June 1, 2026

This entry is part 2 of 2 in the Flash Fiction: The Archer

Written in 67 minutes.


Friday, October 13, 2000

Kelly’s: Dining Room

The dinner rush was at its height when Lucky yanked opened the door, the bells jangling awkwardly from the force. Nearly every table in the main dining room and in the courtyard was filled. Elizabeth and the other waitress, Penny Ramirez, were weaving in and around tables, lifting trays high over the heads of their customers, passing out meals and drinks. Every seat was taken, including the row of stools at the counter.

“Hey,” Elizabeth said as he passed her. “If you’re here for dinner, give DJ your order in the kitchen. I’ll try to come back when I have a second.”

He made a face — after the scene with his father, all he really wanted to do was run it by Elizabeth, try to understand what was going on in his head, but of course — she was busy. She was always busy.

Lucky scowled when a customer shoved back his chair and jostled him. “Hey, what what you’re doing.”

“Sorry, sorry—”

But Lucky was already in the kitchen, snagging a menu on his way. “Hey, DJ. How long for a BLT?” he wanted to know.

The harried line cook tossed another set of orders in the window, then slid an order pad down counter to Lucky. “Fill it out, put it on the board. I’ll get it when I get it.”

By the time the tables began to thin out, and Elizabeth came back to the kitchen, Lucky had already eaten and started to empty the tubes of dishes into the dishwasher. She appeared in the archway between the dining room and the kitchen, tendrils of sweat sliding down her cheeks, and errant curls slicked against her cheeks where they’d escaped the pins she’d used to keep the short strands out of her hair.

“I am never going to no show for another shift again,” she said, rolling her shoulders.

Lucky grunted, slapped the machine shut. “You should tell Bobbie. Tammy shouldn’t be doing that to you. You want me to say something?”

“What? No.” Elizabeth crossed to the small line of lockers and tugged out the notebook she usually kept for sketching, then hopped onto the counter next the dishwasher. “DJ, you should take your break now. There’s no orders on the board. I’ll come get you if we need you back sooner.”

“You don’t have to tell me twice. Thanks, Lizzie.” The cook headed for the doorway the alley, one hand already tugging a pack of cigarettes from his back pocket.

“Hey, you had to get a passport, right?” Elizabeth said, folding a page back. “When you went to see your mom in Switzerland, right? Or was it London?”

“When she was away with my grandmother? Switzerland. Yeah, why?” Lucky furrowed his brow. “Do you need a passport? What for?”

Elizabeth’s eyes sparkled. “Chloe Morgan offered me a temporary job while her assistant is on maternity leave. She said she’s going to be traveling a lot next year, and I’ll need to get mine as possible, but I haven’t had a chance to look it up. Do you remember what you needed for yours?”

“You’re going to travel? Where?” Lucky shoved his hands in the pockets of his jeans, his chest feel tight. “For how long?”

Oblivious, Elizabeth shrugged. “Chloe and I are going to work out an official start date, but I’m going to be shadowing her assistant whenever I’m not here to train, and then she said London in January, and we’ll probably be there a few weeks. And then Rome and Paris, and oh, there were a few more places—”

“So you’ll basically be gone the entire time.”

Elizabeth closed her mouth, frowned at him. “What?”

“Weeks here, weeks there. You’ll be gone more than you’ll be here. That’s what I’m hearing.”

“I—” She bit her lip, looked back at her notebook. “I guess so. I don’t know that part yet—”

“You don’t know, but you already agreed to do it. Without talking to me about it?”

“I didn’t—” She slid off the counter, then leaned against it, clutching her notebook to her chest. “I didn’t think about it.”

“Oh, so you don’t think about me. How your decisions affect me. That’s really great.” Lucky shook his head, turned away. “Good to know.”

“Lucky—” She started to follow him as he headed for the stairs. “Let’s talk about it. It could be such a great opportunity for me—”

“You don’t even like clothes,” Lucky said, whirling back at her. “You never talk about fashion or any of that.”

“I—” Her eyes widened. “I used to. I used to read all those magazines. But it would be traveling and seeing all these amazing places. It could be so inspirational—”

“For you. What about me? How can you be so selfish? I just got my life back. I just got me back,” Lucky continued, pressing a hand against his chest, his voice cracking slightly. “We lost so much time, Elizabeth. But maybe you liked it better when I was gone and you could go and do whatever you wanted without thinking about anyone else.”

“What? No. No.” Elizabeth took a deep breath. “You’re right. I’ll talk to Chloe. I’ll find out how much and travel is really involved, and if it’s not too much—y-you’re right. I should be here with you. We did lose so much, and—” Her smile wobbled slightly, and he looked away. “Maybe I don’t need to go with her or something.”

“Do whatever you want. You will anyway.”

She started to say something else, but the bell over the door jingled, and she looked towards the entrance. When she looked back, Lucky had gone upstairs. A moment later, his door slammed.

Elizabeth looked down at her notebook where she’d been making notes about everything she’d need — luggage, passport, identification, to upgrade her work wardrobe—

She hadn’t even thought about all the time she’d be away, all the time she’d be away from Lucky. It hadn’t even occurred to her. What kind of person did that make her?

Corinthos Penthouse: Living Room

Sonny’s mood hadn’t really improved by the time he’d returned home that night, and his mood wasn’t entirely improved by seeing Carly on the sofa, talking animatedly to Jason. The three of them had rarely been in the same room alone much in the last year, and Sonny preferred it that way.

“Oh. Hey.” Carly got to her feet, standing awkwardly. “Um, Jason was here to see Michael. I had some Halloween costumes—” She flicked her eyes at their friend who also got to his feet. “It’s, um, good news that he’s sticking around a little longer, right?”

“Yeah. Of course.” Sonny paused. “You mind giving us a few minutes to talk? Maybe go upstairs to hang out with Michael?”

“Is it about the case? I thought it was all handled—” Carly began, but Jason sent her a look and Sonny tried not flinch when Carly stopped protesting and headed for the stairs. Why would she listen to Jason and not him?

“Everything okay?” Jason asked, coming towards Sonny who was lifting the decanter of bourbon and tilting to pour the dark liquid into the crystal tumbler.

“Depends on the definition.” Sonny lifted the glass to his mouth. “Why are you really hanging around?”

Jason squinted, tilting his head slightly. “You asked me to. Zander Smith could still make some trouble for my sister. Right now, he’s cooperating against Sorel, but if that goes south, he knows Emily and Elizabeth were involved that cop’s death.”

“Not a lot of evidence to support that, and Emily’s got connections to keep her good. You really don’t have to stay.” Sonny lifted his brows. “Unless you want to be here.”

Jason tensed. “Are you accusing me of something?”

“No. No, damn it.” Sonny huffed. “No, I’m sorry. I’m just—I had an uncomfortable conversation with Luke down at the club today, and then I come here—and you’ve done nothing wrong, but it doesn’t—” He shook his head, set down the bourbon to rub one side of his face. “I just can’t let myself get comfortable.” He looked back at Jason. “And Luke reminded me another reason you left town last January.”

“What was that?”

“Sorel was targeting Elizabeth.”

Jason tensed, looked away. “You said that was done—”

“Because you left. She’s not worth much to him without you around. I mean, I don’t want her hurt on principle, so maybe he could have still played some games. But it’s different and you know it. You stick around, maybe all of that starts up again. And the rumors start again.” Jason opened his mouth, and Sonny held up a finger. “Let me finish. You and I know why you were in that studio. And so do important people. But not everyone believed it. And the statute of limitations on Moreno isn’t done. Elizabeth could still be dragged into a police investigation. People could still make trouble.” He hesitated. “And things are different now, aren’t they? Lucky’s home. And they’re back together.”

“I don’t understand what any of that has to do with me staying or going,” Jason said flatly. “The people who need to know what last December was about know. And if Sorel comes near Elizabeth, I’ll finish what I started that day on the docks.”

“And Lucky?”

“What about him? He was kidnapped and brainwashed, at least that what Elizabeth tells me. That’s over. She’s got him back. Do you want me to go, Sonny? Is that what this is about?” Jason demanded.

“No, it’s—” Sonny sighed. “I don’t know what it’s about. I feel…itchy. Restless. Like we got off easy with Smith getting captured and turning against Sorel. I’m waiting for the second shoe to drop. For something to go wrong. For Carly to find another way to put someone in cuffs. And I’m taking it out on you, I’m sorry.”

“Sorel is the reason I’m sticking around.” Jason picked up his jacket from where he’d left it over the sofa. “Elizabeth and I are friends, and I want her to be happy. She says Lucky makes her happy.  Nothing else really matters, does it?”

Kelly’s: Dining Room

Emily played with her straw, watching the vanilla milkshake swirl around the plastic tube, waiting for Elizabeth to finish clearing another table. “I got an email from Juan. He said he was sorry for this summer.”

Elizabeth lugged the full tub into the kitchen then returned to the table. “Well, sorry doesn’t change the way he drooled over Alison Barrington. If he could keep it in his pants, this entire stupid summer doesn’t happen.” She started to count out her receipts. “Don’t let him apologize his way into taking him back.”

“I won’t. Besides, he’s on tour with Lois now, so he’s done with Port Charles. Whatever.” Emily pursed her lips. “What’s wrong?”

Elizabeth flicked a glance at her, then back to her receipts. “What? Nothing.”

“No, I know that look. You don’t seem tired, you seem mopey. What’s up? C’mon, you spent all summer cleaning up my problems and listening to me complain about Juan. Let me do it for you.”

Elizabeth bit her lip, then nodded. “Okay. Well, Chloe offered me a temporary job and I’d have to travel a lot this spring. I’d basically be gone more than I’d be here.”

“Oh, my God, that’s so awesome! Chloe couldn’t have picked anyone better—” Emily stopped, frowned. “What’s wrong? Why aren’t we happy? Why aren’t we shopping?”

“I was really excited, but Lucky—I can’t leave him here while I go traveling,” Elizabeth said with a wrinkle of her nose. “He’s been through such hell in the last year, Em. Being kidnapped, brainwashed, dumped  back in Port Charles, and fighting his way back to us. To me. And now that I finally got him back, I’m going to abandon him for six months?”

Emily opened her mouth, then closed it, pressing her lips into grimace. Everything inside her screamed that Elizabeth turning down this opportunity would be a major mistake, but Lucky had been gone for so long, and they’d only just figured out what was wrong with him. “I guess that…I mean it’s one way of looking at it. Not a fun way,” she added and Elizabeth smiled weakly. “But that’s part of being in a relationship right. Giving up things for each other. Maybe…I don’t know, maybe he’ll feel better about it when he’s got a chance to think about it. He’s been through so much, Liz. We just have to give him time.”

“Time.” Elizabeth sighed. “Right. Time and patience. What else is new.” She went back in the kitchen, and Emily stared down at her milkshake, her stomach swirling uncomfortably, knowing she’d probably pushed Elizabeth even further from taking the opportunity.

Jake’s: Bar

When he wanted to forget about something, it was usually pretty easy. He just…didn’t think about it.  But it had been harder and harder to do that in the last few years, especially being back in Port Charles and seeing every mistake he’d made around every corner.

Jason pushed his way through the bar’s entrance, intending to have a few beers, play a few games of pool and forget about that stupid conversation with Sonny entirely.

He didn’t care that Lucky and Elizabeth were back together. Why would he? So what if the kid had been an asshole to him nearly ever time they’d seen one another?

But his plan to put the annoying Spencer out of his head failed immediately when he recognized the familiar blond sitting at the bar, a bottle in his hands. Jason grimaced, and nearly headed right for the stairs to his room.

But Jason didn’t run from anyone. And he had no reason to avoid Lucky Spencer.

“Usual,” he told the curly haired bartender, taking a stool a few down from Lucky.

“You got it, kid.” Jake uncapped the familiar green bottle, set it on the bar in front of him. “Good to hear you need the room a little longer. I like the steady tenants. Especially the ones that pay on time.” With that remark, she flicked an irritating look down the bar at Lucky who tensed.

“I told you, Jake. I’m good for it. You know that. I just have to find another job. You hiring?”

“You? Absolutely not.” Jake huffed, and left to talk to another customer.

“I’m not a deadbeat,” Lucky muttered. He glared at Jason. “And don’t you tell Elizabeth about this.”

Jason lifted his brows. “Excuse me?”

“I know you’re dying for another way to make me look bad, to be her hero,” Lucky sneered, “but she doesn’t need you anymore, okay?”

Jason sighed, slid off his stool, his beer in hand. Time to go upstairs.

“Why are you even here?” Lucky demanded. “You were supposed to leave!”

Jason heard a stool scrape back, and looked back to see Lucky getting to his feet, swaying slightly. How much had he already had to drink, Jason wondered. “Look—”

“She said she needed you because I was gone, but I’m back now. So she doesn’t need you anymore.” Lucky lifted his chin. “You leave her alone.”

He meant to walk away. To ignore this idiot looking for a fight. But there was something about Lucky’s stance — the way he was talking about Elizabeth — the way Sonny had talked about her— and the way she’d seemed so happy to find out he was staying —

Jason took one long swig of his beer, set it on the bar. “Why don’t you let Elizabeth decide what she wants?”

He saw the fist coming towards him, and let it land even though he could avoided it. He wanted to hit something. He’d deal with the consequences later.

May 29, 2026

This entry is part 1 of 2 in the Flash Fiction: The Archer

Written in 59 minutes. Huge thanks to Mariah and Pilar for the plot bunny!!!


Friday, October 13, 2000

Kelly’s: Dining Room

There were few shifts more grueling than the early morning rush at Kelly’s Diner on a Friday morning. The days were gradually growing shorter and shorter, the sun rising over the lake later and later. The air more crisp, the chill of wind biting just a little harder as the fall firmly settled over upper New York state, hinting at the harsh winter to come.

Elizabeth Webber had never been a morning person, but she’d learned early in her tenure as a waitress that if Ruby Anderson put you on the schedule, you had better show up and that hadn’t changed when the diner had been passed to her niece and nephew. Tammy Carson ran a tight shift — and Elizabeth owed her big time since she’d dropped to part-time hours over the summer and then no-showed last week on her shifts.

Of course, Elizabeth had a good reason — her best friend in the entire world had been taken hostage after a terrible plan had backfired, leaving Emily Quartermaine barreling towards the Canadian border in the company of drug dealer Zander Smith. Elizabeth and Emily’s friends and family had rushed into action, though she hadn’t really been necessary in the end. She’d almost been taken hostage herself.

That’s where she’d been a week ago instead of behind the counter at Kelly’s — in a clearing near the Canadian border, helpless as one of the goons from Zander’s bosses who were also on the heiress and drug dealer’s tail,  had caught her and her boyfriend, Lucky Spencer, unaware. Lucky had been trying to negotiate Elizabeth’s release without any luck. Fortunately, Emily’s older, Jason Morgan had arrived. He was much more equipped for those kinds of situations.

