April 25, 2024

This entry is part 5 of 5 in the Flash Fiction: Warning Shots

Written in 62 minutes.


February 1999

“I need your advice.”

Jason sighed, then slid out from beneath the car to find his sister standing over the car, her arms folded, the toe of her sneaker tapping against the concrete floor. “Should I call Alexis? Does anyone need bail money?” He got to his feet, reached for a rag. “Or is it the other kind of advice?”

“You know, you get arrested once—”

“Twice, but who’s counting.” Jason leaned against the driver’s side door. “What’s up, Em? Everything okay?” His mouth tightened. “Is it Juan?”

“Oh, you’d love that,” Emily muttered. “No, Juan is the model of the perfect boyfriend, thank you very much. It’s Elizabeth. And Lucky.”

Jason grimaced and shook his head. “I’m not getting involved in that. He’s avoiding which means he knows I’m pissed. That’s good enough—” He headed for the sink, but Emily’s next words stopped him dead.

“She forgave him.”

He turned, looked at her. “What? What are you talking about?”

“He came home, apologizing all over the place. He had bouquets of white roses delivered to her at our dorm, at her grandmother’s place—” Emily bit her lip. “And he had an excuse ready. He said he found out at the airport what dates he was going to be gone, and he tried to call her but he thinks the message got messed up. He had tears in his eyes. Told her over and over again he’d never hurt her like that. Not on Valentine’s Day. And she was crying, and he hugged her, and she forgave him.”

“That’s a lot of details.”

“I refused to leave the room. I thought someone should be listening with a clear head. You look mad. At her forgiving him?”

A little, Jason thought. But Elizabeth was young, and she’d been hurt. “No. At Lucky for pulling that stunt. He knew on Friday what the dates were.”

Emily perked up. “Did you tell her that?”

Jason opened his mouth, then thought back to the conversation. “No, I think—I thought I implied it when I said he knew he was leaving on Friday. But I don’t remember telling her that specifically. Or that he asked for a job out of town. I told him to take the run. He knows it’s usually a week.”

Emily pressed her lips together, looked away. “I wanted her to light him on fire. To throw him out the window. I told her that. I said it’s okay. He might have been my first friend, but you’re my best friend, and I know a guy who can hide the body—you’re the guy,” she told Jason who just rolled his eyes. “And she just shook her head. Because Lucky convinced her he messed up.”

“If the advice is asking me how to get away with a crime, I’ll give Alexis’s number and send you on your way,” Jason told her dryly. “Outside of that, I don’t know what I’m supposed to do.”

“I just—” Emily looked away. “I guess I need to know if I push this. Because this isn’t the first time Lucky’s been thoughtless. Or tried to make Liz believe something that isn’t true. You know they had this plan for New York right?”

“Yeah. It fell through.”

“She didn’t get into the art school, so they regrouped. And, yeah, okay, originally, Liz was just going to do a semester with me while they saved money. But then we started talking about decorating, and going to orientation, and it was just—I got really excited. And she was, too. We thought — let’s go make college everything high school wasn’t. We let ourselves get derailed by—” Emily made a face. “Well, you know, the drugs and the blackmail for me. And…you know what happened to Liz. College, it could be our chance to be silly and stay up all night and—I don’t know. We just got ourselves all hyped up for it, and so Liz told Lucky it would make sense to stay the whole year and they’d revisit living together next summer.”

“So?”

“So, I was there. I know she told him. I know he wasn’t thrilled, but he sucked it. And he agreed. But he brings it up all the time like she sprang it on him last minute or he’s acting like she’s doing some huge betrayal by just…changing her mind. She’s started to wonder if maybe she didn’t really give him a chance to weigh in. Like, ask for his blessing to change our plans.” Emily looked at Jason. “Has he said things like that around you?”

“He’s…” Jason sighed. “He’s mentioned it, yeah. But you’re almost halfway done. That shouldn’t matter—”

“Well, Liz started to think maybe she didn’t want to live with him at all. Like, maybe we’d stay together for all of college. And as soon as she brought it up to him, he like lost his mind, and he’s been so mean ever since. And Juan? He told me Lucky was really pissed at Liz when she took me to the airport. You were there. Was he?”

“Emily—”

“I just—she’s my best friend, Jason. More than that. She put herself on the line for me. She came to that studio to help me. To warn me. And she got taken hostage by the man who hurt her. She was so scared, but she fought back, and I just—” Emily rubbed her arm. “I don’t know. She’s always been in my corner one hundred percent. And I just kind of think I should do that for her.”

“It sounds like you are. Other than hiding a body, what do you need from me?”

“I think Lucky’s angry because Elizabeth isn’t all about him anymore. Her whole life revolved around him for over a year because he was there after…after. He basically put her back together, the way she tells it. Slept on her floor when she was scared. Went to lineups. Tried to help her find the attacker. Like, constantly together. But this year? He’s not the center anymore. She’s not acting the way he thought she would.”

Jason looked down at his hand. “She’s acting like her old self,” he said quietly, and Emily looked at him wide eyes. “He told me that. That she’s acting like when she first came to town. He called her a selfish self-centered brat.”

“Oh. Oh.” She pressed a fist to her mouth. “Oh, that’s horrible. God, Jason, he’s mad because she feels like she did before the rape? When she was happy and not broken? Oh, God. Don’t you see how bad that is?”

He was starting to. “Em—”

“Can you imagine that? The horror of knowing the guy who said he loved you forever only loves the version of you that’s a crying mess?” She sat on a nearby stool. “What do I do? She’ll never believe it if I tell her that. She’ll think I heard it wrong. Or that you did. What do I do?”

“I don’t know that you can do anything. Just be there for Elizabeth.”

“Okay.” Emily grimaced. “But if I eventually end up kicking his ass, I want you to tell the judge and jury I was provoked.”

“It’s freaking me out,” Juan said to Nikolas as they watched Elizabeth bus a table, then head into the kitchen. “She’s quiet. I’ve never known her to be quiet.”

Nikolas hated to agree with Juan on any subject, but well — “She says they straightened it out, but I think maybe—”

“Maybe what?” Elizabeth asked, emerging from the kitchen and coming back behind the counter. She topped off Juan’s water glass. “More coffee?” she asked Nikolas.

“No, I need to go to sleep before dawn,” he told her. “I was thinking maybe we should do something for spring break. It’s next month right?”

“Three weeks. Emily and I were saving money for something, but we never figured out what.” She busied herself with wrapping utensils in napkins. “But I should stay in Port Charles. You know, Lucky’s always saying we don’t spend enough time together—”

“But how many college spring breaks are you going to get?” Nikolas interrupted. “You should go to Florida or something.”

“And do what? Drink myself into a coma?”

“Relax on a beach.”

“Plus, you’ve got that art thing coming up the second half of the semester,” Juan pointed out. “Didn’t you say you had a ton to do for that? You need to chill and like, you know, be at your best.”

Elizabeth furrowed her brow, looked back and forth between the two of them. “What’s going on here? You’re both acting so weird. Since when do either of you are about my workload?”

“Well, you know, you’re my best friend,” Nikolas said.

“And your best friend is the love of my life,” Juan said, “so it’s in my best interest to keep you happy. Wait, that’s not the right answer. Because I like you.”

“I like you, too, but that still doesn’t change the fact that you both—” She stopped, sighed. “Emily got to you both.”

“I resent that.” Nikolas paused. “Lucky told me his side and that got to me. I thought I’d come check on you.”

“Emily got to me,” Juan confessed. Nikolas whacked him. “What? I thought we weren’t supposed to lie—”

“Emily’s heart is in the right place, but really, it’s all settled—”

“What is?” Lucky dropped onto the stool next to his brother, grinned at Elizabeth. “Hey. What time are you done tonight?”

“Eight. But I have a test to study for, so I really can’t do anything after. Oh—” Elizabeth checked the clock on the wall. “I’m going to take my break. I’ll be back.”

“I’ll come with you—” But Nikolas grabbed Lucky’s shirt collar and yanked him back before Lucky could follow his girlfriend.

“It’s all settled,” Nikolas echoed. “So she says. And you say she forgave you—”

“Forgave me—what about her? She told everyone I was an asshole who stood her up on Valentine’s Day—”

“Looking for the lie,” Juan muttered more to his soda than to the world, but Lucky heard it and narrowed his eyes.

“I’m the one who should be mad! She didn’t even try to think about why I didn’t tell her about the change in plans—”

“Because she knew why, jackass. And you know why. Maybe Elizabeth is swallowing the cell phone thing but that’s because she wants to. Me? I know you better than that, Lucky. I’ve known you longer. And I know you can be a vindictive, spiteful, petty little brat.”

“You’re really going to pick a fight with me over this? I thought we were past all that—”

“And I thought you were more than the little punk who punished his mother for having another son,” Nikolas shot back, and Lucky’s cheeks went bright red. “Yeah. Elizabeth wasn’t around for that. You think she’d think fondly of you if she knew how you treated me just for existing? Before you even knew me? I thought you’d grown up. I thought you were better than that.”

“Well, then I guess we were both wrong—” Lucky started to get up, but Nikolas shoved him back onto the stool with one hand on his shoulder.

“Sit down and shut up. I don’t know what the hell crawled up your ass since Liz and Em started college, but you’re going to dig it out and get rid of it fast. Because this time? Liz swallowed your bullshit. But you and I know there’s going to be a next time.”

“Are you done?” Lucky asked coolly. “Tell Elizabeth when she has time for me, she knows where to find me.” He twisted off the stool, then stalked out of the diner.

Juan watched him go. “What’s the stuff about his mom?”

“Old business,” Nikolas murmured, feeling old and tired. He dragged a hand down his face. “I knew. The minute Emily told me that he’d set up the plans and then boarded the plane. He wanted to hurt her. I knew he’d done it. Maybe he’s convinced himself he didn’t, but I know he did it. And I can’t really look at him right now without wanting to throw him out a window.”

He turned back to the counter, smiled when Elizabeth came back, her brow furrowed. “Where did Lucky go?”

“He had something to do. He said call him after your test tomorrow. You know what, Liz, maybe some I’ll have some coffee after all. Decaf.”

“Okay, I’m just going to go over this with her one more time,” Emily said, tugging her coat back on and sweeping her from underneath the collar. “Lucky asked for the job, and he knew the dates on Friday. Before he ever confirmed plans.”

Jason retrieved his leather jacket. “Yes. And if she doesn’t want to believe it, Em, you need to drop it. You’re not going to do either of you any good if you push her too far. She’ll get there in her own time.”

“I know. I know you’re right, but I hate it. It’s just—she’s the only one who gave Juan a chance. I’m not stupid, Jason. No one liked him. Liz was just quiet and nice about it. And she supported me anyway. She put me first. Like she always does. She deserves the same from me.”

“And you’re doing that—” Jason began but the door slammed open and Lucky strode in, stopping dead when he saw the two of them. He started to back away, but Emily was already striding forward.

“Oh, you better not go anywhere—”

“I’m not in the mood for another round of what an ass I am,” Lucky retorted. “I’m tired of being everyone’s punching bag. I get it, Elizabeth made sure everyone knew what she thinks I did—”

“You think she told us? You dumbass. Who do you think waited in the lobby with her?” Emily snapped. “I knew you were late. But I never thought you’d stand her up. And you’re damn right, I told Nikolas. But Juan was with me — and Jason — well, Liz was so worried about you she came all the way down here only to find out you were gone. She didn’t tell anyone. She was mortified.”

Lucky shot Jason a fulminating glance. “Yeah, I’m sure Jason was thrilled to come to her rescue again.”

Jason lifted his brows. “Excuse me?”

“Oh, don’t you dare—that is not the direction you’re going with this,” Emily said, slapping her hands on her hips. “Jason was minding his business and Elizabeth was upset.”

“I tried to leave a message—”

“On the cell phone you’re always saying is a piece of trash, so Lucky, why’d you even bother with it?” she demanded. “You never call it. You always call the dorm. But that day of all days, you’re claiming it was the cell?”

“I tried to tell her I mixed up the dates—”

“You didn’t,” Jason said, and Lucky stared at him, a bit stunned. “You know you didn’t. You asked for that job. I told you it was Puerto Rico. And I told you that you’d be back on the sixteenth. You knew that. Before you ever called Elizabeth to make plans.”

“That is—” He swallowed hard. “Maybe it’s how you remember it, but it’s not what happened—”

“You no good rotten liar,” Emily burst out. “You broke her heart, made her feel stupid and humiliate it, and you’re blaming her phone for not getting the message! Is anything ever your fault?”

“I thought we were friends,” Lucky said, and now some of the anger had faded. “We’ve been friends forever, Em—”

“You’re not going to twist this the way I watched you do to Liz. I’m not an idiot, Lucky. I’m not in love with you. And you’re no friend of mine, let me tell you—”

“I get it! Fine!” Lucky threw up his hands. “I’m always wrong! It’s always my fault! Elizabeth changes the plans without telling me, and she’s never around, never makes time for me, but hey, I missed a date, so it must be me that’s the problem—”

“You didn’t miss a date,” Emily bit out. “You missed that date, and you damn well know why it matters. Because you intended it to. You loaded the gun, aimed it, and pulled the trigger, and bullseye. You hit the target dead on. She is devastated. So devastated that she is clinging to the absolute bullshit you fed her in order to make it go away. I hope you’re happy, Lucky. She’s quiet and sad again. Isn’t that exactly how you like her?”

Lucky’s face was white and he spun around, storming out of the garage. Emily closed her eyes, took a deep breath. Looked at Jason. “Did I go too far?”

“Not as far as I would have, but then he’d still be on the floor if it’d been me,” Jason muttered.

“Jason. I can tell Elizabeth what you told me, but it’s not going to mean the same thing. You’re the one who gave him the dates. You know he’s lying. Lucky did this on purpose.”

“Em—”

“She trusts you. She told me that. That the only reason she was able to get through the night without breaking down completely was how kind you were. She doesn’t need my fury or Nikolas’s indignation. Not right now. She won’t listen to that. But she might listen to you. Please.”

Elizabeth read the same paragraph for a third time, then sighed and rubbed her eyes. She’d been studying for nearly an hour, but nothing was clicking. She’d pretended to read the entire chapter, but not a single word had stuck.

She rose from her desk, went over to her closet, and pulled it open, looking at the plastic bag with the dress she’d worn on Valentine’s Day. It was in perfect condition, but the store still wouldn’t take it back. On sale, nonrefundable. Just a pretty dress to remind her of a terrible night.

How had it all gone wrong so fast? She’d been so happy, so excited for everything that was happening around her, and now she just wanted to crawl into bed and pull the covers over her head. She hadn’t felt like this since she’d received the rejection letter from New York. Or when Detective Taggert told her that her case was going to be shelved as a cold case.

It was silly to get so upset over one date. How many nights had Lucky planned for them perfectly? So he’d messed this one up with some miscommunication. He’d seemed so sorry, and she’d believed him.

But it was hard to get back to how she’d felt the day her professor had told her she was going to be in the spring showcase. Or when she’d looked in the mirror, and reminded herself that Valentine’s Day was hers — that she and Lucky had reclaimed it, and one day she might never remember that one terrible night—

The phone on her desk rang, and she picked it up. “Hello?”

“Hey, Liz. It’s Molly on the desk downstairs. You’ve got a visitor. You know the rules, though—”

Elizabeth sighed. “If it’s Lucky, tell him—”

“Oh, no way, girl.” Molly’s voice lowered. “This one is a man with a capital M. Blond hair, blue eyes, an ass to die for—is he single?”

Elizabeth’s mouth opened slightly. “Jason? He’s downstairs?”

“Yeah, yeah, that’s the name he told me. You want me to send him away? You know no male visitors after eight—”

“No. No. Um, I have to throw on some clothes and shoes. Tell him I’ll be right down.”

“Okay, but if you don’t want him, you know my deets. Hook a girl up.”

Elizabeth rolled her eyes, but was smiling when she hung up the phone. She tossed her sweats in the hamper, shimmied into a pair of jeans and grabbed a sweater. After tying her sneakers and grabbing her jacket just in case, Elizabeth headed for the elevators.

When they opened, Jason Morgan was indeed standing in the lobby of her dorm, wearing a leather jacket over a black shirt with blue jeans. He was reading something on the wall when she approached.

“Um, hey. If you’re looking for Emily—”

Jason turned, looked at her with a hesitant smile. “No. No, I needed to talk to you. Your—” He looked at the desk where Molly wasn’t even pretending not to be staring. “Your friend said there were rules about visitors.”

“No guys after eight. For safety. Um, we could sit on a sofa—” She gestured at the lobby. “But…maybe not. I wouldn’t put it past Molly to listen in. There’s a coffee bar on campus or something.” She started walking with him towards the door. “Or something off campus. It doesn’t matter to me.”

“Yeah. Okay. I’ve got my bike if that’s okay?”

“The one from the garage?” Her smile was quick and genuine when she saw it parked near the curb. “Oh, well, you should have said that. I told you I wanted to try it.”

He handed a helmet. “Then let’s go.”

April 24, 2024

This entry is part 8 of 8 in the Flash Fiction: Chain Reaction

Written in 65 minutes.


Harborview Towers: Hallway

Jason stepped up to the penthouse door, hesitating before twisting the knob. In the last forty-eight hours, he’d sat vigil over his dying sister, slept with Elizabeth, nearly broken up with his fiancee, patched up another fight with Sonny and Carly, and today…this afternoon…he’d stood in the studio, listening to Elizabeth rationalize all of this until she’d found a way to let him off the hook. To make everything he’d done to her okay, to make it sound almost like the right choice.

And it was…wasn’t it? What did that even mean—the right choice? Who decided what was right? The universe? Jason? He’d known that question once with a certainty that seemed almost naive and childlike after the accident. He did what he wanted and didn’t give a damn about anyone else.

Robin had showed him the value of caring about others, and loving Michael had taught Jason how to sacrifice his own needs for the needs of others. But sometimes Jason wondered if he’d taken it too far.

If he’d spent so much time shoving down what he wanted that he no longer knew how to recognize the feeling anymore?

