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    • Whoah, what a day... 🤯 I've repressed my ABDL side in general and my stinky side in particular for the better part of like... 4 years? It's been some of the most dreadful years of my life for many reasons. Alienation, deep depression, shame around more things than just ABDL. However, for the past year I've turned my mental health around, and for the past months I've allowed myself to dabble in pull-ups to get myself used to everything again. But it wasn't until today that I decided to wear a proper Betterdry adult diaper!I only planned to wear it dry or wet it a bit this Sunday while alone at home in my apartment. I even pooped before even putting it on this morning. But then it suddenly happened, I had an unexpected second bowel movement this afternoon... "Well, can't waste this diaper already, guess I'll have to actually do it once again"... I squatted down and it blew up my diaper in no-time 😳  I sat down in it like the good old days in front of my computer for 5-6 hours, and let's just say that me and my Magic Wand 🪄 had the best time together that I've ever had in my life 😌 🤩The complete euphoria of deeply accepting and integrating my ABDL side while messing for the first time in my life is a pivotal moment for me. I will never forget this day. I got really emotional while allowing myself to feel this way and drop all of the shame I've carried around this my whole life 🥹 I'm sure a lot of you can relate, but I hope you are able feel the same about this. I deserve it, you deserve it. We all deserve it! ❤️
    • Not sure the right forum for this  I’ve been trying to figure out what to do with this for the last few days.. but Oh Well.    I am a DL but I also wet the bed on a somewhat regular basis. I probably wet it a few times a month but depending on if I’m sick or super stressed, it can be a pretty much every day thing.    Lucky for me, I was sick twice in February AND had a lot going on and was pretty stressed out. This in turn meant I had a LOT of wet nights.    I’m a senior in high school, and this past week, I had an overnight field trip for an extra curricular. I was extremely nervous for this field trip since I didn’t want to have a wet night but I also had 2 roommates who would cause a ton of problems. The first one is really immature and likes to go through your phone and bags, I had the pull ups in my suit case that I did not want them finding. The second one likes to bully people in tiny insecurities.. If person 1 found out, then in turn person 2 would have to and person 2 would have spread it around or bully me relentlessly.    After crashing out for a few weeks, I pulled my advisor (who I’ve known since freshmen year) aside on the first day of the trip after curfew and let her know that I  Wet the bed  Nervous I might get bullied by person 2  I asked if I could text her (she gave us her number prior to the field trip in case something happened and we needed her ASAP) if a leak happened or one of the 2 individuals in the room found out. Obviously, she said yes and all was well.    When we got back from the field trip, I pulled her aside again cause my anxiety has been really bad about her judging me for it. she said she didn’t judge me in any way since she has family members who wet the bed really late too, told me that I should already know that she absolutely adores me as a person and student, then gave me a hug 💀    Based on her actions during the conversation as well (all the kids had already left, it was just me and teacher + 2 other advisors behind us. She made sure to turn around to make sure they wouldn’t overhear hear before saying “you wetting the bed” for example) I know she kept it on the down low from the other advisors who went on the trip.    I’m still really nervous she sees me differently tho. Im sure she doesn’t judge me, but I also don’t want her to think that I’m not the same person she thought I was. Maybe I’m overthinking this, but I’m genuinely scared to talk to her now. I felt so weird asking her anything for the rest of the trip and they were simple fucking questions like “can you look over my presentation/speaker notes real quick” or telling her how I did since I’ve been nervous AF about doing bad. 😭 Anyways, can ppl just say nice stuff and crap so I realize that this really isn’t that weird of a situation and I’m overthinking 