Now, Elizabeth had to pay for her trip north by opening and closing the diner that day.

“Next time, I’ll find coverage for my shift before I take off,” she muttered to herself, bending beneath the counter to locate the tub of napkins and clean utensils so she could wrap a bunch before the rush of warehouse and dock workers descended on her. She already had three big pots of coffee ready to go — this time of day, there was no point in even brewing decaf.

When she popped up with the plastic tub in her arms, she let out a startled half-scream, half-laugh. Jason was on the other side of the counter. “You scared the crap out of me.” She set the tub on the counter. “I wasn’t expecting anyone for at least twenty more minutes.”

He grinned at her, with the rare sparkle of amusement in his icy blue eyes. He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “I can come back, you know, if you’re too busy.”

“Don’t you dare—” She rolled her eyes, turned towards the coffee machines on the low counter behind her, then turned back, hesitating. “To go?”

“No, a cup is good.” He slid onto one of the stools. “You don’t normally open.”

“No, but—” Elizabeth grimaced, lifting a cup and saucer to sit in front of him. She flipped it open, then tilted the carafe until the dark liquid poured. “I’m doing penance for my botched attempt to save Emily. Double shift.”

He lifted his sandy brows, a hint of the smile still lingering at the corners of his mouth. “I did tell you to let me handle it.”

“Really? You’re going with ‘I told you so’?” She wrinkled her nose. “I expected better from you.” Jason just shrugged, but was still smiling. She busied herself with the sidework, collecting a knife and fork, then rolling it into the napkin. “I thought you were planning to head out. And, no, I’m not trying to get rid of you,” she added when Jason opened his mouth, that teasing light still in his eyes. “I was just wondering how long we get to keep you around.”

“I was thinking about it, but—” His expression sobered slightly.  “Zander Smith might be in jail, but that’s not over,” he said to her. “I wish you’d both come to me sooner.”

“I wanted to—you know that.” Elizabeth sighed. “And we should have. We just wanted to handle it on our own—and I didn’t want to upset Lucky.” She bit her lip, set aside another napkin bundle, began a new one. “Before we figured out about the brainwashing, he was so upset every time we questioned one of his plans—”

“Elizabeth.”

“It sounds so stupid when I say it out loud, but Lucky really did convince me that tying you in anyway to…” A dead police officer. She couldn’t even say it out loud. “It could make what you already dealing with because of Sonny’s problems—”

“Sonny is always going to be in trouble with the cops—”

“Well, yeah, now that he’s married to Carly, that’s a guarantee.” When Jason just sighed, Elizabeth made another face. “Are we not supposed to talk about that? Because we don’t have to. I know that’s…” A sensitive subject considering all that had happened over the last year. “Anyway — we could just not talk about any of it.”

“You mean, stop bringing up how you and Emily almost ended up dead,” Jason said, his expression bland. “She told me you were drugged by the same guy that kidnapped her.”

“She—Okay. She should not have told you that. It’s okay. I was safe—you’re getting that look again, and I’ll just agree that we should have gone to Sonny before you were home, and then absolutely to you. I promise.” She held up two fingers. “Scout’s Honor. The next time I’m in any kind of shady trouble, you’re my first call.”

“I know what that means, and there’s no way you were ever a Girl Scout,” Jason said.

She grinned. “Okay, you caught me, but I have learned my lesson. We leave the dangerous stuff to you. Now—” Elizabeth folded her arms, leaned over the counter. “How long do we get to keep you around?”

Luke’s: Bar

Lucky set a box of liquor bottles on the top of the bar with a grunt. “That’s the last one in the back.”

“Can’t be—” His father flicked back another sheet on the clipboard in his hand. “Damn it. This is why you don’t leave idiots in charge.” Luke slapped it against Lucky’s chest. “Go double check Claude’s work so I can fire him when he gets in tonight.”

“You know, I don’t actually work for you,” Lucky said. “Make Claude do it—”

Luke scowled. “Everything has to be an argument with you—you asked to pick up a few hours—”

“Am I interrupting?”

The father and son turned to find Sonny Corinthos strolling towards them, his jacket over one arm. “Is this a bad time?” he asked again.

“Depends on if you and yours are planning to get my son wrapped up in another cop’s murder,” Luke replied.

“Well, if your son would just pick up a phone the next time his friend wakes up next to a dead body, we could avoid this whole mess,” Sonny said, smiling pleasantly, but his eyes flashed with irritation. “Any reason I didn’t get looped in even after you knew drugs were involved? Or after your girlfriend was slipped a roofie?”

Luke scowled, looked back at Lucky who dropped his gaze. “What the hell is he talking about?”

“Nothing. We were handling it,” Lucky muttered.

“Handling it? The way Jason tells it, if he hadn’t shown up, we’d be looking for another woman up in Canada,” Sonny retorted.

“You think I needed Jason to save the day? I had it under control,” Lucky retorted, taking a step towards Sonny, his chest puffed out. “He wanted to play hero so Elizabeth would be impressed.”

“I’m sorry, I’ll tell him the next time Elizabeth has a gun to her head, he should wait for you to finish negotiating,” Sonny said dryly.

“Go do inventory,” Luke told Lucky. “Or maybe we’ll fill your mother in on what you and your friends were up to—”

“I’m not a child. And you can’t tell me what to do. I was handling it.” Lucky slapped at the clipboard against his father’s chest. “I’ll find another job.”

Luke didn’t argue with him, just watched him storm out of the bar, then turned his attention back to Sonny. “I taught him better than that. You solve the problems you can on your own, and when you can’t you tap out. Dragging Elizabeth up there, no weapons, could have gotten them both killed.”

“One phone call to me, Luke, Elizabeth and Emily are out of this months ago, and I’d be that much closer to dealing with Sorel.” Sonny shook his head, then sighed. “I didn’t come here to fight, believe it or not.”

“No, but Lucky doesn’t need much inspiration these days. His temper—it’s always been easy to trigger, but ever since—” Luke opened the box of liquor Lucky had left on the bar, started to count out the bottles. “Ever since he came back, it’s been worse. I thought maybe when we snapped that old bitch’s hold on him last week, we’d start to see some improvement, but he just stopped spouting off that bullshit about Nikolas and Elizabeth.”

“You sure it’s, uh, all gone—” Sonny made a gesture with his fingers. “How can you really know?”

“I guess you can’t. And maybe it was too easy to end it,” Luke said. He let that thought sit for a moment — it was the first time he’d really confronted the possibility that the nightmare his family had faced with Lucky’s kidnapping and return might still not be at an end. “Why did you come in?”

“Wanted to make sure we’re, ah, okay. This thing with Smith — it’s brought the Sorel stuff to a head, and your place is on the border,” Sonny said. “I’m not as involved here as I used to be, and I’m not saying I wanna buy back my part—but maybe it wouldn’t be so bad if we made it clear who’s side you’re on.”

“My side,” Luke told him. “That’s the only side I care about.” He stopped. “But my side includes my people, and Sorel was a little too interested in Elizabeth last winter. You think he’s forgotten about her?”

“He was only interested in her because of Jason—” Sonny stopped. “And he’s going to be around. They’re still friends, you know. Is Lucky going to have an issue if I have one of my guys around, maybe at the diner or here? Keeping an eye on her?”

Luke lifted his brows. “Why would he care?”

“Were you listening?” Sonny demanded. “He feels threatened by Jason. Probably heard all those rumors last year and half believes them—”

“Rumors.” Luke snorted, shook his head. “Okay. Yeah, I know Elizabeth was looking after him because he got shot. But those rumors weren’t all smoke, Sonny. Were they?”

Sonny hesitated, then stroked his chin. “The worst of them were,” he said slowly. “She was looking after him because he got shot, and they fell into that cover story because Nikolas Cassadine has a big mouth. But yeah, I kind of think maybe it was something for a minute. But he left town. And Lucky came home. That’s done.”

Lucky came home. Luke looked back towards the entrance, then at Sonny. “Sure. Yeah. That’s over. Look, I don’t want to be on the front lines, but you know I’m with you. Sorel’s garbage. Eliminate him and take the territory. Let’s be done with this.”

Kelly’s: Dining Room

 

Every muscle in her body was screaming by the time the lunch rush thinned,  and Elizabeth eagerly snagged the bowl of chili she’d ordered for lunch and took one of the empty tables. She stretched out her feet, wiggling her toes inside her sneakers hoping to jolt some life back into them.

The bell over the door jingled when the spoon was halfway to her mouth, and Elizabeth nearly moaned in frustration which quickly melted to relief at the familiar sight of Chloe Morgan, the vivacious blonde who shared office space with Ned at L & B Records where Elizabeth had worked over the summer.

“Just the girl I wanted to see!” Chloe practically danced towards her, her eyes sparkling. She gestured at the chair across the table. “Do you mind?”

“As long as I don’t have to get up and can eat my lunch, sure.”

“No, of course, enjoy your lunch. This won’t take very long.” Chloe sat down, crossed her legs at the ankle. “I heard what happened last week! I’m so glad you and Emily are safe.”

Elizabeth hesitated, wondering if she was about to be gently reminded how reckless she’d been, but decided Chloe wouldn’t be the type to bother with that. “So am I.”

“Anyway, let me get straight to the point because you’re busy. My assistant, Lottie, is having her first child, and I am just so over the moon for her. She’s going to be on maternity leave in the next few weeks, and she’ll be gone for six months. I need someone temporary who’s quick on her feet, smart, and easy to work with. Ned suggested you, and I thought that was a brilliant idea since I know you’re an artist. It would be such a wonderful bonus to have someone who could sketch at my side.”

Elizabeth blinked at her. “What?”

“I know you’re thinking that you don’t know anything about the fashion business, but that’s my job! You’d just need to be my right hand, and keep track of details because I’m terrible it, and dash off sketches when I’m thinking out loud—I pay very well, and we’ll be traveling a lot, especially into the spring with the new lines premiering.”

“Traveling?” Elizabeth perked up. “What kind of traveling?”

“London, primarily. At first, and then, oh Paris for Fashion Week, and then New York for the Met Gala. And of course, Rome! Oh, it’ll be so much fun. You have a passport, don’t you?”

“I—I do not. I could get one. I can absolutely get one. I’ll start on that right away—Chloe, this—” She stopped, bit her lip. “But I can’t leave Tammy just yet. I’m only part-time, but—”

“Oh, of course—” Chloe waved her away. “You’ll give her notice, and Lottie isn’t leaving for three more weeks. You can shadow her when you’re not working here, and jump right in. You just get started on that passport. This is going to be amazing. You won’t regret it for a minute!”

May 27, 2026

This entry is part 109 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written 76 minutes. I got distracted by the Phillies game and my king Cristopher Sanchez setting a new franchise record, let’s goooooo.


Thursday, October 3, 2024

Temporary FBI Headquarters: Conference Room

Reynolds slammed the door so hard that the frame and wall shook. Unfazed, Gia removed her reading glasses and rose to her feet. “Noah. You seem upset.”

“You have no authority to order the arrest of someone in my case. Pack your bags, you conniving bitch—”

Gia crossed her arms, arched a brow. “You’ll want to watch your tone when you speak to me, Noah. You’re not the one with the leverage in the room.”

“What the hell are you talking about—you lied your way into my case, sabotaged it—”

“Did I? Check the record, Noah. I told you that I lived here. I told you that I knew the players. My connection to Carly Corinthos and Nikolas Cassadine was a matter of public record. You knew my brother worked here for a time, that his family was here. You’re going to have hard time arguing that I’ve done anything wrong—”

“You know the goddamn suspect—”

“Still not an ethical violation. Diane Miller could have made it an issue. She chose not. I imagine she tucked it in her back pocket if she thought things were going south, but she chose to sit back and watch how I played it—”

“Because you were on her damn side—”

“I’m on the side of the truth. Where are you?” she demanded. She strode out from behind the table. “A detective from the PCPD suggested I go back over the case file — the one that they put together. And all the problems I’ve put on record with you were in their notes. They eliminated Morgan the day of the murder, and Elizabeth Webber was never a suspect. They investigated the tip, determined it was a red herring meant to distract them — and you and Caldwell leapt on it like a dog with a bone because you thought you could get back at Jason Morgan—”

“Everything I’ve done has been strictly by the book—”

“You were willing to walk into that court and argue a theory of the crime you knew was bullshit. You knew Elizabeth didn’t have enough time to get to the murder scene. You knew that her alibi was rock solid because why would someone with Michael Corinthos’s background ever call the police so close to the time of the crime—and you never bothered to investigate him. At all. You went after a woman and a pair of teenagers because you thought they’d break under the pressure and hand you Jason Morgan.”

“You think you have all the answers—”

“I think I’ve got Sonny’s daughter on camera planting the gun in Webber’s car.” She picked up the folder, flipped it open and sent it flying across the table. “You know what I found when I looked through the files from Cates’ computer? Records of a wiretap you filed for.” Gia lifted her brows. “Isn’t that strange? You have Sonny’s restaurant under surveillance, cameras and audio inside the building. And a federal judge signed off. Caldwell was stunned that you hadn’t turned any of that over. Because guess what I found?”

She tossed another photo — Kristina in Sonny’s office removing the gun and putting it in the safe. “That’s the gun from Sonny’s safe. She took it two days before Cates was murdered. That’s the same box the gun was found in. The same box in Elizabeth’s car.”

Reynolds faltered at this, picked up the photos, stared at the timestamps. “I didn’t—I didn’t know—”

“Because you didn’t turn over the wiretap to Caldwell. Who was supposed to take on Cates’ case after the fact.” Gia went back to her paperwork. “I had questions about that, but that would have been enough to get him on my side. He looked at it, and he’s the one that ordered Kristina to be placed under arrest. The PCPD filed suit with their own charges. Do you know what I’ve been doing this entire time, Noah?”

“Gia—” His tone had shifted completely, and he set the photos down. “All right, let’s have a conversation—”

“The warrants you filed with the court for this surveillance.” She tossed it at him. “Informant statements filled with garbage. Jason Morgan was never Cates’ informant. Not after Pikeman. It was just one more thing he lied about. All of that was on his computer.”

“I didn’t—” Now he looked ashen and had to sit down, staring at the photo of Kristina with the gun in Sonny’s office. “I didn’t know that.”

“I’ll concede you probably trusted him enough to file on his say so,” Gia said. “But you dropped those charges against Kristina fast, didn’t you? And turned back to the murder case. You started talking about going after Morgan harder. Revoking Elizabeth’s bail, which you were sure would break her or those boys. Maybe make her desperate enough to say anything against Jason to get out, right? Because you knew the murder case was never getting past a jury.”

