why?"
"Oh." she dismissed the concern. "It's All Hallows Eve. Didn't I tell you that she'd stay a woman all day and night today?"
"No, Janice." she answered sardonically. "No, I'd have remembered that."
"Sorry." she sighed. "Frank was in such a bad mood that morning, it kinda threw me off. He's still locked up and has to stay that way until tomorrow morning. His boss knows that Frank never works Halloween anymore."
"Well, at least we know what's going on. Thank you, Janice! Honestly! I don't know what we'd do without your help! I gotta go, though! We need to figure something out!"
"It's fine, Diane. Call me later and tell me. Bye."
"Bye!" she replied before hanging up. Turning to a nearly hysterical Joan, she sighed. "It's All Hallows Eve. You'll be Joan until tomorrow morning."
"Oh, God!" Joan sank to her knees. "I'm ruined! Barb will think I'm ditching work so I don't have to wear a costume! What are we gonna do?"
"Now don't panic!" she repeated. Thinking fast, she smiled. "OK. Let me call Barb and straighten this out! I can fix this, but you have to trust me and do exactly as I tell you, OK?"
Nodding as tears began to run down her cheeks, Joan took a breath to try and calm down. "A... alright, love. I trust you. Just tell me what to do."
Joan took a breath and held it as she walked to the front door of her work. The sound of her shoes on the sidewalk as she approached nearly an hour late was unnerving, but she kept her head held high, smiled, and tried to breathe normally as she opened the door to hear the familiar chime.
Barbara Moon looked up from her desk and smiled as usual. "Welcome to Blue Moon Real Estate! I'm Barbara Moon, how can I help you?"
Looking at her boss, Joan took a breath. "Morning, Barb! Sorry I'm late! I had trouble getting ready this morning and Diane had to help!" she stated in a voice low enough to be passably masculine trying to be feminine.
As Joan spoke, the entire room fell silent. Barbara shook her head as she tried to reconcile the sight before her with the employee she'd known the last year. Looking the woman up and down slowly, she took in the sight and finally began to smile.
"John Henderson!" she nearly laughed. "My God! You look... perfect!"
"Actually, the name is Joan Henderson today, Mrs. Moon!" she lilted as she strutted to her desk. "If you need me, I'll be going through the last quarter's property tax filings! Don't want to slip and miss one!"
Going through the day as though nothing had changed, Joan relaxed into her role of the woman pretending to be a man pretending to be a woman shortly before the lunch party. Laughing along with the other nine ladies who she worked with, Joan felt a true sense of freedom and belonging for the first time in her life.
When the end of the day finally came around, staying an extra hour to make up for her lateness, she approached Barbara cautiously. "I... I hope you didn't mind this all day, Mrs. Moon. It was Diane's idea! I promise I'll be back to being John tomorrow morning!"
Shaking her head, Barbara smiled. "It's fine, Joan!" she laughed. "You were fabulous and showed real team spirit, trying to fit in with all us ladies here! I know it can be hard for a man to work in an office dominated by so much estrogen, but you don't let it get to you and showed just what you're made of today, John! I'll look forward to seeing you tomorrow! Goodnight!"
"Goodnight, Barb!" she sighed in relief before she walked back to her car, the sound of her heels clicking on the pavement making her smile. Getting home, she relaxed a bit until she needed to get ready for the party. Unlike the outfit she'd worn to work, a powder-blue woman's business jacket and skirt, the outfit for her sister's Halloween party was much more risqué.
Pulling both her and Diane's outfits out of the closet and unwrapping them from their plastic coverings, Joan took a breath before stripping down and showering, wanting to be fresh and clean for whatever the evening held in store for her. She was just toweling off when she heard the front door close.
"I'm in the bathroom, honey!" she shouted as she dried her hair and wrapped it the way Diane had taught her. Stepping into the bedroom, she watched Diane collapse on the bed from near exhaustion. "You OK, love?"
"Just tired." she sighed as she lay there. "Long day and I was short on sleep. Not your fault, but..." Turning to Joan, she smiled. "How was your day?"
"Wonderful!" Joan exhaled slowly. "Barb and the rest of the ladies were so nice! It felt really good feeling so welcomed and accepted! Like I belonged! I... I never got a lot of that growing up." she finished sadly.
Sitting up, Diane reached out a hand. "Help me up, sweetie! Let's get ready so we can go see your sister! Maybe she can answer some questions you've had for a long time!"