    • Thanks @Wittlebabiboi, @butters11 & others for thier messages. Big Boi responsablities clashing with the story progression. Plus I'm off on another work trip next week until Friday but a four day weekend gives me time to build off on the cliff hanger I'm about to leave you all with here with parts 1 & 2 of chapter 113 below. Enjoy.   Chapter One Hundred & Thirteen: Part One Inside a converted Tokyo shipyard hangar the size of three football fields stitched together, an entire city block had been rebuilt from scaffolding and imagination. Sodium-vapor streetlights glowed over a fabricated back-alley crime scene — rain rigs suspended from steel trusses above misted the pavement in artificial drizzle, water pooling around overturned trash cans and chalk outlines drawn in bright forensic white. Extras in blood-streaked wardrobe shuffled between takes while a prop detective argued continuity with a script supervisor under the harsh eye of a director perched behind a monitor bank.   “Reset the alley! Reset the alley!”   Crew members moved with quiet military precision.   Beyond the alley, a rolling wall opened to reveal the interior of a police precinct — desks cluttered with staged case files, cork boards threaded with red string, buzzing fluorescent panels casting institutional light across actors in navy uniforms rehearsing interrogation beats. The hum of generators mixed with the whir of camera dollies and the distant clang of metal rigging shifting above.   And further still — The courtroom.   High wood paneling. Ornate judge’s bench. Polished witness stand. The American and Japanese flags positioned side by side for international market appeal. Rows of gallery seating rising in tiered authority. Every surface designed to look like weight, permanence, consequence.   Bryan Goldhawk stood at the center of it.   In a tailored light gray suit — clean lines, subtle weave catching the overhead lights — paired with a dark, open-collared shirt that softened the severity just enough. The cut was precise, elegant, the jacket hugging his shoulders like it had memory of him. Black loafers. Dark sunglasses resting temporarily at his collar.   But his phone was pressed hard to his ear. And his composure was cracking.   “What?” He turned slightly away from a boom mic being adjusted near the judge’s stand. “What was that? I can’t really hear—”   A prop gavel struck the bench during rehearsal. Bryan winced.   “What? What was that? I can’t really hear… HE DID WHAT? Yes, YES? Hold… hold on… Lilly hold on, I just need to get to an office, give me a second.”   He moved fast.   Through the courtroom doors, past a lighting tech perched on a ladder adjusting gels. Past a makeup assistant carrying blotting papers. Through a hallway lined with wardrobe racks tagged with character names and scene numbers. His pulse had shifted from vice president of development to father in less than five seconds.   He wove between sets: first the gritty back-alley crime scene with its flickering streetlamps and fake rain machines still misting the pavement, then through the bustling police station bullpen lined with ringing phones and corkboards covered in case files. He paused briefly in the middle of the recreated courtroom — mahogany benches, American flags, and a judge’s bench bathed in dramatic overhead lighting — before ducking into a quieter side corridor. His phone was pressed to his ear, voice rising with frustration.   He slipped into a small, private dressing room off the main soundstage. The door clicked shut behind him, muffling the set noise into a distant hum. The room was standard but comfortable: a lit vanity mirror framed with warm bulbs, a fresh bouquet of delicate white lilies and vibrant chrysanthemums in a simple glass vase on the counter, a leather couch against one wall, and a small desk with a script open on it. Bryan sank into the chair, turned the phone vertical, and switched to FaceTime.   Lilly’s face filled the screen. It was late in Jacksonville — the master bedroom behind her dimly lit by a bedside lamp. She sat up against the rich, padded headboard, her platinum blonde hair pulled back neatly with a white Lululemon headband. The top of her pink baby doll nightie peeked just into frame, soft and feminine against the luxurious bedding. Her eyes were bright with excitement, but there was a measured calm in her posture.   Bryan’s expression softened the moment he saw her. “Okay, I can hear you now. Repeat what you said earlier… something about a yes?”   Bryan’s brow furrowed.   “Okay,” he said, steadying himself. “Start again. You said… yes?”   Lilly smiled — measured but barely containing it.   “Yes.”   She inhaled slowly, grounding herself before she spoke.   “So after Thanksgiving dinner tonight… Paul and I talked about SMG again.”   Bryan’s jaw tightened. Bryan’s parental protector instinct flickered across his face.   “I thought we agreed we were putting that on hold.”   “We did,” Lilly nodded. “We put filming on hold. Not the story.”   She shifted slightly in bed, leaning closer to the screen.   “I kept posting. About step-motherhood. About regulation. About what it looks like to support without shame. And Bryan… it blew up. Not in a tabloid way — in a real way.”   Her eyes softened.   “The comments. Parents like us. Kids like Paul. Doctors. Therapists. They weren’t mocking. They were thanking. Celebrating this journey.”   Bryan leaned against the vanity counter, the  flowers in peripheral blur.   “And you showed him?”   “I showed him.”   “And?”   “I asked what he wanted.”   Bryan watched her face carefully — reading for pressure, coercion, influence.   “He’s not journaling,” Lilly continued gently. “He told me why. When Rachel died and his doctor told him to draw his feelings? He said all he could draw was sadness. He couldn’t even play right after.”   