fortunefavour.
journal writing. and here he’d thought that only came from his mother. the timing lines up so that when nate meets his eyes, it’s a gaze already leveled. it’s not an uncomfortable look, not like the kind he gets from strangers all the time; it’s weightier than that. the sentiment has him feeling too exposed, too open, too aware of his own skin. he feels like the starfish, the one chloe was dissecting while he made notes and drew pictures. journaling. a scratch of pen against paper. sunlight coming in through a window.
when the photo’s offered to him again, he takes it without thinking. he takes it so he can drop his focus to it instead and try to force a thick swallow down a throat that’s suddenly tighter than before.
“i don’t w— i’m not gonna keep it. if it’s the only one you’ve got or whatever. you don’t — you don’t have to do that. don’t worry about it.”
but he stays holding it anyway.
evelyn’s disapproval seems somehow fitting, even though he only spoke to the woman once, five years ago, in the minutes leading up to her death. he’d seen the letters, the ones from her family. her estranged family. that’s fitting now, too.
“if, uh …” another swallow. his thumb runs gently along the edge of the photograph. “if it makes you feel better, evelyn pulled a gun on us — on me ‘n sam — before she knew who we were. we didn’t kill her, by the way,” he adds, with a brief upward glance that for a split - second is almost defensive. “i mean, i don’t know how much you heard, or — uh, or read, about what happened that night, but it wasn’t us. she had a heart attack. ‘n from the looks of her place, she’d been sick for a while. ironic, right?”
the instinct to tell him he can keep it, he insists, is bitten back because it sounds pushy and desperate. in ways he can’t explain. alex simply nods, wringing his hands together and cracking his knuckles. the action stops abruptly. speaking on cassandra is one thing, speaking on the rumors and whispers he heard about his sons is another. there’s a sharpness to his gaze, but it isn’t directed at nate. in many ways, he seems only half present.
he’d heard the news first. a juvenile and an adult, murder. the death of evelyn. the taste in his mouth at the time had been his own bile and when he reached out to father duffy, his worst fears were confirmed. in spite of that, he didn’t believe what he heard. not really, not about that. not about them.
they were just kids. just kids. just kids that he hadn’t seen for years and weren’t the same age anymore, weren’t even close. and he’d left them. he’d left them. alex clears his throat for the hundredth time and the corners of his mouth pull into a characteristic frown.
“i heard about it,” he admits, swallowing down a lump in his throat. “i didn’t think it was you two. not the way they told it. not ... not my boys and not like that. i knew it was you looking for your mother’s things, but not looking to hurt anyone in the process.”
briefly, his gaze searches nate’s. or attempts to.
“... i’m sorry, nate,” he near whispers. “i know it’s too little, too late, but i’m sorry for how you boys had to grow up because i failed.”