Pulling up in front of her sister's home, Joan swallowed hard. "I... I'm not sure I can do this, Diane! I mean... at work it was one thing! I looked nice! But now? Dressed like this? What... what if Vicky freaks?"
"You look fine!" her wife reassured her. "More than fine... you look hot!" Reaching a hand over, she squeezed Joan's hand before pulling the nervous woman closer. "Hey, you have nothing to worry about, OK? No one'll say anything bad about you! I won't let them! And if anyone does, they'll have me to answer to!" Leaning in quickly, she kissed Joan gently on the lips so as to not muss their matching lipstick. "Come on! Let's go have some fun!"
Approaching the door, hand in hand, the two ladies stopped as Joan pressed the doorbell. Waiting patiently as they listened to the revelry inside, they were thankful of the warmer fifty-degree weather that night. When at last the door opened, Joan smiled as she saw her sister dressed in a twenties flapper costume.
Vicky Eddington looked at the two women standing at her door and her smile melted. "Um... can I help you ladies? Need directions somewhere?"
Smiling, Diane stepped forward slightly. "Hardly, Vicky! Aren't we invited in anymore?"
Recognizing the voice and then the face of her sister-in-law, the nearly thirty-year-old woman's expression brightened. "Diane! Where's John? Who's your friend?"
Once more lowering her voice to be soft and sultry, Joan stepped up. "Hi, Vicky! Like my costume?"
Joan's sister was so stunned at the idea that the woman standing at her door was her little brother, she nearly fainted. Composing herself, she stepped back to let them in, still speechless.
As the two entered, Diane leaned in close to Joan and whispered in her ear. "By the way, I just thought of something. Make sure you don't scratch any men tonight, sweetie!"
Hearing the warning, Joan's expression fell and became just as speechless as her big sister.
Chapter 6 - A Year Plus One
After several moments standing in the entryway and staring at Joan, Vicky finally began to crack a smile. "Oh... my... God! John? Is that really you?"
Nodding quickly as she swallowed hard, Joan tried to keep her 'fake female voice' even. "I... uh... that is, Diane had an idea for a better costume than the same old boring ones! W... what do you think?" she asked, turning in place to show off her outfit.
Taking in the sight, Vicky couldn't help but notice the lovely curves now seeming to accentuate Joan's natural femininity in her smooth movements. The 'little black dress' she wore left little to the imagination, though it did cover enough to see how her brother could still be hidden in it all behind makeup, padding, and hair.
"You look... stunning!" Vicky said at last before moving in to embrace Joan. Hugging her quickly, she stepped over and shook her head as she hugged her sister-in-law. "You really out-did yourself this time, Diane! Well come on in, you two! Party's just getting going!"
Half an hour later, lubricated by a Tequila Sunrise with more tequila than sunrise, Joan was feeling much less nervous about being around her sister's friends dressed as she was.
"Take it easy on those, sweetie!" Diane warned her. "Remember, you have to work tomorrow!"
"I have to survive tonight first!" Joan explained. "Here they come!"
Returning to the last arrivals to her costume party, Vicky wasn't alone. "Diane? John? You remember my husband Derek?"
Dressed as a twenties gangster to match his wife's costume, Derek extended a hand to Diane first and then, hesitantly, to Joan. "Sorry I couldn't make the wedding in January! You know how it is... business and all!" Looking Joan up and down, he shook his head. "Last time I saw you John, you were getting your real estate agent's license... and were a man!"
"Stop it, Derek!" Vicky chastised him. "I told you... no making fun or else you might as well get a hotel for tonight before you go back to Portland!"
"Oh, that wasn't making fun!" he scoffed. "Right, John? Women! They just don't get guy humor!" Turning to Vicky, he shrugged. "It's just the way guys are, honey! I mean, if John couldn't take it, he wouldn't have dressed like that! I mean, it's just begging to get a ration!"
"Well, you're not doing that to my baby brother!" Vicky harrumphed. "Go get a drink and talk to Stan and Greg! I wanna talk to my sister for a while!"
Looking at Joan one more time, Derek shook his head and turned away. "Damn! Some costumes are too far!" walking towards the bar as he spoke.
Gesturing to the sofa, Vicky smiled as they sat together. "Pay no attention to him, John! I think you look great! So do most of the other ladies! They couldn't believe it when I told them who you were! Lisa even asked if you were in transition!"
"Speaking of transition, Vic." Joan segued. "I wanted to ask you something. Diane asking me to dress as a woman brought up some... memories."
