February 1, 2018

This entry is part 1 of 3 in the Workshop: Fool Me Twice, Take 2

I told you this workshop thing would be messy. I figured out what I wanted to do with Fool Me Twice, but for it to work, I have to rewrite Jason’s entire return (and edit some of the intervening 2015-17 because I did not watch all of that foolishness). So I wrote the first draft until I wrote myself into a corner.

And then today, I think…I think I figured out how to tie all together, make Jason’s return an actual umbrella story that might affect more people and use more GH history. I don’t know. You let me know.

So you can still enjoy the first collection of scenes, but we’re starting over. So…

This was written in 32 minutes. No spell check or editing.


September 2017

Somewhere in Port Charles

Andre Maddox managed a tight smile at the olive-skinned, dark-haired man who sat behind a dark mahogany desk. Even before the man spoke, Andre knew his words would be tinged with a thick accent.

He had had it with Greeks.

It had been another Greek, one who had ushered him into an office such as this almost six years ago with an offer. To continue his research, to take it even further than he had dreamed, to have all the resources of the World Security Bureau at his fingertips, an unlimited budget.

And no FDA or stringent federal regulations to hold him back.

So Andre had closed his eyes. Looked the other way. Ignored the signs.

Sold his soul to Mephistopheles in a Faustian pact.

The Greek body man in his dark black suit stood and tipped his head towards the open office door. “He is waiting for you, Doctor.”

Andre stepped over threshold into the office and frowned. He did not recognize the man sititing behind the desk, perusing paerwork, a pair of half-moon glasses perched at the edge of his known His hair might have been a sandy brown at one time, but it was salt and pepper now. His cheeks chiseled, his eyes dark.

Another Cassadine slithering from the cracks of the earth. If Andre had thought he was free with the deaths of Helena and her brother-in-law….he was obviously mistaken.

“Pardon me,” Andre said coolly when the man did not raise his head. “You summoned me.”

“Yes.” The man set aside the paperwork, placed his pen carefully on top, and removed his glasses. “Thank you for meeting with me on such short notice. I apologize for the mysterious nature of my missive and the…poor accomodations. I had little choice.” The man tipped his head. “You see, I have been dead for many years, and I am not quite yet ready to come back to life.”

Cassadines. Andre snorted, lowered himself into a seat in front of the desk. “You said you were interested in my research—”

“Yes, in ending it.” The man was unsmiling. “You have done what you set out to do. You’ve successfully mapped memories from one person to another. Removed memories from a third person. Created a trigger to assist in the retrieval of one’s memory. What is left?”

Andre sucked in a deep breath. “I…have test subjects in the field. The long-term impact—”

The man shook his head. “Did you never wonder at the identity of the men brought to you? Why you were asked to proceed as you have?”

“I—” Andre clenched his fists in his lap. “I don’t ask questions that don’t need to be answered.”

“Fair enough. Let me introduce myself then, so that we may be clear. My name is Stefan Cassadine. My mother was Helena Cassadine. I have spent the majority of my adult life sweeping up after her curses and her vendettas. And this is one that must come to an end.”

Andre just stared at the man for a long moment. He, of course, knew of Stefan Cassadine. One did not go into busienss with the Cassadines without learning something. But Stefan Cassadine had been dead for fifteen years. Where had he been? And why was he here now? “Sir. Mr. Cassadine—”

“You are currently treating Jacob Webber.” Stefan Cassadine picked up the pen, tapped it against his palm. “Does it not trouble you to be the reason for his therapy?”

“I am not—”

“Did you not help my mother plant false suggestions in his head? Allow her to give him instructions? Place the trigger in his mind so that he could carry them out?”

Andre hesitated, nodded reluctantly. “I developed the technology. The method. I did not—Helena had another researcher do the actual work. I was—I was horrified when I realized Jake—I’ve tried to help him.”

“Yes, yes, you’ve been quite good to the boy. Even as you lie to him about his father.”

