December 29, 2014

This entry is part 7 of 23 in the Fiction Graveyard: Mad World #1

Friday, November 5, 2004

General Hospital: Emergency Room

Sonny stared at Monica, not comprehending. “No.”

“I’m sorry.” Monica gripped Sonny’s sleeve. “She had a condition in which the placenta separated from the uterine wall. The baby couldn’t get any oxygen and there was a lot of bleeding. We delivered her but she was…she was still born.”

“No,” Sonny said, his voice rough. “No!” He shook his head. He wasn’t hearing this. He hadn’t lost another child.

“I am so sorry,” Monica whispered. She wanted to offer him comfort but didn’t know how. Where was Jason? Jason would know what to do, what to say.

“Does Sam…” Sonny cleared his throat. “Does Sam know?”

“She’s unconscious,” Monica said softly. “She’s lost a lot of blood, Sonny and will probably be out for a day or two. We’re moving her to ICU now. You can go see her as soon as she’s settled.”

Sonny closed his eyes and gripped Monica’s hand. “I know–I know you did all that you can. Thank you.”

Monica nodded and returned to the operating room.

Bobbie and Carly rushed through the ER doors. “Sonny!” Carly called. The past few days were forgotten and for a few moments, they were just parents. “Sam…is she okay?”

Sonny nodded. “But–she–she lost the baby.”

Bobbie gasped and craned her head towards the surgical room. “Where’s Jason? Is he here yet?”

“I haven’t–I haven’t been able to get in touch with him,” Sonny said hoarsely. “His phone is off.”

“Off?” Carly repeated. “It’s never off.”

“It’s off now and no one’s seen him since he left the Towers this morning,” Sonny told her. “Do you have any idea where he could be?”

Cottage: Bedroom

Elizabeth fastened a few of the buttons on the shirt Jason had removed earlier that morning. “You brave enough to risk my cooking?” she murmured against his lips.

He grasped her hips and tugged her back into bed. “Forget food,” he told her, reaching for the sides of her shirt. Elizabeth giggled and playfully smacked his hands away.

The telephone at the side of her bed rang shrilly and Elizabeth groaned. “I should get that.”

Jason separated the shirt and kissed her collarbone. “Let the answering machine get it.” He nibbled on the soft skin at the base of her throat before going lower.

The machine clicked on after a few more rings. “Elizabeth, if Jason is still there, pick up now,” her brother’s voice commanded.

Elizabeth gasped and pulled away from Jason abruptly. She tugged her shirt closed and reached for the phone. “Steven?”

“Is he still there?” Steven asked.

“Yeah, Steven–”

“He needs to get to the hospital now. They rushed Sam in this morning and I think it’s bad.”

“Okay, I’ll tell him.” Her face pale, she hung up the phone and climbed off the bed. “Sam was rushed to the hospital this morning.”

Jason was out of bed in an instant, his hands reaching for his jeans and boxers. He pulled the latter on while fishing for his cell phone in the first. He switched it on, his face paling at the sixteen missed phone calls. “Damn it.”

Elizabeth found his shirt on the bedpost and handed it to him. He dragged it over his head while trying to fasten his jeans. “Jason, I hope everything’s okay.”

He jammed his feet into his boots, forgetting about socks. “Sixteen phone calls, Elizabeth. Something’s wrong.”

“I’ll–I’ll get dressed. I’ll drop Cam off with Gram and–”

“No, it’s–” Jason found his jacket on the floor. He pulled it on. “It’s not a good time for me to spring this on anyone.”

“I just–” Elizabeth nodded and sank onto the bed. “I’ll just…wait here then.”

“I’ll call later,” he promised. He brushed his lips over her hair before leaving the room. A few moments later, the front door slammed. She heard the garage door open and Jason’s motorcycle roared down the driveway.

A little dazed by how quickly the mood had turned from loving to frantic, Elizabeth sat there a moment longer. Finally, she buttoned her shirt, pulled on some panties and jeans before going to check on her son.

Port Charles Municipal Building: District Attorney’s Office

“Diego Sanchez is being held without bail,” Brianne Joyce, assistant DA, informed Ric as he checked over some paperwork that had accumulated during his absence.

“Good, good.” Ric glanced up. “And Brooke Lynn?”

“Recovering. I, of course, emphasized that it was a Quartermaine family member,” Brianne said, with a small smile. “The judge not only remanded Sanchez but set the preliminary hearing date for next week.”

“Good, good. Mac’s done a good job with the initial investigation but I would like you to have another go at Brooke. Mac’s a friend of the family, his daughters know Brooke and she might feel more comfortable relating what happened to someone who doesn’t know her,” Ric said.

“I’ve already set something up with Ned Ashton and his ex-wife at the gatehouse. Brooke’s leaving the hospital on Monday, so I made the appointment for Tuesday.”

“Kristina’s still not out of the hospital yet. She won’t be home for another week at the most,” Ric said. He moved some more paperwork aside. “I’m hoping you’ll carry me for a few days. I’ll come in for a few hours and take work home but I’ve got to be at the hospital.”

“Perfectly understandable.” Brianne stood. “I’d like to first chair the Sanchez case.”

“It’s a big case, Brianne. How long have you been working here?” Ric leaned back in his chair.

“With all due respect sir, longer than you,” Brianne remarked. “I worked for DA Baldwin.”

Ric nodded and hesitated. “The Quartermaines are a powerful family, but I don’t think I have to remind you of that. You think you’re prepared to first chair?”

“Yes, sir,” Brianne nodded.

“All right then.” Ric moved the case file across the desk. “You’ve had a good trial record so far, Brianne. You can first chair and do any follow up interviews with the police that you need to.”

“Thank you.” Brianne loaded the file on top of the pile in her arms. “Good luck with your daughter.”

General Hospital: Emergency Room

Jason hurried through the doors and stopped at the sight of his sister talking softly to Sonny and Carly.

“Where’s Sam?” he demanded, striding up to them.

Where Sonny would have lit into him for being unreachable, Carly silenced her estranged husband with a glare. “She’s being moved to ICU,” she said softly. She looked to Emily.

“Jason, she lost…she lost the baby,” Emily said. She touched his arm. “I’m so sorry.”

Jason stepped back and shook his head. “No. The baby was fine, she was healthy–I don’t understand–”

“It was sudden,” Carly cut in. “The placenta separated and she couldn’t breathe. Sam was very lucky to be alive herself,” she told him.

“Can I–” Jason swallowed. “Does she know?”

“No,” Sonny said flatly, his eyes dark with anger and disappointment.

“I want to be with her when you tell her,” Jason said. “She’d–”

“You couldn’t bother to be there this morning, you shouldn’t bother being here at all,” Sonny said darkly. “I’m going up to sit with her.”

The mobster spun on his heel and stalked to the elevators. Jason stared at him, his eyes blinking in shock.

“He’s upset,” Carly said, trying to soothe him. “We just–it’s so unlike you to not be here when we need you, Jason. I’m not judging,” she said quickly, seeing the angry look Emily tossed her. “It’s just–he’s not used to you not being here when he calls.”

“I need–” Jason cleared his throat. “I need to be alone right now.” He walked away then, heading in the opposite direction that his best friend had.

Emily leveled a glare at Carly. “You too are way too dependent on my brother,” she said scathingly.

Carly arched an eyebrow. “Maybe. But I don’t see you turning away his help either.” She walked away, leaving Emily alone in the emergency room.

Nurse’s Station

Steven was talking with a nurse when Carly strolled up to him. She waited for him to finish his conversation. “So, how did you know where Jason was?” she asked pointedly.

Steven blinked. “What?”

“Ten minutes after my mother tells us we can’t find him, he shows up. After you excuse yourself to make a call.” Carly folded her arms. “I may be self-absorbed but I’m not an idiot.”

Steven shook his head. “Sorry, it’s confidential.” He slid his hands in his pockets and jingled some change as he went to the elevators.

Carly glared at his back before stalking over to him. “Look–I don’t–did you know where he was?”

“Just yes or no?” Steven asked. “No elaboration?”

“Just yes or no.”

“Yes,” Steven answered. The elevators dinged open. They both entered.

“Whoever Jason was with,” Carly said slowly, “might want to know that Sam’s baby died and that she’s in ICU.”

Steven looked at her sharply. “What?”

“The baby died,” Carly repeated. “And Sonny told Jason that since he couldn’t bother being there this morning, he shouldn’t now. So Jason’s sitting somewhere alone, dealing with this. And I don’t think he should have to.”

“So why aren’t you there with him?” Steven wanted to know as the elevators doors slid open on the lobby floor. Carly walked out of the car and headed towards the parking garage. “Carly?”

“Because it occurs to me that this isn’t the first time he’s been unavailable,” Carly said after a moment. “The first time his phone is off. The first time he’s disappeared. He’s been doing it for a while but I assumed he was just getting away from Sam.” She turned and fastened her dark eyes on him. “He’s hiding a part of his life from me. From Sonny. From the entire world and you know something about it. And that tells me it’s got something to do with your sister.”

Steven stiffened. “I know you don’t like her–”

“What I like doesn’t matter.” Carly hesitated. “But what Jason likes does. I hate knowing that he’s felt he’s had to hide something like this from me. And what’s more, I hate that he was probably right in his reasons. That finding out he was dating Elizabeth again would have set me off. I would have ridiculed him, attacked her and ended up looking like a royal bitch.”

“Why?” Steven asked. “Why would you put yourself through something like that, Carly? Jason’s a big boy, he doesn’t need you to approve of his choices and neither does my sister.”

“Haven’t you heard?” Carly snorted. “I’m selfish and I don’t think of anyone else but myself.”

Steven shook his head. “I don’t think you’re selfish, Carly.”

Startled, Carly dropped her hands to her side. “What?”

“I think you’re someone who’s been so busy fighting to survive that you don’t realize you already have.” Steven unlocked the passenger door. “I’ll drive you to your mother’s,” he said. She stared at him.

“That was an incredibly nice thing to say,” Carly said. “I’m not really used to that.”

“Get used to it.”

