YALL I JUST WATCHED THE FIRST EPISODE OF SEASON 3 OF YOU AND WHEN I SAY I WANT TO WRITE A FIC FOR IT
YALL I JUST WATCHED THE FIRST EPISODE OF SEASON 3 OF YOU AND WHEN I SAY I WANT TO WRITE A FIC FOR IT AH!! IS THAT LIKE A DUMB IDEA??
-
anaviieiraaa liked this · 2 years ago -
fadingtale liked this · 2 years ago -
shortblackgirl liked this · 2 years ago -
hoosurdaddy liked this · 3 years ago -
nymossomyn liked this · 3 years ago -
stelcnas liked this · 3 years ago -
basicallyawoodnymph liked this · 3 years ago -
milfsrcool liked this · 3 years ago -
fungustime1 liked this · 3 years ago -
ann-romero liked this · 3 years ago -
thanossexual liked this · 3 years ago -
thelibraryofdeez liked this · 3 years ago -
bearenout liked this · 3 years ago -
justarandomwriterr liked this · 3 years ago -
hopester08 liked this · 3 years ago -
targaryenluvs liked this · 3 years ago -
btsarmy456 liked this · 4 years ago -
ladolcedea liked this · 4 years ago -
littlestitious2 liked this · 4 years ago -
vivicky liked this · 4 years ago -
missunderstoodxoxo liked this · 4 years ago -
purplefair liked this · 4 years ago -
secretly-a-weeb liked this · 4 years ago -
kianasluvr liked this · 4 years ago -
h11ms4lty liked this · 4 years ago -
buckssstuff liked this · 4 years ago -
spicybibimbap liked this · 4 years ago -
broadwayandnetflix liked this · 4 years ago -
cynosurenorthstar liked this · 4 years ago -
comfort-dealer liked this · 4 years ago -
eggsmokes liked this · 4 years ago -
overduelibrarybooks liked this · 4 years ago -
antxriic liked this · 4 years ago -
alexmarie29 liked this · 4 years ago -
bobo-bush liked this · 4 years ago -
qardasngan liked this · 4 years ago -
yournevergonnamakeitsworld liked this · 4 years ago -
cozyhepburn liked this · 4 years ago -
unknowngirlirl liked this · 4 years ago -
0n3-d4y liked this · 4 years ago -
peachydoki liked this · 4 years ago -
stellervoid liked this · 4 years ago -
bubblegumholland liked this · 4 years ago -
spookyfreddyyy liked this · 4 years ago
More Posts from Yesimwriting
OKAY HI HELLO DSUDJH just read the prologue and chapter 1 of âBloodroots in the Suburbsâ and I'm already so in love with it!! The way you write is just, wow! Definitely going to check some more of your works soon
HII HELLOOO thank you!!! you complimented my writing so im legally obligated to tell you that im in love with you now lmao
okay...maybe I did it...https://yesimwriting.tumblr.com/post/665231245127614464/bloodroot-in-the-suburbs-prologueÂ
YALL I JUST WATCHED THE FIRST EPISODE OF SEASON 3 OF YOU AND WHEN I SAY I WANT TO WRITE A FIC FOR IT AH!! IS THAT LIKE A DUMB IDEA??
felt
just saw Eternals, high-key wanna write for them even though i lack time.
BloodRoots in the Suburbs - chapter two
Chapter Two: Kill Habits, Not people
prologueÂ
Chapter One: The BabysitterÂ
*pls let me know if you prefer longer chapters with longer times between updates or shorter chapters that are up faster,, iâm trying to work out a writing schedule lol
a/n yall i just woke up and the amount of support this fic has gotten has made my heart feel so warm!! love yall!! and if you like it so far just wait until we get to the chapters i need to listen to taylor swift to write lmaoÂ
...also off topic but theyâre putting harry styles in the mcu?? yeah they did that for me i love itÂ
Series Summary:Â Bloodroots are such a strange flower--white and innocent looking yet undeniably poisonous. It has no place in the safest neighborhood in CA. Then again, neither do you. The suburbs are killing you, and no one understands that...at least you think no one does. I see that in the way you roll your eyes when your sister presses the issue of when youâre going to get back on your feet. I see that restlessness when youâre in the small plot of land that youâve actually managed to turn into some type of garden. I see you; I understand you. And if it wasnât for the confines I bear to protect my son, Iâd let you know that. But for now, I settle for knowing that the two of us are equally trapped, and I take some solace in that. I feel bad about it, I do, considering that from what Iâve gathered you spent most of your life being considered the perfect, ideal golden girl that was nothing but potential. And now youâre no longer the gifted child, the one thatâs first to raise their tiny hand in class, the one that knows everything. But thatâs okay--because Iâll make my selfishness up to you.
Chapter Summary: Whatâs a cup of coffee between two neighbors? Nothing, until Joe realizes that people die a lot easier than habits do.Â
Joeâs POV
Who the fuck is Ashton?
Your sister is texting you to not come home for awhile in case heâs on the way to her house. Your house.
Maybe the person calling you is more of a problem than I thought. I want to help you, I really do, but Iâm not sure I can justify it yet. Iâm not alone anymore, I have a son to think about, and with how impulsive Love is, I need to keep myself under control. Henry canât grow up with two murderers as parents, heâll end up in the system and I know what that does to a child.Â
But I wonât let anyone hurt you, either. I promise.
You come back with no warning. âHey, have you seen my phone? I thought it was in my back pocket, but--â
I turn the screen of your phone off. âJust found it.âÂ
You donât even look at me oddly before taking it. Youâre not suspicious at all. Are you always this trusting? The kind of trusting people like Ashton have no problem taking advantage of? Your home screen turns on--another text? From your sister or the source of the problem? You frown, your eyebrows faintly drawing together.Â
âSomething wrong?â
This isnât about confirming what I know. What Iâm really trying to figure out is how much you trust me, how much youâre willing to tell me. You shrug off your concern, shoving your phone into the back pocket of your jeans as you look back at me. âWorried older sisters, a tale as old as time.âÂ
Worried older sisters? Are you really this dismissive about the issue, or are you putting up a brave front for the neighbor you donât really know yet? I thought we already had more than that.Â
â...And ex-boyfriendâs tend to exasperate that instinct.â
So there is more of a connection here than just a distant, neighborly politeness. You let me know that itâs not all in my head, and Iâm thankful for that. Iâm also thankful that I know what Ashton is. Ex-boyfriend. An ex-boyfriend so bad you still feel the need to downplay everything heâs done to you, but you canât hide all of it. Not from anyone that takes the time to note the look behind your eyes. Not from anyone that cares to pay attention. The rest of the world might be ignoring you, willing to let you fend for yourself, but not me, y/n. Youâre not alone.