“Mr. Cassadine, I’m not sure you understand what I was doing with my research—”

“Did you never wonder at the machinations of my mother? What she could possibly want with Jacob Webber? Jason Morgan?” Stefan raised his brow. “Robert Frank?”

Andre waited a moment. “I didn’t ask.”

“That was not my question, but I’ll allow it.” Stefan leaned forward. “Truth be told, I might have allowed this to continue. Allowed you to continue carrying out your research, playing with the minds of people I could care less for. But your project has intercepted my own plans, and I cannot allow anything to come between me and what I want most in the world.”

“What’s that?”

“Valentin Cassadine murdered my nephew and stole his inheritance. Cast my grand-nephew into the streets. I have been waiting for the right moment, the right way to deal with him. I wanted to know if he was in league with my mother.”

“I never saw Valentin—”

“Last week, he sent Ava Jerome to the clinic in Russia where my mother has kept Jason Morgan drugged in a coma for the better part of five years.” Stefan smirked. “Until six months ago. When I countermanded the orders and changed his medication. I wanted to know what Valentin knew. He knows about the clinic. He must be involved.”

“I’m afraid I don’t understand—”

“When Jason Morgan makes his way back to Port Charles—and he will—I intend to tell him exactly what my mother had planned. And why he lost five years of his life. Why his son was stolen from him.” Stefan raised his brows. “And I will be sure to tell him who helped Helena do so.”

Andre drew in a sharp breath. “Wait—”

“And if you think running is going to change anything, perhaps that is because you don’t know Jason Morgan. There is no where you will hide that he will not find you.”

Andre shoved himself to his feet. “You’re crazier than your mother—I don’t have to listen to this—”

“My mother had a long list of enemies. Luke Spencer was always near the top, and so I understand why people simply accepted that she stole Jake to torture Luke. But did no one ask why Helena allowed Jake to be found? Why she simply gave up?”

“She was dying,” Andre said, but even those words felt false to him. The Helena he’d known, the Helena he had sold his soul to—

She never would have sacrificed a piece of her plan without a reason. “She planted that trigger—”

“She sent Jake Webber back to his mother because she knew Elizabeth Webber was lying—or thought she was lying about the identity of Andrew Cain.” Stefan sighed, a bit wistfully. “The only person my mother hated as much as Laura Spencer was that poor girl, though she never did much to deserve it. So my mother set out to destroy her.”

“Wait..” Andre shook his head. “Your mother—she did this—she did all of this—because of Elizabeth Webber?”

“Of course.” Stefan snorted with derision. “Did you really think Victor Cassadine kidnapped Jason Morgan to be his bodyguard? What nonsense is that. She stole him to punish Elizabeth, just as she took Elizabeth’s son. And then…”

“She had me map her memories,” Andre murmured, as his stomach pitched. “Where did—I knew she had a plan for them—”

“You can either help me discover what my mother had planned, what Valentin had to do with it, and why it meant my nephew had to die,” Stefan said with a cool smile, “or I’ll set Jason Morgan free myself.”

February 4, 2018

This entry is part 2 of 3 in the Workshop: Fool Me Twice, Take 2

Written in 34 minutes. Would have been less except my bloody parents decided to have a conversation and ask me questions with five minutes to go. It’s hard to use I’m writing fanfiction on a self-imposed timer as an excuse.

So this scene picks up a few weeks after the Stefan/Andre scene. Assume that the Jason stuff in Russia is happening, the Drew stuff with Sonny and Sam — where he quits, etc. is happening. There’s also no Oscar and I’m killing off Audrey.


Mid-September 2017

Kelly’s: Courtyard

Elizabeth Webber jumped as a leather handbag was dumped unceremoniously on the other side of her table, and Carly Corinthos all but threw herself into the chair across from her.

Elizabeth frowned, set down the cup of tea she’d been sipping as she perused a magazine, enjoying one of her hours. “Carly, you know where you are right now, don’t you?”

“Yes,” Carly said, with a huff. “With you. You know, I’m beginning to think I’ve had it all wrong, you know?”

That was too easy a shot to take, so Elizabeth nodded. “Okay. About what?”

