HIGHLY recommend getting into NHRL and battle robots as a sport in general for any mcyt fans because it gives you the exact same blorbo feelings as the cubitos do and they have such badass funny names. The announcers treat the robots like they are sentient, like drivers who? I only know this little guy who is tearing up the floor fr also our camera is on fire.
I get to be like “this is my baby boy Crashfest he’s the little robot that could, he survived Dutch Oven” and “this is Hot Shot he is a walking jet engine and that is not a joke” or “this is Pawsitively Hissterical he wins fights purely by aggression points from bapping bots with his little paw and doing no damage and also he is trans and also had a heel turn and is now evil” or “Kevin is 30lbs and won a fight via KO because it flipped a 330lb house bot onto Knockout and fucking crushed it” and it sounds exactly the same as “this is mumbo killsalot jumbo and he is a potato that we headcanon to be vampire but he’s literally just a fucking dude PEACE LOVE AND PLANTS”
when i close my eyes, i want only to stay (where the farthest you are is a heartbeat away)
for @kayromantic, hope that you like it <3, I was going to try to fit all three prompts, but prompt two kind of hijacked my brain and wouldn’t leave me alone, so here you go!!
@roswellprompts
Prompt Two - Dreams - we are mentally connected - I can read your mind
* * *
Four Times Michael Drags Alex into His Dreams and Two Times Alex Does It
* * *
.1.
Michael doesn’t mean to do it.
He’s not exactly sure how he does it either, but he thinks it might have to do with the proximity, and the fact that his head was full of Alex and his scent that permeated through the wool sheets and soft pillow that had been stuffed into one corner of the couch the second night that the rain drove Michael to spend the night at the tool shed.
He’s in that state where you’re more asleep than awake, and he can feel Alex calling out for help, and he feels warm and safe in the place that Alex gave to him, and before he’s aware of it, he feels himself latching onto Alex’s consciousness and tugging it into his safe place, inside of his head.
The place is warm and dark and misty and all you can see are the stars shining bright and fierce and in completely different positions than they can be seen from earth, and all you can feel is the warm dry sand that covers the ground. Sometimes it's daylight, and the sun is red and dimming, but most of the time it's dark.
Alex's presence sweeps through him like a cool breeze, blowing the mist away and shines like the moon, a soft yellow-white glow that illuminates against the jagged pieces of the spaceship scattered across the sands.
Michael watches as Alex turns in a circle looking around for danger or trying to figure out where he is and how he got there.
Michael feels a little shocked at how solid he seems to be and how he seems to be affecting the landscape when Michael can't even do that because he's not a lucid dreamer.
The sands change from the pale pink they always are, to the pale brown of the New Mexican desert, and the stars swirl above them until Michael recognizes the constellations, and the moon slides into place, a crescent too big to be real, but bright enough that it illuminates everything.
"Guerin," Alex says, and he sounds a little shocked as though he hadn't been expecting Michael in his dreams, which sends a pang of disappointment spiraling through Michael that he has no idea what to do with. "What are you doing here?"
Michael looks down from the stars to where Alex is standing right beside him, looking down at him with a furrowed brow, eyes narrowed.
"I should be asking you that," Michael responds. "Pretty sure this is my dream."
Alex's brow furrows even more and then he looks around them again, as Michael notes that once Alex's concentration had flickered to him, the landscape had reverted back to the default that only exists in Michael's head.
Alex opens his mouth, probably to argue, but Michael cuts him off by standing up in one fluid motion.
Alex takes a step back away from him, and Michael realizes that he's still tense as though he's anticipating for something or someone to hurt him, his shoulders are rigid, his fingers are clenched to fists and his mouth is pressed into a thin white line.
"I'm not going to hurt you," Michael says, and Alex lets out a startled little laugh that's tinged in disbelief.
“You’re safe here,” Michael continues, and Alex just stops and stares at him as though he can’t believe that Michael is real, and Michael sees when he tells himself that obviously Michael isn’t real because he’s dreaming.
“I’m not really a lucid dreamer,” Michael continues before Alex can say anything. “But since we’re in my head-”
He cuts himself off, and closes his eyes concentrating. He tries to project safety and warmth, the same thing he felt when he fell asleep earlier, and he hears Alex inhale sharply.
Michael opens his eyes and sees that the sun started rising, but Alex is looking at him, eyes wide and dark.
He swallows hard looking away when he notices Michael looking back.
“If this is your dream, then why does it look like we’re on another planet?”
Michael shrugs. “Because I’m an alien.”
Alex laughs, a startled stutter of a sound, and Michael bites down on his lip so that he doesn’t insist that he’s telling the truth.
“Okay,” he says and smiles at Michael, before he realizes exactly what he said.
“How am I in your dream, exactly?”
Michael exhales roughly.
“I felt you calling out for help and pulled you in somehow?”
Alex’s brow furrows, and then it’s almost like a mask falls over his face. He moves back and inhales deeply looking away.
"You gave me a safe place to stay," Michael finds himself saying, and Alex's gaze snaps back to him. "I'm just returning the favor."
Alex swallows hard and worries his bottom lip between his teeth.
“You’re not going to ask?” Alex blurts out, and Michael shakes his head immediately.
“You don’t have to tell me anything you don’t want to.”
Alex lets his lip go and inhales deeply, before he drops down to sit down on the sand.
He leans back on his hands and looks up at the sky.
“I’m a lucid dreamer,” Alex says and Michael jumps as the scene around them changes sudden and disorienting. The music starts to play loud, and Michael looks around to see that they are right in the middle of a stadium, and standing on stage is a band that Michael doesn’t recognize until they hit the chorus of the song they're playing.
He gives Alex a look, who isn’t paying attention, eyes closed as he bops his head to the music.
“Panic! at the Disco?” Michael asks, raising an eyebrow when Alex looks at him.
“Don’t judge me,” Alex says and sits up, eyes on the stage. “We could still be in the middle of an alien desert.”
Michael doesn’t say anything as he sits down beside Alex.
Alex starts singing underneath his breath and Michael just stares at him and feels a warmth spread across his chest at the thought that he gave Alex a safe place in the middle of a nightmare.
.2.
The second time that it happens, Michael really didn’t mean for it to happen.
He can’t even blame the proximity this time since he’s no where near Alex.
He also hadn’t meant to fall asleep. He’d been staring at Isobel while she slept next to Max, who was staring up at the ceiling sightlessly. The icy numbness of the acetone pulled him under, and his dreams were full of fire and the sounds of bones crunching beneath the heavy weight of a hammer, and then it changed.
Michael inhales deeply and finds himself in the desert, and out in the distance he can see the flames soaring high in the air as they engulf the car.
Michael closes his eyes tight against the image that he still sees behind his closed lids, and he feels like he can’t breathe and he wishes that there was some way that he could feel safe, when even the inside of his own head is against him.
"Is that Rosa's car?" Alex asks and Michael jumps and turns, and Alex is standing right next to him, the fire shining in his eyes as he stares at the flames with a furrowed brow.
Michael feels his anxiety and terror spike, and Alex jumps and takes one look at him before he looks back over the landscape and changes it with barely a thought.
Michael jumps again when he feels something cool and insubstantial against his feet and looks down to see that he’s standing right on the edge of a rushing river.
Alex takes a step closer to him, but stays well away from reach.
Michael looks back over at him and notes the split lip and the bruise painting the side of his face, and bites down hard against his own lip.
“Are you-?” Alex starts to ask and then shakes his head, looking away as though what he was about to say was something stupid. He takes a deep breath and looks back to Michael.
“What am I doing here?” he asks, sounding honestly confused, and Michael wishes that he had an answer for him, but he’s too busy trying not to have a panic attack.
As soon as he thinks the words, the landscape changes fast and sudden to nothing at all, but the bright, bright red of the blood staining his sweater, of the glow of Isobel’s hand over Rosa’s mouth, of the flames as they soared higher as they engulfed the car, of the panic that he’s been trying to keep at bay for the past couple of hours.
“Guerin,” Alex says voice too loud and too soft at the same time, going in and out like a bad radio signal. “Guerin! Look at me!”
Michael’s eyes snap open, and he finds Alex immediately, standing right in front of him.
Alex swallows hard, and his eyes are wide but he doesn’t look away from Michael. “What’s wrong?”
Michael opens his mouth, but all that comes out is an airless gasp. He tries to inhale, but he can’t, and his heart feels like it’s about to pop out of his chest, and the air feels like toffee, and all the red, red, red is pressing down all around him, and he can’t speak, can’t think, can’t breathe.
“Guerin,” Alex says again, and this time when Michael looks up, Alex raises his hands on either side of Michael’s face, but doesn’t touch him. “Focus on the sound of my voice. You’re going to be fine. This feeling is temporary. I know it feels like you’re going to die, but I promise you, you are not. Just keep listening to me. Everything is going to be okay.”
Michael closes his eyes and concentrates on the sound of Alex’s voice, on the easy, steady cadence and the way his breathing is steady and even, and the way his fingers were just barely brushing against Michael’s cheeks, and the sound he made when he swallows and continues speaking, and then reciting lyrics when he runs out of ways to assure Michael that everything is going to be okay.
As he matches his breaths to Alex’s steady ones and lets the rhythm of Alex’s words fog his brain, he can feel his heart rate slowing gradually, and the panic and fear leaching from his system, leaving behind a stillness that Michael never feels, even when he plays the guitar.
He blinks his eyes open slowly and sees that Alex’s eyes are closed as he keeps talking.
Michael concentrates on the words, and can’t help the stutter of laughter that comes out.
Alex stops speaking and opens his eyes, brow furrowed in confusion.
“Panic, again?” Michael questions raising an eyebrow.
Alex flushes, and his hands drop back to his sides as he glares a little. “You’re welcome,” he says, sounding a little peeved.
The smile falls from Michael’s face slowly and he exhales and nods his head. “Thanks,” he says as sincere as he can make it.
Alex bites down on his lip and his eyes dart down to Michael’s hand and back up to his face, and away across the pink sands, shimmering with pieces of the broken ship in the red sunlight.
He inhales deeply and then looks back at Michael and shakes his head. “I can’t do this.”
Michael feels a spike of terror at the words that he immediately tries to smother, but he knows that Alex had already felt it from the way his eyes fall shut.
“I can’t pretend that everything is okay, Guerin. Cause it’s not. You’re hurt, and it’s all my fault-”
“No,” Michael says immediately cutting him off, taking a step closer, but stopping when Alex’s eyes snap open.
“I don’t blame you,” Michael starts taking a step closer, but Alex shakes his head taking a matching step back.
“You should,” Alex says, hands shaking as he starts to gesticulate. “I was the one who told you that it was a safe place. I was the one who tried to kiss you first. I was the one who suggested we go there after you kissed me. I was the one who-”
“You didn’t grab that hammer,” Michael says cutting him off again, and Alex stops moving looking at him with wide eyes. “And if I hadn’t done anything, what would he have done to you?”
Alex doesn’t say anything, but he doesn’t have to.
Michael has seen it enough times in different foster homes, and Alex who told him with a smile that sometimes people are nice for no reason and gave Michael a safe place when he needed it, didn’t deserve that. Especially not from someone who was supposed to love him.
Alex just keeps looking at him with wide eyes, and then he moves, crossing the space between them, and Michael inhales sharply as Alex’s fingers curve around his jaw and them he’s tugging him in, and Michael can’t help the way he sighs in relief into the kiss.
This was something he was positive he’d never have again, and even if Alex wasn’t actually here in his dream, he’d take it over anything else.
But Alex feels real. His hands are cold and his fingers are rough and when Michael lifts his hand to press against his back, he moves in closer, feeling solid and so unlike a dream that Michael hopes (and hopes and hopes and hopes) that this is real.
Alex pulls away from him slowly, and Michael’s mouth feels like it’s tingling, and he opens his eyes slowly to see that Alex is staring right at him.
“Michael,” he says low and soft, and Michael’s heart starts beating hard in his chest and he can’t look away from Alex’s eyes, and the light shining in them.
“Michael,” he repeats and it sounds like a prayer. Michael’s hand presses harder against his back, and Alex presses in even closer, hands sliding into Michael’s hair as he presses their foreheads together and his eyes fall shut.
“Michael,” he says again, and Michael shudders, pressing closer. “I think I-”
Alex gasps a little, and it sounds like he’s in pain, and he pulls away from Michael slightly, and when Michael opens his eyes, he’s gone.
.3.
Michael goes to sleep sober for the first time in a really long time, and his dreams are made of shapes and colors and shadows that he can’t make sense of, and then it’s almost like he feels a tug right against his brain stem, and a sensation like he’s about to sneeze, and then he falls to his knees in the middle of the desert, pale yellow sands stretching out for miles, and a heat so intense that Michael gasps, mouth dry.