PCPD: Squad Room

“Is Commissioner Scorpio in?”

Lucky Spencer glanced up from the paperwork stating that Connor Bishop had been taken in the MP’s custody and sat back a little. A petite blonde with wide blue eyes and arms full of files stood in front of his desk. He immediately stood. “No, he’s not but I think he was expecting. ADA Joyce right?”

“Brianne Joyce,” she introduced herself. “I’d offer you a hand but I’d rather not drop these.”

Lucky nodded. “Right. He had an unexpected meeting but he told me to show you to his office and tell you he’d be back as soon as possible.”

“Well, then, Detective…” Brianne trailed off.

“Sergeant,” Lucky reluctantly corrected. After a year and a half on the force, it was hard to accept his recent demotion from detective to sergeant and it was still a bitter pill to swallow. “Sergeant Spencer.”

“Sergeant Spencer,” Brianne repeated. “If you’ll lead the way.”

Lucky led her across the hall and up a flight of steps. “Where’s DA Lansing?”

“He’s taking a short of leave of absence,” she said. “His daughter’s sick and he doesn’t want to leave his wife right now.”

It was on the tip of his tongue to correct her assumption that Lansing was not Kristina’s father but Lucky held back. He opened the door for the pretty lawyer. “Would you like coffee or anything?”

Brianne entered Mac’s office and set the files on the desk. “Nope. I’ll just do some paperwork until he gets here.” As Lucky strode to leave, she called out. “Wait.”

He turned. “Yeah?”

“Are you involved with the Sanchez case?” Brianne asked. “DA Lansing is letting me first chair and I was hoping to get interviews with the investigating officers. To get ready for grand jury.”

Lucky shook his head. “No, Mac’s the only one investigating this. He’s close to the family and all that.”

“Well.” Brianne smiled. “It was nice to meet you, Sergeant Spencer.”

“You, too. Ms. Joyce.” Lucky nodded at her and left the office.

A few moments later, Mac entered. “Sorry, Ms. Joyce. I didn’t think I’d be back this late.”

“No, no, it’s fine.” Brianne went over some of the more simple cases before coming to the final one. Diego Sanchez. “I’m first chairing the Sanchez the case,” she told Mac. “It’s my first and it’s really important that I don’t miss any details.”

“Well, it’s pretty cut and dried. Rape kit was positive. Brooke’s a good kid with a clean record. Comes from a good family. Sanchez is a kid from the foster system. He has a bit of a juvenile record. He’s arrogant and he admits at least that they had sex. One look at the pictures taken after Brooke got to the hospital and hearing her testimony should wrap it up.”

“Right. The pictures.” The pictures of the bruised and battered teenager had made her almost nauseous when she’d finally viewed them in her office earlier that day. But she’d shoved her emotions aside. “Sanchez’s statement says she wanted rough sex. Is there any reason why the jury shouldn’t laugh at that notion?”

Mac’s jaw tightened. “Brooke’s a good kid,” he repeated. “Sanchez is dirt. They only need to look at her to know.”

“I don’t mean to insinuate she’s not. But I can’t have any surprises,” Brianne stressed. “If Brooke had a relationship with this boy, then I can’t have that sprung on me by the defense.”

“Even if they did, that doesn’t take away her right to say no,” Mac snapped.

“No, no it doesn’t. But it creates reasonable doubt,” Brianne tried to explain. “The jury will wonder if she’s said yes in the past, why no now?”

“Well, then it’s your job to change their minds,” Mac said stubbornly.

“Not without the facts,” Brianne argued. “Did Brooke Lynn Ashton date the accused?” she asked bluntly.

“I don’t know,” Mac said coldly. “I didn’t ask.”

She arched an eyebrow. “Maybe you should assign someone to this case who isn’t quite so close.” She held up a hand to fend off his next attack. “So that the defense can’t say the police were biased, seeing as how your daughters are the best friends of the victim.”

Mac seethed but nodded. “Fine. I’ll assign an officer.”

General Hospital: Chapel

Elizabeth slowly slid open the door the chapel, not surprised to find him sitting alone in one of the pews. She glanced over her shoulder and then entered.

Steven’s phone call had confirmed what she hadn’t even wanted to think about. Sam had lost her baby. She had needed Jason and Jason was not there. They’d been making love while the baby he’d come to think of as his own needed him.

She could feel the guilt lodging in her belly and she knew his could choke him.

Elizabeth sat next to him and took her hand in his. She didn’t say anything–didn’t really need to say anything.

He looked at her with red-rimmed eyes. “She needed me and I wasn’t there.”

“You can’t always be there when someone needs you,” Elizabeth murmured. “You’re only human.”

“But Sam was depending on me. Not Sonny. Me. She was living with me.” He shook his head. “I knew she was close to her due date and I turned my phone off-”

“Because she had the cottage number,” Elizabeth interrupted. “She knew how to reach you.”

Only she did,” Jason argued. “And when she was unconscious, when she needed me, I was…” he stopped and closed his eyes. “I should have waited until she was awake, until I knew she was okay and the phone was near. Nothing should have been more important.”

She flinched–she didn’t mean to and he didn’t notice. Nothing should have been more important. Nothing. Not her, not their relationship and not their son. The ex-mistress of his best friend and the illegitimate child.

No, it was wrong to think that way. Jason cared about Sam, loved the child. He was right. Nothing should have been more important than the baby.

“I wish there were words,” Elizabeth murmured. “But there aren’t.” She met his eyes. “But I know that Sam will need you.”

“Sonny’s–he’s too angry to let me near her right now. I want to be there when he tells her. He wasn’t there. Not all the time. He was only there when it was convenient for him. He didn’t to go the appointments, he didn’t watch her fall in love with this baby.”

“I’ll handle Sonny.” Elizabeth hesitated. “If I hadn’t had Steven pick up Cameron, then maybe you wouldn’t have come over this morning–”

“This isn’t your fault,” Jason said.

“And it isn’t yours because you came to see me this morning,” Elizabeth said. “Things happen, Jason. They don’t always have to have a reason. They don’t always make sense. The only thing we can do is deal with it.”

“What if you don’t know how?” he asked quietly.

“Then you just take it one day at a time.” Elizabeth tightened her hand around his. “One breath at a time, one step. You don’t have to have the answers right away.” A sad smile curved on her lips. “Some one very wise once told me that sometimes things happen fast…”

“But you have to live through them slow,” Jason nodded. “You know what I’ve learned since then?”

“What?”

“It’s a lot easier to give advice when you’re not giving it to yourself.”

At one point, the short story Everytime was going to be a longer story about Sam and Elizabeth, but I wrote it during the really short window in which I liked Sam as a character. Most of the time, if she’s worth anything as a character, I have to ignore most of what’s happened on GH. (She should still be in jail for what she did to Jake). So I ended up abandoning the idea.

But I did write a second part, which I discarded when I decided not to continue and since it’s not that great to begin with, I didn’t include it as part of the first story (which I don’t like much either, ha).


 

July 3, 2004

Hardy House

Elizabeth set Cameron in the downstairs bassinet before rushing across the room to answer the ringing telephone. “Hello?”

“Do you know what I had to go through to get this number?” Sam shook her head. “I had to ask Jason to ask his sister and then Emily harped on him for almost an hour, trying to figure out why he’d want your number. The poor baby.”

“Hey, Sam.” Elizabeth shifted the cordless to her space between her shoulder and cheek and moved back to check on the baby. “Why would Emily give Jason a hard time?”

“Because she’s not satisfied if she doesn’t know everything that’s going on with everyone at all times,” Sam mused. “I told you–she’s a brat. Anyway, that’s not what’s important.”

“Oh? Then what is?”

“You. Bring that kid of yours to the penthouse for lunch. You can look at the stuff I’ve bought for my baby and I can see if I can hold a baby without dropping him. I’ll see you around noon,” Sam told her and hung up the phone without giving Elizabeth a chance to decline.

Elizabeth clicked the phone off and set it on a nearby table. “So, Sport, you want to go over to Harborview Towers and chance running into my least favorite person?”

Cameron gurgled happily and his mother smirked. “Yeah, that’s what I thought you’d say.”

Morgan Penthouse

Sam hung up the phone and turned to an amused Jason. “You can stay for lunch too,” she said with a teasing smile.

“No thanks,” Jason remarked. “What’s your sudden interest in Elizabeth anyway?”

“Let’s see–she didn’t automatically call me a whore or a tramp, so she’s a step above the other women in your life. She doesn’t look at me with that pity look, so she’s better than your sister.” Sam ticked the reasons off on her fingers. “And she’s the only person who doesn’t think I’m ruining your life. Gee, I can’t imagine why I’d like her.”

“Fine, but–”

Sam rolled her eyes, impatiently. “Because I’ve been where she is right now. She’s feeling like crap and everyone she knows is too busy to be there for her. I could use a friend that’s not you and she could use a friend that’s not going to screw her husband or ex-boyfriend, okay?” She folded her arms. “And besides, what do you care? Oh, by the way, this penthouse is nice and all but I’m not raising my daughter across the hall from Vito Corleone and the human twig, okay?”

Jason blinked and shook his head. “I’m sorry–what?”

“So, I don’t care if we move into another apartment or a house, but we are not staying here.” Sam crossed her arms and lifted her chin stubbornly. “Got that?”

“Where did the Sam from yesterday go?” Jason wondered, more to himself than to her. “You said you loved Sonny–you said–”

“Sonny decided that me and my kid weren’t as good as his real family and dumped me on you. That’s fine–whatever. I’m used to being disposed of and sent away.” She shook her head. “But I grew up believing I was trash and that somehow, it was okay to do that kind of stuff to someone like me. I can’t change where I come from, Jason and I can’t change what people think about me.” She sighed. “But I sat and listened to this poor girl–this girl with a great family and great friends, who came from a good background–tell me about the people who were supposed to love and who disposed of her just as easily as people have me. And you know what I realized? It doesn’t matter who you are, how you grew up–no one deserves to be thrown away like trash and I’m sick of it.”

Elevators

A few hours later, the doors slid open and Elizabeth maneuvered the stroller into the hallway.

