Title: More Than This
Author: Courtney
Email: [email protected]
Rating: PG-13
Classification: Max/Liz
Distribution: Anywhere is fine as long as
my headers stay put and you email me first.
Disclaimer: I don't own Roswell or any
of its characters. They belong to Jason Katims, David Nutter, et al. Lyrics
belong to The Cure and Robert Smith. All used without permission but no one is
paying me so who cares?
Summary: Liz wants more from Max.
Maria wants more from Michael. Michael wants more from Isabel. And Isabel wants
more out of life. Will any of them ever be able to have what they really want?
want . . .
For a second of your life
Tell me that it's true
Waiting for a sign
It's all I want of you
Your heart hides a secret
A promise of what is
Something more than this . . .
Another second of my life
Not knowing if it's true
Make believe in nothing
Is all I want of you
Whisper me a secret
Whisper me there is
Always something other
Something more than this
-More Than This by The Cure
* * * * *
Liz Parker readjusted herself on her narrow bed and looked back
down at
the book she held. It was her
journal. She'd been keeping a journal for most
of her life, but had stopped
several years back when she was living in
Roswell because she came to
realize what a danger it was to have the goings
on in her life down on paper
for anyone to read. It was just too risky for it
to even exist, so she'd
destroyed her journal from the time she'd found out
about Max, Isabel and Michael.
It wasn't until now, five years later at the
age of twenty-one, that Liz was
finally starting to get past her fears enough
to do something as ordinary as
write about her day to day life for her own
personal satisfaction. Writing
in the journal helped her to sort out her
problems. She was glad she
could finally do it again.
She was no longer a resident of Roswell, New Mexico. That
definitely
helped to assuage her fears.
She'd moved from there three years before to
attend college at the
University of California. Though she'd been frightened
to make such a huge change at
the time, things had ultimately worked out
better than Liz had hoped. Just
a month after Liz enrolled in the marine
biology program at UC, Maria
found a job in Los Angeles with a hypnotist and
decided to move to the West
Coast as well. They'd been roommates in a small
off-campus apartment for the
last five years. This wasn't much of a surprise.
Liz and Maria had been best
friends since they were in kindergarten. What was
a surprise, though, was the
third person they shared this apartment with.
Isabel Evans had moved in with them a little over four years
earlier.
She'd come to Los Angeles not
for school, but to pursue a career in acting.
She'd gotten a job that had
prompted her move to California and, since she
and Maria had been strangely
close in high school and Isabel didn't know
anyone else in the city, Maria
was the first person she'd called. They'd
actually been looking for a
third roommate at the time. The girl who had
originally moved in with them
had gotten married and they'd been left with
more bills than they could
handle on their own. Still, Isabel was the last
person that Liz ever expected
to live with. She'd always sensed that Isabel
didn't really like her very
much. She wasn't quite sure if it was the
attraction between herself and
Isabel's brother, Max, or just the fact that
Liz was the reason they'd spent
most of high school dodging Sheriff Valenti.
It was just a sense she got
around Isabel. Still, they'd managed to get past
that and become, if not
friends, acquaintances.
As for Max, he'd ended up
following Isabel to the West Coast. And, of course,
Michael wasn't far behind. Max
was actually a student at UC as well. He was a
physics major. He and Michael
lived together in a small apartment over a
garage where they both worked.
Strange, Liz had never pictured Max as a
mechanic.
Things between them were really no better now than they had
been in high
school. Liz still felt an
incredible attraction to Max Evans and she could
tell that he felt the same way.
But, he still insisted on keeping her at
arm's length. As if one touch
or a single kiss would destroy everything
they'd managed to keep safe.
She understood his fears, but felt that he was
overly cautious about the
consequences of their actions. The danger that
existed for him and the others
was real, but what he was or wasn't to Liz
Parker did not make the
severity of that danger any less great. The truth
was, Liz felt like their
avoidance was only making matters worse. At least
together they had each other.
Still, she'd respected Max' wishes for all of these years.
She'd stayed
friends, just friends, as he
felt was best. It was hard, seeing him every day
and not being able to touch
him; talking to him without really being able to
tell him what she felt. The
charade was a hard one to keep up.
Liz looked back at her journal and began to write again.
"I've made a big
decision. It's about Max, of
course. I know this sounds like something
impossible for me to do and I
have debated on whether I could really go
through with it, but I think
it's finally time that I got on with my life.