I wish there was a way to let you know that. But I canât say it to you, not yet. âA boyfriend from New York?âÂ
Your frown makes me regret me regret mentioning where youâre from. The fact that youâre from New York and that you left the city in less than amicable circumstances is no secret. I understand needing to disappear and having limited options, but you picked a hell of place for privacy.Â
âYeah.â You wipe your hands on your jeans. âHeâs from New York.â
I can save this, there has to be something I can say to get you to stop looking like a kicked puppy. It might have been too soon to test the waters around the New York subject. Youâre resigned, tired about the inevitable conversation that forces you to relive what you believe are mistakes.
âAnd you need a break from New York?â An obvious question, I know, but I need to hear you say it. Maybe you donât belong there anymore. Iâm not deluded enough to think that you could ever belong here, but there must be somewhere...not LA, not again. Maybe you belong somewhere like DC now, the Washington Post would be lucky to have you, and there are a lot of bookstores there, old bookstores that could--
No. No. Thereâs no way for me to insert myself into your future. I canât...Iâm not supposed to try to. I hold Henry a little tighter, trying to remind myself why I have to be careful. âFrom him--I donât need a break, I need an early retirement with a...401K.â Youâre funnier than I realized, Iâll never doubt you again. âFrom New York, I donât know. I canât live with my sister forever, but I--sometimes I feel like I need the city, which is a weird thing to feel.âÂ
Youâre meant for more than the mundane, of course being surrounded by it makes you feel like youâre disappearing. I understand that; I understand you. âItâs not.âÂ
Your eyes soften. Youâre not used to being seen without someone asking for something in return. In New York, you thought people were seeing the real you when you wrote, but the moment the editors saw your talent, they exploited it. They squandered you, and youâre just starting to see it.Â
âThere are other cities.â You have a talent for knowing when youâre treading on serious grounds. I can feel you turning away, maneuvering your feelings in a way that has to be practiced. âNews never ends in Washington.âÂ
I smile more than I should. Already, weâre on the same wave length. Like weâre meant to be, like I was always supposed to find you. Find you here, not in New York where you believed that you ran the world and I believed that my one was Guinevere Beck. Here--where I need you and you need me.Â
âI think DCâs worthwhile.â Iâm trying to let you go, I really am. âBut I...I donât know much about it.âÂ
You nod once, no sign of rejection on your face. âNeither do I, to be honest.â I want to tell you that we can learn about it together. I want you to picture a world in which weâre together. I want--I want you. âWell, thank you for letting me watch Henry, I should go before I overstay my welcome.â Like you could ever do that. âYou must be tired from work.â
Do you really think I donât want you here? And what about the text your sister sent you? Are you going to dismiss it? Maybe when you brushed it off as your sister being overprotective, you werenât trying to appear together in front of a stranger. Is that how you actually feel? Your sister seemed to be scared of him. She said he was crazy enough to get on a plane and come here. He knows you donât want to talk to him, he could be dangerous. For all we know, he wants to hurt you, y/n.Â
Your phone rings. I know you want to hide the way youâre feeling, but I see it. The way your body tenses. âNot too tired.â You nod once, so distracted youâre not questioning why I donât ask about the phone call. âDo you want me to walk you back?âÂ
You almost smile. I can feel what you almost say: itâs just across the street. âI um...I think Iâm going to go to that coffee place at the end of main street before I go back.â At least youâre listening to your sister. âMy sister doesnât keep it in the house anymore, I think a part of her believes that if itâs in her cupboards the toxins will leak into everything and somehow make it into her uterus.â The moment the words are out of your mouth, you cringe, shutting your mouth. âI canât believe I just said that out loud. I sound like a sucky person and I just said the word âuterusâ to you.â You grimace again. âAnd now Iâve said it twice.â You shake your head, apologetic. âIâm just gonna go before I say something else dum--âÂ
âNo, no.â Itâs nowhere near the worst Iâve heard. Love felt comfortable expressing all of her pregnancy. âI um...I could actually go for some coffee.â I shouldnât be doing this. I--I have to do this. Someone could be after you. âAnd Henry needs his daily walk.â Too definitive, I need to ease off. âIf itâs not an imposition. You know, if you want your alone time, I totally get it, after dealing with--âÂ
âNo.â Your chin tilts less than an inch upwards. You want me to go with you. âI like company, but definitely donât feel like you have to.âÂ
âI definitely donât feel like I have to.â
You smile. The look erases all of my hesitation. âOkay...then letâs go.âÂ
With Henry in his stroller, we walk outside. I try to casually watch your sisterâs house--thereâs no new car in the drive way, and thereâs nothing to indicate that someone thatâs not supposed to be there is inside.
 As we pass the houses down the street, you stay at what you consider a safe distance...but it wouldnât take much for me to get our hands to touch. You want me to have the option to brush our fingers together, the option to hold your hand.Â
All of us walking together to get a mid afternoon coffee. It feels natural. Like weâre supposed to be one family. You feel it the way you felt our connection in your front yard. You still donât have a name for this feeling, and itâs starting to pull at you, but youâre not as uncomfortable as you were the first time you felt it. Thatâs how weâll be--youâll see that thereâs nothing scary about being seen as long as Iâm the one looking.
Iâm going to let you go. I let out a breath, doing all I can to focus on whatâs directly in front of me. Henry is calm in his stroller, but his presence is enough to remind me what Iâm holding myself back for. Iâll do anything for my son, which means I need to stay with Love, which means thereâs no guarantee I can protect you from her.Â
âYouâre going to be disappointed in my coffee order.â The comment comes with no warning, and neither does your sudden lightness.