“What the hell are you doing here?” Carly Corinthos snipped, folding her thin arms across her chest. “Your marriage is over, you’re coming back to latch onto Jason again? What is it with you, Elizabeth? From Lucky to Jason to Lucky to Zander to Jason–what kind of tramp–”

“I don’t know what kind of mother you are but I prefer if that sort of language weren’t spoken in front of my son,” Elizabeth interrupted coolly.

Carly narrowed her eyes. “You’re suggesting that I’m a bad mother?” she almost shrieked.

“I’m not suggesting anything,” Elizabeth said flatly.

Carly took a step towards her but the door to the Morgan penthouse flew open and Sam came into the hall. “Oh, good. I see you’ve met the anorexic princess,” Sam said to Elizabeth. “Why don’t you wait for me inside?”

“You’re here to see Sam?” Carly snorted. “Two of a kind. You both just can’t let Jason go–”

“Oh, you have got to be kidding me!” Elizabeth interrupted. “Little Miss Carly Corinthos who can’t break a nail without running to Jason to solve her problems. Why do you think the man can’t function in a healthy relationship? Because you have him on speed dial,” the brunette spat.

“He was functioning just fine with Courtney,” Carly said triumphantly.

“Yeah, but she divorced him,” Sam supplied helpfully. “And then she took up with a cop and now it’s Sonny’s least favorite person in the world, so tell me how Jason’s relationship with the Steroid Barbie was healthy?”

“What is it with you and the names?” Carly threw up her hands in frustration.

“I just like coming up with fun ways to describe you,” Sam remarked sweetly. “By the way–Jason and I are moving out of the building. We’re getting an unlisted phone number and I’ll tie him to the bed before he gives it to you.” She tilted her head towards the penthouse. “Come on, I’ve got lunch ready.”

They left Carly sputtering in the hallway and went inside the penthouse. “Are you guys really moving out?” Elizabeth asked when Sam had shut the door.

“Hell, yes. I told Jason this morning. And I have got that man so confused he doesn’t know whether to tie his hair or comb his shoes.” Sam crossed to the kitchen. “I just made sandwiches for lunch ’cause cooking is just not my thing, you know?”

“That’s fine.” Elizabeth locked the stroller and lifted Cameron into her arms. “Hey, there, buddy, thanks for not crying out there,” she murmured. She kissed his forehead and leaned her cheek against his smooth skin. “You miss California? I know I do. All that open space and the vineyards with no one who knows us.” She sighed. “Some days–”

Sam was deliberately stalling in the kitchen because she knew Jason would be in any second and she just–she wanted to see them interact. She wanted to be sure of what she suspected.

Jason had done a lot for her and she figured that the least she could do was fix this for him.

Elizabeth was murmuring to her son in a love voice and had crossed to the other side of the room–to the window that Jason spent so much time looking out of. “Can you see the harbor, Cam? Look at all the pretty boats and the smooth blue water.”

Cameron gurgled and reached out with his fist. “Yeah,” Elizabeth said with a smile. “Pretty scenery. See that big house? That’s where Mama’s best friend used to live.” Would live again one day, Elizabeth hoped. “And your daddy used to work on those docks. He really liked the water, he used to talk about running away to Florida.”

The door opened behind them and Jason stopped at the sight of Elizabeth standing at the window, holding Cameron. She turned and instinctively smiled at him, remembering his kindness the last time she’d seen him. “Jason. Hey.”

“Elizabeth.” He hesitated. “You–it’s good to see you again.” He closed the door and looked around. “Where’s–?” he faltered. How could he talk to her after Sam’s words the previous night? After hearing the conversation between the two women?

“Sam’s in the kitchen.” Elizabeth moved away from the window and Cameron started to squirm in her arms. “This–this is Cameron Alexander.” She looked at her son. “Cam, this is Mama’s friend, Jason.”

“He’s beautiful.” Something twisted in his chest. And if you had any sense in that head of yours, you wouldn’t have let Elizabeth Webber get five feet out your door. Maybe you’d have an actual biological child rather than more of Sonny’s hand-me-downs.

Elizabeth laughed. “It’s good to hear someone else say that or else I start to think he’s got a face only a mother could love.” She shifted him to her other arm. “I’m beginning to wish I’d brought something to put him in. I can’t hold him all day.”

Jason moved then and took one of the baby blankets from the couch. He spread it out over the floor. “Michael used to–he used to love to just lay on his stomach and look around,” he said after a moment, feeling self-conscious.

Elizabeth smiled and gently set Cameron down, delighted when he lifted his head to gurgle at her. “He’s so big,” she murmured. “I can hardly believe it sometimes.” She looked up at him. “I was–I was all alone out there in California and at first–it was really hard. I didn’t know anything about being a mother and there wasn’t anyone there to help. So I just–I remembered what you’d told me about being Michael’s father.”

“You just–listen to the baby and pay attention,” Jason shrugged. “He’ll tell you what he wants in his own way.”

“Exactly. You know–I thought I was prepared for this but God, Jason, I’m somebody’s mother.” Her eyes were sparkling in a way they hadn’t in a long time and he was grateful for that.

Having assured herself that her earlier suspicions were correct, Sam left the kitchen with a tray of sandwiches and some iced tea. “Sorry it took so long,” she said with a smile as she set the tray on the pool table. Jason sent her a pointed glance. “Oh–Jase, I got into it with the twig outside so um, I kind of told her our moving plans.”

Jason exhaled slowly. “Sam–”

“Well, I’m sorry,” Sam rolled her eyes. “She was going at Elizabeth and saying some really inappropriate things in front of Cameron–” she stopped and noticed Cameron looking up at her intently from the floor. “And wow–there he is.” She stepped back nervously. “Should he be on the floor like that? What if you forget he’s there and step on him?”

Elizabeth laughed. “Why don’t you pick him up?”

Sam looked at her dubiously before squatting and lifting the boy into her arms. “Oh wow–” She cradled him closely. “He smells like baby powder,” she murmured, shifting her grip and imitating what she’d seen other mothers do. “Hey, there, Cameron. Aren’t you a handsome little boy?”

“See–it’s not so bad,” Elizabeth told her. “Bet you can’t wait for your baby now, huh?”

“Just three and half more months,” Sam murmured. “I can’t believe how quickly it’s gone.”

“Do you know what you’re going to name her?” Elizabeth asked curiously, looking at Jason.

“Uh–” Sam blinked. “Name. Jason?”

“That’s–that’s your field,” Jason said firmly. “It was hard enough to name Michael much less choose god parents.”

Now Sam was truly panicked. “God parents?” she squeaked. “I have to choose god parents and a name?” She exhaled slowly. “No, okay. No, I can do this. I’ll just–” She hesitated. “I think Emily gave me a baby name book. I could just pick a name at random.”

She handed Cameron to an unsuspecting Jason before dashing up the stairs. Jason hesitated before looking down at the startled boy’s face. Cameron blinked up at him before fussing a little at being in another stranger’s arms.

“Have you seen Ric since you’ve been back?” Jason asked after a moment of awkward silence.

“Yeah.” Elizabeth folded her arms tightly. “When I first came home, I brought Cameron to him and then–I saw him last night.” She bit her lip. “He didn’t see me.”

“Speaking of that–” Sam said from the stairs, a thick book in her hands. “Do you think Justus would be available to handle her divorce? Since Alexis is unavailable?”

“She’s not going to take your case?” Jason asked, surprised.

“I’m not going to ask her,” Elizabeth said simply, surprised that Sam had even brought it up. “I wouldn’t feel comfortable–knowing that there’s a relationship between them.” After a moment, she said, “I could pay him whatever his fee is. I just–I want that part of my life over.”

“He’s no fan of Ric’s, I’m sure he’ll take the case,” Jason told her. He stepped towards her. “I have head back to work, so–” he handed Cameron to her almost reluctantly, his hands resting on her forearms briefly as she adjusted Cameron into her embrace. “It was good to see you, Elizabeth. You look–” he hesitated and swallowed. “You look happier than when you left.”

“You do, too,” Elizabeth murmured and Sam briefly wondered if she was even in the room anymore.

December 27, 2014

This entry is part 7 of 9 in the All I Want For Christmas

I’ve got to know
Nobody ought to be alone on Christmas
Where do lonely hearts go
Nobody ought to be alone on Christmas
Nobody ought to be alone on Christmas

All Alone on Christmas, Darlene Love


December 24

Metro Court Hotel: Ballroom

The gala had been in full swing for nearly two hours before Jason was able to track Elizabeth down. She stood with her assistant, looking tired and harried. He might have to make that one week vacation more like two at this rate.

He’d overheard his Ward cousins speculate on the real reasons Elizabeth had left her job with Ava Jerome, and if sleeping with Jason was part of the incentives. If this was the kind of treatment she was experiencing at the hands of the people in his family, it was no wonder she was avoiding him.

“Elizabeth…” He stepped up to her. “Kiki, could you give us a moment?”

The younger brunette blinked and looked at her boss in panic. “Um, if I say no, do I get fired?”

Jason scowled. “No.”

“Okay.” Kiki lifted her chin. “So, um, no.”

Elizabeth rolled her eyes. “Kiki, go deal with the catering. I’ll handle the sagging banner.” She folded her arms and turned to Jason. “Hey.”

Her posture and the set of her mouth screamed Don’t touch! So Jason kept his hands at his side. “Ah, I’ve been looking for you—”

“Well, I’ve been working,” she interrupted. “Maybe some people have nothing better to do than drink champagne and be a pain in the ass, but I’ve been fighting fires all night.” She looked away. “Listen. Things—they’re moving really fast.”

That did not sound promising. He stepped towards. “Elizabeth, wait—”

“A—and my career is important to me, okay?” She held up a hand, her face frozen in a pleasant expression as if to ward off gossip from those who may be in earshot. “So…I’m just…I’m reevaluating my choices. I’m not…I’m not interested in being one of many.”