“You.” Carly leaned back against the chair. “I always thought you would take Jason from me. Which is insane, stupid, immature, petty—pick your garbage adjective. I just knew that when Jason was with you, I didn’t matter as much, and I hated that.”

“Okay,” Elizabeth said with sigh. She closed the magazine. “What’s wrong?”

“I was so happy when Jason woke a few weeks ago. When we knew he’d be okay. That’s all I wanted. I wanted him to be with his kids. To be happy with Sam. Because it was just—it was everything to have him alive, you know?” Carly’s eyes glittered with unshed tears. “And I’ve ignored all the signs. All the voices inside telling me it wasn’t right. That it was never going to be like it was.”

“I know those voices,” Elizabeth murmured. “I heard them every day I lied to Jason. But…I guess I could just focus on the fact that I didn’t need it to be like it was. Jason wasn’t…the same. But I loved the man he was. I loved Jake Doe.”

Carly bit her lip. “He told Sonny and me today that he’s walking away from Sonny. He claims it’s not walking away from the friendship, that if Sonny needs him—but I don’t know. It feels like it’s missing something. And I guess…maybe it’s selfish. Maybe it’s just who I am, and I can’t that Jason isn’t—that he’s not the same. But—”

Elizabeth took a deep breath. “Jason…walked away from you and Sonny. From the business.” Her chest twisted. “He never…that was never an option. He never, ever…made that an option before. It wasn’t supposed to be—”

“Don’t….” Carly leaned forward. “That’s what I’m saying. He never, ever put that choice on the table before. And it’s not about Sam. Or that he didn’t love you back then. God, Elizabeth. That’s exactly what I mean. Jason never offered that you because he never saw it as a choice. So why is that something he can do now?”

“I don’t—” Elizabeth twisted her fingers together, stared down at them. “I don’t know what you want from me, Carly. Because it sounds like—”

“I don’t even know what I’m saying. I don’t know what I thought you could tell me. Except…that I’m not crazy, I guess. Sonny keeps putting on a face, but you know how his life spirals out of control when Jason isn’t here. And it’s not…it’s not about Jason fixing things, though that’s it—”

“Jason knew how to be strong for Sonny,” Elizabeth said, with none of the bitterness she’d once felt about it all. “And Sonny needed that the strength. I know what you mean, Carly. I always felt like…” She hesitated, because showing any weakness to Carly was always a risk, but the other woman had had a horrible year. “I always feel like we all took more from Jason than we ever gave to him, you know? And I don’t just mean you and Sonny. I mean, me.”

“Yeah.” Carly sighed. “I guess I can’t be too mad he’s finally learned how to stop letting us take. I guess…I don’t know. It just…it doesn’t feel like Jason. He never really did, but I guess I was so happy to have him alive, I ignored it all. And I kept thinking if he just—if he went back to Sam, back to work for Sonny—”

“He’d be Jason again.” Elizabeth nodded. “Yeah.” She slid her fingers over the glossy cover of her magazine. “I guess…the thing is that he was gone for two years, lost his memory for another—had his brain played with by Helena Cassadine and the WSB…I know firsthand that to keep looking for the person you used to love—to keep hoping if you just keep everything the way it was…you can go back—God, Carly, it just kills something inside of you to keep hoping like that.”

“Lucky?” Carly asked with a tilt of her head. She sighed when Elizabeth nodded. “Yeah. Yeah. I guess you’re right. It’s just hard to admit that my Jason—our Jason—he’s never coming back. But he’s happy. So…okay.” She pressed a fist to her mouth. “I’ve decided to stop hating you by the way.”

“Oh, well, I guess…thanks.” Elizabeth sighed. “I thought that would last longer.”

“Yeah. Well, what did you really do?” Carly said. “You did exactly what I would have done in the same situation, so maybe that’s why I hated you so much. And it’s not like the truth gave us back Jason. Not really. So what’s the point? Besides, I like your kid.”

“Yeah?” Elizabeth raised her brows. “I like yours, too. Wonders never cease.”