"Oh! You mean your girl thing when you were little?"
"How much of that do you remember, Vic?" Joan probed. "I only remember a little from when I was five, right before Mom put her foot down about it."
"Five?" Vicky scoffed. "Honey, you were doing that way before five!"
"Really?" Diane inquired. "How long did she have a... um... girl thing?"
Thinking a moment, her sister-in-law was quiet. "Um... best I can remember since two at least. I was barely four then, but I remember I used to think you were my baby sister until I was at least five. You kept talking about being Joan until I was seven, though. That's about the time you were talking about, John."
Squirming at the use of her male name, Joan cleared her throat. "Um... do you remember what I did that was so unusual? All I remember was wanting to play... um... dolls with you. Was there more to it?"
"Oh, John!" Vicky laughed. "That was years ago! You were just a baby then! Don't let it worry you!"
"I'm not worried, per say." she admitted. "More curious. Like I said, I only vaguely remember that time."
"OK." Vicky agreed before sipping her gin and tonic. "Well, let's see. You loved to play dolls, like you said. Um... you played House with me as my baby. You seemed to find any excuse to wear one of my old dresses! We'd play cat’s cradle and jump rope, watch Care Bears and Lady Lovely Locks... on tape! Oh, that was such a fun time! I was pretty sad when you stopped being Joan and were only ever John after that, but I'm still glad to have my baby brother!"
Looking at Joan carefully, Vicky leaned in close enough that she could smell the perfume Joan was wearing. "Say... this is just a costume isn't it? I mean, Lisa isn't right is she?"
Shrugging, Joan looked away embarrassedly. "What if it was serious, Vic?"
Floored for a moment, her big sister thought how to reply. "Well I guess I should first say that I'd still love you. Still, don't you think this is all sort of sudden and out of the blue? I mean, where's this coming from, John? Is this something Diane wants or is it just what you want?"
"I think I can field that one, Vicky." Diane offered, knowing that Joan was just tipsy enough to spill the beans. "I didn't ask Joan to do this. It just sort of... happened."
"Joan?" she replied. "So this is serious! John! Are you sure about this? I mean, what about Dad? And Dave! He'll have a total coronary over this! What about kids? On top of mine and Dave's, I mean after you two divorce, I assume you..."
"I'm not divorcing Joan!" Diane interrupted. "I would never leave her!"
Looking from one to the other, Vicky shook her head to try and think. "Wait! You two want to stay married? I thought you wanted to become a woman?"
"It's not somethin' I wanna do, Vic!" Joan tried to explain without explaining. "It's more something I have to try. For a while, anyway. I'll still be John most of the time, but... I have try and be Joan sometimes. I need to, OK?"
"OK," her sister said softly. "I think I understand. This is something you need to do for yourself to see if it's what you need. I get it! It's a pretty big commitment, so I think it's a good idea to just try it a while before making up your mind! I think it's very... responsible of you!" Pausing she thought ahead. "Um... what about Thanksgiving? You plan on..."
"I'll come to Thanksgiving dinner as John." she reassured her.
"OK! Thanks, John... er... Joan! I just don't think Daddy's ready to see this! No offense, but you'll need to work it up to him... I mean... him up to it!"
Biting her lower lip again, Joan glanced at her big sister. "Um... what about Christmas dinner? I... um... I think I'll need to be Joan that night."
"Why?" Vicky whined.
"Because it's Christmas night." was all she could answer.
Folding her arms, the older sibling caved. "Fine! I guess I understand. What about New Years Eve? It's your first as a married couple!"
Joan looked at her wife. "See?"
"It must be genetic." Diane bantered.
"Did I miss something?" her sister wondered aloud.
"Just something Joan said the other day when I suggested staying in this New Years." Diane related. "Joan said the same thing you did!"
"That's... spooky!" Vicky giggled. "You never were a manly-man, Joh... Joan! Sorry! Old habits!"
"It's OK." Joan blushed. "I understand."
"Still, I don't want you thinking that I'm being... um... what's the word?"
"Rude?" Diane smirked.
"No, that's not... hey!"
"Don't tease the drunk lady." Joan tittered. "She's my big sis!"
"I like the sound of that, little sis!" Vicky laughed along. "Besides, you're just as far gone as I am... and on only one drink! Lightweight!"
"Good thing neither of you is driving home tonight!" Diane pointed out.