She had seen the call from Sam, he was sure of it now. “You’re not, Elizabeth.” He reached out for her arm, but she turned to the side to keep away. “I can explain about this morning—”

“You-you don’t have to.” She backed up. “We—we never said it was exclusive. A-And you know, it’s for the best. Like I said, I love my job. I want to keep doing it with ELQ.” She pursed her lips. “So let me just do my job, okay?”

She walked away, and Jason didn’t follow her. He was not going to make a scene in the middle of the Metro Court ballroom. It would only make the gossip worse.

And she didn’t deserve that.

So he’d find her after the party, or talk to her after Christmas. Give them both time to calm down.

The Loft: Living Room

When Elizabeth trudged home the early hours of Christmas, she found Robin sitting up, watching Christmas cartoons, with Nadine sprawled out on the sofa, her feet in Robin’s lap, sleeping.

“You…waited up.” Elizabeth’s lip trembled, and she let her silver purse fall to the ground.

“We did. Or at least we tried. After you called to say you’d be home tonight.” Robin pushed Nadine’s feet away so she could stand. “What happened?”

“Oh…just twenty-four of the most humiliating hours of my life. Most of Jason’s family thinks I’m a social climbing whore and those who don’t are probably just slapping his back and offering him a cigar.” Her eyes burned. “And he’s married.”

“Whoa, what?” Robin’s eyes widened. “That doesn’t sound right—”

“Or he was. And he’s been talking to his ex on the phone for weeks.” She wrapped her arms around herself. “I’m such an idiot—”

Robin wrapped her arms around her and the tears started to fall. “Hey, I’m sure it’ll be okay in the morning. We’ll discuss it in detail over Christmas breakfast. I’ll make mimosas since it’s too early for wine.”

“You guys are the best.” She sniffled.

Robin started to steer her towards Elizabeth’s bedroom. “I guess you guys had a fight about the ex.”

“No.” Elizabeth collapsed on her bed and reached for the straps of her heels. “I—just told him it was moving too fast.” She closed her eyes. “I’m just one in a long line of ELQ floozies for the Quartermaine men.”

“I think it’s probably more complicated than that.” Robin leaned against the doorframe of the room. “But we’ll sort it out in the morning.” Her smile was dim in the shadows of the darkened room. “Merry Christmas, for what it’s worth.”

“Merry Christmas,” Elizabeth murmured in response. For what it was worth.

December 25

Quartermaine Mansion: Family Room

Sometimes Jason liked his family, but most of the time he marveled that not only was he a biological member of this circus, but that he’d been raised with them.

He sipped his coffee and stood in the corner of the room watching as his father handed out gifts from under the Christmas tree to various members of the family.

“I thought for sure you’d bring that nice Elizabeth,” his grandfather said, joining him with a snifter of brandy and a cigar. “After you brought her to the party—”

Jason clenched his teeth. “She has her own family.” Or did she? She was close to her roommates, but she did have family in Port Charles?

“Your grandmother thought she was quite lovely. Exactly what you need.” Edward tapped his cigar into the ashtray on the nearby shelf to rid himself of the ash. “I hope we didn’t come on too strong.”

Coffee wasn’t strong enough to be a member of this family.

“I’m not dignifying that with a response,” Jason muttered.

His grandfather huffed and rejoined his wife near the tree. For all his philandering (and Edward had at least two illegitimate sons to show for it), he had retained the love and devotion of his wife for nearly three-quarters of a century.

He loved his grandmother, but damned if he understood that marriage. Or that of his father and stepmother. Insanity.

“You look like a lost puppy over here.” AJ joined him, followed by Ned. “I’ve heard Grandfather muse on the absence of your one true love like five times.” He snorted. “They’re all true loves until it’s over.”

“Do you two have a point here?” Jason demanded. “I’m not in the mood. Someone must have said something to Elizabeth, because she was miserable last night. She didn’t even let me explain about the phone calls.”

Ned tugged on his ear. “Yeah, so…Olivia mentioned that she saw my mother near Elizabeth and her assistant early on in the evening.”

Oh, hell. Jason pinched the bridge of his nose. “Does no one have impulse control on this family?”

“And I saw Dad with her at the hospital party,” AJ said. “I tried to get closer to find out what was being said, but I only heard Brenda’s name.”

“I’m going to set this place on fire with every one of you inside.” Jason set his coffee mug down with a clack of the porcelain against the oak desk. “Let me get this straight. Yesterday—just yesterday—Elizabeth finds out I’ve been talking with my ex-girlfriend, my father tells her I was married once, and then your ridiculous mother probably mentioned something about social climbers?”

“Yeah, when you list it that way, it’s no wonder she walked out on you,” AJ said, in almost cheerful tone. “Couple that with Sam cornering her the evening before—” He put his hands up in mock surrender when Jason glared at him. “I only heard that today from Dillon.”

“So, some damage control is necessary,” Ned said. “It can be done. Kristina still married me even after she found out I had been married briefly to her sister.”

“Point of order—she found out after you were married and moved out for a month,” AJ reminded him.

Jason stared at the both of them. “And I consider the two of you friends. No wonder I’ve never had a relationship longer than two months.”

“Hey, I’ve been with Olivia for three years now,” Ned pointed out. “So, you know, eventually I figured it out.” He looked at AJ, who just looked at him. “Junior’s a lost cause, but he’s a half decent father.”

“I’m touched,” AJ said dryly.

Jason shook his head. “I’m going to go see her tomorrow. I’ll bring her gift and hope like hell she’ll talk to me. We work together, she can’t avoid me forever.”

“There’s the silver lining. If you can’t harass her personally, do it professionally.” AJ raised his bourbon in a mock toast. “Welcome to the Quartermaine family.”

When Jason only growled, Ned steered AJ away. “Let me get you away before he actually hurts you.”

December 26

The Loft: Hallway

When the door swung open the next afternoon, he found Robin Scorpio staring back at him, her eyes raised in expectation. “Ah…hey, Robin. Can I see—” He faltered when she just shook her head.

“Sorry, she’s not in the mood. We just split open a bottle of Riesling.”

Jason frowned, because she’d said that final part like it was supposed to mean something. Right, Elizabeth said she and her roommates took wine very seriously. “Ah, I guess you don’t use that for holidays.”

“Nope, it’s more to drink away various humiliations.” Robin pursed her lips. “Not romantically, so much. That’s usually the Moscato. Riesling is more general. You know, for being treated like a social climbing whore for two days straight, and finding out the guy you’re sleeping with is not only talking to an ex-girlfriend, but used to be married.”

She looked back to her blonde roommate, who was perched on the arm of the sofa. “Did I get it all?”

“Oh, and the one where her assistant is called a stripper,” Nadine said. “And um,” She paused. “I think there was something in there about the horrors of heels, but that’s more a female thing than directly his fault.”

“Right.” Robin turned back. “Listen. I know you’re a good guy. She knows it, too. She just…didn’t grow up in this town. Most of us are immune to the Quartermaines after so much exposure.”

“I barely blink when your dad pinches my butt these days,” Nadine said blandly. “Though I twisted his wrist the last time. That was awesome.”

Jason closed his eyes. “I know. And I should have…said something to them, but they don’t exactly listen.”

“I hear ya.” Robin tapped her fingers on the edge of the door. “So, I’d love to let you in, but she’s still working off her mad. If you talk to her now, you’re both going to say stuff you don’t entirely mean. Let her come to you.” She narrowed her eyes. “You are here to work it out right? Because if you’re just here to tell her it’s not worth the trouble—”

“I’ll twist your wrist right off,” Nadine said, rising to her feet. “Along with other body parts you might miss.” She cracked her knuckles and rubbed her hands together.

“I’m glad Elizabeth has such good friends,” Jason said after a moment. He wasn’t scared. Not really. He held out the small rectangular box wrapped in silver. “Could you give this to her?”

“Hmm, jewelry as a peace offering. It’s not original, but there’s a reason it’s a standard.” Robin accepted the gift. “Any other message?”

Jason shifted. “Well, I didn’t—there’s no card, because—I thought I’d give it to her in person.” He coughed lightly. “I had planned to tell her it’s so we’ll always remember our first Christmas together, but…” He winced. “That sounds worse out loud than it did in my head.”

Robin considered him for a long moment before nodding. “That’s acceptable. If she wants to call you after this, then that’s up to her. I’ll…think about encouraging it.”

“Thanks, Robin.”

She swung the door shut then and turned to Nadine. “He looked contrite.”

“I think we should open it,” Nadine said. “Just to make sure it’s appropriate.”

Robin just rolled her eyes and headed for Elizabeth’s room.

The Loft: Elizabeth’s Bedroom

Elizabeth was curled up in her bed, watching Love Actually for the fifth time, sniffling. At Robin’s light knock, she hit pause as Mark was showing Juliet the sign that proclaimed her to be perfect to him.

Why couldn’t love be like the movies?

“Come in.” She drew her legs up so Robin could sit the edge of her bed and Nadine just settled next to her. “Who was at the door?”

“Jason,” Robin said. She handed her a silver box. “He wanted to talk to you, but settled for leaving this. I told him you were still working off your mad.” She tilted her head. “Did I overstep? Should I have let him in?”

Elizabeth looked down at her pink camisole and gray sweatpants. “Um, no. The next time I see him, I want to be past the wallowing part of the program.” She took the box. “Is it wrong I don’t want to open this?”

“No,” Robin said slowly, “but there’s a question I didn’t ask you yesterday. It was your day for being coddled.”

“And that part is over,” Nadine said, slinging an arm around Elizabeth’s shoulder and reaching into the bowl of popcorn. “Today, Robin becomes the speaker of common sense.”

“Ah.” A smile tugged at the corners of her lips. “Which tells me you were mostly patting my head yesterday but you think I’m an idiot.”

“I think you have a reason to be annoyed,” Robin said. “I personally think that after three weeks of dating and roughly three months of knowing one another, the fact that he was married before should come up. Particularly if you’re together as often as the two of you were.”

“Even if you didn’t really get into the ex part of the conversation,” Nadine said, “marriage is different. So, Robin and I agree—that’s a faux pas there.”

“And the talking with his ex thing?” Robin hesitated. “I don’t know. I knew him in high school, which was a long time ago, but he wasn’t much for dating a bunch of girls at once. I’d ask him about it with an open mind.”