The sound of gunshots ricochet all around him, and he looks around from where it’s coming from, but all he can see is vague shadows, imprints of people, no, not people, soldiers. Soldiers running around him, shooting their weapons, and he knows that this isn’t his dream.
There is a cold sensations spreading down the base of his neck, a numbing kind of fear that he’s only ever felt once in his life, and when he turns around again, the tool shed stands right in front of him.
“Alex,” he breathes, and moves immediately.
He doesn’t think about the fact that it’s been years, doesn’t think about how hurt he’d been when Alex hadn’t even told him that he was leaving, doesn’t think about the letters he has tucked away unread because thinking about Alex still hurt too much, doesn’t think about how this is all going to tear open the wound he’d been so desperately trying to close.
The only thought in his head is that Alex needs him.
He opens the door to the tool shed, and it creaks just like it did then, and Michael licks his lips and then looks inside and freezes. Just like outside, there are vague shadows, moving inside, a scene that Michael would be able to see perfectly if he closes his eyes. As it is he can’t hear anything, which he’s thankful for, but it doesn’t make seeing the ghosts of the past repeating itself over and over and over.
It’s only when Alex whimpers that Michael’s gaze is snapped away from the repeating sequence, and he looks to see him pressed back against the wall on the far side of the tool shed, arms wrapped around his legs, pulling them tightly to his chest, his face pressed to his knees.
He’s wearing his uniform and there is so much blood everywhere that Michael’s heart stops beating for a second.
He walks in and ignores the ghost of Jesse Manes pulling his teenage ghost to the table and stops right in front of Alex.
“Alex,” he says, and Alex pulls into himself even more, whimpering low in his throat.
Michael drops to his knees, and reaches carefully.
His fingers barely graze the top of Alex’s head before he’s snapping his head up and looking at Michael with wide eyes.
“Guerin?” he says voice low and questioning.
Michael swallows hard and nods his head. “I’m here.”
Alex makes a low noise at the back of his throat and moves fast, wrapping himself around Michael and dropping his face into the crook of Michael’s neck, shuddering as he starts to sob.
Michael wastes no time wrapping Alex up in his arms, and pressing his face to the top of his head.
He feels how the mind numbing fear and the anxious feeling at the pit of his stomach starts to dissipate as Alex relaxes into him.
Michael wants to stay in this moment for the rest of his life, but Alex moves back too soon.
Michael opens his eyes when Alex’s hands grip against the fabric covering his shoulders.
“I didn’t think that it was going to work,” he says when he notices that Michael is watching him.
“What?” Michael asks, hands falling to his sides as Alex’s fingers tighten in the fabric of his shirt.
“I just wanted to see you one more time, the real you, not the ghost of a memory.”
“What?” Michael says again, blinking rapidly as pain starts edging the edges of his consciousness, but it feels kind of like he’s experiencing it through a filter.
Alex swallows and looks down. “I think I’m dying.”
Michael feels the words hit him like an explosion.
“What?” he asks one more time, his voice very nearly fading him, and Alex makes a noise low in the back of his throat, as he leans forward again, and presses his forehead to Michael’s.
“There was a bomb, and there was so much blood, and so much pain, I don’t know if I’m going to make it. I don’t know if I’m strong enough.”
“No,” Michael says, shaking his head and swallowing thickly. “You can’t just give into it. You have to fight. You have to come back to me.”
The sob falls from Alex’s mouth and he presses his forehead harder to Michael’s. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I shouldn’t have-”
“No,” Michael says again. “Don’t. I don’t want you to tell me anything, not when you think you’re going to die. Just, stay alive, Alex. You have to fight. And then come back and tell me.”
Alex closes his eyes, and Michael can see the tears leaking out of the corners.
“What if I can’t?” he whispers. “What if I survive this but can’t find the way to tell you that I-”
Michael reaches for him, fingers snagging along the collar of his shirt, and he crumbles the fabric in his fists and pulls him in tightly, cutting off the words he was saying.
“Then I’ll wait until you can find the words that you want to say.”
Alex shudders against him.
Michael leans in then and Alex’s breath hitches, but before Michael can press their mouths together, Alex is gone.
He gets dropped back into himself so hard that he wakes up, startled in his Airstream, the winter cold hitting him like a punch to the throat after being in the hot desert.
Michael drags himself out of bed, and ignores the tears he can feel on his cheeks, and the way his right leg aches, and how his hands are still tingling from holding Alex, and grabs a bottle of whiskey and a bottle of acetone.
When he wakes up the next morning, he doesn’t remember dreaming with Alex.
.4.
Dreaming about something that happened is always insubstantial, like trying to recreate a memory using shadows and lights and colors and sounds.
But Michael usually doesn’t care if Alex doesn’t feel like something tangible when he dreams about him.
Tonight is different. Tonight he can still feel Alex’s hair, tickling the tips of his fingers, can still feel Alex’s mouth crushed beneath his, can still feel Alex’s hands pressing low on his back, pulling him close, even as he shuts his eyes tight like he’s in pain, can still feel the overwhelming relief and peace at having Alex within arm’s reach, of having him almost whole, but most importantly, alive.
Michael shuts his eyes tight as he presses his forehead to the ghost of Alex’s memory, and wishes that Alex would be right there with him.
Alex gasps and feels infinitely more solid in his hands, and Michael can’t help the smile that crosses his face.
He’d hoped that having Alex near would make it easier to pull him inside of his dreams, and he was right.
“Guerin,” Alex breathes out. “Wha-?” he starts and pulls away from Michael to look around Michael’s recreation of their last kiss.
Michael’s eyes open as he feels the ground shift beneath his feet and sees that they’re in the desert, pink sand glowing lightly with the huge and heavy moon slowly drifting through the sky.
He looks back at Alex who has his arms wrapped around himself and is looking up at the stars as though they have any answers.
“You already know what,” Michael says, and Alex’s gaze snaps to him.
He looks tired even though he has to be sleeping or else this wouldn’t work.
Michael feels the worry pulse through him and sees how Alex shuts his eyes, brow furrowed.
“I’m fine,” he says opening his eyes and looking at Michael. “You don’t have to keep dragging me away from my nightmares. I’ve lived with them just fine for the last ten years. I’m not some kid who needs to be protected from the big scary world, Guerin. I have never needed you to protect me.”
Michael shuts his eyes tight against the words.
“I’m sorry if that’s not what you wanted to hear, but I-”
“Stop,” Michael says and opens his eyes.
Alex is staring at him with his bottom lip trapped between his teeth, and Michael notices for the first time since he appeared, that tired is not the only thing he looks. He looks trapped and like he’s two seconds away from jumping out of his skin.
Michael inhales deeply. “I didn’t bring you here because you were having a nightmare.”
Alex’s brow furrows, “Then why-”
Michael moves until he’s standing right in front of Alex, and Alex’s voice trails off as he looks at Michael with wide eyes, the same way he stared at him at the reunion, like he couldn’t believe that Michael was actually in front of him, looking at him like he wants nothing more than to touch him.
Alex inhales sharply, and his eyes drop to Michael’s mouth, and Michael doesn’t need any more invitation than that.
Especially when he moves in closer, hands reaching up to curl around the back of Alex’s neck, and Alex reaches for him, hands coming up to thread through Michael’s hair, tugging him in the last few millimeters between their mouths.
Michael kisses Alex and holds him tight, and when Alex drags him down to the pink sands, Michael goes willingly.
.5.
Michael watches the car as it was engulfed in flames, and thinks about how much things have changed over the last couple of days. So much more than the last couple of years.
Almost like the whole town was stuck in stasis until Liz Ortecho’s return to Roswell, heralded a complete tilt of the earth’s axis.
Now, Alex is gone, again, and just when Michael needs him the most.
“Is that Rosa’s car?” Alex asks, making Michael jump.
Michael looks up at him not really surprised to find that he’s managed to pull him into his dream without meaning to, and debates on whether or not to tell Alex anything, but Alex just sits down beside him on the pink sands and exhales roughly, like he’s not expecting an answer.
“Yes,” Michael says, and when Alex’s gaze snaps to him, Michael shrugs. “I was there that night.”
Alex’s gaze drops down to Michael’s hand and then he looks back over to the car as the flames rise higher into the air. “Oh,” he breathes in a way that has nothing to do with him thinking Michael is a killer.
Michael sees the way his gaze shifts as he focuses and then they’re somewhere else.
Michael inhales sharply, as he goes from sitting on sand, to sitting with his feet dangling off a pier.
The water is dark and stormy as it splashes against the pier. The smell of salt is heavy in the air, and when he turns to look at Alex, he has his eyes closed with his face tilted back breathing in the sea air.
Michael watches him for a long moment before he looks back over the dark stormy waves.
“You’re not going to ask?” he asks not looking at Alex.
He hears Alex exhale long and slow, “No. You’re not a killer, Guerin. I don’t need to know anything else.”
Michael looks over to him, to see that Alex is staring at him.
“But I am a criminal,” he says, voice mocking, and Alex looks away from him, exhaling roughly.
Michael licks his lips, and swallows hard.
“You can’t keep doing this,” Alex says, not looking at Michael. “Dragging me into your dreams, into your head, whenever you want. It’s not fair to either of us.”
“I’m not the one who walked away,” Michael says, a sour feeling spreading through him at the thought.
“I know,” Alex sighs, still not looking at Michael. “I’m trying to-”
“Don’t,” Michael says closing his eyes tight. ”I don’t want to hear your excuses or justification.”
Alex doesn’t say anything, and when Michael opens his eyes, he finds Alex watching him with his brow furrowed in confusion.
“Then why am I here?”
Michael exhales looking away, and blinking slightly, before he looks back at Alex, and sees the way that the confusion clears from his eyes.
“Because I need you to tell me that it’s going to be okay,” Michael says voice shaking. “I need you to tell me that it’s all going to work out. That it might feel like I’m dying right now, but that it’s only temporary.”
Alex shakes his head in something that looks like disbelief and he looks away from Michael, shutting his eyes tight, before he inhales deeply and clenches his jaw.
“I can’t be your bandaid, Guerin,” he says, and Michael feels the words like a kick to the chest. “You need to find someone else to keep you together.”
“Alex,” Michael says, and he knows that Alex can feel his emotions because he shuts his eyes tightly and refuses to look at him.
“Alex,” he says again, and Alex just shakes his head. “That’s not what this is about.”
“Isn’t it?” Alex says finally turning to look at him. “You want me to keep you together so you can deal with whatever is going on in your life right now, but I can’t do that Guerin. I can’t be what you need right now when I can barely function. I’m not strong enough to stop you from falling apart when I can’t even keep myself together.”
“You’re the strongest person I know,” Michael says.
Alex laughs, humorlessly and shakes his head.”I can’t even stop my father from ruining the one thing that makes me happy, how does that make me strong?”
Michael blinks his eyes rapidly to stop the tears from falling. “Alex,” he says one more time, and Alex shuts his eyes tightly.
“I’m sorry,” he breathes, and then he’s gone, and Michael’s back in the desert, alone.
.6.
Michael doesn’t mean to fall asleep.
With Isobel stuck inside the pod and there being nothing that he can really do about it, Michael feels a little helpless and a lot hopeless, so he takes control of the one thing that he can fix.
Maria’s sign.
His eyes start feeling heavy, and his hand starts cramping, and he feels an insistent tug in the back of his head.
Michael sits on the stool, and leans his head down on top of the table and closes his eyes, thinking, he’ll just rest them for a second.
The tug gets stronger, and then Michael wrinkles his nose, feeling like he needs to sneeze.
When he opens his eyes, he knows that he’s dreaming. He also knows that he’s not in his own dream because he’s never seen this room in his life.
It looks like some sort of underground bunker, with blank monitors and a small table taking up one side, covered in boxes and full of files. Michael looks down to find a piece of paper on the floor, and when he bends down to pick it up, he finds his mugshot.
“I need you to tell me the truth,” Alex says, and Michael jumps and when he goes searching, he finds him sitting right in front of the monitors, and Michael wonders how he missed him earlier.
“The truth?” Michael asks instead of asking Alex why he dragged him into his dreams when he told Michael to stop doing it weeks ago.
Alex swallows and squares his shoulders, and Michael knows that they’re inside of Alex’s head, but he can’t seem to feel anything, like Alex has a rigid hold over his emotions even in this space where he really shouldn’t.
“My father is a homophobic prick who has been using this government facility to target the people that he doesn’t like, under the guise of searching for aliens.”
Michael freezes immediately.
“The government shut him down years ago because the project was just wasting government funds so he funneled his own money into it and kept it going this whole time, and recently he put you and Max and Isobel Evans under surveillance because he suspects that you three are aliens.”
Michael full body flinches at that and takes a step back looking around the bunker.
“I would understand why he would target you, because he hates you, just like how he hates me. But the Evanses? I’ve never met two people more normal.”
Michael swallows hard and looks back at Alex, who hasn’t taken his eyes off Michael.