âDisappointed?â I know you have to hear the smile in my voice, but thereâs no point in trying to hide how your good humor makes everything feel right. This is how itâs supposed to be.Â
You nod, turning your head slightly to watch me as you walk. âMy coffee order is painfully un-enigmatic.âÂ
Un-enigmatic? I laugh. Okay, Iâll give you that one. âOne, youâre implying that a coffee order is a worthy indicator of whether one is or isnât an enigma. Two, un-enigmatic isnât a word.âÂ
âIs to.âÂ
âIs not.âÂ
Your eyebrows draw together sharply and your lips press together into a line I have no choice but to describe as obstinate, but the corner of your mouth betrays you, tilting upwards and letting me know that youâre fighting a smile. Our argument is nothing more than a way to pass time, but your expression just makes me want to give in. It makes me want to give in on anything. You can be right about everything forever.Â
âI used it in an article once, multiple editors read it, and none crossed it out.â
The warmth that returned to you is beginning to fade. Youâre thinking of The New York Times again, of what they did to you. Of what that asshole editor accused you of so that he could get away with the way he harasses female writers. âYeah, and since when is the New York Times known for their judgement?â You smile, but itâs nothing like the one before. This one is for my sake. âNot since they let you go, thatâs for sure.âÂ
Your grin isnât exactly happy, but itâs not sad either. Iâll take it for now. âThanks.âÂ
âIâm serious, the idiot that fired you is going to regret it.âÂ
You tilt your head slightly to get a better look at me. âThe âidiot that fired meâ has two Pulitzer Prizes.âÂ
âSo?â How could he be better than you? Youâre half his age and already working directly beneath him. He probably used that scandal as an excuse to get rid of you before you could lap him. âOne day, youâll have three.âÂ
You drop your head when you think Iâm not looking so that I canât see the way youâre trying to fight a real smile. Iâm not exaggerating, y/n. Look at how far youâve come with no one particularly looking out for you. Imagine how successful you could be if I was there for you. âAnd youâll be able to say you knew me when.âÂ
Weâre only a few steps away from the coffee shop. âThat I will.âÂ
I try to open the door for you, but you beat me to it, holding it open so that I can push the stroller through the entrance. When the door falls shut, you donât hesitate to wander towards the back of the coffee shop. You stop at a table thatâs tucked far away enough from the window that people walking by wonât immediately notice you, but not so far that youâre distant from sunlight. Your life must revolve around that--wanting to be in the sun, but being afraid of the window.Â
We sit across from each other, Henryâs stroller tucked out of the way, between a wall and our table. âSo what is your un-enigmatic coffee order?âÂ
You place your hands on the table, leaning towards me in a way that makes the collar of your shirt lower itself slightly, hinting at just a little more cleavage than what would be considered polite. Are you being more than friendly? âCaramel iced latte, extra cold foam.â
...At least youâre honest.Â
âDonât laugh.âÂ
I tried not to, y/n. âI am--Iâm not laughing.â Your eyebrows draw together, skeptical. âI am just appreciating your honesty.âÂ
The way you glare at me makes it even harder to keep a straight face. âAppreciating my honesty? Really?âÂ
âYes.â You donât believe me and I canât even blame you for it. âYour coffee order isnât funny.â You raise an eyebrow. âItâs not, itâs the--itâs the way you presented it. Who describes a coffee order as a way to determine whether someone is or isnât an enigma?âÂ
You blink, a hint of doubt on your face. âWhatâs your coffee order?â
A change of topic, Iâll let you have it. âHalf a packet of cream.âÂ
Your eyebrows draw together, frowning in surprise. âThatâs it? Thatâs your whole order?â I nod once, you frown in a way that makes it hard to keep my smile in check. âThat is so not fair.â
Okay, you canât get mad at me for laughing at that. âHow?âÂ
âBecause thatâs the kind of coffee order thatâs like...full of intrigue, and mystery and--â You sigh, grinning, âDonât pretend you donât know what Iâm talking about.â
I wish I could. âSave your debate for when I get back with our coffees.âÂ
You turn as I stand. âI can get my coffee--âÂ
âNo, no, you stay here with Henry.â Youâre not convinced, youâre not used to people doing things for you the way you do things for them. I turn away before you can say anything else. Youâll get used to people doing things for you.Â
I walk up to the counter, ordering the coffee and paying for it as the barista makes it. When I come back, youâre looking at your phone. Do you look worried, or is that in my head? You smile when you see me, pocketing your phone as I sit down across from you.Â
âYour unremarkable, un-mysterious coffee.âÂ
You like that Iâm joking, that we can have banter. âThank you.â You take the cup from me, the tips of our fingers brushing. Could that have been on purpose? âHow much do I owe you for the coffee.âÂ
âNothing.â Itâs the truth--after all youâve given me, whatâs the cost of a five dollar cup of coffee?Â
You donât seem to see it my way, thatâs why youâre glaring in a way I think you imagine is intimidating. âJoe.âÂ
I take a sip of coffee. âY/n.â I use the same sharp tone that you used. âHey, I still owe you money from babysitting.âÂ
âI told you, you donât--âÂ
âAnd I told you, youâre getting paid whether you want to be or not.âÂ
You hold your hands up in mock defense, easing into your seat. âFine, but this better come out of that.â
I mean this with only love, y/n, but thatâs never happening. âOkay, I concede.â Your eyebrows draw together, youâre still suspicious. I need to change the subject. âSo how was Henry?âÂ
âAmazing, you may have the worldâs greatest baby.âÂ
âHe was putting on a show for you.âÂ
You laugh slightly between sips of your drink. âSarah told me you guys were new here.âÂ
âWe moved for Henry, you canât beat the schools.â You nod, even though school districts have nothing to do with your world. You want to understand me. âI lived in LA for awhile, but Iâm from Brooklyn.â
The corner of your mouth turns upwards. The city, something in your wheelhouse, something you know how to understand. âBrooklyn?â I nod. âDo you ever miss New York?âÂ
Oh, this conversation. Thereâs only so much I can tell you about New York. âSometimes, but sometimes you have to know when itâs time to let something go.â Like this--I need to take my own advice and let you go. Henry coos, reminding me of the permanent link I have to the unstable monster that would kill you if she ever even suspected Iâve thought about you.
âYouâre right.â You nod, trying not to frown. Youâre thinking of what happened to you, of what youâve lost. âBut sometimes thatâs easier said than done.âÂ
I know exactly how you feel. âIf letting go was easy, thereâd be less screwed up people in the world.âÂ
You tilt your head to the side, something warm outshining the shadows of your past. See, y/n, I can help you. âThatâs fair.â You take a sip of coffee, a bit of foam lingering above your top lip.Â
âYou um...youâve got some...â You look down, embarrassed as you wipe at the spot right next to the patch of foam.Â
âDid I get it?âÂ
âUm.â Youâre watching me carefully...or is it expectantly? I move my hand slowly, giving you every opportunity to stop me that I know you wonât take. My thumb brushes against the top of your lip, the rest of my fingers gently pressing beneath your jaw. The foam isnât there anymore, but my thumb still is.Â
I canât move away. I donât want--I canât let you go. There has to be a way for things to work out...donât I owe it to us to try? Youâre my one, y/n, I know it. Iâve always believed in the concept, the one person youâre meant for, your one soulmate. Candace wasnât committed, Beck was a child that kept choosing ways to hurt herself, Natalie only saw me as entertainment, and Love...sheâs unstable. But you--youâre worth fighting for. It might be messy, but there has to be a way, love always finds a way. I donât have to be some kind of handcuff, maybe thereâs a way for us to have everything. Maybe thereâs a way for us to have Washington together.Â
Iâve felt sure that I found the one before, but this...itâs different. I know it is.Â
 I brush my thumb along the slope of your lips, feeling your warmth, your softness. You hold still, your eyes are wide, like a deer caught in headlights.Â
You want this too, you feel our connection and it scares you for so many reasons. Youâre not the type to go after a married man, much less a married neighbor with an infant son. And after what happened in New York, youâre in no state to take risks. Youâre also just generally scared of being known and cared for--probably because of Ashton, who--if your sisterâs texts are to be believed--probably a stalker.Â
All of these things are reasons for you to back away, but you donât. If anything, you lean closer as much as you dare, just angling your head slightly. Your lips part and I hold my breath. What are you going to say?