"So anyway..." Vicky tried to get the conversation back on track. "You're thinking New Years in this year?"
"If not, it'll be Joan's first New Years." explained Diane. "One or the other."
Vicky huffed. "No last bash with my little bro?" Seeing Joan shaking her head slowly, she sighed. "Fine, I understand. Wonder what Derek is gonna think of all this? He can be a bit of an asshole sometimes! A handy asshole, but still!"
"You don't have to tell him right away." Joan offered. "I mean, I'm still coming to Thanksgiving as John. It can wait until after that."
"Alright. One last holiday with little bro... then 'Hello, sis!' I almost can't wait to see Daddy's face when you tell 'em!" she slurred.
Finishing her drink, Joan giggled. "Me too! 'Hi Daddy! You have two girls now!' I wonder if he'll try to punch me? 'Cuz if he does, I'll just scratch his eyes out!" Raising her hand, she clawed the air like a cat and giggled more, her sister joining in. "And then he'll see what's what!"
Laughing together loudly, with Joan no longer even trying to sound like John, the two reminisced and laughed for hours before Diane took Joan home and poured her into bed.
When she awoke the next morning, Joan's head was pounding as the alarm sounded ten times louder than normal. Reaching over Diane's slumbering form, she turned it off and dragged herself to the bathroom, showering, changing, and then waiting for the sun to rise. Feeling its approach and the slight pain in her arm, Joan began to seriously cry, and was still doing so when she was once more in John's body and buttoning his shirt on.
The week passed and Friday night Joan didn't change for the first time since the whole thing had started. What she hadn't expected was how much she would miss it.
By the time Thanksgiving came and went, life had almost gotten back to normal and Joan felt more like John again as the yearning faded. Still, when the Sunday after the holiday neared sunset, Joan found herself almost giddy to face the next week. Showering and shaving just before sunset while Diane prepared dinner, she sat in the bathroom in her robe, Joan's clothes on the counter, and waited impatiently.
Feeling the first changes, Joan sighed happily, even as mild cramps spoiled the perfection of the moment. Dressing once done, she took the time to style her hair before emerging to enjoy a dinner at home with her wife.
Christmas night was a disappointment. After a disastrous 'coming out' to her father, brother, and brother-in-law, the couple spent the holiday alone. New Years they just stayed in. When Joan came in to work after the holiday, once more stuck in John's body for the next three weeks, she got a surprise.
"John!" Barbara gasped when she saw her employee in a suit and tie. "I... I thought you would be coming into work as... well... Joan!"
Stopping in her tracks, Joan looked at her with a terrified expression. "Um... w... what do you mean, Barb?"
Standing quickly and making her way around the desk, Barbara Moon put an arm gently around Joan's shoulder and lowered her voice, escorting the woman back out onto the street. "Your sister Vicky's a good friend of my daughter, Jenny! She told Jenny all about Joan, and Jenny told me! You don't need to pretend on my account, Joan! I know and it's OK! Why don't you go home, take off that silly disguise, and come back as yourself! The girls in the office will be so disappointed if you don't! They got you a cake!"
Stunned into near speechlessness, Joan stammered. "M... Mrs. Moon, I... I'm not ready to live full-time! Can't... can't I just come to work as John like normal?"
Dismissing her concerns, Barbara scoffed. "Bah! I heard what that idiot father of yours said when you came out! John Michael was always so narrow-minded, even when we were in school together! No! You go home and come back when Joan is ready for work!"
When the woman smiled, patted her on the shoulder, and left her standing on the sidewalk as she went back inside, Joan didn't know what to do. Stuck for options, she did as instructed and returned home in silence.
Walking back into her bedroom in a near fugue state, she sat on the bed heavily, waking her wife.
"Sweetie? What're you doing home? Is something wrong?"
"You could say that!" Joan mumbled. "Vic told Barb's daughter about Joan, who told Barb, who told me to come back as Joan! She... she expects me to come to work that way from now on! What'll we do, honey? I can't look like Joan like this!"
After she sat up and absorbed the new wrinkle in their lives, Diane thought a moment. "OK, if Barbara expects Joan, then you'll have to be Joan!"
"What about my hair, Diane!" she sobbed. "I'd never pass as Joan with this!" she grabbed her now two-inch-long hair, having not bothered with a haircut since deciding she liked it long.
"We'll solve it, sweetie!" she sighed, once more having to get up early.
"I have to be John during the day or else we can't break the curse!"
