March 25, 2014

This entry is part 2 of 16 in the Yesterdays

“Stay in here, baby, I’m gonna run in and get some bread for your lunch tomorrow, okay?”

Olivia nodded and pulled out her etch-a-sketch and started to fiddle with it. “Yes, Mommy.”

Elizabeth put the car in park and left the ignition on because Olivia liked to listen to the radio. She grabbed her purse and headed into the convenience store.

“Hey, Mrs. Morgan,” Georgie Jones chirped as she started to ring up the bread and the candy bar Elizabeth had grabbed for Olivia. “Is this it?”

“Yes,” Elizabeth remarked. She started to count out the change when she heard a high-pitched scream. Her head snapped up. “Olivia!”

She dashed for the door and got outside just in time to watch her gray Mercedes crash into a tractor trailer. She screamed, horrified.

“Oh my God!” Georgie shrieked, heading back inside to call 911.

Elizabeth rushed towards the car and nearly passed out when she realized that the entire front of the car had been crumpled in, trapping her little girl inside. “Olivia!”

“Mrs. Morgan!” Georgie cried, jogging down towards her. “I called 911 and they’ll be in here in a second and they said you shouldn’t try to move her or anything–”

She was numb now. She couldn’t even feel her legs as they gave out and she crumpled to the ground.


“Mrs. Morgan, your daughter’s spinal cord was severed in the accident. We managed to repair most of the damage, but only time will tell if she’ll be able to walk.” The doctor frowned when he realized that his patient’s mother was sitting, blindly staring into space. “Mrs. Morgan, is there someone I can call? Your husband?”

At the word husband, Elizabeth blinked and licked her dry lips. “I’m…I’ll call him. Is there a payphone?”

“Just down the hall.” He helped her to stand and he led her there. “I’ll be in my office when you’re ready.”

Elizabeth shakily put some quarters into the phone and started to dial the direct line to Jason’s cell phone.

A soft voice answered. “Hello?”

She was shaking violently now, her voice hoarse. “Is Jason there?”

“Yes, he is. Who’s calling please?”

This must be Elise, she thought idly. “It’s…it’s Elizabeth.”

“Oh. Um. Let me get him.” She heard the voice call for him and then she heard his voice asking–he was irritated—who it was.

“Yeah?”

“Jason. It’s–”

“I know. What’s going on?”

She closed her eyes at the curt tone. “It’s, uh, it’s Olivia.”

There was silence for a moment. “What’s wrong?” Jason asked, the tone gentle and alarmed.

“There was an accident and she was hurt pretty badly,” Elizabeth whispered. Her voice hitched. “You have to–you should get here.”

“Jesus, what happened? Is she okay?” he demanded.

“The car rolled down a hill and crashed into a tractor trailer,” Elizabeth replied. She felt dizzy again. She needed to sit down. “A-and the doctors…her spinal cord was severed…Oh, God, and she hasn’t woken up.”

“She was in the car?” he asked. “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine–I wasn’t in there. I was–” Elizabeth broke off abruptly, bracing her hand against the wall. “I have to go sit down. Will you come?”

“I’ll be on the next plane.”


Olivia had been moved to a private room by the time Jason arrived. Elizabeth was curled up in a little ball on a nearby chair, her face pale, her hair limp and her eyes wide open and blood shot.

Jason stopped just inside the room and had to grip the doorway when he saw his daughter lying prone in a hospital bed. Her face was translucent, her long dark hair limp against the white pillow. There were all kinds of machines hooked up to her and her tiny delicate face had bruises and cuts.

“Jesus,” he breathed.

At the sound of his voice, Elizabeth blinked and looked over at him. “Jason.”

“What happened?” he asked numbly. He entered the room completely, not taking his eyes off the bed.

“I stopped at a convenience store to get some bread for her lunch tomorrow,” Elizabeth whispered. “It was only going to take a minute or two and it takes twice as long to get her unhooked from the seatbelt and inside. So I just left her in the car like I have a dozen times.”

He stared at her. “You left a five-year-old little girl in a car by herself.”

“I put in park but I left it on because she likes the radio and it keeps her occupied,” she continued, closing her eyes to ward off his accusing stare. “I went inside and it couldn’t have been more than thirty seconds when I heard her scream.” Her voice hitched. “She’d put the car in drive and it started rolling down the hill. She was screaming because she couldn’t get it to stop and she couldn’t get her seatbelt unhooked.” She broke off on a sob and had to take a moment to get her emotions under control. “There was a tractor trailer at the end of the hill and the car barreled right into it, and she was trapped inside.”

“Jesus.” He lowered himself into an empty chair. His hands started to shake. “What do the doctors say?”

“They reattached her spinal cord,” Elizabeth replied. “But they won’t know anything until she wakes up.” Her voice was tiny and incredibly hoarse from hours of crying but he heard her next words clear as day. “If she wakes up.”

“If?” Jason repeated sharply.

“She hit her head on the dashboard,” Elizabeth said painfully. She covered the mouth to try and control her sobs. “She’s in a coma.”

“You left a little girl in a running car by herself,” Jason remarked incredulously. “I can’t believe this.”

She closed her eyes. “I’m sorry. Oh, God, I’m so sorry.”

“Sorry isn’t going to make her live,” Jason told her angrily. He lunged to his feet. “If she dies, this will be your fault.”

Elizabeth stared at the floor blankly. “I know,” she said bleakly. “It should have been me. I should have been in that car.”

Shaken by the idea of Elizabeth lying in the hospital bed rather than Olivia, Jason started to pace before ending up at a window across the room. The last time he’d been in a hospital room had been the day he brought Olivia home from the hospital. She’d been so tiny–so delicate. He was afraid to hold her for fear he’d break her.

Elizabeth had been born to be a mother, Jason thought reluctantly. The moment Olivia had been born, there’d been no one else more important in Elizabeth’s life. And motherhood had agreed with her, Jason remembered painfully. She’d been so beautiful in the months after Olivia’s birth. Not that she hadn’t been stunning before but there was something that just ignited in her when she became a mother. She glowed–she sparkled. He’d thought he was going to die when he was told she had to wait six weeks after childbirth to make love again.

From the moment he’d seen her across the hotel room in Spain, she’d been his whole world. He’d be at Yale and would spend whole classes thinking about her–about her smile, her laugh, her voice. He’d known almost immediately he wanted to spend his whole life with her. And then that Christmas when she’d told him she loved him–he thought he could fly.

He could still picture her the day she walked down the aisle in a church in Paris, dressed in a simple white silk dress with flowers twisted in her hair and lilies in her hands. He’d never wanted anything else but her. He hadn’t been lying when he told her she was his home. Elizabeth Webber was the first person that he’d ever really trusted–depended on.

They’d come to Port Charles so he could make a business deal and they’d been out to dinner when she’d suddenly fainted. Jason could still feel the terror he’d known then as he’d rushed her to the hospital.

He’d barely survived their divorce and part of him wondered if she was right. If maybe he’d been too unwilling to compromise. He could understand her love for their daughter. God knows, he thought the sun rose and fell on Olivia. And until he’d met Elise, Jason had been working out ways to prove to Elizabeth how much he loved her.

If Jason wanted to be honest with himself, he’d admit that Elise was just another version of Elizabeth. She was a petite brunette with porcelain skin and blue eyes. They were almost the same height and Elise reminded him a lot of Elizabeth the first years he’d known her. They’d gone into the marriage knowing there was no love on either side. Elise liked the money and the influence Jason wielded in his world and he liked having someone to hold at night–he’d gotten too used to that during his marriage.

Elise never argued–picked up and went where he wanted to go. And the only time she’d complained was when she’d gotten sun poisoning in Egypt. She’d put her foot down and told him she wasn’t going to go on any of those trips anymore. When he was going out on his so-called adventures, she’d be in a spa, thank you very much.

He couldn’t blame her–but he couldn’t help but compare her reaction to Elizabeth’s during the first year of their marriage.

“I’m sorry, baby,” Jason remarked, lathering hydrocortisone cream over Elizabeth’s boiling skin. She just moaned and buried her face in a pillow. “Maybe you should stay in the hotel tomorrow.”

Elizabeth abruptly lifted her head and looked at him oddly. “But you’re going to the pyramids tomorrow.”

“I know.” He took out an anti-histamine tablet and handed it to her along with a glass of water. She took it and swallowed it quickly.

“It’s just a case of sunburn. I can go.”

“It’s sun poisoning and I don’t think it’s a good idea,” he told her stubbornly. “You could get heatstroke or pass out.” He brushed her hair off her face and smiled at her tenderly. “Listen, I’ll skip the tour group and we can hang out here.”

“You’re not skipping just because I’ve got some sunburn,” Elizabeth protested. “You’ve been looking forward to this for weeks.”

“You’re more important to me than some stupid pyramids. We can come back.”

“No, you go tomorrow. I’ll be fine in the hotel.”

He leaned down and kissed her softly. “If you’re not going, I’m not going.” He kissed her again. She moaned and tried to pull him closer but his skin brushed a particularly sensitive area of her sun poison. She broke away and winced.

“I guess I’m not getting any tonight,” he remarked amused.

She laughed and kissed him lightly. “Jason, please go tomorrow. I’ll be right here waiting when you get back.”

“You promise?” Though he meant the question to be light, it came out serious and his eyes were sad. As if he’d been disappointed by people before–and he had. His parents had missed a lot of birthday parties, his middle school graduation, his high school graduation and his college graduation. The only person who’d never let him down was her.

And she knew that.

She threaded her fingers in his hair and smiled up at him. “I’ll always be here waiting for you,” she replied softly before pulling him into another kiss.

The memory faded and he turned to look at her. She was still curled up in a ball, her arms wrapped around her knees, her eyes trained on the hospital bed. God, he’d loved her. She’d been his first thought when he woke and his last before he went to sleep. Even after his daughter had been born, he’d lived for his wife. For her smiles, for her laughs, for her happiness.

But he’d failed. The most important thing he’d ever had in his life–he’d failed. She’d been miserable with him and he could see that during that horrible week she’d begged him for a divorce. Such misery and loneliness in her eyes. He’d just wanted to take her in his arms and forget the rest of the world. They’d had that ability once. To just crawl under the covers and make love until nothing else existed.

And in that week, he realized that somewhere, they’d lost that. He’d spent a lot time trying to figure out exactly when and he thought it might be after that first fight about her not traveling. Before he brought up the spring trip to Paris, they’d still had the illusion of happiness. He still kissed her on the neck when he came up behind her. They still made love every moment they could find. He’d thought at one point Olivia brought them closer together. God, she was the mother of his child. Elizabeth was perfect, Olivia was perfect–he’d thought their entire life was perfect.

But after that fight–after he’d left for three weeks in Paris, things changed. If they made love, it was perfunctory and almost an afterthought. He’d slip into bed with her, she’d turn into his embrace during her drowsy period between dreams and reality and as usual, just the touch of her–the smell of her–it would arouse him and he would initiate it. If they kissed, it was quick as he was leaving the house or when he came home. Things were just different.

He’d noticed it then but he’d thought it was an adjustment period–that eventually they’d get into a new rhythm and things would be like before. She had probably thought the same thing. And maybe it would have worked itself out on its own.

But that picture…that damn picture. Nearly five years later, he couldn’t remember the woman’s name or even what she looked like but there was a picture of her on his arm at some fundraiser in Paris and it’d gotten printed in a French paper–Elizabeth’s favorite to read. And then just like that, he’d lost her. She’d stopped trusting him somewhere along the way and the picture had been the last straw.

It still tore at him that she didn’t believe him–that she thought he’d touch another woman while he had the perfect one at home. Nothing had hurt more than the look in her eyes when she’d showed him the clipping. He’d thought he was going to die when she’d asked him to sign divorce papers. He’d literally felt like she’d reached in and tore his heart out. She wanted a divorce. The best thing that had ever happened to him was meeting her–loving her–and she wanted to end it.

He’d argued against it–he would have promised her anything at that point. If she’d never wanted him to set foot outside the house again, he’d have done it gladly. But she didn’t want that. She didn’t want to compromise. She just wanted it over.

And in the end, the only thing he’d ever wanted was to make sure she had everything she wanted.

So he agreed.

A rustling sound roused him from his thoughts and he looked over to see Elizabeth standing next to Olivia’s bed, adjusting her sheets, tucking her in. She smoothed Olivia’s hair away from her face and kissed her forehead before sitting back in her seat. She sat forward, her elbows digging into her knees, her shoulders hunched.

“I shouldn’t have said it.”

His voice broke the tense silence and she looked up at him, startled. She cleared her throat. “What?”

“It’s not your fault.” He drove his fingers through his hair and exhaled slowly. “I know you’d walk through fire for her and that you’d trade places with her in a second.”

She stared at him, surprised at his words. “Where is this coming from?” she asked softly.

“And that thing I said last month when I dropped Olivia off about being better off if I’d made my own martini–I didn’t mean that.”

Elizabeth stood and rounded the bed to stand in front of him. “Jason–”

“You were the best thing that ever happened to me,” he found himself telling her. “You have to know that. Tell me you know that.”

Her eyes softened. “Jason–”

“I’m glad I asked you for that martini, I’m even more glad that I stayed in Spain and most especially I’m glad I asked you to marry me,” he continued. Her eyes were bloodshot and if she hadn’t already exhausted her poor body of tears, she would have cried at the tenderness in his eyes. He hadn’t looked at her like that for so long–she didn’t realize how much she’d missed that look.

“I’m glad I said yes,” she said tremulous.

“Do you remember that day?” he asked. He reached out and tucked her hair behind her ears. “We hadn’t even known each other for a year, but I think I knew that day in Spain I wanted to spend my life with you.”

“I think I knew the second you kissed me,” she whispered.

“We were in Ireland,” he continued in a hushed voice, his hand lingering at her cheek. “Outside one of those small villages you used to love to visit. It was my spring break from Yale and I’d convinced you to skip the week of classes with me. God, I wanted to spend every moment with you.”

“The feeling was entirely mutual,” Elizabeth breathed.

“I bought the ring after winter break, after we said I love you, after the first time we made love. I carried it around for weeks, practicing the way I would propose.” He closed his eyes and shook his head. “But in the end, I did it outside a little village in Ireland. A gust of wind blew your hair in your face and you pushed it back. You were laughing and you just…you took my breath away. I’ve never known someone as beautiful as you–inside and out. I knew in that moment I could never love anyone the way I loved you.”

“You just blurted it out,” Elizabeth remembered with a soft smile. “One second we were just walking and the next you were asking me to marry you.”

“You didn’t even hesitate. I was terrified you would say no–that you’d look at me like I was nuts. Because, God, you deserved a romantic proposal. I even made reservations at a restaurant in Dublin. Violins and candlelight. It was going to be perfect. Instead I stumbled over the words I’d practiced a-and I fumbled like I was a ten-year-old idiot. But I got it out and the second I closed my mouth, you jumped into my arms and you were saying it over and over again. Yes. I thought nothing would ever top that moment.” He opened his eyes to find her staring at him, tears streaming down her face. “God, I loved you so much, Elizabeth. All I ever wanted to do was make you happy.”

“You did,” she whispered painfully. “You did.”

He still loved her. Right this second–in this moment, he loved her. God, he wished he could say it. He wanted to tell her and pull him to her and kiss her. He wanted her back. He wanted turn back time to that day he’d tried to make her to go Paris and tell her that of course he understood how she felt and he wasn’t going to Paris either. Because what if Olivia rolled over and he missed it? Or what if Elizabeth smiled and he missed it?

Jason cleared his throat and looked away. “I need to check in at a hotel. I came straight here from the airport.”

She opened her mouth to offer him a guest room at the house but then she saw that the wall was down in his eyes again. Like the past ten minutes they’d spent reminiscing about the day he proposed hadn’t happened.

Elizabeth blinked and took a few steps away from him. “I got the penthouse as part of the settlement–you know we never sold it even after we moved out. The keys are at the house.”