"In the years since I've known Max Evans, I haven't done
much of anything
but pine for him. Even though
there was no hope of us having a real
relationship because of the way
he felt about it, I still kept the faith that
maybe someday Max would see
things my way. Maybe someday we'd be able to
pursue what I'd wanted for so
long . . .
"But that is obviously not going to happen. Max has made
that clear to me
a thousand times. I'm finally
ready to admit that I can't keep holding on. I
have to let him go . . . for
both of our sakes.
"So, I have a date on Friday. Yes, I, Liz Parker, have an
actual date. I
know, it's shocking. His name
is Simon and he's in my chemistry lab. He's
really cute, really smart, and
seems like a pretty nice guy. Max would hate
him . . . but this isn't about
Max. This is about me. For once, it's going to
have to be about me.
"I can't seem to get Max out of my head, which is not all
that
surprising. That's why I've
decided that I have to stop hanging out with him.
I mean, I know that sounds
awful. He's my friend and regardless of where our
relationship leads, we should
still be able to be friends. But, I've spent
five years telling myself that
I could just be friends with Max Evans and
still lead a normal life and so
far where has that gotten me? Sharing an
apartment with my kooky best
friend and his sister, who still resents me for
almost ruining her life. Not
exactly the greatest measure of success, is it?
"Well, that's all going to change. I'm really going to do
this. As much
as it hurts, I have to go
through with it. I have to get Max out of my life .
. . before I don't have a life
at all."
* * * * *
Michael Guerin pushed himself out from under the car he was
working on
and looked up in annoyance. His
best friend stood over him, looking
completely dazed. "Hello?
Earth to Max?" he called out to him.
"Huh?" Max finally looked down. "Sorry, did you
say something?"
"Yeah, I only asked you about fifteen times to hand me the
socket
wrench," Michael said as
he sat up and grabbed a nearby rag to wipe some of
the grease from his hands.
"Sorry, let me get it," Max said as he walked over to
a table filled with
various tools.
"Forget it, Max. I'm taking a break," he said as he
got up from the floor
and walked over to the sink
that sat on one side of the garage.
"I didn't mean to space on you," Max assured him.
"All you do lately is stare off into oblivion,"
Michael said. "What's up
with you, man? What's been
going on that has your brain so scrambled?"
"Nothing, it's nothing," he insisted.
"It's Liz," Michael said with a knowing nod.
"It . . . no. No, it's not. Why . . . why would you say
that?"
"When you say it's nothing, it's always about Liz," Michael
assured him.
Max started to shake his head
again, but Michael turned and gave him a look
as he dried his hands.
"I've known you forever, Maximillian. I know you."
Max sighed as his friend walked away and into the office a few
feet away.
He quickly washed his own
hands, then turned to follow. When he entered the
garage office, Michael was
sitting in one of the chairs drinking a grape
soda.
"You've got it all wrong," Max said as he sat on the
large wooden desk
across from his friend.
"Do I now,"
Michael replied, his voice filled with sarcasm that told Max
he didn't believe a word of
this.
"Liz . . . well, we're friends. I mean, you *know* that
there is nothing
between me and her but, well,
friendship. It's always been that way," he
said.
"Oh really? So, when you look at Liz you feel the same way
as, say, when
you look at me?" Michael
smirked as he watched the expression on his friend's
face. "Nope, didn't think
so," he said in a satisfied tone.
"Michael . . ." Max warned.
"What? Come on, Max. You mean to tell me that you spend
all day with that
blank look on your face
thinking about how good of *friends* you are with Liz
Parker? Come on, get off
it." Michael stood up and crushed his empty soda
can, tossing it into the
trashcan. "You have it bad for her, Maxie. You
always have, for as long as
I've known you. I understood why you didn't
pursue it when we were in
Roswell. I even agreed with you. But Valenti isn't
on our asses every second of
the day anymore."
Max looked at him quizzically and Michael continued.
"Look, I know I'm
the king of paranoia, alright?
And I still think we have to be careful. But,
whether you keep avoiding what
you feel for Liz or not, if you're in danger
then so is she. You're not the
only one who is hung up on something they
don't think they can
have."
He walked out, letting the door to the office close behind him.
Max
watched, wondering if maybe his
best friend was right after all.