“The thing about Joss is…she’s the same age I was when I started to go off the rails.” Carly chewed on her bottom lip. “She’s got Jax in her, which means she’ll probably be okay. But, God, she’s got me in her, too. His confidence, my recklessness? That scares the shit out of me.”

“I know exactly what you mean.” And this was easier ground. Safer. “Cameron’s been having a rough time lately. These last few years…there’s been…a lot of changes.” Elizabeth sipped her tea, not really wanting to fill in the blanks.

“Thinking his brother was gone, then Jake coming back. Then Jason coming back into his life—” Carly hesitated. “Does…he spend time with the other boys?”

“No. Just Jake.” Elizabeth shrugged a shoulder. “And that was hard on him. Jake—Jason—” she corrected. “Was going to adopt him. We talked about doing something about Aiden, too—but he walked away from them. And then Jake last year with all the Chimera stuff, my grandmother died…”

“Franco moved in,” Carly finished. “Look, I’m not one to cast stones about Franco, because God knows, it’s my fault anyone takes him seriously as a human being—”

“Carly—”

“And I get it. I do.” She hesitated. “Because he came into my life when I was struggling, too. Jason was gone. I was struggling with Michael and AJ. And Franco was there. He…once the tumor was gone, it felt like he was a different person. The problem is that…once the unsteadiness passes, once the world tilts back and goes straight—he doesn’t know how to function. He looks for something to be wrong—”

“Carly, you cheated on him—”

“I did. And…that was wrong. I know it. But instead of confronting me, Elizabeth, he deliberately destroyed my son. He wanted to hurt me, and he used Michael to do it. And you know I’m right. He’s in your life because everyone else walked away.” Carly picked up her bag. “I like your kid, Elizabeth. He’s good for Joss. So…just be careful.”

“About Jason, Carly—”

“You’re right.” Carly got to her feet, looped the strap over her shoulder, and sighed. “I have to stop looking for the man he used to be. We did the tests. The DNA says it’s Jason. So that’s who it has to be.”

February 25, 2018

This entry is part 3 of 3 in the Workshop: Fool Me Twice, Take 2

Okay, I’m going to label my parts by the scenes included. These roughly go in order, and of course, the Jason in the Curtis scene is really Drew, but he doesn’t know that yet, so I’ve written him like Drew. (Does that make sense?)

The Franco scene is my first attempt to get inside his head. So…yeah. It might suck. It turns out I’m not a sociopath, so I don’t know how to write them.

Written in about 62 minutes.


Webber House: Living Room

Cameron Webber pulled the door open and stepped aside quickly as Jocelyn Jacks stomped inside, a leather bookbag slung over her shoulder and murder in her dark brown eyes. “I swear to God, I’m not allowed to have even a modicum of personal privacy—”

Behind her, the familiar sight of Milo Giambetti loomed on the porch. “It’s not like this is my idea of a fun time either,” the body guard muttered as he followed his charge in side. “Hey, Cam.”

“Hey, Milo.” Cameron closed the door. “Your mom wouldn’t let you come here without him? I mean…” He wrinkled his nose. “I know your mom doesn’t like Franco, but it’s not like he lives here—”

“Oh, he’s a chaperone.” Joss rolled her eyes and dumped her bag at her feet. “Apparently, Mom remembered that we’re a boy and girl. Like we’re going to jump each other or something. I’m fourteen, you know. And this isn’t West Virginia. We’re practically related.”

“Uh huh.” Cameron tossed Milo the remote. “You shouldn’t have told her that my mom was working the late shift—”

“I didn’t, but your mom told her.” Joss stomped into the kitchen as the body guard settled himself on the sofa and turned on the Phillies-Red Sox game. “I liked it better when they were enemies.”

“I’m sure my mom did, too.” Cameron got out an extra glass and poured Joss her usual Dr. Pepper. “I guess Mom told her that Aiden and Jake weren’t going to be home either.”