A ringing sound forces reality to crash around us. You pull back completely, muttering a quick--and awkward--thank you, before checking your phone. If I didnât have it out for Ashton before, I really do now.
You frown--are you upset that we were interrupted or is something else wrong? âAnything important?â
âNo,â the response comes a little too fast, and you canât quite look me in the eye. Thatâs okay--Iâm affected by the moment we just shared too. I can be patient, I can put in the work that I need to so that you can feel comfortable being cared for. âI um--loose ends in New York.âÂ
Loose ends that fly out because you wonât answer their obsessive phone calls? âOh.âÂ
âNothing bad,â you assure me with one quick nod. âEditors keep reaching out.âÂ
Oh, a tale as old as the social media age. You may not have benefited from a post #metoo world, but they still want you to be apart of it. They want to make you the latest of the club of petty, scorned women. Theyâll have you work on a book a ghostwriter helps you with so that it can published before the news cycle can get bored of you and then theyâll send you to onto one of those talk shows where women yell at other women in the name of empowerment. They want you to take an injustice and re-market it into something viral--itâs a brutal blow to feminism, but as far as career strategies go, itâs not the worst.Â
But you donât want that. You donât really know what you want, thatâs why you came here...into a town that could have come from that universe in A Wrinkle in Time. âOh, should I expect a tell-all?âÂ
You look away from your phone screen, wrinkling your nose. The look tells me I was right about you. You find the idea of exploiting what youâve gone through nauseating. Maybe one day youâll be able to talk about it, write about it even, and make the asshole that decided his dick was worth more than your career suffer, but you need time. You need someone to help you heal. âNo, I canât even write a cohesive email about what happened let alone--â You cut yourself off, reaching for your cup even though most of whatâs left is ice. You donât want to talk about this, especially not with me yet. Iâm still a little more than a nice stranger, someone to be polished around. I can wait until Iâm not, so I let it go. âAt this point theyâd take anything, but...âÂ
Anything? Now thatâs different--donât get me wrong, itâs still an exploitation of what you went through so that some publishing house can get money, but at least theyâre letting you pick the format. âBut?âÂ
You tap your nails on the counter. Youâre nervous now. âIâve always wanted to write a book, but like this...it feels like--god, this is going to sound stupid.âÂ
How could anything causing you so much stress be stupid? âYouâve told me your coffee order, I doubt itâs worse than that.âÂ
You look up again, almost smiling. You appreciate the joke. âIt feels like cheating.â I donât react because I know from the way that you blurted out the words like you were ripping off the worldâs most adhesive bandaid, thereâs more. âIf I write a book, and it gets attention and everything Iâve ever wanted works out...and itâs because agents and publishers were interested in me because of what he did--it feels like cheating. It feels like my entire career will be his, and thatâs exactly what he said.â Your eyes are wider now, practically glazed over. Please donât cry over him--I donât know what Iâll do if I see you cry over him. I donât know if I have the self control to not search up flights to New York the second you walk away if you start crying because of him. âForget I said anything--I told you it was stupid. And itâs not like Iâve really been able to write anything since...â
It was worse than the papers said. I donât know how anyone could talk to you about it and not see it. He did more than just offer you something...he really hurt you. The manâs name had been kept out of several articles, but I know he wouldnât be hard to find. He wouldnât be hard to get rid of. You werenât the first young writer he said he wanted to work with, youâre just the first to say something. There are no doubt more victims who were silenced, who settled in court but got nothing. It wouldnât make me a bad person to get rid of him. I know I donât want to do things that could make me a bad parent, but I donât think this would. I mean, I donât want to raise my son in a world in which men like the one that hurt women like you get away with it with no consequences.Â
âY/n, there is no world, no universe, even, in which he gets credit for anything you do.â You nod, your expression softening slightly but not exactly relaxing. I donât blame you, youâve probably been told that by every person that youâve told that to. I watch you carefully, desperate for any clue on how to help. How can I take your hurt away, y/n? Tell me and Iâll do it, please. âDo you want him dead?â
Shit--I shouldnât have said that. Youâve known me for less than 48, you donât have any background on my sense of humor yet, maybe I can play it off as a joke? Shit, youâre still looking at me like that.Â
âWhat?âÂ
âI kind of exaggerated, a little, but I was just trying to see how angry you are. Not that youâd kill him, or that anyone would, but thereâs this saying about anger and sadness and how most anger is just sadness...but thatâs bullshit, because you should be angry--but not murderously angry, itâs--âÂ
You save me from myself with a laugh. An almost teary, awkward laugh. âRelax, I didnât think you meant it literally.â Thank god. âI donât know how angry I am--it comes and goes, and--sometimes I think I wouldnât mind pulling off a kind of The Count of Monte Cristo-esque situation.â Are you joking? Do you want him gone? âI shouldnât have said that.âÂ
âAt least itâs the murder that involves the least violence.âÂ
You donât quite smile, but at least youâre relaxed again. âThank you.âÂ
âFor what?âÂ
You shrug before relaxing further into your seat. Youâre trying to shrink away from me, from what you feel. âThe company, the coffee, not making me feel crazy.âÂ
âAnytime.â You nod, finally smiling again. âNo I mean it--literally âany timeâ, my only options for friends here are men that virtual reality their porn, and spend a lot of time in the wilderness for no reason other than that they can, and men that make me drink caviar flavored, zero calorie energy drinks.â You laugh, the sound so genuine all of my bad thoughts are forgotten.Â
âThe wives are nice,â your defense is weak and you know it, âif you actively try to block out most of their gossiping.â So thatâs why youâve buried yourself away, confining yourself to your backyard, and only bearing the real world out of necessity. âNatalie seemed the nicest, but that might just be because she wanted a friend.â Of course you liked Natalie. âItâs terrible, what happened to her.âÂ
âYeah, it really is.âÂ
âDid you know her well?âÂ
Outside of our almost-affair and then covering up her murder? No, not really. âShe was right next door, I saw her but we didnât talk often. Had a glass of wine with her once, around the time I moved in...but I didnât know her well enough to be able to talk about her too much now without feeling...â How do I word this in order to get you to stop asking questions I canât let you ask?Â
âI get it. Grieving someone you barely knew because they suffered a tragedy feels weird and kind of wrong if you do it openly.â ...Yeah, not quite, but letâs go with that. âIâm glad youâre honest.â
