2025
Adelina's standing there in Germantown, hands shoved into the pockets of her too-thin hoodie, reading the inscription on the Pastorius Monument like it's gonna tell her something she doesn't already know. The stone's old, carved deep with names, and the wind cuts through the park, rattling the half-dead leaves still clinging to the branches.
Carrie Delvecchio, never one for long walks in cold weather, slows as she approaches. Kicks a stray acorn out of her path. Hands jammed in her jacket pockets.
She doesn't say hi. Just tilts her head and mutters,
"And we couldn't do this on the phone, why?"
Adelina doesn't look over. Just smirks at the monument.
"You don't pick up when I call."
Carrie snorts. "Yeah, well. I thought you were dead. Or, like, got a government job or something."
That gets a laugh--soft, but real.
"Right," Adelina says. "I'd make a great civil servant."
She finally turns, and for a second, Carrie sees it--the weight, the time, the years gone by. Adelina's still Adelina, but the edges are sharper now. She's not a ghost, not yet, but she's been close.
Carrie swallows. Kicks another acorn.
"So what now?" she asks.
Adelina takes a breath, lets the wind carry it away. "That's what I'm figuring out."
And for once, Carrie doesn't have a smartass remark. She just stands there, waiting.
Carrie tilts her head, hands still stuffed in her pockets. The wind whips at her hair, loose strands brushing against her cheek, but she barely notices.
"And?" she prompts.
Adelina shifts her weight, shoulders tight. She doesn't fidget--never has--but there's something in the way she stands that tells Carrie everything she needs to know.
"I got trouble. Money."
Carrie gives her a look. A slow, knowing look.
Adelina sighs. "I don't need a handout or a loan or any of that shit."
That's when Carrie really hears it--not just the words, but the weight behind them. The way Adelina bristles, the way her jaw tightens like she's already waiting for an argument. This isn't charity or pride--this is fear.
Carrie's stomach twists, but she doesn't say anything. Not yet. Just lets the silence sit between them.
Adelina exhales hard, looks away.
"I already owe a guy."
And there it is.
Carrie's breath catches, but she keeps her voice steady. "What kind of guy?"
Adelina shakes her head. "The kind that doesn't take IOUs."
Carrie chews the inside of her cheek, staring past her, staring at the monument, at the names carved into stone. Some of those names belonged to men who probably thought they were doing the right thing at the time. Who probably didn't think they were marching toward something they wouldn't come back from.
"How much?" Carrie asks, voice low.
Adelina hesitates. Not because she doesn't know, but because saying it out loud makes it real.
"Six grand."
Carrie lets out a slow whistle, tilting her head back. "Oh, you're in it."
Adelina doesn't answer. She doesn't need to.
Carrie watches her for a second longer, then pulls her phone from her pocket. Starts scrolling.
"What are you doing?" Adelina asks, suspicious.
Carrie doesn't look up. "Texting Valeria."
"For what?"
Now Carrie does look up, eyebrow arched. "For options, dumbass. What, you think I'm about to rob a bank with you?"
Adelina exhales, rubbing a hand over her face. "I shouldn't have called you."
Carrie shrugs. "Yeah, probably not."
She sends the message, then shoves her phone away and crosses her arms. "But here we are."
Adelina looks at her, like she's trying to figure out how much of this is a joke.
Carrie meets her stare head-on.
"We're fixing this," she says.
And for the first time, Adelina looks just a little bit relieved.
2017
Water slaps against mildewed tile, washing over their bare shoulders. The showerhead spits weak, lukewarm streams, but neither of them moves to adjust it. They just cling--Carrie's arms locked tight around Adelina's back, Adelina's fingers digging into Carrie's ribs, both of them shaking like the cold is inside them, deep under the skin.
They're barely 19. Wrapped in each other, pressed so close it's hard to tell where one ends and the other begins.
Adelina's face is buried in Carrie's shoulder, her breath hot and ragged against wet skin. Carrie can feel her crying, little jerks of her body, but she doesn't say anything about it. Doesn't try to pull back.