Bryan closed his eyes for a brief second. He remembered. The crayon breaking in small fingers. The way grief made play feel like betrayal. Lilly’s voice softened further.   “I told him maybe recording his thoughts could be therapeutic. Saying them out loud. And Bryan… he wants to try.”   Bryan’s protector sharpened in tone.   “How?”   “One five-minute clip. Voice only. No face. Modified with AI. His words. His control.”   Silence. Bryan let that settle.   He imagined Paul’s voice through a filter — anonymous but brave.   “He wants to be hands-on,” Lilly added. “He wants to help someone else not spiral the way he did.”   Bryan felt something uncoil in his chest. A small smile broke through his hesitation.   “Studio liked his voice-over read last week,” he said softly. “They mentioned it again today. If he doesn’t get the part, there are others. People are interested.”   Lilly’s heart swelled visibly at that.   “So maybe he balances online classes with side voice work,” Bryan continued. “Not just this one piece of him.”   Lilly nodded — proud, hopeful. Bryan’s tone shifted.   “Otherwise… how is he?”   Lilly’s voice brightened with a quiet squeal of excitement. “You should have seen him tonight, Bryan. After dinner he asked me to rock him in the chair. He just wanted to be held. “He didn’t even say much. Just crawled into my lap, his head right here.”   She tapped her collarbone.   “And he let me hold him. No shame. No apology.”   Bryan felt the air leave him slowly. Joy. Relief. A kind of sacred gratitude.   “And then,” Lilly continued, reaching off-screen, “he picked this.”   She held up the well-worn copy of The Little Mouse, the Red Ripe Strawberry, and the Big Hungry Bear. The cover was faded from years of bedtime readings, the corners soft from countless small hands turning the pages. Bryan’s face changed instantly. A single tear of joy and nostalgia slipped down his cheek as recognition hit him like a wave.   “My God… he kept it. After all these years of moves and chaos, he actually kept it. I used to read that to him when he was way too old for it,” he said, voice breaking into a soft laugh. “He’d pretend he wasn’t listening. But when I’d skip a page, he’d correct me.”   His voice cracked with a mix of heartbreak and heart-filled joy. The room in Tokyo felt very far from Jacksonville in that moment. And yet, somehow, closer than it had been all week.   “How are you feeling?” Bryan asked.   Lilly inhaled slowly. This time she didn’t dodge it.   “How are you feeling, Lil?”   Lilly was thoughtful, genuine, her eyes glistening.   “I’m feeling like a mommy, Bryan. Like this is exactly where I’m supposed to be.”   The quiet gravity of a woman who had chosen this role and was no longer afraid of it.   “You are,” Bryan said softly. “You really are.”   Lilly swallowed.   “And I don’t feel wrong saying that anymore.”   Silence stretched between them — not empty, but full.   Bryan smiled back, the tear still shining on his cheek. “Anything else happen tonight?”   Lilly’s expression shifted to slight confusion.   “Well, after story time I put him down at seven thirty. A few hours later just  as I was getting ready to call you and turn in, the nanny cam went off. He was tossing and turning again, close to falling out of  bed again. Bryan, when you get home we need to talk about this and an idea I have.”   She paused.   “He kept mumbling something… maybe you know what ‘Nib-Nib’ means? He was almost whining for it for a good few minutes but then lulled himself to sleep.”   Bryan’s smile turned teasing, warm with memory. “You really don’t know, do you?”   Lilly laughed softly, matter-of-fact. “No, I don’t have a master’s in baby babble. But seeing your face, you know, don’t you?”   “Guilty,” Bryan said sweetly. “Nib-Nib is what he called his pacifier when he was really young — like fourteen months old. Paul used to rub the edge of it between his fingers and hum. ‘Nib-nib-nib.’ It was the sound of pure contentment. The house would be quiet except for that little rhythmic sound while he sat on the rug building blocks. Why is he regressing that much?”   Lilly answered carefully, mindful of every word. “Mindy’s plan is to try different stages of regression — some days with, some days without. It was a test, didn’t pan out to what Mindy was thinking regarding his regression. So we’ve stopped and gone back to daily blocks for him to reset. He hasn’t really had an episode since a few weeks ago. You should have seen him dressed in adult-size Ninja Turtle PJ’s that Kim bought for him so he and William matched on their playdate.”   Bryan chuckled warmly. “You’ll have to show me the pictures.”   Lilly’s eyes sparkled. “I’ll do you one better.”   Bryan didn’t let her finish. “They’re in his closet, huh?”   Lilly nodded. “He’ll probably want to wear it after Saturday when he gets back to rehearsals with Amber again.”   Bryan’s voice was encouraging. “They’re adults. They’ll make this work, Lil.”   “Bryan… Kim thinks we should take a trip next year. Just us.”   