“It came up,” Joss grumbled as she took her algebra textbook from her bag, then fished for a pencil before giving up and taking one of the extras lying next to Cameron’s. “Whatever. She’s just worried I’ll repeat all her mistakes, but I’m not as crazy as she is. It’s like I’m being punished for crap that isn’t my fault.”

“It could be worse.” Cameron took his seat and opened his textbook to their assigned homework. “Your mom could still be dating Franco.”

“Yeah, well, at least with Franco, there were no body guards,” Joss muttered. “But then my mom did get kidnapped, almost got killed, and covered up a murder. So you know, you take the good with the bad. Your mom hasn’t dumped him yet? I don’t get it. His hair looks greasy, and he’s always got a smirk. He makes me want to punch him. Except, you know, you’d probably screw up his brain and he’s go all rampagey-killer again.”

“He hasn’t been around as much as he used to be,” Cameron offered. “But that doesn’t mean anything. My mom’s the best, except she’s got shit taste in men. The ones who should stay never do, and we can never get rid of the assholes.”

“My mom’s got the same problem. Sonny’s an improvement over the last couple of jackasses, but I really wish she and my dad could have stayed together. He was good for her crazy. Made her calm down. Sonny just laughs at her like its funny.” Joss grimaced. “Where are the rugrats anyway? How come you’re not baby sitting?”

“Jason came home from the hospital a couple of days ago,” Cameron said. “So he took Jake for the week, and Aiden’s grandma is going to take him for the overnight shift.” He stared down at the linear equations he had been assigned. “We used to all go to my Grandma Audrey’s when Mom worked late or overnight.”

“Oh.” Joss pressed her lips together for a minute. “Yeah. That’s right. Well, I guess your mom decided you were old enough—”

“No where to send me,” Cam said, matter of factly. “I don’t have any grandparents, aunts, or uncles. And I haven’t had a a dad since Jake found out he was Jason, and decided he hated everything to do with my mom.” He shrugged a shoulder as if that didn’t bother him.

“Except Jake.”

“Yeah, well, Jake’s blood. I’m not. It’s not like Sam could tell Jason he couldn’t be around his own kid, but there was no way in hell she’d let me or Aiden hang around, you know?”

“Yeah, well, you’re better off. I liked Jason before he had his brains scrambled this time.” Joss shrugged. “You could talk to him. And he was the sane one in the family. Now, it’s like we might as well not exist. You’d never know he basically raised Michael. And he was barely around when Morgan died. And Sam’s trash. I hate her for what she did to Patrick and Emma.”

“Yeah, but that ended up being good. Emma got her parents back together. You know that was always her dream.” Cameron pressed down on his pencil. Of course, then Emma had moved. And Nikolas had died, which meant Spencer wasn’t around much.

“Yeah, I guess. Our parents are stupid. I don’t understand why Jason didn’t just go through with it and adopt you guys,” Joss said. “Which a dick thing to do. Your mom was stupid and lied, but what did that have to do with you guys?”

“It doesn’t matter. He’s not my father. He never really wanted to be my father. He barely wanted to be Jake’s father. The truth came out after we thought Jake was dead. He didn’t have a choice but to step uponce we found everything out.”

“That’s pretty harsh, but I guess it’s accurate.” Joss tapped her eraser against the textbook page. “We should finish this before my mother sends out a search party.”

Floating Rib: Bar

Curtis Ashford lined up a shot at the pool table, took it, and then straightened, watching in satisfaction as the last of the balls slid across the green felt and into the corner pocket. “And that’s how it’s done.”

Jason Morgan scowled, raised a bottle of Heineken to his lips and sipped. “You keep kicking my ass at this. I used—” He shook his head. “I used to be good at this.”

“Well, your brain has been scrambled a few times.” But Curtis tipped his head towards one of the booths across the bar. “You all right? Maybe you shouldn’t have come out tonight—”

Jason followed him to the booth and they slid in. A waitress came over, swapped out their empty beers for a fresh round. “Nah. Sam said I should get out of the house. Jake and Danny were busy with video games or something. And you sounded like you were down on the phone—”

“Jordan,” Curtis muttered. “I don’t know why I bother. I was a private investigator when we met, wasn’t I?”