“But the rest of it, girlfriend?” Nadine said. “You know, the part where you’re accosted by the majority of Port Charles’ class of idiots and his family?”

“Not his fault,” Elizabeth sighed. “Which I’d mostly accepted two days ago. It was just the culmination of it.”

“So what you have to ask yourself, my love, is—other than the two points we’ve already discussed, what has Jason done to make you distrust him?”

“Other than the girlfriend and wife thing?” Elizabeth shook her head. “Nothing. He—he even suggested a trip after Emily comes back. He went into work on Christmas Eve, trying to clear his schedule a bit.” She closed her eyes. “But right after that, I saw the phone calls, and I stopped thinking about it—”

“So maybe you give him a chance to explain the two aspects we agree he’s in hot water over, and the rest?” Robin shrugged. “You chalk it up to not having to sleep with his family.”

Elizabeth laughed, and slowly began to unwrap the gift.

Inside the velvet lined box from Tiffany, laid a delicate diamond snow flake on a silver chain. “I shouldn’t let jewelry impress me,” she murmured.

“Tell her the message,” Nadine urged.

“He said—and I quote—that it’s so you’ll always remember your first Christmas together.” Robin smirked. “And he looked embarrassed to say it to us.”

“But he did.” Elizabeth removed the necklace and held the charm in the palm of her hand. “That has to mean something, doesn’t it?” She blinked and looked up. “Our first Christmas?”

“Yeah, I liked that part of it, too.” Nadine grinned.  “You gonna forgive him?”

Not yet, but…

Elizabeth smirked. “He does look fantastic just wearing black briefs. There is that to cling to.”

December 25, 2014

So here’s the second part of my Christmas update. Most of the good stuff was posted yesterday, I’ll admit. However, I’m posting the concluding segments of my Christmas short story, A Merry Little Christmas, as well as several previews.

Your previews are the opening scenes to Feels Like Home and Burn in Heaven, and previews for an upcoming chapter of The Best Thing and All We Are.

Have a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

These are the two opening scenes to my Tangle rewrite.


I’m alive but tell me am I free
I got eyes but tell me can I see
The sky is falling and no one knows
It shouldn’t be hard to believe
Shouldn’t be this difficult to breathe
The sky is falling and no one knows
Sky is Falling, Lifehouse


Monday, November 15, 2010

Morgan Home: Kitchen

The last time Jason Morgan saw his wife, she was smiling at him. She stood by her open car door, facing the street as he fastened the car seat for their three-year-old son, Jake.

“I’m going to miss you guys so much,” she murmured, leaning over the car door to kiss him softly. “I wish I weren’t going back today.”

Jason smoothed his hand down the back of her hand, over her chestnut hair and tilted his head to the side. “You don’t have to go, you know. You can call, ask for extra time.”

She wrinkled her nose and shook her head. “I can’t. I’ve already been out six months. I think I was spoiled because I was only out three with Jake.” She cast her sapphire eyes at their blond son who was chattering with six-year-old Cameron. “And you know…the last month of that was…” She sighed. “I’m not going to think about that anymore.”

He didn’t much like to think about the few weeks their newborn son had been kidnapped by a grief-stricken mother, made possible by his girlfriend’s anger at the situation, as she had stood and watched the woman lift an innocent boy from his carriage and leave the park.

“We don’t have to.” He kissed her again. “But you know…Juliet is going to miss you.”

She laughed, the sorrow clearing from her eyes. “Oh, she is not. She has you wrapped around her tiny finger.” She punctuated each word with a soft finger poking him in the chest. “Admit it, big bad Jason Morgan is a softy.”

He scowled at her, but only in fun because it was true. He’d only raised boys before, from Michael to Jake and Cameron. He’d been around girls, but never his own daughter. “I have a reputation to protect.”

She smirked. “I have to get the boys to school, and then to the hospital before Epiphany sets the hounds loose.” He stepped back and closed the door. He kissed her one more time. “I love you,” she murmured against his lips. “I’ll see you later.”

He stepped back from the car, and repeated their usual goodbye, one that went back more than a decade. “I’ll see you later.”

His wife smiled, and slid into the car. As she fastened her seatbelt, Jason, out of habit, glanced to the street where a dark car was waiting to follow his wife to the boys’ school and then to General Hospital.

With a wave, Elizabeth Morgan pulled out of the driveway and then drove down the street. Her silver car turned a corner, and she was gone.

Jason returned to the house where his six-month-old daughter slept peacefully never knowing that she would grow up without the mother who loved her so much.

Morgan Home: Study

Four hours later, Jason sat behind the desk in the study Elizabeth had insisted on setting up when they’d moved into the home the year before. He hated bringing his work home, but she had successfully argued that if he did paperwork and met with trusted people the kids already knew at the house, he would be home more. After missing nearly a year of Jake’s life, any decision that allowed him more time with his children was easy to make.

So today, the meeting was with Cody Paul, the enforcer in his organization, and his business partner, Johnny Zacchara. Juliet peacefully slumbered in a playpen a few feet outside the door, in the living room.

“Vega’s an impatient old woman,” Johnny grumbled, scribbling his name on a page. “I told him that we would have answer by the end of the week, and he’s already hassling me. It’s Monday, for f—” He coughed. “Anyway. We’ll have to figure out what to tell him about the pier.”

“We will,” Jason said. “At the end of the week.” He rubbed his forehead. “Anything else?”

“Nope,” Cody said, gathering up the ledgers. “I’ll take these down to Max at the warehouse. See ya guys.” The enforcer left, and a few minutes later he heard the door open and close.

Johnny leaned back in his chair. “Nadine said Liz was going back to work today. How’d she take it?”

Jason shrugged. He and Johnny were mostly relaxed with one another, despite the fact Johnny was responsible for the death of Sonny Corinthos two years earlier.

Their business partnership had just seen its first anniversary, having been struck when his now-wife Nadine agreed to marry him. Johnny had, sensibly, argued that they would be stronger together than apart and since they were both family men now, they would be well-served to preserve the peace.

“I told her she could stay home,” he answered finally.

“Yeah, I told Nadine the same thing last month.” Johnny smirked. “She thought I was nuts. What would she do when Lia was older, started going to school?” His grin broadened. “I told her we’d have more kids if she wanted to stay busy. She whacked me. Just easier to let them do what they’re gonna do.”

“Elizabeth loves her job.” And that was enough for him. It was a logistical nightmare securing the hospital at times, but it was important to him that his wife not be isolated, stuck in his penthouse. Carly had been that way with Sonny, and it had driven her insane—almost literally.

The landline on his desk rang and Jason reached for it. “Morgan?”

“Jason? Oh. Hey. It’s Nadine.”

Jason frowned at the sound of his partner’s wife. “Nadine? Are you looking for Johnny?” He glanced at the other man who took out his cell, as if to examine its condition.

“Oh. No, no. I guess Elizabeth forgot its her first day back. I tried her cell, but she probably left it with Jules again, she can’t get enough of it but I’ve managed to hold Epiphany off for a while, but she’s super late—”

His fist clenched on the desk, and Johnny leaned forward. “What’s wrong?”

“Nadine, Elizabeth left for work four hours ago,” Jason said, careful to keep his voice very calm. He met Johnny’s eyes, and his partner immediately started to dial Elizabeth’s guards.

“Oh.” There was a pause, and then a sucking in of her breath. “Oh. God. Okay. Well…I…don’t know what to do. Should I call the police?

“No.” Jason swallowed. He could not panic. There was an explanation. A reasonable one. “No. I’ll…drive the route she took. Maybe she got stuck somewhere.”

“Okay…well, let me know.” But Nadine’s voice was skeptical, and they both knew he didn’t believe it.

Jason carefully set the phone on the hook, and took a deep breath. “Johnny?”

“No answer on the guards,” Johnny confirmed. “I’m calling Max and Cody to start the search.” He hesitated. “Jason, doesn’t she usually drive the boys to school?”

And if Jason had been fighting panic before, he now tasted the terror.

Snatching the phone back up, he punched in the number for St. Andrew’s Academy. “Hello, this is Jason Morgan. I’m calling to find out if my sons, Cameron and Jake, made it class today. Cameron is in first grade, and Jake is in nursery school.”

When the woman on the other line confirmed that the boys had been dropped off on time, the vise around his lungs eased…only slightly. He hung up the phone. “They made it.”

“Okay.” Johnny exhaled slowly. “Okay. I’ll stay here, with Jules, Jason. You’re not…” He shook his head. “You’re not going to be able to sit back and let other people search for her, I know it. So…go trace her route. Go look.”

But Jason couldn’t move. If he moved, left the house, started looking, it would mean this was real. That his wife had not made it work, that her guards were not answering their phones.

“Jason,” Johnny said. “I’ll stay with Jules. I’ll play point for the guys, for Cody and Max. Go look.”

Johnny’s quiet words broke through his stupor and he looked across the desk, at the man who was not nearly the friend Sonny Corinthos had been, but in that moment, he just didn’t care. “If something happened to her…”

“We’ll cross that bridge when we get to it, Jase.”

This is a snippet from Chapter Two of All We Are.


Saturday, October 21, 2006

 Elizabeth’s Apartment: Living Room

Elizabeth set a blanket over Cameron’s napping body on the sofa and switched off the cartoons that had lulled him to sleep. It was the first day in weeks she’d been able to devote completely to him, a realization which made her feel lower than an ant.

How was she going to take care of her little boy with no money? She’d lose the apartment for sure, and she did not want to move in with her grandmother. She’d probably be pressured to stay with Lucky.

That was one thing that was going to change. If a divorce wasn’t part of Jason’s plan, she was going to add it. It wasn’t enough that he’d humiliated her, lied to her, cheated on her, but he’d continued to place Cameron in danger by leaving pills in the apartment.

And now he’d cost her job and possibly her freedom.

“It’s a hell of a way to smash a permanent lock,” she murmured as she rose from the sofa, her stomach twisting in knots. She rubbed her hand absently. “Please, Baby, be Jason’s. That’s the only thing that would make my life remotely easier.”