Her voice dipped slightly — sad, hopeful.   “Not the cruise around the world,” she added. “And I’m okay with that now. But we need time. Just you and me. After these months.”   Bryan didn’t hesitate.   “When I get home, we book it. After Christmas. We’ll figure coverage out. Kim. Martina. Even Harley if we need.”   Lilly hesitated at Harley’s name, then nodded.   “We have options now.”   The silence that followed felt different. Softer. More intimate.   Bryan leaned closer to the camera. “You look tired,” she said gently.   “I am,” Bryan admitted.   “But it’s a good tired.”   Lilly smiled slowly as Bryan spoke.   “You look beautiful.”   She rolled her eyes lightly — but she blushed.   “Bryan…”   “No,” he said, voice dropping into something quieter. “You do. There’s something about you lately. It’s not just… you being strong. It’s… softer.”   Lilly’s throat tightened.   “I don’t feel like I’m trying so hard anymore,” she confessed. “With him. Or with you.”   Bryan’s expression changed — the guarded father replaced by the man who missed his wife.   “I miss you,” he said plainly.   Lilly’s voice turned velvet.   “I know.”   “No,” Bryan continued, gaze steady. “I miss you in the quiet way. The way you reach for me without thinking. The way you curl into me when you fall asleep. The way you say my name when you’re trying not to laugh.”   Her eyes shimmered.   “You’re a day ahead of me,” she whispered. “But I can still feel you here.”   She pressed her hand against her chest. Bryan mirrored her.   “Soon,” he said. “Soon,” she echoed.   “Good morning, my love,” Bryan murmured.   “Good night, my love,” Lilly replied.   They didn’t hang up immediately. They just looked at each other.   Two adults who had survived grief, shame, long distance, complicated parenting, and still found their way back to softness. Finally, Lilly leaned forward and blew him a quiet kiss. Bryan caught it theatrically against his palm, smiling. Then the screen went dark. The Bishop Gates Academy theater lobby buzzed with Saturday-morning energy, the kind that only a serious high-school production could generate. Golden autumn light poured through the tall arched windows, catching dust motes in the air and painting long, dramatic shafts across the marble floor. The faint scent of fresh paint from the newly built sets mingled with the sharp tang of coffee from craft services and the low hum of excited chatter. Crew members wheeled costume racks and prop carts across the space, while the distant metallic clang of stage lights being tested echoed from inside the auditorium like distant thunder. This wasn’t just any school playhouse — it felt like a professional set, with its massive proscenium stage, rich burgundy velvet curtains, and rows of plush red seats waiting to be filled.   Paul pushed through the double doors, backpack slung casually over one shoulder, still carrying the quiet confidence from his early-morning basketball session. His Carolina Hurricanes hockey jersey — bold red with black and white accents — hung loose over his black onesie, the fabric soft against his skin. Beneath it all, the thick, cloth-backed ABU Pre-School diaper gave him that familiar, secure bulk he’d come to rely on. He mingled easily with the arriving cast in the lobby — Leo clapping him on the back with a warm, booming laugh.   “Good to have you back, Jem! Thanksgiving treat you right?”   A couple of ensemble members chuckled at Paul’s quick joke about the parade floats looking like they’d eaten too much turkey. His smile was genuine, his posture relaxed. For the first time in weeks, the stage felt like home.   But his eyes kept drifting.   Across the lobby, Amber stood near the water fountain, laughing softly with a small group of castmates, script tucked under one arm, her hair pulled back in a loose ponytail that caught the light. Marcus leaned in close, kissing her goodbye with that easy, possessive confidence. “I’ll pick you up at two, babe,” he said, voice carrying just enough to reach Paul. Paul’s heart twisted — a sharp, familiar pang of old hurt mixing with a fragile thread of hope. She’s not mine. She never was. But maybe… after the play… we could at least be friends again. The thought settled in his chest like a quiet promise he wasn’t sure he believed yet.   The moment passed as Declan’s thick Irish brogue wrapping around every syllable boomed from the auditorium doors.   “Alright, lads and lasses! Gather round, would ye?”   The chatter dropped instantly. Julia’s voice cut through the hall like a conductor raising a baton. Her New York accent was warm but impossible to ignore.   “Welcome back from Thanksgiving. The real work begins today.”   “And by real work,” Declan added, “I mean sweating like sinners.”   A ripple of laughter.   Julia gestured behind her.   “I’d like to introduce our full makeup team for this production. They’ll be working with you closely from now through show week.”   The makeup artists filed in, Whitney among them. Paul spotted her immediately — her warm, professional smile instantly grounding him. His cheeks warmed slightly, his stomach dipped, and then heat & warmth bloomed low in his body before he could stop it.   “Oh, come on…” he muttered under his breath. A quick glance at his tracker showed a faint yellow spike, but nothing alarming. He breathed through it, the familiar security of the thick cloth-backed diaper reminding him he was safe. Julia continued, her voice carrying easily. “General cast and extras, head straight to the cafeteria for application. Leads and key roles, you’ll find your dressing rooms backstage with your artist already inside. Fifteen minutes, then we’re back on stage for the first walk-through.”   Declan nudged her playfully, his Irish lilt full of mischief.   “And remember, under these lights ye’ll all be roastin’ like turkeys this afternoon, so stay hydrated, ye hear? Now move yer arses!”   Paul made his way backstage, the hallway lined with dressing-room doors, each taped with a name. He found his — a small classroom converted for the production, with his name neatly written on the door. As he reached for the handle, he glanced to his right. Amber was opening the door to the room next to his. Their eyes met for a brief, awkward second — a shared glance that held years of history, hurt, and the fragile possibility of something kinder. She stepped inside first. Paul followed a beat later, heart steadying.   Inside his room, Whitney was already setting up. The space had a lit vanity mirror framed with warm bulbs, two large office chairs, and professional makeup supplies laid out like a pro station. What stood out was the changing pad Whitney rolled out onto the larger teacher’s desk — a soft, colorful mat patterned with cheerful lions, cars, blocks, and stars, the fabric plush and padded with white borders clearly borrowed from the daycare wing.   Whitney smiled apologetically. “Sorry — it was all we had from the daycare that was big enough.”   Paul blushed but nodded, unbuckling his belt and sliding off his jeans. The black onesie and thick cloth-backed ABU Pre-School diaper were visible now the sag unavoidable, the familiar bulk giving him that quiet sense of security. “It’s alright,” he said, lying down on the pad without hesitation. “I actually need a change anyway.”   “Let’s multitask,” she said lightly, snapping open a palette. “Makeup first.”   She leaned close, applying subtle contour to age him into Jem. Soft dusting along the jawline. Light freckling. A touch of grime to simulate outdoor Alabama heat. Whitney pulled on gloves, keeping everything professional and respectful. As she began the change, she chatted lightly to ease the moment.   “How was your Thanksgiving, Paul? Mine was this huge Jamaican-American mash-up feast my parents do every year. Jerk turkey with all the spices, rice, and peas mixed right into the stuffing, callaloo on the side, and my mom’s famous rum cake for dessert. It was loud, chaotic, and perfect. My little sister got all the attention again, though — she’s finishing her final year at Princeton Law, and you’d think she hung the moon the way my parents go on about her. I love her, but sometimes I wonder if they even remember I’m the one who’s been doing makeup for theater since I was twelve.”   Paul relaxed under her calm, steady hands. “Sounds amazing. Mine was quieter — just me and my stepmom. We watched the parade and had a small dinner. It was… really nice, actually.”   Whitney worked gently, just as she untaped the used one and pulled it back. She saw how much his diaper held her voice slipped into an accidental, gentle coo out of pure habit.  “So much pee-pee again, huh?” She caught herself immediately. “Sorry — force of habit.”   Paul blushed deeply but managed a small, understanding smile.   “It’s okay. You’re not the first person who’s done this. No big deal at all.”   She finished applying cream and powder before sliding on a fresh ABU Pre-School diaper, the cloth backing crinkling softly as she ensured a tight but snug fit with the leg gathers firmly in place.  She finished efficiently and helped him sit up so he could adjust.   “All good?” she asked.   “All good.”   Back on stage, the lights came up hot and bright. Under the lights, Paul became someone else.   “Places now, lads and ladies!” Declan called from the center aisle, script rolled tight in his fist like a baton. “Let’s not drift about like we’ve nowhere to be.”   The house lights dimmed to rehearsal glow. The stage instruments hummed overhead — hot white beams angled down in deliberate diagonals. The temperature shifted immediately. What had been a cool Saturday morning became thick Alabama air. Paul stepped into his mark — the small strip of tape near the porch stairs. He grounded himself there. “Right,” Declan said, pacing the aisle. “Scene three. And mind the beats, yeah? Don’t rush the truth.”   The opening exchange began. Paul delivered his line with edge — shoulders squared, chin slightly lifted. Declan raised a hand.   “Ah-ah. Hold there, Jem.”   He stepped closer to the apron, head tilted.   “You’re playin’ anger like you’ve earned it. But you haven’t yet, son. You don’t know the world well enough to be angry with it.” He tapped his temple. “You’re confused. That’s the wound. Try it from there.”   