Jason nodded. “Just let me know where they are and I’ll get them. I want to go and get back.”

She went back to the other side of the bed and fumbled in her purse for her house keys. She found them and gave the ring to him. As he took them from her, he gripped her hand for a moment. “You, ah, you still wear your wedding ring.”

She flushed and stared down at the golden band around her ring finger. It was accompanied by the delicate diamond ring he’d given her that day in Ireland. She cleared her throat. “I tried taking them off after it was final, b-but my hand felt different–it just…” she faltered. “Olivia would think I didn’t love you anymore.”

His grip tightened for a moment before letting it drop. His throat felt tight and he had to look away for a moment. “Is there anything you need from the house?”

“Could you grab some of her stuffed animals?” Elizabeth asked, casting a look at the plain room. “And some of her picture frames. It looks…it’s too white in here–too sterile.”

“I was thinking more along the lines of clothes for you but I can grab some of Olivia’s things, too.” He hesitated. “You still keep your luggage pieces in the closet in the hallway?”

“Yeah,” Elizabeth replied softly. “Thank you. The, ah, keys for the penthouse are in my desk in my bedroom–they should be in the first drawer on the left.”

“I…I’ll be right back.”


It felt surreal to be standing in the bedroom where he’d once made love to her–where he’d known some of most intimate moments of his life. During those nights Olivia would cry to be fed or changed, they would often be making love or just talking softly. He always held her at night–whether they were both on their sides or he laid on his back–he held her tight as if scared she’d slip away during the night.

He would watch her get up–no matter what they were doing, the second Olivia began crying, she was out of bed and on her way to her. She’d slip out of bed and reach for the turquoise silk robe her mother had sent her after the baby was born. She’d knot the tie and leave the room, his eyes trained on her every step of the way.

And now, four years later, he was standing in a bedroom that was no longer theirs but hers. He was in a house that he didn’t have keys to. He was married to a woman that wasn’t Elizabeth.

He sighed and rubbed his forehead. All this regret was coming a little too late, he decided. Besides, he had to get this done, drop his things at the penthouse and get back to the hospital to see his daughter.

He pulled open the first drawer on the right and it was halfway open before he remembered the keys were in the first drawer on the left. But his eye caught a couple of photographs and he pulled them out.

They were of him and Elizabeth. The one on top was taken just after they’d returned from their honeymoon cruise in the Greek Islands. They’d gone to some party that his parents threw and she wore this red dress with a slit to her mid-thigh and a corset top. Her hair was in messy curls, her makeup smoky and her mouth was open in mid-laugh.

The rest of the photos brought back other pleasant memories. One taken on their Ireland trip, a picture of an Elizabeth with sun poisoning, smiling proudly at his side as they stood in front of majestic Egyptian pyramids and then one taken at the San Francisco Opera. This one was a newspaper clipping. They were smiling–truly ecstatic smiles. The caption read Jason Morgan, the son of Wall Street financier Chad Morgan, announced at a performance of La Bohème that his wife of a year is expecting their first child.

He closed his eyes, picturing Elizabeth in his mind the moment she’d announced her pregnancy. She’d been so scared he wouldn’t want the baby–that he’d be upset. He’d never loved her more than in the moment she told him they were going to be parents. That their love had created another life.

He coughed, clearing his throat. He set the photographs back in the drawer and shut it tightly. He grabbed the keys from the other drawer, threw some things in a bag for Elizabeth before moving to Olivia’s room.

He put some of her stuffed animals into her pink suitcase before heading for the shelf full of picture frames. He found one of himself and Olivia as well as one of Elizabeth and Olivia. He put those in the bag, added the picture of the three of them the day they came home from the hospital and left the room.


Elizabeth bit down on her nail nervously as her watched her little girl sleep. The doctors had been in and told her that as long as Olivia continued to breathe on her own that it was a good sign. She was still alive–she still had a very strong chance to pull out of the woods.

The door clicked open and Jason entered. He set Elizabeth’s bag by the door and put Olivia’s next to the bed. He had a two paper cups in his hand. “I got coffee but I know you hate it so I got you a hot chocolate,” he said, handing her one of them.

“Thanks,” she said softly, taking it. It warmed her cold hands. “The doctors came by while you were gone. They said that it’s a good sign she’s breathing on her own.”

“Good. That’s good.”

After a moment, Elizabeth took a deep breath and looked down into her hot chocolate. “Did, ah, did Elise come with you?”

He shook his head. “No. She stayed back in Spain.”

She winced at the mention of Spain and bit her lip. “You don’t normally go to Spain this time of year. It was always too hot.”

“Elise likes it. She’s got a favorite spa.” He didn’t want to talk about Elise. He wanted to talk about her–to tell her that he still remembered the look in her eyes right before he’d kissed her for the first time. He didn’t tell her that but he didn’t talk about his wife either.

He unzipped Olivia’s suitcase and took out the picture frames first, arranging them on the table next to him. Then he took out the stuffed dog he’d given her on her third birthday. He set it next to her on the bed before reaching in for a soft brown teddy bear. He set it next to the dog and slid the suitcase under the bed.

“Did the doctors say when she would wake up?” Jason asked.

Elizabeth shook her head. “It could be five minutes from now, it could be tomorrow…”

He exhaled slowly and sat back in his chair to wait.

This entry is part 3 of 27 in the Sanctuary

But if my silence made you leave
Then that would be my worst mistake
So I will share this room with you
And you can have this heart to break


June 22, 2006

General Hospital: Nurse’s Station

Mac Scorpio stepped up to the counter and waited for Elizabeth Spencer to finish with a fellow nurse before turning her attention to him. “Hey, Mac,” she said warmly. “What can I do for you?”

“I need to have Patrick Drake paged,” Mac told her. “Can you do that for me?”

“Sure…” Elizabeth drawled. She flashed him a curious look before lifting the receiver. “Dr. Patrick Drake, please report to the fourth floor nurse’s station. Dr. Patrick Drake.” She set the receiver back down. “Do you…need anyone else?”

“No, just Dr. Drake. Thanks, Liz.” Mac gestured towards the small cluster of chairs and couches to the right. “I’ll wait over here.”

Five minutes later, Patrick stepped up to the desk. “Liz, you paged me?”

“Uh, yeah.” Elizabeth pointed to where Mac was calmly standing between the couch and chair, his arms crossed and his face impassive. “Commissioner Scorpio needed to speak with you.”

Patrick glanced over at Robin’s uncle before looking back at the clearly intrigued nurse. “Thanks. I think. Have…have you seen Robin yet today?”

“No, she actually called in sick.” Elizabeth picked up a chart. “I think she said something about taking a short leave of absence, maybe to go see her mother. But I’m not sure.”

“Right.” Patrick took a deep breath before crossing the short distance between himself and Mac. “You wanted to see me?”

“Robin might not have mentioned this to you, but I raised her after we thought her parents were killed. She was about thirteen, fourteen at the time and mostly grown but I finished the job. She’s like a daughter to me.” Mac’s genial tone didn’t mask the disgust he clearly had for the doctor and it only deepened the more Mac talked. “I’ve watched her get hurt more than once by a man who clearly didn’t appreciate the jewel that she is and I’ve watched her walk around for the last few weeks like someone had ripped her guts out so you can imagine just how pissed off I am right now.”

“I’ve got a pretty good idea. Commissioner,” Patrick coughed. “I’m not sure what Robin’s told you–”

“She’s told me enough.” Mac’s eyes narrowed. “Now, I’m willing to give you the benefit of the doubt because I know that Robin doesn’t tend to make the same mistakes twice. Now, she’s going to handle this however she sees fit, she’s a grown woman and she’s been making her own decisions for quite some time. However, if you step out of line, just once…” Mac leaned towards him. “I want you to know that I’ll be watching you.”

Patrick swallowed. “If I could just–Commissioner, Robin gave me about ten seconds to take in the news before she walked out. I’m sorry that I didn’t have the answers that she needed right then, I’m not even sure I have them now. But I know that I have a responsibility to Robin and to our child and I intend to take care of them both.”

“My niece deserves to be more than a responsibility, Dr. Drake,” Mac all but snarled.

“That’s not–” Patrick let out an impatient breath. “There’s nothing I’m going to say right now that’s going to stop you from wishing you could break me into little pieces, is there?”

Mac considered that for a long moment. “No, no there’s really not. It’s good that you plan on stepping up but you might want to inform Robin since she’s made up her mind about moving back to Paris to be with her mother for the duration of the pregnancy.”

Patrick’s jaw clenched. “That is not going to happen. She might hate me, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s my child, too and I have a right to be a part of this. If she thinks she’s going to shut me out and not even give me a shot at this, she’s got another thing coming.”

He stormed away and Mac nodded. “That ought to do it,” he murmured. He stepped back over to the nurse’s station. “Thanks for your help, Liz.”

“Ah…Mac…” Elizabeth crossed her arms on the desk and leaned forward. “You and Patrick…you were speaking somewhat loudly and you should know that well…” she coughed. “It should be said that certain people might have overheard, including half the nursing staff. Robin should be warned.”

“She’ll have my head for interfering,” Mac sighed. “But he needed to be set straight.”

“Oh, I don’t think he did.” Elizabeth twirled a pen in her fingers. “If there’s anything I know about Patrick Drake, it’s that he takes his responsibilities as a surgeon very seriously. I imagine that translates to other parts of his life. Is Robin…” she hesitated. “Is Robin happy about the baby?”

“Part of her is,” Mac admitted. “But the other part…”

“Is scared to death.” Elizabeth smiled faintly. “Well, tell her congratulations and if she needs anything, just to let me know.”

Robin’s Apartment: Living Room

“I’m excited to see you, too, Mom.” Robin sighed and tucked her legs underneath her. “I’m just waiting to hear when Dad will be able to come to Port Charles for a quick visit before I set my plans. There’s something I have to tell you both but it’s better in person…no, it’s nothing bad. It’s just–its news that’s better face to face. No, I’m not going–”

“Robin!”

Robin’s head jerked at the loud pounding on her door coupled with the call of her name. “Mom…I have to go.”

She hung up and bit her lip, wondering if she could hide in her bedroom and continue avoiding Patrick. She really wasn’t ready for this.

“Open the damn door!” Patrick pounded again. “Don’t make me open it for you!”

She narrowed her eyes and strode towards the door. She threw open the locks and yanked the door open. “Will you be quiet? Do you want to get arrested?” Robin demanded.

Patrick ignored her and stormed into the apartment, whirling around to stab a finger at her. “If you think for one second that I’m going to let you get on a plane with my child, you’d better think again.”

Robin blinked. “What are you–how did you?” She closed the door and pressed her forehead against the cool wood. “My uncle talked to you.”

“Yeah, and it’s a good thing he did. Were you planning to tell me you were running away?” Patrick demanded. “Or were you just going to disappear and never tell me?”

“I’m not–” Robin bit her lip. “I’m not going right away. My father’s coming to Port Charles so I can tell him. I wasn’t going to just disappear without talking to you.”

“Well, I’m thrilled to hear that,” Patrick retorted, his voice dripping with sarcasm. “You’re not going at all.”

Robin bristled. “Look, this might be a novelty for you but I’m making this easy on everyone involved if I just go stay with my mom until the baby is born. By then…” she took a deep breath. “By then, we’ll know if the virus…” she broke off and looked away.

That’s what this is about?” Patrick asked. “You think that I won’t want to be a part of the baby’s life if he tests positive? Jesus, Robin…” he turned away and rubbed his hands over his face, devastated by the clear lack of faith she had in him.

“It’s a possibility that we….that I have to think about,” Robin said quietly. “I mean, the odds are against it but…it’s possible. And it’s possible the baby wouldn’t have the same luck I’ve had with my protocol. He could die within a few years, he could develop AIDS and die and then you would really hate me and I’d hate myself so you know, I’m sorry if I just want to make this easy on you and me and my family–”

“How is dealing with this by yourself going to make this easier?” Patrick replied sharply. “I can’t believe you think so little of me that it would matter whether our child tested positive or not.”

“You might like to think it doesn’t matter, but that’s because it’s a hypothetical theory, it’s not reality but as soon as it becomes real–”

Patrick reached for her, gripped her shoulders tightly. “Look at me, Robin. Look at me, damn it!”

She closed her eyes for a long moment before opening them and meeting his turbulent gaze. “I couldn’t bear for you to look at me and know that I signed our child’s death warrant,” she said softly. “Please…just let me go. If the baby tests negative, then we can revisit this and talk about joint custody–”

“The hell with that.” His voice was quiet, yet held an undertone of cold contempt. “The hell with you taking off and disappearing for the next eight months because you think I might reject our child and you. That’s not going to happen.”

“Oh really?” Robin challenged. “I’d love to hear how you think this is going to play out.”

“That’s easy.” Patrick released her and stepped back, his expression suddenly shuttered. “We’re going to do the responsible thing–the only thing for people like us–who were raised by people who taught us better.”

A knot formed in her stomach as Robin could almost hear the rest of his statement before he finished.

“We’re going to get married and we’re going to raise the baby together.”

This entry is part 2 of 27 in the Sanctuary

I spoke to you in cautious tones
You answered me with no pretense
And still I feel I said too much
My silence is my self defense


June 21, 2006

Scorpio-Jones House: Front Porch

Felicia Scorpio-Jones opened the door and found Robin standing on the porch, hugging herself and looking like she’d lost her puppy. “What’s wrong?” she demanded, always fiercely maternal towards this girl she’d watched grow into a woman.

Robin smiled faintly. “Is Uncle Mac here?”

“No, he’s at the station–” Felicia put a hand on Robin’s arm and gently pulled her into the house–Robin was too tired to resist. “Honey, you know I don’t like being kept in the dark. What’s going on?”

“I just…I need to talk to…” Robin closed her eyes. “I’m pregnant.”

Felicia’s hands dropped to her side and she frowned at Robin. “Come again?”

“I’m pregnant, I’m going to have a baby,” Robin clarified. “I need–I have to tell Uncle Mac.”

“Right, of course. You’re going to sit down first and you’re going to let me feed you because you look like a brisk wind is going to sweep you away.” Felicia steered Robin into the kitchen where she directed Robin to sit down. “Now, I want to know everything because I have a feeling you’ll need back up when you tell Mac.”

Robin nodded and rubbed her arms. She felt so cold. “Well, there’s not much to tell. When Patrick and I were together, we slept together once.” She flushed. “Well, I only spent the night at his place once but well we didn’t–it was more than once–”

Felicia coughed delicately. “Yes, I believe I get the picture.”

“We used protection and I thought–” she swallowed hard. “I don’t know what happened, you know I’m careful. I’m anal about this stuff, Felicia.”

“Of course honey.” Felicia set a plate of dried fruit and crackers in front of Robin. “Eat.”

Robin chewed on a piece of apple just to make Felicia happy but didn’t even register the taste as it slid down her throat. “Anyway, I thought we were moving too fast and I didn’t…I pulled back and it didn’t happen again. And then we had that stupid fight–” Tears blotted her vision and Robin swiped angrily at her eyes. “I’m so tired of crying.”

“Well, your hormones are going to be acting up for a while so I’d get used to that,” Felicia said sympathetically.

“And I haven’t even really talked to him since about anything more than a patient or a consult. I was feeling sick and tired so I thought maybe something was wrong with me–that maybe my T cell level was changing so I asked Alan to run some tests and…I found out this morning that I’m pregnant. And I could have infected Patrick.”

“Oh, honey…” Felicia sat back. “Are you going to tell him?”

“I already did,” Robin admitted softly. “I went straight from Alan’s office to find him. I mean…I know what’s going to happen and I know how he feels about children and commitment but…I just…he had to know–if only to get tested.”

“Of course,” Felicia sighed and rubbed her mouth. “And what happened when you told him?”

