(ain’t) worth a try | solo
LOCATION: evans family farm; fort worth, tx
TAGGING: sam and lisa evans (npc)
DATE & TIME: 6/24, late (late) evening.
NOTES: sam and his mother attempt a talk...yikes. WC: 1030
It would’ve been easier to sit inside, where the AC was on and the bugs weren’t waiting to feast on him, but the night air was tempting. It was late enough that the heat had finally tapered off, leaving a gentle, cooling breeze that felt good against his skin.
He sat on the front porch with his eyes shut and just...drank it all in. The familiar sounds on the farm. Crickets and comforting quiet. Nothing like the constant movement of Los Angeles. Where even on the rooftop, in that relative peace, the faint sounds of music and traffic and other noises from the city could be heard.
Sam appreciated it. Welcomed it, really. It’d been too long. Being home came with a host of feelings he wasn’t sure what to make of. But they would be leaving out tomorrow, him and Harley. And it seemed like dissecting those feelings would have to wait until his next visit. Or at least until he could put some miles between him the farm.
The creak of the front door caused him to glance up and though it was dark, and his initial thought was Harley had come out to join him, he could easily make out the outline of his mother. The moon was huge, giving a decent amount of light that once she turned, Sam could see her small, tentative smile.
“Had a feeling you’d be out here.” Her voice was gentle, and her movements almost hesitant as she sat in the porch chair beside him, the creak of the wood, sturdy and still smelling of cedar ringing out in the quiet.
And Sam had to tamp down on his initial instinct to leave. They’d manage to be polite to each other during the brief visit but the warmth that’d existed with Sam and his father wasn’t extended in their interaction. He spoke little. Barely hugged her, and maintained a strained sort of friendliness one would reserve for a cubicle mate and not family.
Sam stopped knowing how to talk to his mother a long time ago. Once upon a time, she was his everything. But over the years, with every disappearance and reappearance, an icy indifference had settled in his chest and refused to thaw out.
Even now, he felt it. Jaw set, tightening slightly as he felt her eyes on him, the same color as his own, and so damn expressive. And he knew she would keep trying, unsurprised to hear her break the silence.
“It was so good seeing you, baby. Feels like you changed so much being out there. The beard suits you.”
“I’m cutting it,” he replied, his voice low, but not unkind.
Lisa let out a soft chuckle, as if Sam managed to tell a knee-slapper. “Either way, I'm sure it’ll look good.”
“Yeah.” The earlier peace had shifted, right into the typical tension he normally felt with his mother, awful and exhausting in its familiarity. And Sam didn’t have it in him to play the polite son. It was late and he’d have to wake up early in a few hours to get himself together for the long drive ahead. So he rose from the chair with a muted grunt and turned to his mother, because despite his feelings, he could never, ever be that rude. “I’m headin’ to bed.”
He heard her sigh, and knew whatever was coming next would snowball into something more. The churning in his gut said as much and yet he didn't make a move to go inside. Even after she started speaking.
“I’m tryin’ here, Sammy. But you gotta give me something.”
Something inside him gave an almighty jolt at that, uncapping the irritation he’d been barely restraining and he turned, mouth set in a firm line. “Why?” was all he asked and he knew from her silence he’d surprised her with the question. “‘Cause you're here now? Fine. Great. But I don't owe you anything. Stop tryin’ to force me to forgive you when you ain’t even bothered to say sorry. It don’t work like that. I’m not six years old anymore, a home cooked meal and a hug won’t fix it.”
His throat burned from the angry hiss of the words he hadn’t wanted to say, but he was tired, so damn tired of having to be the damn adult in the equation. To swallow his feelings for the sake of family peace, to spare his mother’s feelings or avoid his father’s tired silence or Harley’s annoyance at his indifference.
For once, Sam wasn't interested in being the peacemaker at the expense of himself, and he felt the sting in his eyes and he rubbed at them, taking a step back when Lisa stood up and reached for him, her hand grasping at nothing and she pulled it back, close to her chest.
Somehow, it only made Sam feel worse.
“You still can’t say it, can you?” he scoffed, the sound giving way to mirthless laughter and he pushed a hand through his hair. “I really don't know why I expect things to be different. Everybody else is real comfortable, so I guess it’s just me, being stubborn and holding on to old feelings. Whatever.”
Even as he said it, he could feel the lump in his throat and the waver in his voice was barely noticeable, though he swallowed both down and took a slow breath.
“I want us to be able to talk again, Sammy" Lisa told him, voice soft in the evening quiet. “You used to tell me everything.”
Sam swallowed thickly once more and shook his head. “Yeah well, you’re about fifteen years and ten disappearances too late, I guess. Goodnight. Tell Pops I said I’ll see y’all on the next trip.”
And with that he went inside, careful not to let the front door slam, quiet enough to hear his mother’s heavy sigh, the sound carrying, following him upstairs, lingering in his thoughts and he knew, sleep wouldn't come easy, or at all.