Noah scrubbed his hands down his face. “You need to understand—”

“You dragged that poor boy’s mistakes in court, and you did it even after you saw him sitting in the gallery. You can’t prove Elizabeth had anything to do with that incident other than be the owner of the home. But you wanted to put more and more pressure on her.” Gia leaned in, standing over him. “Here’s something I didn’t tell you, Noah, something that you might already picked up. Elizabeth Webber stays loyal until the bitter end. She was never, ever going to turn on Jason Morgan. And that’s why I thought she was covering for him. That’s why I got involved. Because I remember being a hypocritical bitch who loves to point fingers at people for their crimes, but she won’t look at the man in her bed, no matter who he is at the time. And I would have happily prosecuted her for that — if she did it.” Gia straightened. “But she didn’t. And neither did he.” She stabbed a finger at the photo. “And if you’d turned over that wiretap, you’d have known that weeks ago.”

“We can’t use those photos,” Noah said. He looked up at her. “Cates lied—”

“We can’t use them against Sonny, no. But we can use them against his daughter.” Gia pulled out a chair, sat down, and leaned back. “This is what is going to happen. Caldwell is eager to move on from this — he’ll admit he had tunnel vision and should have seen the red flags. He’ll keep his mouth shut about you keeping crucial information about his case to himself. He’s already started his part by arranging the arrest and the guard at the hospital.” She arched a brow. “You’ll keep your mouth shut about my lack of candor about the connection I had to Elizabeth, and I’ll do the same about what I found in the files. As far as anyone knows, we only just dug into the surveillance files on Cates’ computer and we’re going to inform Diane Miller that our evidence matches hers. You’ll drop the charges against Elizabeth and upgrade Kristina to murder.”

“It’s not that simple—”

“It is. Kristina doesn’t have an expectation of privacy in her father’s office. The wiretap being bullshit won’t matter. You can’t use it against Sonny, and Cates really screwed you there, didn’t he? He didn’t get anything you could use on Morgan, Elizabeth — but he got Sonny on tape talking about so many things—such a shame you’ll never be able to use them. That’s your punishment, Noah. For caring about your vendetta more than the truth.”

Noah glared at her. “You’re loving this, aren’t you?”

“Being right? Of course. And you won’t have to worry about seeing me around the office. I’ll submit my letter of resignation.” She sat back. “I have other plans for my future employment.”

Quartermaine Estate: Foyer

“We can’t put it off any longer,” Willow said, folding her arms. “Drew, half the people in this house already know. She might overhear it—”

Drew was saved from having to respond by the doorbell. And then he saw who was on the other side. His expression immediately went blank. “Alexis.”

“I want to see my granddaughter.” Alexis strode past him, barely acknowledging his presence. “Willow? Where is she—”

“Alexis. I’m so sorry,” Willow said. She held out her hands, but Alexis ignored them, shook her head. “We were just talking about how to talk to Scout.”

“She doesn’t know yet—” Alexis whipped his head around, looked at Drew still at the entrance, the door now closed. “It’s been hours.”

“It’s not an easy piece of news to share,” Drew said. “I haven’t even said it outloud for myself—”

“Don’t pretend you give a damn now,” Alexis retorted. “You made a difficult situation nearly unbearable—” She stabbed a finger at him. “If you’d left Scout in her mother’s custody, all of this would be different—”

“I had no choice—”

“Danny was out of the home, damn it. And so was Rocco. In fact, Rocco lives in this house now, doesn’t he?” Alexis bit out. “But no one is trying to take your child away, are they? You wanted the optics of being a good parent, and you didn’t care about actually being one.”

“Alexis—”

“Don’t try to defend him,” Alexis snapped at Willow who closed her mouth immediately. “If Sam had had her daughter in the home, she would have been home with her—”

“You mean, if Sam hadn’t lost custody of both her children, Kristina might not have felt it necessary to try to screw with Elizabeth’s bail,” Drew interrupted coldly, and Alexis pressed her lips together. “Let’s rewind here, Alexis. I didn’t kidnap my daughter away in the middle of the night. I put the facts in front of a judge, just like Jason did. A judge determined that Sam was acting irrationally and that the children weren’t safe with her. Now, I’m not going to pretend I couldn’t have done things differently,” Drew added. “I was too harsh. Too unforgiving. And Sam deserved better than that. But I didn’t do this alone, Alexis. And Kristina still chose to interfere.”

“You could debate who bears the burden of guilt until the sun sets,” Willow said before Alexis could respond. “But it doesn’t change anything, Alexis. There’s a little girl upstairs who has had her entire world upended in the last few weeks, and she doesn’t even know that she’ll never see her mother again. That needs to be the priority here. Not pointing the finger.”

“I can’t turn back time, Alexis,” Drew said, his tone gentled, and Alexis closed her eyes. “Neither can you. How many choices are you going over in your head, all the little things you said or did that put you on the road to this day? Willow’s right. Scout comes first. Danny comes first.”

“They need to be together. Scout is going to want her brother,” Willow said, looking at Drew. “So you’re done forbidding him access. He needs his family around him, Drew. And so does she.”

“Of course.” Drew touched Willow’s shoulder, then looked at Alexis. “Absolutely. Whatever Scout needs. Whatever you need to get through this. I’m glad you’re here with me. Scout will find a great deal of comfort in your presence.”

“I find everything you say to be so incredibly condescending and obsequious—” Alexis put out  her hands. “I actually feel nauseous being in the same room with you. Let’s just get this over with.”

General Hospital: ICU

Kristina turned her head slightly, her lashes fluttering against her pale skin. They opened, her dark eyes unfocused as Sonny came into view. “D-Dad.”

“Hey, sweetie. Just relax. You were in an accident.” Sonny stroked her forehead. “Rest. Don’t worry about anything.”

Kristina closed her eyes, her mouth going slack, indicating she’d drifted back into sleep, and Sonny exhaled slowly, rubbing his chest.

“Don’t worry about anything. What a joke.”

The words, delivered in a tone so acidic that he half-expected the floor to dissolve beneath his  feet, came from behind him, and Sonny turned to find Molly in the doorway, her arms tightly folded, her eyes swollen and bloodshot.

“Molly—”

She put out a hand, and Sonny stopped. Hesitated. “Molly—”

“I’m on my way to the morgue,” Molly said flatly, and Sonny went still. “They pulled my sister’s dead body from the river, and they need an official identification.”

“I’m so sorry—”

“Kristina has never had to worry about anything, has she? Not really. Not without you or Mom to bail her out. Not without Jason or—” Molly’s voice faltered and she looked away,  her eyes glittering with tears. “Not without one of us to clean it up. Well, she should worry. Because she’s going to jail for the rest of her life. And if there’s any justice in this world, Sam will haunt her every waking moment. So you can hire her a lawyer, you can do whatever you want, Sonny, but I promise you this — I’ll be on the other side of the aisle, doing everything I can to make sure she pays for what she’s done.”

“I didn’t know—”

“I don’t believe you. I just don’t. You tell my mother if she participates in Kristina’s defense, if she lifts a finger to help the bitch who murdered my sister, I will never speak to her again.”

Sonny let Molly leave — there was nothing that could be said to her in this moment, no words of comfort or reassurance. Molly’s world had already been shattered with the death of her daughter, and all of this had cracked what little she’d attempted to rebuild.

He looked back at his daughter, at his little girl, and exhaled slowly. No easy answers. No clear way forward.

Webber House: Kitchen

“Thank you.” Michael accepted the coffee Jason handed him. “I think I have more caffeine than blood right now. I, uh, wanted to say—hey,” he said to Elizabeth who rejoined them in the kitchen, followed by Jake and Aiden. “How’s Danny?”

“Still in his room. I’m hoping Dante will be a comfort to him.” She touched Michael’s shoulder then started to make her own cup of coffee. “Have you slept?”

“No. I don’t really think anyone has.” Michael set the cup aside. “Look, I just wanted to apologize. Dante and I—on Tuesday, after the hearing, after he’d talked to Sam, we went over the whole thing, and he started to piece together that maybe Kristina was involved—with the email to the court,” he added hastily when Jason straightened, his expression turning cold. “Not the murder. I didn’t know Dante was suspecting that. He never said a word to me.”

“If he had?” Jake wanted to know. “Would you have still kept quiet?”

“Jake,” Jason began, but his son wasn’t interested in whatever Jason had to say.

“No, I want to know how many people knew Kristina was completely insane and said nothing,” Jake retorted.

Michael grimaced. “If I knew what Dante was thinking, I would have said so — maybe I would have asked Diane first—no, you asked a question, Jake. At least have the respect to listen to my answer. How easy it would it be to turn your brother in for murder?” he demanded. “If you knew he was up to bullshit—”

“You couldn’t even tell on Danny when you caught him with a vape,” Elizabeth reminded Jake gently. “It’s not easy—”

“Danny was being an asshole, sure, but he wasn’t hurting anyone but himself, was he? As soon as I realized how bad it was, I did say something–”

“You’re talking about the murder of an FBI agent,” Michael said. “Do you think it’s so easy to think something so terrible of my sister?”

Jake started to shake his head, but Aiden bumped his lightly. “What?”

“If someone came home and told you I killed someone,” Aiden said, “you gonna believe it? And hell, what if you did suspect it, if Cam suspected it, what are we doing first? I’m calling Cam. I’m going for help—”

“This wouldn’t happen to us,” Jake snapped, then leveled a glare at Michael. “Because yeah, my dad’s a criminal—sorry,” he added as aside to Jason, “—but no one ever raised us to think of murder as goddamn solution—”

“Jake.” Jason stepped forward, between the cousins. “That’s not fair—”

“No, he’s right,” Michael said, holding up a hand. “This wouldn’t happen to you or your brothers,” he said. “Your mother’s not perfect, no, but Elizabeth always made sure you three were the priority.”

“Michael—”

“My parents didn’t do that,” Michael said, cutting off Elizabeth’s protest. “Why do you think Jason had to practically raise me from over their shoulder? You think that I got any sense of morality  growing up with Sonny or Carly Corinthos? The first time I really started to fuck up and think that I was untouchable, your dad practically ripped my head off and told me I was acting like a little bitch. So, no, Jake, this wouldn’t happen to you or your brothers. But it happened to me. And my sister did this to your family. She did this to—” He looked at Jason who was already shaking his head. “She did this to my family. She did this to you, Jason. I’m so sorry I didn’t see it. That I didn’t stop it—”

“I’m not blaming you,” Jason said. “I’m not blaming anyone but Kristina,” he added, looking at his son. “And neither should you. No matter what you think they’re doing, it’s not easy to turn on family. Or to think the worst of them, Jake.”

“Also—” Aiden coughed lightly. “Cam did sort of think of murder as a solution that one time—” Jake whacked him in the stomach. “Right, right. Never mind.”

“Okay, I think we change the subject.” Elizabeth went to Jake, touched his shoulder. “Being angry is okay. This is an awful situation that just seems to get worse no matter we do, but we’re family, Jake. And Michael’s doing his best. Dante did his best. I’m not interested in vengeance.”

“I am—” Jake muttered, but lowered his gaze when Jason sent him an exasperated glance. “Okay. Fine. As long as your charges are dropped, and Kristina rots in hell, I guess we can let that be enough. But if she gets away with it—”

“We’ll deal with it as it comes. All I care about is that this nightmare is over, that my charges will go away, and we do everything we can to support your brother and Scout.”

May 25, 2026

This entry is part 108 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 60 minutes.


Thursday, October 3, 2024

General Hospital: ICU Hallway

“Taking a break?”

Alexis turned, frowned slightly when she saw Sonny striding towards her, his coat over one arm, and a disposable cup holder in the other hand, two cups emblazoned with his coffee logo tucked inside. “What?”

“You’re out here, I thought you’d be in with Kristina.” Sonny held out the tray, then peered over Alexis’s shoulder to see their daughter still lying prone in her hospital bed, the tube of her ventilator snaking across the hospital bed.

“I can’t sit still. Probably the caffeine—” The liquid scalded her tongue, but Alexis drank it anyway, grateful for any feeling in her body. She’d been awake for more than twenty-four hours, and by now was fueled by little more than anxious worry. “It’s nearly ten, someone should have an update. Dante or Michael should have called—you know what? You need to go rent a helicopter and I’ll find my daughter damn it—”

“Okay.” Sonny set his things on the small sofa that was tucked in the corner, then put his hands in mock surrender. “I can see that the plan to ignore all of that until we knew something—”

“Ignore all of that? That? You mean my daughter caught in a flash flood and missing, presumed dead?” Alexis hissed. “That was your plan?”

Sonny exhaled slowly, the corners of his mouth drooping slightly. “You’re right. I’m sorry. I’m sorry,” he repeated when she shot him a nasty look. “I don’t know what we’re supposed to do. We can’t go out there and help, I can barely get Dante on the phone, I’m avoiding Jason, you’re avoiding Diane—I don’t have any answers.”

Alexis sat down on the sofa, hunched over, her arms crossd in her lap as she rocked back and forth. “I can’t sit next to her, Sonny. I can’t sit next to our daughter, waiting for her to wake up when the reason she and Sam were in that car was because I didn’t believe Sam. I didn’t—” She closed her eyes. “And I can’t begin to think about Molly because I’ve been completely absent to what she needed — it’s falling apart. Everything. And I started it.”

“Alexis—” Sonny sat next to her, touched her shoulder. “No—”

“I started it,” Alexis murmured. “When Kristina wanted me to draw up custody papers, and I didn’t tell her no. I argued, but I gave in. I always give in. That was the first domino.”

“I went after Ava for custody, didn’t I?” Sonny reminded her. “Is Kristina even in that room if I don’t do that? If that little girl makes it—” He rubbed his mouth. “But it’s not a game of dominos, Alexis. We all played a role in what happened, but it’s not as simple as pulling out one part and changing it all—”

“I just want that moment back. I want it back. I want to shake Kristina the first time she calls that baby Adela, and I want to shake Sam until her teeth rattles when she started playing games with Danny’s custody — if I had been a better mother—”

“And if I’d told them about the gun weeks ago?” Sonny asked quietly. Alexis looked at him, her eyes bloodshot. “If I’d handled Ava a decade ago when she killed Connie like I should I have. Do we sit here and keep making a list of all the ways we missed the signs?”

“What else is there? Wait for Kristina to wake up so we can demand answers, wait for someone to come through those doors and tell me they’ve found my daughter’s body—” Her voice broke and she dipped her head down. “What else can I do but retrace every horrible step that brought me here?”

Sonny started to answer, but the phone in his discarded jacket vibrated. He reached for it, and accepted the call from Michael, Alexis’s head snapping up when he greeted his son. “Hey. Do you got something?”

“Yeah. We’re, uh, on our way to Elizabeth’s to meet Jason there. Dad, they found Sam’s car about thirty minutes ago. It was snagged under a bridge with some other debris.” There was a heavy pause. “It took some time, but they…they got a look inside. She’s in there.”