She hit play on her answering machine and listened to the messages she folded some clothes. One from Nikolas, concerned about news he’d heard from Emily. Emily had also called, hoping she wasn’t blaming this on Lucky. Her grandmother had called—

The black cell phone a man in a suit had delivered to her door the night before remained silent. If Jason had a plan, he was taking his sweet time.

And, God, didn’t it gall her to be so dependent on him? Why couldn’t she stand on her own two feet and make this go away? She could turn Mac’s daughter in—the affair and her volunteer work at the hospital would surely point the police towards her as the culprit.

But as much as she wanted to hate Maxie, she couldn’t.

She remembered what it was like to be young and desperately in love, then to have it shattered. If Maxie had had a Jason in her life, someone she could turn to keep her from trashing her life, the way Jason had stopped Elizabeth that night in Jake’s so long ago, would Maxie have turned to Lucky?

She knew what it was to be desperate, to want to keep someone’s love so badly you’d do anything. What had she done in the name of her love for Lucky? For Ric?

No, turning the attention to a desperately unhappy, barely legal adult wasn’t fair. Maxie didn’t deserve to pay for Lucky’s mistakes any more than Elizabeth did

So how else could she make this go away? How could she protect herself and her children without throwing Jason to the wolves? Lying in front of a grand jury seemed like the best bet, but that would just land her even more on Ric’s radar.

Maybe Jason’s idea would allow her to be more involved, to make an active choice to help rather than passively sitting back and hoping he could make it go away.

And since she was the weapon being used against him, it was fair Jason had a hand in making this go away, right? It didn’t make her weak, just smart.

“I’m using all my available resources,” she told the room. “Jason is a resource. He’s always been there for me. I didn’t do this. There’s no harm in making sure I don’t pay for it.”

Right. That sounded good.

The black cell phone vibrated suddenly, the force of it sending the device sliding across the coffee table. Elizabeth snatched it up. “Hello?”

“Elizabeth. I—I need to see you. Can we meet at Vista Point?”

Elizabeth chewed her lip. “I just put Cameron down for a nap. Let me see if Robin or Patrick can come watch him.” People who wouldn’t ask her questions. God, it was nice to have people to depend on for a change.

“Okay. I’ll be there in an hour.” He paused. “I have a way to make us both safe, I just…I need you to let me explain it.”

Well, that sounded odd and disturbing, but she swallowed. She trusted Jason. “All right, I’ll be there in an hour.”

She hit the end button and tapped the phone against her mouth. What if he was sending her away? To a jurisdiction where she couldn’t be extradited?

What if that was the only solution? Could she give up her family, her friends, her life here? Any hope of having Jason being in her child’s life?

“God, I hope that’s not the plan.” She reached for her own cell phone in order to dial Robin’s number, hoping she’d come through for her again.

This is just a bit from a Sonny/Carly scene in an upcoming chapter.


“I…should have dealt with it better, Sonny,” Carly said, though she didn’t think her actions had been nearly as bad as his. She’d been shot in the head—hadn’t she forgiven that? Did no one remember what she’d been through? “I just…I was hurt. I lashed out. I don’t…know if I meant what I said about the boys.”

She had meant every word of it and had intended to use Alexis’s secret to destroy him in court, but that wasn’t important now.

“Well, I took you for your word.” Sonny stood, crossed to the window that overlooked the city. “I thought….I’d use the summer to figure out how to fix things.”

There was more to this story, but Carly knew he would never tell her, and if it reflected badly on Sonny, it was unlikely to come from Jason either.

They were always more loyal to one another than they were to her. Men. They all stuck together.

“And when Sam died?” Carly murmured. She set the tub of cold cream down and slowly began to draw her brush through her blonde hair. “Why didn’t it come out then?”

“Sam…tricked me into terminating my parental rights,” Sonny said through clenched teeth. “I thought I was signing a trust for Evie. Instead, she took them away and created a will that left guardianship to Jason in the event of her death.”

Carly smirked. If she didn’t hate that whore so much, she might admire the tactic. A woman scorned had scorched him right back. Served him right.

It was easy to see this from Sam’s side of it. She’d been used, tossed away, foisted on Jason. Sonny had returned to his family. Why should she make it easy on the bastard who discarded her?

There was a certain poetry, a certain sense of innate justice that Carly respected.

That didn’t change the way of the world.

Now, I haven’t run this scene or any of the plot past my beta yet, so this isn’t final. But it’s a taste of the world I have set up in the sequel to A Few Words Too Many. It picks up in late 2007, almost four years after the story closed.


Living beyond your years
Acting out all their fears
You feel it in your chest
Your hands protect the flames
From the wild winds around you
Icarus is flying too close to the sun
And Icarus’s life, it has only just begun
It’s just begun

– Icarus, Bastille


Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Kelly’s: Courtyard

Everything about this day had been a disaster so far.

Elizabeth Morgan’s hold on her overflowing tote failed as she hurried through the arch that separated the courtyard of Kelly’s from the parking lot.

The handle to which she had been desperately grasping tore from its seams, sending a pile of folders sliding to the cobblestones below, as well as her make up bag, her keys, an extra toy truck, and a hair brush.

She stared down at the pile and felt the absurd urge to burst into tears.

“Let me help, Mrs. Morgan.” Her guard crouched in front of her, gathering her things into a pile.

“It’s okay, Kevin.” Elizabeth knelt down to start shoving things back into her now useless tote. “I over packed it again.”

“I’ll send someone to bring you a new bag,” the young dark-haired man began, setting the pile on a nearby table and reaching inside his suit jacket for his cell phone.

“No, no, that’s not necessary—” Elizabeth held up her hand. “I’m handing some of these over to Robin at our meeting anyway. It’s really—”

But he was already on the phone with Cody Paul, who until six months ago, had been her daytime guard. Cody had been promoted to another position in the organization, and her life had never been quite the same. She didn’t even know how much she’d relied on him until he hadn’t been there.

And curse her husband and his partner for taking him away as she had lurched towards the end of an uncomfortable pregnancy. Men. No sensitivity.

“Elizabeth?” Robin Scorpio stepped out from inside the restaurant. “Hey, is everything okay?”

“No, but that’s not new.” Elizabeth smiled faintly at Kevin who was telling Cody that an extra tote from the penthouse needed to be sent to Kelly’s immediately. “My bag ripped as I was coming in.”

“Oh.” Robin joined her at the table. “It’s a cool day—let’s sit outside instead.”

“I’m late, I know I am.” Elizabeth dumped the last of her bag’s contents on the table and collapsed into a chair. “I spent half the night organizing this paperwork and now it’s a mess.” She pressed a hand to her forehead again. “I nearly overslept and was late picking up Morgan. It’s my week to carpool—”

Robin nodded, taking a seat across from her. “As much as you can call sitting in a car while a guard drives carpooling, I suppose.”

“Cady refused to eat breakfast, and then she dumped her plate of eggs in Jake’s lap, so I had to clean him up before I could drop him off with Monica to spend part of the day with her and Alan—he didn’t sleep half the night. Woke Cady twice. I finally put them both in bed with me.”

“Where was Jason through all of this?” Robin asked, calmly removing her date book from her own tote bag and flipping it open. She reached for Elizabeth’s paperwork pile and began to sort it.

“He worked late again. Didn’t get home until almost three. Sonny called him while I was cleaning up Jake—some kind of meeting at the warehouse required his immediate attention.” Elizabeth huffed. “It’s getting ridiculous, Robin. I love Sonny, but I’m going to strangle him if this keeps up.”

Robin leaned back as a waitress emerged from Kelly’s to take their lunch orders. When she was gone, Robin asked, “Still wrapped up in Kate?”

“Yes.” Elizabeth rolled her eyes. “Like he was with Jordan. And Claire. And Amelia. And Sam. It’s exhausting and to think, I actually miss the days when he and Carly were trying to kill each other in court. At least Sonny showed up for work on a regular basis.”

“Yeah, but that was to escape Carly. She hates the warehouse doesn’t she?” Robin asked. She smiled as the waitress returned with their drinks. “Thanks.”

“It wouldn’t be so bad if Sonny didn’t continually start these ridiculous projects, then flit off for a few days with his newest woman and leave Jason to do the rest of the work. First it was just the warehouse expansion into Buffalo and then into Albany. Then he wanted to open a coffee house. Then a restaurant. And now? He wants to expand the coffeehouses into Buffalo and Albany.” She huffed and stirred her herbal tea. “I’m getting a migraine thinking about it.”

“And Jason doesn’t want to say no because he likes that the new businesses are…” Robin pursed her lips. “Free and clear, so to speak. It’s something he can give to the kids later.”

“Except he’s doing twice as much work as he used to.” Elizabeth shook her head. “It was different before, Robin. Before we were married. When we were…sorting through things, dealing with Ric and Faith. Sonny bent over backwards to make sure Jason and I had time together—he took a long business trip in the middle of Carly’s pregnancy so Jason wouldn’t leave me.”

She closed her eyes. “It’s like he was trying to make up for what he thought had been partly his fault before—Jason never being home. But then that mess with Kristina blew up a few months after we got married…” She shook her head. “And it’s like he takes it for granted that I’ll be around, that I’ll put up with the long hours, the meetings—”

“Have you or Jason talked to Sonny about letting up?” Robin stirred some sugar in her iced tea. “Especially since you had Jake? I mean, you were in the hospital for three weeks after he was born. Jason was always around then.”

“I don’t know what happened,” Elizabeth admitted. “I was pretty in and out of it for the first few days. I’m just not sure Jason…” She hesitated. “I’m not sure it occurred to him to leave the hospital. Other than making sure someone was with Cady. I just know every time I woke up, he was with me.”