Looking at her curiously, Diane shook her head to try and clear out the cobwebs. "What makes you say that?"
"The words of the curse!" Joan explained. "It goes, 'by night she lives, the day's his role'! That means I need to be John during the day or else we can't break the curse! Besides, what happens when we do break it and I go back to being John all the time!"
"What makes you think you should choose John after the year's up?"
Looking at her wife curiously, she swallowed. "You mean, you might want Joan for the rest of our lives?"
"I want you!" Diane exhaled in exasperation. "If that's Joan, then that's what I want! I want you to be happy and you're happier as Joan than you ever were as John!"
Thinking about what she was saying, Joan shook her head. "But what if there's a part of you that actually does care and wants John? You could barely think about wanting me as Joan last month!"
"Let's just say I'm starting to appreciate having a wife around!" she smirked. "For the moment, let's stick to the immediate concerns... namely your job!" Calling Barbara, she tried to explain that Joan wasn't ready to come to work as herself yet, buying them until the next week to come up with something. After celebrating their first anniversary, Joan went in to work the next day with a set of hair extensions that closely mimicked the hair she had when the change came each month, as well as a new lady's suit.
Stepping in the front door nervously, Joan was certain the moment she did she was going to be looking for a new job. Diane had reassured her several times that she looked nearly the same as the curse made her appear, but still she feared the rejection the way her family other than Vicky had done.
"Good morning, Barb." Joan stated softly and shyly.
Looking up at her, Barbara smiled broadly. "Nice to see you again... Joan! Girls?"
At that, Joan heard her co-workers stand and give her a round of applause, which only made her even more embarrassed and self-conscious. Fast-walking to her desk, she tried to just get through the day, but it seemed that everyone in the office 'needed' to talk to her about something that day.
Months passed and a new routine got established. Joan would get up, get ready for work as herself, get through the day, come home, change back into John's clothes and pull her hair back into a ponytail, taking on the role she was meant to by the curse. Her monthly times being Joan became not much more than a hiccup in much the same way it is for most women.
By the time October rolled around again, the two had all but forgotten about the curse. It wasn't until Joan's 'time of the month' was due to end that month when something happened to disturb their equanimity.
Getting out of bed on the Tuesday after her week, Joan went through her routine in preparation for the moment of sunrise when she would change back into John's body. Once again the sun's rays peaked through the window and she was stunned when she did not change.
"Diane!" she whispered, shaking the woman's shoulder gently but firmly. "Wake up! I... I'm still Joan, honey! It's over a week before Halloween and it's happening again!"
Rousing quickly, her wife looked at her a moment. "OK, so... just go to work, sweetie. Nothing we can do about it, right?"
Seeing her point, Joan nodded and finished getting ready, heading in, and going through her day as usual. No one even noticed the difference.
After three more mornings of remaining Joan, she came home that Friday, going through her routine of cooking and cleaning while it worried her. At last Diane came home and Joan almost raced up to her.
"Welcome home, love!" she said with a quick kiss and helping her off with her coat as the temperature outside plummeted. Once settled and enjoying the dinner she'd prepared, she cleared her throat. "Honey? We need to talk about this!"
Looking up from her food, it took a moment for Diane to understand what she was talking about. "Oh, you mean you not changing back to John?"
"Yes!" she whined. "I mean, everything I've read about the curse, and curses in general, says that my year and a day aren't up until sundown the day after tomorrow, and that's when I'll have to try and guess what you really want... John or Joan. I don't even know how that's supposed to work! Now this!"
Irritated by the discussion, Diane shook her head dismissively. "Can't we talk about this later, Joan? I had a rough day! I also got that stomach bug going around and couldn't keep my lunch down! I ended up having to work in records all day so I didn't spread it around!"
"Oh, honey!" Joan consoled her, getting up and checking her forehead with her hand. "You do feel a little warm! Why don't you go lie down on the couch? I'll get you your favorite blanket, bring you some soup, and..."
"Joan!" she shouted frustratedly. "Just... stop, OK? I'm fine! I just want to have dinner, relax to a good movie for a bit, and go to bed, OK?"
Nodding shyly, Joan went back to her own food. Once done eating, she washed the dishes before joining Diane on the couch for a movie and cuddle.
That Sunday, the same day she was due to decide, Joan woke to the sound of vomiting coming from the bathroom. Checking on Diane, she found her sitting on the toilet seat with a digital thermometer against her temple.
Hearing the beep from the device, Diane checked it and gulped. "I... I don't have a temperature, Joan."