He twisted the knob, stepped inside, and Courtney immediately popped off the sofa, her features creased with anxiety. “You came back.”

“You didn’t think I would?” Jason asked, dropping his keys on the desk.

“You said you were going to talk to Elizabeth,” she said. She looked pointedly at the window where the sun was beginning to sink below the horizon. “That was hours ago.”

“I had wait until she finished working,” Jason said, irritated with Courtney for pressing the subject and with himself for ever walking into Kelly’s and thinking that he could tell Elizabeth over the counter that he’d made a choice. He  hadn’t thought about her at all, Jason realized. Only himself, and wanting to be done with it.

A selfish act, and a reminder why he couldn’t act that way anymore. Acting on impulse only got you in trouble and hurt other people.

“Six hours?”

“After I talked to her—” After Elizabeth had looked at him those shattered eyes, silently begging him to make a different choice even when her mouth told him the opposite. What if she’d really said it? What if she’d actually begged him to stay?

He’d still be there, Jason thought, and man, that didn’t sit right with him. None of this did. He dragged a hand down his face. “After I talked to her, I needed a ride. Can that be enough? I told you I was sorry.” When she flinched, looked away, he sighed. He was the bad guy here. The man who’d proposed marriage, then slept with another woman. “I’m sorry,” he repeated. “It just…it wasn’t a pleasant conversation.”

“No, I guess it wouldn’t be. I just thought maybe you’d see her, and you’d change your mind again. But you didn’t. That’s good.” She smiled, but it looked pained. “We’ll…we’ll work on things, right? We were unhappy for a little while, but we’ll just find that feeling again.”

“Right.” That was the plan. “Did you want to do something for dinner?”

“Oh, Carly came by. She wanted to have us over for dinner. An apology,” Courtney added. “For always dragging us into their fights. I think it’d be good. You know, all of us. A family night. Just us.”

“Just us,” Jason repeated. Just the family. “Sure. That’s fine.”

Kelly’s: Dining Room

Elizabeth stifled a yawn, then flipped the closed sign to open before returning to the counter. “You ready, DJ?”

“Ready for an hour of toast, bagels, and coffee,” the cook muttered. She could hear him scraping on the grill. “Real challenging work.”

“You’ll miss this quiet time when the rush starts,” Elizabeth said, leaning over the counter, smiling. “You always complain about the quiet time, the rush, and everything in between.  I’ve missed this, DJ.”

“We missed you, too, Lizzie. Not the same without you. You and me, the last of Ruby’s people. Once we go, who’s gonna keep this place going?”

He’d meant it as a compliment and she smiled at him, but man, she did not like the reminder of how long she’d been here. Kelly’s had been a quick job to pay off her debts when she’d moved here. She’d used all of her year’s allowance on a first-class, one way ticket. She smiled at the memory, moving to the counter to organize her sidework. What a crazy kid she’d been — never thinking ahead, figuring tomorrow would take care of itself.

What would she tell little annoying Lizzie Webber if she could talk to her younger self? The list was endless, but mostly she hoped she’d tell that love-starved girl that not all affection was real, and not to trust anyone who made you the center of their world.

The bell jingled, and Elizabeth raised her eyes to find Ric Lansing stepping into the diner, a broad smile stretching across his handsome face. Her hands stilled. It was the first time she’d seen her estranged husband in nearly a month, and she was hoping to keep it that way.

“The rumors are true. You’re back at Kelly’s.” Ric slid onto the stool, tipped over his cup. “You remember how I take it, don’t you?”

“I remember everything, Ric,” Elizabeth said, turning to the carafe and tipping it so that the hot liquid poured into the cup. “Can I get you anything else?”

“No, coffee will do for now. I was sorry that you’d contacted the gallery and cancelled. You didn’t have to do it—”

“I didn’t have time to finish the paintings,” Elizabeth said flatly. “Recovering from a pulmonary embolism took time and money I didn’t really have.” She lifted her brows. “You know, the doctors don’t know what caused it. I didn’t have any of the risk factors.”

“Medicine, such a mystery.”

“A real mystery,” she said. She was cold, little icicles pricking at the surface of her skin. “They told me it could have been the birth control pills I was taking. But when I told them I wasn’t on any birth control, well, they were stumped.” Elizabeth set the carafe on the hot plate and looked at Ric who had the audacity to stare at her with that blank, curious stare. “We’re not friends, Ric. We’re not amicable exes. You can refuse to sign the papers all you want. No judge in their right mind is going to stall a divorce where I’m not taking anything from you.”

“You believed in me once, Elizabeth. Even in the face of everyone telling you differently—” Ric leaned in, his eyes earnest. Sincere. “You know me. Better than anyone—”

“I do know you better than anyone. Which is why all I want is to be done with you. Make it as difficult or as painful as you want. I don’t care. I don’t care why you did it, how you’re getting away with it— I just want you forget you ever existed—”

“But you won’t be able to forget me, Elizabeth, or what we shared. It was real—

“A real nightmare that I am ending. I have ended it. Now drink your coffee and go.”

Corinthos & Morgan Warehouse: Office

Sonny paced the length of his office, stroking his chin. “You talked to Benny’s brother, didn’t you?”

“Yeah. Yeah, I made contact this morning. He’s up for taking over Benny’s spot,” Jason said. “I’ll set him up in the office, get him what he needs, and we won’t have to worry about that.”

“Good. I want to turn my attention where it belongs. Lorenzo Alcazar.” Sonny gritted his teeth. “He’s not making a single move I could call aggressive.”

“Just at the hotel, like a tourist.” Jason gripped the back of the desk hair. “He’s got the same layers covering him his brother did. The feds need his contacts with the arms operation, so our hands are tied on that.”

“But why is he still here? I didn’t kill his damn brother,” Sonny muttered. He rubbed his chest. “He’s waiting for something.”

Jason grimaced because he knew where this was going, and he didn’t want to deal with it. Two straight weeks of talking his partner off the ledge about Lorenzo Alcazar hadn’t changed anything. Sonny could and would let every little thing lead him astray, and Jason had to drag him back.

How many hours of his life had he lost to this debacle? Sometimes Jason missed not being in Port Charles. Walking around some foreign city where no one knew him. Where no one could call him. And lately —

Even before that night, even before all that was wrong with Emily, Jason had found himself wondering if he could just get on his bike and leave again. There was nothing holding him here other than Sonny’s family. And Emily.

And Elizabeth.

She’d always kept him tied to Port Charles — every time he left, he thought about her. What she’d say about the buildings he saw, and the museums he’d gone to. He’d had to work very hard to wrap her up, put her inside a box, and lock her away. She’d made it clear last year, Jason thought, that she didn’t want him.

And he’d suceeded. He’d put it away. He’d stopped thinking about her.

Until she’d sat next to him, and she’d started to cry, and he’d had to touch her and it had all come flooding back, and now he didn’t know how to turn it off again. How had he done it before?

“Jason?”

Jason blinked, looked at Sonny, cleared his throat. “What?”

“You tuned out.” Sonny frowned. “You never do that. You focus. That’s your talent. What’s going on? Did—did something happen with Emily? If you need to be at the hospital—”

“No. She’s still—she’s fine. Recovering. Restarting chemo in another week,” Jason said. “I’m fine. I just—I haven’t been sleeping well.” Not for days. Weeks. Months. Not since Carly had disappeared from the church yard.

“Yeah? What’s up? If it’s about Ric, believe me. I’m there.” Sonny grimaced. “I don’t know what the hell he pulled at the DA’s office — we had him dead to rights. Elizabeth, you know, she really came through. I didn’t know if she would—”

“She saw the panic room for herself,” Jason said, remembering that awful day when he’d gone to see her in the hospital, when she’d flatlined, and he’d thought she was dead. How angry she’d been when she thought Jason had killed Ric—how angry she’d been at him for months—and how furious he‘d been with her for not believing him in the first place. “She couldn’t talk herself out of it anymore,” he murmured. “She’s good at that. Talking in circles until she can accept whatever reality she’s trying to hold on to.”

Sonny studied him. “Yeah, I guess she did that enough with Lucky. You’d have to stay as long as she did. Made herself miserable. But she stood up. Gave that statement. And then Ric just…” He looked out the window over the dockyard. “Skated. Now he’s working for the law. None of it makes any damn sense.”

“No, it doesn’t. I know—I know he’s your brother—”

“Brother,” Sonny muttered. “He has my mother’s eyes. Shares her blood. That doesn’t make him my brother. It just makes him an abomination.” He looked at Jason. “Is that what’s eating at you? Now that we’re back in Port Charles. Now that Carly’s safe?”

Ric walking around free instead of being six feet under, it definitely bothered him. And it was easy to just nod, to take the excuse Sonny had handed him. Because, no, Ric’s continued relationship with oxygen hadn’t been particularly nagging at Jason, but now that Sonny had brought up the topic, it gave him somewhere to put his frustration.

“Yeah,” Jason said finally. “I don’t like it. For what he did to Carly. And whatever he did to Elizabeth,” he added as an afterthought. “I don’t know how she ended up in the hospital, but it was him.”

“Probably, yeah. She had a lot of medical issues as soon as they met. Christ.” Sonny dragged a hand down his face, then flexed his hand, almost as if he was missing the usual tumbler of liquor. “Well,  you know, what I don’t know, won’t hurt me.”

Jason lifted his brows at this quiet acquiescence. “Yeah?”

“Yeah, well, it’s not like he doesn’t deserve it. And if it’s going to eat at you, you might as well handle it. But I don’t want to know,” Sonny told him.

He felt oddly guilty letting Sonny think Ric was the problem lurking in Jason’s head, but that was easier than telling Sonny, the same man who’d fired Jason over the relationship with Courtney, that he’d slept with Elizabeth.

Sonny would think he’d lost his mind, and Jason wasn’t really sure what side Sonny would fall on, and he wasn’t in a hurry to find out. Not when Sonny’s good days were starting to outnumber the bad. Maybe one day, when it was all behind them, Jason could talk to him about it. Sonny might even understand. He’d walked away from Brenda, hadn’t he? He knew what it meant to walk away from the woman you loved while she had tears in her eyes.

He cleared his throat. “I’ll get Bernie set up, and make sure we can get eyes on Alcazar. He’s waiting for something, and I don’t want to be the last to find out what.”

Kelly’s: Dining Room

Elizabeth emerged from the kitchen with a tray of orders, stopping for just a moment when she realized the last empty table in her section had been occupied by Courtney and Carly. The blondes were talking, and Michael was coloring at his chair, oblivious.

She took a deep breath, continued to her original destination, delivering to a trio of dockworkers, then pulled out her order pad and approached the table.

“Can I get you guys started with some drinks?” Elizabeth asked. Courtney looked up at her, then raised her hand, rested it on her chin. Her left hand, the diamond winking in the light.

“Mmm, I’m in the mood for a milkshake. Strawberry,” Courtney said. “Carly?”

“Oh, just iced tea for me. Dairy makes me—” Carly made a face. “I didn’t know you were back. Mama didn’t say.”

“Yeah, well, have to pay the bills. Divorce lawyers aren’t cheap.” Elizabeth scribbled their orders. “Anything for Michael?”

“Chocolate milk. And we’re ready to order,” Carly said, before reeling off her usual and something for Michael.

“I’ll have chili. Elizabeth, you need to settle a debate for us,” Courtney said. She straightened, let her hand drop to the table, but left it flat so that the ring was still visible. “Carly thinks an outdoor wedding in October is asking for trouble—”

“Without a backup,” Carly said. “Have a venue on standby—”

“But I think it would be romantic,” Courtney said, looking directly at Elizabeth. “For Jason and I to get married outside, on the anniversary of our first kiss. October 19. And I think it’s worth the risk, don’t you?”

Elizabeth tucked her pencil back in her apron. “I think Carly’s right. You should have something on standby. You’ve only had one fall in upstate New York. The storms off the lake are no joke.”

“See, when Elizabeth and I agree on something, you know it’s probably right. I don’t think we’ve agreed since—” Carly frowned. “Have we ever?”

“We agree that I make good brownies,” Elizabeth said softly, and the blonde hesitated. “I made them for you last year. When you were grieving. I’ll go put in your orders.”

She left the pair at the table, her heart pounding. She went behind the counter, ripped the order off her pad and slid across to DJ. She just needed a minute. Just one.

She wasn’t on the verge of years, Elizabeth was relieved to realize. Or even angry that the pair had come in to stake their claim. Courtney had obviously not told Carly anything — no way the blonde wouldn’t have said something. But she’d brought Carly to talk about the wedding, and she’d flashed her ring as if Elizabeth could forget.

It was just….sad. For all of them. Jason had made his choice, and Elizabeth knew that he’d made the only one he’d be able to live with. But she wondered if Jason knew what Courtney obviously did.

That making the choice to stay was only the first step. The easiest.

Now it came the hard part — actually staying. And meaning it. Being happy.

And while Elizabeth truly did wish Jason well — well, she wouldn’t be human if there wasn’t just the smallest piece of her soul rooting for failure. If she didn’t hope that Jason looked at the life he’d built with Courtney, and wonder…what could have been.

But she wouldn’t sit around and wait for him. She’d get on with her life — and her job.

“Order’s up,” DJ called, and Elizabeth got back to work.

April 22, 2024

This entry is part 4 of 5 in the Flash Fiction: Warning Shots

Written in 69 minutes. Needed that last scene to be perfect.


February 2000

Elizabeth spied a familiar figure in the courtyard and beamed. “Penny,” she called to the waitress on the floor. “I’m going to be right back, okay? I have to grab something from the back.”

Penny acknowledged her words with a wave, and Elizabeth dashed back to the employee lockers and reached into her messenger bag for her class portfolio. When she came back to the counter, Jason was just taking a seat, flipping over his coffee cup.

“I’m so glad you came in today,” Elizabeth said, reaching for the carafe to fill the cup with his usual order — plain black. “I had something I wanted to show you, and I didn’t know if I could wait until I went to the garage this week.”

Jason lifted his brows. “Yeah? You finally get a car? I told you—”

“No, I told you—I can take the bus. I’m saving my money for more important things.” She flipped her portfolio open, and set it down in front of him. “Read that.”

Bewildered, Jason picked it and read the feedback evaluation sheet attached to her winter project. “This is exactly what I was looking for all last fall, Miss Webber. You reached down inside the subject and displayed vulnerability and tragedy with a few pencil strokes. It would be my honor to recommend this for display in our spring showcase this May.” His smile was immediate. “The same professor from December?”

“You remembered! I hoped you would. Yeah, you know, you told me to just go ahead and go all in, because, hey she already hated everything I did, so what was the harm?”

“I don’t think those were my exact words,” Jason said, setting the evaluation sheet down and sipping his coffee. “But okay.”

“I paraphrased,” Elizabeth said, taking the portfolio back, hugging it to her chest. “I probably would have kept drawing boring landscapes and portraits for her if you hadn’t said that—”

“I think you’re giving me too much credit,” Jason said, “and you’re the one that had to do the work.”

“Sometimes a little encouragement makes all the difference—” Elizabeth looked past Jason, her smile a bit smaller. “Hey, Lucky.”

“Hey.” Her boyfriend dropped onto the stool next to Jason. “What are you guys talking about?”

“Oh. My art project. Jason gave me some good advice at the end of last semester, and well, it’s paying off. My project is going to be in the showcase.” Elizabeth handed him the portfolio and Lucky flipped it open, going past the evaluation sheet to the sketch itself.

It was a simple one, done in colored pencil, not a medium she used often, but it had the rough edges she wanted.

Lucky’s smile faded slightly as he looked at it, then at her. “This…this is the project you turned in?”

Elizabeth tensed. “Yeah, why?”

“It’s the fountain.” He set it down, folded his arms. “From the park.”

Elizabeth bit her lip. “Yeah, um, Dr. Watts wanted me to show vulnerability—”

“So you painted that night for a good grade?” Lucky asked. “Down to the shoe?” He shook his head. “You never told me about this. You knew?” he looked at Jason who was doing his best to appear invisible.

“It’s art,” Elizabeth said before Jason could say anything. “And he doesn’t know anything about the subject. And so what if I drew it? It’s mine, isn’t it?” She snatched the portfolio back, staring down at the scene. She’d felt so drained when she’d finished the original sketches for this, but by the time she’d completed the color, and added the details to the broken shoe laying by the stone fountain, she’d felt almost peaceful.

As if painting the worst night of her life had somehow taken some of the power out of it. And now Lucky was making it sound like she’d used that memory for her own gain.

“Yeah, you can do whatever you want. I just—” Lucky shook his head. “Congratulations on getting the showcase. I know it’s what you wanted.”

“Yeah, it’s what I wanted.” Elizabeth closed the portfolio and went to put it back in her bag. When she came back to the counter, Jason had left, leaving a twenty next to his cup. He’d always tipped too generously, but lately it had doubled. Probably trying to convince her to buy a car.

“Since when do you talk to Jason about your art?” Lucky wanted to know. “That’s our thing—”

“It’s my thing, and I can talk to whoever I want about it. I went to the garage the night I got that last project back, but you weren’t there.”

“So you just…told him? Since when are you even friends?”

“We’re—” Elizabeth frowned. “Why do you care? I’m friends with Nikolas, aren’t I? And Jason’s always been nice to me. Because I’m Emily’s friend, probably. He was just humoring me, okay, Lucky? I was upset because it was a bad grade, and he asked. And he probably didn’t even remember talking to me—”

But he had, hadn’t he? Had seemed happy for her? Why was it so difficult for Lucky to do that lately? Everything that had to do with college — he always had to take the fun out of it, to make her feel bad for doing something without him.

“Probably not. He’s got a lot on his plate. And you know, he’s having an affair with my cousin,” Lucky said. “She’s always at the garage—”

“Why is that relevant?” Elizabeth demanded. “Never mind. Never mind. I don’t want to talk about this anymore.”

“Me either. Let’s talk about something better. Valentine’s Day is next week,” he reminded her. “I thought we could do something last year. A nice place. I’ll dip into the savings,” he told her. “Some place fancy won’t break the apartment fund, and we should celebrate your showcase thing.”