“He said he couldn’t handle this right now, that he needed some time to process but I know how he really feels. He hates me, Felicia and he probably has every reason too, especially now since I might have infected him–”

“Honey, honey–Patrick has a lot of flaws.” Felicia paused. “And I mean, a lot of flaws. But I honestly don’t believe for one second he’d ever blame you. He’s a doctor, he went into this relationship with open eyes and open ears and he knew all the risks. I know you know in your heart that he wouldn’t hate for you for it.”

“He never wanted kids,” Robin said. She sniffled and wiped her eyes with the napkin Felicia had given her. “He’s said it a thousand times–he doesn’t want a family, he didn’t want to be tied down and I told him that I didn’t need for him to do anything, that I wasn’t going to ask for him. I know he’s not going to want the baby–”

“Hold it, did he say that?” Felicia asked.

“No, but come on, Felicia.” Robin closed her eyes. “I’m not going to let myself hope for a miraculous happy ending to this scenario, there isn’t one. I’m having a baby–one that I might have already infected with the virus and I’m going to raise it alone. That’s reality and anything is else is just a fantasy.”

“No matter what happens with Patrick,” Felicia reached out and took Robin’s hand in hers. “You are not alone and you will never be alone, is that understood?”

“Yeah.” Robin sniffled again. “Can you call Uncle Mac and ask him to come home?”

“Sure.” Felicia patted Robin’s arm and stood.

General Hospital: On Call Room

Patrick flopped onto the bunk and rolled onto his back to stare at the fabric of the bunk on top of him.

He’d had two surgeries and a consult since the encounter with Robin in the locker room and had been running on auto since the elevator doors had closed. He’d had to shut himself off and concentrating on getting from one moment to the next.

But now–when he had a moment to himself–he found himself going back to that moment–with Robin looking up him, terrified and Patrick not having anything to say that would make things better.

Pregnant. She was pregnant and quite clearly didn’t expect him to step up and didn’t intend to demand it. No, that wouldn’t be her style. She wouldn’t beg or grovel for him to help–to be a father. She might be disappointed that he wouldn’t, but she’d never ask him to do something like that. And a year ago–with a different woman and in a different place, that might have happened and Robin would be correct.

But things were different now and he wasn’t that guy anymore and he wanted to take that look out of her eyes and surprise her with being exactly what she needed. The only trouble was that Patrick had never been able to correctly gleam what Robin needed or even wanted and he didn’t think that would magically start happening now that the situation had turned critical.

The on call room door slid open and Noah Drake stepped in. He closed the door behind him and leaned against it. “Elizabeth Spencer said that she saw you come in here like something awful had happened. She was concerned.”

Patrick chuckled, the sound was bitter and almost harsh. “I don’t know that it’s awful but it’s certainly something all right.”

“I know I’m not going to win any Father of the Year awards any time soon but I’d like to help if something’s bothering you,” Noah remarked.

Patrick sighed and swung himself into a seated position. He kept his head low, his arms dangling over his knees. “Yeah, sure. You can’t make things any worse than they already are.”

“You’re probably wrong about that but I suppose we could give it a try.” Noah crossed his arms. “So what’s up?”

“Robin came to see me in the locker room,” Patrick said. “We haven’t spoken about anything more than patients in the last six weeks so I tried to brush her off, tried to dismiss her.”

Noah frowned. “It wasn’t about a patient?”

“No.” Patrick scrubbed his hands over his face. “She said that she’d just been to see Alan Quartermaine, that he’d run some tests…”

Noah straightened. “She’s sick?” he demanded. “Is it serious?”

“About as serious as it gets,” Patrick sighed. “She’s pregnant, Dad.”

The chart in Noah’s arms slid to the ground with a clatter. “You–” he cleared his throat. “With a baby?” He shook his head. “Strike that. How–Patrick–how could this happen?”

“Before you ask, of course we were careful,” Patrick replied. He stood and paced the tiny room. “I’ve never met someone who was more anal about safe sex than Robin. But you know, the only thing that’s one hundred percent is abstinence.”

“Of course.” Noah exhaled slowly. “She must be out of her mind right now. Worried about the baby, worried about you. Where is she?”

“I don’t know,” Patrick shrugged helplessly. “She just told me that she was pregnant, that I need to be tested and that she wasn’t asking for me for anything. And then she left. I couldn’t catch up with her.” He rested his forehead against the wall. “She thinks I’m this deadbeat loser that can’t even take care of my responsibilities.”

“I’m sure her opinion isn’t that bad,” Noah murmured. “Patrick…what are you going to do?”

“I’ve never made it a secret that I didn’t plan on kids, on a family.” Patrick shook his head. “I know where Robin would have got the idea that I wouldn’t step up because I’ve all but told her that a thousand times in all the months we’ve known each other. But…it’s a reality now and I can’t…I’m going to be a father. I can’t keep thinking about how I didn’t want this to be my life, that’s not fair to anyone. Especially to a kid.” He dragged his fingers through his hair, making it stand even more up on end. “I’m going to do exactly what you and Mom would expect me to do, the right thing.”

“Uh huh,” Noah nodded. “Which would be?”

“I’m going to convince Robin to marry me and we’re going to raise our child.” Patrick met Noah’s eyes. “What else can I do?”

Scorpio-Jones House: Living Room

When Mac burst through the front door a mere ten minutes after Felicia had asked for him to come home immediately, he found Felicia seated nervously on the sofa and his niece at the fireplace, staring at a photo of herself with her parents, taken shortly before their supposed “deaths”.

“What’s wrong?” Mac demanded. “What’s going on?”

“Uncle Mac…” Robin sighed. “You must have broke every speed limit getting here.”

“I’m the commissioner. I just put the lights on,” Mac said. “Robin…” his eyes flicked to Felicia before moving back to his niece. “Is…are you okay?”

“I’m okay as I’m going to be,” Robin said honestly. “Uncle Mac, you should probably sit down.”

Mac crossed his arms and squared his shoulders. “I’m fine where I am. Are you in trouble? Do I need to call Robert or Anna?”

“You still think I’m eleven,” Robin sighed with a sad smile. “You know how much I love that about you, Uncle Mac? That no matter where I go, how much I change or what I do, you’re always going to see me as a little girl in pigtails that needs your protection.”

“Before I was worried, now you’re scaring me. Robin…”

“I’m pregnant, Uncle Mac,” Robin said. She twisted her fingers together and her smile grew just a little. “I’m going to have a baby.”

“I changed my mind,” Mac said after a long moment. “I’m going to sit down.”

“It’s wonderful news,” Felicia nodded. “We’ll celebrate it, of course. I’ll get Luke to rent us the Haunted Star because I’m not setting foot at the Metro Court.”

“Of course it’s good news,” Mac said. “But Robin…there are questions I want to ask but I’m not sure how to.”

“Then let me just answer them for you.” Robin kneeled in front of her uncle and took her hands in his. “Yes, Patrick is the father and yes, there is a chance that he was infected. Yes, I’ve told him. And no, I don’t know what comes next.”

Mac’s eyes narrowed. “If he thinks he’s just going to get off without taking any responsibility…”

“He doesn’t,” Felicia jumped in over Robin’s small sound of protest. “Your niece has her mind up how Dr. Drake is going to handle this situation and isn’t allowing for any other scenario. I imagine Robin gave him all of five seconds to process things before walking out.”

“Well…that’s true,” Robin admitted. “But–Uncle Mac, I don’t know what Patrick’s going to want or going to do but I’m not…I won’t force his hand, okay? I don’t want him to do anything he doesn’t want to do because it’ll just make him resent me and our baby. Please tell me you understand.”

“I don’t like it, but it’s not my life.” Mac leaned forward and kissed Robin’s forehead. “Whatever you need, sweetheart. You know I’ll do whatever you need me to do.”

“Good.” Robin stood and slid her hands into the back pockets of her slacks. “Because I need you to call my dad and ask him to come for a visit. And I don’t want you to tell him why, okay?”

March 24, 2014

This entry is part 1 of 16 in the Yesterdays

The first time Elizabeth Webber saw him, she was nineteen and vacationing in Spain with her parents. The only child of wealthy jet-set parents, she’d spent most of her childhood traveling Europe, Asia and South America.

But she’d never seen anyone as handsome and charming as Jason Morgan. He was the twenty-one-year-old son of some of her parents’ friends. He grew up the same way she did–traveling from place to place.

She met him at a party in her parents’ penthouse suite of their hotel. She was dressed to the nines–looking far more mature and sophisticated than her nineteen years. Standing near the bar and serving–that was her job at these things.

He came up to her, smoothly asked for a dry martini. She served him with a graceful smile.

“I’ve never seen you at one of these before,” he remarked.

“I’m with my parents,” Elizabeth replied. “I’m on summer break from Cambridge University.”

“Which ones belong to you?”

“Cheri and Chris Webber–they’re over by the piano player,” Elizabeth gestured. “What about you?”

“I’m on break from Yale,” he told her. “And mine are the ones next to your parents–Heather and Chad Morgan.”

They’d bonded over their similar childhoods and exchanged stories about all the different places they’d been. He’d convinced her to abandon the bar and join him out on the terrace.

“So what are you studying at Cambridge?” he asked, sipping his second martini of the night.

“English Literature,” Elizabeth replied. She laughed. “I’m really only getting my degree because my parents insisted. I’d rather just continue living like they have–from place to place, you know?”

“Is that what you plan on doing after graduation?”

She nodded. “If I can, I’m going to graduate this year–early. I really want to travel without my parents. They’re always monitoring the places I go.”

“I feel the same way. I’m graduating this year from Yale and after that, I get my trust fund.”

She smiled and tilted her head to the side. “I guess we’ve got quite a lot in common.”

He’d kissed her for the first time that night. As night slid into dawn, he slid his hand over the nape of her neck and tugged her close to him. He was intoxicating–his smell, his taste, his touch–she wanted to drown in him.

She was in Spain for two weeks and even though his parents were leaving the next day, he stayed behind to be with her. They spent every moment of those two weeks together and by the time it was over, she knew he was the one.

But at the end of the summer, he went to Connecticut and she went to England. They wrote and called each other–she flew to see him over Thanksgiving and he came to England for Christmas.

It was over Christmas that she realized he was just as serious about them as she was. He rented the biggest suite in the most lavish hotel in London for the week he was there. She pretty much moved in with him during that time and she’d been floored when he mentioned his preference for that.

“This feels right,” he told her, wrapping his arms around her waist as they stood out on the large terrace. “I like going to sleep holding you and waking up with you.”

She smiled. “It doesn’t bother you that we haven’t slept together yet?”

“No, not really,” Jason replied. He kissed her neck. “When you’re ready, and it’s right it’ll happen. We have the rest of our lives.”

“We do?” she asked a little surprised. She twisted to look at him.

“Yeah.” He smiled at her–the little tender half-smile that never failed to make her melt. “I love you.”

She turned his arms and slid her fingers through his hair. “I love you, too,” she whispered.

They’d married the day after she graduated from Cambridge. He went to work at his father’s investment firm, taking a job that allowed him to travel extensively. And for the first two years, it was perfect. They were in love and doing exactly what they wanted when they wanted.

They’d been staying in San Francisco the cold winter during their second year of marriage. She’d been feeling kind of ill and she’d suspected she might be pregnant for almost a month before she finally bought the test.

And when she’d seen the positive result, a cold and clammy fear gripped her heart. Jason liked their life as it was. Would he welcome a baby? A baby that would throw their entire lives into whack–disrupt their every routine and change them–who they were, what they did…would he want that?

As soon as he’d come in from a meeting, she’d thrown herself into his arms, burying her face in his neck. Alarmed, he held her tightly, smoothing her hair down. “Baby?”

“I’m pregnant,” she reported, her voice muffled.

He drew away then, forcing him to look at her. Her eyes were wide with fear and she was shaking. “Pregnant?” he repeated.

She nodded. “Yeah.”

“Pregnant.”

“Yeah.”

He grinned then and twirled her in a circle before setting her on her feet and kissing her with more passion and desire than ever before. He broke it off abruptly and fell to his knees to raise her shirt over her stomach and kiss it gently. The action brought tears to her eyes and they slid down her cheeks soundlessly.

He got back to his feet and kissed her again, brushing the tears from her skin. “This is incredible,” he breathed. “You’re the most beautiful woman in the world.”

“You’re happy?” Elizabeth asked, genuinely surprised. “Really, truly happy?”

“Aren’t you?” he asked, suddenly paling. “Elizabeth–“

“Oh, God, I am happy,” she assured him, pressing a kiss to his lips. “Wildly ecstatically happy. I just…didn’t know if you would be.”

“I’m thrilled,” he replied. He kissed her again, his hands covering her abdomen. “We’re having a baby,” he whispered against her lips. She laughed and threw her arms around his neck and he twirled her again.

Her pregnancy had been relatively normal until the seventh month when she’d been diagnosed with hypertension and restricted to bed rest. Jason had promptly bought a large penthouse apartment in the town they were in at that moment–Port Charles, New York–and he told her in no uncertain terms that they weren’t moving until the baby was born.

Olivia Webber Morgan had come into the world eight weeks later and the moment Elizabeth held her tiny precious daughter, she’d fallen head over heels for her and decided that she would have the life Elizabeth hadn’t.

Jason was just as smitten with her. Within days, the nursery at the penthouse was overflowing with stuffed animals and all kinds of toys that Olivia wouldn’t be able to play with for years. Touched by her husband’s bottomless love for their daughter, Elizabeth decided it was a good time to tell him her decision.

“I want us to spend more time in one place,” she told him one night while breast feeding the baby. “I want Olivia to have the home I didn’t.”

“Whatever you want, baby,” Jason promised, kissing her forehead.

“I’d like to buy a house here in Port Charles,” Elizabeth continued. “And you can still travel but right now I want to be home with her.”

“I completely understand.”

She’d thought he did. She’d really believed it. But he didn’t. He expected her to do the same thing his mother and her mother had done. Spend time with Olivia for a few months and then put her in the care of well-trained nannies while they continued their former life. When Olivia was old enough and on vacation from whatever boarding school she was attending, she’d join them.

But Elizabeth didn’t want that. She wanted to raise her daughter herself–to be present when she took her first step, said her first word. She wanted to take her to her first day of kindergarten. She wanted Olivia to have a normal childhood.

And once Jason realized that Elizabeth intended on staying in Port Charles permanently…that’s when the trouble began.

“We always go to Paris in the spring,” he argued.

“Olivia’s not old enough to travel,” Elizabeth replied. She finished changing the baby and set her back in her crib. She smiled at the cherubic face. “Maybe I’ll go next year.”

He frowned. “We can just hire someone. I don’t know why we’re putting it off. We’re going to need to do it before the summer season anyway.”

Elizabeth sighed and pushed him out of the nursery before closing the door softly. “We’re not hiring anyone. I’m her mother.”

“I understand that, honey, but–“

“And I’m not going anywhere this summer. She might start talking and I don’t want to miss that.”

Jason slid his hands in his pockets and peered at her closely. “What are you saying Elizabeth?”

She bit her lip and looked down at the ground. “I’m not going to travel anymore–not like we did before.”

“Baby…that’s how we met,” Jason protested. “That’s all we know together.” He slid her hair through his fingers and smiled at her. “We’re good at that.”

She shook her head. “And now we’re parents and I want to be good at that.”

“Elizabeth, your whole life can’t revolve around Olivia,” Jason argued.

“Why not?” she challenged. “Other people do it. They spend their days carting their children from place to place. And they’re happy doing it.”

“Yeah, normal people. We’re not like them.”

“I hated not knowing my parents until I was old enough to join them on summer vacations. When I was four, I thought my nanny was my mother.” She shook her head. “Olivia needs this time with us. To learn our voices and become attached–to realize that we’re her parents. This is the time when bonds are formed. I can’t abandon her.”

“You’re not abandoning her–“

“I’m not going, Jason. And that’s final.”