“We didn’t know for a few days if they’d stop the bleeding,” Robin murmured. “It was pretty scary, and Jason just looked…I mean, I’ve seen him scared, worried—when Michael was kidnapped all those years ago. But it was more than that—I know things are difficult right now, Elizabeth, but he loves you—”

“Oh, God, that’s not…” Elizabeth exhaled slowly. “No, I’m just tired, you know? And I miss my husband. I miss some semblance of family life. I don’t doubt for a minute that he loves me. And I love him. I just…I want Sonny to respect that again. He’s taking our stability for granted, you know? Like…Jason and I have been together for four years, we have two children, and somehow Sonny thinks that’s it. We don’t need to do anything extra. We’re a happy family without working at it.”

“To be fair, I can’t blame him. You and Jason are probably the most stable people I know.” Robin wrinkled her nose. “I mean, marriages in this town do not last long. Even the Spencers have had some bumps in the road—not so much since Laura came home a few years ago, but you and Jason haven’t had so much as a blip. No huge arguments, no storming out. No secrets.”

“Well, we managed to do plenty of that before we got married.” But Elizabeth smiled, because it was the truth. There had been so much drama in the beginning of their relationship that she felt like there was nothing left to worry about beyond the everyday. They were in love with a beautiful home and two beautiful children—

If Sonny would just let Jason have blessed moment to himself, life would be nearly perfect.

“You know, before I came home two years ago,” Robin began as the waitress placed their food in front of them. “I wondered how I’d feel knowing Jason had married you, that you had kids. I mean, I remembered you from before. Sort of. I’m not entirely sure we ever officially met other than running into each other at the garage.”

Elizabeth arched a brow. “Worried I wasn’t good enough for Jason?”

“Not so much,” Robin laughed. “Just that—I couldn’t see you two together. I don’t know, it’d be like going away for several years and learning that Lucky had married Maxie Jones. You know, someone you’re kind of aware of but, wow, cannot picture him with.”

“I can barely picture him with Sam, but that might be residual annoyances since Sonny and Sam’s affair during the divorce only made life worse,” Elizabeth sighed. “But yeah, I get it. So, what’s the verdict?”

“I like the two of you together,” Robin said, dumping ketchup over her fries. “Then again, after everything that happened with Carly and Michael, particularly my part in it…I decided that I would like anyone that gave Jason the chance to be a father again.”

“Well, he gave me the chance to be a mother, which most days, I’m grateful for. Today? Maybe not so much.” Elizabeth smiled and dug into her chili. “So, somewhere in that pile of paper is the contract for next month.”

“Carly agreed to hold the benefit at the Metro Court?” Robin frowned. “I thought she’d give me more trouble—”

“Well, I told her I’d be her liaison with the foundation, and when she still balked, Jax twisted her arm.” Elizabeth shook her head. “You’d think after two years, you’d two be…I don’t know. Somewhat civil. Considering neither one of you are involved with the man you fought over in the first place.”

“Except Carly still thinks I was wrong to tell AJ the truth.” Robin sniffed. “I’m willing to accept that fact, but I’ll never admit that to Carly. Plus, there was that business with her trying to sleep with Patrick.”

“That last summer before she and Jax got serious,” Elizabeth reminded her. “And mostly it was to annoy you. Which it did.”

“I thought about making Patrick bathe in bleach before I agreed to sleep with him again, but I decided to take his word for it that nothing happened,” Robin decided. She pointed a fry at Elizabeth. “Did Nadine tell you about her latest goober?”

“God. There was a rambling message on my voice mail this morning, but I didn’t get a chance to listen to it closely. Something about a jackass, a good cocktail and a broken finger?” Elizabeth asked.

“Yeah, one of Patrick’s friends asked her out. Pete Marquez? The English professor who went to Vegas with him a few months ago?”

“Oh.” Elizabeth frowned. “She’s getting desperate.”

“Yeah, something about being the only single girl left in the group.” Robin shrugged. “I tried to tell her Kelly’s still on the market, but that didn’t cheer her up.”

“I guess we all have paired off since that first time at Jake’s.” Elizabeth smiled at the memory of her first Girl’s Night. “Lainey’s been dating AJ—what nearly a year now? You and Patrick are stupid for each other. I’m spoken for. Emily’s engaged to Nikolas—it just leaves Nadine and Kelly.”

“I think she’s still hung up on the idiot she was dating before she hit PC but the last time I mentioned her looking up Johnny Zacchara, she nearly took me out with a bottle of tequila.” Robin scowled. “It’s not my fault he’s a dillhole and she’s mooning over him.”

“She’s dated plenty in the last four years,” Elizabeth said. “Though I guess it doesn’t cheer her up that most of her previous attempts have gone on to more serious relationships. There was Lucky—who’s dating Sam now. And of course, Nikolas, though the two brothers thing was weird enough.”

“Don’t forget her brief and disastrous date with Patrick before I moved here.” Robin laughed. “He still talks about that bar fight.”

“I know. I told her it was a bad idea, but what can I say? Nadine’s a romantic.” Elizabeth leaned back in her chair and took a deep breath. “I feel a lot better, Robin. Just…sitting here. Bitching about my almost perfect life, reminding myself as bad as it could be, at least I still have this wonderful man to go home to.”

“Right?” Robin shrugged. “All things considered, Elizabeth? Life could suck a lot more.”

“I completely agree.” Elizabeth lifted her mug of tea to click against Robin’s glass of iced tea. “To life not sucking all that much in the grand scheme of things.”

December 24, 2014

Merry Christmas! I had mentioned on my Facebook page that I was planning a few special Christmas surprises, so I hope this lives up to it. I’ve got a few things for you today, and a few things tomorrow.

1. The Ebooks page has been completely redesign so hopefully it’s a bit easier to find what you’re looking for and answers a few more questions. For those of you who may have had trouble with the file formats, I’ve included a .pdf file for the two books that are currently online, Daughters and A Few Words Too Many.

2. All I Want For Christmas – Part Six has been added. There are only two parts left, and will be posted December 27 and December 31.

3. On my Facebook page, I asked for some prompts to write a new entry in The Adventures of Lucky and Lizzie. Caroline sent me in one, so I wrote The Envy of All Men.

4. And finally, as a sort of follow-up to Other People’s Truths, a ensemble Christmas story set this year with everyone from Dante and Lulu to Jake and Elizabeth. The first part of A Merry Little Christmas is posted today and the conclusion is one of your presents tomorrow.

I don’t think I’ll be posting The Best Thing today. I sent the chapter over to Cora later than I should have, and you know, it turns out there are holidays and what not. Ha. I’ll post it as soon as I get it back 🙂

Happy Holidays!

This entry is part 6 of 9 in the All I Want For Christmas

And when those blue snowflakes start falling
That’s when those blue memories start calling
You’ll be doin’ all right, with your Christmas of white
But I’ll have a blue, blue blue blue Christmas

Blue Christmas, Sheryl Crow


December 24

Morgan Penthouse: Jason’s Bedroom

“Kiki, I don’t care if God himself plants his ass in front of you to block traffic, you had better have those presents in GH’s conference room by 11 AM this morning or I will send you back to your mother in pieces.”

Elizabeth hit the end button on her phone and scowled. “I miss being able to slam my phone down. It was so much more satisfying.”

Jason laughed from across the room where he was hanging up the tuxedo they’d tossed over a chair the evening before—her dress had only fared mildly better. The fear of Kate Howard’s wrath had caused her to break off the delightful activities right after he had peeled it away (with the promised teeth) in order to carefully place it on a hanger in the closet.

“Why did you go to the trouble of stealing her from Ava Jerome if she’s not capable?” he asked, closing the door and striding towards her.

She pursed her lips, considering him in those black briefs, and winced. Her schedule this morning did not allow for more than another twenty minutes at his place.

She had a party at GH at noon, another at Mercy at two, and then the gala at the Metro Court at eight. Christ on a crutch, how did Emily do this every year?

She blinked because he had asked her a question and he stood there, patiently waiting for the answer. “Oh. Kiki. Well, first, she’s usually fine. She’s just feeling the pressure of it all. Second, I did it because Ava was a pain in the ass who threatened to sue me for terminating my contract with her because I was supposedly violating my non-compete clause.”

“You’re a corporate planner,” Jason said. “We wouldn’t use Ava’s services anyway.” He wrinkled his nose. “Though she used to be Ned’s type.”

“I have no doubt of that—I’m familiar with Faith Roscoe.” Elizabeth crossed to the dresser and slid a watch over her wrist. “Kiki’s got a great eye for colors and design. She’s only hanging with me to get experience and contacts—she wants to break out into wedding planning eventually.”  She shrugged. “Anyway, she just doesn’t want to mess up the GH party since your father is on the board.”

“I’m sure it’ll be fine.” He stepped behind her and slid his hands up and down the arms left bare by her green silk dress. “I think you did a great job last night.”

“Hmm, well, you’re biased.” She reached for the diamond studded earrings in the porcelain bowl she used to store her jewelry. “Honestly? I don’t know how Emily does this every year—juggling all of this while still doing the estimates for the next year.” She shuddered. “Thank God I don’t have her job.”

“You never know.” Jason brushed his lips over her nape. “Her boyfriend that swept her away on this vacation? He’s the head of Cassadine Industries and might steal her away for his events.”

“That’s not remotely funny.” She bumped him. “You have to get a shower, and I have to finish dressing. We’ve both got a crazy day in front of us.”

“Only because I want to take off the week after Emily gets back from Greece. How would you feel about a trip to the Bahamas?”

Elizabeth narrowed her eyes. “Are you asking me to go on a tropical vacation, leaving all my duties and responsibilities on your sister?” She smirked and reached for a comb to draw her through her hair. “Where do I sign up?”

“Maybe not the islands, though,” Jason said, leaning against the wall next to the dresser. “What about Europe? You’ve been to London as part of ELQ, and I know Ava worked out of France and Spain.”

“Mmmhmm….and I spent a month in Portugal to plan one of her events.” Elizabeth reached for the charcoal blazer she’d left on the armchair. “I’ve never been to Scotland or Germany.”

“What about Italy? Florence or Venice?”

She paused. “Seriously? You think I could do either of those in a week?” She laughed. “I couldn’t do those in a lifetime. Maybe we should stick to the islands where I won’t be so distracted by the scenery.”