"Well then why are you..." She interrupted herself when it dawned on her what else could be causing the vomiting. "Honey? Are you..."
"I think I might be." she nodded. "Um... remember last month? The weekend before you became Joan? That was six weeks ago." Getting up, she went to the medicine cabinet and got out the home pregnancy test she'd bought when the two had first gotten married. "Well, it's not past the expiration yet, so..."
Waiting the five minutes for the results was nerve wracking. When at last the timer went off and Diane picked up the stick, she stared at it in silence.
"Well?" Joan begged. "What is it? What does it say?"
Diane cracked a smile. "It says you're gonna be a Mommy!"
Taken aback, she shook her head. "I'm gonna be a Mommy?"
With a short laugh, she walked up and kissed Joan. "Yes! You can't exactly be a Daddy, so you're gonna be a Mommy!"
Stunned a moment, she slowly smiled along with her wife. "I'm... I'm going to be a mother!" Squealing in delight, Joan hugged her tightly.
That night when the sun began to set, she finally knew what she should choose. As the last rays of sunlight vanished, she saw a flash of light and fell into blackness.
Looking around, Joan felt lost and confused. She was standing in the middle of a woodland clearing; a rustic cabin a short distance away with smoke curling out of the stone chimney. Drawn to it, she knocked on the door.
"Come in!" snarled a woman from the other side.
Opening the latch, Joan took a moment to let her eyes adjust to the dark interior before entering. The scent of herbs struck her powerfully as she stepped inside, the door slamming shut behind her and making her spin in place, finally seeing the woman staring at her.
"So! You've had a year and a day and you made an honest effort to embrace womanhood! Now comes the time to..." Pausing in her prepared speech, Maggie looked Joan over quickly. "What the hell is this? You're a woman!"
"I... I know I am." Joan stammered. "You cursed me to be one."
"No, you were a woman before you were cursed!" she snapped back. "How in blazes did you get infected? It can only afflict childless married men!"
Thinking a moment, Joan tried to puzzle it out. "I think you may be confused, ma'am. My... my name is John... or at least that's what my parents named me... John Henderson."
"They may have named you John, but I sense your name is Joan! Just what goes on here? Mike! Mike you blasted devil! Get y'er lazy butt out here!"
Fading into view before her eyes, a handsome young man of about twenty appeared. Wearing faded blue jeans and a polo shirt, he looked anachronistic in the ancient cottage.
"What is it now, Maggie!" the man sighed, not appearing to even notice Joan's presence. "I already told you that you can't have a TV, computer, internet access, or a smartphone! You have that cauldron and that's all you get! No freebies!"
"I didn't call you here for that!" she groused. "I called you about her!" she pointed a crooked finger at Joan.
Finally turning to look at the third member of the party, the man looked Joan over and smiled. "What about her?"
"That curse of mine's gone sour!" Maggie moaned. "It cursed a woman!"
"No it didn't." he denied with a smile.
"Yes it did!" she insisted. "Think I don't know my own curse? She's got it!"
"Yep. She sure does." he freely admitted.
Staring at him blankly a moment, Maggie stepped up to him with her hands on her hips. "Don't you be smart with me, Mike! You just said my curse didn't nab a woman, then admit she's got it! Well how did she get it then?"
"She's trans." he shrugged. "What's the big whoop?"
"What in the world is trans supposed to be?" she argued shrilly. "Some newfangled kind of witch?"
Shaking his head and laughing, Mike looked at the floor. "If you spent more time gazing into that cauldron watching the world change instead of watching reruns of Bewitched and Charmed all day, you might know what's going on out there!"
"Don't give me no lip, Mike!" she snapped. "That don't explain nothin'!"
"Yes it does."
"No it don't!"
"Excuse me." Joan interrupted their argument. "Um... may I..."
"Hush up!" Maggie barked. "You stay out of this!"
"That's no way to talk to a lady." Mike stated calmly.
"I'll talk how I like!" the witch insisted. "This is my purgatory!"
"Still no reason to be rude to the poor girl!"
Sighing, Maggie saw she was getting nowhere. "Alright. You explain to me how a woman is here trying to break my curse, then! How can she even be here if she didn't get it?"
Looking at Joan, Mike smiled kindly at her. "Come here, Joan. No need to be afraid."
Stepping closer, Joan swallowed hard. "H... how do you know my name?"