She’d thought it would be okay. That eventually, he’d understand and he’d even appreciate the love she had for their daughter. She didn’t even begrudge him his own trips. She knew he loved to travel–he went to the posh places that people in their set was expected to go but he also went other places. He’d been thrilled to go to Hong Kong and Cairo. He’d visited Russia and Argentina, Kenya and Israel. He lived for those kinds of trips and she’d always understood. When she’d gotten sun poisoning in Egypt so he could visit the pyramids and when she’d gotten pneumonia visiting Siberia…she’d just accepted it as part of loving him.

He went about his own schedule–their usual one. He’d come in for some weekends but most of the time she rarely saw him and then the day came when she opened up a newspaper from France and she’d seen a picture of him attending some stupid party with a busty blonde on his arm.

Her heart had shattered and she wasn’t sure that it had ever recovered. While she was at home raising their daughter and setting roots down in the community for their daughter to thrive on…he was off in France, substituting a blonde for her.

When he’d come home from that particular trip, she’d given him both the newspaper and a copy of divorce papers. She loved him but she couldn’t–wouldn’t–deal with infidelity. He’d fought her–insisted that they’d just posed for the picture together. He loved her, he said, but he couldn’t understand why she didn’t love him anymore.

The thought that she didn’t love him was absurd–just because she wouldn’t put their daughter in the care of nannies and be like their parents–she loved him with everything inside her. She’d screamed that at him but he only shook his head. If she loved him, she’d compromise. And if he loved her, he would understand why she couldn’t.

And in the end, it’d been left at that. After days of arguing and getting nowhere, he’d thrown his hands up and signed the papers. He’d moved out the same day.

The actual divorce proceedings had been simple. She asked for nothing and wanted nothing. He’d argued for joint custody and it’d been awarded. Olivia would spend summers and various vacations with him while spending the bulk of her time in Port Charles with Elizabeth.

Jason had insisted on child support and signed an agreement to pay both support and alimony. After the divorce had been granted, he’d taken off for Europe.

And Elizabeth, shattered, had thrown her life into Olivia. After a while, her entire world revolved around the angelic little girl. Anything that didn’t have to do with her Elizabeth didn’t allow herself to think about it. When Jason remarried two years later to a woman named Elise Jacoby, she’d allowed herself one night to cry and scream before going on with her life.

The times Olivia was staying with Jason, Elizabeth would numbly move through her life, attending charity functions and doing various fundraisers. She never dated–never even thought about another man. Jason had been it for her and she’d always known that.

The spring that Olivia turned five years old marked the fourth year of their divorce. By this time, Olivia had spent half her life traveling on yachts and planes while Elizabeth served on the PTA, the Knights of Columbus and joined the country club.

For the first time since their divorce, Jason brought Olivia home personally instead of sending her with a driver or something. The young girl had been ecstatic–practically forcing her father inside the home to see her bedroom.

It was the first time Jason had seen the house since moving out four years earlier and the first time he’d seen Elizabeth since their last divorce hearing three and a half years ago.

The changes between the vivacious and carefree girl she’d been and the mature and demure woman she was now stunned him. She wore her long brown hair straight, her makeup was natural, her sundresses and evening gowns exchanged for a pair of blue jeans and a tank top.

“Elizabeth,” Jason said, nodding at her.

“Daddy’s gonna see my room!” Olivia announced gleefully. She tugged on her father’s hand. “Come on Daddy!”

Elizabeth barely had time to greet her daughter after not seeing her for two months before she’d dragged Jason up to the second floor. A little hurt and thrown by seeing Jason after so long, she followed them.

“This is my bathroom,” Olivia directed, “and that’s Mommy’s room–”

Jason glanced inside Elizabeth’s open bedroom door and saw that it looked exactly as it had the last time he’d been home–down to the comforter and sheets. Before he could see anymore than that Olivia was dragging him to the large and open room at the end of the hall.

“This isn’t the room we had the nursery in,” Jason thought out loud as he took in the room that had once served as his wife’s art studio.

“She liked this room the best,” Elizabeth said softly from behind him. He turned. “My studio is downstairs in the sunroom.”

“Look, Daddy,” Olivia gushed, holding up a picture frame. “That’s you and Mommy and me!”

He took it from her, drinking in the photograph that his mother had taken the day he’d brought Elizabeth and Olivia home from the hospital. His arm was around her shoulders, holding her to him tightly while she cradled their daughter. “I remember the day this was taken.”

“Mommy says it was the day I came home,” Olivia said, excitedly. Her face fell. “It’s the only picture I have of us.”

Elizabeth came forward. “What did you do this summer?” she asked, setting Olivia’s princess pink suitcase on her bed.

“Daddy and Elise took me to see the big clock in E-gland,” Olivia said, hopping onto the bed. “It was so cool, Mommy. Have you ever seen it?”

“Your mother went to school in England,” Jason reported, trying to divert Elizabeth’s attention from the mention of Elise. Elizabeth had never met his second wife and he preferred it that way.

“Wow, that’s so cool. I wish I went to school in E-gland,” Olivia chirped.

Elizabeth smiled. “Well, maybe you can go to college like I did. But if you went to actual school, you couldn’t see Maja or Lily.”

Olivia frowned. “Yeah, because I’d be in school all year and then summers with Daddy. I wouldn’t be able to play in the playground or go to Kelly’s with Em and Lily.” She scowled. “I wouldn’t get to see you either.”

“Who’s Maja, Lily and Em?” Jason asked curiously.

“Maja Spencer and Lily Cassadine,” Elizabeth replied. “They’re Olivia’s best friends from kindergarten this year.” She looked at him pointedly. “She loves her school.”

“Yeah, Daddy, I was in a play this year and Mommy says I can take ballet lessons with Maja this year.” She frowned. “You didn’t come to the play.”

Jason sighed and tousled his daughter’s dark hair. “I didn’t know or I would have been in the front row.”

Elizabeth snorted. “Perhaps you should check with your secretary since I left a message about it three times,” she muttered.

“Will you come see me in a ballet recital this year?” Olivia asked hopefully.

“I wouldn’t miss it for the world,” Jason swore. He checked his watch and sighed. “I gotta go, Princess. I don’t want to miss my flight.”

Olivia crossed her arms stubbornly. “I want you to,” she pouted. “Because then you could stay here and we could be family again.”

Elizabeth froze in the middle of the packing, her back to her ex-husband and daughter. Oh, God. They’d tried to make life as normal for Olivia as possible but when she saw people like Emily and Nikolas Cassadine or Lucky and Jessica Spencer…she had to know that her parents living on opposite ends of the earth wasn’t normal.

“We are a family,” Jason said, kneeling in front of her. He rested his hands on her scabby knees and smiled at her. “You, me, your mother and Elise. We’re a family.”

Elizabeth gripped the dresser tightly at the mention of his new wife. Elise Jacoby-Morgan was not part of her family. Not now. Not ever. She didn’t even have to meet the woman to know she despised her.

“Nobody else I know has two mommies,” Olivia sniffled.

A sharp pain lanced through Elizabeth’s heart at the very idea that Elise was Olivia’s mother. This is what she’d wanted to avoid all those years ago when she refused to hire a nanny.

“You don’t have two mommies,” Jason corrected. “Elise is not your mother. She’s just my wife. Elizabeth is your mother and no one else, baby.”

“Then why don’t we live together like a real family?” Olivia asked, her big blue eyes welling up with tears. “Nobody else I know has an Elise.”

Elizabeth shut the last dresser door and sat down next to her daughter. “Sometimes adults don’t get along enough to live together,” she said softly, wrapping an arm around Olivia. The little girl burrowed into her mother’s side. “That doesn’t mean they don’t love each other or you. It’s just that they’re better off apart.”

“Maja’s parents fight and they still live together.”

“We’re not Maja’s parents,” Jason told her softly. “”And everyone has different fights.”

“Then you should find a way to work it out,” Olivia remarked stubbornly. She pouted. “If I have to work it out with old meanie Kristina Davis then you should do it too.”

“It’s not the same thing as when Kristina threw sand in your hair,” Elizabeth replied. She kissed her on top of the head. “Say goodbye to Daddy so he doesn’t miss his flight.”

Olivia pulled away from Elizabeth and threw herself into Jason’s arms. “Don’t go, Daddy, please!” she cried, burrowing her face into his neck. “I’ll be really really good and Mommy will be, too. Just stay.”

Elizabeth stood and left the room abruptly. She couldn’t do this anymore–couldn’t sit there and answer her daughter’s questions about why she and Jason weren’t together anymore because truthfully Elizabeth wasn’t even sure anymore. God, she’d loved him. She still did. She didn’t know how he could have married someone else when she couldn’t imagine being anyone else’s wife.

She busied herself in the living room downstairs working on another fundraiser for the PTA. After a few moments, she heard Jason clearing his throat in the doorway.

“She’s asleep,” he told her quietly. “Cried herself there.”

Elizabeth exhaled slowly. “I’ll take care of it,” she told him. She hesitated. “Thank you for what you said about her not having two mothers.”

He shrugged. “You might not think I was listening back when you explained all the reasons why you didn’t want to hire a nanny, but I was. I had the same childhood you did, Elizabeth. And it didn’t hurt either one of us. So why would you think it’d hurt Olivia?”

Her eyes burned with tears. “You mean any worse than we’re hurting her now?” she asked in a pained voice. She pressed a hand to her forehead and turned away. “Just go, Jason. I don’t feel like having the same argument again. It’s over.”

“Sometimes I think I would have been better off making my own martini that first night,” he told her.

Stung, she turned to him, the tears sliding down her cheeks. “What?”

“If I’d just avoided talking to you, then I wouldn’t have to watch my daughter cry and beg me to stay every time I leave.”

“You wouldn’t have your daughter,” Elizabeth said coldly. “And don’t you dare make this all my fault. I’m not the one who broke my marriage vows.”

“God, Elizabeth, how many times do we have to go over this?” he demanded. “I just posed for a damn picture with her. I don’t even remember her name.”

She snorted. “Yeah. Whatever.”

“I never touched her. You were the only woman I wanted–even if you were being incredibly unreasonable,” he spat.

“It was unreasonable to want to raise my own child? To want to have a home?” she asked, stunned. “That’s unreasonable?”

“You wouldn’t bend–not even a little,” he retorted. “You wouldn’t leave her a weekend to go away with me. It was always Olivia with you. It’s like the second she was born, your first thought was about her. You stopped caring what I wanted–”

You stopped caring first,” Elizabeth interrupted. “You were the one who would go on trips for weeks at a time. Half the time you never called, and when you did, you wouldn’t even ask about her.”

“I didn’t need to have a house in some hick town to have a home,” Jason replied, irritated. “You were my home. I never needed some stupid pile of bricks to make me feel secure.”

“You bought this house,” Elizabeth accused. “You decided we were going to stay in Port Charles.”

“I bought a penthouse until she was born. You wanted this house and I bought it because I thought it would be temporary,” Jason retorted.

“I can’t do this anymore,” Elizabeth cried. She whirled and pushed her way out of the living room and into the kitchen where she leaned against the wall. Oh, God, she still loved him. How was that possible? After all they’d done to each other, why were they still going in the same circles?

She heard a soft knock. “Elizabeth, I really do have to go. Tell Olivia that I love her.”

“Okay.”

“And Elizabeth?”

She closed her eyes. She’d always loved the way he said her name. His voice always dropped an octave and sometimes two after they made love. “What?” she asked painfully.

“I…I never wanted to hurt you. You know that right?”

“I never wanted to hurt you either,” she whispered.

“Goodbye.”

She heard his footsteps walking across the living room and then the door opened and then closed. She sank to the floor and started to cry.

This entry is part 27 of 34 in the I Shall Believe

December 1, 2003

Morgan Penthouse

Jason stared at her for a long minute as if trying to gauge if she was really serious or not. Finally, he shrugged. “Okay. Will you move in with me?”

“Not here,” she said immediately.

He shook his head. “I don’t understand.”

“And not full-time.” Elizabeth took a deep breath. “I still want time to sort things out and the last thing I want to do is rush into something I’m not ready for. So…maybe we could compromise. I like being with you, Jason, I’m just not ready to do it all the time.”

“So what are you suggesting?” he asked curiously.

“I don’t want to live here. I mean–it’s a nice place and I did like staying here but there are more bad memories than good and if we’re going to start something, I want to start fresh.”

“Okay,” Jason agreed. “That’s more than reasonable. I only live here because Sonny’s across the hall and he…” he hesitated. “He won’t be there much longer.”

“I really am sorry about–about what’s been going on. I know it’s got to be hard for you to watch him go through this.”

He exhaled slowly and pushed away from the pool table. He moved towards the window and stared out of it. “He was the strongest man I’d ever met, you know? I didn’t think there was anything he couldn’t do.”

Elizabeth nodded. “He was your mentor, Jason. He taught you so much…”

“Yeah, yeah, he did.” Jason crossed his arms and put his chin into his chest. “Sonny showed me a lot of concrete things that Robin couldn’t. He–he’s the one who told me that you never lay a hand on a woman in anger. That you never commit violence against them for any reason and now…after what he’s done to Carly…I have to wonder…how much did he really teach me?”

Elizabeth frowned and crossed the room, standing against the edge of the window, across from him. “What do you mean by that?”

“I mean…he taught me how to treat a woman. And despite all of his problems, he has never violated that. You know how some people have this line that they just don’t cross? For Sonny, that line is abusing a woman. His–his stepfather used to hit his mother.”

Elizabeth’s throat tightened. “Oh, that must have been so horrible for him,” she said softly.

“He used to lock Sonny in a closet and you–you know he’s still claustrophobic. He was this monster and the thing that always terrified Sonny was becoming just like him.”

“Doing it once does not make him a monster,” Elizabeth protested. “Yes, it’s a horrible thing and I do not think he deserves to be forgiven right now but he knows it was wrong. I mean–Jason, I saw his face. I don’t think he knew what he was doing and that’s got to be more terrifying than hitting someone.”

“I’ve been so busy taking care of other things that I haven’t been paying attention to him. Last week, he came over and wanted to talk–and I just brushed him off.” He looked at her and she wanted to cry at the anguish in his eyes. “What if he coming to tell me he was close to the edge?”

“You cannot blame yourself for this,” Elizabeth said firmly, closing the distance between them. “You have the right to your own life and after everything you’ve done for Sonny, there is nothing wrong with wanting a night to yourself, okay?”

He shook his head. “Sonny depends on me to be there for him–to pull him back–”

“I don’t think anyone could have this time,” Elizabeth interrupted. “Everyone has had way too much going on in their lives and maybe that made Sonny feel a little out of control himself. When were you supposed to find time in between dealing with the business, with Courtney, with me, with Carly and God knows what else you have to do that I don’t know about?”

“I should have found the time,” Jason protested.

“You are only one man,” Elizabeth told him softly. “You cannot do everything on your own and you cannot be strong all the time.”

“Everyone expects me to be. They come to me because they I know I’ll listen and they know I’ll help them,” he said. He shook his head. “I just have to find a better way to handle it all–”

“Jason, when you’re off taking care of everyone else, who’s supposed to take care of you?” Elizabeth asked pointedly.

“I don’t need anyone to take care of me,” he told her firmly.

She threw up her hands in frustration. “Sometimes I just want to throttle you,” she seethed, stalking away from him. At the foot of the stairs, she whirled around. “Some day, Jason, you’re finally going to be done taking care of everyone else and then what are you going to come home too?Nothing! Because you were too busy to have your own life and no woman in her right mind is going to wait for you to get around to being with her.”

“Are we doing this again?” he asked, sounding just as aggravated as she was. “Elizabeth, I’m already doing everything I can to prove that you’re a priority in my life. What else do you expect me to do?”

“I want to be able to talk to you,” Elizabeth exploded. “I don’t want to just be priority–I want to be with you. I want to be the person that you turn to when you need someone to talk to. Why is it so hard for you to just…just be with me?” she demanded.

