~All characters are at least 18 years of age at the time of sexual interaction. This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Adopting a New Outlook
Chapter 1:
There are moments in everyone's life that can change everything. My moment came earlier than most. If I close my eyes, I can hear the raindrops hitting the windows. The metallic tink tink tink as they hit the roof of the '67 Cutlass. The chatter of my parents in the front seat, talking about seeing friends, while they scanned the radio for a song that they both wanted to hear. From Eminem to Britney Spears to some amorphous boy band of the era before my mother started digging through the glove box, finding the one she was looking for. I watched sleepily as she popped the case open, pulling free the dark disc with the rainbow design. I smiled as the static hit. The first sounds of Speak to Me finally break through.
To say my musical tastes at thirteen were strange would not be far from the mark. Something about the 70's just seemed to resonate with me. I would often eschew modern pop for the deeper feeling of music like Pink Floyd or Zepplin, or Clapton, or Petty. My father liked to joke that I was born with an old soul. I had heard the line more than once.
Being the quintessential flower children hippies that my parents were, they encouraged my love of music, especially when I would delve into the works that they favored. For all that is great about the Dark Side of the Moon, it certainly is not the most appropriate music for a thirteen-year-old boy, tired from a long day, lounging in the back seat, trying to stay awake as night fell and we made the last few miles of our drive. I found myself drifting in and out, appreciating the pleasant soothing sounds for a few moments before I was snoozing again.
I awoke to the sounds of Brain Damage, realizing they had picked the perfect CD as I looked out the window into the deepening night to see a neighborhood that looked familiar. I smiled as I thought of seeing my best friend Lily for the first time in a month. We were nearly inseparable for the first 12 years of our lives, but her father had recently found a new job that forced them to move nearly 150 miles away.
Being the daughter of my parents' best friends, we were given ample time to ourselves. I thought of the childish games we'd play as our parents sat around the table, or the TV. Simply being in one's presence with regularity doesn't make two friends but, when there is that simple spark of commonality, it can fuel what's there. To say we were young and knew little of what the world had to offer was true, but there was always something about her that drew me in, beyond proximity.
Looking back on it now, I can say with some certainty, that if there is a thing such as the Fates, they have a sick fucking sense of humor. The murmur from the front seat drew my attention as Eclipse began, to find bright lights reflecting off the wet surface of the windshield. A horn honking, then another. A sickening squeal and then nothing...
Chapter 2:
I awoke to some incessant beeping and voices my groggy mind could hear but couldn't yet assign any meaning to. I tried to clear my throat, but it felt like cotton. If I even managed to grunt before I attempted to open my eyes, I would be surprised. The sharp brightness of the lights forced my eyes to shutter. The mechanical beeping turned quickly from a mild annoyance to a deafening offense as the haziness in my head gave way to a pounding headache. It astonished me that something, for one, can be so unholy painful, and two, can be so painful, in fact, that it collapses all your senses into it. I couldn't hear but the pounding, see but the backs of my eyelids, feel but the pain. I tasted copper in my mouth as I realized I'd bit my tongue hard enough to draw blood. I tried to steady myself, one deep breath, in through the nose, out through the mouth. Then another, and another, until finally I felt some of the tension in my body relax.
I loosened my white knuckled grip on the bed sheets and turned my ear to the conversation I was beginning to comprehend.
"...It's good you came." A woman's voice I didn't recall spoke, "We had the police calling everyone they could, trying to find relatives. It's a good thing they checked their phones."
"It's just hard to believe." A pained voice replied. Recognition sparked in my mind. Mrs. Hunt spoke again, tentatively, this time, "Aaron is going to be alright... Right?"
"He's lucky in at least one way, that's without a doubt." The first voice replied, "I'm not sure how much the police told you, but if he hadn't been lying down in the backseat, we'd be having a very different conversation right now."
A third voice spoke up then, the waking of my mind becoming apparent when I immediately recognized it as Mr. Hunt, "We spoke with the EMT's on our way in. They told us they pulled a shard of glass from the seat cushion just above him. As it was the boy still got cut to ribbons."