“I’ve read everything he has on you, and on everyone he’s suspected over the years, and the information is inconclusive and circumstantial at best, and I would’ve just stopped this at shutting it down after I got rid of him, but then there’s this.”
He points between them at the fact that Alex just pulled Michael into his head like Michael has done to him multiple times.
“You told me that you were an alien, and I thought that it was a joke, because you know, we live in Roswell, but you weren’t joking were you?”
Michael exhales deeply and shakes his head. “No, I wasn’t.”
Alex nods his head and finally looks away, and Michael feels terror slide through him.
“I’m not going to hurt you,” Michael says, brow furrowing as he moves closer.
Alex’s gaze snaps to him, and he gives Michael a confused look before he remembers that they’re inside of his head.
He shakes his head. “I don’t think you’re going to hurt me.”
“Then why are you so terrified?” Michael asks.
Alex sighs, and looks away before he looks back at Michael, and his eyes are wide and full of tears. “I can’t protect you from this. I was finally able to send my father some place where he won’t ever be able to hurt either of us, but this is just the tip of the iceberg. There’s information that goes back decades, autopsy reports and files upon files of experiments done, and coded messages that prove that this isn’t the only facility, that there might be others.”
Michael feels like the world just dropped below his feet and he’s in freefall.
He looks at Alex, and Alex doesn’t look away.
“My family has been hunting yours for generations, Guerin. How am I supposed to live knowing that if it wasn’t for my great grandfather you would still have a family?”
Michael inhales deeply, and really, he can’t deal with this right now.
Too many things out of his control, but there is one thing that isn’t, one thing that he can say right now, and really, it’s the only thing that he can think to say.
“You’re not your dad Alex,” he says simply, and Alex’s eyes widen even more.
“And you’re not your grandfather and you’re not your great grandfather,” Michael says shaking his head and looking at Alex as seriously as he can. “You’re you, and I’ve been wanting to tell you the truth for a long time.”
“Why?” Alex asks, and Michael can feel the way his composure is cracking, how the terror isn’t the only thing that Alex is hiding from him, how something sweet and full of longing hides behind that.
And once again, Michael can’t think of anything else to say, but, “Because I love you.”
Michael sees how the words hit him like an explosion, how it collapses the rest of his control, and then Michael is flooded with Alex’s feelings, pain and fear and sorrow and longing and love, so much love, that Michael feels like he might drown in it.
Alex stands, and Michael takes another step closer, “Michael, I-”
Michael doesn’t let him finish.
He climbs up the steps to Alex, and tugs him close.
Alex drops his forehead to Michael, lips still parted, but he just exhales and closes his eyes, and the feeling of peace spreads through Michael.
Michael inhales deeply and opens his eyes and looks at Alex’s face, and for the first time in weeks, since the last time he held Alex close, he feels like everything is going to be okay.
This is for my @hannah-writes, and her prompt of
Malex / Mylex : "Since I met you, I’ve felt abandoned without your nearness; your nearness is all I ever dream of, the only thing." (quote by Franz Kafka)
I know I said I wasn't doing a story for you, but I lied. I hope you like it darling .
“I miss you. I always miss you, every day, every hour, every minute. You’re part of me, you’ll always be part of me. Just like you’ve been since back then.”
The look on Michael’s face as he speaks the words is enough to make him want to cry. It rips his heart open in a thousand little pieces, scattering them to the winds of Michael’s powers. It’s painful to be standing in front of him, speaking the little truths he doesn’t want to admit. Michael isn’t his anymore. Maybe he’s never been truly his except for one fleeting moment when he was 17. The following ten years has just been fraught with heartbreak, abandonment and miscommunication, hurt feelings and anger. He’s walked away time and time again, afraid and worried of whatever his father would do if he knew he was with Michael. But the times he’s been back since he first left, all of them has been spent at Michael’s side. Feeling his warmth, rejoicing in having his nearness, his presence around him. Making him not feel so alone.
But he is alone. As always, he’s walked away too many times. Walked away and left the gorgeous being that is Michael Guerin alone to face the world. Walked away and let him think he wasn’t loved. When nothing could be further from the truth. He loves Michael, from the bottom of his broken, three quarters of a man, heart. Loves him enough to color the sky red, to take on his entire family and the entire US Air Force if he has too. Just so he can maybe, hopefully, feel Michael in his arms again in the future. Maybe, hopefully, one day when Michael has had time to heal from the pain he and his family has been the cause of. When he doesn’t feel as scared and worried about what his father would do if he knew he was still standing by Michael’s side. The one place he’s always wanted to stay. Forever.
“Alex-”
“No. I just need you to know that I love you, Michael. I will never look away. Even when I walk away, I never look away.” He walks closer to Michael and presses a soft kiss to his cheek. “I’m going to walk away now. And you won’t see me again for a while. Please, be happy.”
“Where are you going?”
“I’m going to go make sure my father can never hurt you or your family again.” He smiles then, a smile he knows is filled with sadness. Filled with pain, maybe even grief. But he also knows that he needs to go away, needs to leave Michael alone to heal and worry about bringing Max back from the dead. Needs to leave him to be loved by someone who isn’t him. Someone who is brighter, happier. Easier.
“I don’t want you to go.”
“I know. But we both know I need to.” Michael nods, looking down for a second before he lifts his head to meet Alex’s gaze. Dropping all walls, they both stand there, looking at each other with all the love they feel for each other evident in their eyes. All the want, longing and admiration front and center.
“I’ll dream of only one thing,” he murmurs in the small space between them. He knows Michael recognizes what he means, knows the real quote rings as true for Michael as it does for him.
“Can I kiss you?”
He nods and closes his eyes as Michael’s hand cradles his face. The soft lips meeting his is perfection in many ways, a goodbye in the moment, a hello in the future. Right now, it’s exactly what it needs to be. Just two men sharing one last kiss, before they part for future’s unknown.
He breaks the kiss after both too long and too short of a time, opening his eyes to look into Michael’s hazel eyes. He commits them to memory and lifts his hand to run though Michael’s soft curls one more time. Then he steps back, breaks away, and once again walks away.
-----
It’s a long time before he sets foot in Roswell again. Two years and counting. He’s been all over the globe at this point, tracking down Project Shephard leads and cleaning up his father’s mess. His father who is out of a coma, but down on his memory courtesy of Isobel. It’s the easiest agreement he has ever given in his life, when Kyle called him a year ago and asked if he was okay with Isobel manipulating his father’s memory as they brought him out of the coma. He’s had to deal with his brothers, forcing them to realize that they are out from under Jesse Manes’ thumb and are free to do whatever they want. Though they might not have had it as bad as him, they didn’t have it easy. He hopes they can all live better knowing that they’re finally free.
He’s kept regular contact with everyone in Roswell. Helped out from the other side of the globe as they finally brought Max back. Sent all the files and research he found at various Shepard sites back to the alien trio to help them understand themselves, their powers and their family.
He gave them their real names from a site in Germany. Zan, Vilandra and Rath. Twin children of the King and Queen of Antar, and son of the Antarian army’s general.
He gave them drawn pictures of Antar from a base in Finland, drawn from descriptions made by Antarians in capture there.
He gave them the name of their planet in DC, his first stop after Roswell. When he was missing Michael so much, he could hardly breathe.
He told them the planet was destroyed in a war a week after that, in New York.
He’s sent science experiments and theories to Liz, medical research to Kyle, arts and samples of music to Rosa. A cure for Maria and Mimi.
He’s sent spaceship parts and theories to Michael. But the biggest piece, the one he found in the wall of his cabin he still has with him. To remind him of why he’s doing this. To remind him that even if he misses Michael with a burning, they need space.
Still, the minute he drives past the Welcome to Roswell sign two years after he left, he breathes a sigh of relief. He’s home again. He’s near the person he wants to be closest too. And he knows Michael misses him too. Michael is 8 months out of a relationship that lasted for longer than anyone gave them credit for. Anyone but Alex. He knew that if Michael and Maria were going to try, they would do it completely. It’s why he left, so they could do it without regret. Without having him hanging over them.
But now he’s ready to be home. He’s ready to see his friends, so see his family. He’s ready to drink milkshakes and dip his fries in it at the Crashdown, he’s ready to go have a drink or five at The Wild Pony, he’s ready to have the lunches Isobel has promised him for when he came back, he’s ready to hang out with Liz, Rosa, Maria and Kyle like it’s 2005. He’s ready to be a civilian again, 12 years since the last time he was anywhere close to being a civilian.
He’s ready to kiss Michael again. Ready to feel him close.. He’s ready to know if they can just be Alex and Michael, not Captain Manes and Alien Guerin. And as he drives to the junkyard, where he knows Michael is, he smiles to himself. He’s already taken on the world. Now he’s ready to live in it.
Michael’s not alone when he gets to the junkyard, Maria’s with him. Then he notices Isobel, Liz, Max, Kyle and Rosa. The entire gang is there. It makes him nervous in a way he didn’t think he would be, makes him freeze in a way he never expected. The usual worry and feeling of not being good enough rears its ugly head as they all turn when they see his car. Though he doesn’t need to worry, if the smile that breaks out on Liz’s face is anything to go by. He hears her squeal even before he stops the car and kills the engine, and as he opens the door she has already run up to the car and is waiting not so patiently.
“Oh my god, Alex,” she says in a voice pitched so high it almost hurts his ears. But he still opens his arms and tucks his face in her neck as she hugs him. She’s sniffling in his ear, so he just hugs her closer. More arms surrounds them as Liz holds on, Rosa, Kyle and Isobel joining in. He hears Max laughing a joyous laugh in the background and Michael’s murmuring which makes Max laugh even more. He’s fairly sure he knows what Michael is saying. They’ve both been dreaming of nearness.
That means only Maria is missing. He lifts his gaze and sees her standing just next to them. She seems unsure of her welcome, and if there is one thing Maria should never have to be, it’s unsure of her welcome. He smiles, stretching his hand towards her. The smile that lights up her face assures him he picked correctly. She looks happier in a way she has in a long time, more safe and secure in her position amongst the group. She should never have been an outsider to the secret, and he’s glad she isn’t any more.
“I missed you,” she whispers in his ear as he she slots herself amongst the huggers. He squeezes her back, not angry or betrayed or anything any more. Just full of love for his friends.
“Alright! If everyone can unhand the Alex and get the fuck out of my junkyard, I would appreciate it.”
He can’t help but grin at the indignation in Michael’s voice. Maria is shaking in silent laughter, as is Kyle at his back.
“Jesus, Michael. Try to be any more impatient,” Isobel says snidely as she peels herself gracefully away from the hug. Rosa, Kyle and Maria follow until only Liz is still holding on to him.
“Don’t worry, I’m here to stay this time,” he whispers in her ear. Which must be the correct thing to say as she moves away from him right after, her eyes filled with happy tears.
“You better,” she replies. A part of him wants to keep them all there, close after two years of hearing their voices and grainy pictures through facetime when time zones lined up. There will be time to reconnect with everyone the way he wants later, the way he has been hoping to for a long time. But as he turns to look at Michael, he knows all of that will have to wait. Because looking at Michael, jeans, dirty t-shirt, boots and black cowboy hat on his head takes his breath away. He knows that he wants Michael more than he needs to reconnect with everyone right now, texts, phone calls and grainy images is never enough when it comes to Michael.
The distance between them all of a sudden becomes too much, he needs his nearness. He yearns to hold him in his arms, to smell the scent of oil, sweat and sunshine that is so typically Michael. And Michael is looking back at him, his gaze filled with the same longing to be near Alex knows is showing in his own eyes.
He’s aware of everyone else leaving in his peripheral vision, he’s aware of the catcalls and laughter in his ears as they do. But he only has eyes for Michael now. The dream of him is so close, he can’t wait any more. And like he’s done a million times before, before he has inevitably walked away, he walks closer to Michael who welcomes him with open arms. He lifts his hands to run them through Michael’s curls, lovingly tugging them as Michael wraps his arms around him and holds him close. They both know that this time he isn’t walking away, he’s here to stay.
He can’t help but smile as he snuggles into Michael’s arms, his nose deep in the crook of his neck so he can smell him. But he smiles even wider when he hears the words Michael whispers in his ear.
“You don’t need to dream of the only thing anymore. I’m right here.”
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Relationships: Michael Guerin/Alex Manes, Max Evans & Michael Guerin
Characters: Alex Manes, Michael Guerin, Max Evans, Liz Ortecho
Additional Tags: Canon Compliant, body swap via alien shenanigans, Crash Fest 2019, Roswellprompts
Summary:
alex turns up at the airstream to end months of indecision between himself and michael. the situation turns awkward when he finds out what kind of trouble michael and max have gotten themselves into.
this is my entry for the crash fest exchange, organised by @roswellprompts, and a gift for @manesguerin! the prompt for this baby was: "michael and max body swap comedy. bonus points for awkward malex content cuz alex keeps getting confused". it ended up being heavy on the malex, but i hope there's enough in here to give you a laugh!
written for @audreyblanche for @roswellprompts‘s Crash Fest 2019! Prompts were Jenna/Maria and tropey Malex au... I hope I delivered.