“Because you want things I can’t give,” Jason argued. “You want honesty and for me to sit and pour out my feelings and I just can’t do those things–”

“I never said I wanted you to pour your feelings out to me. That’s not who you are,” Elizabeth sounded vaguely insulted. “All I want is for you to be with me. I don’t want to be another person you take care of, Jason, and the second I feel like that, I’m walking out that door.”

“Elizabeth, I don’t know what you want from me. First you say you need time and then you give me this cryptic answer when I ask you to move in with me and now–you’ve got to be the most confusing woman I’ve ever met.”

“I was being selfish this morning,” Elizabeth remarked. “I was thinking of myself and I have to stop doing this. If this is ever going to work between us, I have to start thinking of you when I make my decisions and I’m sorry–but you actually sounded like you wanted to be with me when you asked earlier and suddenly, now I’m too confusing.”

“I do want to be with you,” Jason protested. “But I don’t want to disappoint you again. You said that while we were apart, I turned into someone else and maybe that’s true. But what I need to know is if you can still love the person I am now.”

She rolled her eyes. “Of course I still love you. Would I be standing here arguing with you if I didn’t?”

“Well, it’d be nice to hear it once in a while,” Jason retorted. “Instead, all I get is what I’m doing wrong.”

“Good lord,” she muttered. “Okay–maybe we should get back to the original topic. The moving in thing. When I said not full-time, I meant that a few nights a week, we’d try it out. No physical stuff, you know? I don’t feel ready to go back there just yet but we could share the bedroom, I guess. I know you want to be around during the pregnancy and this is a way for you to be around more. Is that what you want?”

“That sounds fine,” Jason said warily. “What about the rest of the stuff?”

“The rest of the stuff we could figure out along the way. No one says we have to have all the answers right now.” Elizabeth sat on the couch and rubbed her eyes. “Man, arguing really sucks the energy out of you.”

Jason moved away from the window and sat next to her. “It’s getting kind of late, you know,” he began. “And since the launch doesn’t work past dark…maybe you should just stay here,” he said hesitantly. “I mean–I know you don’t want to stay here permanently or anything but what about just for tonight?”

“Yeah, actually, that would really be a good thing because then I could just go from here to the apartment tomorrow and not have to face that horrible launch again.”

“Okay, then. I’ll go to Kelly’s and get some food. I’ve got something to do so I’ll do that while I’m out, okay?”

“That works for me,” Elizabeth agreed, already planning to nap while he was gone. She wasn’t kidding–the entire conversation had seemingly sucked any energy gained from the previous nap.

Scott Baldwin’s Office

Scott had barely exited his private bathroom before his eyes focused on an impatient Jason Morgan standing in his office.

Scott narrowed his eyes. “I know you’re not here to confess,” he remarked dryly moving behind the large mahogany desk.

“Tomorrow when Dara Jensen informs you that Sonny’s changed his plea back to guilty due to a mental defect, you will offer her a deal,” Jason said firmly. “He’ll serve a minimum of six years in Ferncliffe, a maximum of twelve. Do you understand me?”

Scott smirked. “If you think you can intimidate me, Morgan–”

In a flash Jason reached across the desk and yanked Scott towards him by grabbing the lapels of his electric green shirt. “If you think you’ve got a choice, you’re sorely mistaken. You’ll do it Scott, or you’ll regret it. I will take Sonny out of this country and you will never find him. Would you rather have a conviction or let Sonny get away again?” Jason released him and Scott jerked back, straightening his collar.

“That’s assault right there,” Scott huffed. “Why shouldn’t I have you arrested?”

“Because Sonny in Ferncliffe for six years is almost as good as two years in Sing Sing,” Jason said coldly. “Like I said, you can have a conviction or a fugitive. What looks better in the papers?”

Scott hesitated. Putting Sonny Corinthos behind bars had been his goal for the past two years. Putting him away someplace for the criminally insane was almost as good. He cleared his throat. “When Dara calls, I’ll offer her the deal.”

“Good.”

Jason left the office and headed for Kelly’s.

The Docks

“Here,” Lucas said, handing Sage a Styrofoam cup of hot chocolate. “This should warm you up.”

“I’ve never been ice skating before, thanks for teaching me,” Sage remarked, her teeth chattering a little. “But you didn’t have to push me into that snow bank. I am freezing now!”

“Sorry, I slipped.” Lucas hid his smirk behind his own cup but she didn’t miss. She smacked him in the shoulder.

“I’ll get you back,” she promised.

“Oh…hey, it’s Lucas and Sage.”

Sage sighed. She knew this night was going too well. She turned and saw the Jones sisters coming down the steps followed by a reluctant Dillon. “Hello,” she said politely.

Maxie, having been the one who’d spoken, stepped forward. “Hey, I’m Maxie Jones. I don’t know that we ever got a chance to really meet but you know Lucas can’t shut up about you,” she tossed a teasing glance at her now glaring cousin.

Sage flushed. “It’s nice to meet you. I take it you already know my name.”

“Well duh,” Georgie said dryly. Maxie elbowed her sharply. “Ow. Oh…God…look, did you really mean that apology last week?”

“Georgie,” Lucas sighed, “don’t start.”

“Hey, butt out for a second,” Georgie remarked. “Well?” she asked expectantly.

“I don’t tend to dole out insincere apologies,” Sage replied. “Why?”

“Because I think that it’s obvious you and Lucas hit it off and he’s not really stupid enough to hang around with someone unless they’re worth knowing, you know? So maybe we all really did get off to a bad start.” Georgie shifted uncomfortably.

“We did,” Sage assured her. “I really–it was really just a matter of seeing a cute boy and going after him. I didn’t think I was going to be living here and–things are just really different than they were even a month ago, okay?”

“Okay.” Georgie shrugged. “Clean slate?”

“Clean slate.”

“Great,” Maxie said. She saw the ice skates dangling over Lucas’s shoulder. “So you guys were down at the lake?”

“Yeah, Lucas was showing me how to skate. I’ve never really been in places where it snowed so I never got the chance to learn,” Sage informed her. “It’s a lot harder than it looks on television.”

“Yeah, the first time I was on the ice, I must have fell about eight thousand times,” Georgie said, making an obvious attempt to be friendly. While Sage still felt the girl was being slightly insincere, she appreciated the effort.

“Well, I wouldn’t have fallen more than ten times myself but Lucas tripped and knocked me into a snow bank,” she threw a nasty glance at the boy in question. “I’ve never been so cold in my life.”

“Just wait until winter really sets in,” Maxie said. “It’s only early December now. January is absolutely horrid and February’s not much better.”

Sage wrinkled her nose. “Ugh. I thought I’d like living with all this snow but I know now I’d much rather look at it than sludge through it all the time.”

“Well, I’d better finish walking you guys home,” Dillon said, speaking for the first time. “If you’re not back by eight, Mac will skin me alive. Nice to see you again, Sage. Hey, Lucas, we still on for that hockey game?”

“Yeah, we’re going to kill you guys,” Lucas boasted.

“Oh, right, that’s next Saturday,” Maxie said, clearly pleased that Dillon had brought it up. “The night after the dance. Are you guys going?”

“I hadn’t decided yet,” Sage said hesitantly, glancing at Lucas. He hadn’t kissed her since Thanksgiving which made her wonder if he was interested in her romantically at all.

“We should all go,” Georgie suggested. “Kyle will be home for Christmas break by that time. We have to do a group date or Mac won’t let Maxie near Kyle, so why don’t you two come with us?”

“Sure,” Lucas agreed. “That okay with you Sage?” he asked.

“It’s great. Hey, my uncle has a stretch limo. Maybe he’d let us use it,” Sage suggested, hoping she didn’t come off as haughty and arrogant.

Instead Maxie’s eyes lit up. “Ooh…that would be awesome. It’d be like prom all over again. Except, you know…better than last year.”

“Speaking of Prom, I think we should start planning for it soon,” Georgie said. “Because we want to get the right dresses, the right shoes and we need to coordinate seating arrangements–”

“My sister’s an organizational freak,” Maxie said, shaking her head. “But she’s right. The best dress prices are in February. Maybe we could go together.”

Sage’s grin widened. “I’d love to. I love dances and I really like shopping for them.”

“Great,” Georgie agreed. “Okay, you can walk us home now,” she told her boyfriend.

“Well, thank you,” Dillon replied shortly. He walked past Lucas and Sage and the two sisters followed him.

“He hates me,” Sage sighed.

“Nah, he hates everyone except Georgie and Maxie,” Lucas tried to assure her. “After all, you apologized.”

“Yeah…but apologies don’t solve everything,” Sage said softly. “I just have to try harder, you know? I mean…Georgie doesn’t hate me anymore or maybe she’s just being nice to me because of you but Maxie seemed to like me.”

“Are you okay with the dance thing?” he asked hesitantly. “I wanted to ask you but I didn’t…I didn’t exactly have the courage.”

“The courage?” Sage repeated, slightly bemused. “Why would you need courage to ask me to a dance? You asked me to go ice skating today. Why is one thing different than the other?”

“Because this was between friends and the dance…I would have been asking you on a date,” Lucas admitted. “I mean–I know we’re just friends and all but…I–” he shrugged and ducked his head. “I like you, Sage.”

“Just for the record, if you’d asked me one on one, I would have said yes,” she informed him. “And I like you, too, Lucas.”

He raised his eyes back to her. “Yeah?”

“Yeah.” There were those damned butterflies again, Sage mused as Lucas stepped a little closer to her. This was going to be the second time a boy had ever kissed her. Usually she’d done the initiating but Lucas was proving to be a different sort of boy altogether.

He lowered his lips to hers and though both were chilled from the cold, it still felt like heaven to her.

Harborview Towers: Parking Garage

“Are you sure you don’t want to come back tonight?” Brian remarked, pulling his keys out of his pocket.

Courtney rested her hand on the hood of his car. “Yeah. I need to stay with Sonny. But you–you have to go back. I mean, you only got the one day off.”

“Yeah, but I could arrange for another if you need me,” Brian told her. “Do you?”

“Yes…but I need to handle this on my own. Besides, I’m going to be with Sonny all the time and now is not a good time to be springing you on him especially with how you feel about his line of work and how he feels about yours…you know?”

“Yeah, I can understand that. Well, you know my number. Call me any time.” He leaned to kiss her forehead. She closed her eyes at the soft contact and when he pulled away, she opened them to look up at him.

Brian hesitated only a moment before lowering his head to kiss her. Unfortunately, their lips had barely met before the roar of a motorcycle echoed through the garage. Courtney pulled away abruptly and put some distance between them. “I’ll call you, okay?”

“Yeah, I’ll see you when I see you then.” He opened his car door and got inside. He glanced in his rearview mirror but Courtney was already walking back towards the elevators.

This entry is part 26 of 34 in the I Shall Believe

December 1, 2004

Carly’s House

Lorenzo stalked towards her and took her face in his hands. Despite the anger on his face, his touch was gentle as he turned to get a better look at her bruised and swollen cheek. “Jesus, Carly…”

“I’m fine. I need you to know that and remember it when I tell you what happened, okay?” She took his hands from her face and squeezed them. “Please…I know you’re angry.”

“Okay.” Lorenzo nodded. “How much angrier will I be when you finish?”

“Oh…I don’t even want to estimate how angry you’ll be.” She pulled away from him and sat down, touching the tender skin with a wince.

He remained standing. “I came over when I heard that Sonny had changed his plea. I knew you’d be upset. But it’s been almost three hours. What’s happened, Carly?”

“Dara quit after Sonny changed his plea–she didn’t know that he was planning on that. Um…” Carly touched her forehead, trying to gather her thoughts. “Sonny, he was…he was…I don’t know how to describe it. He was close to the edge, I guess. Looking for a reason to fight. He was saying things to people he never would have normally. He berated Courtney for befriending Brian–who happens to be a sheriff where they’re at and then he called Elizabeth a home wrecking slut…I wanted to get him out of there before he could do anything else.”

“You knew he was close to snapping and you left with him?” Lorenzo asked incredulously, his ire growing as he realized that Sonny Corinthos had left that mark on her beautiful skin.

Carly’s voice broke. “I know. It was stupid.”

Lorenzo shook his head and kneeled in front of her. “No, no. Hey, how many times has he been like this and never laid a hand on you? How could you know?”

“I should have. I goaded him. I didn’t mean to do it but he was talking about how he needed to fix his family and how we all needed him and I couldn’t–” She took a deep breath and closed her eyes. “I told him that even though I had brought him home and was going to help him find another lawyer, I wasn’t going to come home.”

“And what did he say to that?”

“He told me he wanted to bring my boys home–that he didn’t want them exposed to you and Sage only he called her a brat and you a criminal and I don’t care what you do for a living–he has no right to judge and no one’s going to talk about Sage like that in front of me so I told him that no judge in his right mind was going to give him custody.”

She took a deep breath. “It just went from bad to worse and I could see–I could see that he getting more and more agitated but I just–I told him I didn’t need him anymore and that just–I think that was the end of it. He threw the glass from the mini bar like he always does and then he overturned the whole thing. He told me to walk away but I–I didn’t and I should have. Why didn’t I walk away?”

“Because it never occurred to you that he would hurt you,” Lorenzo repeated. He pushed her hair out of her eyes and cupped her uninjured cheek. “And he hit you.”

Carly nodded miserably. “Yeah.” She tried to go on but her voice faltered and she had to pause for a minute. “Jason had to have been right outside because almost immediately, he came in and he was on the floor, checking on me. Sonny–he seemed kind of out of it. I don’t really think he knew what he was doing. I’m not trying to make excuses,” she explained in a hurry when she saw Lorenzo grimace.

“Okay.” Lorenzo would let her get this out; he’d sit with her and make sure she was okay.

And then he’d kill him.

“He must have been doing something with Elizabeth because she was there, too. It’s all kind of hazy. Elizabeth helped me to my feet and got me across to Jason’s place.”

“What happened to Sonny?” Lorenzo asked, trying to keep his voice soft and gentle.

“Jason took care of him–I didn’t ask for a lot of details. He got Sonny to agree to take the plea and he seemed pretty convinced Scott Baldwin would make a deal for time in Ferncliffe. I waited until I felt more calm, and then Jason walked me to my car.” Carly took his hands in hers. “I know that you’re mad.”

“I’m not going to lie to you. I think that if Sonny was in this room right now, I’d probably do him a lot of bodily harm,” Lorenzo admitted.

“I don’t want you to get involved in this, okay?” Carly asked. She searched his eyes. “I know what you want to do and believe me, I do not blame you and it makes…it makes me feel good that you want to protect me. But I am okay. This situation has been handled and I don’t–I don’t have to see Sonny again if I don’t want to. If this deal goes through, he just needs to have a sentencing hearing. That’s it, okay?”

“Carly, he hit you,” Lorenzo said sharply. “I’m just supposed to let that go unpunished?”

“It’s not your job to punish him,” Carly retorted. She took a deep breath and tried to calm her self. “I need you to listen to me. You are important to me, more important than just about anyone else in my life and I don’t want that to change. But you have got to understand that just because I am not with Sonny anymore…it does not mean I do not care about him. I know that there is nothing you can do to him that he wouldn’t gladly let you. When he gets back into a place where he is in control of himself…he will remember this day and that will be punishment enough for me. He will remember that because he had too much pride to do the right thing, he did the one thing he swore never to do–that he committed an act of violence against a woman.”

“And that’s enough for you.”

“That’s enough for me.”

Lorenzo rose to his feet. “Well, it’s not enough for me. Somebody hurt you–somebody laid a hand on you and left a bruise and that just…” he shook his head. “Carly, I know that you’re not ready for a relationship and that’s okay. I understand that and I’m giving you all the time and space you need. But that doesn’t change the fact that I love you and I don’t know how I’m supposed to sleep at night knowing that Sonny hit you and I did nothing about it.”