Elizabeth refilled a sugar canister and decided not to comment on the apartment fund. If he refused to accept that she wasn’t planning on living with him for at least another year, if not longer, than there was no point in having that argument today. “Yeah, that sounds good. Just let me know when and where.”

“It’ll be fun. We don’t get out much, just the two of us,” Lucky said. “But I know you’re working a lot of hours here. I’m glad. I know we argued about the apartment, but I’m okay with waiting until the summer—”

“I’m working a lot of hours here because Emily and I want to go to Florida for spring break,” Elizabeth said, grabbing Jason’s empty coffee cup and dumping it into the green tub for the dish washer. “I know you know about this. We talked about it on New Year’s. And two weeks ago. Emily and I were looking at hotels—”

“Spring break? You’re getting a whole week off and you’re going away? Were you even going to tell me?”

“What—” Elizabeth stared at him. “What is wrong with you? I literally just—we’ve talked about it at least twice. Lucky, this is ridiculous. It’s like you’re a completely different person—what happened? Why can’t you just—” Her eyes stung. “Why are you making me feel guilty every time I do something that has nothing to do with you?”

“Why doesn’t it bother you that I’m included anything? Why didn’t you ask me? We could have done spring break together. We never spend any time together because you’re always busy. You don’t want to live together, you don’t want to spend any time with me—”

“Not when every time I see you, it turns into another list of everything I’m doing wrong.”

“I have to get to work. I’ll call you about next week,” Lucky muttered. He slid off the stool, and left. Elizabeth made a face, watched him go.

——

Jason did his best to be underneath a car and incommunicado before Lucky got to work, but a customer came in, distracted him.  The younger man stomped past them, heading for the office.

When the customer left, Lucky came out of the office, his eyes hot. “I want to know what the hell you think you’re doing with my girlfriend.”

Jason stared at him, then looked behind him because there was no way this little idiot was talking to him. “What are you talking about?”

“Since when you do talk to Elizabeth? Since when do you know things about her that I don’t?” Lucky demanded.  “I’m the one that talks to her about her art—”

“Okay, we’re not doing this,” Jason interrupted. “I like you, Lucky, and I’ve known you a long time, but you’re out of line. With me, and with Elizabeth. The only reason I know anything about her art project is you didn’t tell her you’d be out of town. She came down here, she was crying, and it was too cold to make her wait for the bus. So, yeah, I asked her if she was okay. Do you have a problem with that? Because there’s the door—” he added, jabbing a finger towards the exit.

Lucky grimaced. “I did tell her. She just doesn’t listen—she never listens. It’s just like when she moved town,” he said suddenly. “She was a selfish, self-centered brat who didn’t care about anyone but herself. And I thought she’d changed. That she grew up. But now all she worries about is what she wants.”

Jason opened his mouth, mystified because everything encounter he’d had with Elizabeth Webber for the last six months had been directly the opposite. Worrying about Emily’s feelings, about Lucky’s, about everyone except for herself. But if he said that, this would keep being an argument and he did not want to be in middle of any of it.  “Then you take that up with her. Not with me.”

“Fine. Fine.” Lucky dragged a hand through his hair. “I’m sorry. I know you’re not interested in her. I know that. I just—she’s driving me crazy. Maybe I need a change of scenery. I know you said things were slow right now, but there has to be something I can do for you and Sonny. Sometimes that might take me out of town for a few days to clear my head.”

“Yeah, maybe. I’ll call him. You could always do the Puerto Rico run next week,” Jason said, heading for the car on the lift. “An you wait that long?”

“Next week? Yeah. That’d be good. Perfect. Thank you. I’m sorry.”

“Just don’t let it happen again,” Jason said, already dismissing the whole thing.

Emily rolled over on her bed, and leaned up on her elbows. “Honestly, what is his damage lately? He’s been ticked at me, too. First because of Juan — and he’s just mad because Juan’s basically perfect, and he can’t complain about him without sounding like an idiot—”

“Doesn’t seem to be a problem for him,” Elizabeth muttered, sorting through her clothes.

“And then he’s mad at me because I asked you to room with me and had my grandfather pull strings to get you in free of cost. Listen, if I can’t use being a Quartermaine for my advantage, what’s the point?” Emily sat up, crossed her legs. “What are you doing?”

“Thinking about what to wear next week for Valentine’s Day. He wants to take me some place nice. It might be good for us,” Elizabeth admitted. “I mean, he’s right. I’m not really prioritizing him. You know, maybe we should just pick a night every week and make it date night, you know?” She nibbled on her bottom lip. “And I didn’t tell him how that art project turned out. When I got my project back, I thought about telling your brother because, like, he gave me the push I needed. I should have told Lucky—”

“You think a date night is going to fix any of that?” Emily asked dubiously. “I think maybe not.”

“Not just a date night.” Elizabeth came out of the closet with a dress, held it against her. “I think maybe Lucky’s pushing for us to live together because…well, he won’t say it. But he’s waited a long time, you know? And we haven’t—” Her cheeks flushed. “We haven’t.”

“Yeah, but that’s because you’re not ready,” Emily said. “I’m not either, and I told Juan, we can do stuff, but not that. Not yet. I only get one first—” She cut off. “Um—”

“It’s okay. You don’t have to say that. Lucky and I don’t even do stuff,” Elizabeth admitted. “Nothing under the shirt. Or really over it,” she added. “He doesn’t push, and I haven’t really…sent any signals. But I think it might help. To get us back to where we used to be. We were so close, you know? Like one person—”

“But you’re not one person. You’re you, and you’re in college, and you get to be your own person. He chose not to come here with us this year, that’s not on you. I think he’s just mad that you’ve got your own thing going on here. With me, and the classes, and the art thing. He’s not part of it, and he’s never had to work at being the center of attention with you. You didn’t…”

“I didn’t have anything else,” Elizabeth said with a sigh. “I made Lucky my whole world, and now I don’t need to do that. We need to find a new balance. I love him, Emily. I want him to be happy. So maybe I should—maybe I should push myself. It’s Lucky. I know he won’t hurt me.”

“If you’re sure,” Emily said.

“I am. And we’re going shopping, because I want to look perfect.” Elizabeth sat on the bed next to her. “I can dip into spring break savings for this. It needs to be special. I want Lucky to know how much I love him.”

Jason slid out from under the car, then headed for the sink to wash the grease and oil from his hands and beneath his fingernails. He was using a scrub brush on the latter task when he heard the outside door open. “We’re closed,” he called, concentrating on the nails. “If it’s an emergency, it’ll be—” He trailed off when Elizabeth came around the corner, wearing her white winter coat. Her hair was gathered on her head, with loose pieces hanging down, and her make up was darker than normal—her eyes and lips.

She licked those ruby red lips now, looked around, then sighed. “He’s not here, is he?”

Jason set the scrub brush aside. “Lucky?”

“I think I knew it when I sat in the lobby of our dorm.” Elizabeth shook her head. “But I thought — maybe I got the plans mixed up. Maybe I was supposed to meet him here, right? Closer to downtown and restaurants. But no, he’s just not here. Did he say where he was going? Maybe I missed—”

That rat bastard, Jason thought, dimly thinking of the date he’d scrawled on the invoice. Valentine’s Day. “You had plans with him, tonight?” he asked carefully. He reached for the towel to dry his hands and forearms. “When did you …when did he make them?”

“He left a message on the phone at the dorm Saturday morning, and I left a message for him when I got it—” She frowned. “Why?”

“Because Lucky flew down to Puerto Rico Saturday afternoon,” he said slowly, deciding that when the kid came back, Jason was going to rip out his throat. “I’m sorry—”

“Puerto Rico? Was it an emergency or something?” Elizabeth asked. “He didn’t leave a message for me or anything?”

“No. No.” He’d asked for the damn job, hadn’t he? Hadn’t balked when Jason gave him the dates.

“Not a last minute thing, then. He knew on Saturday morning he wasn’t going to be here tonight.” Elizabeth exhaled slowly, dipped her head down, and Jason knew from the way her voice trembled that she was likely close to tears. She closed her eyes. “Can I—I need to sit down.”

“Uh, yeah, yeah—” Jason came forward, found one of the stools and made sure the top was clean. He nearly touched her elbow, to guide her, then remembered he hadn’t finished cleaning under his nails. “I’m sorry—”

“I’m sorry,” Elizabeth said, looking up at him, with a smile even though tears were clinging to her lashes. “I always seem to show up here and ruin your night, huh? It’s kind of turning into our thing.” She used the tip of her index finger to carefully flick away an errant tear. “God. This is so exhausting. I just need a minute, and then I’ll get out of your hair.”

“You don’t have to do that,” he said. He found another stool, sat across from her. “You can be mad.”

“I’m sure I will be. Especially—” She stood back up, unbuttoned her jacket and tossed it aside. Beneath it, she wore a blue dress made of material that looked slippery. It was strapless, curving in at the bodice and fell to her knees.  “When I get my credit card statement for this because I already took off the tags? I’m pretty sure I’m going to be furious.”

She dropped back to her stool. “But right now, I just—of all the nights to pull this kind of stunt—to make me come all the way down here—to tell me he was taking me to a fancy, expensive restaurant so I’d dress up and spend all day on my hair and makeup so he’d be proud to sit with me—and he knew the whole time he was going to do this.”

Elizabeth stared down at her nails. “Tonight. Of all nights,” she said. “He did this to me. As if I don’t have a reason to already hate Valentine’s Day, he has to add this to the list. Why?” She looked at him. “What did I do wrong?”

“I don’t think I can answer that,” Jason said, even though he wanted to tell her nothing. Because nothing was worth this kind of punishment, and he was almost positive that this was entirely Lucky’s fault. “I’ll —”

“Drive me home? Yeah. Why not. Why even bother to argue about the bus? Right?” She rose, reached for the jacket she’d discarded, then paused. “You know the project I turned in? The one that my professor said showed vulnerability?”

He had the distinct feeling he was not going to enjoy where this conversation would go. “Yeah—”

“I didn’t show you the finished sketch.” She wasn’t looking at him now — she facing away, her back straight, her shoulders tense. “You said you had trouble with them, and it wasn’t important anyway. But Lucky didn’t like that I’d made it into a grade.”

“I remember.”

“It was Valentine’s Day. Two years ago. The fountain in the park. The stone one with the benches. Do you know it?”

“Elizabeth—”

“It’s a winter scene. Everything is dead. Grays, whites, blacks, browns. There’s almost no color in it. Except for a red shoe. The strap was broken.  I had a jacket, but I don’t know what happened to it. I never did.” She turned to look at him now, her face white but there no tears now. “Lucky found me that night, crawling out the snow. Broken. Dirty, bruised. A trembling mess. He brought me home, and he made me feel safe. And last year, on this day, he tried to give it back to me. He told he’d love me forever.” She picked up her jacket, drew it on. “I’m not sure I like what his idea of love looks like anymore.”

He knew what night she was talking about — Emily had mentioned it, Lucky had brought it up. But listening to her recount the barest of details about it — the way it had looked that night, how she’d felt afterwards — his skin felt cold and hot all at once, and he knew those sensations were coming from inside him — he didn’t feel surface temperatures that well.

“I’m sorry,” Jason said. “That Lucky did this.”

“Me, too.” Elizabeth bit her lip, and some of the life came back into her eyes. “And I’m sorry I made it your problem—”

“It’s not a problem,” Jason said. He picked up his keys, found his jacket. “And even if it was, Lucky created it. Not you. You did nothing wrong, you know that, don’t you?”

“I—”

“Whatever he tells you is the reason he did this to you tonight, it won’t be good enough,” he said, and she closed her mouth. “He knew you’d get dressed up, probably knew you’d buy something. And he probably knew you’d wait for him for a long time. Maybe he didn’t think you’d come all the way down here. He wanted you to feel this way, Elizabeth. So when you find the anger he deserves, I want you to remember that.”

“I will.” She smiled faintly. “Thank you. We’re making this a bad habit, aren’t we?”

He led her to the door, held it open. “Careful, the cement is slippery, and I don’t want you to get hurt. I don’t mind driving you home. And there are worst things in the world than spending a few minutes every once in a while talking with a friend.”

He opened the SUV door for her, and she looked at him. “We’re friends, huh? I’m not just your little sister’s best friend?”

“No,” Jason said. “You’re not.”

April 21, 2024

This entry is part 7 of 8 in the Flash Fiction: Chain Reaction

Written in 50 minutes. I did do a read through to look for typos, but my mother called so I didn’t do it as closely as I wanted to, lol. I’ll find them as soon as I posted, I know. Next update on Tuesday!


Kelly’s: Dining Room

Elizabeth refilled Nikolas’s coffee cup. “It’s hard to set realistic expectations after all that, you know?” she told him. “I know she still has rounds of chemo and so much work ahead of her before she goes into remission—”

“If,” Nikolas corrected, almost on a mutter. He cupped the ceramic white cup with both hands, rotating it gently. “I can’t let myself believe it. It’ll hurt too much when it doesn’t work.”

“I know. I know. But I also—” Elizabeth paused when she saw a familiar figure in the courtyard, lingering between the window and door, almost as if he wanted to come in but couldn’t figure out how to work the handle. Her throat tightened, and their eyes met.

Oh, God.

“Liz?” Nikolas asked, and she looked at him, blinking. He frowned, then twisted in his seat, his lips thinning when he saw who had caught her attention. “Oh, hell.” He turned back around, dragged a hand down his face. “I didn’t know that was back. I mean, that you and him—”

“We’re not,” Elizabeth murmured. And we won’t be, she thought.

The door finally opened, and even the jingle of the bells sounded muted as Jason entered, walking slowly towards her, heaviness in every step. Her lower lip quivered, so she bit down on it.

“Nikolas?”

“Yeah?”

“Whatever you do, stay right there.”

“Got it.”

Jason stopped in front of her, rested the tips of both hands on the counter. Their eyes met for one excruciating minute, then he looked away. “I was—if you had a few minutes—”

“I’m on break in ten minutes,” Elizabeth said. “I’ll talk to you in the alley. Not in here. Or out there.” Not in the courtyard where he’d walked away from her for the first time all those years ago.

“Yeah. Yeah, okay.” He cleared his throat, almost as if he wanted to say something else, but mercifully, he left.

Nikolas watched him go, then studied Elizabeth’s face. “You’re not going to tell me what that’s about, are you?”

“Nothing. It’s—”

“Hey. I know I have a terrible track record when it comes to that topic, and I’m not going to fix that in the next ten minutes,” Nikolas said. “You don’t have to lie to me Just tell me to butt out.”

“It’s not that. I just—” She very carefully picked up a dish towel and folded it, desperately needing something to do, an action to perform so that her hands didn’t shake. “I can’t talk about it. Physically. I mean. I need to take the next ten minutes to decide how to do this, and I don’t have the bandwidth to explain any of it to you right now. I’m sorry—”

“Don’t apologize for doing what you need to do to survive, Liz.” Nikolas raised the cup to his lips. “You don’t report to me and you’re not accountable to me, either. But whatever happens next, I hope you know I’m here for you.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.”

She kept herself busy for what time remained before her break, and still didn’t have any epiphany for what had to come next. Only that she wasn’t ready for this conversation.

“Go on and take your break,” Penny said, passing her with a carafe of coffee. “I’ve got it covered.”

“Thanks.” Elizabeth headed for the kitchen where the back entrance lead to the alley.

Jason stood there, leaning against the opposite wall. He straightened when she pushed the door open and stepped out. “Hey—”

“I know I asked you to wait out here, but—” She folded her arms, looked down at the ground, kicked at a stray piece of glass that had escaped the trash bins. “I honestly don’t think I want to do this here, either. I don’t want to do it at all. I still have three hours on my shift, and right now, I can pretend I don’t know what you’re going to say. I can’t finish my shift if I know.”

Jason exhaled on a long breath. “I didn’t—I’m sorry. I didn’t think—”

“No,” Elizabeth said, her smile grim. “You don’t work a nine to five, so I guess it wouldn’t occur to you. I’ll meet you at my studio in three hours. And no, you can’t come here and pick me up,” she added when he opened his mouth. “I don’t think that’s a good idea, do you?”

“No. No. I’ll see you then.”

“Okay.” Elizabeth looked at him for another long moment, searching his eyes, then went back inside. She leaned against the closed door, squeezed her eyes shut.

“You okay over there, Lizzie?” DJ, the cook on the grill for the breakfast shift, asked.

“Okay is a strong word, DJ. I’m surviving. That’s good enough.”

She’d make it enough.

Three hours later, she turned over what tables remained to the next waitress, grateful for the lunch rush which had made it impossible to think about anything else. She’d needed the time, the space, the distraction. She’d only get one chance at this conversation, and she really wanted to walk away from all of this knowing she’d done the right thing by herself—and by Jason.

She walked home, wishing she lived further, that she could put off this conversation again. To prolong the silly hope that somehow, if she didn’t do this today, tomorrow would be different. But it wouldn’t be.

Jason was waiting for her, and she almost wondered if he’d come directly here and had sat here for the last three hours. She nearly asked, but didn’t. Her keys were in her hand when she approached the door.

“Thanks,” Elizabeth said, sliding the key into the lock, twisting to release the catch and deadbolt. “For, um, waiting. I needed a chance to….I needed to be ready for this.” She walked into the studio ahead of him, and if she’d had any doubts about his choice, they would have been erased when he followed her inside, closed the door and stayed on the other side of the room.

“Elizabeth—”

She sat on the arm of her sofa. “You don’t have to say it. You went home and you looked at her, and you realized it’s insanity to walk away from what you know you can live with, from someone who makes you happy enough, that you love enough. To walk away from the life you know and trust—” Her voice trembled. “And risk it for someone who never stays anyway—”

“Don’t say that,” Jason said, coming forward just a step, then stopping, fisting his hands at his side. “That’s not what you are to me—”

“That’s what you were to me,” she interrupted, and he closed his mouth. “That day in the park. You offered me the world, and I almost said yes. But you backed off. Do you remember that? I asked if you wanted me to go with you, and you said it didn’t matter as long as I was free. And I—” She brushed at an errant tear. “And I said no. Because what if I walked away from everything and everyone and you decided it wasn’t real, that you didn’t love me after all, not that you loved me in the first place—but I just—I couldn’t trust it. Maybe I was only unhappy because you were here, and I could imagine something different. But before you came home, I was happy. Happy enough. I loved Lucky enough. Maybe once you went away, it all go back the way it used to be.”