 Ah, so youâve met Sherry and you know about the way she twisted Natalieâs interference as a tool to gain more followers. You donât know it, but this is just proof of how good you are--you wonât even turn your own pain into profit for no reason other than financial. You want to wait until youâre no longer hurt so that you can be tactful, I respect that.Â
âI am honest,â I agree, âand I meant it when I said we should do this again.âÂ
You hesitate because youâre not sure if my offer is out of pity. The way your eyebrows draw together tell me you canât stand pity. âIâd like that. Iâd like to be friends.âÂ
Friends. If thatâs what we need to be for now, Iâll take it. Iâll be patient. And if I want there to be a chance of this working out, I need to be tactful. Which means I canât let myself get lost in our moments together. Love will be back soon. âWell, friend, Iâm ready to go if you are.âÂ
âYeah, Iâm ready.âÂ
We walk out together...a little slower than the pace we used to walk here. Youâre more at ease now. Youâre getting used to talking to me. You ask about my job, what I did before this...I lie as little as possible. You let me get in a few questions. By the time weâre rounding the block, I know that youâre the youngest of three. Your sister is two months shy of being ten years older than you and your brother is four years older than her. Youâve felt like the forgotten child more than youâd ever admit to yourself, but youâre not bitter about it. At least not towards your siblings. Your mother is a mystery...you speak about her like sheâs an expensive vase youâve never been allowed to touch. You never mention a father. You do mention a few good friends: an old roommate waiting for you in New York named Sicily--and you donât let me get away with laughing at the pretentiousness of naming a child Sicily--and two girls that you used to go to NYU with, Camille and Charlie.Â
Weâre only a few feet away from your house and Iâm sadder than I should be. Iâll see you soon...and if Ashtonâs there, waiting for you--
Thereâs a car in the driveway that wasnât there before. That doesnât necessarily mean that itâs him. The car is nice, it could belong to your brother-in-law--maybe he just got back from work. Or--
âOh my god...â You stop walking, I tighten my grip on Henryâs stroller. Is it him? What kind of unstable person would follow you from New York?Â
The driverâs door is opened, both of us stay still as someone comes out of the car. Their back straightens as they shut the car door. Itâs...
âColin!â Your enthusiasm isnât making me feel any better. âYouâre here!âÂ
The guy--who is honestly, way too tall for you--walks around the car. You take off, running to hug the stranger. Colin. He didnât come up today when we were walking back to the coffee shop.
You pull away from the hug first, but Colin seems to try to make it linger. âColin, youâre here.âÂ
âYou didnât think Iâd leave you here by yourself forever.â Maybe you did, considering that he didnât. help you in New York.
âNo, not forever.â Your tight smile tells me youâre thinking what I was thinking. Itâs easy for anyone to come in like the good guy after the aftermath of an incident, but he didnât jump into the burning building to save. âPlease tell me youâre not here on behalf of the agency. Iâd hate to have to kick you out.â
He works at an agency? He doesnât care about you, y/n--he wants to use you the same way everyone else does. Why else would he show up now? If he cared, he would have been there for you before. âOne, you canât kick me out Iâm staying in a hotel.â Doesnât mean she has to let you hang around. âAnd two, donât be so cynical--I missed you, babe.â Babe? Donât be so cynical? Is this really your type, y/n? Sleazy men that are genetically pre-dispositioned to dismiss every emotion a woman feels? âAnd whoâs this...âÂ
"Oh, this is Joe...and his son, Henry--they live across the street.â How comforting, you didnât completely forget my existence the moment you saw this guy park his escalade and step out in a suit thatâs way too tight for a man his age. Note the sarcasm.Â
âJoe.â He doesnât like me. I know it the moment he looks me in the eye--I can see it, the silent âthanks for watching her until I decided I was done being busy, but back off nowâ. âAnd Henry.â He waves, i have to bite back to urge to tell him to not look at my son. Iâm holding it together for you. âNice to you meet you guys.âÂ
âYeah, good to meet you too, man.â I can be polite for now. For your sake. I need to know who he is. I need to know how large of an obstacle has just been thrown into our already difficult path, and I canât exactly find out in front of you. âI had fun getting coffee, but if I donât get Henry back for his nap, his entire schedule will be off. Do you mind if I drop off the baby sitting money off later?âÂ
âOh, no--I donât mind at all, do what you need to do for Henry, and Iâll see you two later.â And Iâll be seeing you first.Â
I wave a goodbye to Colin, because Iâm holding onto the performance I need to give for you. After I turn around, I hear him whisper a sharply skeptical, âBabysitting?â To which you reply with a terribly giggly, âshut up.â
Who is this loafer wearing, neatly trimmed stubbled asshole? I donât know, but I know Iâm going to find out, because despite all the wrong things you said...you were right about one of them: Iâll see you later.Â
--
Taglist: @maggiecc @im-sidney @eveieforeve02 @caitlyn-s-bitch @darkened-writer @qardansngan @a-dorkier-book-keeper @littlebrowngirl @kittykylax @everday-imfangirlingÂ
Bloodroots in the Suburbs - Chapter One: The BabysitterÂ
prologueÂ
a/n soooo happy with how this story has been received!! hereâs chapter one :)Â
series summary: Bloodroots are such a strange flower--white and innocent looking yet undeniably poisonous. It has no place in the safest neighborhood in CA. Then again, neither do you. The suburbs are killing you, and no one understands that...at least you think no one does. I see that in the way you roll your eyes when your sister presses the issue of when youâre going to get back on your feet. I see that restlessness when youâre in the small plot of land that youâve actually managed to turn into some type of garden. I see you; I understand you. And if it wasnât for the confines I bear to protect my son, Iâd let you know that. But for now, I settle for knowing that the two of us are equally trapped, and I take some solace in that. I feel bad about it, I do, considering that from what Iâve gathered you spent most of your life being considered the perfect, ideal golden girl that was nothing but potential. And now youâre no longer the gifted child, the one thatâs first to raise their tiny hand in class, the one that knows everything. But thatâs okay--because Iâll make my selfishness up to you.
chapter summary: In a town full of au pairs and staffed houses, nanny cams are just standard practice. Itâs not Joeâs fault that the new babysitter keeps getting phone calls.Â
Joeâs POV.
Youâre a natural caregiver. That much is clear from how much time you spend outside, watching and pruning the pitiful green square youâre desperate to turn into a garden. Iâm sure you will, something about the way your eyebrows draw together when assessing the tiny, green sprouts tells me that youâre a force to be reconned with when youâre determined. And you definitely are.