Carly stood up and put her hands on his shirt. “I know. Believe me, I know how you feel. But I want you to promise me that…at least right now…you won’t do something crazy and go after him. Right now, Sonny is no position to defend himself and you are not the kind of man to attack someone like that.”

Lorenzo exhaled slowly and covered her hands with his. “I won’t–I won’t do anything. I’d rather keep a promise to you than seek revenge on Sonny.”

“And that is why I love you,” Carly said softly.

Lorenzo blinked. “Could you–could you repeat that?”

“I love you,” Carly said again with a smile. “That doesn’t change the fact that it’s too soon for me to start anything but I thought–you deserve to know how I feel.”

“Well…” Lorenzo smiled then. “I think it’s safe to say I’m not angry anymore.”

“Good…” Carly leaned up and kissed him on the cheek. “Because I need to go experiment with my makeup to cover this. I don’t want Michael to know until I can think of a way to explain it to him. Could you call my mother and ask her to keep Morgan a few more hours?”

“Sure,” Lorenzo agreed easily, watching her pull away from him and move towards the stairs.

Waiting for her to be ready suddenly didn’t feel as difficult.

Harborview Towers

Courtney stepped off the elevator and turned to Brian. “Maybe you should wait out here. I don’t–I don’t know what kind mood he’s in.”

Brian nodded. “I can do that.”

She left him at the elevator and frowned when she saw the lack of a guard in front of the door. “That’s weird,” she murmured.

She turned the knob and pushed it open, her face paling as it took in the trashed downstairs of her brother’s home. “Jesus Christ.”

She stepped inside and swept her eyes across the living room. The mini bar was overturned and broken glass was  everywhere. “Sonny?” she called raising her voice. “Sonny?”

When she received no answer she ran towards the stairs, glass crackling under her feet. She dashed up the flight and pushed open her brother’s door. He was sitting on his bed, his head in his hands. “Sonny,” she said softly.

He raised his eyes to hers and blinked. “I–I hit her.”

Dread settled in her stomach like a pound of lead and Courtney crossed to him and kneeled in front of him. “Oh…Sonny…”

“You shouldn’t be here right now,” Sonny said in a hoarse voice. His eyes were red and swollen. “I don’t–I don’t think I’m angry enough to do anything but…I don’t really know what I’m capable of anymore.”

Courtney pushed some of his dark hair out of his face. “Hey, I’m not going anywhere. I know you must hate yourself pretty bad right now but it’s going to be okay.”

“No, it’s never going to be okay again.” Sonny dragged his hands through his hair and bowed his head. “I hit her, Courtney. I swore to myself I would never lay a hand on a woman and I hit her. Somehow that feels worse than shooting her in the god damn head.”

“You need help,” Courtney whispered thickly. “Carly and I thought we could do it before and Carly and Jason have always been enough but it’s not anymore, Sonny. You need to talk to someone. Please. It hurts so much to watch you in pain.”

“I know.” Sonny cleared his throat. “I already told Jason I would do anything he wanted me to do. I called Dara and I’m changing the plea back. I just…I thought if I could just fix what’s been going wrong around here…it would help. It always has before.”

“But there’s nothing you can fix, Sonny,” Courtney told him gently. She moved to sit next to him on the bed. “What’s going wrong right now–it’s been happening for months. Except no one wanted to say so. And if you don’t say it, it’s not real.” She bit her lip and looked away. “You were right last year. Jason and I–we weren’t a good idea. A-and I’m sorry that I didn’t listen to you. I was too hurt by AJ and too addicted to how safe Jason made me feel and I just–I was too proud to say that you knew better.”

“It fit though,” Sonny told her. “You and Jason, me and Carly. It all fit.” He chuckled bitterly and forced himself to stand and cross to the window. “But it really didn’t. I–I made a lot of mistakes. I keep myself in check by controlling everything around me and that used to work. But–but it doesn’t anymore. You guys–you moved on. You made changes–big ones–and I’m playing catch up.”

“Carly loves you,” Courtney said softly. “That hasn’t changed. But she’s moved on, too. It feels like it happened while you were in jail but it’s been happening for a while. Jason–I love him, Sonny. But we do not work as couple. Mainly because I like the little quiet life I’m building in Haye’s Landing…and because I’m not Elizabeth.”

Sonny nodded. “I knew that you were just trying to prove it to yourself that you could do this. I could see it in your eyes every time you had to leave the room or sacrifice something else because of this life. You were fighting yourself, Courtney a-and I’m glad you’ve stopped.”

“I feel…I feel better now that I’ve admitted it out loud,” Courtney confessed. “I can’t handle it. I’m sorry that I’ve made myself miserable in the process and I’m sorry that I had to hurt Jason to realize it but we’re better off, Sonny. I need you to please understand that it wasn’t his fault and it wasn’t mine.”

“He still cheated on you.”

“Yeah, but…but it helps that he didn’t just pick some random girl on the street. He did it during a time when we were fighting a lot and when things were rocky…and he slept with a woman I knew he’d never get over.” She sighed and twisted her hands. “I don’t like that he did it, came back to me and still married me but it’s easier for me to understand what he did because it was with her.”

Sonny exhaled slowly. “Yeah…well, that’s between the two of you and it was–it was wrong of me to get in the middle.” He closed his eyes. “I’ve been close to the edge for a while now–maybe since Alcazar sprung that Lily look-a-like on me or maybe since last spring with that stuff with Jason originally. I don’t really know.” He sighed. “But it’s never been as bad as it has these last few days. I said things that I shouldn’t have. To you, to Carly, to Elizabeth, to Jason…”

“That’s why you’re going to get help,” Courtney said firmly. “So that you can apologize and say that you’re sorry and that you’re getting help.”

Sonny nodded. “But that doesn’t take it back. It doesn’t make it okay.”

“Not to you but it will to them. At least–I think it will.”

Sonny sighed. “So, this Brian guy…” he managed a weak smile. “Do I need to grill him on his intentions?”

Courtney laughed a little and stood up to kiss his cheek. “Yeah, but between you and me, he’d wipe the floor with you.”

Morgan Penthouse

Elizabeth stirred and opened her eyes. When she realized her surroundings, she sat up abruptly. “Oh, hell, I did it again.”

Jason glanced at her from his desk with an amused smile. “You’ve been out for almost two hours.”

“Christ.” She dragged a hand through hair and shook her head, trying to clear the haze. “I’ve never been so tired in my life. Over the weekend, I was sitting with Emily out in the gardens at Wyndemere. We were on this bench and she went inside to ask Nikolas something. She came back out and I had curled up on the bench and fallen asleep.”

“Carly was like that too a lot for the first few months. I found her curled up in the booths at The Cellar more than once.”

“Oh, well, at least it’s not just me. I just close my eyes for a minute and I zone out. No warning. It’s insane.” She stood. “Sorry but you could have just woken me up.”

Jason shrugged and pushed away from the desk. “I didn’t really mind. I did move you so you’d be more comfortable.” He rubbed the back of his neck. “Are you hungry or something? I don’t have anything here but I can get something from Kelly’s.”

“No, I’m okay. I’m sure you’ve got more important things to do so if you could just walk me to the docks for the launch…?”

“Elizabeth, there is nothing more important in my life right now,” Jason corrected. “I wanted to thank you…for being here today. For helping with Carly.”

“I’m just sorry any of you are going through this,” Elizabeth remarked. “I’m glad you let me help.” She sighed. “Jason…I don’t want to be an obligation.”

“You’re not.”

“But it feels like it,” Elizabeth admitted. She stared at her hands. “It feels like you’re just…doing what you think you’re supposed to be doing. Giving me money, getting me this apartment, getting a divorce…you don’t need to take care of me, Jason and I don’t want you to.”

Jason opened his mouth to deny it but closed as he thought over his words. He stood and crossed to his pool table. “I tried to tell you that last night…that things weren’t going to be the same between us.”

Elizabeth blinked and twisted on the couch to look at him oddly. “What night?”

“That night before we faked Sonny’s death. When you asked me if I would call and take you out…and I told you that I didn’t know what was going to happen or how we’d deal with it.” He ran his fingers over the soft green felt. “I knew you were going to be upset when you found out. It just…it never crossed my mind that you leave and cut me out of your life.”

Elizabeth stood and rounded the couch, leaning against it. “I–my original intention wasn’t cut you out permanently.” She stared at the floor. “I was so angry and I knew I’d keep saying things I didn’t mean just so I could hurt you as much as you hurt me. I didn’t want to be that person, Jason, so I just–I stayed away. I thought…I’d calm down and then I’d go to you…”

“Why didn’t you?” Jason asked. “Why did you dismiss me that night at Luke’s?”

“Because you weren’t you anymore,” Elizabeth said, with a little shrug. “I came home from helping Luke and Lucky and the first thing out of Courtney’s mouth was that you got married.”

“That wasn’t real,” Jason protested. “You had to know that.”

“No, I didn’t know that,” Elizabeth replied shortly. “Because you didn’t tell me. What was I supposed to think? You’d lied to me and then told me it had nothing to do with me.”

“I’m sorry. I–I’ve apologized for that and I’ve told you that I should have told you.”

“I know and I accept that but you wanted to me to explain why I cut you out of my life and that’s part of it. You married another woman and then you came to me like…like I was just supposed to forget it all. Yes, you’ve apologized…but you didn’t then.” She sighed. “You just…you weren’t the same. You were different and I wasn’t really fond of who you were. Then the whole Courtney thing happened and I just…things got out of control.”

“You’re not an obligation,” Jason said quietly, “but you’re right. I–I’ve been just doing the things I think I’m supposed to do. And it’s because I don’t know what to do. I don’t know where I stand with you and how much to push you for more and I don’t know if I deserve to considering that I got married less than two months ago and it’s just…I feel like I don’t know what’s going on inside my head anymore.” He dragged his hand through his hair. “But I know that I like having you around. That sitting here with you today…with you sleeping on the couch and me sitting there doing paperwork…it’s the best I’ve felt in a long time. And part of me just wants to ask you to move in here with me so I can feel like that all the time.”

Elizabeth blinked. “So why don’t you?” she asked softly.

This entry is part 1 of 27 in the Sanctuary

In every heart there is a room
A sanctuary safe and strong


 June 2006

General Hospital: Locker Room

Robin Scorpio’s courage nearly faltered when she came across Patrick Drake hovering over a blonde nurse, flashing that charming smile–the dimple winking in his cheek. She nearly turned and walked away but that would be the easy thing and Robin was through taking the easy route.

“Patrick?” Robin spoke up. “I’m sorry to interrupt–”

“Then don’t,” Patrick said flatly without even glancing in her direction.

“It’s important,” Robin tried again. “Please.”

Patrick sighed and rolled his head before leveling an impatient glare in her direction. “Is it about a patient? An upcoming surgery?”

“No,” Robin admitted, “but–”

“Then we have nothing to discuss.” Patrick dismissed her and turned his attention back to the nurse.

“You know, why don’t we do this later?” the nurse remarked with a sympathetic smile to Robin. After all, everyone in the hospital knew that the two had crashed and burned a few weeks ago. It couldn’t be easy having to walk around knowing that everyone knew Patrick Drake had dumped you.

She slipped away from Patrick and left the locker room, the door swinging gently shut. Patrick exhaled slowly and shoved his hands in the pockets of his jeans. “You happy now?” he demanded.

Without warning, Robin burst into tears–a mortifying moment for her and a very panicked one for him.

“I’m sorry,” he said uncomfortably. “There’s–there’s no reason to get all upset.”

Robin sniffled and took a deep breath, trying to regain her composure. “I’m sorry–that’s–it’s been happening a lot and it’s stupid and it doesn’t even have to be about anything–” she shook her head. “Look, I just–I have to tell you something, okay?”

His eyes narrowed. “What?” Patrick leaned against the locker. “Didn’t you give up all rights to lecture me?”

“This–” Robin felt hysteria bubbling in her throat again. Oh, God, please let me get through this, she thought desperately. “I just–I had an appointment with Alan–”

Patrick snapped straight up and alarm replaced the look of impatience. “What? Are you sick? What’s wrong?”

“I’m not–” Robin shook her head. “I’m not sick. I almost wish I were but…” She closed her eyes. “Patrick, I’m pregnant.”

The color slowly drained from his face and suddenly, he knew he wasn’t going to be able stand much longer. Patrick sat on the bench and stared at her. “Pregnant,” he repeated.

“I’m s-sorry.” Robin bit her lip. “I–you–you have to get tested, Patrick. Right now. Because if I’m pregnant, there’s a risk–”

“Yeah, okay. I’ll do that.” That was the furthest thing from his mind though he was sure it would be top priority for her. “I don’t understand–we used–we were safe.” He shook his head. “Are you sure? Is Alan sure?”

“We ran the tests a few times. I insisted.” Robin wrapped her arms around herself. “It’s yours,” she found herself saying lamely. “I just–I don’t know if you thought it might not–”

“Well of course the baby’s mine,” Patrick spared her an irritated look. “I’m not an idiot, Robin.” He clenched his hands into fists when he realized they were trembling. “I can’t–I can’t do this right now.”

She had expected that, had played this scene out a thousand times in her head in the time it had taken her to walk from the Chief of Staff’s office to the locker room this morning. And every single scenario ended with Patrick walking away from her.

“I don’t–I don’t need anything,” Robin said quietly. “I just–I thought you should know. Because you need to get tested and–you don’t have to do anything, Patrick, okay? I know that–” she broke off and looked at the floor. “Look, I have to–I have to go tell my uncle, okay? So…I’ll just–I’ll walk away first.”

Her hand was on the handle of the door when he realized her intentions and he was up and off the bench before she could open the door. “Wait–just wait a second–” He grabbed her elbow but she yanked out of his grasp and stepped back.

“I know–I know that you don’t want kids and you don’t want responsibility and that’s okay, I mean, I’m not asking you to do anything. I don’t need–”

“Robin, you can’t dump this on me and expect me to have all the answers,” Patrick interrupted. “I need a second to process, a second–a second to think, okay?”

“You can have all the time you need,” Robin said stiffly. “I have to go tell my family, okay?”

“Robin–” Patrick began but she ducked under his arm and fled the locker room. She heard him calling her name but she ignored it and stepped onto an elevator. He caught up to her just as the elevator doors slid closed.

This entry is part 10 of 10 in the In the Family

Outside The Brownstone

“Wait, maybe we should run away to Mexico,” Elizabeth pulled him away from the front steps.

Jason smiled in amusement and shook his head. “Come on…it might not be as bad as you think.”

“This is still my father we’re talking about right?” Elizabeth sighed and sat down on the steps. “Times like this…I wish my mother were still alive. Brenda’s great and all but she just argues with Daddy…Mama used to be able to convince him.”

“Elizabeth…whether Sonny approves of this or to…we are married, okay?” He crouched in front of her. “He can’t change that.”

She took a deep breath. “Right.”

“And I love you. He can’t change that, either.” He took her hands in his and rubbed his thumb over her wedding ring. “I hate that we had to do it like this. That we had to rush and be secretive. That we couldn’t just enjoy being with each other for a while but I don’t regret taking this step with you.”

“Even though we didn’t…” she flushed and looked down. “I feel so horrible that I ruined our wedding night.”

“You didn’t ruin anything,” Jason said firmly. “You know…I went to sleep holding you and I woke up and you were still in my arms. That’s–that’s more I ever dreamed of, okay?”

“Yeah–it’s just–all the advances I’ve had lately were Alexander’s and I guess it was harder than I thought to put that away–”

“Elizabeth, I’m not arguing with you.”

“–and it just really pisses me off that I couldn’t–I mean, I thought it about it all the time, Jason. From like the time I was thirteen on up–I thought about what it’d be like–”

“Thirteen?” Jason repeated, surprised.