Paul nodded once.   Reset. Again.   This time, he let the uncertainty live beneath the words — a flicker behind the eyes, hesitation before the final syllable. Declan didn’t clap. He just murmured, satisfied, “There it is. Now we’re talkin’.”   The rehearsal continued. Amber entered as Scout. The first exchange between them was clean, tight, professional. Declan watched like a hawk.   When Amber stumbled near the porch stair and Paul caught her instinctively—   “Thanks,” she whispered. “Always,” he answered.   Declan straightened in his seat.   “Keep that, for the love of God. That’s brother and sister right there. That’s lived-in. Don’t polish it. Leave it rough.” The five-minute break dissolved the tension. Cast members shuffled backstage. Whitney waited with powder and blotting paper. Amber moved toward her touch-up station. Paul lingered a moment longer near the apron, wiping sweat from his forehead.   “Jem,” Declan called quietly.   Not loud. Not performative. Paul turned. Declan gestured toward the house seats.   “Walk with me a second.”   They moved down the center aisle together. The stage behind them dimmed slightly as crew adjusted gels. Declan didn’t speak immediately. He studied Paul the way directors study storms.   “You’ve got somethin’ dangerous in you,” Declan said at last.   Paul stiffened slightly. “Dangerous?”   “Aye,” Declan replied calmly. “You feel things before you understand them. Most actors spend years tryin’ to learn that. You already have it.”   Paul didn’t know what to do with that. Declan leaned one elbow against a seat back.   “But here’s the thing,” he continued. “If you don’t steer it, it’ll steer you.”   Paul’s jaw tightened. Declan’s eyes sharpened — not unkind.   “Whatever you’re carryin’ right now — don’t bury it. Don’t spill it either. Channel it.”   He tapped his own chest lightly.   “Pain’s like electricity, lad. Raw, it burns the house down. Directed, it lights the whole stage.”   Paul swallowed.   “You weren’t angry up there,” Declan said softly. “You were hurt. That’s the truth. Let Jem be hurt. That’s what makes him real.”   Paul looked back at the stage. The lights. The marks. The space where he felt most whole.   “And for what it’s worth,” Declan added, voice dropping into something almost paternal, “whatever happened between you and Scout offstage — leave it there. On this stage, you’re brother and sister. And you protect each other. That’s your job.”   Paul nodded slowly. Declan clapped him once on the shoulder.   “Right then. Back to work. And try not to melt under the lights. I’ve no interest in explainin’ that paperwork.”   Paul let out a small breath of laughter. As he walked back toward the wings, something felt steadier inside him. The pain hadn’t disappeared. But it had direction. Then came the treehouse scene. The set was simple but effective — a wooden platform framed by ropes and painted leaves, lit with soft golden stage lights that made it feel like a secret childhood hideaway tucked high above the world. Paul climbed up first, settling on the edge with Jem’s easy confidence, legs dangling, the thick padding of his  diaper shifting comfortably beneath his onesie and jersey. Amber followed, script in hand but barely glancing at it now. She sat beside him, close enough that their shoulders nearly touched, the warmth of the lights wrapping around them like a blanket.   Jem (Paul): “You know what I think, Scout? I think Boo Radley’s just lonely. That’s all. He’s been shut up in that house so long he doesn’t know how to come out anymore. Folks keep him locked away like some kinda monster, but I reckon he’s just… waitin’ for somebody to give him a reason to step outside.”   Scout (Amber): “You reckon he’s crazy, like they say? Miss Stephanie says he eats raw squirrels and cats, and that’s why his hands are all bloody.”   Jem (Paul): “Nah. Not crazy. Just… different. Folks are scared of what they don’t understand. But I bet if he ever came out, he’d be the best friend we ever had. Imagine it, Scout — him sittin’ right here with us, tellin’ stories about what it’s like watchin’ the world from behind those shutters all these years.”   Scout (Amber): “You really think he’s watchin’ us right now?”   Jem (Paul): “I know he is. And one day… one day we’re gonna make him come out. Not because we’re nosy, but because maybe he needs us as much as we need him.”   The lines flowed between them like breathing. Amber’s voice caught on the last word with perfect vulnerability, her eyes meeting Paul’s with a softness that went beyond the script. Paul responded with a protective warmth that made the entire cast pause. Their chemistry crackled — brother and sister, bound by love and secrets, the awkwardness between Paul and Amber dissolving completely under the lights. For those few minutes, they weren’t ex-friends navigating a breakup; they were Jem and Scout, two kids trying to make sense of a complicated world.   The entire crew went still, drawn in.   