You take such care with your plants, how could I ever need a reference to trust you with my son? Trust. Thatâs the perfect word for us, y/n. You donât belong here, youâre not one of these fake, cookie cutter emblems--youâre real. I can trust you. Not with everything Iâve done, no, or with feelings that are still unfortunately brewing. Feelings I promise I will keep in check. I swear Iâll do everything I can to keep them on a leash.
Youâre young and youâre meant for more than this place, I refuse to give you strings, especially when getting tangled in my web could cost you your life in both a metaphorical and literal sense. I know your career feels shot right now, and I really feel for you. I mean one New York agent gets caught trying to take advantage of you, and youâre the one getting punished? How is that fair? I thought this generation believed women...but thatâs just what the media wants us to think. A point you brought up in the first and last interview you did after the scandal. That interviewer kept asking sexist questions and no one in the world was willing to defend you, thatâs why you lost your patience. If I had been there, I could have protected you. Iâm here now, though, and I promise Iâll make up for my absence.
âJoe? Can you watch Henry today? I know I said Iâd take him, but Sherry called me about an event she wants me to cater. It sounded like the mommy blogging convention of the year, which means I have to pick up groceries and try recipes for about a thousand different dietary restrictions.â
I have to look away from you. I have to pretend that there was never anything intriguing about the window that looks out over the front lawn even though youâre standing there, only a road dividing us. Still, Iâm not too disappointed, because Love has given me the perfect opportunity to introduce the idea of you.
This feels like playing with fire. If Love ever senses the way I feel about you, youâll never get to leave here. Youâll never get to do anything again. But I know how to be smart, I know how to be attentive enough to keep her doubts away. And if youâre the girl across the street, the babysitter, youâll blend into her background. Itâs not like I can keep you completely away from her, I would if I could...but youâre across the street from me. I know the monster that lives in me canât shut you out when youâre right there, so in need of my help, even when it comes to opening a gate.
So I know I canât put you away, somewhere safe...which means I need to hide you in plain sight. Which is exactly what Iâm doing. âI canât, shift at the library.â
âThe usual sitterâs out of town, so I guess I should tell Sherry I canât do it.â
âOr...â This needs to seem like an idea Iâm coming up with right now. âYou know the family across the street?â
âSarah and Tom?â She nods once, adjusting Henry on her hip. âYeah--theyâre great, but I donât think either of them are up to babysitting. They want a baby too much to be around one that isnât theres.â
âNo, no, of course not. Thereâs actually someone else living with them--Sarahâs sister, I met her while taking my walk with Henry yesterday. She mentioned wanting something part time and she has babysitting experience, and a strong list of references.â Thatâs completely true--you texted me your resume about half an hour after we met. You added a smiley face at the end of your text. Does that mean youâre already thinking of me as more than just the random dad from across the street?
âSarahâs sister?â Love pauses, sheâs thinking about it, trying to put a face to the label. âOh--Iâve met her. Sheâs been by the bakery, sheâs a good tipper, seems nice.â This is working, but I canât seem eager. âIsnât she a party girl? Sherry said something about her needing to flee New York City.â
Indifference. Indifference. You make it so hard not to defend you. My hero. You said it politely, a partial joke, but I intend to make it a reality. âSherry likes gossip. Party girls donât move to the suburbs if they want to keep being party girls.â
She pauses, desperation is making her a little more open to the possibility of a stranger watching Henry. âYou want to let her watch him?â
Love doesnât sound suspicious. Thereâs the slightest bit of tiredness in her voice, sheâs just discussing the prospect of hiring a new babysitter. This is going to be the most important reaction. I need to play you as sympathetic, someone who I could feel protective of, sure, but not in a romantic way. Right now, Iâm thankful that youâre younger than us. âShe probably came here because she wanted to abandon her past. I see us in her.â Loveâs eyes round slightly, good, sheâs sympathetic. Time to seal the way that she sees you, and y/n, I want you to know that this next part makes me feel terrible, but it needs to be said. A nail in the coffin for your safety. âShe seems like a good kid.â
Ugh, saying that left a terrible taste in my mouth. Youâre not a child. Considering the ways Iâve thought of you, the ways Iâve pictured you, itâd make me a fucking monster to think of you as a child. Which is why Love needs to think I see you as that.
Henry spits up onto a blanket on Loveâs shoulder; I feel you, buddy. Love wipes his mouth with the fabric. âOkay--thatâs a good point.â
âAnd if it makes you feel better, I can try to duck out of work a little early, surprise her a little. See how she is with Henry.â
She bounces Henry comfortingly. âYeah--could you?â
âDefinitely.â
âOkay, then can you see if sheâs available? Because I need to be at the grocery store like now, because the deadline is super soon and--â
âIâve got it.â I step towards her, moving until Iâm close enough to take Henry into my arms. She lets the way our hands touch linger before leaning upwards. She kisses me and I kiss her back. Itâs a quick peck, nothing really, but itâs enough to make me wonder what Itâd be like for us to kiss. For our lips to touch. âGo. Go make keto, vegan, paleo, fast ending pastries so that all the mommy bloggers can tell everyone youâre the best.â
She grins. âThank you.â
I adjust the way Iâm holding Henry. Now, I have an excuse to talk to you. To bring you here and allow you to slip into our lives like youâve always been here. âItâs what I do.â
Love leaves, purse in hand. I wait until her car is out of the driveway before looking for you out the window. Youâre no longer in the garden. You must have gone back inside. I hate to think that you might have plans. Neither I nor Love would hold it against you, considering that this is extremely last minute...but things have just worked out too perfectly.
I cross the street, Henry in my arms as I knock on the front door. You open it--not your sister or brother-in-law. You. Did you see me from the window? Were you hoping that Iâd come back to you so soon?
âJoe! Hi.â Youâre happy to see me, itâs more than politeness, I can see a warmth in your eyes. Maybe you want to entertain the idea of me but you canât bring yourself to. You donât want to be the person that destroys a marriage. I understand, but youâve destroyed nothing. If anything, youâve cultivated me into something new. Something with purpose.
âHi,â I could get lost on this front porch with you. âI know this is insanely last minute, but Love just got this catering job and Iâm scheduled to work, so given yesterdayâs conversation, I was wondering if you could come over and watch Henry.â
You smile, eyes moving from me to Henry and then back to me. The warmth of your expression tells me that Iâve done the right thing.
âSheâs available!â A voice interrupts us.