“The second Mama had the talk with me, I thought about it,” Elizabeth told him honestly. “I mean–I knew about the whole where babies came from and the mechanics but she sat me down on my birthday and told me everything. That it–it would hurt but it got really good and if you had a man who really loved you, it made all the difference and I didn’t really think about it more than what it would be like to do it with you. I just–okay, maybe it seems a little weird because I was thirteen and you were like eighteen–”

“Elizabeth,” Jason interrupted, slightly amused, “I’m not judging you–”

“I know, I know you’re not but–well, it’s not like I thought about it every second of the day. And not when I was thirteen or whatever. I mean–Mama just said that one day I was gonna meet a man that I really loved and wanted to spend the rest of my life with and it would be really special with him because of that and I remember thinking that I’d already met that guy and I knew–” she cleared her throat and shrugged. “I knew it would be special with you and that’s like as far as my thoughts ever really went.”

She flushed. “Well–until I was fifteen and I kissed you in the gardens. After that, my imagination just built it all up, you know? And yeah–then I started thinking about it in more detail and the fact that Alexander screwed that up for me really pisses me off.”

“He didn’t screw up anything,” Jason assured her again. “We’ve got the rest of our lives to make love, Elizabeth. And right now–I just want to go tell your father and get this over with.”

She stood and squared her shoulders. “Yeah, I guess running off to Mexico would only delay the inevitable. There’s no where we could go Daddy couldn’t find us.”

He twined their hands together and they started up the stairs.

Sonny’s Office

Sonny watched his daughter and his surrogate son converse on the steps outside his home. Saw that they’d walked up hand-in-hand and he watched the intimate way they’d talked on the steps. Elizabeth sat on one of the steps and Jason had crouched in front of her.

Then they’d stood and walked up the stairs. Together.

“I accept that I haven’t been the type of father to Elizabeth that Lily would have wanted,” Sonny told his younger brother. “I came to terms with that a long time ago. She’s my oldest child and I love her, but in my world, women don’t carry a lot of weight. Lily was submissive to me. Docile, gentle. Everything Brenda has never been and I wonder if that’s not part of the reason I was attracted to her.”

Ric sipped his whiskey and stood behind his brother. “You were raised in a different generation that I was. Then our mother was.”

“My mistake was treating my daughter like the Don treated his own.” Sonny glanced at Ric. “You’re too young to remember the way Paul was. He treated everyone like they were one step above scum and he treated his wife like she’d been born to serve him. His daughter was married off to someone in Queens as a way to acquire territory. Before he died–when he told me that he was setting me up as the heir, he said something that I’ve never forgotten. He said that everyone and everything could be used as a bargaining chip. Don’t ever mix emotions with business. A son is desirable but a daughter can expand a territory faster.”

He glanced over his shoulder at Ric. “I made the arrangement with the Castellanos before Jason stepped foot in this house. I feel that it’s important for someone to know that. And when Elizabeth announced she wanted to marry Jason–she was all of five years old and I thought that she was–she was just being five. Lily never believed that and I think subconsciously, Jason even knew she was serious.” Sonny chuckled. “I can still see the horrified look on his face.”

“She’s the only one who never treated him like he wasn’t born to be part of this family,” Ric remarked quietly. “You were good to him Sonny and Lily loved him. He was my best friend. But you held part of yourself off. You never adopted him. You never let him forget where he came from and because of your attitude, Lily was affectionate but never more than necessary. He’s been a brother to me, Sonny, but Elizabeth was so young when he came here, she didn’t see the need in holding back. She adored him from the moment he let her play touch football with us.”

“I think it was before that,” Sonny remarked quietly. “But I guess it doesn’t matter now. It’s not that I thought he wasn’t good enough for her. I know that’s what I told him but it’s not that.”

“Then what, Sonny?” Ric asked. “He loves her and she loves him. What could make you want to forbid that?”

“He wasn’t the man I’d picked out.” A touch of bitter amusement filled his voice. “I’m a control freak, Ric, or didn’t you know that? God knows Brenda’s shouted it loud enough for you to hear next door.”

A soft knock sounded on the door and Ric turned to approach it. “Wait–” Sonny turned. “That’ll be Elizabeth and Jason.”

Ric turned back to his brother and frowned. He hadn’t been looking out the window and knew nothing of the couple’s arrival. “Elizabeth’s in her room,” he lied smoothly. “God knows where Jason is. It’s probably Mama.”

“You’re good at that,” Sonny told him. “Your eyes don’t even change when you lie. That’ll come in handy when you take over for me one day. But I saw them talking outside. And I’ve known Elizabeth was gone since she left yesterday morning and I know Jason was with her when he remained gone all day yesterday and didn’t return to argue more with me.”

Ric smirked. “We should have known we couldn’t get anything past you. Mama sends a message though–she wanted you to know that she was involved in the whole thing and thinks you’re anidiota.”

Sonny laughed then. “Yes–I believe that. Answer the door and then leave us. Go find Mama and Brenda. They’ll want to be present when they announce whatever it is they’ve done.”

Ric pulled open the door to find his apprehensive niece and determined best friend standing there. “The jig is up,” he remarked. He kissed Elizabeth’s cheek. “I’ll be around.”

Elizabeth frowned and entered her father’s office, wondering what her uncle could have meant. “Daddy–”

Jason closed the door after them and stood behind Elizabeth, offering his silent support.

Sonny held his hand up to ward off her words. “You need not say a word to me, Elizabeth. The ring on your finger speaks volumes.” He took her hand in his. “It’s been almost nineteen years since I put this ring on your mother’s finger, you know that?”

Elizabeth hesitated and looked into her father’s sad eyes. “Daddy…”

“She looked so beautiful, mi hija. As beautiful as I’m sure you looked yesterday. I loved your mother very much, Elizabeth and the things that I have said to you, forced on you–they would have made her so sad–I have shamed her memory.”

Now Elizabeth’s eyes burned with tears. “No–”

“Yes,” Sonny remarked. He kissed his daughter’s hand and let it go. “Your mother adored you with every fiber of her being. She lived for you and she wanted you to be happy. And from the moment Jason came to live with us, Lily was sure he would be the one to do so.” Sonny smiled a little. “I had forgotten how young Lily was when we met. She was seven and I was ten. I did not look at her as any more than a little nuisance who followed me everywhere. But when she was fifteen, she was suddenly more than a child. She’d blossomed–over night, it seemed–into this beautiful woman who had gained the attention of all the men in our neighborhood.”

Elizabeth, who still thought her mother was the most beautiful woman in the world, smiled at that. “You were jealous,” she said with amusement.

“Yes. Because I did not realize that I had always considered Lily mine.” Sonny lifted his eyes to Jason then, the first time he’d looked at him. “I know how Jason must have felt that day in this office when I told him of the engagement to Alexander Castellano and he asked if your happiness meant anything?”

Elizabeth smiled and looked away. Jason stepped forward a little and offered her a sheepish smile when he looked at her. “He did, did he?”

“Ah, I should have seen it then. But it’d been so long since those days when I was barely a man–still a teenager. I did not remember the sting of jealousy I felt whenever a man looked at this beautiful girl I had been trying to get rid of for eight years. You see, Elizabeth, sometimes a man must be hit over the head with the obvious and it was until one of these men tried to put his hands on my Lily that I realized what I had and what I could lose. And it wasn’t until Jason left for three years and returned to find my little girl all grown up that he realized the truth either.”

“Sonny,” Jason said, “I’m sorry–”

“You have nothing to apologize for. I am foolish man, used to getting my way. Until Brenda entered my life, I ran my life and those around me with a iron fist and unquestioned will. And I had set your life out for you, Elizabeth and yours as well, Jason,” Sonny admitted. “Elizabeth would marry Alexander and I was already working on finding you a suitable wife. As I said–I did not take Lily seriously when she decided you were the man for my daughter. When you announced at dinner when you were five you wanted to marry Jason–it did not occur to me that your mother was thinking of herself and how she’d decided who her husband was to be at age seven.”

“I am only sorry that I missed my only daughter’s wedding,” Sonny said softly. He kissed Elizabeth’s cheek.

“You knew before we even came in here today,” Jason said with a little respect. Slowly, Sonny was once again becoming the man Jason had idolized most of his life.

“I saw Brenda and my mother smuggle Elizabeth out in the alley yesterday,” Sonny told him. “And when you and Ric disappeared, I knew something was up. I was in my room before dinner and Lily’s wedding ring was missing from my dresser. I kept it next to her picture,” he told his daughter. “Brenda, God bless her, has never begrudged me Lily’s memory and each night I say a prayer for your mother.”

Elizabeth hadn’t known that and she was swamped with a sudden rush of love and sadness for her father who’d lost the first woman he’d ever loved. “Oh, Daddy…”

“And then you walked up hand in hand and spent ten minutes speaking outside.” Sonny crossed o the dinner. “My office is in this room precisely so I can keep track of comings and goings. I saw the easy and intimate way you spoke and I know the kind of man you are, Jason. I suspected you had not kept my daughter out all night talking and you are an honorable man, after all, so I suspected you might have eloped. But my suspicions were confirmed when you walked in with my stepfather’s ring on your finger and Lily’s on Elizabeth’s.”

“Are you mad?” Elizabeth asked softly.

“Mad that my beautiful daughter has married a man that I am proud to call my son in law?” Sonny asked. “I regret that I could not be in attendance, mi hija. But I know why you did what you did and I cannot blame you for it. I fear that I gave you no other choice.” He leaned forward and kissed her forehead. “I only ask that you be happy.”

Elizabeth threw her arms around her father and hugged him tightly. “Thank you. I was so scared coming here. I love you and I didn’t want to have to choose.”

“But you would have chosen Jason and I do not begrudge you that. I know what it is to be in love.” He pulled away from her and offered his hand to Jason. “I know that I was unfair to you and that is putting it kindly. But I ask that you do not hold it against me and that we put the past where it belongs.”

Jason nodded and shook Sonny’s hand. “I’m glad that this went well but I have to confess that it almost makes me suspicious. It can’t have been that easy.”

Sonny smirked. “There is a catch but it is a good one and I think one that you would both like. I ask that you let me throw you a reception to celebrate your marriage. That you let me buy the brownstone next door to me as a wedding present.”

Jason hesitated. He could easily afford the house on the money he’d saved working for Sonny but it would eat into a considerable amount of his savings. He recognized this was Sonny’s way of making amends and nodded. “All right.”

“Also–I have asked Ric to gather Brenda and my mother in the living room which means Faith, Carly and possibly AJ are there now. Brenda will know what we have been speaking of and will assume the worst so she has called in her reinforcements.”

Elizabeth laughed and hugged her father again. “I know that I gave you a hard time when you married her but I like her very much.”

“I like her too,” Sonny agreed. “Even if she drives me insane.”

Living Room

Sonny entered the room first and immediately Brenda strode towards him, pointing her finger at him. “I swear if you gave them a hard time or any ultimatums, you’re cut off from sex for like a year, Michael Corinthos and furthermore, I’m proud to say I was completely in on it and–”

Sonny cut her off with a kiss. “You worry too much, Brenda.” He looked over his wife’s shoulder and saw Carly and AJ standing there. “Carly, AJ. Nice of you to join us.”

Carly’s brown eyes were burning with irritation. “I helped her pick out her wedding dress and I helped to arrange for the honeymoon, Sonny, so don’t you dare–”

“Oh, ye of little faith,” Sonny sighed. “Mama–” he began warily looking at his mother.

But Adela Lansing knew her son and she kissed his cheek. “You make me proud, mi hijo. Where are they?”

“In the hallway. Ric–I doubt that we have champagne but perhaps you could pour the wine?” Sonny prompted.

Brenda frowned. “What’s going on?”

“Elizabeth, Jason,” Sonny called.

Elizabeth pulled Jason into the room and smiled brilliantly. “It’s all right,” she assured her stepmother. “Daddy’s fine with it.”

“He knew we were married before we even walked in the door,” Jason said, slightly amusedly.

“Oh.” Brenda looked at her husband with baffled surprise. “And you’re okay with it?”

“More than okay,” Sonny said. He handed her a glass of wine. “I feel it’s appropriate that Jason is officially part of this family.”

“But–” Brenda trailed off and shot her sister a helpless look. “You were so angry yesterday–we heard you and Jason yelling in the office–”

“That was yesterday, today is another day.” Sonny shrugged.

Her eyes narrowed into slits. “Listen, buddy, I don’t appreciate being jerked around and furthermore, I don’t appreciate you being entirely amused at the fact you’ve knocked me off balance.”

“Ah, but it’s a husband prerogative. If you don’t change the rules, things become stale and ordinary.” Sonny kissed his wife again and she looked a little less angry but more baffled.

Ric passed glances to Elizabeth and Jason and looked to his brother. “Do you want to make a toast?”

Sonny nodded and wound an arm around his wife’s waist–a wife who was still muttering curses under her breath. “To my beautiful daughter and her new husband, may they know half the happiness I have in my life.” He looked up to the ceiling. “And to my beautiful Lily, who I know is looking over us and having a very amused laugh at my expense.”

He looked at his wife and was grateful to find love in her eyes again–the starry-eyed love that she’d had when they’d first married. He hoped he’d rebuilt himself some in her eyes. “To my Brenda, who constantly challenges me and makes me rethink every thought I ever had on women.”

He nodded in Carly and AJ’s direction. “To my wife’s sister and the family she is building, I know the influence you have had on m little girl, Carly and as much as it pains me to admit it–I am very glad you came here.”

“I am too,” AJ whispered in his wife’s ear. “Don’t you dare drink that wine,” he cautioned the heavily pregnant blonde.

“To my brother, who’s responsible for bringing Jason into all of our lives and to my mother, who puts up with us all.”

“Here, here,” Ric agreed.

Sonny raised his glass a little higher. “Most of all, to family. May this just be the beginning.”

THE END

This entry is part 9 of 10 in the In the Family

Queen of Angels Church

Brenda pressed a handful of white lilies into her step daughter’s hands and smoothed her curly hair. “I’m so glad you didn’t straighten it today. You look so beautiful when it’s like this.”

Elizabeth took a deep breath and glanced through the doors to where Jason was standing at the altar–clad in an ill-fitting tux he’d borrowed from Ric–was speaking with Ric and AJ.

Jason had originally suggested only telling Ric and Brenda so that they could keep Sonny in the dark more efficiently. But Brenda said that if they were going to get married in secret, they had to make it as memorable as possible. She’d enlisted Adela in the secret and gave Ric and Jason a list of things to do before they all met at a tiny little church that she’d already set up.

Brenda called in Carly’s help and the trio of women went to one of the hotels that Carly’s husband owned. AJ had married Carly to join with the Corinthos empire but he really did adore his wife and he was only too happy to donate one of his best suites until the next day.

Between Brenda and Carly, Elizabeth had found herself in a long silk white dress, her makeup done and ready to be married. But when Adela handed her the ring that had belonged to her second husband–the love of her life, she said–to give to Jason as well as Elizabeth’s mother’s wedding ring–she nearly cried.

Three hours after his surprising proposal, she was in a church with her stepmother, step aunt and her grandmother, ready to be married.

And she hadn’t had one second thought about the whole matter.

“Thank you for doing all of this.” she said softly. She clung to the handful of lilies, trying to hide the shaking of her hands. “I promise that I will never tell my father that you were involved.”

“Tell him, mi niete,” Adela instructed. “You tell him that his own mama went against him to make her baby happy.” She stepped forward and kissed her cheek. “Lily would be so proud of you.”

“Okay, we can’t afford for all us to be out of the house much longer, so let’s get this show on the road,” Brenda declared. She opened the doors to the main room of the church, the signal for the organist to begin to play.

As soon as the opening notes sounded, the men fell into place–Ric as Jason’s best man and AJ seated in the front pew, waiting for his pregnant wife.

Brenda and Carly moved down the aisle swiftly in their roles as bridesmaids and one of AJ’s nieces–Brooke Lynn was doubling as both flower girl and ring bearer.