The wrist tracker glowed a steady, reassuring green on Paul’s wrist. The digital display read: Fri Dec 5th 7:00 AM. The ball left his fingertips in a perfect arc. Swish. Nothing but net. Paul is left standing alone on one half of the state-of-the-art gymnasium at Bishop Gates Academy. Early-morning Friday light poured through the high clerestory windows in long, slanted beams of pale gold, catching the air and painting the polished hardwood in soft amber stripes. The massive facility was almost empty — just the faint echo of a 2-on-2 game happening on the far end of the court where two girls and two guys laughed and trash-talked over a loose ball. Paul had the near half all to himself, the vast space feeling both expansive and strangely intimate in the quiet dawn hours. Above him, the 12-15 championship banners hung from the rafters like proud battle flags in Bishop Gates Academy’s signature colors — deep crimson red, metallic gold, and black. They swayed gently in the air currents from the HVAC system: city titles, state championships, southern conference banners, and one gleaming national high school men’s basketball title from 2023 that caught the light like a crown jewel.   He wore his white Charlotte Bobcats 2004 jersey — the crisp fabric with bold orange lettering across the chest — paired with matching white athletic shorts that completed the uniform look. The shorts were classic Bobcats style: bright white with orange and blue side accents, the word “BOBCATS” arched across the left leg in bold orange, and the number 04 printed on the right leg in the same vibrant color. On his feet were the Nike Jordan 1 Retro AJKO Rush Orange high-tops, the bright orange leather and white midsoles popping against the hardwood. Wireless earbuds were in his ears, Fort Minor’s “Remember the Name” pulsing through them at just the right volume — the driving beat and lyrics about rising up and claiming your place feeding straight into his bloodstream. The distant sounds of the gym wrapped around him like a familiar soundtrack: the rhythmic thump-thump-thump of the other players’ basketballs on the far court, the sharp squeak of sneakers making quick cuts, bursts of laughter and friendly trash-talk echoing off the high walls, and the low, constant hum of the overhead lights. It all felt alive, yet peaceful. Paul caught the rebound, dribbled once, twice, then launched into a smooth spin layup that kissed the glass and dropped through the net with a soft swish. He grinned to himself, the little side bubbling up with pure joy while the big side kept score in his head. This week… this week has been really good, he thought as he caught the ball again and took a few more shots from the elbow. I actually survived rehearsing with Amber. We laughed at the same lines. She even asked me how my day was after practice yesterday — like a real conversation, not just polite small talk. For a second it felt… normal. Like we could be friends again after the play ends. Maybe. Just maybe. He smiled at the thought, then launched a three-pointer from the corner. The ball arced high and dropped through the net with a clean swish. And Ellie… that text I sent her about doing college online and maybe visiting Maine for a week. Her reply with the blushing emoji — that was kinda cool. She didn’t think it was weird. She thought it sounded awesome. Maybe there’s a future where I’m not stuck here. Where I get to be me without all the noise. Although I miss Harley, Lilly looked a little at ease when she called and said her baby brother brought home a daycare virus. She'd be back, and she kinda wanted to see her again. Maybe they could paint.   His thoughts drifted to Lilly and the SMG project. The first time he’d recorded content for her — sitting on the couch, voice shaking as he admitted how a pacifier helped calm his nerves when the stress got too loud — had felt terrifying. But sharing that tip, knowing it might help someone else who was spiraling the same way he used to… it had been almost therapeutic. Brave. He felt a quiet pride bloom in his chest. Lilly may have been right. It wasn’t as scary as I thought. And if it helps even one person feel less alone… then it was worth it.   Paul gathered the ball, tucked it under his arm, and walked over to the bleachers where his backpack waited. He removed one earbud, wiped the sweat from his forehead with the hem of his jersey, and took a long drink from the insulated bottle Lilly had packed — her homemade juice combo of carrot, kale, watermelon, and green apple. The crisp, sweet-tart flavor hit his tongue like liquid sunshine. He paused for a moment, glanced behind him to make sure the other four players were still focused on their game, then turned back and peered down the front of his shorts. The white Step-In pull-up was damp, the little paw prints starting to fade where the padding had done its job. He sighed softly. Gonna have to see Whitney sooner than I wanted, he thought. The ABU pre-school diaper would keep me dry for the rest of the day, but it’s thicker… I wouldn’t be able to move like this. He let his shorts snap back into