“Well, we’ll nail it down after tonight. You have a lot on your plate today.” He kissed her forehead. “Too bad you’re almost ready or I’d suggest you jump in the shower with me.”

“The next time I have to go early, I’ll wake you up.” She slid her arms around his waist and reached for up another kiss. “Now, let me finish my makeup in peace or I’m going to miss meeting with your father on time. I don’t want him thinking because I’m sleeping with his son that I expect special treatment.”

“All right, all right.” He kissed her again before disappearing into the bathroom. A moment later, she heard the water running.

She was glad she’d put last night out of her head. She was not going to let catty, jealous women ruin this for her.

Or his grandfather with his innuendo. Or his father. Or any other Quartermaine.

The cell phone on the dresser buzzed. Elizabeth reached for it, had it in her hand before she realized that it was Jason’s and not hers.

And then she saw the name scrawled across the front. Samantha McCall.

An image of the tarty brunette with the plunging neckline flashed in her mind. Why the hell…?

And even though she knew she’d regret it later, she hit the decline on the call, slid the bar to unlock his phone and went into his call history for her number. God, she was one of those women now. Her life sucked.

Sam had called him three times the day before. Twice before that. And they’d spoken several times—not all her calls had been declined or sent to voicemail.

Carefully, she set the phone back on the dresser and reached for her eyeliner.

Had that been why the woman was so upset the night before? Had she harbored hopes of reuniting with him? And why hadn’t Jason mentioned an ex-girlfriend calling him so often?

Wasn’t that part of the relationship rules?

She set the eyeliner on the dresser with a thud, her eyes meeting her own in the image reflecting back. They were exclusive, weren’t they? They hadn’t said it, but you didn’t always have to say it.

Did you?

“Damn it.” Elizabeth dumped the rest of her makeup in her bag and left the room without another word.

So much for not letting last night in her head.

ELQ: Conference Room

Jason frowned at the text message from Elizabeth, then glanced up at his cousins, busy with their own paperwork. “Elizabeth just told me not to pick her up tonight, that we’d meet at the hotel.”

AJ finished scrawling his signature at the bottom of a contract and slid it over to Ned. “So? She’s the party planner, not just your arm candy. Maybe she has to be there early.”

“So I’d go early.” Jason set his phone aside. “I—I think she saw a phone call on my phone this morning. Before she left. I was in the shower.”

“You left a phone unintended with a woman you’re sleeping with?” Ned said. He shook his head, sadly. “Young Skywalker, have I taught you nothing?”

“Shut up. I’m saying that maybe the phone rang and she saw the caller ID. I had a missed call when I got out of the shower.”

“Your phone was locked, though, right?” AJ leaned forward. “If nothing else, little brother, that much you’ve learned from me.”

“Who the hell has time to put a fucking pin code in every damn time they want to use their phone?” He scowled. “No, it wasn’t locked.”

“Hell. Then if she saw the phone call—and believe me, we’re getting back to that in a moment—then she probably checked the call history.” Ned arched a brow. “Would that have raised flags?”

Jason glared at his phone. “Sam called me this morning.”

“Oh, hell. I knew you should have fired her. We could have settled any sexual harassment lawsuit,” AJ told Ned. “She tried to get her hooks in me, too. Thought I’d be too drunk to remember protection. Ha. Haven’t forgotten to dress myself for a party since Carly.”

Ned rolled his eyes at AJ, and turned his attention to Jason. “Listen. It’s not the end of the world. She probably doesn’t even know who Sam is. It’s a guy’s name—” He closed his eyes. “She’s in your phone as Samantha, isn’t she?”

“I’ll just tell her that Sam’s been annoying me to transfer back to Port Charles, into my department, but I usually tell her it’s not my decision and hang up.” Jason nodded. “That’ll fix everything.”

“You’re an idiot. Never let one girlfriend know about the other—” AJ scowled. “Do you not know the rules? You’ve dated enough women in the company—”

“Three,” Jason said, his teeth clenched. “And Brenda barely counts.”

“Your forty-eight hour wife doesn’t count?” Ned asked. “Because—”

“We were drunk and AJ bet me—” Jason shook his head. “Not important. Where else do I meet women? I’m always working.” He hesitated. “People don’t think I’m like you idiots, do they?”

“Ah…” AJ blinked. “You mean, that you’re following in the footsteps of our illustrious grandfather? Of the nefarious Alan Quartermaine? You’re kidding, right? You’ve dated four women total at ELQ, and Elizabeth is the only one who still works here.”

“Son of a bitch.” Jason rapped his fist against his head. “How much do you think people said to her last night? She was acting off for most of the night. And, of course, Grandfather didn’t help.”

“The sad fact is he tries so hard to,” Ned mused. “But, odds are more than one person commented on it. Listen, explain the Sam thing to Elizabeth. I’m sure it’s not an issue.” He looked at AJ, jabbing a finger at him. “You, stop comparing Jason to the rest of us. Do not insinuate in front of Elizabeth that she’s like all the other women.”

“Well, I know she’s not. She’s got more brains. But I can’t control the world.” AJ shook his head. “Much as I’d like to, I just don’t.”

“I hate you both.”

General Hospital: Nurse’s Station

“Did I do it right?” Kiki asked, wringing her hands together as she and Elizabeth watched various children, doctors, nurses, and other hospital staff members and their families gathered around Edward Quartermaine dressed as Santa Claus, listening to a story.

“You were fine, Kiki. I need you to relax.” Elizabeth shifted from one foot to the other. She loved these shoes, but her Jimmy Choos were not made to hit the ground running at seven-thirty without sitting for six hours.

“Okay, I mean, it’s just a big deal, you know? Because the board is here and I just want them to like me.” Kiki blew her hair out of her eyes. “And there’s Michael Quartermaine. Oh, he’s so pretty. Does he work at ELQ? Can you introduce me?”

Elizabeth glared at her assistant who just offered a sheepish grin. “Does everyone think with their hormones in this company?” she muttered.

“Totally not picking that up and running with it.” Kiki sucked in a breath. “Dr. Quartermaine is heading for us, Lizzie. What do we do?”

“First, you stop calling me that. Your mother always thought it was hilarious.” Elizabeth tried not to look directly at Alan Quartermaine as the older man approached them, but eventually, there was no ignoring the fact he was coming right for them.

“Elizabeth, we didn’t get a chance to speak much last night.” Alan reached for her hand, held it between both of his with a winning smile. “You were flawless at the gala.”

“Well, I couldn’t have done it without Kiki and my team,” Elizabeth said, tightly, choosing to believe he was referring to her work on the party and not her appearance. Jason’s father was not hitting on her. Her fragile temper could not handle that nonsense today.

“I was so pleased when I saw you arriving on Jason’s arm,” Alan continued. “From what I heard, you’re a step above his usual sort.”

Kiki’s eyes were as wide saucers. “You’re kidding me, right?” she muttered, but the chief of staff either ignored her or didn’t notice.

Elizabeth’s smile froze in place, a familiar feeling when dealing with Quartermaine men. Was any man in the world worth this kind of nonsense?

Thinking of that morning and the black briefs, she took a deep breath. “That’s very nice, Dr. Quartermaine. If you’ll excuse me, I have another party at Mercy—”

“I didn’t like the last one at all,” Alan said. “And of course, Courtney was all right but not really up to par with the Quartermaines.” He furrowed his brow. “I could have lived with Brenda, but they annulled that—”

Annulled? What in the name of all that was holy—had Jason been married? Shouldn’t that have come up at some point?

“I’m very…” Elizabeth tugged her hand from his. “I’m flattered, I’m sure. But as I said, Kiki and I have a long day in front of us. It was a pleasure to meet you.”

She grabbed Kiki by the arm and steered her towards the elevator. To hell with this.

Metro Court Hotel: Ballroom

“Elizabeth, I really think you’re overreacting,” Kiki murmured as she handed a glass of champagne to her. “His family is appalling, but he’s been nice enough—”

“You’re not being paid for your opinion on my love life.” Elizabeth flexed her ankle, wishing she’d sprung for a set of flats rather than the silver Manolo Blahniks Maxie had insisted went perfectly with the green confection she wore.

Why did men get to wear flats and still look professional but women were pressured into these heels to make their legs long and their asses stick out? Damned patriarchy.

“No, that’s free,” Kiki chirped. “Look, he’s got a colorful history. I’m sure yours doesn’t look as good under scrutiny—”

“Yes, but my family isn’t walking around reminding him of it—” Elizabeth stopped and took a deep breath. “I’m fine, Kiki. I need you to run interference with the orchestra and keep them from enjoying the booze as much as last night.”

“I’m on it,” Kiki began, but as she turned away, she almost ran into another member of the Quartermaine family.

“Ms. Quartermaine,” Elizabeth said politely to Ned’s mother, Tracy. “You look lovely this evening.”

“You’re smart to keep your day job, Ms. Webber,” Tracy snipped. “That sets you apart from the rest of the social climbers that try to weasel their way into my family’s money.”

“I enjoy my job,” Elizabeth said blandly. She reached for Kiki’s arm to hold her in place. “Kiki Jerome, this is Tracy Quartermaine. My assistant—”

“You want to be taken seriously?” Tracy snapped. “Drop the Kiki. You sound like a stripper.”

Kiki’s mouth dropped. “Are you kidding me? You people are—”

“Don’t make the same mistake the others do,” Tracy said, dismissing Kiki’s protests. “Jason doesn’t marry whatever walks in front of him like my son, and he’s not going to buy an accidental pregnancy like my idiot nephew.” She smirked. “He’s more like my brother and father. They’ll screw whatever is on front of them, maybe even pretend to love them, but they never do.”

She pursed her lips. “So don’t get your hopes up.”

Tracy whirled and disappeared into the crowd.

“I’ve changed my mind,” Kiki said. “I don’t want to meet Michael after all. These people are insane. You should run as fast as you can.”

Was it worth the headache for another few months of fun? Of constantly being accused of being just a step under a whore every time she went in public or saw a member of Jason’s family?

And what about those phone calls to his last girlfriend?  Why bother to wait around two months and find herself transferred?

“I’m certainly considering it,” she murmured.