You turn your head, throwing a slightly irritated glance behind you. âSarah!â You turn back to me, eyes softening as a form of apology. We were interrupted, and you feel bad about that. âSorry about her.â
Your sister appears in the doorway. I see the family resemblance--same hair color, same eyes. âHi, Iâm Sarah Burrell, Iâve seen you around the neighborhood. Tom and I keep meaning to invite you and your wife over for dinner, but heâs been so busy with work lately.â
Right, your brother-in-lawâs âworkâ. Heâs a Burrell, as in Burrell Pharmaceuticals. Also known as the company that supposedly created the first, secret COVID vaccine that only the ridiculously rich could afford. Buzzfeed thinks the Burrell vaccine--which was never confirmed--was administered to the Queen of England and the entire royal family. But then again....thatâs Buzzfeed.
Still, the point is your brother-in-law might be the richest guy in Madre Linda. Heâs also the youngest of three, meaning that heâll never have to look at the business side of Burrell Pharmaceuticals. It also means that Tomâs side business of creating healthy, sophisticated energy drinksâ is completely unnecessary and overly pretentious. Does the world really need an energy drink with 0 trans fats thatâs white truffle flavored? We both know the answer to that.
"Hi, Sarah.â Your sister reaches out her hand. I take it. âDonât worry about it, Love and I have been busy with the bakery and...him.â I bounce Henry once, letting all the attention move off of me. Sarah smiles, but thereâs a tiny bit of stiffness there. A stiffness so subtle I donât think sheâs aware of it. You werenât kidding when you made that joke about how badly she wants a baby. âWhich is why Iâm so thankful to your sister, whoâs offered to help us.â
Sarah nods, ready to let you go.
âBabe--is someone at the door?â Great--the man behind escargot flavored energy drinks himself. He appears in the foyer, in a Ralph Lauren collared shirt, dirty blonde hair shagging over his eyebrows. âOh--hey, you live across the street, right?â
âYes, Iâm Joe and this is Henry.â
âOh--what a cute little man.â He coos at Henry, who is his fatherâs son, because he really doesnât seem impressed. âWeâve been meaning to have you over for dinner, but Iâve been slammed in the office.â Fighting several FDA lawsuits. âI own a company that makes high end energy drinks.â I nod, pretending that Iâve never heard about it. âOh, speaking of, thereâs a new flavor Iâve been developing and I brought home a sample, and Iâve been looking for someone to try it.â
Iâd literally rather put anything else into my body. âThat sounds great, but I really need to get to work.â
âItâll take a second, Iâll go get us two glasses.â My digestive system will never forgive me if I donât get out of this.
âTom, heâs busy.â Thank you, y/n, youâre trying to save me. âI donât--â
He comes back, holding out a glass of dark liquid. âTold you itâd only be a second.â
Youâre giving me a look that says sorry. A look that tells me that I donât need to do this. But Iâd do anything for you, even drink the tar being handed to me. I take the glass, forcing myself to swallow the liquid in it. And--itâs so much worse than I thought. Itâs bitter, and...and fishy. Â
Tom is watching my reaction. I turn my grimace into a smile. âItâs um...Iâve never tasted an energy drink like this.â
âGood, right?!â I nod, fighting the way the energy drink seems to want to come back up. âItâs caviar flavored.â
The things I do for you, y/n. âY-yeah, I got that.â He grins. âIâd love to drink the rest of this, but I need to get to work.â
âOf course,â he takes the glass back. âWell, good to finally meet you, and thanks for the feedback.â I almost say âanytimeâ but realize that he might take that literally. âOh, um--I have these tasting parties with other guys from the neighborhood, Iâll be sure to send you an invite.â
Iâdrather lose another finger. âIâll keep an eye out, man.â
He smiles again, nodding before disappearing. Your sister squeezes your shoulder once before saying goodbye to me and disappearing into the house. As soon as theyâre gone, you laugh. The sound is so warm it makes the lingering taste of acidic, liquid caviar worth it.
âI canât believe you actually drank it.â
Look at you, making me smile after one of the weirdest, unneeded interactions Iâve experiencing all week. And thatâs saying something in Madre Linda. âHasnât he gotten you to drink anything?â
âNo,â you shake your head, attempting to dismiss a smile. âHe thinks Iâm allergic to like twenty different things.â You laugh again. âIâm so sorry I didnât get you out of here in time.â
Youâre still holding in a partial laugh, weâre still joking, and yet I know that thereâs something genuine about the reaction. Something behind your eyes tells me that you do feel a little bad, a little guilty. Youâve been told to apologize too many times and some of thatâs sunken into you.
âI have a feeling he would have caught me at some point.â We stand there again, quiet. Itâd be too easy to lose time with you.
But you donât like the quiet. Or at least, youâre not used to it. Because the quiet means youâre being seen and youâre used to people interpreting you incorrectly. I can see it in the way you stand, the correction of your posture, the way you angle your head. You want to be seen as perfect, flawless. You donât have to be perfect around me. And itâs scary, y/n, I know--but I wonât run from you, and then youâll understand that youâre safe with me.
âProbably.â
I nod. âWe should get going.â
You take a step forward, one hand reaching for the door handle. âYeah, we should, Iâd hate to make you late for work.â
There isnât a shift for me to be late to, but you donât need to know that. âRight.â
We walk together, a polite distance between us, and yet, when I turn to open the door, the back of our palms brush. The contact is more surprising to you than you realize, you take a partial step back as I open the front door.
I want to show you around. Iâm not particularly attached to this property, itâs a nice house, Quinn blood money made sure of that, but it doesnât mean much to me beyond a way to assure that Henry gets into a good school. But I want you to be comfortable in my house, I want you to be comfortable around me. Itâs the least I could do, considering the way youâve helped me. Without your assuring presence, I think the suburbs would have driven me crazy. But youâve been here, outside in your garden, letting me know that Iâm not the only one drowning in the mundane.
But youâll get suspicious about why Iâm not in a bigger hurry to get to work. So this will have to be a rushed interaction. âHe had a bottle a little over an hour ago, which means he doesnât need to eat for a couple hours, but if he gets fussy thereâs another bottle in the fridge. If that doesnât work, try putting him down in the nursery, itâs the first door upstairs. He might whine at first, try reading to him, thereâs a stack of books in there--Fitzgerald is his favorite.â You raise an eyebrow, amused at what youâre probably assuming is a joke. âThere are diapers and changing supplies under the diaper table in the nursery, uh...â What else should I tell you? âI wish I had more time to show you, but--â
âOh, no,â you dismiss, always polite, always ready to help, âyouâve told me enough, Iâm sure Henry and I can figure out the rest.â
You extend your arms, ready to take Henry. I squeeze him once before handing him to you. Our hands touch as you adjust the way you hold him. I donât want to move back. Carefully, I let my fingers move past the back of your palm and onto your forearm. You let me move your arm so that you can better support Henryâs head.