Adela escorted her trembling granddaughter down the aisle and handed her off to Jason. The older woman kissed his cheek and squeezed her hand. “You take care of her, mi hijo,” she ordered.

“Yes, Mama,” Jason dutifully, returning the kiss to the cheek before taking Elizabeth’s hand and stepping before the priest.

As soon as her hand was in his, the trembling stopped and she smiled at him. “I love you,” she whispered.

It was the first time she’d said so and he couldn’t fight the matching smile on his face. “I love you too.”

The priest began the ceremony then and what seemed like only seconds later, he was instructing Jason to kiss his bride.

He did so eagerly, pulling Elizabeth to him in their first real kiss. Trying to keep it appropriate in a room full of their closest relatives, he settled for a quick taste.

And just like that, Jason Morgan–the bastard son that no one had wanted–had married Elizabeth Corinthos, the only daughter of Michael Corinthos.

Quartermaine Hotel: Dining Room

“You know…” Elizabeth sighed over dinner that night, “my father’s going to know something is up if we’re both not at home tonight.”

Jason reached across the table and took her hand in his, rubbing his thumb over the delicate ring he’d put on her finger earlier that day. “We’ll deal with all of that tomorrow,” he promised. “Tonight…it’s ours.”

Elizabeth flushed and looked down at her plate. “Jason…you know that I–that I’ve never–”

“That doesn’t matter to me,” he replied. “None of that maters tonight. I love you. I never dreamed that when I came home–that less than twenty-four hours later , I’d be married to you.”

Her heart caught in her throat, Elizabeth swallowed hard. “Do you–do you have any regrets?” she asked softly.

“No,” Jason said quickly. “No. I just…it’s all happening so fast–that’s all I’m trying to say.”

“Because I have loved you my entire life and I always dreamed about marrying you, so I have no regrets or second thoughts or whatever,” Elizabeth said quickly.

“Elizabeth, I know. It’s okay. Things happen fast, you know, sometimes but you gotta live through them slow. Tomorrow–we have to tell your father about this but tonight…we can pretend that none of that exists. We can just be.”

Elizabeth nodded. “It’s just–I’m worried about telling my father. I used–he used to care about me,” she said softly. “And listen to me–we used to talk. But ever since little Mike was born…” she sat back in her chair, pulling her hand from his grasp. “I’m just another possession to him.”

“I’m sorry, Elizabeth,” Jason told her. “For everything that you’ve gone through since I’ve been gone. I wish–I wish that I’d been more open to the idea of loving you. But you were so young…” he shook his head. “And I was so stupid.”

“Jason…” Elizabeth laughed a little. “I was fifteen years old. A relationship then never could have worked. Maybe you couldn’t imagine loving me then–but looking back…I can’t imagine how I thought it would work.”

“Still…I hurt you,” Jason said. “And that’s the last thing I ever wanted to do.”

She stood and held her hand out to him. “Well lucky for you–you’ve got the next seventy years or so to make it up to me.”

He rose from his seat and took her hand. “Where are we going?” he asked, once again rubbing his finger over the ring her mother had once worn.

“Upstairs,” Elizabeth replied. She slid her arms around his neck. “I’m not really very hungry,” she murmured.

The Honeymoon Suite

Elizabeth giggled as Jason carried her into the room. “Jason!” she squealed. “I didn’t think you were the type to do this stuff!” she teased.

He grinned and slowly slid her to the ground. “Maybe I just like holding you,” he replied, kicking the door shut.

She laughed again, tilting her head back. He used the opportunity to kiss her neck, nibbling the soft skin. Her laugh trailed off to a shaky moan and her hands tightened on his shoulders. “That feels so good,” she confessed.

His hands slid up the slick silk of her dress, molding to her hips and her ribcage. When his hands brushed the undersides of her breasts, she stiffed slightly but he didn’t notice. She shook it off and kissed him hard, thrusting her tongue past his lips.

He felt the tension in her body but assumed it was jitters and continued to kiss her. He bypassed her breasts and opted for the row of pearl buttons that formed a straight line up her back.

When Elizabeth felt the cool air of the room on her bare back, she broke the kiss and stepped back a little, swallowing hard. “I–” she broke off and looked away, mortified.

“Hey, it’s okay,” Jason assured her. He stepped towards her and couldn’t help but feel a little sting of pain when she backed up. Forcing himself to remember that she’d fought off the unwanted advances of another man just twenty-four hours ago, he took a deep breath. “Elizabeth, maybe…maybe this isn’t a good idea,” he said regretfully.

Her eyes widened her and she shook her head, sending little tendrils of her hair flying. “No, wait–j-just give a minute, okay? I’ll be okay. I’ll be fine.”

“I don’t want you to feel like anything has to happen tonight,” Jason told her. “We can just—we can talk. About how to tell you father, what’s going to happen after tonight–”

“I don’t want to talk about any of that. I want–” She took a deep breath. “Let me…let me change, okay? I promise I’ll be fine.”

“Elizabeth–” Jason protested but she was already heading across the room to get her overnight bag. “It’s okay.”

“I know–I’ll be right out,” Elizabeth told him with a small smile. She closed the bathroom door behind her and sat down on the closed toilet with a thump, trying to fight tears.

This was her wedding night and she was married to the only guy she’d ever dreamed of marrying. This was supposed to be a good night. This was supposed to be the best night of her life.

Except, this time two days ago, Jason had been in Puerto Rico and she’d been engaged to Alexander Castellano. She’d believed that she’d driven him away forever and that he’d never love her.

And now…he was sitting outside this door in a tuxedo with her grandmother’s second husband’s wedding ring on his ring finger. How had they gotten to this point?

There was a soft knock on the door. “Elizabeth? Please come out.”

She wiped her eyes with a piece of toilet paper and stood to unzip her bag. “Hold on–I’m not done yet.”

She reached behind her and finished unbuttoning her dress. She tugged it off and gently hung it on the padded hanger on the back of the door. Elizabeth shimmied out of the slip and her undergarments. Brenda had talked to her briefly about tonight earlier in that morning and advised her to go nude under her nightgown. “Easier when you’re all in a hurry to just get it on,” her stepmother had teased.

“Elizabeth?” Jason called.

“In a minute!” Elizabeth pulled the gauzy silk nightgown over her head and started to yank the pins from her hair, sending it tumbling over shoulders in curls. She took a deep breath and pulled open the door.

Jason had removed his tux jacket, his bow tie and his shoes. His shirt was buttoned and pulled out of his pants and every time he moved slightly, she caught sight of his bronzed chest.

“Sorry, it took me a few minutes to get out of the dress,” Elizabeth said nervously. She flicked the bathroom light off, sending the room into shadows.

Jason cleared his throat and stepped towards her. “Elizabeth, it’s okay if you’re not ready. I mean–”

“Don’t be silly,” Elizabeth said in dismissal. “It’s our wedding night. Of course I’m okay–ready, I mean.”

Uncertain, Jason approached her slowly. “Just because it’s our wedding night…that doesn’t mean anything has to happen. I love you and that’s not going to change if we make love tonight, tomorrow or not for three months.”

She sighed and sat on the bed. “My wedding night was something that I had resigned myself to.”

“Because it was going to be Alexander?” Jason asked, sitting beside her. She nodded, dipping her head and looking away from him.

“For the last three months–I tried to care about him. Tried to at least…develop some feelings for him, you know? But almost every time we went out, he’d remind me that he would have me on our wedding night–it didn’t matter if he sampled goods now or then.”

His fists clenched at his side. “Why didn’t you tell anyone?” he asked.

“What would the point have been?” Elizabeth replied. “Brenda and my father fight enough without my adding to it. There’s nothing Abuela could have done, Carly’s wrapped up with AJ and her pregnancy, Ric’s busy with Faith all the time.” She shrugged. “Anyway…that doesn’t matter now. I’m not marrying him–that part of my life is over.”

He kissed her forehead. “We should get some sleep. Tomorrow’s going to be a long day.”

“Wait…” Elizabeth pushed him so he was lying flat on his back. She threw one leg over his body so she was straddling him. “You know, when I used to tackle you like this–it seemed a lot more innocent then.”

Jason propped himself up on his elbows. “You were five years old the first time you did it. I think I’d been staying with you guys for about a month.”

“You and Ric were playing touch football in the backyard,” Elizabeth remembered. “And I begged Ric to let me play.”

“You didn’t know you weren’t supposed to tackle in touch football,” Jason teased. “And I wasn’t expecting it so it was the only reason you even got me to the ground.”

“Yeah, okay,” Elizabeth rolled her eyes. “My grandmother was watching and nearly had a coronary.”

“Yeah, well her only grandchild was straddling a street urchin,” Jason said.

“You were not a street urchin,” Elizabeth told him fiercely, fisting her hands in the soft fabric of his shirt.

“I was,” Jason corrected. He shifted his weight to one arm and raised his hand to push her hair out of her face. “But never to you. You made me feel like part of the family from the day Ric brought me home for dinner.”

And with his words, the last of the tension bled from her body and she lowered her mouth to his. “I love you,” she whispered against his mouth.

“I love you, too.”

This entry is part 8 of 10 in the In the Family

Sonny studied his daughter carefully the next morning at breakfast. She was quiet, withdrawn and had brushed off Brenda’s attempts to talk about the previous night.

He’d spent most of the morning on the phone with John Castellano discussing the events and what the future would hold for everyone. After breakfast, he would talk to Jason–and to Ric, who’d come back early. They would discuss it and then he would speak to his daughter.

Sonny cleared throat and stood. “Jason, Ric. We should go to my office now.”

Elizabeth glanced up at her father, as if waiting for an invitation but he just left the room and she stared back at her plate.

Jason, seated next to her, wrapped his hand around hers and squeezed it gently. “It’ll be okay,” he told her softly. He stood and exited the room, Ric on his heels.

Brenda cleared her throat and glanced at Adela. “Honey, what happened last night?”

Elizabeth shook her head. “I don’t want to talk about it.” She stood abruptly and left. A few moments later, her bedroom door clicked shut, echoing through the empty and silent house.

Brenda pursed her lips and set her napkin aside. “She’ll marry that man over my dead body,” she scowled.

“I spoke with John this morning,” Sonny began, his back to them, his eyes focused on the window that faced the street. “He was gravely disturbed by Alexander’s actions last night and wanted to offer his apologies.”

Jason snorted. “A little late for that. I want the job, Sonny,” he said bluntly.

Troubled, Ric silenced Jason with a look. He recognized his brother’s tone, his posture. He had no intention of putting a hit on Alexander Castellano. “Sonny, what exactly did John say?”

“I expressed to him my doubts about this marriage occurring,” Sonny replied. “I told him that despite our previous arrangement and what good would come out of it–I couldn’t in good conscience, sentence my only daughter to a life with a man who holds no respect for her.”

Jason’s foot began tapping against the floor, a sign of his obvious impatience. “Let me guess. He made you an offer you couldn’t refuse.” Sarcasm dripped from his voice and Ric winced at the lack of respect Jason was showing.

Sonny glared at his foster son. “You forget Jason that you exist in this house, in this world only by my say so and my generosity.”

“If you make her go through with this, I won’t need either,” Jason retorted.

Ric held out a hand to silence his friend. “Sonny, while I disagree with Jason’s phrasing, I have to agree with his point. Elizabeth can’t marry Alexander. He tried to rape her last night. He’s notorious for sleeping around and no amount of land or power is worth sacrificing her.”

“John assured me that his only wish for this union would be an heir to join our two families permanently. He’s agreed that after a son is born, he would consent to a divorce for Elizabeth.”

“That’s unacceptable,” Jason spat.

“You don’t get to make that decision,” Sonny replied coldly. “She is still my daughter and it’s in my power to provide for her future. There is no other suitable man to marry her.”

“What about Jason?” Ric suggested. “If you’re so hell bent on marrying her off, just do that.”

Sonny shook his head. “I said suitable. Jason is merely a foot soldier. You are not good enough to marry my daughter,” he told the young man.

Though he suspected Sonny felt this way, it still stung to hear the words and Jason lowered his head.

“When I take over–and I will be doing that,” Ric reminded his brother, “Jason will be my second-in-command. And you know that Lily–”

“Don’t speak to me about what she wanted,” Sonny cut in sharply. “She was a good woman–I loved her–but she knew nothing of this world and only of the fantasy world she lived in. It’s out of the question. You haven’t taken over yet, Ric. Don’t be making plans to do so.”

“I love your daughter,” Jason blurted out, surprising both brothers. “I love her,” he repeated. “And I want to marry her.”

“And you don’t have my permission,” Sonny said firmly. “Elizabeth is my only daughter–the only way I will ever get my hands on Staten Island or Long Island–”

“She’s not a piece of property you can shove around–she’s a human being,” Jason shouted. He lunged to his feet. “And I think we should call her in here and ask her what she wants.”

“Whoa, whoa.” Ric stood and put a hand on Jason’s chest. “Let’s just take a step back here, okay? Look, we all care about Elizabeth and want what’s best for her. Sonny…Jason…let’s just…take a day or two and think this over.” He grabbed the shirt sleeve of Jason’s right arm and dragged him towards the door.

Once they were outside the office and down the hallway, Ric let him go and threw his hands up in frustration. “Have you lost your mind?” he demanded.

“Look, I didn’t…” Jason muttered something under his breath. “How can he sit in there and even consider letting this go on? He saw her last night–she was terrified. She was on the floor, crying her eyes out and shaking so badly–” he drug his fingers through his hair. “Ric…what am I supposed to do? Sit back and let him sentence her to a life of that?”

“No, but telling him to bring Elizabeth in so you can make her decide whether she’d rather marry you or that asshole isn’t the way to do it. Come on, man, do you really want to propose to her like that?”

“You’re right.” Jason let out a frustrated growl. “He’s never gonna let me marry her.”

“She’s been pretty pissed at you since you left–would she even let you?” Ric asked, thoughtfully.

“In a heartbeat.”

Her voice was wistful and it surprised both men who turned to see Elizabeth standing in the hallway, just off the kitchen. She crossed her arms. “I heard what my father said…from talking to Alexander’s father to…just now,” she informed them.

“I’m sorry you had to hear it like that,” Jason sighed. He started towards her, Ric obviously forgotten. “That’s not the way I would have gone about it at all.”

“I didn’t expect it to begin with so it’s okay,” she said softly. “Jason…I don’t want to marry Alexander.”

“And you won’t,” Ric assured her. He shook his head. “I don’t care what it takes–we’re not doing it. Not even with the new divorce clause.” He put a hand on Jason’s shoulder. “I’m gonna go back in there and talk to him. Distract him. Give you two a chance to talk and all.”

He disappeared back down the hall and into Sonny’s office.

Jason took a deep breath. “Elizabeth, I meant what I said last night. I love you.”

“I know,” Elizabeth replied, her voice trembling. “I heard you telling my father. Oh, Jason, you shouldn’t have said those things to him. He’s going to be so angry.”

“I don’t care,” Jason said stubbornly. He smoothed a hand over her jaw. “I’ve waited most of my life to be able to say those words to you. He’s not going to take them away from me.”

She couldn’t fight a tiny smile. “I’ve waited all of my life to hear them,” Elizabeth whispered.

He pressed a brief kiss to her lips–too brief for both their tastes but it was too risky so close to Sonny’s office. “Will you marry me?” he asked softly, his breath still on her lips.

“Yes,” Elizabeth agreed. For the first time since he’d been home, he saw a spark enter her eyes–a little fire. It was damn good to see. “When?” she asked eagerly, careful to keep her voice so as not to echo in the empty hallway.

“You got a free couple of hours?” he asked. “We could get down to the justice of the peace and do it today.”

Elizabeth bit her lip. “My father would kill you,” she remarked with a tiny smile. “Are you sure about this?”

“I’ve never been more sure of anything in my life,” he vowed. “What do you say?”

“Let’s do it.” She grabbed his hand and tugged him down the hall.