The sun glared off the still sea on the day that Captain Maria DeLuca watched her family leave. The sky was cloudless, a contrast to the storm of emotions on the deck. Guerin, at the helm, refused to meet anyone’s eye, too angry and too scared and too heartbroken to watch as Alex Manes slipped into the rowboat and made his way back to his father. Alex too refused to meet anyone’s eyes as he lowered the boat. Maria watched it all, stoic in the face of this heartbreak. Another member of her family slipped away- away from the ship that was their home, away from their real family.
She had already watched Liz leave, to the arms of a navy man and a chance at adventure and discovery. She couldn’t begrudge her that dream, the chance to seek out knowledge, to see something beyond the sea and the few safe harbors that allowed them entry. Maria loved the sea with her heart, had since Mimi first set sail away from the land that hand tried to shackle her, but she knew that not everyone shared that love. She knew Liz didn’t. Liz loved her books on the sciences, biology and chemistry and all the things that England would never allow a woman from a family such as hers to study. She had found a man who loved that about her, who loved everything about her. Maria would never keep her from that.
Maria wished she could keep Alex from this. She watched as Alex released the rope, to start the pulley to lower himself into the water. She walked across the deck, footsteps heavier than she would ever dare if the sea weren’t so still.
“You don’t have to do this Alex,” she said, voice harsh with desperation. “We will fight. You do not have to return to him.”
Alex couldn’t even manage his usual smirk, eyebrows furrowed as he tried to hide his on-coming tears. His eyes flickered to the helm, to Michael, before they quickly returned to Maria’s face.
“I know what he’s capable of, Captain. He will not stop until he sees us burn; or, until he gets me. I will protect my family, the same as you would protect me. This is for the best.”
“I already lost one member of my family Alex, please don’t make me lose another.”
This time Alex managed a small, sad smile as the tears finally fell. “We’re family Maria, we’ll always return to one another. One way or another. I promise. Please, take care of yourself. Take care of Michael and Rosa. They will need you, as their friend and their captain.”
“I love you. And if you ever get the chance…”
“I’m a pirate DeLuca, I know when to use a sword.”
“Good,” she replied before she kissed his cheek and stepped back.
She stayed by the side of the boat until Alex hit the water and started to row to the ship well outside the range of their cannons. Neither side trusted the other not to fire. She walked over to where Guerin was huddled, still trying to hide his pain. Rosa was already by his side, small yet powerful as she wrapped her arms around his shaking form.
Maria joined them, allowing her crew to see this single moment of pain. She wrapped both Guerin and Rosa in her arms and rocked them, gentle as the calm before the storm. Whatever came after, they would weather it, as they always did, together. She disentangled herself from their arms and opened her spyglass. She watched as her brother in all but blood neared the opposing ship. It was a merchant ship, allegedly, their hull was full of iron and gunpowder. Privateers paid by Admiral Jesse Manes to retrieve a single piece of treasure- his wayward son who had to be punished for his crimes.
As she watched, she listened as Rosa tried to console Guerin, tried to say that his heart would heal, he would love again. Maria doubted it. So, it seemed, did Guerin.
“There is only one man I will ever love Rosa, and I just watched him leave forever.”
“You don’t know it’s forever. Besides, what about a woman to love Mikey?”
He laughed a quiet sob into Rosa’s hair. Guerin didn’t have to answer, they all knew the truth. There was only one woman any of them would ever love truly. She had their heart firmly in her salty grasp.
Alex climbed the ladder thrown over the side of the boat, helped over the rails by a thin blonde woman, curled hair pulled back barely hidden by her hat. The captain of The Aphrodite was known to Maria, but never before had their paths crossed.
It was unfortunate for Captain Jenna Cameron that she made an enemy the day she struck a deal with Jesse Manes.
A/N: for the Crashfest exchange at @roswellprompts, I got @queersirius‘s prompt of ‘anything revolving around the liz/maria/alex friendship. I ... may have gone a bit overboard in my excitement. this fic has been a true labor of love (emphasis on the labor because good gracious, the timeline for this show is NOT EASY TO FOLLOW) but I’m excited to share it. Millie, I hope it’s at least a little like what you wanted, & that you enjoy! You deserve all sorts of wonderful things for the fabulous contributions you make to this fandom -- your rec list & your fics are things that we all look forward to.
as usual, thanks to @soberqueerinthewild for being a second pair of eyes, putting up with my whining when i got lost in the timeline & my own head. additional thanks to @hannah-writes for letting me talk out some of my frustration & reminding me that i have, actually, finished a fic before, haha.
September, 1997:
Alex’s family moves to Roswell, New Mexico -- or back to Roswell, as his father is so fond of repeating, because that’s where the Manes men belong -- when he’s seven and going into the third grade. He’s lived here before, even in the same house, but nothing feels the same without his mom. There’s no home without her, and despite the boys all being packed in, two to a room, the place feels empty. And it is, at least of all the things that matter. There’s no affection anymore, except maybe when Harlan gets leave and comes home to see his brothers. Jesse Manes spends most of his time away from the house, usually with Jim Valenti or another man who whispers with him in corners and stops talking quickly when Alex walks into the room. It’s weird, but Alex is seven, and all he cares about is that his mom is gone, and he misses her.
School has already been in session for three weeks, and he hates being the new kid. He hates the way the other students all stare at him, especially in these small towns, and even avoids Kyle Valenti’s hopeful smile when he walks in. They were friends, once, before the Manes’ left Roswell for Jesse’s last station, and Sheriff Valenti’s made it clear that his son is happy to have Alex back. But Alex isn’t the same kid anymore, even at seven. In the short three years he’s been getting a public education, he has been to no less than five different schools. He’s given up trying to make friends, because what good is it when he’s just going to be somewhere else in a few months -- and even if he doesn’t, what’s to stop the other person from leaving? If his own mom could take off without telling anyone, anyone can, and Alex isn’t going to give them the chance. So he doesn’t smile, doesn’t answer any of the questions from the other kids about what it’s like to have a dad in the military, and does the work that’s put in front of him when the teacher insists.
The first two weeks are the worst. Alex ignores his classmates and his teacher, when he can get away with it, and glares at anyone who tries to penetrate the personal space boundaries he’s careful to cultivate. He mumbles answers to his brother Flint when he asks how school is going, and stands, spine rigid, while his father screams at him about responsibility, maturity, and his legacy when Alex kicks a boy on the playground for calling him a name and the principal calls home. Some part of him knows he should be ashamed of himself, but at least his father is looking at him while he’s yelling -- and any attention is the good kind, when his mom’s not around and he’s so lonely he wants to cry with the weight of it. He’s tired of being the easy-going youngest brother, he’s tired of moving and losing his friends, and he wants his mom back. How’s he supposed to just pretend everything’s fine when she’s not there?
Jesse Manes doesn’t see the sadness Alex is hiding, and if his brothers do, they don’t make any effort to help. Alex knows they’re all missing their mother in their own ways, but even so, he wishes just one of them would actually say something -- even just her name. He’s the only one who does, probably because he’s the only one who hasn’t yet seen what his father is capable of. That’s how he learns, though. He calls for her at night, in tears, and his father’s only response is to backhand him.
It’s two days later, when Alex is sitting alone on the playground under the jungle gym, that he meets Maria DeLuca for the first time. He’s expecting yet another question about living overseas, or what it’s like to have a dad who’s a war hero, but Maria isn’t anything like what he’d come to expect from the kids in his class. Instead, she plops down next to him, her bright pink pants getting covered in dirt and woodchips from the playground, and points up at the sky. “Did you know that those fluffy clouds are called cumulus clouds?” she asks, squinting against the sunlight. “I think that’s stupid, because they look like marshmallows, but Mr. Fintz keeps taking points off of my science tests when I write that they’re marshmallow clouds.”
Alex stares at the girl for a long moment, but his arms unfold from across his chest, and he tips his head back to look up at the clouds in question. She’s right -- they do sort of look like marshmallows, now that he’s thinking about it. “I don’t think science is supposed to make sense,” he says finally, because the girl doesn’t look like she’s going anywhere, and being mean to her when she’s only being nice would make him feel bad. “Otherwise, why would Ms. Simmons do that stupid dance to teach the water cycle?”
The girl laughs at that, and nods her agreement. It makes the braids on top of her head rattle, the tiny, multi-colored barrettes at the end of each one striking each other. “I’m Maria DeLuca,” she tells him proudly, her chin raised a little, like she’s expecting a smart comment about her name. Something deep inside of Alex recognizes a kindred spirit -- Maria is used to being the outsider, used to people teasing her or instantly recognizing her family name, just like him.
So Alex just nods, and even smiles a little. “I’m Alex,” he tells her, and it feels strange, to be nice to someone after so long of acting belligerently at school, but the grin on Maria’s face makes it easier.
“I already know who you are, Alex Manes,” she says, though he hasn’t said a word about his last name, and her knowledge takes him a little by surprise. “And no, no one told me. I’m a psychic. I just know things, sometimes.” Again, there’s that slight lift of her chin, a hint of challenge gleaming in her dark eyes, and Alex swallows the laugh that had been threatening at her proclamation.
“You just … know things,” he repeats slowly, trying not to sound too skeptical. Alex likes to read about people with psychic powers, like Professor X in his favorite Marvel comics, but he also knows that real people can’t read minds, and Maria is as real as he is. “Like my name?”
Maria nods seriously. “Yeah. And that you’re sad, and you need a friend who you can’t scare off.”
Alex isn’t sure if this girl is making fun of him or not. It’s hard to tell, when she’s so smiley and nice, but the things she’s saying don’t make any sense. “I’m not sad,” he insists too quickly, his gaze darting to the other students playing just a few feet away who might overhear. “I’m not!”
“Sitting by you makes me sad,” Maria tells him quietly, and takes his hand before Alex can even think of pulling away. It’s the first time someone’s touched him with good intentions in a long time, and he can’t help but stare down at that hand in his, trying to figure out why this girl is so determined to talk to him. She’s not even in his class, she doesn’t really know him -- but she’s right, about the way he feels and that he’s lonely, and could use a friend. He’s been thinking that way for a couple of days now, but he’s done enough damage with his classmates that none of them are options. Alex doesn’t believe her psychic story; maybe she heard someone talk about his mom leaving? Or maybe she knows that he’s sad because she feels the same way? But either way, Alex is pretty sure he doesn’t want to hurt her feelings enough for her to give up on him.
“My mom left,” he tells her in a hushed voice, still looking at their entangled hands. “And I miss her.”
The rest, about his brothers and his father, and all of the new schools, will come out later -- it’s impossible to hide for the sort of friend that Maria becomes, the friend that’s never content until she knows of his hurts and does her best to help heal them. Alex isn’t psychic. He doesn’t know, yet, that Maria will become the first person after his mother who feels like home, and he doesn’t realize that letting Maria DeLuca into his life means that he will never face another day of school without an unwavering ally at his side.
Right then, all Alex knows is that holding Maria’s hand makes him feel a lot less alone.
November, 2006:
Liz Ortecho explodes into Alex’s life like an earthquake, shaking the foundations of his rapidly shrinking world in the best way possible. Also like an earthquake, it’s almost inevitable; they’ve circled each other for years, sharing friends and classes but never quite connecting — until one day, after the news that Alex isn’t into girls has spread around the school like wildfire, Maria DeLuca grabs Alex’s wrist and drags him to a table in the cafeteria where the Ortecho sisters are waiting. She’s the only friend that hadn’t turned into a tormentor that year, aside from a few who are more acquaintances than anything, and Alex is ashamed to admit that he’s been clinging to her as his world shifts around him.
There’s no difference in the way Maria treats him, though. They bitch about classes and teachers together and spend their study halls outside in the grass, listening to music on their MP3 players and taking turns introducing each other to new songs. Maria is his staunchest defender until Alex gets his feet under him and starts fighting back against the jocks who seem determined to make his life hell, and Maria’s also the one who buys him his first eyeliner pencil. Sometimes, she drags him to her house after school and they blast My Chemical Romance at top volume and eat junk food until her mom comes home, and then they eat at the table like Alex imagines a real family does. So really, the least Alex can do is eat lunch with Maria’s other friends, who she’s definitely been neglecting in his favor, lately. It doesn’t matter that he doesn’t know how to take Rosa and her narrow-eyed glares, or Liz and her blunt honesty and wide smiles.
As they approach, Rosa glances up from her lunch tray wearing her usual dark eyeliner and sneer, all but daring anyone else to sit down at the table, and Alex feels his own rebellious spirit rise at the challenge. But as soon as the older girl spots Maria, her face is totally transformed, a genuine, wide smile replacing the scowl in such a way that she’s barely recognizable. Alex blinks in surprise as Maria tugs at a lock of the older girl’s hair and slides onto the bench next to her.