* * * * *
"Evans, Isabel?" the woman at the door said into the
room filled with
hopeful, young actors.
"That's me," Isabel said as she stood up and walked
over, following the
short, dark-haired woman into
another room. They walked down a corridor and
into a larger room where two men
and another woman sat waiting.
"Evans, Isabel," the other woman said again and it
suddenly occurred to
Isabel that those were the only
words she'd heard from her thus far. Turning
around, the woman walked back
out of the room.
"So, Ms. Evans," one of the men said, "Dazzle
us."
She swallowed nervously, then took a deep breath and jumped
into her
audition.
* * * * *
"How much are the tarot cards?" a young girl asked.
Maria looked up from
the book she was reading to the
face standing before her. The girl looked
about thirteen if that.
"Tarot cards are very powerful and shouldn't be put into
the wrong
hands," she said.
"How much?" the girl persisted impatiently.
"Do you even know how to use them?" Maria asked.
"Look lady, are they for sale or not?"
Maria rolled her eyes and replied, "Ten fifty."
"I'll take them." The girl set down the cards and
handed Maria a
twenty-dollar bill. She took
her change and left the store with her purchase.
Maria shook her head in
exasperation and went back to her book. She was sick
of this job. She knew that it
was her own fault. What kind of "mystical
therapy" store did she
expect to find on Melrose anyway? The description
alone should have turned her
away. Mystical therapy . . . please. But, her
job with the hypnotist wasn't
paying enough and she needed some way to make
ends meet. It was this or the
burger joint down the street so she knew that
she should still consider
herself lucky.
Maria had already begun reading again when she heard the chimes
that
sounded when the front door to
the shop opened. She didn't bother looking up,
just figured it was yet another
silly kid coming to buy party favors for a
slumber party, and kept reading
her book on past lives regression.
"Excuse me, miss? Could you point me in the direction of
the crystal
balls?" she heard someone
ask. Recognizing the voice, she looked up and
smiled.
"Hi Michael," she greeted him.
"Hey, what's going on, Maria?"
She set the book down and sighed. "Very little. I hate
this job."
"Yeah, tell me about it. You think I enjoy being a grease
monkey?" he
laughed.
"Actually, I thought it kind of suited you," she
teased.
"Gee thanks," he replied sarcastically.
"So, to what do I owe this visit?" she asked.
"I was actually hoping you'd seen Izzy around," he
said.
"Um, not today. She was gone when I left this morning.
Why, what's up?"
"Nothing, I was just going to see if she wanted to catch a
movie tonight
or something. I haven't seen
her in a while," he said.
Maria nodded but didn't reply. Michael was always asking her
about
Isabel. On the one hand, it was
a good way to strike up a conversation
between herself and the
brooding young man she'd had a crush on forever, but
it was also hard to see the
look on his face when the subject of Isabel came
up. It was easy to see that
Michael thought of Maria as a pal, but of Isabel
as a whole lot more.
"So, you don't know where she is then huh?" he asked.
"Nope, sorry," she replied.
"Well, what are you doing tonight?"
"Me? Um, nothing I guess," she responded.
"You up for a movie? I need to get away from the smell of
motor oil for a
while."
"Sure, that sounds good," she said with a slight
grin.
"Great, I'll meet you at your place at about 7 o'clock
then, okay?"
She nodded. "Yeah, okay," she said, then watched as
he waved and left the
shop. She picked up her book
again, but could do nothing more than smile at
the page. Maybe there was hope
for her yet.
* * * * *
The sound of the doorbell broke Liz from her genetics homework.
She got
up off the couch and went to
the door. Opening it, she was surprised to see
who was on the other side.
"Simon, hi," she smiled.
"Hi Liz. Um . . . can I come in?" asked the tall,
blonde in her doorway.
"Sure, of course. Come on in," she smiled as she
moved aside. They went
into the living room and sat on
opposite ends of the sofa. "So, Simon, what
brings you by?" she asked
casually.
"I came by to see you actually," he said. "I
just wanted to see if you
were busy tonight."
"Tonight? Well, I thought we were going out on
Friday?"
"Yeah, I'd still like to do that. I just . . . well, I was
wondering if
you'd like to have dinner
tonight. My treat, of course," he said.