Jason swallowed hard. “Did it?”

She smiled at him through her tears. “No, it didn’t. But I didn’t know that then. I couldn’t. You were the risk I was too scared to take, and the regret I’ll have to live with, I guess.” Elizabeth closed her eyes, took a deep breath. She could do this.

She could do this.

Elizabeth opened her eyes, looked at him. Really looked at him. “I’m not saying staying with Courtney is a mistake. It’d be so arrogant and self-serving, right? To tell you that we couldn’t have shared what we did that night if you’d been really happy—I’m not that person, and neither are you. I know that staying with Lucky was the choice that I made willingly, and just because it turned into a mistake, it didn’t mean it started that way.”

Jason dragged a hand down his face. “I just—I love her,” he said in a low voice, and Elizabeth was surprised when the words didn’t stab her in the gut the way she’d expect. “We…work. Outside. In my life. She understands it and—”

“She’s part of Sonny’s family. Friends with Carly. She fits, Jason. And you love her. I understand.”

“I—” Jason paused, as if searching for the right words. “I love you, too,” he said, and those words did slice at her, because she’d dreamt of hearing them and now it was being said as he walked away. “I don’t know if that’s—if I should tell you that—but I can’t stand it if you think I don’t—or that the other night—that it was—I should regret it. I know this would all be easier if I did, but—”  He looked away, shook his head slightly. “I don’t know. I’m standing here, and I don’t want to do this. But then I go home—”

“And your brain tells you all the reasons why you and Courtney have lasted for months and months, and why you and I didn’t make it three weeks.”

Jason looked at her sharply. “I didn’t—I knew why we didn’t. I lied to you. I should have told you about Sonny.”

“And I should have given you the grace you had earned over and over again. For all the times I hurt you, for all the times I didn’t stand by you, I should have stayed. Fought about it. But I left. And I don’t get to complain that you didn’t fight for us. Because I didn’t either.” She looked down at her hands, twisting the silver ring on her right hand.

“It just…it was too hard,” Jason admitted, his voice quiet. “I’m sorry.”

“Me, too.” She looked up, smiled, tears stinging again. “I want you to know that there’s a part of me that wants to fight you now. And I’m struggling—because maybe that’s what I’m supposed to do. I haven’t  yet. Maybe that would work. If I cried, and I begged you to—” Her voice trembled, and swallowed. “If I begged you to stay. To love me. To choose me.” The tears spilled over the edge, hot and torrid, and she pressed her hands to her face, horrified. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry.  I’m not doing that — I just—I said it out loud, and it hurt so much—” She threw up her hands when he started across the room. “No. No. You made a decision, okay, and if you come over here, you’ll hold me, and we’ll never get through this and we’ll keep doing this stupid dance over and over again until I can’t breath anymore.”

“I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m messing this up. I’m hurting you, I’m hurting her—”

“And yourself. You’re hurting you, and you won’t say that. Because you never do—you always put yourself last, and I’m trying so hard to put you first, okay? Because you’re what matters.”

“You matter, too—” But Jason stayed where he was, though his hands were shoved in the pockets of his jeans, as if that was the only way to protect himself. “You do. And—”

“You have to do this. Because you were happy with her before it all went to hell. You were happy and you loved her, and you wanted to marry her,” Elizabeth said. “So you have to do this. You need to go be sure that you can’t get that back. I promise you, I understand. I do.”

“Maybe this would be easier if you didn’t,” Jason muttered and she smiled. “If you were angry at me, or throwing things—”

“Oh, yeah, it definitely would be,” Elizabeth said, with teary-eyed laughter. She  smiled at him. “I love you. And I want you to be happy. I told you yesterday, and I meant that. If it’s with her, I wish you happiness. I do, Jason.”

“If you need me, if you need anything—”

“I know where to find you. I always do.” She wrapped her arms around herself, smiled. “It’s better this way. You know? I’d always wonder if you loved me or you were staying because you’d blown everything else up and had no where to go. We’re not those people, Jason. We’d never be happy if it came at her expense, would we?”

“No,” he said softly. He came forward now, and this time she let him. “No, we  wouldn’t.” He used the pad of his thumb to brush away the last of her tears. “I want you to be happy, too. You deserve it. Promise me you’ll be happy.”

“I don’t make promises I can’t keep,” Elizabeth said and he closed his eyes, leaned his forehead against hers. “I’m sorry. I’ll try, though. Okay?”

Jason gently kissed her  forehead, his lips lingering. She put one hand around his wrist, the way she had long ago day the first time he’d left her. Then he looked at her, and she braced herself for the goodbye.

“I’ll see you later,” he told her, and she smiled again.

“I’ll see you later,” she echoed.

And then he left.

April 20, 2024

This entry is part 6 of 8 in the Flash Fiction: Chain Reaction

Written in 54 minutes. This was a good stopping point.


Corinthos Penthouse: Living Room

Max had left the door open when he’d rushed across the hall. Jason reached the other penthouse before Courtney to find Sonny staring blankly at the remains of shattered glass and brown liquor on the hardwood floor, and Carly crying, one hand over her mouth to muffle the sobs, and the other wrapped protectively over her belly, now eight months gone.

It wasn’t the first time since Carly’s return that Jason come over in the aftermath of a vicious, angry argument, and it wouldn’t be a last. He knew his part in this charade, and so did Courtney. Sonny’s sister went straight to Carly, wrapping an arm around her shoulder, murmuring soothing words.

Jason went to Sonny, took him by the arm, alarmed by how docilely the older man acted as he was led towards the fireplace, widening the gap between husband and wife.

“M-Michael—he’s upstairs—but I know he heard—I know—” Carly’s hitched words. “He just—he won’t believe me—he doesn’t believe me—”

“Let’s get some water, okay? Let’s get something to drink,” Courtney suggested, stroking Carly’s back. She guided her sister-in-law in the direction of the kitchen, disappearing around the corner.

Jason got Sonny to sit on the sofa, then went to Max standing in the doorway, his hands hanging limply at his side. “No one else was up here today?” he asked, his voice low. “None of the other guards?”

“N-no, just me. I’m supposed to be off in twenty, but—” he swallowed hard. “I’ll call. Tell Diego I’m pulling a double.”

“Good. Good. Take care of that.” Jason rubbed his thumb against his brow. Sonny’s erratic behavior was bad enough on a personal level, but if it were just that then maybe Jason wouldn’t feel like he had to be involved.

But not all of the guards had been with them for years — and not all could be trusted with the uncomfortable truth about Sonny’s dark moods and breakdowns. Max could, and Jason would have to make sure the guard was compensated for the extra time and effort.

If the wrong people knew how unstable Sonny could get — how easy it would be to exploit that vulnerability, it would be all out war. Violence would escalate and people would get hurt. Jason would do anything he had to do to prevent that, to preserve the peace.

He’d chosen this life and it was too late to turn back. All he could do now was keep it steady and predictable. Which meant protecting Sonny.

He closed the door, then went back to Sonny. He sat on the coffee table in front of him. “Sonny—”

“I didn’t mean to—” Sonny’s dark eyes darted away. “I wasn’t going to say anything to day. We talked about it. We talked and I believe you. I believe you that Carly—I know she’d never do anything. I know—I know that it’s good that she was treated well after all—” He swallowed hard, and his voice shook. “But I thought I saw Lily on the balcony—”

Jason looked Sonny at the closed balcony doors, at the setting sun in the background, then back at Sonny. “It was a trick of a light. Your imagination,” he told his friend carefully. “You know that.”

“I do. She died. My son. She and my son died because I couldn’t protect her—” Sonny dragged a hand over his mouth. “Couldn’t protect her, just like Carly. Alcazar. He got her out of that panic room, and she was happy there—”

“No,” Jason said, his voice sharp because that was how it always started. “Not happy. Relieved to have sunlight and real food. The ability to walk around. She was locked in a small, cramped panic room for three weeks, Sonny. Anything after that would feel like a paradise.”

“I know, I know. I just can’t remember that—”

“You will. We’ll talk about it as much as you need to. You and me, Sonny. But Carly’s been through so much. Kidnapped in front of her son, trapped in a panic room, threatened with death, kidnapped again — she needs rest and relaxation. She’s going to have a baby. Your son. Her health comes first.”

“Right. Right.” Sonny dipped his head. “My son. Our son. We have to save him this time. Can’t lose another one. Wouldn’t—” He curled his hand in a fist, unfurled it, then formed it again. “Wouldn’t survive it again,” he muttered.

“I know that,” Jason said. “Why don’t you lie down? You’ll feel better in the morning.” He always did — it was the twilight hours, the darkness of night that always set Sonny off. He’d be better off living somewhere where the night was short, and the days long.

But for now, getting him to bed and finding the sedatives that always seemed to calm him would have to be enough.

Jason settled Sonny in his room, made sure he slipped the pills into the water he gave Sonny. Watched him drink it. When Jason was sure, he left and went down the hallway to Michael’s bedroom.

The bed was against one wall, and he found Michael curled up in the corner, his knees drawn up to his chest, his little head buried against his thighs. “Hey, buddy,” Jason said, closing the door and heading over to the bed.

Michael’s head popped up, and relief spread across his little face. “Uncle Jason!” He launched himself into Jason’s arms, and he held on tight. “They were screaming and yelling and Mommy cried, then something broke, and I got scared so I stayed in here just like you told me to—”

Jason rubbed his back, letting the little boy ramble out all his worries in a stream of conscious. “You did good, Michael. I’m sorry you were scared. I’m trying really hard to stop that it from happening again.”

“I knew you’d come and you’d fix everything.” Michael sniffled. “You always do. You found Mommy and you brought her home. She’s so sad all the time, Uncle Jason. Can’t you fix that?”

“I’m trying.” Jason stood and Michael wrapped his legs around Jason’s waist, and he walked him around the room, hoping the movement would soothe him,  almost the way he’d done when he was just a baby. This room had been Michael’s nursery when he’d been Jason’s…responsibility. His mind skittered away from the reminder that this boy had been his son. He knew that wasn’t true — but it was hard to stop loving him that way. To stop wishing he could wrap Michael in cotton so that the world would stop hurting him.

“I love you, Uncle Jason. Can I come live with you?”

Jason sighed, then sat back on the bed, Michael still in his lap. “We talked about this,” he told Michael. “You live here with your mom and your dad. I’m across the hall and I’ll always be there if you need me.”

“You went away for a while,” Michael said with a sniffle. “I ‘member you coming home and Mommy was so happy. We were all happy.”

“I know.”

“I just wanna be happy again.”

“I’m working on it. I promise.”

“I know. You never break your promises. You always keep them. So I know you’ll make this all okay.”

“It’s almost eight,” Jason said, and Michael made a face. “Isn’t that bedtime?”

“I don’t want it to be,” the child said glumly, but he half-crawled, half-scooted towards the headboard and slid under his brightly covered comforter. “Will you read to me?”

“Sure. Whatever you want.” Jason reached for the book on the nightstand. “Where am I starting? What chapter?”

Michael laid down. “We finished three. With all the letters, remember?”

“I do now.” Jason flipped to the right page and began to read. “BOOM. They knocked again…”

He only made it a few pages into the chapter before Michael’s eyes closed, and Jason carefully closed it, marking his page and setting it on the table. He didn’t read to Michael every night—it was usually Carly—but lately, it felt like he was here more often than not. And that wasn’t a good thing, he knew. It wasn’t healthy for him to still be protecting and loving Michael the same as a father would.

But Michael didn’t deserve the world he was living in, so Jason had to step in. To make sure that whatever Sonny and Carly were dealing with didn’t ripple out and hurt Michael.

Because no matter how wrong, no matter how unhealthy, Michael would always be a little bit his.

He switched on Michael’s night light, then flipped the switch on the larger light by the door. He headed for the stairs, and found Courtney over by the minibar with a broom and dust pan in her hand.

“Let me do that,” he told her, hurrying forward. “There’s glass—”

“I can do it,” Courtney said, but there was no heat in her voice, just exhaustion. “I cleaned up worse at Kelly’s. Carly went upstairs about five minutes ago. Guest room,” she added. “She’s not up to talking about what happened. Just cried and cried—” She dumped the tray filled with glass shards into a trash can. “He’s making her feel guilty for not fighting Alcazar harder. For wearing the clothes he gave her, eating the food, walking around his house without shackles—”

“I know.” Jason folded his arms, leaned against the sofa. “He always seems to understand when we talk about it, but—”

“He forgets when they’re alone. It’s awful, you know, what’s going on. It’s like—” Courtney made a face. “He’s my brother, and I love him because I want to love him. But sometimes I don’t know if I really do. If it’s just a choice I’ve made because I don’t have any other family.” She swept the last few pieces into the dust pan. “How’s Michael?”

“Upset. Just like always. I calmed him down, read to him. Sonny took a sedative, so they’ll be good until morning.”

She nodded. “Until it starts again tomorrow. Or the day after.” She looks at him. “What’s the end game, Jason? Do we keep cleaning up after them? Patching them up until the next time? Because there’s always a next time. I’m so tired, and it’s only been a few months. I know you’ve been doing it for years.”

“It wasn’t always this bad. It’s never been this bad, actually,” Jason said. “I don’t know what they were like when I didn’t live here. It’s…” He squinted. “It’s the baby, I think. They lost the first one, and Sonny — I think the kidnapping brought back what happened to Lily.”

“Another pregnant wife he couldn’t protect. I get it, and I’m sympathetic but—Carly’s my best friend. I don’t know how—” Courtney said with a half smile. “But she is, and this is killing her. She’s been through enough.”

“I know.”

When she’d finished cleaning up the remains of the bourbon bottle, Jason disposed of the glass in the trash can and they headed across the hall. He closed the door behind him, and flipped the deadbolts.

He turned and found her looking at him. And it came rushing back — the argument they’d been having before Max’s call. The night before. The conversation at Elizabeth’s studio.  And now that the storm had passed—

“I don’t know what I’m supposed to say to you,” Courtney said finally. “I don’t know why I should have to argue for myself — I’ve been here for almost a year. Ten months since that night at my apartment.” Her eyes searched his. “I know you and Elizabeth have a history. Maybe it’s worse because you never really got started, and you’ll always wonder what if. I—I do get that. Sometimes I think about AJ, you know? What if I’d forgiven him? What if he hadn’t been so scared I’d leave him that he tried to trick me into staying—” She looked away. “I understand about the what ifs and the way your mind plays tricks on you.”

“I never wanted to hurt you,” Jason said. “Or lie to you. But—”

“You lied when you said you weren’t in love with her. I knew it when you said. I don’t know if you did.” She met his eyes. “We have a life, Jason. We have a family. You and me. Sonny and Carly, and Michael. This new baby. We’re a family, and we were happy before this summer. Weren’t we? Did I imagine that?”

“No. No.” He stepped towards her. “You didn’t. But—”

“But you have a history with Elizabeth. We have one now, too. I’m not asking you to…I’m not asking you to forget that,” Courtney said. “I couldn’t. It wouldn’t be fair. I’m just asking you not to throw away everything we have. We work, you and me. We’ve been working for months and months. I don’t understand why that doesn’t get to count. You and Elizabeth — did that ever work for more than a few moments? A few days?”

“No,” Jason said, then looked away. “No,” he repeated. Elizabeth had said as much, hadn’t she? When it was just them — it was magic. But that wasn’t real life. And maybe it hurt more because they’d both held on to a dream that had already ended. Maybe she was right. Maybe they were meant to hold on it. Was love supposed to be that painful, that difficult?

He did have a life with Courtney, and it did work. They’d been happy. He loved her. He’d asked her to marry him, to share a life. And maybe she was right. Maybe he’d drifted back towards Elizabeth because everything had been so chaotic in the wake of Carly’s rescue. Maybe he’d wanted that quiet peace that he only ever found with Elizabeth, sitting in a room with her, and listening to her talk.

But maybe she was an escape he wasn’t supposed to need anymore. Hadn’t she said that once to him? With Lucky home, she shouldn’t have needed an escape. He hadn’t really understood what she’d meant then. But now—looking at Courtney, he almost did.

“You’re really quiet. Are you thinking—” she folded her arms. “You’re thinking of ways to explain to me why you’re leaving.”

“No,” Jason said, softly. He came forward, took her in his arms. “No, I’m not. I did what I did, and I’m sorry it hurt you. It wasn’t about having children. There are other ways to make that happen. You’re right. We have a history, too. And you don’t deserve for me to throw it away like it doesn’t matter. Like you don’t matter.”

Her lips trembled, parted as if she wanted to say something, then she closed them. “So you’re—you’re not leaving me for her.”

“No. I’m not.” But even as he spoke the words, even as he saw the smile on her face, they felt wrong. They weren’t — it was the right choice, he knew that. He and Courtney had a relationship that worked, and he loved her enough to try to make this work.

It was just — he knew he loved Elizabeth, too. But when he’d opened his mouth to tell Courtney that he wanted to be with Elizabeth, he couldn’t say the words. Because what if it always ended the way it did with Elizabeth — with her walking away?

“I’m not going anywhere,” Jason said, and her smile was a little more genuine, but instead of making him feel better — he just felt worse.

Was this how Elizabeth felt every time she’d walked away and went back to Lucky? Was he making the same mistake she had? Staying because he thought he should and not because he wanted to?

He thought maybe he was, and for the first time, he understood that some mistakes needed to be made. And he was making this one—for better or for worse.

 


don’t hate me <3 i love you. we’re going on a journey my lovelys. trust the process. 

April 19, 2024

This entry is part 3 of 5 in the Flash Fiction: Warning Shots

December

“When was the last time we did this?” Lucky split the last brownie in half and dropped a piece on Elizabeth’s empty plate. Around them, Kelly’s was quite, partially in shadows. After closing, she and Lucky had cleaned up and then had dinner on their own.