“Where you been, DeLuca?” Rosa asks, sliding something wrapped in a tortilla toward Maria on a napkin. “I should refuse to share my lunch with you until you ‘fess up to ditching me for a guy.” She looks pointedly at Alex, though he’s pretty sure there’s no actual malice in the expression. Still, his grip shifts awkwardly on the strap of his backpack, and he has to force himself not to snap something back defensively. It’s habit, at this point, to step on the people who are trying to do the same to him — but Maria wouldn’t have insisted they come over here if she thought they’d have a problem with him, and Alex isn’t so caught up in his own head that he can’t realize he’s not exactly giving anyone a fair chance, lately.
Liz snorts, and elbows her sister. “Yeah, you’re so nice — I can’t imagine why she’d want to find different friends,” she quips, smiling sunnily up at Alex. “Ignore Rosa,” she tells him, nodding to the empty spot on the bench beside her. “She’s just jealous because you got Mama DeLuca’s ribs the other night while we had to fend for ourselves at home.” He’s never noticed how sunny Liz’s smile is, or how easy it is to return, but he does this time.
“Fair,” Alex replies, lifting his chin. “Missing out on Mimi’s cooking is a pretty good reason to be pissed.” He doesn’t know what to say, doesn’t have a witty retort or a sarcastic quip at the ready, but Liz just nods emphatically, like she hadn’t expected anything else.
“Right? Papa’s a great cook, but we end up eating at the diner more often than anything else.” She shakes her head in distaste, and gestures at the seat next to her again, this time more firmly. “Maria says you’re into music, and I’m like, desperately in need of some new recommendations. Everything Rosa gives me is depressing.”
“Ai! Ungrateful brat,” Rosa growls at her sister, and tosses a wadded up napkin at her face. “It’s not my fault you’ve got shit taste in music. I’ve tried to educate you.” Liz makes a face and pitches the napkin back across the table, and Alex blinks at the affectionate teasing. He and his brothers certainly never interact like that -- but then again, he’s pretty sure his brothers share their father’s beliefs that Alex is shaming them all by existing.
“Alex, come on,” Maria prompts impatiently, even as she grabs the napkin out of midair before it strikes Liz’s forehead a second time. Rosa complains, but Maria is unaffected as she looks up at Alex and orders him to, “Sit down.” She’s already pulling her paper-bag lunch from her backpack and laughing at Rosa’s muttered comments about the jackass in her Spanish class, clearly expecting Alex to join in. Maria’s been his closest friend for years, and maybe his only one since Kyle Valenti realized that being a bully gained him more popularity than being friends with ‘the gay kid,’ and he loves her — but Maria’s never felt awkward or uncomfortable in a social situation in her life. In her world, there’s no such thing as self-consciousness. She says what’s on her mind, plows into every situation with confidence and that little tilt of her head, and somehow comes out on top of everything.
Alex has never been that lucky, but that day, when Liz Ortecho hands him one of Arturo Ortecho’s famous tamales and begins quizzing him on his knowledge of her favorite bands while Rosa interjects with disparaging comments about his choices and insists he try some of her recommendations, the shifting earth beneath his feet seems just a little steadier. He doesn’t understand it, and doesn’t try to, but Alex leaves the cafeteria that day certain that the tiny family he’s been building for himself has expanded by two.
June, 2008:
Alex climbs the stairs to the roof above the Crashdown slowly, unsure of the situation he’s about to enter. The text he got from Maria had been brief, ordering him to get there with no real explanation, but he can read between the lines pretty well, considering the circumstances. It’s been less than forty-eight hours since Maria called him, her voice breathy with suppressed sobs, and told him about the car accident and the fact that their tiny, patchwork family was down a founding member. He’s been to the Ortecho apartment twice, but Liz hadn’t wanted to see anyone -- in her usual fashion, she’d ignored her own feelings in favor of focusing on her father, on helping in the diner, in making funeral arrangements, and when asked, she’d insisted she was fine. Alex knows better, and so does Maria, but they’d let her get away with it.
Tonight, though, feels different.
The humid summer air breaks over his face as soon as Alex opens the door to the roof, and he has to stop for a moment as memories hit him at the sight of their familiar hang-out. Over there, under the sign, is where Rosa’d given him his first joint and laughed as he inhaled and promptly choked on the smoke. To his left, near the brick barrier at the edge of the rooftop, is where Maria had insisted he close his eyes and let her do his eyeliner, just to see what it would look like. They’d spent nights on the roof in sleeping bags when Alex didn’t want to go home, looking up at the stars and talking about anything and everything, from boys to disappointments to absent parents, and there’s a moment in which Alex isn’t sure that he can do this. He wants to be there for Liz, and for Maria, who’d loved Rosa like her own sister, but his own grief is heavy in his chest, and he doesn’t know if he can figure out how to hide it enough to support them
He was stupid to have worried. As soon as he’s out in the open, Maria catches sight of him and drags him over to the cement blocks that hold the sign up where they’ve most often congregated. Liz is lying out on the top of the roof, wearing a pair of sweatpants and an old Third Eye Blind t-shirt that he knows belonged to Rosa. She’s staring straight up at the sky, and doesn’t so much as look in Alex’s direction, even when he stops at her side to look down at her. She’s pale, and her eyes are red-rimmed, but overall she looks much the same as she ever has -- which seems wrong, somehow. The world is completely different without Rosa in it, they’re all different without her, and it seems like their appearances should reflect the monumental internal shift. But Liz, like Alex and Maria, looks the same as always.
“Hi,” Liz says quietly, and pushes herself up into a sitting position. Alex flops down beside her and wraps an arm around her shoulders without saying anything, pulling her into his chest for a proper hug before she can speak again. For a startled minute, she says nothing -- just freezes under the affection, and Alex nearly pulls back. Maria catches his eye over Liz’s shoulder, grief making her look older than the eighteen years she’d so recently celebrated, and shakes her head, encouraging him to hold on. She’s right, as usual -- it only takes another second for Liz to turn into him and hide her face, her fingers knotting in the thin cotton of his t-shirt.
“Sorry for ignoring you when you came over, earlier,” she says to his chest. “I just -- I don’t --” Liz’s voice breaks, and she stops trying to explain in favor of swallowing down the sob Alex can hear rising in her throat.
His heart aches, and his own eyes burn as she finally gives into the inevitable. Tears soak through the fabric of Alex’s shirt, and small, quiet sobs shake Liz’s slender frame. Alex glances helplessly at Maria before bending and pressing a chaste kiss to the crown of Liz’s head, hugging her tightly all the while. “I understood,” he promises, and holds out an arm for Maria to join the hug on Liz’s other side. The other young woman comes easily, moisture glistening on her cheeks, and they keep Liz safely engulfed in the warmth of two people who love her, who miss Rosa nearly as much as she does. Alex knows that he wished for something like this, when his mom left, and he hopes that he can offer the kind of comfort to Liz that no one was there to give him back then.
“No,” Maria says, long moments and an indeterminable amount of tears later. She sniffs and wipes away the thin lines of melted mascara on her cheeks before pulling away from the cocoon they’d formed around Liz. “This is not what Rosa would want from us, guys. This isn’t how she did things. When she was sad, she didn’t sit around and cry, and if she could see us now, she’d be telling us exactly how pathetic we are.”
Alex readjusts his grip on Liz so they can both watch as Maria moves gracefully across the roof to the short, brick wall that frames the space. Before a question even forms in Alex’s mind, Maria bends down and pulls one of the bricks out of place with the growl of stone on stone. Liz huffs, and when Alex glances down, he sees that she’s smiling sadly as the hiding place is revealed. “You know what we did, the last time your mom took off, Liz? While you were with Kyle, pretending you were fine?” Maria pulls a baggy from the gap the loose brick left, and smirks as she waves it at them to show the two, poorly-rolled joints inside.
“Of course you know where she kept the good stuff,” Liz says with a roll of overbright eyes, and pats Alex’s chest gently before pulling away to join Maria by the wall. “She never let me touch that, not unless it was a really special occasion. She said she didn’t want me to make her mistakes. That I was supposed to be better.”
Her shoulders slump, a bit, and Alex takes that as his cue to join them and insinuate himself in the middle. He drops an arm over each of their shoulders as Maria fishes the joints from the baggy and lights them with a matchbook that had apparently also been stowed behind the loose brick. “Rosa and her hiding places,” Liz finishes with a bemused shake of her head, sadness creeping back into her voice. This time, it’s the sort of grief that’s almost fond, with the promise of one day being able to think of her sister without dissolving into tears or anger with her poor choices, and Alex is proud of Liz for moving forward, for taking that step even though he knows it hurts.
“But if we’re trying to channel our inner Rosa, we need music, too,” Liz says, surprising both of her friends. She’s been silent for most of the last few days, aside from the sobs she’d fought so hard to stifle, but Alex is selfishly relieved she’s coming back to herself. There’s nothing more awful than a still and silent Liz Ortecho, not when she’s meant to be one of the most dynamic people in whatever room she enters. He wouldn’t recognize her without that inner fire that makes her so special, and seeing a bit of it sparkle in her eyes -- a little subdued, but definitely there -- makes it easier to believe that they’re all going to be okay.
A half an hour later finds them all high, with the joint between Maria’s fingers burning low, potent smoke curling from the ends and rising up into the night. At some point, someone had crawled through Liz’s bedroom window and grabbed her boombox, and the Black Crowes were crooning Mrs. Potter’s Lullaby for the fourth or fifth time in a row, because, according to Liz, “I can’t cry during this song. I can’t. Rosa’d never forgive me if I ruined it like that.”
So instead of crying, the three of them dance, hands thrown carelessly in the air and bodies twisting around, Liz’s hair flying around and smacking Alex in the face when he gets too close with his purposefully spastic movements. They’re all graceless with the influence of pot and the sudden lightness of spirit that comes with good music and good friends after escaping, if only temporarily, from beneath a cloud of grief. Alex knows that tomorrow, when they’re all dressed up in their funeral black, standing in front of Rosa’s closed casket, this will all be just a fond memory -- there will be more tears, more fighting, more horrible accusations tossed at the Ortechos by members of the town. They’ll be back to drowning in their grief, and Liz will return to raging against her sister for doing something as stupid as driving under the influence and leaving her alone in the world.
And of course, Alex doesn’t realize yet that this will be the last time he gets to spend any real time with Liz, that he’s lost her almost as completely as he’s lost Rosa, thanks to alien interference and his own bad decisions -- but for that night, Alex allows himself to inhale from the joint in Maria’s hand and lets the music and his friends’ hysterically-tinged laughter carry him away from reality.
March, 2017:
It’s Maria who shows up in Germany after Alex is injured.
He’s been better at keeping in touch with her than others from Roswell, but it’s still been at least four months since they’ve even exchanged a text. He saw her on his last, disastrous trip home to Roswell, but only for an hour before he couldn’t resist Michael Guerin’s unintentional siren’s call and wound up spending the next three days sweaty and sated in the single-bed of his trailer. In retrospect, there’s a good chance Alex wouldn’t have fucked everything up between them quite so spectacularly if he’d just stayed with Maria -- and maybe, he wouldn’t feel guilty now for neglecting their friendship, when she’d clearly dropped everything to fly halfway across the world to be with him when he needed a friend. Alex doubts he could be that forgiving in her position.
But he should know better, Alex thinks. Maria DeLuca is a one-woman army and always has been, and she’s never given him a reason to doubt her before. She and her mother have been Alex’s family since his own began to realize he was never going to fall in line with them -- and no matter what previous experiences have taught Alex, no matter how many people abandon him or walk away, Maria always shows up when he needs her.
Despite knowing all of this, it still catches Alex by surprise when he wakes up in the hospital bed to find dark fingers entwined with his own eerily pale digits. The nurses have told him at least once a day that his emergency contacts have been notified of both his condition and his location, but Alex’s drug-fogged brain hadn’t yet managed to connect that information with Maria. He remembers writing her name on the enlistment form all those years ago, since the only thing he can imagine worse than being injured in the line of duty is waking up to find Jesse Manes standing over him while he’s weak and vulnerable, but it had never even occurred to him that Maria would actually come when she got that call. Not when he knows damn well that she’s never set foot on a plane in her life, and that she’s got her own life to live thousands of miles away. It’s more than he would ever expected of her -- and yet.
For a moment, Alex wonders if the doctor messed up the dosage of his meds. Maybe that soft, familiar presence and the comforting grip on his hand is a hallucination? He blinks slowly, once, twice, and lifts his gaze from the sparkling rings at her knuckles to find her face, and inhales sharply around the nasal cannula when he realizes that this is real, that Maria really is sitting in a hospital room in Zurich with him, and Alex is utterly overwhelmed with relief as the feeling of warmth and support that suffuses him from just that one look.