She looked at him, silently sizing up the man before her. He
was nothing
like Max Evans at all. His hair
and skin were fair instead of the intense,
dark shades that hovered around
Max. He seemed so easygoing and fun, not
brooding and serious all the
time. His eyes weren't constantly filled with a
thousand emotions that she felt
the need to dissect and categorize. He was
just a nice, simple guy. And,
most importantly, he was a nice, simple guy who
wanted to date her. He wasn't
afraid of anything because there was nothing to
be afraid of with Simon. He was
normal, just like she once was. She longed so
much to just feel normal again.
With a smile that she wanted very much to be sincere, Liz
replied, "I'd
love to have dinner with you,
Simon." If she was going to move on, she might
as well start out right.
* * * * *
Max heard the door close as his roommate walked into the
apartment. He
looked up from his computer and
nodded to Michael. "Where've you been?" he
asked casually as he read over
the sentence he'd just typed, then turned up
his nose and deleted it.
"Uh, just out. I was looking for Izzy but I couldn't find
her," he said
as he took a carton of orange
juice from the refrigerator and drank from it.
"She had an audition today," Max informed him.
"For what?"
"I dunno, some commercial. I think she said it was at 2
o'clock so she
should be home pretty
soon."
"Oh yeah? Okay, well maybe I'll go see how it went later then."
He walked
over and peered over Max'
shoulder at the computer screen. "What are you
working on?"
"A term paper about Newtonian mechanics and linear
oscillations," he
replied.
"Man, whatever you just said," Michael replied.
"When is it due?"
"Monday, why?"
"I was going to ask you if you wanted to catch a movie
with me tonight,"
Michael explained.
"I'd like to, but I really need to get this done. What
movie are you
going to see anyway?"
"I'm not sure, I guess I'll see what Maria wants to
see."
"Maria's going?" Max asked as he looked up from the
computer to his
friend.
"Yeah, I went by the shop looking for Iz and got to
talking to Maria. I
mentioned the movies so I
thought I should ask her if she wanted to go."
"But you didn't
plan on asking her before that?" Max asked.
"Well, not planned, no."
"Michael, do you like Maria?" he asked.
"Do I like her? Sure, I like her. I've known her for a
long time. We get
along pretty good. Why do you
ask?"
"Nothing," Max shook his head. "It's just . . .
do you think Maria likes
you?"
Michael shrugged. "How should I know? I guess she does.
She always seems
okay with hanging out and
stuff."
Max sighed to himself. His best friend was truly oblivious. Maria
DeLuca
had been head over heels for
Michael since the eleventh grade, but Michael
still had no clue. Max wondered
if he'd ever manage to open his eyes to what
was so blatantly obvious to the
rest of the world.
"Well, I hope you guys have fun," Max said.
"Yeah, thanks. Look, I'm meeting Maria over at the girls'
place at seven.
If you change your mind just be
ready by about a quarter till."
Max nodded, but replied, "Thanks, I just don't see myself
getting this
paper finished by then though."
"Okay, suit yourself. But you know, I bet Liz is home
tonight. Maybe
Maria can talk her into joining
us." He smirked; he always knew how to push
Max' buttons.
"I'll think about it," Max replied as he kept typing.
Michael nodded, now
sure that Max would be joining
them tonight after all.
It was late afternoon by the
time Liz finished her homework. Simon had
stayed for a while and they'd
talked. He really was a very nice guy. She
didn't feel that *thing* with
him that she felt with Max, of course, but she
knew she needed to give it
time.
By the time she'd put away her books, she heard the front door
open and
peeked out of her bedroom to
see Maria bounding happily into the apartment.
"Hey there, good day?" Liz asked.
"It was okay," Maria replied, but couldn't suppress
her infectious grin.
"Seems that way. Want to tell me why you're so
happy?"
"No reason," Maria replied as she walked past Liz to
set her things in
her own room. Liz followed.
"Well, if you won't tell me about your good day, then I
will tell you
about mine. I have a date
tonight," she announced.
Maria's eyes grew wide as she turned to her best friend again.
"Liz,
that's great! When will Max be
here?" she asked excitedly.
"It's not with Max," Liz corrected her curtly.
"Oh, sorry," Maria said, her eyes now downcast.
"Don't you want to know who?" Liz prodded.
"Oh, sure."
"Simon, the guy I told you about from chemistry. He's
taking me to dinner
tonight. And, we're going out
again on Friday."