"He'll live though. God knows when he'll wake up, but I can say with some certainty he will. And," the first voice paused for a long moment before continuing, "When he does..."
"We know," replied Mrs. Hunt, "He's going to need people here for him."
"No grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins?" asked the woman.
"Only child of only children," Mr. hunt offered, "And, if I recall correctly, Michelle's grandparents were both passed when she was in college and Robin grew up in foster care. Which is where we met actually."
"So, you're his Foster brother?" she asked.
"And Aaron's Godparent's," Mrs. Hunt.
"Well," the woman breathed deep, letting it out, not in a sigh but relief, "That solves one problem. If you two think you can manage it that is."
There was a short silence, wherein I held my breath in my lungs with a fierce refusal to let go. I didn't exhale until Mr. Hunt spoke again, "God knows we never expected this."
"Expected what?" I tried and failed to ask. That is strange, I thought to myself, trying and failing to feel as nonchalant about the whole thing as the voice in my head was. The tension returned and I dug deep inside myself and found panic, plain, pure and unpleasant panic. I couldn't remember why when I looked inside, but I felt loss. I swear it in my bones I felt it, like you would a knife in the heart.
My breath quickened and I forced my eyes open against the offending bright of the Hospital lights. My head still felt like it was underwater, struck repeatedly like a bell, but I could make out Aileen and Nick, standing with a woman in a white coat. Aileen's eyes bore the signs of sleepless nights and Nick stood, as I had never seen him before. Shoulders hunched and I swear if his wife's arm wasn't wrapped around his waist he would have simply collapsed from the weight of the world.
I felt a heat rising in me. It started in my belly and rolled through me. I wanted to scream, but I settled for a whiny whimper. A rustling across my left arm began and I felt a weight I hadn't realized had been there, shift. Her fiery auburn hair tickled at my skin, sending a cold shiver down my spine. Those brilliant blue eyes found mine and smiled, shortly, sadly. It was no sort of smile to greet a long-lost friend. That sort of smile did not belong here, in this room, with this pain. That sort of smile belonged in happy places, where the world turned true, and all was as it was meant to be. This hospital bed, the walking dead stances of Aileen and Nick Hunt, the loss burning inside me. They were given this smile, made from equal parts, I'm sorry and I'm glad you're alive. I knew it then, knew it in my bones. I shed a tear and shut my eyes. I heard Lily release breath and returned her head to the crook between my chest and arm as my pretend sleep became corporeal.
Chapter 3:
My stay in the wretched Hospital amounted to a little more than a week. Three days of which were lost in the long sleep that followed the accident. The Hunts revealed the truth as soon as I awoke the next day. Therein lay days where I was all at once, happy to be alive, afraid as to precisely how I would continue living, and wondering what twist of fate allowed me to walk away from what happened with little more than a concussion and about 40 stitches. The shards of glass that had caused the majority of my injuries also scored a deep cut across my neck. Lucky to be alive doesn't tell the half of it. Had I been resting on my side I would be in a very different room of that Hospital, less precisely one head. Instead, Dr. Martin gave me a very lenient prognosis of a genuinely sad shoulder shrug when I wrote, "When will I speak again?"
My stay ended with a black dress shirt and pants, carrying flowers to a funeral for two. The Hunts were there, encouraging words, encouraging hands on my shoulders, encouraging smiles. I still wept. For hours, straight through the service, straight through the ride to the headstones carved far too soon. I wept as they were put to rest. I wept as Aileen, Nick, and others said their final words to them. The tears continued to fall on the car ride to the Hunts' home, head resting on Lily's shoulder, no doubt making a mess of her black sweater.
That night I felt precisely as alive as a zombie. The TV played as my head rested on her knees. It wasn't the worst day of my life, that day should be obvious, but it was close. Close because I felt everything. It didn't just happen off stage. It played out in front of me. Then it played again through my head. My mind finally gave me some freedom when it allowed me to sleep. I put one more day behind me as I woke on the floor in front of the couch, bundled up in blankets.
The days that followed were not so bad as to call them trying times. The Hunts were fantastic people. Being so near my best friend again was nice, but it was not everything I hoped it'd be when my parents set off on that drive. Who could think things would ever be the same after that?