“Oh, probably since before Thanksgiving,” Elizabeth said, her smile fading just a bit when she remembered their last dinner date had ended with the rushed trip to the airport and the humiliating fight in the courtyard. She cleared her throat. “But hey, my last final is this week, , so I’ll be all yours for a month.”

“Just like old times.” He flashed her that grin she’d fallen for first, then popped a piece of brownie in his mouth. “Are you tomorrow? I thought we could take a look at few places. I know you want to be on the bus route so you can get to campus—”

Elizabeth wrinkled her nose, sat back in her chair. “Lucky, we’ve talked about this—”

“No, I’ve talked about this, and you keep acting like we didn’t have a plan.” He pushed aside his plate, folded his arms, leaned forward. “When you didn’t get into New York, we sat down, remember?”

“I do—”

“And we looked at our savings — neither of us had pretty much anything. We were going to get housing from your school, and I’d pick up jobs, but we were always planning to live together eventually. You said you’d room with Emily for the first semester because her housing was already paid for. The old man just picked up a phone and pulled a few strings to get you in.”

“I remember all of this. And yeah, that was the plan in June. But I also remember telling you in August that I thought we were better off waiting until next summer to get a place. I’d be able to save up so much more, and you said you were going to pick up some courier jobs with Jason and Sonny.” She lifted her brows. “Did I imagine that conversation, Lucky? Because it sure feels like only one of us was listening.”

“Come on—you can’t really want to be on campus for six more months. That room is so small and you’re sharing a bathroom with half the floor. That’s better than living with me. I’m sorry I don’t rate—I just wish you’d told me you changed the plan.”

“I’m talking to myself obviously because I told you in August. Why can’t you just be okay with this?”

“I don’t know. Because we used to see each other practically every day,” Lucky said. “But now you’re off at college, and you’re never around. You’re always working or in class and you have time for parties—”

“I make time for you, Lucky—I just—” Elizabeth sighed. “Okay, maybe I didn’t make you a priority. I’m sorry. I just—I had so much fun the first few weeks. It was a lot of fun living with Emily, and I didn’t expect that. I think maybe—maybe I want to put off living together until…maybe after graduation—”

“After graduation—” Lucky scowled. “In four years?”

“Well, three and a half—”

“Don’t get technical. We had a plan, Elizabeth. It’s not fair you to just to change it without talking to me.”

“I’m talking to you right now but you’re not listening—”

“Are you nervous about us living together? Because you know…” Lucky reached across the table, took her hand. “You know, I’m okay with waiting however long you need. But if we live together, you might get more comfortable—”

“It’s not about that. It’s not. And I—” She chewed on her lip. “I’m working on that. I want us to be together. All the ways. And you’ve been really great about that. You know how much I appreciate you not pressuring me. But I’m telling you I’m not ready for us to live together and it’s like you can’t hear me.” Her throat was tight and she had to blink back tears. “We fight all the time now. I don’t know. I don’t know what I did to make you so mad.”

“I’m not mad. I just—” He stroked her hand with his thumb. “I miss you. We were basically attached at the hip for over a year. You know? Always together. We slept under docks together and you’ve spent the night at the garage with me a few times. You can trust me to keep waiting.”

“But you’re always so annoyed when I bring up anything about school. Or when I want to do something you don’t agree with — like, that whole thing with Juan—”

“Oh—” Lucky rolled his eyes. “Come on. You know I’m right about him—he’s no one, Elizabeth. He came to town looking for a hand out, and he picked up the richest girl in town. Emily’s naive when it comes to these kinds of things—”

“Emily’s been through so much in her life, Lucky. She’s happy with him. So what if he doesn’t have any money? It’s not like you and I are rich. I didn’t think you were a snob—”

“I’m not. I’m just looking out for Em. When Juan shows his true colors—”

“You’ll be right there to tell you I told you so. Just like the airport thing. It was fixed and no real harm was done, but you just had to make sure everyone knew you’d been against the whole thing. I mean, you were willing to abandon Emily at the airport—”

“I don’t want to get into that—”

“Why? Because you don’t want to talk about how mortifying it was with you berating me in front of Jason—who by the way, doesn’t like Juan either, but he doesn’t make it his whole personality.”

“Yeah, Jason’s great. He saved the day. So what? What does any of this have to do with getting a place or changing the plan so that it’s four years away instead of a few weeks?”

“Here’s a newsflash, Lucky, I get to change the plan when it’s about me. I’m the one who has to live there, too. And I don’t want to live together yet. I want to go to college. I want to stay up late with Emily and be silly. I want to have fun. It took so long for me to get back there, you know? To be light, and happy. To not have—” She closed her eyes. “To not be afraid all the time. I just want to be eighteen and stupid sometimes. I want to help my best friend be in love even if sometimes we do foolish things. And I want the guy who says he loves me to understand that just because I don’t want to live together, it doesn’t mean I don’t love him anymore.”

“I’m sorry if I take it a little personally that everything you want to do has nothing to do with me.” Lucky shoved his chair back. “Fine. Stay with Emily this summer. Whatever. Do what you want.”

He jerked his jacket from the hook by the door and had left the diner before she’d even processed the whole thing.

Shaken, Elizabeth rose and started to clean up. She’d unpack all of this later — and maybe when Lucky had time to cool down, he’d see that she was right.

Jason headed into the office, surprised to find Lucky already in there, on the computer just like always. He tossed the work orders on his desk. “Hey. Did I know you were working today?”

“No, I’m just trying to distract myself,” the younger man muttered. “Figured I’d get a head start on the paperwork from yesterday. I was supposed to be looking for apartments today, but that got cancelled.”

Jason heard the petulant tone in his voice and wondered if Lucky had finally started listening to his girlfriend. Jason barely knew Elizabeth, and even he knew Elizabeth and Emily were planning to keep rooming together.

“Hey, can I ask a question? You don’t have to answer, but —” Lucky swirled on the stool. “When you and Robin starting dating, she’d just been diagnosed, right?”

Surprised, Jason nodded. “A few months earlier, yeah. They didn’t get the medication—the protocol—until we were together. But yeah, why?”

“Sex was an issue, wasn’t it?”

Jason stared at him. “Excuse me?”

“I know, I know, it’s none of my business — I just—” He grimaced, looked back at the computer screen. “Emily said she’d told you about that photographer last year. What he did to Elizabeth.”

Jason tensed, the memory flooding back of Emily painfully telling Jason she wanted to be as brave as Elizabeth had been when confronted with her rapist. He hadn’t thought about it much after that — Tom Baker had made a deal, and Jason had made a promise to himself to handle the situation before the asshole would ever see the light of day again. “What does that have to do with Robin?”

“Elizabeth and I—we haven’t—she’s not—”

“Lucky, I really don’t think this is something she’d want you talking about with me,” Jason said, realizing too late where the kid was  going with all of this. “I’m not even sure Emily should have told me, either—”

“Yeah, well, Emily does a lot of things she shouldn’t,” Lucky muttered. “But I think that’s why Elizabeth doesn’t want to live together, and I just—I figured you had that problem with Robin—”

“I am not talking about this with you,” Jason said, heading for the door. He stopped at the threshold, feeling irritated with himself because he liked Elizabeth and the way this idiot was talking, he’d probably say something to put that look in her eye again. “Look, I won’t pretend to know what Elizabeth went through with that—”

“It was awful, but I’m not going to hurt her—”

“I don’t know what she went through. But I do know that she has repeatedly said to me and to anyone who listens that she’s happy rooming with Emily. Did she tell you it was about this…other thing or that she just wanted to be in the dorm?”

“She said it was the dorm—”

“Then do yourself a favor and listen to her. It’s not the end of the world. Robin was away at school a lot, and we were just fin.”

“You broke up with her, though—”

“This conversation is closed,” Jason said. “Listen when she talks Lucky. That’s the end of it.”

He put the conversation out of his mind entirely the moment he left the office because he absolutely did not want to be in the middle of Lucky’s romantic issues. He was staying out of everyone’s business, even if Lucky seemed determined to drag him through it.

A few days passed, and Jason forgot about it. Lucky didn’t bring it up again, and Jason was all too happy to send the kid out of town for a few days on a courier assignment, giving him the garage all to himself. He didn’t need to do the volume of business that required him to hire anyone else, and he liked the solitude of working by himself.

So when the door opened, and he heard footsteps, Jason sighed and slid out on the car roller, trying to find the patience to deal with another customer. He rose to his feet, reached for a rag to deal with his oil-stained hands and frowned when Elizabeth came around the corner.

She wore a white jacket, and her hair tucked up in a matching hat. In her hands she held a thick black leather portfolio, and she’d been crying. Jason knew enough about women to recognize the red-rimmed slightly swollen eyes.

“Is Lucky here? He didn’t answer his phone, but I thought—”

“He’s out of town until tomorrow,” Jason said, and she made a face, looked down at the portfolio in her hands. “He didn’t tell you?”

“No, he told me that he’d be around this weekend. He knew—” Her voice was wobbly. “He knew I was getting this back today, and I said I’d come by, but he must have forgotten.” Elizabeth sighed, then looked at him. “I’m sorry. I always seem to be bothering you when you’re working. Was it last minute or—no, I know. You can’t tell me.”

“He knew about it two days ago,” Jason said, and she flinched. “I’m sorry—”

“For what? It’s not your responsibility to tell me Lucky’s schedule or to listen when I talk so I don’t come all the way into town when there’s no reason—” Elizabeth took a deep breath. “Never mind. Never mind. Just forget it.”

“I can take you back to campus—”

“Aren’t you tired of offering to drive me somewhere every time Lucky disappoints me?” Elizabeth asked, looking back with a half smile. “I’m fine. The bus stop is just around the corner—and there’s one in like twenty minutes—”

“Then wait here where it’s warm until it gets here,” Jason said, heading to the sink. He’d use that time convince her, and maybe he’d look into talking to Emily about this. He didn’t like her on the bus all the time, especially when she was upset.

“Um, thanks, I guess. It’s pretty cold out.” Elizabeth set her purse and the portfolio on a nearby table. “Are you…excited for Christmas?”

“What’s to be excited about?” Jason asked, drying his arms off with a towel. “It’s just a day.” He saw her drop her eyes, and felt bad. “I mean, it’s good for other people. But it’ll just me and Sonny. You probably spend it with your family?”

“Yeah. With my grandmother. We used to come out for the holidays every Christmas when I was kid so we could listen to my grandfather read the story. Dad said it was one of his favorite memories of Gramps. I always thought it was weird because Dad didn’t even know Gramps was his father until he came to Port Charles, but it was also kind of nice, you know? That you could make your own family if you wanted to.” Elizabeth made a face. “Sorry — I tend to get going and just ramble. You don’t have to listen,” she added.

“I remember your grandfather a little,” Jason said. “He passed away not long after my accident, but he was one of the few doctors who didn’t…” He paused, squinted. “He didn’t look at me like I was a puzzle to figure out.”

“He really was the best. I miss him all the time this time of year. Anyway, Gram and I will decorate a tree next week, and Emily invited me over for a Christmas party at the Quartermaines, and Laura said I could come to their place. It’s nice to have options—” Elizabeth stopped. “Oh. I forgot. Um, about the Quartermaines. And—” She cleared her throat. “Anyway. I should go. The bus stop—”

“Still have ten minutes,” Jason said, and she sighed, looked at him. “You don’t have to worry. I know Michael’s at the house. I’m glad Emily will be there with him. She’s been the one constant for him.”

“Yeah, she told me she’s his godmother. I’m sorry. Is that why Christmas is so hard?” Her eyes widened. “Never mind. I didn’t ask that. Sorry. I’m always doing that.”

“Yes,” Jason said. “But every day is hard,” he added, and there was a little bit of a release inside when he admitted that. “Like I said, it’s just another day for me.”  He nodded at the portfolio, hoping to change the topic. “What’s that?”

“Oh.” She slid her hand over it. “My project for art class. I…” And her voice faltered. “I passed because I technically completed the requirements, but my professor didn’t like it.”

“Why not?”

Elizabeth jerked a shoulder. “She’s always telling me that I need to push harder and dig deeper, but I don’t know how to do that.” She flipped it open and showed him what was inside. There was a white background with swirls and colors that he couldn’t really make out. “I didn’t think it was that bad.”

“Uh—it’s nice.”

Her cheeks flushed. “Right. Right. That’s what she said.”

Damn it — “No—”

“It’s okay. It’s okay. I think maybe I just have to start facing the fact that I’m not supposed to be an artist. New York didn’t want me and Dr. Watts says I’m not doing enough but maybe that’s her way of saying I don’t have what it takes—” She flipped it shut and headed for the nearby metal trash can. Jason snatched it before she could drop it inside.

“No, wait. Let me explain,” he told her.

“There’s nothing—”

“My accident,” Jason interrupted, and she closed her mouth, frowning. “I can’t always see…things that are abstract. Or—I mean, photographs are okay. Because they’re realistic. But art? It doesn’t make sense to me. A processing thing.” His cheeks warmed, and he handed her back the portfolio. “You could be Van Gogh and I’d never know.”

She studied him for a moment, then nodded. “Oh, that’s fine. Well, it’s — it’s just Lucky playing a guitar.” Elizabeth flipped it open — pointed to a color  “That’s the guitar, and Lucky’s holding it. She said it was nice, technically correct. But—” She wrinkled her nose. “Soulless.”

“Ouch,” Jason said, and then she laughed.

“I guess she’s right. There’s nothing really in this.” Elizabeth studied it. “I drew it from memory. I wanted Lucky to pose for it but we couldn’t get our schedules together, so maybe that’s why it’s like that. She asked why I always did portraits and landscapes, and I told her I didn’t know what else I could do. And she just told me that I should paint me, something inside of me, and —” Elizabeth bit her lip. “I don’t know. There’s too much sometimes, and what if I tried, and she still hated it?”

“What do you have to lose?” Jason asked, and she looked at him, startled. “She doesn’t like what you’re doing now. You might as well try something new.”

“That—” Elizabeth smiled, and some of the sparkle came back in her eyes. “Makes complete sense. You’re right. She’s not impressed with me as it is, I doubt it could get worse. And maybe it won’t. If I never try, the answer is always no. Thank you.”

“Sure. And—” Jason reached for his jacket and keys. “We missed your bus, so now you have no choice but to let me give you a ride back to campus.”

“Fine,” Elizabeth said, but her smile twitched. “Did you do that on purpose so I wouldn’t take the bus? Distract me?”

“I have no idea what you’re talking about.” He steered her towards the door, grimacing when he saw through the window that snow had begun to fall, sticking to the streets. “Hold on, I have to grab the keys to the SUV. We can’t take my bike in this.”

“Oh—” Elizabeth looked over at his Harley, inside the garage for protection from the elements. “That’s a shame. I’ve never been on one before.”

“Maybe some other time since we’re making a habit of this,” Jason said, and she laughed, following him out the door.

This entry is part 5 of 8 in the Flash Fiction: Chain Reaction

Written in 56 minutes.


Elizabeth’s Studio

Maybe we’re not meant to hold to it.

He probably shouldn’t have touched her again. Common sense and rational thought always seemed to short-circuit the minute his hands were on her soft skin, the taste of her on his tongue—

Jason didn’t want to stop kissing her, didn’t want to stop touching her—his hands slid down to her hips, and he started to back her to the sofa, her fingers at the hem of his shirt, and he knew that everything would just go away if he never stopped, if the sensations just went on forever—

And then a cold rush of air swept over him—Elizabeth pressed her hands against his chest, pushed instead of pulled and he was thrust back into the real world, nearly panting. “Elizabeth—”

“She’s still wearing your ring,” Elizabeth managed, her lashes lush with the tears clinging to them. “This isn’t who you are. This isn’t who I am. I don’t want to be these people, Jason. Okay?” She pressed her fingers to her mouth—they were trembling, and it all rushed back to him.

When it was just them, when he didn’t think about anything about her and the way she made him feel—it was easy to think it would be easy.

But it wasn’t just them.

Jason swallowed hard. “I’m sorry—”

“For what?” Elizabeth looked at him, misery etched in every line of her expression. “For kissing me? For having the keys to the room, for not stopping? What are you sorry for?”

The answer should be all of it, but it wasn’t. And wasn’t that the real crime? He took a deep breath. “For making you cry. Not the rest of it.”

She closed her eyes, but tears continued. She wrapped her arms around her torso, her shoulders stiff. “We should be sorry. Shouldn’t we? For all of it.”

“Yes.”

“I stood there holding a pot of coffee,” she said, her voice soft. “And she told me she understood. That you chose her over and over again, and she’s right—” And now she looked at him. “You chose her. To see in secret. To build a life with. And I wish I could be angry about that. I wish I could rage—that I could hold on to that as evidence that I don’t matter—”

“That’s not true—”

“I know. I know.” Her lips curved in a smile, but her eyes remained shattered. “You chose her, Jason, because I never chose you. I ran when I should have stayed. I threw angry words at you over and over again, words you never deserved—”

“Elizabeth.” He took a hesitant step towards her, relieved when she didn’t move back again. “It’s not like that—”

“I’m not angry with you because you didn’t break up with Courtney this morning. And if you go home, and you see her, and you still don’t—” Elizabeth drew in a shaky breath. “I won’t be angry if you decide to stay.”

He dragged a hand down his face. “Why not? I promised you—”

“But you promised her first, and I know you, Jason. I pretend I don’t, but I do. You weren’t lying when you asked her to marry you. You meant it. And you would have married her that night in June. You looked in her eyes this morning, Jason, and you remembered that.” She tipped her head. “You wouldn’t be the man I loved if you could make those kind of promises and throw them away easily.”

The soft declaration hung between them, and Jason wanted to offer the words back to her. He wanted to tell her that he’d loved her for so long that it was simply part of his soul, a piece of his identity that would always belong to her, that he’d always be in this room with her, teasing her about soup and singing and paper chains and picking splinters out of her skin and standing by a window—

“I did mean them—” Jason said carefully. But then he stopped because he didn’t know what else to add. He meant them in May. In June. July. August. Did he mean them today? He didn’t know the answer to that.