Sonny closed his eyes, and Alexis pressed her fists to her mouth. “She didn’t make it, did she?”

“No. She didn’t.”

He’d known, of course, the possibility of finding her was slim, almost zero. She’d been trapped, the car had been swept away — injuries in the accident, dark, debris filled waters — the odds had been against her, but the odds had been against him, hadn’t they? And Sonny had found himself alive in Nixon Falls.

But a body changed the hope. Sam wouldn’t return in days, weeks, months, or years. Her story had ended that night, on a dark and stormy night, behind the wheel of the car — and, if the evidence was correct, at the hands of the sister Sam had spent most of her life protecting.

“When—when are they—”

“They have to do a few things before they can recover her, but it’s—it’s happening. We’re telling Danny. Drew is going to tell Scout. I don’t know what Alexis wants to do.”

“I don’t know either,” Sonny said, taking Alexis’s hand, holding it tight, tears falling quietly down her cheeks. “I’ll call you back.” He set the phone aside, then looked at her. “They’re telling Danny. Drew is handling Scout. They’re recovering the…they’re going to get her out of the car, but it’ll take some time before we know what happened. How it happened.”

Alexis closed her eyes, squeezed tight bit down hard, and Sonny just waited. Then she opened her eyes, exhaled a long, shaky breath. “I should be with Scout. Danny has support. He has his brother, but Scout—she doesn’t—she needs me. I need to see her. I need to see them both. I can’t—” She stopped. “You should stay here in case Kristina wakes up—”

“I—” Sonny stopped what he was about to say when he saw a familiar figure turn down the hallway. He got to his feet. “You’ve got no business here—”

Caldwell, flanked by Anna and Gia, stopped a few feet away. “You don’t make—”

Gia put a hand up to stop the abrasive agent from continuing to speak. “I’m here on behalf  of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office. We’re filing federal charges against your daughter.”

“And we’ll be filing locally,” Anna said coolly when Gia flicked her an irritating glance.

“What’s changed since last night?” Sonny said, and Anna held out a manila folder. He snatched it from her, flipped it open, then his face drained of emotion. Wordlessly, he handed the folder to Alexis, who glanced down, and sighed at the security footage of Kristina standing by a car, a metal box in her hand. “Elizabeth’s car,” she said, lifting her eyes to Gia. “I presume?”

“Yes. Kristina Corinthos-Davis is under arrest, charged with aiding and abetting the murder of a federal agent.”

“Aiding?” Sonny retorted. “What the hell—”

“Well, I’m arresting her for the murder, but I suppose the FBI will have to catch up with what we already know—”

“Don’t you have an international fugitive to sleep with?” Caldwell demanded. Anna scowled at him.

“I don’t have the time and energy for whatever the hell this is,” Alexis snapped. She looked at Sonny. “Handle this. Get her a lawyer. I don’t give a damn. I have somewhere else to be.” She slapped the folder at Sonny and stalked off.

“This couldn’t have waited?” Sonny asked. “Even an hour? I expected better of you, Anna. You know that we just found out Sam’s body was just found. Or are you even more incompetent than I thought?”

Gia pursed her lips, looked oddly at the commissioner. “What?”

“The accident,” Anna said, keeping her tone even. “The suspect’s sister was missing, presumed dead. It wasn’t pertinent to the case, and well, I assumed it was only a matter of time, Sonny, before you got your wits about you and we lost our chance to secure Kristina’s custody.”

“Yeah, you know all about absconding from justice and evading arrest, don’t ya, Anna?” Sonny smiled, his teeth slightly bared. “Your time is coming, you know.”

“Right after yours, I’m sure.”

“Are we done with the games?” Gia demanded. “Caldwell, put a guard on the door and read the suspect her rights as soon as she’s conscious. Sonny—”

“Oh, we’re done pretending you don’t know any of us?” Sonny retorted. “How’s your boss like it that you and Elizabeth were enemies back in the day?”

Gia tipped her head to the side, her lips curved in a smile. She didn’t answer him right away, and the silence sent a chill down his spine. “That might have worried me yesterday, but I spent all night pouring over this case file. Over the Pikeman investigation. I have everything I need to make sure I come out smelling like a daisy. Can’t say the same for your daughter.” She looked towards the door, then back to Sonny. “When did you suspect her, Sonny? Before or after Elizabeth was put in federal custody, strip searched, and kept from her kids?”

Sonny furrowed his brow. “What?”

“Elizabeth’s defense team secured this footage, Sonny, but I spent the night looking at all the files John Cates put together. Verifying the information, of course, because well, he wasn’t entirely above board.” Gia took a step towards him. “He had surveillance on the restaurant, did you know that? A warrant for inside and out. Cameras. He didn’t tell anyone that. He and Reynolds kept that to themselves all this time.”

Sonny lifted his chin. “I don’t know what you’re talking about—”

“No? You didn’t look in the folder. The charges we’re filing are preliminary, Sonny. I’m going to upgrade them to murder in the next few days. Because I’ve got your little girl on camera taking the gun from your safe. And I’ve got you looking for that gun twenty-four hours after Cates was killed.” She smirked. “I’ve got your daughter on first degree murder, Sonny. And there’s nothing you can do to stop it. Should have covered up for her sooner.”

Webber House: Living Room

He knew, of course. Before his father even opened his mouth, Danny knew.

He sat on the sofa, staring hard at the wood grain pattern on the coffee table, words slipping in and out, no real awareness of how they fit together. Recovery, hours, quick

When he heard nothing, when he realized there was no more sounds, no more voices, he lifted his head to find his father sitting next to him, and he had to look away quickly — because the pain in his father’s eyes hit like a laser, searing his flesh, the grief bubbling up in his throat, and Danny could get through this if he just didn’t look at anyone.

“When—” He stopped, surprised by the crack in his voice, the effort it took to start again. “When will we know?”

Jason frowned, tilted his head. “Know?” he echoed.

“If she…” Danny licked his lips. “If it hurt.”

“Danny, man—” Jake sat on his other side, a hand on his brother’s shoulder. “You can’t think like that—”

“I just wanna know if she knew. Or if it was quick. Or if we had a chance. If I’d answered the phone—” He looked his father, averting his eyes quickly again. “I didn’t. I didn’t pick up the first time, but maybe if I had—”

“I don’t know if it would have helped,” Jason told him gently. “And your mother wouldn’t want you to think about that—”

“Well, we don’t know that, do we?” Danny said, lunging to his feet. “We don’t know anything, because she’s dead!”

He darted for the stairs, and Jason slowly rose, looking after him with tired eyes. Behind the sofa, standing in front of the book shelf, Elizabeth met his eyes, her own filled with worry. “I can call Fletcher. Get him into see Danny as soon as possible.”

“Yeah. Yeah. That’s—” Jason scrubbed his hands over his face. “Yeah, okay.”

As she reached for her phone, it rang, startling all of them. She answered it, turning away to begin the conversation.

“I don’t know if there was any way to tell him without it going bad,” Jake said, trying to lift his father’s spirits. “There’s not really much we can say to make it better, you know?”

“Yeah, I know.” Jason stopped, cutting off whatever he was going to say next as Elizabeth came back over, her phone clutched against her chest. “What is it?”

“Diane. She—she sent the report over like we talked about, but apparently it was—it was extra. Because the FBI had something else. They’ve put a guard on her room and they’re putting her under arrest—”

“What?” Jake asked. “What does that mean? What’s going on?”

“Are they dropping the charges?” Jason demanded.

“Not yet. It’s—it’s complicated. But it’s…” Elizabeth looked at their son. “They know who put the gun in my trunk, Jake. They have proof now. It was Sam’s sister.”

“Kristina?” Jake said, bewildered. “She framed you? Wasn’t she the one who got brainwashed into a cult? Didn’t you save her from that?” he asked his father. “Why did she want to hurt Mom?”

“I don’t know, but I guess we’ll find out when she wakes up.”

May 24, 2026

This entry is part 107 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 51 minutes.


Thursday, October 3, 2024

Port Charles Temporary FBI Offices

For the first time in days, the skies over Port Charles were blue, the remnants of the tropical storm had finally moved out of the region, tormenting Ontario to their north or just fading out of memory altogether, but relentless downpour had left temporary scars across the city making Gia Campbell’s trip even more frustrating as she navigated road closures and detours until she was able to reach her destination.

At her entrance, Caldwell straightened from his position leaning over a different agent, his expression stone-faced. “Reynolds said you’d stepped back from the case—”

“Noah Reynolds is going to be lucky to keep his job by the time this case is over,” Gia said flatly. “If you don’t want to be on the chopping block right along side him, I suggest you listen to what I have to say.”

Caldwell exchanged a glance with the agent he’d been speaking with, then nodded towards the nearby conference room. “All right. You’ve got my attention.”

Quartermaine Estate: Foyer

Chase lifted his brows when he saw who was waiting for him by the front door. “I thought you’d still be at the hospital — or with Danny—”

Molly folded her arms, shook her head. “I can’t.” When Chase just looked quizzical, she let out a low huff. “I can’t look at my mother right now, and if Kristina were to wake up — well, let’s just say it wouldn’t be friendly. And Danny—” Her throat tightened. “I can’t look at him right now. Not when he might still think there’s a chance his mother might come home.”

“There’s always—”

“Chase.” Molly closed her eyes. “Don’t. You were at the scene last night. You said yourself the car was gone. And Sam—we should have found her by now. It’s nearly nine in the morning—I’m not here to debate that—” She opened her eyes, focused on him again. “I need to know where you are in the case. And if there’s a chance we can make sure Kristina doesn’t get away with causing that accident.”

“Molly, why don’t you sit down—take a minute—”

“I can’t. I can’t. You were following them, you said so yourself. The car swerved of the road, and Spinelli said it sounded like Kristina found the phone. If Kristina tried to grab the wheel or distracted Sam  while she was driving, she’s responsible. Reckless endangerment—Don’t look at me like that,” she snapped, holding up a finger when Chase’s expression softened. “I’m not crazy. We need to find something to charge her with. Everyone knows what you were doing there. Sonny is going to have her on the first plane—”

“We don’t have a lot to work with. Anything could have happened in that car—”

“But you can charge her—”

“That’s a question for Robert,” Chase told her, and Molly sighed. “All I can tell you is that we don’t have more evidence than we did last night. Everything we know is circumstantial. Our techs are looking at footage around Elizabeth’s house, Spinelli is looking at the same things right now. We also subpoenaed Kristina’s cell phone records, and we’re going to try to get your sister’s too. We’re circling the wagons—”

“Yeah, well, it won’t be a lot of help if she’s lifted out of trouble just like she always is. Sonny will find a way to make this someone else’s fault. My mother will make excuses, and Kristina will get away with it—”

“All I can do is follow the law and where the evidence takes me. I get why you don’t want to be with your mother right now, but Danny and Scout are going to need you—”

Molly’s eyes shifted and she looked towards the stairs. “Scout. Where is she?”

“Drew’s keeping her at home today — Scout doesn’t know yet. She’s still asleep. And he didn’t want to say anything until they knew for sure. Danny’s probably coming out of his skin. He knows too much, and he’ll have questions. You should be with him.”

Miller & Davis: Diane’s Office

It had scarcely been twenty-four hours since she’d learned Kristina might be the real killer, and while Elizabeth had trusted Spinelli and Diane’s convictions, she realized there was part of her that was sure, somehow, there’d be an explanation. A reason for all the things they’d learned.

She stood in Diane’s office, staring at the television screen as security footage played across four quadrants — Spinelli had organized four views from three of her neighbors and Elizabeth’s own — syncing up the time, depicting the day the horror had begun.

Kristina walked out of Elizabeth’s house, went to her car, and pulled away. Then a few minutes, Jason’s motorcycle parked at the curb, and Elizabeth came out her door, turned the lock to check it, and then left with him.

Then — Kristina returned, parking behind Elizabeth’s car. The trunk opened, she put the metal box inside, and then disappeared out of view, until she returned on Elizabeth’s camera, stooping down at the door, then leaving.

“I rewatched the footage for the rest of that day,” Spinelli said, and she looked at him. “Aiden came home, and just before the door closes and we lose him, he bends down. I don’t know for sure — but I think he might have picked up your key fob. I think Kristina dropped it at the door.”

“Doesn’t really matter, does it?” Jason said roughly, and Elizabeth looked at him, her whole body physically aching for him. What was it like to watch the young woman he’d protected her whole life repay him with betrayal? Had Kristina intended for Elizabeth to be the target? Or for the FBI to go straight for Jason? After all, the false tip had tied Jason to the crime as well.

“Spinelli has put together this exhibit, but we also have prepared a report of the raw footage,” Diane said. “It ties Kristina to the gun, and we have the tech reports — Elizabeth never opened that trunk again. It’s the only trunk pop after the murder. Their case is dead. The gun is the only link and they cannot put it in Elizabeth’s hands or tie her to knowledge that it even existed.”

There should have been relief, a sweet sense of victory, or just something at those words, but the last month of her life — of all their lives — had been so draining that Elizabeth didn’t know what to feel. And to get this news today of all days when they were waiting for even more grave news to arrive — she just looked at Jason, reached for his hand, lacing their fingers together. “I’m so sorry.” Then to Diane, who appeared to have aged a decade overnight. “To both of you. I know how long you’ve known her. How much you’ve cared and looked after her.”

Then to Spinelli, who never looked less like the silly boy with his nicknames he’d been when they met, as he stood by the monitor, staring at the results of his long, sleepless night. She didn’t know what to say to him, to any of them beyond what she’d already expressed. “What’s next? What are you doing with the report?”

“We’ll send a copy to Chase and the PCPD, and then to Agent Caldwell and Reynolds. I’ve appealed my motion to exclude the gun with a request to dismiss the charges. What happens next largely depends on them. They might immediately drop the charges — I expect Robert will file charges locally.”

“You don’t seem convinced that will happen,” Jason said, getting to his feet. “Do you think the FBI will ignore this?”

“Not ignore. Explain it away. It seems clear to me you were always their target,” Diane told him. “And everything they’ve done to Elizabeth and the boys was a means to turn them against you, to testify to your knowledge. They may just shift their theory of the crime — Kristina was helping you, and framing Elizabeth to throw off the scent from you both. It’s not going to work, a jury would never believe it. I think a judge will dismiss Elizabeth’s charges, but they might come after you next, Jason.”

“That’s fine,” Jason said, and Elizabeth made a face. “I’d rather they do that,” Jason told her with a shake of his head. “They can’t convict me any more than they could convict you. But you deserve to have your name cleared.”

“Kristina’s made it clear she doesn’t care about the truth. She could turn state’s witness, pretend you gave her the gun to get rid of—”

“She could,” Jason admitted. “But I’m prepared to deal with that. You have what you need to get the case against Elizabeth dismissed,” he told Diane. “Do what you have to do. We’ll face what happens next.”