There are tear-tracks on Maria’s cheeks, glistening under the fluorescent hospital lighting, and her usual curls are matted down in places, a sure sign that she’s just stepped off a plane, but Alex thinks she’s never looked better. It’s not the first time he’s woken up; he’d heard about his condition from the doctor two days prior, and he’s been trying to deal with it all on his own. There’s a long road ahead of him -- even after he’s permitted to leave this hospital, he’ll just be going to another Stateside for healing and therapy, and he’s heard from at least three medical professionals that everything will be a little bit easier with a support system. Until now, he’s just laughed scornfully, thinking of the way his so-called family has treated him, and the fact that the only person he’s ever felt genuinely, completely safe with is likely long-gone, wanting nothing to do with Alex after the way he left things during his last trip to Roswell.
But having Maria on his side has always been more than enough, and this is no exception. Already, his new reality is feels just a little less oppressive, and he can breathe without wondering if the next inhalation would be what sent him into another round of panic. He grips her fingers tightly and gives his best attempt at a smile, though it’s ruined when he winces at the tug of the IV in the back of his hand.
“Hi,” he manages, frustrated by the ache in his throat that stops him from speaking above a whisper. The doctors assure him it’s just a temporary effect of intubation, but Alex is getting pretty damn tired of it. It’s bad enough that he can’t even get out of bed to piss -- it’d be nice to have full control of at least one of his faculties.
Maria’s laugh is a short, nearly soundless thing. “Hi,” she returns, and the fingers around his hand tighten briefly. “You know, this isn’t how I imagined the next time I saw you.” The exhaustion in her voice is obvious, and Alex has to ignore the niggle of guilt at being the reason for it. “I was going to read you the riot act for that disappearing act you pulled, last time you were home, and I was going to make you feel so bad about not calling me for months that you felt like you had to pay for the pizza and beer while we caught up.”
“Can’t say it’s how I wanted it to go, either,” he tells her frankly, rolling his head to search for a clock along the wall. It’s 0300, and even with the time difference between Zurich and Roswell, Maria’s had a long damn day. “And you can still yell at me, if you want.” Alex knows that he deserves it -- and as long as it keeps Maria there, talking to him, he doesn’t care. The last couple of days have been hard, not just because of his physical condition, but because he’s been alone. He’s gotten used to having the guys in his squad around him twenty-four/seven, and has never liked the feeling of isolation. Laid up in the hospital alone with overly professional doctors and nurses with only his spiralling thoughts to keep him company is a recipe for disaster, one that’s been staved off by Maria’s appearance. So, yeah. If she wants to rip him a new one, he’ll sit there and take it.
Her answering chuckle is humorless. “If I’m going to yell at you now, it’s going to be because you scared me to death, this time.” There’s a crack in the words, and Alex wants to close his eyes as he catches sight of the tears sliding down Maria’s cheeks. “You could have died, Alex. The doctor I talked to told me at least twice how lucky you were to be found so quickly, and that all you lost was --”
“Please don’t,” Alex says frantically, cutting her off. He’s squeezing her fingers and looking up, over her head, both to avoid watching as she cries and to hide his own reaction to her words. He’s still not ready to address the elephant in the room; everything he’s been feeling has been firmly shoved down and bottled up in his chest to be dealt with when he’s somewhere safe to fall apart -- but Maria’s been his safe place for long years of his life, and her presence is enough to make the wall between himself and his emotions feels pretty damn flimsy. He’s too used to trusting her with everything, too used to the comfort and calm she brings to his life, even after months with no contact.
Part of him wants to tell her, to let his fears and horror pour out onto her sturdy shoulder -- but first, he knows he’d have to say the words. He’d have to admit that he hasn’t yet been able to muster the courage to lift the sterile, white blanket to look at the space where one of his feet should be. He’d have to say aloud that he can still feel something that’s no longer attached to his body. Fuck, Alex would have to tell his best friend, one of the few people left that Alex loves, that he’d crawled to safety after the explosion knocked out his humvee, and left three others behind to die. The very idea of it is enough to make him tremble, and Alex has to swallow down a wave of nausea that would likely bring a nurse and all manner of distraction. That might have been a good thing, if he didn’t think Maria would be forced to leave the room.
“Hey,” Maria says softly, drawing his attention back to her. “It’s okay, Alex. I’m not going to make you talk about anything you’re not ready for.”
There’s a moment of silence, save the steady beeping of the medical equipment. Maria’s watching him, her eyes glassy and unfocused in a way that means she’s trying to get a read on him. He’s called it her ‘psychic face’ before, and followed it up with a teasing laugh, but it’s true that such an expression usually leads to Maria attempting to convince him to talk about something. But tonight, she only smiles again and stands up from her chair. Alex can’t help the instinctive rush of panic; the monitors on his heart beep faster and louder, showcasing his fear in an embarrassingly obvious fashion, but he can’t help it. There’s no reason to think Maria’s come all this way just to leave after a few minutes, but Alex’s desperation to avoid being alone overrides his common sense.
Gentle fingers push hair back from his forehead, and Alex takes a long, slow breath. “Just let me move my chair a little closer,” Maria tells him, and does exactly that. Fingers resume stroking through his hair soothingly, and the relief that floods his chest is downright shameful. “Hm,” Maria muses, after a few peaceful moments in which Alex manages to relax a bit. “I should tell you how lucky you are that I love you, because airplanes? So not my style, Manes. I don’t know how you do it -- screaming kids, couples hooking up in the tiny bathroom, people dumping drinks in your lap -- I’m pretty sure that if there really is a hell, we’re all going to be strapped in to tiny airplane seats surrounded by idiots for all eternity.”
She shudders in mock horror, and Alex manages a tired smile. The morphine pump activated at some point in the last few minutes, and while the pain he’s feeling has decreased, he also feels a little floaty and detached from reality. It’s not entirely a good feeling; reality is grounding. It’s Maria’s smile and her teasing voice, the warmth of her hand on his. It’s the solid feeling of the bed beneath him and the knowledge that he’s no longer in a war zone, that he’s as safe as anyone can be in a hospital. But in his mind, in that hazy place the drugs drag him to, he’s still trapped in a humvee about to explode, with the stricken faces of fallen friends staring him down.
“You get used to it,” Alex says aloud, shifting a little under the blankets to make himself more comfortable -- and to remind himself exactly where he is. “Tell me about Roswell. How’s Mimi?” It’s a blatant subject change, but a safe one. Maria launches into tales from home easily, growing more animated as she talks about the latest idiocies of Racist Hank and his cohorts, and the people who come into the bar. There’s a strange quality to her voice when she tells a story about Mimi and a psychic reading gone wrong, something almost melancholy, but it’s gone before Alex can ask. Through all of it, Maria holds Alex’s hand, and never once looks like she’d consider letting go. It’s an additional, all-important anchor, one Alex appreciates more than he’ll ever be able to explain, just like her embellished stories from home.
“But then, Michael Guerin -- you remember him from high school, right? He grew up kind’ve hot, but the attitude is a total turn-off. But anyway, he comes in swinging, and takes Hank down before Long can even blink. It was actually awesome, but if you tell anyone I said that I’ll deny it.”
Until that point, Alex has been half listening, half letting Maria’s familiar voice lull him to sleep, but the mention of Michael has him wide awake and on edge again in a moment. He blames it on the pain meds, but Alex has been thinking of him since he woke up in the hospital. Maria means safety to Alex; she’s a sanctuary in a world full of people who seem to hate him for no reason. But Michael is the one person who has ever physically protected Alex -- the only one who he’s been able to be wholly vulnerable with and could trust to watch his back. And in this hospital with all of his weaknesses put on display for anyone who cares to look through the window, Alex can’t help but wish Guerin was here to offer that refuge again. It’s undeniably selfish, considering how he’d left things between them, but Alex can’t help himself.
“Should I be leaving to let you get some sleep?” Maria asks, thankfully interrupting Alex’s thoughts. “It’s almost five in the morning, and I’m talking your ear off about bar brawls while you’re supposed to be healing.”
Alex shakes his head quickly, and regrets it when the room spins. “No,” he answers, as firmly as he can manage. “I might fall asleep on you, but -- if you can stay, I’d really appreciate it.” Maria’s always been too good at figuring him out. He imagines he can see her reading his mind, flipping through the anxiety and loneliness there like she would the pages of a magazine. “It helps,” he admits a moment later, because there’s no point in trying to act tough, now. “To have you here. I’ve been going crazy all day, and I just --”
“You don’t need to explain, Alex. What else are friends for?” Maria interrupts, and slings her legs over one arm of her chair to recline back against the other in a show of exaggerated comfort. “I’ve slept in worse places than this, believe me. Would you believe Chad made me go camping? I spend the whole damn night with a giant rock digging into my kidney. This is practically the Taj Mahal in comparison.” From her new position, Maria reaches out to recapture Alex’s hand in silent assurance, and once again, he finds himself wondering what he did to deserve a friend like Maria DeLuca.
“Love you,” she yawns, as a passing nurse pops her head in to turn off the lights. Her eyes are already closing, her voice quiet as she begins to sink into sleep.
The simple declaration makes Alex’s eyes sting, and he’s grateful Maria isn’t looking at him while he pulls himself together. It takes a moment, fighting against the lump in his throat and the incessant pull of medication-induced exhaustion, but finally he answers: “Love you, too.”
February, 2019:
Liz is the first one to catch sight of him when he walks into the Crashdown, and Alex grins at her gobsmacked look as she takes in the leather jacket tossed casually over the discounted band t-shirt he picked up from the local department store on a whim. He’s still wearing well-tailored jeans and his standard-issue boots, but Alex knows that this one little wardrobe change makes a big difference in his overall appearance. The obvious, and then the more subtle -- the way he feels just a little more at home in his own skin, and the confidence it gives him to stand just a little bit taller when he’s comfortable. There’s still a lot of work to do on that front; Alex isn’t sure he’s ever going to be utterly content in his own body now that he’s missing a piece of it, but reclaiming his identity from the military is, in his mind, a damn good place to start.
“I miss the eyeliner,” Liz tells him, head cocked thoughtfully to one side, as he weaves his way through the crowd around the counter. If her smile is thinner than it used to be, Alex understands. She’s mourning Max Evans even as she celebrates Rosa’s resurrection, and all anyone else can do is be there to support her -- and maybe offer a little assistance in creating a fake identity for an eighteen year old girl who’s been legally declared deceased for the last decade. “Otherwise, I totally approve of this 2000s flashback, as long as it’s sticking around.” Liz stretches up on her toes to hug him across the counter, and Alex returns the affection.
“I’m not officially at the end of my enlistment, so I’m stuck with regulation-issue for at least the next month, most of the time,” Alex replies with a one-shouldered shrug. In all honesty, he’s still not entirely sure that he’s ready to lose the uniform and the anonymity that comes from blending in with the crowd completely. It’s nice to step out of the Air Force Captain role once in a while and remind himself that he’s still human, but the thought of losing that fall-back permanently, especially considering everything else he’s lost lately, is overwhelming. And, quite frankly, terrifying. “But I’m off duty today, so I thought I’d --”
“See if you could remember how to dress yourself without Uncle Sam’s help?” Liz supplies with a wink, and slides a milkshake across the counter in front of an empty barstool. It’s obviously an invitation to sit and stay a while. They’re supposed to be spending some time together -- it’s one of the several ways Alex has begun insinuating himself in Liz’s life and attempting to stop her from working herself to death while she tries to hide from her grief and confusion. It’s harder than it sounds; already, Alex is forty-five minutes late to meet Liz, and he knows she was supposed to be off the clock at least an hour ago. It’s not unexpected, of course. When Liz can’t run from her problems, she hides from them in work instead, whether it be creating serum after serum to bring Max back in her makeshift lab, or working shifts in the diner like she’d always claimed to hate in high school.
Alex claims the empty barstool in front of the counter and sips at the milkshake, warming a little when he realizes it’s the same flavor he’s always ordered and enjoyed. “Hey, it’s harder than it sounds,” he argues half-heartedly. He and Liz are good friends, and they understand each others’ hurts more than other people can, but he knows she doesn’t get why playing with his fashion choices is so important to him, or why it’s so hard to face the upcoming end of his contract with the Air Force when he’s never really loved it, anyway. “And since I haven’t seen you without a lab coat or the antennae --” Alex looks pointedly at the headband in question, one eyebrow quirked. “-- in at least a week and a half, I don’t think you get to judge me.”