"That sounds like fun," Maria replied, but from her
tone Liz could tell
that her friend didn't really
think so.
"There are other guys in the universe besides Max
Evans," Liz said to
her.
"I know that. What did I say? Did I say anything? I think
it's great
you're going out with Simon. I
hope you two have a nice time tonight."
Liz rolled her eyes. Maria was impossible. If any person in the
world
wanted Liz with Max more than
Liz herself, it was Maria. She'd been trying to
convince the two of them that
they were cosmically linked or something for
years now.
"Oh, Liz, I have to tell you what I read today about past
life
regression," Maria said.
"I think I figured out what we need to do to get it
to work this time. Will you be
my guinea pig this weekend, please?"
"Sure," Liz said as she walked over to Maria's
dresser. Her friend had
flopped down on the bed with
her book and was thumbing through it, looking
for the new morsel of
information that she'd discovered. Liz studied the
pictures on the dresser and saw
a new one had been added to the mix. "Where'd
you get this one?" she
asked as she picked up the small, gold frame and held
it up for Maria to see.
"It was from the party of the fourth of July," she
replied. The picture
was of Max and Michael. They
were both smiling at the camera, a sight that
still seemed odd. The two of
them did seem more at ease here in California,
but they still weren't the
smiling type.
Liz set the picture back down and turned to Maria again.
"So, what are
you doing tonight?"
"Going to the movies," she said absently.
"With who?" Liz asked.
Maria looked up momentarily and replied in an offhanded way,
"Just
Michael."
"*Just* Michael? Maria, are you serious?" she asked.
"Yeah, he came by today while I was working and we got to
talking. He
just mentioned he was going to
the movies and asked if I'd like to come. I
said yes."
Liz smiled. "No wonder you're so happy."
"What?" Maria looked up. "It's only a
movie."
"Only a movie, sure," Liz nodded with a smirk.
"It is," she insisted. "Look, if you can go on a
date with some other guy
tonight and totally ignore the
whole Max thing, then I can go and see a movie
with Michael without it being a
federal case."
"Okay, alright," Liz said as she held up her hands in
surrender. She
started to inform Maria that
there was no "Max thing" to speak of, but
decided instead to leave well
enough alone. "So, tell me about this
breakthrough in hypnosis,"
she said as she walked over to the bed and looked
down at the book.
Just then, the front door slammed shut. "Izzy's
home," Maria said as she
put aside her book and got up
from the bed. She and Liz walked into the
living room to find Isabel
slumped down onto the sofa, her face in her hands.
"I don't guess we need to ask how it went," Maria
said sympathetically as
she sat down beside her friend.
"It was awful!" Isabel wailed. "I totally blew
it!"
"I'm sure it wasn't so bad," Liz offered.
"There is no way I got the part," she lamented.
"Well, next time," Maria said as she rubbed Isabel's
shoulder.
"There may not even be a next time," she said.
"I'm thinking about giving
up all together. What good is
all this stuff anyway?"
"Oh, you're a great actress," Maria assured her.
"You just need to find
the right part."
Liz sat in a chair nearby and watched as Maria helped Isabel
pull herself
together. She wondered to
herself when those two had gotten so close and when
she herself had been relegated
to the edge of this friendship. She knew it
was her own fault. She'd spent
so much time concentrating on school and Max
that there wasn't a free minute
left in the day for anything else it seemed.
Well, she thought with a rush
of determination, that will all change soon
enough.
* * * * *
Maria was putting the finishing touches on her makeup when she
heard the
doorbell. Figuring it was
probably Michael, she quickly examined her
reflection one last time, then
hurried out to get the door. She opened it to
reveal the face of a stranger.
"Oh, hi," she said to the blonde-haired, blue-eyed
man before her. "You
must be Simon."
"Yes, is Liz here?" he asked.
"Yeah, I think she's almost ready," Maria told him.
"Come on in." She
moved aside and motioned to the
couch where Simon had a seat. "I'll see
what's keeping her," she
told him and went quickly to Liz's door to knock.
"Come in," her friend's voice answered.
"Simon's here," she said as she peeked her head in.
"Okay, thanks," Liz replied. "Tell him I'll be
out in five minutes."
Maria returned to the living room and relayed the message, then
the
doorbell sounded again.
"Excuse me," she said to Simon before she turned back
to the door. She opened it to
see Michael and Max on the porch. "Max! Hi. Um
. . . I didn't know you were
coming," she smiled as she showed them in.