“Sure—”

“And I take cases from people who pay. That’s the life. That’s the job.”

“Uh huh—”

“So what if you and Sonny are sometimes those people. I gotta pay the bills.”

“I don’t—” Jason hesitated. “I’m not working for Sonny anymore. I actually…” He twisted the cap off his beer and stared at the small circle of metal between his fingertips for a long moment. “I’m getting into something else.”

“You’re…breaking away from Sonny.” Curtis set his beer down with a dull thud. “Is that even…possible?”

“I don’t know.” Jason was quiet for a moment. “It never felt like it was before. Or…I remember that I didn’t consider it before. I don’t know.”

“What’s up, man? I know you’re still getting your head together after spending all the time in the hospital, but you’ve been…” Curtis wiggled his fingers. “You’ve been weird lately. What’s the deal?”

“It’s…” Jason shook his head. “I don’t know. I used to think getting my memories back all the way would help things. And then Sam and I—we got married. We have Scout. And Danny’s great. I get to spend time with Jake. I used to want all of those things.”

“You don’t want them now?”

“I do. Don’t—I love my kids. I love my wife. But—” Jason hesitated. “Tonight. You asked me out to shoot pool. I know I know how to play. I used to have a table in the penthouse. But when I put my hands on the cue, it’s like those things happened to someone else.”

“Hey, you’re being too hard on yourself. Helena Cassadine had you frozen for two years, planted shit in your head, and then Elizabeth lied to you for like a year—”

“Half a year,” Jason muttered. “And…that’s just it. I’m so angry at her. And I remember all the crap she and I have been through, and I don’t…I don’t know. I think about the memories I have of Sam. And Sonny and Carly. And they all just feel like…it’s not me. Like they’re in my head, but they happened to someone else. Walking away from Sonny? From Carly? It felt like the right thing to do. It’s the first thing that’s felt right since the day I found out who I was really was.”

“Maybe that’s just it.” Curtis tipped his beer towards him. “You’ve spent two years being the image of Jason Morgan. You tried to be him even before you had those memories. You lived as someone else for a long time, man. What’s wrong with letting that guy lead the way?”

“That guy?” Jason snorted. “That guy was brainwashed, controlled, lied to—”

“That guy started a fresh new life without anyone running after him,” Curtis said, with a half shrug of his shoulder. “Yeah, Helena did some crap to you, but you got through it. You made new friends. You fell in love with a good woman—even if she did something that wasn’t so great—”

“She lied to me about who I was—”

“She did you a favor, man.” Curtis leaned back against the booth. “You barely like being Jason Morgan. The only good things in your life are your wife and kids. All the other crap that comes with being Jason? Sonny, Carly. The money. The job. That all drives you insane. You think it would have been easier to know the truth earlier?”

“I know it wasn’t her decision to make.” Jason sipped his beer. “It was mine. Anyway. I don’t know. I got a wife I’m crazy about. A brand new beautiful little girl. Two great boys. I don’t know what I’m bitching about.”

“Me either,” Curtis agreed. “Besides, sounds like you figured it out. You broke ties with Sonny. You said you were getting into something else. And you know, maybe you could cut your kid’s mom a break.”

“Why are you suddenly Liz’s biggest fan?” Jason asked, with some irritation.

“Because she’s a nice person who looks out for my nephew at the hospital. He’s been working as orderly, and she showed him the ropes. I don’t think what she did was worth the punishment she got.” Curtis shrugged. “I mean, how desperate for love do you gotta be to hook up with that psycho?”

General Hospital: Emergency Room

“Ugh.” Elizabeth set a chart back into the rack and reached for a new one. “Why did I pick up a shift down here again?”

“Because you love me,” Felix DuBois, her friend and permanent emergency room nurse, sang as he wheeled a patient past her. “And I begged.”

“Hey, you can’t get this kind of action anywhere else,” Dr. Lucas Jones said with a smirk as he held out a chart to her. “Can you give the drunk crazy in Curtain Three another 2 mics of lorazapam? I’m waiting on a Psych result.”