I know Iâve agreed to keep my feelings in check, but seeing how naturally you hold my son. Youâd be good for Henry. Weâd be stable, a perfect family. But even thinking of this is putting you in danger. Love would kill you just because I cared about you, if I ever tried to do anything...
I canât. Iâm taking enough risks as it is, doing what I can to satiate the monster in me. âI think he likes you, and thatâs a real compliment because sometimes Iâm not even sure he likes me.â
You rock slightly to keep him calm. âThat has to be in your head.â You say it with no judgement, a slight hum in your voice as you tilt your head. âYou seem really great with him.â
Is there something in the way you say that? Something in the way your eyes soften? Or is that just what I want to be seeing? Women are drawn to babies and the men that are responsible for them. Let it go, let it go, let it go. Iâm not going to get as attached to you as Iâve gotten to other people. Everything about you is temporary.
âPlease, if I could get him to stay as calm as you are, Iâd get hours of my day back.â You laugh slightly, cradling Henryâs head. Itâs just me, you, and Henry, and I canât remember the last time things felt like this. Complete. Like the family I had always pictured. You feel it too, thatâs why you havenât looked away yet. You may not have a name for the feeling, but thatâs okay.
Henry starts to mumble, interrupting our moment. You look down, rocking him a little more. âNot to kick you out of you out of your own house, but speaking of hours that you canât get back, arenât you running late for work?âÂ
Itâs too easy to get distracted with you. I need to focus. âRight,â I step back, towards the front door. âIâll see you soon.âÂ
You rub Henryâs back patiently. âWeâll be here.âÂ
I walk out the front door, grabbing my keys from a table at the houseâs entrance. I get in my car, driving away for your sake. I leave the neighborhood, driving towards town. I end up parking in an alleyway between two stores that Love wonât need to go to for baking supplies. Thereâs nothing illegal or particularly sketchy about what Iâm doing, but I put on a dark baseball cap and slump into the driverâs seat of my car anyways. Better safe than be recognized by a neighbor and forced into a conversation about baby food allergies or preschool introduction letters. I pull out my phone, clicking on an app that takes two seconds to load. The screen shows me the camera feeds.
Iâm not the biggest fan of technology, or Sherryâs blog, or...Sherry, but I do need to thank her for her blog post on the best nanny cam on the market. Youâre still in the living room with Henry. I click on the camera youâre closest to, letting it become full screen.Â
Youâre good with him. Youâd make a good mother, something I wish I hadnât noticed but canât stop thinking about. Youâre attentive, focused, even though your phone rings often. You donât take the calls, of course, your full attention is on Henry.
 Whoâs calling you so much? Unfinished work in New York? A concerned friend? Maybe your mother? Or is someone waiting for you? They seem obsessive, y/n. Youâre uncomfortable.Â
When Henry falls asleep, the phone rings again. This time you finally answer, I unmute the feed.Â
â...Stop calling me. I changed my number and didnât give you my new address for a reason.â You hang up before shoving your phone angrily into the pocket of your jeans. You let out a frustrated sigh before wiping your face with your hands. Are you crying?Â
Whoever has been calling you has hurt you. Really hurt you. If I could get your phone, just look at your call history, Iâd know who they are. And then--no, the person is far from you now. They donât have your address, they donât have to be taken care of right now. Those are the kind of impulsive thoughts that make Love unstable.Â
Henry starts crying, you wipe your check with the back of your palm one last time before going back into the nursery.Â
You recover like nothing happened, and you do it so well I have no choice but to wonder how long youâve been dealing with the way the person on the phone makes you feel.Â
The time passes more slowly after the interruption. I canât stop seeing the way your phone rang, again and again. The way you let it go on and on until you finally exploded. Is no one looking out for you? Youâre twenty, you were in school until your career took off. Do you have an old roommate you talk to? Is that who the problem is? Youâre one of the youngest people to ever be given their own New York Times column, so being able to relate to your coworkers is off the table. Your life fell apart, and you came here...to your sister, whoâs caught up trying to have a baby. What about your parents?
And who is calling you so much? Youâre never on your phone in the garden. Iâve seen you on the phone at the window before, and you seemed fine. Is the stranger always calling? Why? Who are they?Â
This isnât about me or about my urges. I want to know you, to figure you out, but I said I wouldnât do that. Iâd barely started with Natalie and look what Love did. Iâm only going to help you...but can I do that without knowing you?
The phone rings again. You ignore it, leaving it on the kitchen counter before reaching into the fridge to find a bottle for Henry, whoâs hungry crying. Who is that? They wonât leave you alone, you need someone to make them. You...you need me.Â
Stop it. Care less. I donât think I can leave you alone. You need someone that cares about you, and Iâm trying to be that without getting attached. I need to--are they calling you again? Damn it, I need to know whose calls youâre ignoring.
I lock my phone, dropping it onto the passenger seat before taking my car off park. Itâs a reasonable time to come back.Â
Parking the car in the driveway of the house, Iâm relieved to see that Loveâs not back yet. Never thought Iâd say this, but thank god for Sherry and her entire army of mommy blogging monsters.Â
I open the front door, and it takes me no time to find you. Youâre with Henry, sitting with him on the couch. And your phone is still on the kitchen counter.Â
âHi.âÂ
âHey,â I walk over to you, taking Henry back, âI hope he wasnât too much trouble.âÂ
âOh, he was great.â You were great, donât sell yourself short. âAnd you were right about FItzgerald, half a chapter of The Great Gatsby, and he was out cold.â So you like the book with her, huh. Henryâs rejection aside, I think today was successful. Or at least it will be when I think of a way to get that phone number.Â
âTold you, heâs his fatherâs son.âÂ
âFitzgeraldâs great, itâs hard not to like him...though I do think Zelda deserves more credit.âÂ
âYou got me there.â I adjust my grip on Henry. âSometimes in a marriage, things end up like that.â Why did I say that? I have no idea. Itâs way too early to test the waters on how much you care about the fact that Iâm married...I shouldnât be doing it at all.Â
You nod once but your expression reveals nothing. âItâs a big decision.â Sometimes itâs the wrong decision. âIâm sorry, do you mind if I use your restroom?âÂ
âOf course--second door on your left down the hall behind you.âÂ
You walk away, not even glancing in the direction of your phone. The moment youâre gone, I walk to the kitchen counter. Your phone is password protected, but the missed call number is on your notification screen. I pull my phone out of my pocket, taking a picture of yours. Your phone starts buzzing again, this time itâs a call from your sister. When you donât answer, she texts you immediately.Â
Ashton called the house phone asking about you. Maybe you shouldnât come back for awhile, heâs crazy enough to have been calling from the airport.Â
Who the fuck is Ashton?Â
--
Chapter Two - Kill Habits, Not PeopleÂ
--
Taglist: @maggieccÂ