“Keep us in the loop. We’ll be sticking close to home,” Elizabeth said. “We should—” She stopped when she heard the ring of Jason’s phone. He fished it from his pocket. “It’s Michael.”

Belle Forest Drive: Command Center

Michael put his phone back in his pocket, then made his way over to Dante, still standing in the same place, in the same position he’d been when the lieutenant from the rescue squad had given him the news. “Jason’s on his way back to the house. He was with Diane at the office. I told him we’d meet him there.”

“You should go. They—they might still need me—”

“Dante.”

His brother turned to look at him, his dark eyes glimmering with unshed tears, his mouth bracketed with lines, the day’s growth of stubble telling the story of the exhaustion he must feel. “I should be here when they get her out—”

“It will take hours,” Michael said gently. “They have to stabilize the car before they can send out divers. And you know Sam wouldn’t want it this way. She wouldn’t want you here. She’d want you with Danny. Drew and Willow are at the house. They’re going to tell Scout, and I think the kids are going to need all of us to get them through it.”

“Do you think she knew?” Dante asked, his voice rough. “Could she feel the car moving, but she couldn’t get to the surface? Was she still alive when it got stuck at that damn bridge? And she just couldn’t get out? Or was she already gone? Did she—” He faltered, bent over at the knees, bracing his hands on his thighs. “There’s almost no worse way to go. She would have fought so hard to get out. She would have known she was going to die—”

“We might never know the answers to that,” Michael said. “And maybe it won’t bring us comfort now, but knowing how bad things with Danny were — she was able to talk to him one more time, Dante. And she died knowing he still loved her. It’s not enough,” he added when Dante straightened, looked at him. “It won’t ever be enough. But it’s something to hold on to. He’s going to blame himself, you know that. Sam wouldn’t want that.”

“No, she wouldn’t. Okay. Okay.” Dante scrubbed his face, dragging his hands back and forth, forcing color back into his skin. “Okay. You’re right. I need to be the one to tell Danny. I need to—I need to be with him. And then the kids need to be together. We need to make sure they have each other.”

May 17, 2026

This entry is part 106 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 62 minutes.


Thursday, October 3, 2024

Miller & Davis: Lobby

The sun had just begun to peek over horizon when Maxie knocked on the glass door of the law offices. The security guard on the night shift sat behind a desk, scrolling lazily on his phone, glancing up when he saw her there. He made a face, then got to his feet, lumbered over. “Not open until nine,” he told her, the words muffled behind the glass door.

Maxie flicked through her phone, then held up a photo of herself and Spinelli. “He’s here, isn’t he? Let me in. I’m his—” She grimaced. “Partner.” Because girlfriend seemed too silly. And honestly, how could he work here and not know who she was?

The guard rolled his eyes, but then punched something into the pad beside the door, then unlocked and pulled it open. “He’s in the back. Next time, have him tell me you’re coming.”

“He doesn’t know,” Maxie said, sliding her phone back in her tote, then started down the hallway leading to the support offices. She knew exactly where to find Spinelli, and would have even if the app on the phone hadn’t told her.

The office he’d been assigned was towards the back, near Diane’s office, the door open just enough for a sliver of light to fall onto the carpet. Maxie pushed it open and found her target scrunched over a desk, skimming through papers, then looking at his computer screen. “Spinelli.”

He jolted at her words — which meant he hadn’t heard her approach or noticed her standing in the doorway. When he lifted his gaze to meet hers, his disheveled hair standing on end from running his hands through it over and over, his eyes rimmed with red, exhaustion etched into every line of his beloved face.

“Maximista—” He blinked, looked around. “What—” He licked his lips. “What time is it?”

“Almost six-thirty.” She reached inside her tote, removed the large insulted jug of coffee and set it on the desk, then followed it with a wrapped sandwich. “Because I doubt you’ve bothered to eat since last night or that I could talk you into going home to sleep.”

Spinelli blinked again, then rubbed his hands over his face. “I didn’t—I should have called—”

“You did. A text just before midnight.” Maxie tipped her head to the side. “And Mac came by after they shut down the search for the night. He thought I might need to leave, so he and my mom are with the kids. I guess I was surprised to see you here and not at the hospital or out…” She pressed her lips together. “What’s going on? Why are you here?”

“I don’t—” Spinelli stared blankly at the papers, then at her. “What do you already know?”

“Drink some coffee, take two bites, and then I’ll tell you.”

He grimaced, but followed directions and accepted the water she also fished from her bag. “Well?”

“I know that Sam and Kristina were an accident last night. That Kristina was found, that Sam is still…” Maxie shifted with a sigh. “That she’s still missing, and that her car was caught in the flash floods out by her mother’s place. I also know that the police are investigating one or both of them for something because Mac was talking about Chase being out on scene because he was following someone.” She paused. “I also think it’s related to the case because Jason was there last night, too. And seeing you here — I know it now. What’s going on?”

“It’s a long story—”

“Sum it up, and we can talk details later. What has you pouring over the investigation files all night? You can trust me, Spinelli. You know that.”

Spinelli slid a piece of paper across the desk at her. “You see this? The line I highlighted?”

“Looks like gibberish to me,” Maxie told him with a wrinkle of her nose. “But I think it says something about something on September 3.”

“That’s the records from Elizabeth’s car the day after John Cates was murdered. Her trunk was opened with her remote key fob at 1:13 in the afternoon on September 3.” Spinelli turned the computer screen, tapped a key, then gestured at the bottom. “That time stamp —”

“Matches this time and date—” Maxie stopped, taking in the still image of a car parked on a curb in a neighborhood she knew very well. She’d grown up nearby, had played with her cousin hundreds of times. “That’s Elizabeth’s house. That’s—” She looked at Spinelli. “That’s Kristina.”

“Footage from her neighbor’s Ring Camera. Kristina opens the trunk, places a metal box inside, then closes it. She goes towards Elizabeth’s house — crouches down by the door, then leaves. We think she was dropping the fob in front of the house, hoping they’d think it fell off Elizabeth’s keys or something.”

Tears stung Maxie’s eyes — she didn’t know why. She hadn’t known the murder victim, didn’t know Kristina that well. And she certainly didn’t care much about Elizabeth. But she knew Spinelli had been working tirelessly for weeks to find evidence exonerating Elizabeth, to prove her innocence. And now he had.

“This is connected to last night, isn’t it? That’s why you came here and spent all this time going through files that could have waited until we knew about Sam.” Maxie looked at him again, her throat tight. “What happened, Spinelli?”

“Kristina framed Elizabeth for the murder, or was trying to set up Stone Cold. I don’t know. And she emailed the prosecution for the case to get Elizabeth’s bail revoked. We all thought—” Spinelli rubbed his face. “We thought it was Sam. Trying to get rid of Elizabeth, or help her custody case. But it was Kristina. Sam found out and she was in the car last night. She called me.”

He held out his phone, stared at it. “I don’t talk on the phone much anymore. The calls I’ve made recently have been about the case, so I installed an app to automatically record them.”

He pressed play.

…I just don’t…why…her bail…important…”

…told you…I…to help…you said…no one…know.”

“We’ve been over this, Sam. And if Mom can’t make this go away, I’m not admitting to anything.”

“You have to tell them, Kristina. You have to tell them I didn’t know. Danny believes I did this to him—do you really think your feelings are more important?”

“He’ll get over it. He’s done worse to you.”

“I just wish you’d tell me why you did this. Why you really did this. You had to know there was a chance people would think it was me—why did you take the risk? Why not try to get Mom to use it in the custody papers? Why go to the same lawyers who tried to put you in jail?”

“You needed Elizabeth out of the picture—”

“No, no! I didn’t—not like that! Damn it, Krissy, it wouldn’t have solved anything! She’d be a goddamn martyr and everyone would be trying to get her out—you really think it would make Danny’s life better that way?”

“But Jason wouldn’t be able to say he’s got a stable home—”

“No, no, I still think there’s another reason. You were ready to blame me and gaslight everyone else into blaming me, too, until I asked you why you wanted Elizabeth’s bail revoked.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about—”

“Don’t play stupid, Kristina. You’ve never had a negative thing to say about Elizabeth in all these years, and now suddenly you’re trying to help by putting her in jail. I don’t believe you. Just tell me what you did, and we can talk to Mom. We’ll fix it. But you have to tell me what you did.”

“What do you want me to say? That I finally see Elizabeth as a manipulative bitch like you always said—”

“But you’re doing it now not when it would have made a difference. I mean, when she lied about Jake Doe, you weren’t talking like this, but she’s accused of murder, and you want her in jail over it. Kristina, did you put that gun in her trunk?”

“Why are you asking me that? How can you even—”

“What is that? Is that your phone?”

“Damn it—let go—”

The recording stopped, and Maxie lifted her gaze to Spinelli’s. “Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my god. Kristina — she caused the accident. Sam was driving, and Kristina must have tried to get the phone—she heard that beep — what was it?”

“Flash Flood advisory. Came through her phone, and all the phones around mine.” Spinelli exhaled slowly. “Sam called Danny from her car. She was trapped, terrified, couldn’t get out.”

Maxie pressed a fist to her mouth. “Oh, God. Spinelli. She killed her own sister. She killed—” The horror of it silenced her, and she couldn’t form another word. She’d lost her own sister to unspeakable violence. Georgie’s murder had broken Maxie’s world in ways that couldn’t be articulated, and for twenty years, she’d tried so hard to push it down. But to listen to the sisters argue on the phone, to know where they’d ended up — Tears spilled down her cheeks. “She caused the accident.”

“I couldn’t do anything to help. Couldn’t look for Sam. Couldn’t do anything for her kids, for Stone Cold — but this—” Spinelli  stared at the mess of paperwork. “I could do this. Find the answers. So I came here.” He scrubbed his face over his hands. “I knew she did it. I knew it, somewhere deep inside. But I’m watching her plant that gun, Maximista. And now I know everything that happens because of it.”

They both looked at the frozen image of Kristina at Elizabeth’s car, trunk still open, a box in her hands. “She did it in broad daylight,” Maxie murmured. “There’s something obscene about that, isn’t there? Almost evil.”

Belle Forest Drive: Accident Scene

The blood coursing through his veins must be pure caffeine by now, but Dante tossed back the last of the coffee Michael had delivered. They’d stayed out by command center all night, listening for any sign of news — good or bad. But there’d been nothing.

Now, with the sun rising in the sky, the dusky reds and pinks fading into a soft blue, the quiet scene began to pick up. More trucks arrived, specialized in rescue and recovery. Dante watched them from the car Chase had abandoned by the side of the road. There’d been no sight of the car or of Sam almost from the moment Chase had lost sight of the headlights in the floods. They were attempting to ping her phone, knowing she’d had it to call Danny, but they hadn’t been able to locate it beyond a general area which meant it was probably dead.

A sedan pulled up from the direction of Port Charles, the road having been reopened. Anna stepped out, her face bare of makeup, her hair pulled back into a tail at the nape of her neck. She didn’t look she had slept much either.

“They’re beginning the search again,” she told Dante when she reached him. “They’re starting closer to the lake, hoping that nothing has been swept out with the current—”

“Don’t talk to me like I don’t know what they’re planning,” Dante bit out. He met her cool eyes. “I’m not a moron. I’ve done these before. They’ll check the culverts, the bends, anywhere the car could have been caught. You know I know that, so why are you even here?”

Anna opened her mouth, then closed it when Michael approached, another tray of coffee and a brown paper bag in his hands. “I’m sorry. Am I interrupting?” he asked.

“No. I was just telling Dante that we should know something in a few hours. I also—” Anna paused. “I’d like to offer you another chance to tell me why you and Detective Chase were so quick on the scene. If you know why half of your family seemed to find themselves at the accident scene—”

“Sure. I’ll tell you whatever you want to know as soon as you tell me how Valentin was able to escape custody,” Dante said, lifting his brows.

“Dante—”

“You stopped me. Five minutes. Do you know what would have happened if I’d been just five minutes quicker?” Dante demanded. “I’d have been across the creek, I’d have been here when the accident happened. Chase and I could have gotten them both out of the damn car. But you decided you knew best. You decided you came first. Just like you did this summer.”

Anna folded her arms, took a moment to collect herself. “I know you’re upset—”

“The FBI wanted Pikeman. You knew who Pikeman was. You and Jason made sure Cates didn’t have that information in time to do anything about it. Jason’s a criminal who has his own priorities. I don’t expect better from him. But you, Anna? You had a responsibility to this city. To your officers. Valentin is the reason I was shot on those docks,” he bit out. “I nearly died because he ordered Sonny’s murder, and sent a team of mercenaries to carry it out. But you didn’t think about that, did you? Whatever happens here today, Anna, I can’t change it. I can promise you this — no one in your department will ever respect you again. I’m not the only one who knows what happened.”

He snatched a coffee from Michael, then walked away.

Webber House: Kitchen

No one had really slept in the house, though they’d tried. Elizabeth had come downstairs around three to make herself a cup of a tea and found all three boys in the living room — Aiden in the arm chair, Danny stretched on the sofa and Jake on the floor, the television screen autoplaying YouTube videos quietly. She’d thought they were asleep, but Aiden had looked at her, and she’d realized they just didn’t want to be alone or cooped up in their rooms.

Now, day had broken across the city, and she was making another pot of coffee, listening to Jason talking on the phone to Michael, and the plans for the search. There was no question of sending the boys to school, and she’d already sent emails indicating they wouldn’t be back for the rest of the week. But she’d insisted they go upstairs, shower, and change if only to give she and Jason some time to figure out what they were going to do — if that were even possible.

The shower above their heads clicked off, and Elizabeth looked at Jason, lifting a brow. “What does he say? Are they letting volunteers help or—”

“No, uh—” Jason set the phone down carefully, stared at the counter for a beat, then met her eyes. “They’re not saying anything, but Michael doesn’t think they expect to find…they’re not expecting much. But the longer she’s missing—” He shook his head, looked towards the window overlooking Elm Street. “No body means something, I know. They didn’t find Sonny’s. He came back. And in Greece—”

“And if it weren’t for that phone call, I think we could all hold on to that,” Elizabeth said. Jason sighed. “But—”

“But it changes something that she was trapped or pinned in the car. There’s no guarantee that she didn’t—before the car was moved—” He shook his head. “I don’t know what to do. But they don’t want family members out there. Especially not her son. Michael says they can’t make Dante or him leave, but I think maybe he’s right. I don’t want—Sam wouldn’t want Danny to see her—” He stopped. He didn’t need to finish the thought, and she didn’t follow up or respond. There wasn’t a need to.

His phone vibrated and Jason reached for it. “It’s Spinelli—” he told her, pressing the accept button. “Yeah?” He straightened, looking at Elizabeth. “Okay. Yeah. I’ll tell her, and I’ll let you know what—I’ll let you know.”