With a quick laugh, Mike held out a hand. "It's my job to know!" seeing her tentatively take it, he gently led her to stand next to him. "OK, Maggie. What do you see when you look at her?"
"A woman!" the witch growled. "That's the problem!"
"Would it surprise you to know she was born in a male body?"
Furrowing her brow, Maggie shook her head. "So she was under a different witch's curse before mine got her?"
"Nope." Mike stated smugly. "Guess again!"
"Well she didn't chose to be a woman on a whim! She's got no magic!"
"You're right!" he agreed. "She was made that way from the beginning!"
Puzzling that for a moment, she shook her head dismissively. "That don't make no sense! Why?"
"There's lots of reasons women and men on Earth are born to the wrong bodies." he shrugged. "In her case it was to break your curse... among other reasons."
"You mean ta tell me that your Almighty shoved a girl in a boys body, just ta' thwart the curse I've had runnin' for three hundred thirty-three years?"
"Not the only reason." he admitted. "It was also so she could have a baby with her wife!"
"Impossible!" she cried. "My curse won't affect a man whose wife has a baby or who ain't married yet! That's what made it the perfect curse! The only way out was ta' have their wife love 'em after they spent a year actin' like one half the time and likin' it! That's what the rage was for! Teach 'em to be nice and subservient! No woman without his baby would love a man like that!"
"See... that's where you're wrong, Maggie." Mike smiled. "Times changed. Women can and are allowed to love other women on Earth now. They finally stopped listening to the letter of His words and started listening to the intent of them! Joan's wife Diane loves her... and they conceived their child after your curse took her."
"OK, but she still has to guess her wife's secret desire, to have the man or the woman!" Maggie pointed out. "She guesses wrong and the curse stays!"
Turning to Joan, Mike raised his brows curiously. "She is right, Joan. You have to choose!"
Remembering the wonderful gift they'd been given earlier that day, Joan was torn. I... I want to stay a woman... and I think Diane will love me as one no matter what... but it also means we can't have any more kids... so she might want John just for that reason alone. Considering everything, Joan looked Maggie in her black eyes.
"I choose to remain Joan."
"Spirits of the wild!" the witch cackled happily. "You guessed wrong!"
Joan felt the terror of the moment flood her as thunder roared through the simple wooden building. Falling to her knees, she began to weep.
"Forgive me, Diane! I thought I knew you well enough! It... it's my fault!"
As the wind roared around the building and the storm outside grew, Mike shook his head and smiled.
"No she didn't." he stated smugly.
The storm dying, silence filled the room.
"She didn't what?" the witch asked confusedly.
"She didn't guess wrong."
"Yes she did!" Maggie retorted.
"No she didn't." Mike said calmly.
"She did so!" the hag insisted. "Why would her wife want a woman?"
"Because I am a woman and Diane loves me and wants me to be happy!" Joan answered after standing back up and drying her eyes. Beginning to glow, Joan felt her feet leave the floor as the light suffused her to the marrow, warming her with the light of love and acceptance.
Michael flew up to her and took her hand as his wings sparkled back into view, guiding her through the wall of the building as it crumbled. "Don't look back, Joan." he warned her.
Hearing Maggie's screams of frustration and anguish as her curse collapsed on itself and ended her eternal rule over a small slice of the afterlife, Joan was tempted by curiosity and empathy to look back, but heeded Mike's advice and kept her eyes looking forward.
Racing into the sky, the world exploded in light and she was once more in her living room, only a moment after sunset.
"Diane!" she shouted as she leapt to her feet.
Startling her away from looking at her phone as she booked a visit to her OB/GYN, Diane clutched her chest. "Joan! Don't scare me like that!"
Running over to her wife, Joan sank to one knee. "It happened, Diane!" she cried tears of joy. "I... was told to choose... and I chose to remain Joan... and I was right! It is what you wanted! You do love me! Before I only believed it! Now I know it!" Taking Diane in her arms, Joan kissed her passionately.
Reveling in the moment, her loving wife smiled into the kiss. Breaking off their passionate embrace, she held Joan at arm's length. "Wait a minute! Does that mean you broke the curse? You're Joan forever now?"
Joan nodded happily. "It's done! I'm Joan now and forever!" Placing her hand on Diane's belly, she grinned. "And I'm gonna be a great Mommy!"
Epilogue
Looking out the window, Joan smiled slightly as the sun slipped below the horizon, the waxing crescent moon barely visible and poised to set in a few hours. It had been barely a year since that final time she'd transformed, the cause of her happiness. Turning away, she continued to set the table.