“She said something else,” Elizabeth said finally. Their eyes met. “She chose you because she knew you were worth fighting for. That I didn’t fight for you. I didn’t. You know that. I don’t know why.” She sighed, rubbed her mouth. “I spent so many years fighting for Lucky, so determined to hold on to that dream. Maybe I just didn’t have it in me to keep going. To keep battling for my place in someone else’s life. Even if I don’t think I would have had to fight very hard.”

She bit her lip, then nodded. Squared her shoulders, looked at him again. “I don’t know what’s in your heart, Jason. Maybe you don’t either. That’s okay. I…I can wait. For you to be sure. Whether it’s with her, or with me—” She smiled, and it looked almost genuine this time. “Either way, you’re what matters. I want you to be happy. Wherever that takes you. If it’s me, then, okay. But really, if it’s with Courtney, then I’ll wish you well.”

He stared at her, a bit thrown. Confused. He didn’t know what he’d expected from this conversation. Maybe anger that he hadn’t kept his promise, or an ultimatum — a clear path forward, Jason thought. He’d wanted her to give him a direction, and she hadn’t.

She was placing the choice in his hands, the way he’d always done for her. It was her life that would change if he’d kissed her that day in his room at Jake’s. In the park. And if she didn’t want it, if she wasn’t ready, then it was better to never know what it would feel like to hold her. He didn’t want just a piece, he’d wanted everything, and she hadn’t been ready to give it to him.

Now—now, she was doing the same to him, and he wondered if she’d been as frustrated as he was not to have someone else make the choice for him.

“I should go,” Jason said finally. “I—”

“It’s okay.” Elizabeth raised her hands to her face, wiping at her tears with her index fingers. She walked past him, pulled the door open. “It is. I promise. Um, you said something to me once a few years ago that I really needed to hear…” They stood close, separated by a few physical inches, though it felt like an ocean between them. “I won’t come to you, but if you come to me, I won’t turn you away.”

He smiled now, shook his head. “You were mad at me when I said that.”

“I know. Because I knew even though I should stay away from you, I wouldn’t be able to.” She leaned her cheek against the edge of the door. “Maybe I’m hoping for a better ending this time.”

Jason touched her cheek, the pad of his thumb catching another tear. She closed her eyes, leaned into his touch. “You should go.”

“I know.” Reluctantly, he dropped his hand and went into the hallway. The door closed behind him, and he heard the locks a moment later. Jason rested his hand against the door, took a deep breath, and left.

Morgan Penthouse: Living Room

Courtney was on the sofa when Jason returned, curled up with the remote in her hand and something on th screen in front of her. When he came through the door, she switched it off, looked at him.

“I spent last night with Elizabeth,” Jason said, and Courtney sighed. She swung her legs to the ground, stood. “At Jake’s. In bed.”

“Did you think I needed to hear that confirmed—”

“No, but I needed to say it.” Jason set his keys on the desk, and looked at her. Her hands rested limply at her side. “You went to see Elizabeth. You told her that we’d talked. We haven’t.”

“She works fast,” Courtney said. She folded her arms. “How quick did she have you on the phone to cry about it—”

“I ran into her at the hospital. Visiting Emily.”

“Okay, so I told her we talked. We did. And you told me everything I needed to know when you came in and went upstairs. You chose me. Didn’t you?” Courtney lifted her brows. “Because if you’d wanted this ring, all you’d have to do is ask—in fact—” She twisted it from her finger. Set it on the desk. “There you go. I’ll make it easy. You decide if I get to keep that.”

Jason stared at it — the little circlet of gold with the diamond stone setting. He’d picked it out with Carly after she’d suggested marriage. He probably wouldn’t have thought of it on his own — it had only been a few months, after all. But Courtney had stuck with him through the worst of what his life had to offer, and she’d never flinched. She loved him anyway, and so he’d thought it was a good idea. He’d taken Carly to the jewelry store and she’d pointed out a few options.

He’d bought the one that he liked, brought it home and he’d proposed. And Courtney had been happy — so had he, Jason acknowledged, because it was nice to come home to someone who loved you and didn’t always constantly demand more.

Jason picked up the ring, turned it over in his hand. Did he want her to have this back? Did he want the life that ring promised?

He didn’t know the answer to that anymore. It wasn’t the yes it had been a few months ago. It wasn’t the no it had been this morning, standing in the hallway outside Elizabeth’s studio.

He set it back on the desk. “You can do whatever you want with that,” Jason said finally, and Courtney’s eyes darkened. “It’s yours, no matter what happens here.”

She pursed her lips, picked it up, slid it back on her her finger. “I suppose I should be grateful that you didn’t just say no, right? Did you even think about me?” she asked abruptly, her eyes flashing to his. “Last night. When you were screwing another woman, did I even enter your consciousness?”

“No,” Jason said, and she closed her eyes, absorbed that. “I didn’t plan it. It happened—”

“Don’t—don’t say that—you’re a deliberate man, Jason. You don’t act on impulse, okay? I know that. So—” Courtney grimaced, looked away. “Are you sorry? Do you wish it hadn’t happened?” Her gaze snapped back. “And don’t lie. I’ll know.”

“No, I don’t wish I hadn’t happened. And I’m not—I’m not sorry.  Not the way you want me to be.”

She nodded. “No regrets? Not even one?” Courtney laughed, a shaky sound without an ounce of mirth. “Wow. Okay, well I asked, didn’t I? Serves me right. Okay, fine. Was it good?” Her eyes squinted into little slits. “Was it everything you’d ever wanted it to be?”

“Don’t—don’t do this—”

“No, I think I get to interrogate you a little bit, Jason. You asked me to marry you,” she spat. “And you spent the night with another woman—not just some whore you picked up in a bar — but Elizabeth. Your ex—God, whatever she is. Ex-girlfriend, ex-friend, ex-crush, I don’t know. Pick a word and go with it. But you don’t get to stand there and tell me I can’t ask for whatever details I damn well please.”

Jason knew he deserved this — knew that the anger and hurt were valid, and that every piece of it was earned. But it didn’t make any of this easier.

“So what happens now?” Courtney demanded. “You didn’t take the ring back. So you still want to marry me? Am I just supposed to put up with the idea that maybe every few years you and Elizabeth will circle back to each other, no matter who you’re involved with? Oh, you think I don’t know about that?” she retorted when Jason frowned at her. “Carly told me how Elizabeth played you like a violin a few years ago, when she had you and Lucky Spencer on the hook, making you fight over her—”

“That’s not what happened—”

“Well, whatever. It’s not going to happen this time. I told Elizabeth what she needed to know. That as long as I’m in the picture, she needs to keep her hands to herself. I don’t think it’s out of line, do you?”

Maybe not, but everything inside of Jason said it had been more than that — but unlike Courtney, he wasn’t going to keep pushing. “Courtney—”

“You didn’t answer my question. What happens now? Do you want to be with her? Do you want to leave me? After everything we’ve been through?” Her voice faltered, and she swallowed hard. “Because, let me tell you, this is some bullshit if you leave me now and go to her. I had a miscarriage less than a month ago, and I found out I can’t have kids, and you didn’t even so much as blink when I told you—”

“Courtney—”

“Can you say anything other than my name!” she broke in, her voice rising to almost hysterical pitch. “Because that’s what this is! You and I both know it! You love kids. Christ, look at how much you’ve let Sonny and Carly push you around because of Michael — you want kids of your own, and I can’t give them to you, but I bet she can, huh?”

“That has nothing to do with it—”

“The only thing that’s changed between us is that I can’t have any children,” Courtney shot back. “That’s it. So if it’s not that, then maybe you never loved me at all. Maybe you were just settling because Elizabeth didn’t want you. What makes you think she’ll stay this time?” she charged.

None of this was going the way he wanted it to, and he didn’t know how to tell her that her ability to have kids had never even entered his consciousness, but —

“How can you throw away everything we’ve been to each other? Did it mean anything to you? Do I mean anything to you?” Courtney begged, and now she was sobbing, holding her hands to her mouth. “Was I just a warm body—”

Jason closed the distance between them, and took her in his arms as she broke down, her tears warm against his neck. “No, no, that’s not true. None of it—”

“Then tell me you love me, okay? Tell me—tell me right now and I’ll believe it—” Courtney pulled away, fisted her hands in his shirt. “Tell me, Jason, and we’ll just forget all of this ever happened. I won’t ever bring it up again—”

“I—”

There was a frantic knocking at the door, and Jason turned, releasing Courtney and going to the door. As soon as he’d done that, the screaming and yelling could be heard. Jason winced. Not again.

Max stood there, grim. “I heard glass breaking, and Mrs. C is pretty upset. I think you’d better get over there.”

April 18, 2024

This entry is part 2 of 5 in the Flash Fiction: Warning Shots

Written in 63 minutes.


Story 2: The Juan of It All

October

Elizabeth counted the tip left at one her tables, wrinkling her nose as she walked back to the counter. “Man, people get cheaper all the time. They’re not even bothering with ten percent, much less fifteen.”

Emily swirled her straw in the vanilla milkshake. “You know, if you want, I could have my brother sit in your section and glare at the cheapskates. I bet that would work—”

“Why don’t I hold off on the intimidation until I get desperate.” Elizabeth slid the tips in her apron and continued her sidework, wrapping utensils in napkins. “You look miserable. Still avoiding the essay?”

“I’ll be avoiding that essay until three hours before it’s due.” Emily sighed. “It’s Juan. We’re trying to call each other three times a week, but it’s not easy with my schedule and his stepdad always breathing down his neck. I just—” She jerked one shoulder. “I miss him—”

“You miss who?” Lucky came through the kitchen entrance, wrapped his arms around Elizabeth’s waist, then kissed her cheek. “Hey,” he said, nuzzling her neck. Elizabeth leaned against him for a minute, then returned the kiss on his cheek. He came around the counter, dropped onto the stool. “Em? Who do you miss?”

“You’ll just make fun of me,” Emily muttered. She sipped her milkshake, and Elizabeth sighed. Neither Lucky nor Nikolas had let up on making sure Emily knew exactly how they felt about Emily’s boyfriend, which was stupid because the guy had been gone for six weeks.

“No, I won’t. Come on—” Lucky nudged her shoulder. “Juan, right? You’re still trying long-distance.”

“Yeah. It’s hard. But let’s talk about something else.” Emily straightened. “Liz, did you get your first art project back yet?”

“Not yet, but I’m really looking forward to it. Dr. Watts is the first, like, real artist to look at my work, and I really want to know what she thinks.” Elizabeth set a soda in front of Lucky. “But I’m also, like, terrified, because what if she hates it?” Her smile faded slightly. “I mean, there’s a reason I didn’t get into New York, right?”

“It’ll be fine,” Lucky assured. “Don’t I tell you all the time how good you are?”

“Well, yeah, and I love that. Really. But—”

“But my opinion doesn’t matter?” he asked, lifting his brows. He picked up the soda. “Used to matter a lot.”

“Of course it matters,” Elizabeth said. “If you hadn’t believed in me, I’d never even be this far. But Dr. Watts has connections, you know? And she’s head of the department. If I could impress her, it would make such a huge difference in my career.”

“You’ll be great.” Lucky turned back to Emily. “I hate seeing you so down all the time. Come on. We should do something Friday night. All of us, like we used to—”

“Oh, I wish I could, but I already told Tammy I’d work,” Elizabeth said.

“And Friday’s my night to call Juan,” Emily added. “But Saturday—”

“I have work at the garage.” Lucky rolled his eyes. “What about three weeks from now?” he asked sarcastically. “Is that enough advance notice? I mean, what’s a guy gotta do to get some time with his girlfriend?” He was smiling as he said, but there was an edge in his voice.

“I’ve been so busy, I know. I’m sorry,” Elizabeth said. “Just getting used to the new classes and everything on campus, juggling work. But we’re already almost halfway through this semester. And we’ll have Thanksgiving break—”

Emily pursed her lips. “About that. Um, what would you say about covering for me if I tell my parents I’m gonna have Thanksgiving dinner with you and stay at your house?”

Elizabeth frowned. “I’d say your parents would be confused because we live ten minutes apart. Why?”

“Oh, you’re not going to do something stupid like run off to Puerto Rico—” Lucky stopped when Emily dropped her eyes. “Em. Come on. He’s not worth it.”

“You don’t even know him—”

“I know enough—Look, you’re just making this harder on yourself than it has to be.”

“Lucky, hey, give her break,” Elizabeth said, a bit startled by how forceful he was being. It wasn’t like him to be so dismissive of someone else’s feelings, especially not Emily’s. “Em, we’ll work on a cover story, okay? Let’s get you to Puerto Rico.”

Emily brightened. “Yeah?”

Lucky scowled. “You’re just making it worse,” he told Elizabeth. “This guy is probably already dating someone else—”

“He’s not! Juan loves me—” Emily said, her eyes hot with indignation. “We talk all the time and he misses me! He’s writing songs about me and he sings them to me—”

“And he’s probably singing them to a thousand girls.” Lucky softened his tone. “I love you, Em. You know that. And I want you to be happy. With someone who deserves you. Not this guy.”

He tossed some money down for his drink. “Look, I gotta get to work. But you need to be realistic, Em. This is only going to end badly if you keep stringing yourself along.”

Emily watched him go, then looked to Elizabeth, her eyes stricken. “Is he right? Do you think Juan is already dating someone else? Maybe the songs aren’t for me—”

“Don’t listen to him. I don’t know what crawled up his butt lately, maybe he’s spending too much time with his dad. You know how cynical Luke is, especially these days with Laura dating Stefan Cassadine.” Elizabeth leaned over the counter. “Listen, I got you, okay? Here’s what we’ll do…”

Not too far away from Kelly’s, Jason was giving serious consideration to locking the door to the garage, getting on the bike, and riding out of town without a word to anyone else.

Because maybe then Carly would stay the hell away from him and stop dragging him back into her plans — into her life—

And maybe she wouldn’t be standing here, Michael in her arms, smiling at him like she’d done him a favor.

“I just knew you’d want to see how big he’s getting,” Carly said, shoving the toddler at Jason who fumbled to get hold of the little boy. Michael, nearly two, squirmed and struggled. Jason set him on his feet, then scowled at Carly.

“He doesn’t know me anymore,” he hissed, the pain of that statement—the accuracy—slicing at him. He’d given the little boy up the previous spring, ending their visitation and it had nearly killed him.

It had been the right decision — the only one — and if he could just get Carly to see that —

“No, but I could start showing him your picture and, come on, Jase, don’t—” she grimaced and went to grab Michael before he could get into any trouble. “I was thinking maybe I could come to your place and bring him so that when I finally get out of all this—”

“I’m going to tell you the same thing I said months ago,” Jason said, and her expression only turned more stubborn. “This isn’t going to work. You got a good thing up at the mansion—”

“You hate them—”

“But you like their money,” Jason said, and she rolled her eyes, didn’t deny it. “And Michael—he looks good. Happy,” he said, looking at the little boy he loved so much. “That’s what I wanted for him. So you need to go—”

The door behind them slammed open and Lucky stalked in, stopping when he saw Carly there. “Oh. I can come back—”

“No. No.” Almost grateful for the younger man, Jason waved him forward. “I need to talk to you about something. Carly was leaving. Say goodbye, Carly.”

Carly made a face, then lifted Michael in her arms. “Goodbye, Carly,” she said in a mocking tone, and flounced off.

“I didn’t mean to interrupt,” Lucky said, after the blonde had left. “I thought you said—”

“I did. I got a job for you from Sonny. Come into the office.” Jason jerked his thumb in that direction and headed there, trusting the other man to follow.

“You know, Emily’s still talking to Juan all the time,” Lucky said darkly. “I thought she’d be over it by now.”

Jason looked for the package he’d set aside, only half-listening. “Yeah, I guess I thought she might meet someone on campus. She’s always telling me about some party they’re going to.”

“That’s what I’m talking about! How does she have time to go to class, talk to Juan, and go out all the time! Every time I try to see Elizabeth, she’s got something to do.” Lucky sighed. “Man, maybe I should have gone to college or something, so at least I’d be there with them.”

“What?” Jason tuned back in, frowning. “Maybe next semester.”

“No, we’ll be in our place by then. Just gotta suck it up for now,” Lucky said, taking the package. “But this Juan stuff — you gotta talk to her, man. She’s setting herself up for some real disappointment.”

“I’ll be there if she needs me,” he replied. “Now, here’s what Sonny needs from you.”

November

The night before Thanksgiving, Elizabeth had just completed step one in the GET EMILY TO PUERTO RICO ACTION PLAN, and had headed to Kelly’s to meet Lucky for a long-overdue dinner date.

She dropped into the chair across from him, grinning when she saw he’d already ordered her usual. “Oh, thanks! I’m sorry I’m late, I got hung up—”

“Did you at least remember to put gas in my car this time?” Lucky said, taking the keys from her. “What did you need it for? And do I have any new dents?”

“You back into one measly fire hydrant,” she said with a sigh, then picked up her milkshake. “I had to drop someone off. Anyway, the car is golden, and I am all yours. Just like I promised.”

Lucky smiled, his face lighting up. “I’ve missed this. Just you and me.”

“Me, too. And I really am sorry. I got so carried away these last few months, but, oh, it’s so much more fun than I thought it’d be, you know? I love my classes, well except for Dr. Watts—” her face fell slightly. “But I just know she’ll like the new project I’m working on—”

“I told you not to worry so much about what other people think—”

“It’s not just other—” The bell over the door jingled, and Elizabeth glanced over, her face falling when she recognized the man who’d come in.

Lucky twisted in his seat, and he grimaced. “Oh, damn. I really thought we were done with this.”

“What are you doing here?” Elizabeth lunged from her seat, crossing to where Juan freaking Santiago was standing in Port Charles. “You’re supposed to be in Puerto Rico!”

“I know, but it’s a surprise. Emily will never see it coming—”

“Oh, God—” Lucky hissed. “Elizabeth, please tell me Emily isn’t the person you had to drop off.”

“Um—” Elizabeth looked at Lucky, her eyes wide. “Maybe.”