“What’s going on?” Elizabeth demanded as Jason set the phone down. “What did Spinelli say?”

“He, uh—” Jason shook his head slightly, then looked at her again. “He said they found something, but he doesn’t want to say it over the phone. Just that he’s meeting with the FBI later today to turn it over, and he and Diane want to show it to us first.”

May 15, 2026

This entry is part 105 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 58 minutes.


Thursday, October 4, 2024

Webber House: Jake’s Bedroom

The call connected before even a single ring had been completed, Cameron’s worried voice answering. “What’s wrong?”

Jake stretched out on his bed, staring at the ceiling, leaving the phone laying on the pillow next to him, his brother’s voice filling the room, a pale imitation of what it would be like if Cameron were right here with him.

“Why does something have to be wrong?”

“It’s almost one in the morning, dumbass.”

Jake exhaled slowly. “Yeah. Forgot about that part. Uh—” Unexpectedly, his throat tightened, and the words felt impossible. “First, I’m okay. So’s Mom and Aiden. But there was an accident tonight. Danny’s mom.”

There was silence for a beat, then Cameron replied, “What happened?”

“I don’t really know. Just that Danny’s mom and her sister, Kristina, they were in a car, and then it was in the creek. The one out by their mom’s. Kristina got out, but they haven’t…they haven’t found a body yet.” The ceiling above him blurred. “His mom called him, Cam. She was trapped in the car. Said she couldn’t get out.”

He didn’t have to be looking at his brother or living inside Cameron’s head to know what was running through it — Cameron was likely sitting in his dorm room in Berkeley, cursing himself for getting on the plane nearly twenty-four hours ago. “When are they gonna know?”

“I don’t know. Dad was out there, I think he got home a little while ago, but he hasn’t come up here yet. You don’t have to be a genius to figure he doesn’t know what to say. I don’t know what to say, Cam. Tell me what to say.”

“Jake.”

“I hated her, Cam. You know? We both did. Aiden doesn’t really remember enough to hate her, but we do. And Dad was so angry with her. Danny was picking fights all the time. Anything I say is gonna sound fake and stupid and it’ll make it worse—”

“There’s nothing you can say, man. You know that. Nothing is gonna make this okay. Or hurt less—”

“Tell me what you’d say to me.”

“Jake.” This time when his brother said his name, it was with exasperation. “It’s not comparable—”

“I know—” Jake started to say, but stopped and sat up when the door opened and Danny appeared at the threshold, his eyes rimmed with red.  “Just tell me. Tell me what you’d say to me and Aiden,” he said to Cameron, keeping his eyes on Danny. His brother perched on the edge of the bed, staring hard at the ground.

The line was quiet, and Jake thought Cameron would avoid the question again. But then — “There’s nothing I can do or say to make this go away. To stop you from hurting. From feeling like the world is going to end. Because the world ended. The worst thing that could ever happen to us—it’s here. To pretend that your life didn’t just split into two would be stupid. You will always remember before tonight and after. I know you’ve been through it before with your dad, and yeah, that sucked. A lot. But Mom’s different. It’s different. She’s been there every step of our lives, and she’s supposed to be here until we’re men. This isn’t fair, and I’m not doing you any favors pretending it is.”

“What—” Danny began, but had to stop when his voice faltered. He swallowed hard. “What do I do? I have to be there for Scout. How do you…how do you do it? How am I gonna make it okay for her?”

“Danny, man—” There was a long sigh, then Cameron continued. “You’re not. You can’t. You know that. You want to and Jake wants to, and I wish like hell I was there with you. But you can’t. So you’re gonna hug her, and you’re gonna let her cry. You gotta feel it, man. It’s too big, it’s too much to bury. To pretend it’s not happening. And…you know, maybe it’s not. It’s…Jake said…”

“I-I know. But I-I h-heard her—I h-heard her—” Danny’s face crumbled, and he wrapped his arms around his middle, his body trembling.

Jake climbed over the bed, the phone clutched in one hand, his other going around Danny’s shoulder. “Cam—”

“Yeah, call me back later. Danny, I’m—I’m sorry.”

Jake tossed the phone aside, glancing up when he heard another set of footsteps climbing the steps. “Hey, that’s Dad—”

Danny sat up, immediately scrubbing away the evidence of his tears, lifting his chin, getting to his feet just as Jason appeared in the doorway.

Their father just stood there for a long moment, weighed down by an invisible anchor that kept his shoulders slumped the corners of his mouth curved down. Danny’s lower lip began to tremble again. “You don’t have any news, do you?”

“No,” Jason admitted. “We won’t know anything until morning. Danny—”

“I s-should be with Scout—” Danny started towards him, towards the door. “Maybe you can take me—”

“I just talked to Brook Lynn,” Jason said, holding out a hand to stop him. “Scout’s asleep. She doesn’t know anything yet. I think we should leave her that way.”

“Oh.” Danny folded his arms around himself. “I guess that makes sense. I just—” He jerked a shoulder.

“Need something to do,” Jake finished, getting to his feet. “I get it. Do you want to try to get some sleep?” he asked.

“Sleep?” Danny stared at his brother, furrowed his brow. “I can’t sleep. We should be out there looking for her—”

“I would be if there was anything I could do,” Jason told him. He put a hand on Jake’s shoulder. “Dante is staying out there tonight, and he’ll call us as soon as we can do something to help. But right now, we’d be in the way of people who know what they’re doing and who are going to make finding your mom their top priority.”

“We’ll watch a movie,” Jake said instead. “That’ll make it go faster. Or maybe one of those—” But Danny had already left the room, and the door across the hall closed a beat later. He grimaced, met his father’s eyes. “I don’t know what to say to him. I tried to call Cam. Cam always has the words—”

“There’s nothing you and I or anyone can say,” Jason said with a firmness that felt oddly reassuring. Because of course Jake knew that — you couldn’t talk someone out of grief, especially when it was so fresh. “We just—we have to make sure we’re here when Danny needs us.”

“I tried—” Jake stopped, then continued. “I thought I could get Cam to tell me what he’d tell us if Mom—and he tried, and I kept thinking what if it were Mom, what I would be doing, or thinking. I thought Cam would have the answers. He always knows what to do or to say, and I should know how to fix this—he’s my little brother—”

“It’s not going to happen tonight, tomorrow, or even in the next few weeks,” Jason said. “There’s no timeline on what Danny is feeling. Or what you’re feeling.”

“Me?” Jake shook his head. “You’re—I don’t count. Danny and Scout, and Rocco—”

“You think you don’t know how to help him because you didn’t like his mother,” Jason interrupted, “but even if you had been Sam’s number one fan, Jake, you still wouldn’t know how to help him. Because Danny doesn’t need anything we can give him right now.” He let out a slow breath. “And I’m telling you this because I need to hear it, too. We can’t take this burden from him, no matter how much we want to.”

“Oh.” Jake pressed his lips together, considered his father’s words. “Okay, but there has to be something we can do. Right? Everyone was so angry at the hospital, and I only sort of understood what was happening. Everyone seemed so angry at Kristina. Why?”

“That’s something we can talk about tomorrow,” Jason told him. “You should try to get some sleep. It’s going to be long day.”

Webber House: Living Room

Elizabeth wrapped the ends of her sweater more tightly around her body, pulling the door open to reveal a damp Diane. “It’s the middle of the night, Diane-”

“I saw your light was on, and I—I took the chance. Please.” The normally well-coiffed lawyer was disheveled, her cheeks tear-stained. “Is Jason back?”

“He’s with the boys. Diane—” Elizabeth closed the door after letting Diane inside.

“I’ll talk to him another time. I couldn’t—” Diane bit her lip, turning to face Elizabeth. “I couldn’t go home, and not try to make things right—that’s stupid,” she said even as Elizabeth opened her mouth. “I can’t make things right—”

“I came down on you and Sonny pretty hard—”

“You were right. Partially. Yes, the suspicions I had, that Spinelli had, we probably could have said something to you or Jason sooner. We had nothing we could use in court, not yet. But there was enough—” Diane hesitated. “I don’t know what Sonny knew or when he knew it, and I can’t speak for his intentions, but I always intended to turn Kristina over to the authorities if and when we had the ability—”

“Diane—”

“You and your family have been through so much. You have to know that my number one goal was to end that suffering—”

“Diane.” Elizabeth held up a hand and this time Diane did stop. “I was angry earlier tonight. Overwhelmed. By everything that had happened, everything that I felt like was happening behind our backs, but I’ve had some time to let things sit. To take a deep breath. I know what it’s like to have a friend as close as Alexis is to you. You’ve watched her girls grow up. You know what Jason’s sacrificed to look after Sonny’s children. After Carly’s. Alexis buried that precious angel a month ago.   I can put myself in your shoes and understand why you wanted to wait until you had to tell us.”

Diane’s eyes watered and she looked away briefly, swallowed again. “As always, your ability to forgive puts the rest of us to shame.” She gathered herself, then focused on Elizabeth again. “Sonny and Alexis are now aware of what Kristina has likely done, and believe me, Alexis has already begun to focus on the reality of Kristina’s actions. To know that that while Sam was being accused by all of us of sending that email and hurting Danny, Kristina did nothing to exonerate Sam. Whether it was selfishness or arrogance or self-preservation, she left her sister to twist in the wind. For all Sam’s faults, she looked after her sisters. Always. Particularly Kristina.” Diane looked past her, and Elizabeth turned to see Jason stepping from the bottom step. “The PCPD have named her as the suspect, and as far as I know, they’ve sent that information to the FBI.”

“It won’t enough for them,” Jason said with some reluctance. “They want someone’s blood—”

“I know. And you can’t make this your priority. Neither of you can. Danny and his sister — they need to be your focus. So I am, once gain, asking for you to leave this in my hands,” Diane said. “Focus on your family. Because I assure you — I will not let Kristina manipulate her mother into getting away with this. Will you give me your trust, just one more time?”

May 5, 2026

This entry is part 104 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 65 minutes.


Wednesday, October 4, 2024

General Hospital: Roof

Molly tipped her head up to the sky, the mist coating her cheeks, mingling with the tears that had begun to fall even as she’d fled the waiting room. She’d held it together for hours, waiting for news on her older sisters — for Kristina’s surgery to fail, for her to find yet one more way to evade accountability for the mistakes she’d made. Waiting for Sam to be found, battered and bruised, clinging to a branch or washed up on the sides of the creek.

She hadn’t realized how sure she’d been that Kristina would die in surgery, that Sam would survive until she’d been forced to confront the reality: that Kristina would live, and that if Sam were found now, it would almost surely be a recovery and not a rescue effort.

The door behind her opened, the creak of the hinges warning Molly that she wasn’t alone. “I’m not going back down there.”

“I wouldn’t ask it of you.” TJ came to her side, still dressed in his scrubs. He touched her shoulders. “Mols—”

“They’re not going to find her. Not alive, you know that, right? I keep going over it in my head,” Molly interrupted. “Danny said she was trapped. Chase said the car was underwater by the time he made it down the embankment. Even if the car was swept away, she was probably already dead.”

“You can’t think like that—”

“I can. I can think like that because I need to be ready. I need to be ready when they find her—”

“Ready for what?”

“I—” Molly pressed her lips together, looked at him. “I don’t know. For Mom to fall apart. For Kristina to find a way to make this someone else’s fault. She will, you know. She’ll blame Dante and Chase for not confronting her sooner, or for blaming Sam for the call to the court about Danny — she’ll blame Elizabeth or Jason for taking Danny — she’ll find a way to make this someone else’s fault.”

“Probably.”

“And all of those things — maybe they’re true. Maybe it’s everyone’s fault. Maybe it’s mine for not confronting Kristina when she became a suspect. For doing the ethical thing and staying out of it — maybe if Jason had just stayed dead, none of this would be happening—” Molly shook her head, looked back out over the horizon, the view of the city as it began to close down for the nights, the lights gradually dimming or switching off in the buildings around the hospital. “But I’m not going to let her do it. She won’t get away with it this time.”

“This time?” TJ echoed.

“She’s the reason Sam was in that car. She’s the reason everyone turned on Sam—she’s the reason I wasn’t there for Sam—no wonder Sam was acting irrationally — her whole life was falling apart, and I was avoiding her because I didn’t want to deal with Kristina, but if I’d been there—” She moved away from TJ as he began to reach for her. “No. No. If I’d been there. If I hadn’t convinced you to let Kristina be our surrogate, none of this would be happening, and we might have our baby—I’m not going to let Kristina get away with ruining our lives—”

“So you’ll go on another crusade?” TJ interrupted, and Molly stopped, stared at him. “When we lost Irene, you went back to work. You turned Elizabeth’s case into a war that only you could fight. And now that there’s a chance you’ll lose Sam, you’ll — what— hound Kristina until you have justice? Anything you have to do to face what’s happened.”

“How can you say that to me? I am facing it! I am—” Hysteria bubbled up in her throat, and had Molly hugging herself again, closing her mouth until she could force it back down. “You went back to work, too! What did you want me to do, sit around and cry all the time, every day? Do what Kristina did, and make it everyone‘s problem? What was I supposed to do?”

“Deal with the pain, not hide yourself in solving everyone else’s problems. If you hadn’t gone to war with the FBI—”

“Then what? Chase and Dante wouldn’t have realized Kristina was a suspect? Turned up the heat? Are you going to blame me now, too?” Molly demanded. “Do you think I would have started all of this if I thought for one second that the trail would lead back to my family?”

“Do I think you’d have used this to get back at Kristina? Yeah, I do. Because you’re using Sam to get back at her now—”

“You have no idea what you’re talking about,” Molly retorted. “Go to hell.” She stalked past TJ, jerked open the door to the roof and left.

And this time, he didn’t follow.

General Hospital: Chapel

“I don’t know why I’m bothering with this,” Alexis murmured as Sonny sat next to her in the otherwise empty chapel. “God’s not listening, and even if he was, he’s not going to listen to either of us.”

“Alexis—”

“I started to go after Molly, and I stopped myself — because what would I even say?” she asked him. She got to her feet, went to the altar, staring at the candles eternally burning. “Does someone come in and light these every day? What happens when the candle burns down to the wick?”

“I don’t know. Does it matter?”

Alexis picked up a long wooden stick that lay next to the candles and used it to light another candle. “Nothing but a fire hazard,” she muttered. “What would I even ask God to do? Turn back time? To when? This is why religion is stupid.”

“She doesn’t mean that,” Sonny said, casting his eyes to the ceiling, then crossing himself as if that would help. He rose, joined her at the altar. “Elizabeth let loose on me and Diane after you left. Seems to think all of this is our fault.”

Alexis rubbed her chest. “I didn’t suspect Kristina of having anything to do with Cates — I had only begun to think she was involved with the bail hearing today—” She looked at him. “How long did Diane know? Or suspect?”