"Yeah, I hope that's okay," he said.
"Sure, of course," she said. "Um, Max, Michael,
this is Simon. He's a,
uh, a friend of Liz's from
school. Um, would you all excuse me a moment?"
They all nodded as the other
two men took seats in the living room with Simon
and Maria dashed back to Liz's
room.
"Maria, what's going on?" Liz asked when her best
friend came into her
room and shut the door quickly
behind her.
"We have a situation," Maria replied.
"What sort of situation?"
"Well, Max is here," she said.
Liz's breath caught for a moment, then she forced herself to
act
naturally. "So?"
"So?! So, Liz, he's
out there right now with *Simon*! He's . . . well,
he's going to know that you're
going with him, that you have a date."
"And? Maria, I don't really see this as a problem,"
she lied. Of course,
she *did* see this as a
problem. She'd known that telling Max she was dating
would have to be done
eventually, but she hadn't been ready just yet. Even
though they had not been
together in all these years, neither had they been
with anyone else. They'd just
spent five years dancing around each other and
waiting for someone to finally
put an end to this stupid charade. Well, Liz
was finally doing just that.
"Max doesn't think of me as anything but a friend,"
she said.
"You can't really believe that," Maria said.
"He's made it clear enough that that is all he wants from
me, Maria," she
replied.
"He loves you, you know he does. This is going to hurt
him."
"Well, I'm sorry if he's hurt, but this is the only way
either one of us
can ever be happy," she
said.
Maria looked at her friend and sighed. There was no changing
her mind on
this. She felt badly for Max
and Liz. They belonged together, anyone could
see that. But, they were both
too damned stubborn to let that happen. He was
too afraid of putting her in danger
and she was constantly trying to work
around the boundaries he had
set. They were both just too impossible for
words.
With a sigh, Maria turned and left, wondering what would happen
next.
* * * * *
Max sat staring at the coffee table in front of him. He
wondered who this
*friend* of Liz's was and just
what he was doing there. He knew it was wrong
to be jealous, but he couldn't
help it. It killed him to think that Liz was
going to spend time with this .
. . guy.
"So, guys, how's it going?" Maria asked as she walked
back in and sat
beside Max on the loveseat.
"Uh . . . good," Michael replied. "Say, is
Isabel home?"
"Yeah, she's in her room," Maria replied. "I
asked her to come with us,
but her audition didn't go so
hot so she's not up to it."
"Oh, well I think I'll go see how she's doing,"
Michael said. "Do you
mind?"
"No, no," Maria replied. "Go on." She
watched Michael walk down the hall
towards Isabel's room and felt
a pang of jealousy. He was always so concerned
about Isabel. She wished for
once that he'd show the same concern for her.
* * * * *
"Izzy? You in there?" Michael called softly as he
rapped gently on the
door.
"Yeah, come in," she sniffled from within the room.
He opened the door
and saw her curled up on the
bed in a sitting position, her back to the
headboard.
"Hey," he said with a small smile as he closed the
door and walked over
to the bed to sit beside her.
"Hey," she replied as she wiped at her eyes.
"So, I guess you heard."
"About the audition? Yeah, Maria told me that you were
upset about it,"
he said.
"I was awful, Michael!" she wailed as she leaned over
towards him. His
arms came quickly around her
and she began to cry again on his broad
shoulder.
"I'm sure it wasn't so bad," he said as he tried to
comfort her.
"It was," she mumbled. "Even worse in
fact."
"It'll be okay," he told her.
"I'm a horrible actress," she moaned.
"No, Isabel, you aren't. Things will get better. I promise
you they will."
"I hope so, Michael. God, I hope you're right," she
said. She leaned back
and wiped at her eyes again.
"Thanks, talking to you always makes me feel
better."
He smiled. "I'm glad."
"Are you still going to the movies with Maria tonight?"
she asked.
"Actually, I was thinking maybe we could stay here and
keep you company
instead," he told her.
She smiled, "I'd like that."
* * * * *
Liz came out of her bedroom and peered into the living room.
Great, they
were both still there. Well, it
was now or never, she decided, so she took a
deep breath and headed into the
room.
"Hi Simon, sorry it took me so long," she said as she
approached.
He turned and smiled at her. "Not a problem."