Liz makes a face at him and sweeps the antenna off her head with one hand, exasperation obvious in the short, jerky movement. “I’d argue, but considering I don’t remember the last time I put on a pair of jeans, I think you’re probably right.” She leans forward over the counter, propping her elbows on the surface and looks up at Alex, giving him an excellent view of the dark circles beneath her eyes, visible even through the meticulously-applied layers of concealer. To make matters worse, there’s a strain in the lines of her mouth and forehead that speak of long nights full of science and data collection rather than rest, and Alex finds himself wishing, once again, that any of the aliens in Roswell were capable of thinking before they act. Max Evans has a lot to answer for if they ever manage to resurrect him, and Alex will be waiting to make sure he knows it. Liz deserves better than this halflife of cautious hope and grief. She deserves more than frantic research and the stress of looking after her newly-resurrected sister. Liz should have the happiness that Max Evans promised by loving her, and Alex could punch the guy for thinking that sacrificing himself for Rosa would do anything but hurt.
“Kyle and Rosa went to Albuquerque for the weekend,” Liz tells him, and Alex may not be a psychic like Maria, or an alien like Isobel, but he knows her well enough to see the signs of guilty relief in her expression. “She hasn’t been sleeping well, and he thought getting her out of town and away from everything for a couple of days might help.” At first, Rosa had clung to Liz like a child to its mother. She wouldn’t even look at Kyle, who’d wanted nothing more than a chance at a relationship with the sister he never thought he’d get to have. But Rosa Ortecho is as resilient as her sister -- maybe more, if Alex is honest with himself -- and she’s taken the new world she’s been brought into mostly in stride. Nightmares from the trauma of her death aren’t surprising, nor is the fact that she’s been clinging to people she knew and trusted before her death. But it’s taken an obvious toll on Liz, both emotional and physical, and Alex is relieved that Kyle’s managed to convince Rosa that he can be trusted. For all their sakes.
“That’s great,” Alex enthuses. “What are you going to do with your weekend, then?” It’s not likely that Liz has plans outside of working or going to sit with Max’s body in that damned cave, but he can’t help but hope. The two of them are supposed to get dinner together tonight; maybe he can convince her to come stay at the cabin where he can keep an eye on her. Or knock her out until she gets a decent night’s rest -- Alex won’t pretend he hasn’t considered asking Kyle for a sedative in the past few months.
Three months has never seemed like a long period of time, except maybe during basic training, but it feels like years have passed since Liz lost Max -- since Alex lost Michael and Maria in one fell swoop. The two of them have drawn closer than ever in that time, both hurting from losses, but Alex has gotten better. He’s not mad at Maria or Michael any more, not really, and he’s starting to piece together a life. One that will remain after Alex can’t call himself an airman anymore, whether he’s got Guerin or Maria in his life or not.
Liz isn’t moving forward, and Alex doesn’t know how to help. It’s like an integral piece of her soul is locked in the pod with Max, and another piece of her is tightly bound to Rosa and her new life -- and the remaining parts just aren’t enough to keep her sane or happy.
“Nothing special. I haven’t gotten to visit the cave in a few days, and I need new samples, so I’ll probably spend most of my time in the lab.” Liz takes off her apron and drapes it over a hook and signals something to her father, who’s poking his head through the order window and speaking rapidly in Spanish that Alex can’t keep up with. He catches the equivalent of, ‘get some rest!’ and ‘no more shifts for you this weekend, mija,’ which tells him that he’s not the only one noticing that Liz has been spending entirely too much time punched in lately. That, at least, is gratifying.
“Come on, we can talk upstairs while I get dressed -- in real clothes,” she tells Alex with an ironic chuckle, and leads the way to the staircase that takes them to the small apartment the Ortechos have lived in since their arrival in Roswell. While they walk, Alex reminds himself that he’s not here to get frustrated with Liz’s coping mechanisms, or to scold her for being so careless with herself. He’s here to be a friend -- and no matter how much he wants to shake her, he needs to be patient.
The apartment above the Crashdown hasn’t changed at all since they were in high school. Arturo has clearly kept everything exactly the same for his daughter -- and now daughters -- and Alex can’t decide if that’s a positive thing or not. It explains a lot about Liz’s refusal to move forward after a tragedy, though; evidently, it’s genetic. The furniture is in the same configuration in the living room, the same Mexican-inspired decor on the walls, and walking into Liz and Rosa’s room is like taking a trip in the TARDIS to the late 90s. Rosa’s clothes are still lying all around the room, her band posters taped up on the wall in nearly the same spots, and Liz still has the same books on the bookshelf in the corner.
“I think I’m actually going to call Michael into work with me this weekend, if I can convince him,” Liz says from her position in front of the closet, wearing nothing but a bra and a pair of leggings as she studies her options. “He got arrested again last night, so he clearly needs to put his brain to work before he gets into trouble that Isobel can’t bail him out of.”
The words are matter-of-fact, and Alex appreciates that Liz has stopped trying to avoid mentioning Michael or Maria to him at all. Dancing around people so integral to her life, and once so involved in his own, is awkward and uncomfortable, and though it still causes a little pang of hurt in his chest to hear either of their names, Alex would much rather hear about how they’re doing. They may all be avoiding each other for now, but he’s never going to stop seeing either of them as family -- what kind of man would that make him? Do one thing to hurt him, make one mistake, and he’s done caring? He’s not his father, damn it. He’s just needed some time to heal, to let go of the hurt and anger that came with what felt like betrayal, and he’s had it. The fact that Liz recognizes that makes him love her all the more.
“He’s missing Max, too,” Alex guesses quietly, leaning heavily on one side of the doorway to Liz’s room. “I know they’re not as close as they used to be, but they’re still family. And Guerin’s never quite figured out how to hurt without hurting anyone who gets too close.” It’s a habit Alex has, too -- which is why he and Michael always managed to leave each other cut and bleeding when things went bad. Their sharp edges didn’t match up; they sliced into each other instead.
Liz’s bottom lip catches between her teeth, and she worries at it for a beat too long. Alex frowns at her, waiting for an explanation. He knows that Guerin’s reverted to old habits in the last three months; it’s impossible to go outside without hearing rumors of his latest brawls and assault charges. Alex assumes he hasn’t been sleeping around, since Maria would likely castrate him if he cheated on her, but Michael in a self-destructive spiral isn’t new, as much as it makes Alex ache to witness. “Liz, Max was his brother in every way that mattered. Of course he’s going to act out. Isobel’s doing exactly the same thing - she’s just being quieter about it.”
There’s a moment of silence, then Liz shakes her head. “I don’t think it’s just that,” she admits. “He’s been worse, lately. He’s been avoiding Isobel, and ignoring my phone calls, even when he knows they’re about the serum. Isolating himself.” They’re quiet again as Liz finally chooses a red shirt and pulls it over her head, then turns to sit down at the edge of the bed to look back at Alex with indecision written all over her face. She’s trying to decide whether or not to tell him something, clearly, and he’s not pleased.
“Just tell me, Liz,” he orders, a shadow of his command voice lingering in the tone he uses. “I thought we were done pretending that I’m not in love with Michael Guerin -- you knew when you started that I’d want to hear the rest of it, so just tell me.”
Liz sighs, her shoulders slumping obviously. “I was worried about him when he didn’t answer his phone this afternoon,” she begins, picking at the hem of her shirt. “So I went to see Maria, since they were together. I thought she’d be able to help, or at least tell me where to find him.” Were together? Alex’s heartbeat picks up, and he hates himself a little for it. Even if Michael and Maria are done, it doesn’t mean that Guerin wants to be with Alex -- or even that Alex wants to be with him. There’s so much shit between them now that he doesn’t know that they could ever work it all out, and he’s loathe to give up all of the forward momentum he’s built on a whim.
“When I got there, Maria was three-quarters of the way into a bottle of tequila and all I could get out of her was that she and Michael are over,” Liz continues, and glances up at him, the inside of her cheek caught between her teeth. “Between that and the fact that it looks like Mama DeLuca’s going to have to go into an assisted living facility --”
“What?” Alex demands sharply, cutting Liz off. “What do you mean, Mimi’s going to a facility? Since when? Why?” He doesn’t know how to feel about the end of Michael’s latest relationship, and it doesn’t matter, anyway. Not unless Guerin comes around and actually wants to talk to him, and Alex doesn’t see that happening any time soon. But the idea of the only woman who’d ever shown any real motherly affection for Alex being put in a facility is far more pressing. He can’t stand the idea, not after everything Mimi’s done for him. What the hell is Maria thinking?
Liz presses her lips together, and pats the space beside her on the mattress. Alex doesn’t move immediately, but when it’s clear she doesn’t plan on explaining further until he sits, he obeys the unspoken order and joins her, shoulder-to-shoulder. Without any care to personal space, Liz reaches over and grabs his hand, their palms cupped together like kindergartners entering a classroom for the first time, and she sighs.
“Mimi wandered off a couple of days ago. Sheriff Valenti had to send people out to find her, and she made it pretty clear she didn’t think Maria could handle looking after her alone, anymore.” Weary sadness rippled in Liz’s dark eyes, and Alex knows she can see the same emotion echoed back in his own. Mimi DeLuca had been a surrogate mother to both of them as they navigated the treacheries of high school, and neither of them had done much to help Maria support her, especially lately. Instead, Alex had closed Maria out of his life, gone out of his way to avoid her in town and ignore her messages under the guise of moving on -- and now, with this slap of reality, he’s overwhelmed with guilt for his actions. Maria deserves better from him, just as he deserves better from her, and hiding from each other isn’t going to solve anything.
“Put on your shoes,” he says finally, sucking in a breath and bracing himself for what he knows they’ve got to do. “I know what we’re doing tonight.”
They go to Maria’s, of course. Liz is the one to pick her up of the Pony’s floor and get her into a set of pajamas, but Alex doesn’t hide in the background, either. It’s awkward, at first; Maria is clearly stunned to see him, and more than a little uncomfortable, and Alex is still upset and uncertain. Liz doesn’t let the awkwardness get far, though -- she just grabs a bottle of whiskey from Maria’s stash in the kitchen and uncorks it, then hands it off to Alex. It’s a time-honored tradition of drinking away their sorrows, and he doesn’t hesitate to imbibe.
They don’t talk about Michael much, that night. They drink instead, and squeeze together in Maria’s queen-sized bed, shoulder-to-shoulder, all three of them, like they did the night they danced to forget their grief after Rosa’s death. Liz drinks enough to admit she’s not sure they can bring Max back, and she hates him a little for sacrificing himself for Rosa, for Liz, without even talking to her first. Maria sobs her way through the story of Mimi’s sudden decline, leaning heavily against Liz’s side as she speaks of a mother who no longer recognizes her, of frantic searches and angry neighbors who’ve found the woman ranting about science fiction movies in their yards at three in the morning. She talks about the financial strain, about the second mortgage she’s taken out on the bar, and Alex manages to ignore the haze of bitterness in his mind when he looks at her enough to kiss her cheek and promise that it’s going to be okay, somehow, and that she’s not alone.
Even under the influence of half a bottle of whiskey and a couple of tequila shots, Alex keeps his own hurts to himself. This isn’t the time to bring up Michael or the tangled mess his father has created for all of them, and he doesn’t think either he or Maria is ready to discuss the betrayal lingering between them. But the night proves to Alex that he will, eventually, be able to forgive Maria -- that she’s still one of the most important people in his world, even when she makes mistakes.
“I’m sorry,” she whispers into the darkness after Liz has fallen asleep on the other side of the bed. Maria’s laying on the other woman’s chest, one arm across her waist, while her back is pressed into Alex’s side. “I know it doesn’t change anything. I know how much I hurt you, and how angry you are --”
“I’m not angry,” Alex insists, just a little too fast. For a moment, he’s reminded of that day on the playground the first time they met, when Maria knew how he felt even better than Alex himself -- one would think that after all of this time and a thousand other examples of her psychic talents, he’d believe her, but it still comes as a shock, every time.
Maria sighs, a quiet hiccup escaping her lips before she rolls on her side to face him. They’re sharing the same pillow; there’s not a lot of room on the bed, and even if there was, Alex knows they would’ve all gravitated together. Comfort is tradition in their friendship, and even if it’s a bit unorthodox, he hopes it’ll never change.
“I’m too drunk to do this right,” Maria says clearly. “But I don’t know if I can do it sober, so.” Her nose wrinkles, and she makes a face as she pushes herself into a sitting position. Alex follows suit, careful not to put too much pressure on the place where his leg joins with the prosthetic. It’s a habit, these days, carefully cultivated in the years since he lost part of himself -- just as avoiding this subject has become habit. There’s still a huge part of him that still wants to run, to mumble an apology and scramble out the door before he loses his mind, but this is Maria, and he needs to stay.
“Michael is in love with you,” she says, speaking slowly and over-annunciating the words like she always does when she’s had too much to drink. “He was the whole time. I knew it, but I didn’t want to admit it, because he’s --” Maria’s eyes close, and she swallows heavily. Alex wants to tell her to stop, wants to shove his fingers in his ears and hum until he can’t hear her anymore, but he’s not five years old, and he knows they need to do this if they ever want to move on. But fuck, it sucks. “He showed up for me, you know? Every time I needed him. And I thought that maybe, if he was the real thing, it would make up for how much I hurt you.”