“Oh, no,” Juan groaned, realizing what must have happened. “She’s on her way to Puerto Rico?”

“See? This is why I told you not to get involved.”

“Yell at me later,” Elizabeth said. “First, we have to get to the airport to stop Emily from getting on that plane—”

“No. No, this is exactly what needs to happen.” Lucky folded his arms. “Emily never thinks before she does anything—and you’re just as bad when you’re trying to help—” He shook his head. “I’m not helping you out of this one.”

“Dude—” Juan frowned, then looked at Elizabeth. “What time is her flight?”

“Ninety minutes, so we still have time. Lucky, if you don’t want to drive us, then just give me your keys—” She held out her hands, but Lucky sat down, picked up his drink. “Lucky, you’ve got to be kidding.”

“I told Emily not to waste her time on this idiot—”

“This idiot came all this way to see her—” Elizabeth wanted to stomp her foot. “Why are you being like this? Emily’s in trouble—”

“This isn’t like when she got blackmailed, Elizabeth. That was trouble—”

“Oh, forget it. I’ll argue with you later.” Elizabeth went around the counter. “I know just who to call. Someone who will actually drop everything when someone’s in trouble, no matter how they got there.”

“You’re trying to make me feel guilty, and it won’t work,” Lucky called.

“You’re not calling him, are you? Because he hates me—”

“He loves his sister more,” Elizabeth said. She dialed a number, waited for the call to connect. “Jason? Hey, it’s Elizabeth. Um, Emily and I have a small problem. I need a ride to the airport. Yes—” She rolled her eyes. “I’ll explain everything when you get here. I’m at Kelly’s.”

Jason strode over to the gate where his little sister was waiting patiently for her flight to be called. She sat in one of the seats, flipped through a magazine.

He placed two fingers on the magazine, plucked it out of her hands. “Going somewhere?”

Emily looked at him, guilt flashing on her expression, then it slid into determination and she jumped up. “You can’t stop me! I already bought my ticket!” She jabbed a finger in his face. “And I am eighteen so I can do whatever I want—”

“Seems like a waste of time to go all the way to Puerto Rico when you can just look over there—”

Emily frowned, then turned her head. Her eyes grew comically wide, and she squealed when she spied Juan standing next to Elizabeth by a bank of pay phones. She practically danced over to him. “You’re here! You’re really here!”

Jason just sighed and went to stand next to Elizabeth. He didn’t like Juan Santiago much, but the kid could be worse. And his sister looked so happy — she could probably power an entire small village from the wattage in her smile and light in her eyes.

Elizabeth had her hands clasped together and was practically vibrating with happiness. “We made it! Thank you so much! I thought we’d miss her plane when we got stuff in that traffic—”

“Yeah, it was close.” He folded his arms, looked at her with the glower he usually reserved for work. “Don’t think this gets you out of trouble.”

Elizabeth rolled her eyes. “Please. I saw you smile when Emily saw Juan.” She poked his bicep lightly. “You’re a softy for her, and you know it.”

“I am not,” he argued, but it was tough to keep up the facade when she was sneaking peeks at Emily and Juan, still talking excitedly. Elizabeth continued to grin, and he couldn’t really pretend to be unhappy with her when the only thing she’d cared was taking care of Emily.

“Look how happy she is,” Elizabeth said, putting a hand on his arm, pointing. “You can hate him all you want, but he’s not that bad if he makes her that happy right?”

“I like her being happy,” Jason said with a beleaguered sigh. “But does it have to be with him?”

“You can’t choose who you love,” Elizabeth told him, and he nodded, because of course that was true.

Emily bounced over to them, practically dragging Juan. “Liz! Liz! Oh my God, Juan gets to stay! He’s coming to PCU this spring!”

“Oh my God, that’s amazing!” Elizabeth hugged Emily, then Juan, then beamed at Jason. “Isn’t that the best news?”

“Yeah,” Jason said, then said nothing else. Elizabeth rolled her eyes, then went back to laughing with Emily.

“I just need somewhere to stay until my room is ready in January,” Juan said, his hand firmly tucked in Emily’s hand as they walked into Kelly’s courtyard. “You think Tammy will rent to me again?”

“Oh for sure.” Elizabeth rocked back on her heels. “She’s working right now. You guys should go ask her.”

“Come on, I’ll plead your case.” Emily dragged Juan into the diner. “We have a lot to catch up on.”

“Did you have to suggest Kelly’s?” Jason asked, with a wince. “Do you know how much I come in here? How much I’m going to have to see him?”

“Wow, it’s almost like I didn’t take you into consideration at all,” Elizabeth said, her eyes comically wide. “I was just thinking about Emily.” But then she laughed, and he knew she’d realized he was just teasing her. “Listen, this is actually a really good thing,” Elizabeth told him.

“I’m going to need you to expand on that,” Jason said, folding his arms. “How exactly is Juan being back in Port Charles, at PCU, and at Kelly’s a good thing—”

“Juan is what?”

They both turned to see Lucky striding towards them from the parking lot, scowling. “Tell me you’re joking,” he said to Jason. “Juan’s not really back for good—”

“He is, and listen, I know you guys aren’t sold on him, and I get it, but I promise you, this is a good thing—”

“You keep saying that,” Jason said.

“Before it was like Romeo and Juliet, separated by time—”

“That’s not the plot of Romeo and Juliet,” Lucky complained. “Their families hated each other—”

“Oh my God, are you going to correct my Shakespeare? Really? I watched the Leo version until my VHS tape broke. I know my Leo,” Elizabeth said, dismissing Lucky’s complaint. “Juan being in Puerto Rico meant that Emily would just keep making up stories about him in her head, making it harder for her to get over him. But he’s here. And he’ll either make her happy or he won’t. But at least it’s not her just mooning over him anymore. She’ll get to really know him this time. And we’ll see if he’s actually good enough.”

“Let me save you some time. He’s not,” Lucky said flatly, and Elizabeth just made a face. “And you’re just making it worse by egging her on—”

“I’m not—”

“And I told you not to get involved with all of this. Now we’re stuck with Juan. Why can’t you just admit you were wrong?”

Elizabeth frowned. “But I wasn’t—”

“You nearly sent Emily to Puerto Rico on her own for no reason—”

“I didn’t—”

“Jason, come on, tell her, man. You agree with me. You hate Juan. Tell her it was stupid for her to encourage Emily in all of this.”

Elizabeth’s smile had faded and so had all the light from her eyes. She looked at him, and he felt like someone had sucked all the air out of the world. “I didn’t mean for Emily to almost end up down there by herself—”

“It’s not that serious,” Jason said. He looked at Lucky. “It just isn’t. Emily would have just booked a flight home. We could have left a message at the airport down there. You’d have laughed about it later,” he told Elizabeth, and her smile bloomed again.

Lucky scowled. “It must be nice to have money to throw around like that. But some of us have to be realistic—”

“Well, lucky for both of us, I have enough money to send my sister to Puerto Rico every day for the next fifty years if I want,” Jason said, his tone more annoyed than he’d realized. Lucky flinched. “It’s not a big deal. Elizabeth’s right,” he added. “More exposure to Juan will either prove to us that she’s right about him or she’ll get over him faster.” He looked back at her. “I still don’t like him,” he said, hoping she’d see it as another tease.

But she was more subdued. “I’m gonna head back to my grandmother, I guess. Tell Emily I’ll call her tomorrow.”

“I’ll drive you,” Lucky said. “We were supposed to have a date anyway—”

“I’m not in the mood anymore. I’ll just take the bus.” Elizabeth hurried away, and Jason frowned after her, before looking at Lucky.

“Why did you do that?” he asked. He’d been around the two of them for over a year now, and he’d never heard Lucky talk to Elizabeth that way. “What’s your problem?”

“Elizabeth just—she used to be rational. Reasonable. Ever since she started college and is spending all this time there—” Lucky pressed his lips together. “I don’t know. It’s like she’s a different person.”

He went inside the diner, and Jason headed for the street where he knew the bus stop was located.

He found her sitting on the bench, picking at one of her nails. He sat next to her. “I can drop you at your grandmother’s,” Jason offered.

She looked up at him, smiled again, though it was weak and didn’t reach her eyes. “It’s really okay. I don’t mind taking the bus.”

“I mind,” he said. “You spent your entire day racing to my sister’s rescue. Thank you. She’s lucky to have a friend like you. Let me take you home so I don’t worry about you on the bus.”

She smiled again, and now it was a little bit brighter. “Even if I made it easier for her to see Juan?”

“Nobody’s perfect.” He stood, and held out his hand. “Come on.”

“Thanks.” She took his hand, let him pull her to her feet. “I hope you’re wrong about Juan.”

“Me, too.”

This entry is part 4 of 8 in the Flash Fiction: Chain Reaction

Written in 59 minutes. Off to make coffee! See you at 10!


Morgan Penthouse: Bedroom

When he woke, the sun was streaming through the blinds, flooding the room with slats of light. Jason sat up, looked over at the clock on the night stand and exhaled slowly. It was just before three. Plenty of sleep, and yet —

The fatigue that had been dragging his steps when he’d arrived at the Towers after dawn hadn’t eased. And clarity hadn’t arrived with rest or the cold shower.

He’d spent the night with another woman while his fiancee waited at home. And not just any other woman, but Elizabeth. Jason dug the heels of his hands in both eyes until stars dotted the black in his vision.

It had been simple standing in front of her door seven hours ago. Come home, tell Courtney that it was over because it had to be, didn’t it? He didn’t regret any of it, only that Courtney had known and suspected all night long. Maybe if she hadn’t — if she hadn’t looked at him with that calm expression and told him it was okay if he and Elizabeth had comforted each other, he might have been able to say something.

He should have opened his mouth and told she was wrong — but she wasn’t. Not all the way. He should have told her that he didn’t know if he could go back to pretending Elizabeth didn’t exist, or if he even wanted to. But he hadn’t done any of that. He’d let Courtney forgive him for a crime he hadn’t confessed to, and she’d sent him to bed.

Jason rose, and dressed, almost mechanically. Briefs. Jeans. T-shirt. Socks. Boots. He sat on the edge of the bed to lace the boots, and he had one of those rare flashes — of the night before, Elizabeth on her knees in front of him, smiling with that wicked tilt to her mouth and gleam in her eye—

He practically lunged off the bed and head for the doorway. Courtney was nowhere to be found downstairs, though it wasn’t that surprising since it was halfway through the day. She hadn’t left a note, and he could call if he wanted to find her. But he didn’t feel ready for that yet. She’d come home and want to talk, and Jason needed the words. He needed to do what she’d done — think about what to say so that it came out just right.

Instead, he headed across the hall to check in with the guard on Sonny’s door to be sure that all was well over there after the apparent fight the night before. Max brightened when he saw Jason, the relief palpable. “Jase. Good. Good. I was hoping you’d come by. Miss Matthews said you were still sleeping. She told us your sister’s gonna pull through. That’s really awesome.”

Jason rubbed his chest, but it didn’t relieve the vague itch that plagued him. Courtney telling people about Emily, talking about still sleeping as if he’d spent the entire night worrying about his sister. He’d started it that way, hadn’t he? But—

“She said there was a problem last night.”

“Yeah. Uh, Dougie was on duty last night. Said the shouting was through the door, so he went over to find you or Miss Matthews. She took care of it, but—” Max coughed. “It’s getting worse.”

“I know. Is he up or—”

“Sure, sure. Lemme go see what the situation is.” Maxe knocked lightly, then went inside, leaving Jason in the hallway, already irritated at the idea that he might have to deal with Sonny and Carly again today.

Carly’s return from Venezuela after having been kidnapped for two months should have been a triumphant homecoming—an end to the chaos, worry, and anxiety that had gripped their world since that terrible night in June. Instead, Sonny had found Carly enjoying some luxury as Lorenzo Alcazar’s captive, and he’d become obsessed with it. As if Carly, seven months pregnant, had started an affair with her second kidnapper.

Sonny had been teetering on the edge for weeks, and it wouldn’t take much more to push him over. Jason just wanted to pull him back before that happened so he could stop worrying about him. Stop worrying about what would happen to Carly or the kids.

He just wanted it all to stop.

“He’s good. Awake. Clear-headed,” Max reported in hushed tones. Jason nodded and went past him. Sonny sat at the table by the windows, a cup of coffee in his hands.

He lifted his brows at Jason. “I thought you’d be by sooner. Oversleep?”

“No. I didn’t get in until after dawn.” Jason folded his arms. “Emily — she’s going to—well, she pulled through the night. Not all the way in the clear, but—” He hadn’t even digested that news, he’d released. Let it sink in, be absorbed. He’d received the news, felt the weight leave his shoulders, and had looked next to him at Elizabeth whose bright eyes and smile had matched the way he’d felt—

And he’d kissed her—

Jason shook his head. “Uh, so I just woke up. Did you—did you know where Courtney went?”

“She was here for breakfast,” Sonny said. He picked up the newspaper, flipped to another page. “Head to Club 101 with Carly a little while ago. That’s good news about Emily. I’m glad.”

“Yeah.” Jason’s phone vibrated in his pocket, and he tugged it out, half-hoping it would be Elizabeth, but it was Monica. “Hey. What’s up?” he asked, a lick of fear in his throat. “Is Emily still—”

“She’s good. She’s up and ready for visitors.” Monica’s joy radiated through the connection. “I thought you’d want to see her.”

“I do. I really do. I’ll be right there.” Jason closed his phone. “Listen—”

“Go see your sister. Send her my best,” Sonny said, waving him away. “We’ll talk later.”

“Thanks.” Jason headed for the door, eager to see his sister’s recovery for himself.

General Hospital: Emily’s Room

She didn’t look much different than she had the night before — her face was still pale, her movements lethargic but there was a spark in her eyes that hadn’t been there before. Jason sat at her bed, picked up her hand, and opened his mouth. Then closed it—his throat had closed, and he couldn’t force out a word.

He really thought he’d spoken his last words to Emily the night before. That he’d never see her again.

“Hey,” Emily said. She smiled faintly. “Fancy seeing you again, huh?”

“Em.” Jason shook his head, squeezed her hand. “I can’t—I’m just so—” The words wouldn’t come. He couldn’t form a coherent sentence. He dipped his head, took a deep breath.

“Never thought you’d have to see me again, right?” Emily asked, wryly, and his head popped up, stunned. “What, can’t we joke about this kind of thing?”

“I just…I’m so glad to see you.”

“Right back at you.” Emily sighed, closed her eyes for a moment, then opened them again. “I’m sorry I scared you. That you were all so terrified. Mom said you spent half the night in the chapel. And Elizabeth came back. Lucky and Nikolas did, too. Tell me you didn’t spend the whole night here, Jase.”

“I didn’t. I—” Jason hesitated, looked down. “I ran into Elizabeth. We—we waited together. Neither of us—”

“Wanted to be alone when the call came. I’m glad.” Emily’s voice was a bit raspy. “I’m glad you had someone.  That she did, too. You’re both so stubborn. Always putting yourselves last.” Her voice faded again and she closed her eyes.

“Emily?”

“Mm, sorry, I’ve been doing that all morning.” Her eyelids fluttered again. “You know I’m not…I’m not in remission yet. I could still…put you through all this again.”

“I know,” Jason said. “But—”

“But we’ll take the victories where we can find them. I woke up this morning, and…that wasn’t supposed to happen.” Tears clung to her lashes. “Do me a favor, Jase.”

“Anything.”

“Make sure to smile once in a while. I worry about you.”

“You worry about me?” Jason asked, his brows lifting in surprise. “Em—”

“I know, I know. I’m the one dying. But—” Emily smiled. “I do. I love you.”

“I love you, too.” He half-stood, leaning over to kiss her forehead. “Rest. I’ll talk to you later.” He squeezed her hand, then headed for the door.

In the little waiting area outside Emily’s room, he found Elizabeth perched on the edge of the chair. Her hair was pulled back, out of her face, but tendrils fell down around her cheeks. She bit at her thumb, and looked over when she heard the door.

Their eyes locked, and Elizabeth rose. “Oh. Oh. They just told me at the nurse’s station someone was in with her—” She folded her arms, then let them fall to her side, only to fold them again, but this time she wrapped them fully around her torso, hugging herself. “I didn’t know it was you.”

Jason cleared his throat took a step towards her, then stopped when a nurse and doctor passed between them. “You can go in. She’s tired, but I know she wants to see you.”

“Yeah. Okay. Um—” Elizabeth looked away, her blue eyes trained on the cream colored linoleum. “I just—I wanted you to know that…I—I’m back at Kelly’s. Working, I mean. And um, Courtney came in just before I finished my shift.”

“Courtney.” Jason’s stomach pitched, rolled. Was that why she wouldn’t look at him for very long, making eye contact, then darting her eyes away quickly — “She—”

“Um, it’s okay. I just wanted you to know that. I get it. I understand—” Elizabeth closed her eyes, expression pinched. “I do. You made promises to her.”

“Wait.” Jason stepped closer to her, but Elizabeth stepped back. His brow creased. “I didn’t say more than a few words to her when I got in this morning,” he said. “I—I didn’t talk to her. I wanted to. But—” He stopped when another doctor passed them, grimacing. “We can’t talk about this here.”

“We don’t have to. Really—”

“We do.” Jason closed the distance between them, reaching out to grasp her elbow before she could retreat again. Still she wouldn’t look at him. “We do. We have to talk. I’ll wait while you see Emily, and then we’ll…we’ll talk,” he said. She finally looked at him, her blue eyes careful, guarded. Not unlike Courtney’s had been this morning, and it was like a ton of rocks had been dropped on him. Was there any way to get out of this without hurting either of them? Or was it too late?

“Okay,” Elizabeth said. “We’ll talk after.” She slipped away from him then, and into Emily’s room.

——

What had possessed her to bring up Courtney in the hallway like that? Her entire body was flushed with humiliation and frustration. She hadn’t meant to do that — she’d just looked at him, at his face, and his hands, and the night before—earlier that morning—it had all come flooding back. Every touch, caress, kiss—she could feel it like it was still happening—

And right after that the rush of mortification when Courtney had lobbed that grenade at her. She was still in the picture, and she’d fight for it.