"Sweetie?" Diane yelled from their bedroom. "Can you give me a hand?"
"Be right there!" the woman shouted back. Checking the table quickly, she turned to help. "What is it?" she asked, entering the room.
"Can you zip me up?" begged Diane.
"You used to be able to reach!" Joan quipped as she pulled the zipper up her wife's back, slipping her hands down to rest on Diane's hips lovingly.
With a sly smile, the blonde turned around to face her, resting her arms on Joan's shoulders. "I lost some flexibility during bed rest." she excused. "Two months of not much activity made me lose my limber!"
Kissing her gently, Joan shook her head. "We'll have to fix that!" Just when Diane was about to ruin both of their painted lips, the shrill cry of a baby broke the mood. "Your turn!" Joan sighed, slipping back and away.
Groaning, Diane's arms fell to her sides. "Oh! Can't you take a second turn, sweetie?" she whined. "I still need to fix my hair before they get here!"
Half smiling, the dark-haired woman shook her head. "OK, but you know the deal! You take the next two and you owe me a favor!"
"Done!" the exhausted woman agreed in haste, running for the bathroom.
"I'll just put it with all the others you owe me for all those foot rubs I gave you last June!" Joan laughed as she headed towards the baby's room.
Picking up the wailing four-month-old, Joan pouted. "Aw! What's the matter, little Mikey? You can't be hungry! Mamma just fed you! You're not wet, so you must have a little bubble in your tummy!" she cooed. Grabbing a baby blanket, she flung it over her shoulder easily out of long habit, rested her son against her, and began patting his back. "There! Mamma will fix it!"
Joan carried the infant into the living room as she gently bounced him and kept patting his back when the bell rang. Sighing, she headed to the door. "I got it, honey!" Stopping her baby care a moment, she peaked outside and smiled. "Come on in!" she said just loud enough to be heard outside.
Opening the door, Janice stepped in from the cool outside and smiled at the mother and baby. "Hi, Joan!" she almost whispered as she crept up to the two, grinning at the infant. Stopping short, she was pulled back slightly.
"Will ya' let me help ya' with yer coat off first, Jan?" Frank almost laughed. Taking the woman's light coat, he removed his own and hung both up by the door. "Jeez, woman! The baby's not goin' anywhere!"
Cooing over the baby boy a moment, Janice finally settled down. "I'm sorry, Joan!" she apologized. "He's just so adorable!"
With a light rumble from her son, Joan shook her head as Michael released his gas bubble with only a little spit-up on the blanket. "You can have one of your own, you know!" she quipped as she lay her son in the crib that took up one corner of the living room after cleaning his mouth.
Looking over her shoulder at Frank, Janice lowered her voice. "I... I think he might be ready to think about that. Maybe next week we can start trying."
"I hope so." Joan sighed as she gave a quick hug hello to her best friend. "You two deserve to move on with life!"
"Thanks ta' you!" Frank grinned as he waited his turn to hug his savior. "I'll never fer'git last Halloween when I didn't change! Jan had Diane on the line quicker'n anythin'! Speakin' a' who, where's she at?" he looked around.
"Right here!" she chirped, coming out. "Good to see you two!" Giving each a hug hello, she gestured to the table. "Come on! Dinner's getting cold!"
The four quickly sat and served, saying a quick prayer of thanks that meant more to them than to most families. Enjoying a moment of peace while baby Michael slept, Joan nodded to her guest. "Oh, Frank? The cabinet door works much better now! You don't need to keep doing those things, you know!"
"I want ta'!" the man spoke around a mouthful of food. "Least I can do!"
"The crib and changing table were more than enough!" she sighed. "You're gonna start making me feel bad for accepting your help! I'm just all thumbs when it comes to being handy, though."
"Bah!" the man dismissed her concerns. "I have to do something with my new basement workshop! Besides, it makes me feel useful! "
"You can be useful in about ten days, Frank!" Janice insinuated slyly. "We start trying again then!" Grimacing slightly, the woman moved in her seat to try and get more comfortable.
Frank didn't need to ask what was wrong when he saw it. He knew. Reaching out a hand, he held it open to her and smiled at her in sympathy when she took it. "I get ya', Jan! It'll pass... and at least you can get somthin' out of it!"
Laughing together, the four continued eating and talking; making the most of their unusual friendship and the pains once shared by all.
--
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Roberta Elder