Alex looks up sharply at that, and has to swallow the angry response that bubbles up at the selfishness in Maria’s explanation. He bites his lower lip to keep silent, and Maria looks away, down at the bedspread her restless fingers are plucking at.
“No one ever wants to believe that I can actually feel what they’re feeling,” she continues, and there’s virtually no slur to her words as she pushes forward. “Even you and Liz, and you’ve known me for most of my life. But I can. I do. And Michael never loved me, Alex. Not for a minute, even when I was so desperate to believe he did. I tried to ignore it. And I did -- but it’s pretty hard to forget that I heard him calling your name while we were in bed together.” Her smile is weak, full of self-deprecation and bitterness. “I guess it’s only fair, because in the end, he hurt me just as much as I hurt you. Karma’s a bitch, huh?”
And what the hell is he supposed to say to that? Alex hates the small voice in the back of his head that’s whispering yes, it is fair, because he knows it’s not. This isn’t the Biblical era, and an eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind. He wouldn’t wish heartbreak on his worst enemy, let alone his best friend, no matter what she’s done -- especially not when he knows that her world is collapsing around her shoulders as Mimi’s health continues to decline.
“I’m in love with Michael,” he says finally, when the silence in the room has gone on a moment too long, and he can see Maria beginning to fidget under his scrutiny. “I’ve been in love with him for ten years, and I don’t see that changing, but God, Maria -- I love you too, you know. And yeah, maybe I’m still pissed, and hurt, and everything else you’re seeing in my aura or … however you always know, but you’re my best friend. I want you in my life. I’m always going to want you in my life.” He reaches across the distance between them and takes her hand, just as she’d done for him so many years ago when Alex didn’t know what it was to have someone solidly in his corner.
“This isn’t going to destroy us,” he promises earnestly, and finds a smile for her, though he knows the expression is loaded with everything he’s not saying. It’s going to take time to mend the broken trust between them, and Alex knows that it’ll be nearly as hard for Maria to watch him with Michael as it was in the reverse if things go that way, but for once, he allows himself to be an optimist. It’s going to work out because he won’t settle for anything less.
Maria nods slowly, and squeezes his hand in return. “No,” she agrees, determination settling over her tired, pinched features. “It won’t.”
Alex has never been more grateful that Maria doesn’t take ‘no’ for an answer. If she says that this won’t break them, she’ll move heaven and earth to make it true. He’s seen her do it before, when she was determined to convince Rosa to go to rehab, or when she showed up in a German hospital after her very first plane ride despite her aviophobia. She’s gone to bat for Liz when the townspeople were after her to make her pay for Rosa’s apparently poor choices, and Alex has seen Maria go toe-to-toe with men twice her size to protect the women in her bar, armed with nothing but her sharp tongue and scathing commentary. Maria DeLuca doesn’t let anything stand in her way, not fear nor insecurity nor hurt, and Alex knows that he can at least trust her to stick around while he figures out how to forgive her.
It’s not perfect, but it’s enough.
October, 2021:
“Guerin, you have to stop,” Alex says with a reluctant sigh, though the insistent warmth spreading through his body tells him to give into Michael’s promises that they have plenty of time to waste. They’re in their cabin, Alex fully dressed aside for the buttons that Michael undid to get at his neck, and Michael wearing nothing but a towel and a pout at Alex’s gentle rejection. “We’ve got to be at Max’s in ten minutes, and I’d rather not spend the first half an hour we’re there getting mocked for the hickey you’re trying to leave on my neck.”
He tugs at one damp curl teasingly, then steps out of Michael’s reach to rebutton his flannel properly. When he glances in the mirror over the bathroom sink, his face is flushed and his hair tousled, but the happiness in his eyes and demeanor makes it hard to complain. Some days, it’s hard to believe that Alex can be this content in his life; he’s got Michael, a shared home in the cabin Jim Valenti left him. He’s got a job designing cyber security code that’s fulfilling and leaves him with time for his music and his family, and Jesse Manes and the rest of his sons are miles back in Alex’s rearview mirror. It’s a good life, and Alex is damned lucky to have it.
“Or . . . we could just skip this whole thing,” Michael drawls, and the heated stare he levels at Alex from his lounge against the doorframe is almost enough to make him consider it. But Liz had been adamant that everyone needed to be there tonight when she texted the invite, and Alex hasn’t seen her or the rest of his friends in a couple of days, anyway. In the last two years, since the worst of the alien drama was put behind them, he’s been careful to maintain all of his relationships, and worked to make them stronger. Ditching out on Liz without any notice isn’t the kind of thing a good friend would do, no matter how tempting the drops of water rolling down Michael’s chest might be.
“Get dressed, cowboy,” Alex says with a laugh, and shoves a pair of jeans from the top of the laundry hamper into Michael’s outstretched hands. “I want to know what Liz’s news is, and I want to make sure Isobel hasn’t gone totally overboard ordering stuff for the spare room -- I still can’t believe you told her to get whatever she wanted.”
Michael snorts, but unfolds the jeans and drags them up over his lean legs. “Have you met Isobel?” he asks, the question called over his shoulder as Alex moves around him and into the bedroom to finish making himself presentable. “She would’ve ordered whatever she wanted no matter what I told her. We’ll go through the stuff when it gets here, use what we like, and send the rest back -- believe me. Max’s been doing it for years; otherwise, his whole house would be full of shitty lace curtains and ‘tasteful corals.’”
The disgusted face he makes is impossible not to laugh at, so Alex does, and shakes his head ruefully. “I guess telling Isobel the truth never crossed your mind?”
It’s Michael’s turn to laugh at him, apparently. “No, never,” he snorts. “Why don’t you give it a shot and let me know how it works out?” He pauses, then adds, “But if she asks, I know nothing about it and love everything she orders, because she’s way scarier than you.” Alex catches the wink in the mirror and groans, but knows Michael’s right. Isobel doesn’t take ‘no’ for an answer on anything, a fact that’s only gotten harder to ignore since she and Maria stopped pretending to hate each other a few months back and started making out, instead.
Michael joins Alex in the bedroom to get a shirt, one of his ridiculously patterned ones that he’ll leave unbuttoned halfway down, Alex is sure. Over the last six months of officially dating Michael Guerin, he’s found that fashion choices are one of the battles he’s going to have to let go.
“As for what Liz’s news -- come on. You really don’t know?”
“You mean you do?” It doesn’t seem likely, since Guerin had gotten the same text Alex had, but there’s a definite gleam of I know something you don’t in his boyfriend’s eyes.
“It’s pretty hard to keep secrets in a family full of aliens with psychic powers,” Michael points out, looking far too smug for Alex’s comfort. “But that’s all I’m gonna say -- Liz’ll kill me if I ruin it for her.”
Somehow, Alex finds himself being hustled out of the house and into the truck, like he hadn’t been the one trying to get Michael moving just a few minutes prior. He lets it happen, though, only stopping to grab the bag of store-bought rolls and chips he’d offered to bring to dinner. The others all take turns cooking for their weekly get-togethers, but it was decided early on, long before he and Michael managed to work things out between them, that Alex was a hazard in the kitchen and needed to be saved from himself. (Boil one pot of water long enough to set fire to the bottom of it and no one will ever let you forget it!) So instead of offering his limited culinary skills, Alex brings what he can, and tries to make up for the lack in other ways -- not that anyone ever really lets him try.
“It’s about damn time!” Maria’s on Max’s porch by herself when they pull up, grinning broadly in welcome, and Alex can’t help but smile back as he takes in the way her flowing skirt and jacket fly in the breeze. Time hasn’t softened Maria DeLuca, but it’s sanded down some of the sharper edges that developed in the months after Mimi’s hospitalization, especially after Max and Liz managed to combine science and superhuman abilities to stabilize her dementia.
Time, conversation, and sheer refusal to give up on each other have also mended the rift between Alex and Maria. It was as Alex guessed when they talked about Michael that first time; they both wanted to forgive each other enough that walking away was never an option. When Michael and Alex finally got back together after a year and a half of dancing around each other, Maria was the first one Alex called -- and the sliver of uncertainty that remained between them disappeared. Maria is family, just like Liz and Rosa and all the others, and he’s sure now that nothing will ever change that.
“Good to see you too, DeLuca,” Michael snarks, squeezing her shoulder as he passes to get in the door. He won’t admit it, but Alex knows he’s excited to see Max. After nearly two and a half years of grief, fear, and frantic research and experimentation, the three months that he’s been back in Roswell are negligible. Michael, Isobel, and Liz, especially, still look at the other man like he’s about to disappear sometimes, and it took a particularly stern intervention to get them to allow him to leave their sight.
Alex stays on the porch with Maria for another moment, and presses an innocent kiss to the top of her head. “We still on to go see your mom tomorrow afternoon?” he asks, referring to the plans they’d made several days ago, before Alex had been forced to go out of town on business. Liz, Rosa, and Alex all take turns visiting Mimi with Maria as often as possible; she’s been like a mother to all of them for all of these years, and no one has any intention of forgetting that because she’s ill.
Maria nods once, her smile growing a little more serious. “If you’re still up for it, yeah. I told her today, but --” she shrugs, and Alex gives her a quick side-hug when his mind fills in the blanks. Mimi’s condition may be stable now, but the damage couldn’t be reversed. No matter what she knows today, there’s a slim chance she’ll remember tomorrow.
Everyone gathers in the enormous living room of Max’s house, carrying plates heavily laden with barbecue and cook out fixings. Liz and Max have obviously spent the better part of the day slaving over a hot grill, because there’s enough food to feed a small army. Alex settles himself on one end of the couch and Michael joins him, squishing in close so that Isobel and Maria can fit, as well. Liz perches on the arm of Max’s chair across the room, her dancer’s legs tangling with his longer ones, and Alex stares at them, trying to figure out what they’re hiding. There’s a suspiciously large smile on Liz’s face, even as Michael and Kyle tease her about the amount of time she’s been spending at Max’s place, and there’s a happily astonished expression on Max’s face that doesn’t disappear, even as the party wears on.
“Figured it out yet?” Michael asks in a whisper, leaning close.
Alex shakes his head, even though he thinks he’s got a pretty good guess. He’ll let Liz tell them in her own time -- he wouldn’t want his moment ruined by anyone else, after all.
He doesn’t have to wait long for confirmation of his theory, though. After everyone’s finished eating and the plates are piled in the sink, Max clears his throat and stands, looking around at all of them like he can’t quite believe what he’s about to say. Michael and Isobel grin back at him, obviously in on whatever secret he’s about to divulge, and Alex raises an eyebrow at Liz, who just winks.
“I’m not one for speeches,” Max says, pointedly ignoring Michael’s teasing scoff. “But after what we’ve all been through, I think it’s important that I say how incredibly lucky I feel to have all of you in my life. I literally wouldn’t be here without each and every one of you, and --” Max glances at Liz, who sidles up to him and links their hands, happiness permeating every line of her body. “We all know that life is short.” Dark, serious eyes rest on Rosa for a moment, and Alex’s breath catches in his throat at the stark reminder. Guerin’s hand slides into his, and Alex squeezes back, forcing himself to turn his attention to Max again. “I’m not going to waste any of the extra time I’ve been given on fighting with the people I love, or keeping secrets. So, in the spirit of honesty --”
“And sharing good news!” Liz adds, elbowing Max.
“ -- Liz and I want you guys to be the first to know that we’re getting married.”
Alex gets lost for a moment in the ensuing flood of cheers and congratulations. Michael is gone, up and slapping his brother on the back and saying something about how he told Max that the ring he picked out was good enough. In the next instant, Maria is standing too, and hauling Alex up by the hands to drag him across the floor to Liz. She’s laughing, open-mouthed and incandescent with true happiness, and she lets the two of them enclose her in a hug without a single noise of complaint. Rosa throws herself at Liz’s back, her hair hanging down in her sister’s face, and it’s the perfect fucking moment. The future looms on the horizon, and none of them know what’s to come, but he’s holding Maria’s hand and hugging Liz, and watching Rosa celebrate with her sister after a decade spent mourning her.
The four of them found each other when they most needed it. They’d started this all together, grown closer through trauma and tragedy, and the tiny, make-shift family they started had grown by leaps and bounds. None of them are the scared, lonely children they once were, and Alex is overwhelmed by the realization that they’ve made it through the worst. All that’s left for them to do is be happy.
“I can’t believe you took Michael ring shopping with you, Max Evans!” Isobel’s disapproving voice floats over the din of the small crowd, making Liz and Maria dissolve into a sing-song chorus of, “Max is in tro-uble!” like they’re still eight years old on the playground. Michael ducks out of swatting range as his sister comes for him, but Maria jumps in front so that her girlfriend can smack the back of his head gently. Guerin, of course, makes a show out of being wounded, and looks to Alex for sympathy.
Alex throws his head back and laughs, and allows himself to be carried away in the joy of the moment.