Because unlike you, I know Jason’s worth fighting for.

Is that what Jason thought? That Elizabeth hadn’t wanted to fight for him? How could he think anything else after all she’d done to him, all the ways she’d made him feel like he wasn’t enough—

Elizabeth leaned against the closed door, squeezing her eyes shut, willing it all to go away.

“Did you see a ghost or something?”

Emily’s amused, but faint,  voice brought Elizabeth back to reality. Her eyes popped up, then filled at the sight of her best friend, still alive. Still breathing. Still with them.

“Hey, you.” Elizabeth came away from the door. “I’m so glad to see you.”

“Me, too. You, I mean. I’m glad to see you. I’m also glad to see me,” Emily admitted, and Elizabeth laughed. She sat down. “Sorry I was so dramatic last night. But you know, those doctors.”

“You fought back,” Elizabeth said. She squeezed Emily’s hand. “And you’re going to keep fighting, you know. You can do this. I’ll be right here with you.”

“Like I’d let you get that far.” Emily’s eyes fluttered closed, then opened again. “What’s wrong? You were upset when you came in. Did—” Her face fell. “You and Jason. You’re not upset with each other again, are you?”

“What?” Elizabeth blinked. “Why would you ask that?”

“Well, he told me he took you home. That you guys waited together—”

“He said that—”

“And—” Emily made a face. “I hate this,” she muttered. “Jason never tells me what’s wrong, and I could tell something was. I can tell you’re upset. But you won’t say why, will you? And if I asked him—”

“Em, you should just be concentrating on yourself—”

“When I get out of this bed—” Her voice faltered, fading out. “I’m going to kick both your asses.”

“I look forward to it.”

Elizabeth’s Studio: Hallway

Maybe it had been a mistake to accept the offer a ride back to her studio, but Elizabeth couldn’t pass up the chance to sit behind him, wrap her arms around his waist, and hold on like she’d never let go.

She’d let go so many times — why was she surprised that Jason had run out of patience and stopped holding his hand out? Last night had been a mistake, she knew that. It had to be. And he was trying to think of a way to tell her that. To be kind about it.

She stopped at the door, then turned to look at him — the way she had this morning, when the real world hadn’t existed for either of them. Her eyes searched his. “It’s okay, you know. I’m not mad or anything. That you decided to stay—”

“I didn’t—” Jason grimaced, took out his own keys and with a start, she realized he had his own copies. Her heart pounded as she watched him unlock her door.

“You still have them.”

“Well—” Jason looked down at the keys in his hand, then back at her. “You never know when I’ll need a place to hide.”

Because the world was always waiting to ruin everything, Elizabeth thought. She took a deep breath, forced a smile. “You know you can always come to me. I won’t—” She shook her head, went inside the studio.

“Elizabeth—” Jason followed, closing the door with one hand. “Listen—”

“Courtney said—”

“Courtney saw us last night,” Jason said and Elizabeth closed her mouth. “Leaving the hospital. She didn’t know for sure. She still doesn’t unless you said something.”

“I—” Elizabeth furrowed her brow. “She knows, Jason. She told me she knows. Whether or not you confirmed it with words—” She looked at him. “I don’t understand. I told you I’m not mad that you decided to stay, and you’re saying we need to talk because you didn’t decide—but now—now, you’re saying that our secret is still safe—is supposed to be a secret then?” Her voice wobbled on the last few words. “Because you don’t want her to know for sure?”

Jason closed his eyes, winced. “That’s not what I meant. I don’t—I was tired when I got home. And I meant what I said when I left here.” He took a step towards her, and like the hospital, she stepped back. “I mean it,” he repeated. “I still do. It’s just—”

“You looked at her and remembered all the reasons you love her,” Elizabeth finished.

Jason opened his mouth, then closed it, a bit mystified. Bewildered. “No. Yes, but—” He fisted his hand. “It’s more that — I realized that I was going to hurt her, and she didn’t do anything to deserve that, you know? I didn’t know how to start the conversation and then she started it for me, and I was tired—”

“Jason—”

“It seemed so easy when it was just us,” he murmured, more to himself. “Standing out in the hallway, I looked at you—” His eyes found hers. “And it’s all I wanted. To come back here and be with you.”

“That’s how it always is,” Elizabeth said. One hot tear slid down her cheek. “We work really well in here. In your room at Jake’s, on your bike, sitting on a bench—when it’s just us, oh, it’s the best feeling in the world.” She smiled even as the tears continued. “But that’s not the real world. Last night — it felt like a moment out of time. And maybe we’re not meant to hold on to it. Maybe we never are.”

“I won’t—no, I don’t believe that. I won’t—” Jason strode towards her and kissed her, cupping her jaw with his hands. Elizabeth slid her hands up to push him away, then fisted in his shirt, dragging him closer.

April 17, 2024

This entry is part 1 of 5 in the Flash Fiction: Warning Shots

A note on structure: Each update for Part 1 of Warning Shots will be like an episodic short story to provide a prequel to the main event. It’ll make sense later, I promise.

Written in 60 minutes.


STORY 1: And in the Beginning…

Port Charles, New York

September 1999

It had all started with a letter.

On bright April morning, Elizabeth Webber had rushed to her mailbox, eagerly anticipating acceptance to the New York School of the Visual Arts, Step One on the Lucky & Elizabeth Life Plan, a decorated poster board that held a prominent position on the wall in her bedroom.

Step 1: Get into Art School!
Step 2: Move to New York City!
Step 3: Get Lucky a gig playing guitar in the West Village!
Step 4: Get My First Art Show!
Step 5: Get married in Central Park!
Step 6: Live Happily Ever After!

Each step had been illustrated, and Elizabeth couldn’t wait to check off the very first one—

And then she’d seen the letter.

It was a slim envelope, nothing like the large, thick white ones that rolled in for her older sister Sarah year before or the one her best friend Emily Bowen Quartermaine had been receiving for a few weeks now. Or even the one from Elizabeth’s back up school, PCU.

No, this one could hold nothing more than a single sheet of paper.

She had stood on her step staring at it for a long time, the front door wide open enough that her grandmother’s annoying cat, Gatsby, had escaped, and Audrey Hardy had come to admonish her.

“Elizabeth, what is it—” Audrey had stopped when she saw Elizabeth staring at the letter. “Oh. Have you heard from New York then?”

With trembling fingers, Elizabeth opened the envelope, slid it out —

We regret to inform you

It had been devastating. Soul crushing. She’d pinned everything on this one hope — they’d even gone to New York City a few weeks earlier to start scouting out their new neighborhood. Lucky wore a subway token around his neck in memory — and now —

She’d cried in her grandmother’s arms, then had gone to the phone to call Lucky. Lucky had been disappointed, but sweet as always. They’d figure out a new plan. No worries. Good thing she’d applied to her back up school, right?

Within a few weeks, Elizabeth had a new plan. Not as carefully or intricately designed — this was more of a paper ripped from a notebook type of thing.

Step 1: Go to PCU.
Step 2: Room with Emily.
Step 3: Graduate.
Step 4: Move to New York.

And now, five months later, Elizabeth was embarking on step two. Emily had convinced that for their first year, they absolutely had to live together in a dorm on campus. It would be the most awesome experience ever. Lucky had been disappointed — he’d been saving for an apartment for them, but Elizabeth had started to warm up to the idea of going to PCU. Especially with Emily. They’d pored over all the orientation materials, gone to all the opening house events —

Today, Elizabeth and Emily were moving into their dorm — Room 314 on the third floor of Barrington Hall, and Elizabeth was driving Emily’s older brother crazy. Not that Jason Morgan would ever admit it — he’d have to talk in order to do that.

“You’re going to be really mad,” she said, a breathless as she came back into the room to see Jason sliding the desk into the spot Elizabeth had just promised was the absolute perfect place.

Jason looked at her, his light blue eyes locked on hers. “No.” Normally, men like Jason made Elizabeth nervous. He wasn’t particularly tall, but everyone towered over Elizabeth’s short height. He was muscular, and Elizabeth knew he could throw a punch. He was Jason Morgan, notoriously mixed up with the local mafia. She’d been at Luke’s the night someone had tried to kill him and snagged Nikolas Cassadine in the throat.

But he was just Jason to her these days, the guy who ran the garage and rented a room above it to Lucky. He was so different around his sister — he even smiled, and even someone happily devoted to her boyfriend like Elizabeth was, could objectively admit he was attractive. Gorgeous. Sexy, actually with light blonde hair always worn with spikes — sometimes she tried to picture him arranging his hair in the morning with gel, and it made her giggle.

But mostly he was just Jason, the guy who would do anything for his little sister. And his little sister’s best friend.

Jason sighed, pressed one thumb to his eyebrow. “Where do you want it?”

“You are the best!” She squealed, actually jumped a little, then darted around him. “I had this vision as I was coming up the stairs — because you know, Em and I are going to be studying but this is going to be like home, too—”

“Elizabeth.”

She broke off, startled because she didn’t think she’d ever heard Jason say her name. Which made sense — how many conversations had they ever had? She bit her lip. “Right. You don’t care why. I promise this is it. We want the beds here—” She gestured by the window. “And then the desk over here—oh, and—” She bent down as if to pick up one end of the desk. “I can help—”

He brushed her hands aside, the callused fingers startling her — Lucky was the only man who’d ever really touched her, and his hands were so much softer. “Thanks, but I can do this quicker by myself.” Then in one light move, he lifted the desk without even exerting himself.

“You’re really the best. I’m so sorry Lucky ditched us. He had to do something with Laura, and well, Emily would have invited Juan—”

Jason looked at her and Elizabeth wrinkled her nose. “Right. I know. That’s why she didn’t. Plus, um, she didn’t tell you this yet, but I thought I’d warn you. Juan’s step dad is making him go back to Puerto Rico.”

“Warn me?” Jason said, furrowing his brow. He slid the desk into the space she’d indicated, then moved the beds. “Why do I need a warning?”

“Emily’s trying not to be upset about it, you know, but when she told Lucky and Nikolas they practically cheered in her face. They really don’t like him—and I know you don’t either, but she was hurt—”

“I might not like the guy,” Jason said, his tone changing, a bit more serious now. “But my sister does. And until he gives me a good reason to punch him, she doesn’t need to know that.”

“I figured, but you know, I just wanted to protect her.” Elizabeth looked over her shoulder. “Here she comes now. Remember, you don’t know anything, okay? This will be the first you’re hearing about it!”

Jason just shook his head, but nodded, clearly humoring her. Emily came in now, a forced smile on her face. “Oh, you changed it again. I like this so much better.”

“Good, because I have to go. I should have been gone already, but—” Jason looked at Elizabeth, whose cheeks pinked up. He hugged Emily. “Call me if you need anything. I mean it. Don’t make any headlines.”

“I’ll walk you down,” Emily said, wrapping her arm around Jason’s bicep. “There’s something I have to tell you.”

Though he didn’t think he’d needed the forewarning, Jason was glad Elizabeth had previewed Emily’s news for him. He hadn’t cared for Juan Santiago the minute the little bastard had rolled into town over the summer, but Emily had hearts in her eyes almost immediately. Her first real boyfriend was leaving abruptly, and she’d probably never see him again. She’d been hesitant about sharing the news, prefacing it with —

“I know you don’t like so you’re probably glad—” she’d said with a heavy sigh.

“I care about you,” Jason told her, and had hugged her, reminding her again to call him with anything she needed. He knew Emily could take care of herself — and he was glad she was going to be with Elizabeth. He’d seen her around this last year and knew Elizabeth was tougher than she looked.

He left the campus and headed downtown to the garage he’d opened two years earlier. He left  his motorcycle parked in the usual spot, and went inside to the office where Lucky Spencer was tapping away at something on the garage’s ancient computer.

Jason had snagged the mail on his way in and didn’t notice the younger man until he was almost on top of him. He furrowed his brow. “I thought you had something to do today.”

“I finished an hour ago, thought I’d get a head start on logging the new inventory.” Lucky looked over at him. “They get moved in okay?”

“Yeah, all set.” He tossed aside the junk, set the bills on his desk. He didn’t really care that Lucky hadn’t shown up to help move the girls in — Jason could have done it in twenty minutes if Elizabeth hadn’t kept changing her mind on the set up. But it was the first time either had lived on their own, and he wanted his sister to be happy.

But Elizabeth had spent the first half hour apologizing over and over again for Lucky not being there — it had been an emergency, and Lucky said he’d try to hurry up because he hadn’t seen their dorm yet — and yet here he sat, no emergency in sight.

“I wanted to run something by you,” Lucky said twisting on his stool. “Going back to courier jobs.”

Jason grimaced. “Lucky—”

“I know you didn’t get me involved again after you, uh, left the last time,” Lucky said quickly, “and I was supposed to be leaving for New York so it was no big deal. But we’re stuck in Port Charles now, and we’re not going to have the money we thought we’d have for an apartment. That’s why Elizabeth is stuck on campus this semester—”

Jason frowned, looked at him. He knew all about semesters from Robin — this one would end in December. “Just this semester?”

“Yeah, yeah. I’m saving up for the security deposit for us to get a place together. That was the plan in New York, but we had to put it on the back burner.”

That wasn’t the impression Jason had gotten, moving pieces around the room a thousand times until Elizabeth had been sure it was comfortable — it was going to be their home away from home, she’d told him, hadn’t she?

But it wasn’t any of his business, so he just shrugged. “So you want some courier work again?”

“Yeah. Just something extra. I can do it—”

“I don’t doubt that. I just—I figured—” Jason shook his head. He wasn’t going to tell Lucky Spencer about getting involved with him and Sonny wasn’t a great idea. Lucky had grown up at Luke’s feet. The kid had been raised inside the life. If he wanted to make stupid choices — “I’ll talk to Sonny.”

“Great. Thanks. This whole thing is just a bump in the road. Elizabeth being stuck at PCU. Maybe she can transfer after a year or something, and we can go to New York. Just as long as we’re together.” Lucky gathered up the things at his desk. “I’m gonna head over to my mom’s and see Lu. If Elizabeth stops by or calls, let her know.”

Jason opened his mouth, then closed it. Lucky had supposedly been with his mother all morning — but it wasn’t any of his business.

Jason was done minding the business of other people. After ending things with Robin and losing custody of Michael earlier that spring, all he wanted to do was stay in his own lane and stay far away from anyone else’s problems.

A few days later, Jason was stretched out underneath a Honda with a leaking oil pan. He heard the outside door open, and then a pair of legs appeared in his view. Long, slender, and bare — at least from the calf to the ankle. The toes were painted a bright pink and encased in a pair of sandals with at least two inches of platform underneath them.

“Hello?”

Jason slid out from the car and Elizabeth danced back, not having seen him. She had a messenger bag slung diagonally across her chest, over a white shirt. The legs weren’t completely bare — she wore a pair of cropped jeans that stopped just below her knees.

“Hey! Sorry, I didn’t mean to interrupt you. I’m supposed to be meeting Lucky here.” She checked her watch. “He told me to just come in and grab him because he’d be in the office.”

“Lucky’s not working today. I don’t know where he is.”

“Oh.” She bit down on her bottom lip. “That’s annoying. And he refuses to get a phone, you know? Gram made me get the one second she found out I was going to be on campus.” She removed it now from a pocket on her bag, flipped it open. “Maybe I messed up the message. He’s been impossible to get a hold of the last few days.”

Maybe Sonny had called Lucky directly and hooked the kid up with a job, Jason thought, though he didn’t really know how say that to Elizabeth. She’d known Lucky was working for him the year before, but Jason didn’t think it was his place to mention it now.

Jason frowned. “You don’t have a car,” he remembered, and she looked at him with some surprise. “Emily said you take the bus,” he added. “You won’t even borrow her car.”

“Well, no, have you seen it? It’s brand new. I can’t park to save my life. Gram and Lucky won’t let me borrow theirs either.” She rolled her eyes. “How am I supposed to get better, I ask you? But whatever. No, I take the bus everywhere. It’s pretty reliable.” She fished into another pocket, waved the PC Bus schedule at him. “I’ll just leave a message at his mom’s and you tell him I was here, then I’ll head back to school, I guess.”

Jason didn’t know why it bothered him — except now he remembered hearing Lucky make the plans with Elizabeth that morning on the phone in the office. She hadn’t messed them up — he had.

But he wasn’t going to tell her that and cause problems. No one else’s business but his own, he reminded himself.

Elizabeth started for the door, then turned back. “Since I ran into you, thanks again for putting up with me the day we moved in. It was really nice of you not to just dump everything in the first place I pointed to. I know I was super annoying—” Her cheeks flushed, the color spreading down her neck. “But I’m pretty sure Emily went to PCU because I did. She could have gone lots of places, you know? But she picked PCU so we could do it together, and I really wanted it to be perfect. The dorm room is gonna be like —”

“Home,” Jason finished and she lit up, her eyes sparkling.

“Exactly! And it’s the first one I’ve ever really had that I get to sort of do my own thing in. It’s just ours. And maybe next year, we could do suite apartment thing so we could—” She stopped. “Anyway, like I said, it was really nice of you. And whatever you said to Emily about Juan, she felt so much better. It’s really cool of you not to make not liking him her problem. She’s lucky to have you.”

“She’s my sister,” Jason said as if that said everything and she wrinkled her nose.

“It should be that simple, right? But it’s not all the time. Family is—well, they can be the worst. Anyway, Lucky called him a loser, and it made her cry. I didn’t tell you that then but—I don’t even know why I’m telling you now except it made mad because we’re supposed to be a family, too, of sorts. Me, Em, Lucky, Nikolas—we made a pact—” She shrugged. “Anyway. It bothered me. And just because it’s the right thing to do, it doesn’t mean you doing it should go unnoticed.”

“Thanks,” Jason said, feeling a little like a heel staying quite about Lucky being the one to screw up her plans. “Listen, I’m about done here for the day. I can run you back to campus so you don’t have to deal with the bus.”

“Oh, thanks, but I’m gonna stop by my grandmother’s anyway. Thanks. Tell Lucky I was here when you see him!” She tossed him a wave over her shoulders, and he watched her leave.