“A while. She kept making excuses to keep Jason and Elizabeth in the dark, and maybe they’re good excuses. But they’re still excuses. If the FBI had suspected Kristina was involved — ”

“They’ve have jumped on it,” Alexis murmured. “A case that was connected to you, clean of the mess Cates made of Kristina’s charges. Maybe they might have still clung to Elizabeth to get to Jason, but it’s just as likely they would have used Kristina to get at you. To tie you to this. And you’re the bigger fish. It would have saved their reputations after Pikeman blew up.”

“I think part of me knew,” Sonny confessed, and she looked at him, met his gaze. “I knew the gun probably came from me almost as soon as it happened. But I talked myself out of it. I told myself that it wasn’t my gun.”

“You never told them it was missing?”

“I told Spinelli. Could have told Jason. He’d have made the connection. Kristina was at Elizabeth’s house the day after the murder. They knew that almost immediately. But I didn’t tell him.”

“Sonny—”

“I didn’t want it to be true,” Sonny said slowly. “For the same reasons Diane kept quiet. Why Dante and Molly took themselves off the case. They’ll tell themselves it was because of me. Because I’d have gotten Kristina out of the country, and maybe that’s true. Maybe I would have. I trust Diane. She’d get Elizabeth free of all of this. Cates deserved to die. He deserved it, Alexis. I’m not sorry he’s dead.”

“Sonny—”

“I didn’t want it to be Kristina. So I ignored all the signs that she was involved. Just like you did. And if Jason is honest with himself, they ignored it, too. We all knew she was at the house. We knew she had the window of opportunity to plant that gun. That she had a reason to want John Cates dead. We all knew those facts, Alexis. But none of us did anything about it.”

Alexis was quiet for a moment, absorbing Sonny’s words, weighing the truth. She stared at the candle she’d lit. What was she even praying for? What was the purpose? For her daughters? For their lives, for their souls, for the world to turn back time, for a second chance —

“I had the chance to believe Sam,” she said softly. “She looked at me, devastated, betrayed, begged me to believe her. And I didn’t. I assumed if Kristina was involved, it was a support role. That she’d given Sam the idea. Or that they worked together. I never once dreamed Kristina had done it on her own. Sam had to call Spinelli without Kristina knowing — she wanted someone else to hear Kristina confess because she knew we’d never believe her. What kind of—” Alexis’s voice broke. “What kind of mother does that make me? That I was so blind to how selfish and destructive Kristina was — that I put all of it on Sam — if she doesn’t come out of this, Sonny, if we don’t find her alive — that’s how it ends. That’s the last memory my daughter has — that I didn’t believe her when it mattered most.”

Quartermaine Mansion: Living Room

Brook Lynn was still shaking rain drops from her dark hair when she came into the room, the fire crackling and warming the room. “I thought you’d be asleep by now,” she said. She accepted the tumbler of whiskey that her father handed her.

“I wanted to wait for news,” Drew said, getting to his feet. “But I guess you don’t have anything else to tell us.”

“No.” Brook looked towards the double doors, past them to the stairs. “Scout is asleep?”

“Olivia’s sitting with her,” Drew said. “I don’t want her to hear about this until—” He rubbed his forehead. “Until we know something.”

“When are they going to start looking again?” Tracy wanted to know.

“Dawn, I think. The storm’s mostly cleared out, so there’s some things they can do tonight, but Chase said the bulk of it’s done until it’s light out. He went back out to Belle Forest to sit with Dante and Michael.” Brook sat in an armchair, clutching the tumbler in her hands. “I know you’re not Sam’s biggest fan, Granny—”

“I’m not going to pop the champagne until I know for sure,” Tracy replied dryly, and Brook rolled her eyes. “Whether I liked the gutternsnipe or not, she’s the mother of Monica’s grandchildren, and Monica liked her. Probably realized they both had gold digging in common.”

“You’re such a comforting presence, Mother,” Ned said with a half-smirk. “But Monica’s right. The possibility of Sam’s…death is an impact on this family, and the people we care about. We all want to be able to tell Scout, Danny — and Rocco — that everything that could be done — that we did it.”

Just outside the double doors, lurking in the foyer, Rocco leaned against a wall, and pulled out his phone. An empty text message blinked back at him, just as it had for several hours. He hadn’t spoken to Danny since they’d been suspended. What would he even say to him that would make a difference right now?

Nothing. So he slid the phone back in his pocket, and slunk back towards the backstairs like the coward he knew that he was.

Webber House: Living Room

The room was dark and empty when Jason finally made it home around midnight — it was quieter than he’d expected, given the events of the evening. He didn’t know whether to be worried or relieved that he wasn’t immediately faced with his son and Danny’s questions.

He heard some dishes clinking in the kitchen and looked over to find Elizabeth putting dishes away in the cabinet. “Hey.”

“Hey.” She set down the plate in her hand, then crossed to meet in the middle of the kitchen, wrapping her arms around his neck, holding him tight, his damp clothes pressed against her warm body. “Hey,” she repeated in soft whisper, her fingers lightly brushing the nape of his neck as she pulled away, letting her hands slide down his chest. “You should change into something dry.”

“I will. The boys—they’re not asleep are they?”

“No. No. But I think Danny was tired of being stared at, so he said he was going upstairs. And I think Jake and Aiden just didn’t know what to say.” Elizabeth bit her lip, dipped her head low for a moment, then raised them back. “I don’t know what to say to him either. To any of them. Danny had…Danny had her on speakerphone, so they all…” Her voice trembled. “God, Jason. It’s horrible to think about. That Danny heard her last words—”

He pressed his lips against her forehead, needing the comfort as much as she did. “I don’t know what to feel. What to think. I was so angry at her —”

“So was I.”

“But this isn’t what I wanted. Not like this. Not when Danny—” Jason rubbed Elizabeth’s arms, stepped back slightly. “I don’t know what to do. What to say to him. He knows how angry we were. I’ve done nothing but argue with Sam for months. Anything I can think to say will feel like a lie to him.”

“I know. Jake’s struggling with it, too. Danny knows that we didn’t like her very much. But wanting her out of my life — not like this, Jason. I didn’t want this.” She sighed, bit her lip. “There’s no—I mean, is there any hope? Really?”

“I don’t know. They wouldn’t say much to me. But I got the sense that they’re not expecting much. Kristina made it out of the car, and Sam didn’t. Instead of calling for help, she called Danny. So she didn’t think there was hope either. Maybe the car was swept away and she was able to move and we’ll find her clinging to wreckage or something, but—”

“But it’s just as likely she was trapped in the car and drowned before the car was swept away.” Elizabeth exhaled slowly. “I feel awful. I—I blew up on Sonny and Diane at the hospital. If they’d just told us something weeks ago, how much of this would have been different? I kept thinking that they were so busy protecting Kristina  and not caring about anyone else—I know they didn’t mean for tonight to happen, but—”

“I don’t know what Sonny knew. Or when he knew it.” Jason grimaced, rubbed his face. “But maybe that’s no different than how they played this. None of us want to believe Kristina would do something like this. And I don’t want to think that Sonny would have let you go through all of this if he had something that could stop it. He knew—” He paused. “He knew I thought about confessing. And he was pissed at me. Did he know it was possible then? Did he let me think about leaving you and the boys while he knew what really happened? I don’t want to think he did.”

“I’m not sorry I lost my temper, I just wish I hadn’t done it tonight. I just—I just want to do what’s right for Danny and for you. And God, for poor Scout, who’s been almost forgotten in all of this. No matter how I felt about Sam, this wasn’t how it should have ended.”

April 24, 2026

This entry is part 103 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 61 minutes.


Wednesday, October 1, 2024

General Hospital: Waiting Room

The only reason I want Kristina to survive is to find out what the hell did she to Sam. After that, she can rot in hell for all I care.

Molly’s outburst seemed to freeze everyone in their place for a beat, unsure what to say, where to look, how to even breathe.

TJ broke the paralysis first, charging after his partner and he was barely out the door before Alexis followed on his heels. Sonny scrubbed a hand over his face, every year he’d lived etched into his face, his disheveled graying hair falling into his face.

He looked at Danny, sitting in a chair between Elizabeth and Jake, the teenager slumped down, his arms folded, his eyes trained on the floor. He’d said nothing, not even looking up during Molly’s breakdown, but Jake could practically see his body vibrating, the trembling impossible to hide. His mother, on Danny’s other side, was sitting half turned towards Danny, perched on the edge of the seat, a hand in the air—poised to do something if Danny gave the slightest hint of what he might need.

Sonny cleared his throat looked over to Chase, Brooke, and Michael. “I don’t—” He stopped, took a deep breath. “I doubt Dante’s leaving the area tonight. Am I right that search and rescue will set up camp there?”

“They’ll leave a light team in place until sunrise, yeah.” Chase straightened. “I’m heading out there—”

“You’re headed home to rest like the doctor ordered,” Brooke interrupted, then looked at her cousin. “Michael—”

“I’m on it.” He touched Brooke’s shoulder lightly, then moved towards the door, stopping for just a moment by Danny. He opened his mouth, but words failed him. He met Elizabeth’s eyes for a moment, then left the room.

“I’m gonna stay here. With Alexis. Until we know more,” Sonny told Elizabeth. “I don’t know if Jason’s planning to stay out there, too—”

“I haven’t heard from him in a while,” Elizabeth said. She bit her lip, looked at the boys, then back at Sonny, then at Brooke and Chase behind him. “Someone…someone should talk to Rocco.”

“Yeah, he’s got Drew at home, and well—that’s not comforting. And God, poor Scout—” Brooke closed her eyes, shook her head slightly. “I hope he’s not stupid and kept her from the news. She shouldn’t hear like this—”

“Don’t talk about her like she’s dead.”

The words were quiet, but imbued with fury, and attention moved to the speaker — to Danny, who had finally lifted his head to glare at his father’s cousin across the room. “There’s nothing to tell Scout because my mother isn’t dead. They didn’t find her.”

“Right, I know,” Brooke offered awkwardly. “But I—” She stopped, unsure how to continue.

“Danny, we’re just trying to—” Sonny started to say, but Danny lunged to his feet and bolted for the door.

“Jake—” Elizabeth got to her feet, and Jake nodded.

“I won’t let him get far.”

When Jake had left the room in his brother’s wake, Elizabeth wrapped her arms tightly around her torso, chilled even though she’d changed hours ago.

“Elizabeth—”

“What were you doing out there?” she asked, softly. She lifted her gaze to Sonny’s, tilted her head. “You were with Alexis on your way out to her house. Molly said Chase and Dante were following Kristina, so I get them. Why you?”

“I could ask you the same,” Sonny said, and Elizabeth looked at Aiden briefly, then sighed, rubbed her forehead.

“Spinelli got a call from Sam. She was in the car with Kristina, asking her questions. Trying to get her to admit over the line that Kristina was the one to email the court, not Sam.”

“Whoa, Danny’s mom didn’t do it?” Aiden wanted to know, his eyes widening. “She framed her sister?”

“We don’t know that,” Sonny snapped, and Elizabeth scowled.

“Yes. Yes, we do. Because the suspect pool is limited, Sonny. The boys sure as hell didn’t tell anyone. Jason and I didn’t. That left Dante, Sam, and the arresting officers. And apparently, Kristina. Now that I know all the pieces Spinelli and Diane were holding back — ”

“What?” Sonny demanded. “What did they know?” He whipped his head around to glare at Diane who had remained when Alexis left, though she’d kept quiet.

“Looking to circle the wagons?” Elizabeth asked coolly, and Sonny simply looked at her. “Because I can think of a few reasons you’d be rushing out to talk to your daughter. How long did you know it was her?”

Sonny exhaled slowly, looked at Chase, then back at Elizabeth. “I’m not talking about this here—”

“You’re not going anywhere until you answer my question.” Elizabeth stepped in front of the door, blocking his exit. “How long did you know it was her? Don’t lie to me, Sonny. I deserve better than that. My boys deserve better than that. Jason damn well deserves better than that from you.”

At that reminder, some of Sonny’s bravado disappeared, and he had to look away. He pressed his lips together, then faced her again. “I still don’t know. Not for sure. You can’t think I would have allowed it to get out of hand—”

“Out of hand—” Elizabeth had to stop before the rage bubbling up inside nearly exploded. She turned away, fisting her hands in her hair, and saw her son standing there, looking shaken, bewildered—

What he’d been through these last few weeks — the arrest, her week in jail, getting caught with Danny and Rocco, trying to choose where he’d end up if she were gone — how much of it could have been avoided?

How much time had all these people wasted—

She turned back, and this time when she spoke, she wasn’t directing it just to Sonny — but to Chase behind her. “You were following her today. You knew. And Spinelli and Diane. They knew. You all knew there was a good chance that Kristina started all of us, and you kept quiet.” She closed her trembling hand into a fist. “You kept quiet. You knew.”

“We didn’t know for sure,” Diane said softly.

“Don’t—don’t—” Elizabeth pointed at her. “I trusted you. Jason trusted you. To put my freedom first. And you didn’t. You didn’t want to say her name because you knew what it meant. That Sonny’s daughter, that Alexis’s daughter did this—” She looked at Dante. “And Dante’s sister, right? Sam’s sister? You knew what it would mean to accuse her. You decided you needed a smoking gun—”

“Elizabeth—”

“And you know why they needed one, Sonny—” Elizabeth whirled back to face Sonny. “Do you know why? Because they knew what you’d do if you found out. You and Alexis. You were rushing out to find out what Sam knew. Planning how to get her out of this. What did you tell yourself, Sonny, that Diane was a good lawyer who could get me out of this? Isn’t that what you’ve been telling me for weeks?” she bit out to her lawyer. “That if we got in front of a jury, it’d be fine?”

“What did you want her to do, Elizabeth? Accuse someone without a good reason—” Sonny started, but Elizabeth silenced him with a fulminating glare.

“Don’t—don’t you dare—” She stabbed a finger at Diane. “One word to the FBI that Sonny’s daughter did this and they’d be running towards her so fast, you’d see smoke. Maybe not when you first suspected—but you knew within days Kristina was at my house the day after the murder—” She shook her head. “You protected her. You wanted a smoking gun so Sonny wouldn’t send her out of the country.”

“I didn’t have enough,” Chase said, trying to defend himself. “We just needed a few pieces to come together—”

“She’s right,” Diane said quietly, and Chase stopped, looked at her. “I told myself it was to protect the case, to make sure that when I made the accusation, that it would hold. But I knew what it would do to Alexis. To her family. I saw what it was doing to your family,” she confessed. “And I didn’t want that for my friend. Not unless I was sure.”

“And you knew if Jason or I knew, we’d turn her name over immediately. So you kept us out until you had no other choice.” Elizabeth nodded, folding her arms again. “And let Kristina think she got away with it. So she got greedy. And arrogant. She thought she could get Danny back for her sister, and throw me in jail to make it harder for me to fight, for Jason and my boys to concentrate with me gone — you gave her every opportunity.”