Turning to Max, she smiled. "Hey."
"Hey," he smiled in return.
"Did you guys meet and all?" she asked.
"Yeah, it was nice talking with you, Max," Simon said
amiably.
Max plastered a smile across his face and replied, "Yeah,
you too."
"Well, should we go?" Simon asked Liz.
She glanced quickly at Max. The look on his face was hard to
read, but
she could swear his eyes were
pleading with her to stay. Turning back to
Simon, she replied, "Yeah,
let's go."
* * * * *
Maria slumped down onto the couch and sighed. Michael had just
told her
that he thought it best if they
skip the movie. He wanted to stay and make
sure that Isabel was okay. She
understood him being concerned for their
mutual friend, but in her heart
she knew it was more than that. She'd be
forever envious of the bond
that Isabel and Michael shared, a bond that she
could never be a part of.
"So, I guess I should head home then," Max said sadly
as he started to
get up. In all her self-pity,
Maria had forgotten that he was still there.
"Wait, Max, don't leave yet," she said quickly.
"We can still go see a
movie if you want to?"
He started to shake his head no, but Maria interrupted him.
"I think we could both use an escape right about
now."
He gave her a melancholy smile and nodded. She was right. He'd
give
anything at that moment to just
escape from this life. They quickly grabbed
their coats and left together.
* * * * *
It was ten o'clock when Michael opened his eyes. He awoke to
find himself
still in the same position as
when he'd fallen asleep; lying on Isabel's bed
with his arm wrapped tightly
around her shoulder. They'd been watching a
movie; he wasn't even sure
which one. The last thing he remembered was the
smell of her hair and the feel
of her body shifting slightly against his as
she laid there at ease and
watched a movie with her friend.
Friend. Michael hated that word. He was glad that Isabel
considered him a
friend, but he wanted to be
more than that. He had wanted more for quite some
time now. Unfortunately, Isabel
didn't seem to realize that. She thought of
Michael almost like she thought
of Max. He was a part of her family. In her
eyes, he could never be more.
She was asleep now, her head resting on his shoulder and her
breath
coming out in a smooth, even
rhythm. He sighed contentedly as he held onto
her. Even if she didn't see him
as anything but a friend right now, maybe
someday that would change. For
right now, though, he could enjoy this moment
while it lasted.
* * * * *
Liz and Simon walked slowly, hand in hand, to her front door.
She stopped
and turned to her date with a
smile. "Thanks for tonight, Simon. I had a nice
time."
"I'm glad," he replied. "So did I."
She stared up at him and wondered if he kissed her, would she
be able to
go through with it? Could she
kiss someone else? The only person she'd ever
kissed was Max, and those few
kisses had been the most magical moments of her
life. Could kissing someone
else ever live up to that?
He leaned in closer and Liz knew it was going to happen. He was
going to
kiss her. She decided quickly
to close her eyes and let it happen.
When the kiss ended, Simon pulled away. "Thank you,"
he said softly.
"For what?" she asked.
"For letting me kiss you good night, since I have a
feeling we won't be
getting the chance on Friday
night," he said.
"What makes you say that?" she asked in confusion.
"That guy that was here earlier, Max. Let's just say that
every scientist
has the ability to weigh the
elements given to him and form a hypothesis.
Mine is that you were some
place else all evening, and this Max guy had a lot
to do with that."
"I'm sorry, Simon," she told him.
"No, Liz, it's okay. I know you really wanted this to work
out. So did I.
But, can I give you some
advice?" She nodded. "Don't give up on Max just yet."
She was very surprised to hear this from the guy that had just
taken her
on a date, but she found
herself nodding anyway. Simon turned to go and Liz
watched him leave. She looked
up at the stars and thought that maybe she had
been wrong. Maybe there was
more to this thing with Max after all.
* * * * *
Max and Maria got back from the movie and walked into the
apartment
laughing together. They'd spent
most of the evening bemoaning their sad lives
and had come to discover that
their mutual commiseration was actually quite
comical. They'd decided that
laughing at their situations was better than
crying about them, so they'd
been joking with each other the rest of the
night.
As they walked into the apartment, Maria said to Max,
"Thanks for going
with me tonight. I had a nice
time."
"Me too," he agreed.
"I wish things had turned out better for both of us
tonight, though," she
added.
"Yeah, my best friend can't seem to catch a hint to save
his life," Max
told her.