“I live to serve.” Elizabeth took the chart, flipped through it, and yawned. “How many more hours until seven and freedom?”

“One hours, thirteen minutes, and thirty seconds,” Amy Driscoll said in her usual perky voice that made Elizabeth want to rip out her vocal cords. “But who’s counting?” She smirked. Though it probably a smile, but Elizabeth found everything about her annoying. “I’m off now, though. I came in early.”

As the blonde took a new chart and headed for an exam area, Lucas grimaced behind her back. “I try to be a nice person, but sometimes, I think I’ve had too much exposure to Carly.”

Elizabeth snorted. “Yeah, well, there are a few reasons I only take shifts here when Felix begs me too. I hate the overnight shifts, and…well…some of the company. Besides, I like surgery.” She uncapped her pen and perused the orders on a chart. “I just want to take the boys to Disney World next summer, and that does not come cheap on a single mom’s salary.”

“Feel free to tell me it’s none of my business, but can’t Jason buy and sell Disney World a few times over?” Lucas asked as he wiped his name and a patient from the white board.

“He can. I can’t. He gave me money a long time ago for Jake, but my brother lost it in the stock market. Naturally. And we never really set up anything official for child support. I’ve always taken care of my boys myself.” Elizabeth shrugged. “Anyway, there’s still Aiden and Cam to pay for—” She frowned as the desk clerk took a call from an ambulance unit. “Did they say another overdose?”

“Yeah.” Lucas frowned. “That’s the fifth one tonight. That’s not usual—” He rubbed his eyes. “But it’s only my first ER rotation—maybe it’s normal.”

“No, we’re good for one or two at best,” Felix said as he joined them. “And that’s usually during the holidays. Five in one night—”

Another call crackled through the radio—a fire with several major injuries. Elizabeth sighed, checked her watch. She was probably going to end up working overtime and missing breakfast with Franco. The third or fourth date in the last few weeks.

She made a mental to call him and then rushed to meet the trauma coming in.

Franco’s Art Studio

Franco Baldwin slammed the door behind him as he stalked inside. He ripped off the thin fall coat he wore and threw it across the room.

Stood up again. Not even a fucking phone call. What the hell was her problem—

He stopped himself. Took a deep breath. She was working a lot and picking up shifts all over the hospital. It wasn’t her fault.

Franco looked down at the list in his hand. His reminders. Elizabeth was a good person. She loved him. She trusted him. She would tell him if she didn’t love him anymore.

He needed to remember that when he got angry. He couldn’t just fly off the handle. Just react every time he wanted to. That was the before Franco.

The bad Franco.

He was good now. A good man. Who could do good things. Who knew how to be someone Elizabeth would love. He wanted her to love him. That made him a good man.

Carly was a bad woman. Her love had made him empty inside. Angry. He’d done bad things with Carly. He’d done bad things with Elizabeth, but those had been for her. Proof of how much she meant to him.

No one would hurt her.

So he looked down at his list. His little cheat sheet. Sometimes he couldn’t remember why he didn’t do what he wanted to do. Why he didn’t do the things that made his art good. That gave him passion and life.

Because he was a good man now. And Elizabeth would leave him if he gave into his urges. He’d go back to jail.

He really didn’t want to go to jail. And as along as Elizabeth still loved him, he could be a good man. It would all be okay. She would save him. She liked saving him. She liked saving people. That was her job. That’s why she had stood him up today.

Why she hadn’t even given him the decency of a fucking phone call, like he was nothing. Like he could be forgotten. Who the hell did she think she was? What gave her the right to treat him like he was invisible?

His cell phone rang then and he stared at at photo that popped up. Her face. Her smile. He stared at it. Her lying face. Her bad face. She was a liar. Just like Carly.

He threw the phone across the room and felt good inside when it smashed into pieces all over the ground.

Maybe he’d go to the hospital and tell her she was a liar. That she couldn’t treat him like that. He was only good when she loved him. She needed to remember that. He should tell her.