“That’s not fair,” Sonny protested.

“You protected Kristina just like you always have. You protected her right into that hospital bed, and Sam into her grave. Was it worth it?”  She didn’t wait for their answer, only held out her hand to Aiden. “Let’s get your brothers and get the hell out of here.”

Belle Forest Drive

The thunder and the lightening had passed, leaving nothing more than a mist falling from the sky. The road was still closed with three police cars and a fire truck still blocking traffic coming directly from downtown Port Charles, a few tents set up as a command center for the search and rescue team left behind when the bulk of first responders had gone.

Dante remained there, huddled under one of those tents, his clothes still soaked against his skin, studying a hydro graphic map of the creek, noting where the twists and turns, the culverts and bridges were as it wound its toward open water. All the places a car could get stuck before it washed out into Lake Ontario.

He grunted when he heard someone call his name, but then looked up when they called it again and found Michael there, holding out a coffee. “Thought you could use this.”

His stomach rolled at the thought of putting anything into it, but the caffeine was necessary — he could feel the crash approaching, the adrenaline fading. “You didn’t have to come out here. There’s nothing anyone can do. They’re barely letting me be involved.” He sipped the coffee.

“I know. I talked to Jason on my way here — ” Michael set down a brown paper bag. “I would have been here sooner but I had to go all the way around—”

“Yeah, they said they can’t open the road until—” Dante stopped, shook his head. “How is—I mean, what’s going on there?”

“Most everyone was at the hospital. Including Danny,” Michael added, and Dante stared at him. “Sam called him from her car.”

“Why didn’t you tell us—we could use that to pinpoint where she is—” Dante started past him, but Michael caught his arm.

“Dante. She called within minutes of the accident. I checked his phone, and I talked to Spinelli. She told him she couldn’t get out. That she was trapped.” Michael’s voice faltered. “I think she was calling to say goodbye.”

“What? No. No. She’s—she was just scared. But the car—it got swept away — so if she was trapped, if she was trapped, they—she could get out then. She’s—” Dante shook his head. “She got out. That’s all. The creek dislodged the car and she got out. She’s waiting for us to find her.”

“Okay.”

“Don’t say it that way,” Dante snapped, but Michael didn’t flinch or look away. “She’s tough. She’s out there, and we’ll find her. I’m not going anywhere until we do.”

“Then I’ll keep you company until we do.”

General Hospital: Stairwell

Danny had only made it to the third floor before dropping down and leaning against the wall, his legs stretched out. Jake had found him there only minutes later, but said nothing and sat at the bottom of the steps.

And waited.

“She called me.”

“I know—”

“I ignored the call,” Danny said, speaking over Jake who frowned, looked at him. “Sent her to voicemail. I knew if they found out she was calling me, contacting me, she’d get in trouble, and it would make it all worse. So I sent it to voicemail.” He looked at his brother, his eyes red, puffy. “She wasted time. She had to call me again. She should have called Dad or 911 or —”

“You didn’t know—”

“I should have—”

“You didn’t know,” Jake repeated, and Danny just shook his head. “You were trying to keep things from getting worse, Danny. You didn’t know she was in trouble.”

“She should have called for help—”

Jake didn’t want to say what he was thinking — the horrible realization that Sam would have called for help if she’d believed there was a chance it would arrive in time. She’d used what she thought were her lost moments to call her son.

Jake had disliked her for most of his life, and actively hated her for the past few years — the intensity only growing as Sam had grown more and more irrational, but the prospect that she’d been so sure that she was going to die that she’d used that time to call Danny —

“You told her you loved her, I heard you,” Jake said and he heard a muffled sob from his brother. “You told her. She knew you loved her, Danny. Maybe you missed a few extra seconds with her, but a lot of people never get a chance to say that one more time to the people they love, right?”

“D-doesn’t really help r-right now.”

“No. Probably not.” Jake got to his feet, then sat next to Danny, keeping a few inches between them so that he wouldn’t feel crowded. “But one day it might.”

“Y-you h-hated her.” Danny sniffled, swiping his sleeve across his face.

“I did,” Jake admitted. “But you loved her.”

Danny didn’t respond, and they remained in the quiet, the silence suffocating around them. His phone vibrated in his pocket, and Jake leaned to one to slide it out.

I think it’s time we head home. Dad’s meeting us there. Where are you?

Jake looked at his brother. “Hey. Dad’s gonna meet us at home, okay? Why don’t we go?”

Danny sighed, then dragged himself to his feet. “Yeah, whatever.”

Jake stood next to him, stopped him from heading down the next flight of stairs. “Look, I know you’re going to beat yourself up about missing that call, and I would be doing the same thing, so I’m not gonna tell you to stop. Whatever happens next, I’m not going anywhere.”

Danny jerked a shoulder in response, then headed down to the next landing. Jake sighed, looked back at his phone.

Meet you in the lobby.

April 19, 2026

This entry is part 102 of 109 in the Flash: You're Not Sorry

Written in 58 minutes.


Wednesday, October 2, 2024

General Hospital: Waiting Room

There were too many choices.

Jake stared blankly at the line of vending machines, flicking back and forth from sandwiches, coffee, junk food, soda, then back again. Why was he even bothering to bring anything? No one would eat. No one would drink.

They were waiting for information. From the crash site where they were still looking for Danny’s mother, from the hospital team working on Kristina who had been taken up to surgery almost an hour ago, and they knew nothing more than “everything is going fine” or “it’s going as expected.” Why did they even bother updating the family when there was nothing to learn?

“You’ve been here a while.”

Jake heard his mother, turned to look at her. She’d tied back her damp hair into a tail that had started to dry, curling up into half waves. Her eyes looked puffy, tired, with purple shadows blooming beneath them. He turned his attention back to the lined row of vending machines. “Did Dad call yet?”

“No, not yet. The rain stopped, so maybe soon.” She came up beside him, rubbed his back. “Why don’t you come back and sit down?”

“Can’t.” Jake shook his head swiftly. “I’ll go crazy if there’s nothing. Or Danny will and I don’t know if I can stop him. And I should be able to stop him because his grandmother shouldn’t have to worry. Neither should his aunt.”

“Jake—”

“I can’t stop him,” Jake repeated, looking at her again. “Because I keep thinking maybe his mom is dead and that’s the worst thing that could happen. I know she was a terrible person, I know she hated me and I mostly hated her, but that’s his mom—” His voice cracked and he shook his head, stared at the vending machine again. “That’s his mom. How do you come back from that? How do you breathe? I thought I knew—I mean, we lost Dad didn’t we? We both did. But I got up and I got over it.”

“Did you?” Elizabeth asked softly. She stroked his back lightly. “Because I noticed you spent more time with Danny after. You’d always been close, but you really started to see yourself as his older brother. Responsible for him.”

“I had to. His mom was building the new life, moving in with Dante and Rocco, and Drew was back with Scout — no one was looking out for him.” Jake curled his hand in a first, rested it against the machine. “I know Dad and I are — I know it was weird and bad, but it’s better now. We’re better now, and maybe Danny’s mom was going to be better. She didn’t send that email, right? So maybe it’s supposed to be better now.”

“Jake.”

“But it’s not because no one’s saying it, but she’s missing, and she sounded scared, so maybe the water got to her, and she couldn’t get out. She couldn’t—” Jake pressed his lips together. “I listened to her on that call. I heard her, Mom. I don’t think she’s coming back. I always thought—I always thought if she were gone, things would be better—I didn’t want—”

“Of course not. Hey, of course not—look at me baby—” Elizabeth touched his cheek, turning his face gently until he was looking at her again. “You think I didn’t have my moments with her, too? How much easier my life would be if she were gone? You’re human, honey. And she was a difficult person to know. Wanting her to be out of your life? That does not mean you wanted your brother’s mother to die. For him to lose her this way. Or any other.”

“I just—I don’t know what to do. How to help him. How do I help him?” Jake wanted to know. “What are we going to do?”

“We’re going to take it one step at a time,” Elizabeth said. She rubbed his arm. “We’ll sit with him until we know something. And then when we do—we’ll handle it. Okay? There’s no manual, no instructions. Just one step at a time.”

Belle Forest Drive

The rain had stopped. For the first time in a days, the sky was quiet. The normally quiet, two lane road that connected the Belle Forest development to the rest of Port Charles was awashed in emergency lights, flashes of red and blue from fire engines, from police cars.

Jason stood by the SUV, watching Dante with some of the other first responders, grimacing when Anna moved away from him, from whatever tense conversation they were having, then approached Jason.

“I would have thought you’d be on your way by now,” Anna said, folding her arms as she came to a stop. “Don’t you think you’d do more good at the hospital with your son?”

“My son would want to know what we’re doing to find his mother,” Jason bit out. “That’s why you and Dante are arguing, isn’t it? You’re calling off the search.”

“Until daylight, yes—it’s dark and the terrain isn’t stable,” Anna replied. “It’s also not my call, Jason. That’s on search and rescue, and they’re not putting their men in danger to find someone who is likely already dead.” She paused. “You understand that, don’t you? If she was trapped in the car, she likely drowned before the creek swept the vehicle—”

Jason shook his head, left her in midsentence, then went to find Dante who’d gone over to the side of the road. Spinelli stood a few feet away, both of them staring down the hillside where the creek could be heard, but barely seen.

“I should have been faster,” Spinelli said, and Jason shook his head. “If I had been faster, we might have had the trace on that email sooner, and—” His voice shook just a little. “We believed it was her. I know we had reasons, but to know, in the final moments, that I failed her so utterly—”

“Spinelli.” Dante’s voice broke into the younger man’s ruminations. “You weren’t the only one. We all thought—we all thought it.” He scrubbed a hand down his face. “I knew weeks ago Kristina was a suspect. I should have known it was her. She’d framed Elizabeth once—”

“You knew she was a suspect?” Jason said. “Did everyone know except Elizabeth and me?”

Dante exhaled on a low breath. “I didn’t really believe it. We couldn’t eliminate her from the list. Her or Alexis. That didn’t mean we thought—I still couldn’t—” He looked at Jason. “Molly and I recused ourselves. We let the investigation play out. That’s what you’re supposed to do. That’s the rule.”

“The rules—” Jason bit out. The rules that had kept him on the sideline for weeks, the rules that had let Kristina walk free, committing more harm. “You should have told me. What did you think I was going to do? Let her go?”

“Did I think you might protect Sonny or one of his children instead of taking care of your own responsibilities?” Dante demanded. “Yeah. I did. You had Jake, didn’t you? You still confessed and went to jail for Michael. You had Jake and Danny, and you still sacrificed your life for Carly’s freedom. Don’t pretend we didn’t have a damn good reason to keep this to ourselves.”

He wanted to argue. He wanted to deny the truth. But he’d left his sons to take of Sonny and Carly and their children. He’d sacrificed over and over for them —

“Once she put that gun in Elizabeth’s trunk,” Jason said roughly, “she stopped being someone I was interested in protecting. Elizabeth spent a week in jail, away from her kids because of Kristina. If she’d framed me, put the gun in my room — it’d be different. I don’t know.” He stopped, looked at Dante. “Sam knew. Somehow she knew. Because the last question she ever asked her sister was if she put the gun in her trunk. Kristina found out Sam had the phone, that she’d called someone — and she tried to grab the phone. She caused the accident, Dante.”

“Jesus Christ.” Dante paced a few steps away, then came back. “You’re telling me that Kristina—that Kristina did this? That she put her sister in that creek? That—I can’t believe it. I don’t—she loves Sam—”

“She loves herself more. We raised her to believe someone would always protect her. Clean up after her. It stops. It stops now.”

General Hospital: Waiting Room

When the phone call ended, Chase slowly slipped the phone into his pocket, then looked at Michael and Brooke who had come to the hospital to wait with him. His wife saw his expression first, touched her cousins’s arm.

“What is it?” Michael asked. “Did they—did they find her?”

“They’re calling off the search. It’s too dark, too dangerous. The creek — it’s not expected to subside for several more hours.” Chase grimaced, looked over at the family clustered by the sofas and chairs. “Anna said the search and rescue — that they didn’t expect to find her alive at this point.”

“Oh, man.” Michael made a face. “I should have said something to my uncle. Dante wanted me to wait, to give him time, before I told him Kristina knew about the whole Aiden and Elizabeth connection.”

“We thought we could – we wanted to force her to make another mistake,” Chase said. The medication Willow had given him when he’d gone to get stitches were beginning to wear off, and his head felt like it was on fire. “Dante wanted to push to talk to Sonny, but she went to her mother instead. And now we might never be able to prove Elizabeth’s innocence—”

“No one thought there’d be this kind of accident, come on,” Brooke said. She wound an arm through Chase. “Do you really think anyone’s going to blame you for this? It sounds like Sam knew her sister was the bad guy, too, and what did she do? Confronted her. She didn’t have to do that — I’m not blaming her,” she added when Michael grimaced. “I’m just — it sounds like a lot of people thought Kristina knew something or was part of it. And you all did exactly what she expected. You played hands off and talked around it, hoping for a smoking gun that was never gonna come. Because her kind? They never admit to anything. Not if there’s someone else they can point a finger at.”

Across the room, a doctor in scrubs had emerged from the double doors leading back to the surgical rooms. Alexis was on her feet immediately, Molly following a bit less eagerly.

“Is she okay? Will she be okay?”

“We were able to stop the bleed in her brain,” the doctor told Alexis. “But we won’t know what we’re dealing with until she wakes up. There could be some memory loss—”

“Of course. She’ll pretend she doesn’t remember anything, and you’ll both believe her,” Molly said, almost disgustedly. She stalked away a few paces, staring blankly at the wall.

“Molly—” Alexis started, but Sonny touched her arm, shook his head lightly, before looking back at the doctor.

“When can we see her?” Sonny wanted to know. “When do you expect her to wake up?”

“Sometime tomorrow morning, maybe six to twelve hours for now. Best case scenario,” the doctor added. “This is good news—”

“Speak for yourself,” Molly retorted. “The wrong sister made it out—the wrong—” She pressed her hands to her mouth as Alexis went white. “The wrong sister. If Sam were alive, they’d have found her by now—”

“That’s not true—” Alexis began.

“Molly, we can’t talk like this,” Sonny said at the same time with meaningful looks towards Danny who was on his feet, his cheeks tear-stained. “We have to believe Sam found a way—”

“I’ll talk anyway I want, damn it—no!” Molly shook off TJ’s arm. “No! The only reason I want Kristina to survive is to find out what the hell did she to Sam. After that, she can rot in hell for all I care.”

“Mols,” TJ said, reaching for her, but she’d already stalked off, storming out of the waiting room, the door swinging closed behind her.