She just kisses the side of Adelina's head, soft, gentle. "It'll be all right."
Adelina makes a sound. Not quite a laugh, not quite a sob.
"Don't lie to me."
Carrie exhales, forehead resting against hers. The world outside is chaos--credit cards maxed out, gas station food for dinner, a shitty motel room on some endless interstate where the only people who check in are running from something.
Maybe they are too.
But right here, under the dull flickering bathroom light, wrapped around each other under weak motel water?
This moment is safe.
Carrie tilts Adelina's chin up, kisses her--slow, desperate, like maybe if she does it right, she can make the world stop for just a little while.
Adelina kisses her back.
Because there's no one else.
Because they don't know if they have tomorrow.
Because right now is the only thing they can hold onto.
The motel room stinks of bad choices and worse decisions. The carpet's rough under Carrie's knees, the flickering glow of the TV casting jittery shadows over the walls. The air's thick with something unspoken, something dangerous, but right now, it's just this.
Adelina's small under her hands, all sharp angles and restless energy, like she doesn't quite fit inside her own skin. Her blonde hair's a mess, damp from the shitty motel shower, dark roots creeping in like the past catching up. It's too short to grab, just enough to tangle fingers through.
Carrie pins her down anyway.
"Still with me?" she mutters, voice low, mouth brushing against Adelina's jaw.
Adelina makes a noise--not quite a word, not quite a gasp, but Carrie feels her shudder, feels the way she arches desperate and wanting into the press of fingers pushing inside her.
She's soaked, trembling, her hips stuttering as Carrie's palm grinds down against her clit. Carrie should go slow. Should tease, should take her time.
She doesn't.
Because this isn't about teasing. This is about staying here. Staying real. About Adelina gripping Carrie's wrist like she'll vanish if she lets go.
Carrie watches her--really watches. The way her chest barely moves when she breathes, nearly flat, the way her green eyes shine too bright in the dim motel light, sharp and unreadable. The way her lips part, slick and red, her teeth sinking into her bottom lip like she's holding something back.
The thought is gone before it lands, lost in the way Adelina clenches around her fingers, the way her thighs squeeze tight like she's trying to pull Carrie in, like she needs more, needs everything.
Carrie leans down, bites at her collarbone, just to feel her jerk. Just to hear the way her breath catches, sharp and desperate.
"God, you're a mess," Carrie mutters.
Adelina lets out a breathless laugh, too close, too wrecked. "Like you're not."
Carrie doesn't answer--just curls her fingers, just presses deeper, just listens as Adelina falls apart beneath her.
The sound she makes when she cums? Carrie swears she'll hear it in her bones forever.
2025
The wind howls through the alley, funneled between rusted chain-link fences and crumbling brick. It whips at their clothes, tangles their hair. Trash skitters across the pavement--crushed beer cans, old newspapers, a plastic bag that flutters like a dying bird before getting snagged on a fence.
Adelina and Carrie walk in step, shoulders hunched against the cold. The warehouse looms ahead--shady as hell, tagged up with graffiti, the kind of place where bad things happen and worse things get buried under concrete. A rat scurries across their path, vanishing into a pile of busted pallets.
Adelina glances over. "You know how you're handling this?"
Carrie doesn't slow. Doesn't hesitate. Just keeps walking, eyes locked ahead, wind pulling at the loose strands of her hair.
"Only one way to handle it."
Adelina exhales, shaking her head, but there's something almost amused in the way she does it.
"Of course that's your answer."
They reach the warehouse door. Rusted metal. Paint peeling. A thick chain looped through the handle, padlocked. Carrie cracks her knuckles, then pulls something from her pocket--a tension wrench, a pick, the same tools she's been carrying since she was old enough to know how to use them.
Adelina watches, arms crossed. "You sure about this?"
Carrie fits the pick into the lock, works it with the kind of ease that comes from habit, not hesitation.
"Nope." The lock clicks. She smirks. "But that never stopped me before."
She yanks the chain loose. The metal groans. The door swings open.
Dark inside. Silent. Waiting.
Carrie steps forward. Adelina follows.