She smiled. "Mine either."
"Well, I guess I better get home. I still have a term
paper to write," he
said. She nodded and smiled at
him. He bent down and kissed her forehead in a
friendly gesture, then turned
back to the door and left.
As Maria walked down the hallway, Liz came out of her room.
"Hey, did Max
leave yet?" she asked.
"Yeah, he just did," Maria told her. "How was
your date?"
"Um, I'll tell you later," Liz said, then left her
room and rushed down
the hall and out the front
door. Maria looked after her for a moment, then
just shook her head and
continued down the hall. She started to go into her
own room, but her eyes moved to
Isabel's door instead. She knew she should
invade their privacy, but she
had to have a look.
Easing the door open silently, Maria peered inside. What she
saw made her
heart drop. There were Michael
and Isabel, sound asleep in each other's arms.
They were both fully clothed
and she was sure that everything was perfectly
innocent, but the sight still
made tears spring to Maria's eyes. She turned
and left as quietly as she had
entered.
* * * * *
Liz bolted out the front door of her apartment and looked frantically
over the parking lot. She saw
Max getting into his Jeep and called out to
him. "Max! Wait!"
He stopped, hearing that voice that he couldn't mistake for
anyone but
her. He turned to see her
running towards him.
"Liz, what is it?" he asked in concern. She seemed
frantic.
"I . . . I need to talk to you," she said in a rush.
He reached over and
unlocked the passenger door and
she climbed into the Jeep beside him. "I'm
really sorry about
tonight," she began.
"Liz, if that's what this is about then don't bother. It's
okay, really,"
he assured her.
"No, Max, it's not. It's not okay." She sighed and
looked down at her
hands. "The truth is . . .
well, I didn't really want to go out with Simon. I
mean, I like him and all, but .
. . well, he's not you. You're the one I
want, Max." She looked up
at him then. "You must know that by now."
"Liz, you know we can't . . ."
"Why? Why can't we? What is stopping us?" She moved
closer to him and
said softly, "I love you,
Max Evans. I have for a long time now. And I know
you love me, too. So, what is
it that you're so afraid of?"
He looked into her deep brown eyes and almost lost himself.
Looking away
to gather his thoughts, Max
replied, "It's not safe."
"You've been saying that for five years."
"And it's still true. It'll never be safe, Liz.
Never."
"But I love you anyway," she replied. "You and
no one else. And, safe or
not, I'll always love you. I'm
not giving that up. I'm not even sure that I
could if I wanted to," she
admitted.
He looked at the steering wheel, refusing to meet her eyes.
"Look at me,
Max," she said. She
reached out and took his chin in her hands and turned him
towards her. "Look me in
the eyes and tell me that you don't feel the same
way. Tell me that you don't
love me and I promise that I'll walk away
forever."
He stared into her beautiful and haunting eyes and suddenly
nothing else
existed but the two of them.
"I can't lie to you, Liz," he said softly. "I
never could. I do love you.
I've loved you for as long as I can remember.
Nothing in the world has ever
scared me more than the way I feel about you .
. . but nothing has ever felt
so right either."
She smiled as she blinked back the tears in her eyes.
"Kiss me, Max," she
whispered. For once, he was
beyond hesitation. He moved closer to her,
pulling her into his arms and
lowering his mouth slowly to hers. When their
lips met, it was like an
explosion. They could each feel the depth of their
feelings for one another as they
lost themselves in the kiss.
When they finally parted, Max looked down into her eyes once
again. "I'm
sorry, Liz," he said
softly.
"There's nothing to be sorry for. We were both just
scared," she told
him.
"I should have let this happen a long time ago. I've been
running away
from you for too long. I was
hiding behind the danger I was afraid this might
put you in, but the truth is
that I was just as afraid that things might not
work out. I mean, I love you so
much . . . I just don't know what I'd do if I
had to go the rest of my life
knowing that you didn't feel the same way," he
admitted.
"You'll never have to, Max. I could never stop loving
you," she said as
she touched his cheek gently
with her hand.
He kissed her again and smiled. "This is all I've ever
wanted, Liz. This
moment is the most perfect time
of my entire life."
"I'm glad you feel that way, Max, but," she looked up
at him and smiled
seductively before adding,
"I still want more." And, with that, they were
lost in another kiss.
* * * * *
The End