place. Fifteen more minutes. I can get fifteen more minutes in. Paul brought his left shoe up onto the bleacher seat and began lacing it back up, fingers working the orange laces with practiced ease. Then the voice cut through the gym like a blade. “Goldie-hawk…” It started low, mocking, dripping with malice. “Oh Goldie-hawks…” The tone grew louder, teasing, the kind of singsong cruelty that promised harm. “Goldie-hawks… come out to playyyyyyy.” Chapter One Hundred & Thirteen: Part Two Paul’s head snapped up toward the north entrance of the gymnasium. The heavy double doors didn’t swing open — they slithered apart with a slow, deliberate hiss of hydraulic hinges, the sound echoing off the rafters like a predator announcing itself. Standing just ten feet away, framed in the doorway like a nightmare stepping into the light, was Danny McFeerson. He was 6’1 — three inches taller than Paul’s 5’11 — with a body that was lengthy and rangy through the legs but bulked up through the shoulders and chest from years of lifting. His hair was styled in that deliberately messy way that screamed “I woke up like this,” and his face carried the kind of sharp, handsome menace that made people look twice before crossing him. He wore black pull-away Adidas pants that swished with every arrogant step and a crimson-red Bishop Gates Academy t-shirt with white-and-gold lettering across the chest. The outfit screamed entitlement. Behind him, another player trailed like a loyal shadow. Danny’s body language screamed bully from the first stride: shoulders rolled back, chin high, that twisted, predatory grin splitting his face as he strutted straight toward Paul. Every step was deliberate, cocky, owning the floor like he already knew how this was going to end. Paul’s confident posture crumbled in an instant. His shoulders hunched forward protectively, knees bending slightly as if bracing for impact. The easy smile from moments ago vanished. His left hand tightened around the basketball until his knuckles went white. Inside, the memories slammed into him like a second wave of punches. The name hit Paul like a film reel suddenly playing in slow motion — vivid, saturated, every detail sharp and painful. Three years ago. First month of school. The cafeteria door swinging open. Danny was standing on a table like he owned the room, shouting “Goldie-hawk!” the second Paul walked in. The whole room erupted in laughter and cheering, the sound ringing in Paul’s ears like a cruel symphony. He remembered forcing himself to breathe through it, how he’d quashed the asshole nickname before it ever caught real fire. Then the memory sharpened: Danny standing on a chemistry lab table, shouting it when Paul entered the room. Amber’s face blushed bright red with Marcus’s arm slung possessively around her shoulders. But instead of running, Paul had stood his ground that day and leaned straight into the teasing with a confidence he didn’t know he had. “It’s true, it’s true — my name is Paul Goldie-Hawk and Danny over there knows why. Everybody knows the story. See, Danny’s bed was too soft, his sister’s bed was too hard… but Danny’s MOTHER’s bed was just right, especially last night, right Danny? I hope WE weren’t too loud to wake you.” Paul remembered the color draining from Danny’s face in real time, the cheers suddenly turning in his direction for once. It had felt like a small victory. But victories with Danny never lasted. That same afternoon two of the players had jumped him in the stairwell — a quick right to the cheek that split his lip. That was only the first of many run-ins. After that, Paul had stopped chasing Amber. Stopped trying out for the basketball team. Stopped doing a lot of things. The flashback shattered as Danny slapped the basketball out of Paul’s hands. It bounced away across the floor with a series of loud, echoing thumps. “I said I was talking to you, Goldie-Hawk,” Danny sneered, voice dripping with venom. “Are you even more retarded recently?” Paul answered back, neutral but firm, his voice steady despite the storm inside him. “What, Danny? Did your mom ask you to invite me over for a sleepover?” Danny reacted instantly, shoving Paul hard in the chest and pushing him back a few feet. Paul heard the faint crinkle of his Step-In pull-up, but prayed the squeak of his sneakers masked it. Danny looked him up and down with that twisted grin, hands up in mock surrender. “Sorry Paul, that one was on me. I forgot what a little bastard you can be with that silver tongue of yours. You know — the one that can land you the lead in the school play with the basketball captain’s engaged soon-to-be wife as the other lead. Yeah, your mouth certainly gives you an edge. I’m sure you wanted to eat out Amber’s pussy, huh, fuck boy?” Paul’s face burned red from both embarrassment and anger. “What do you want, Danny?” “It’s not what I want, Paul. It’s what I want to give you. You remember I beat you two years ago and got the spot on the team which gave us that—” Danny pointed up at the gleaming 2023 national title banner hanging from the rafters. “Sure you did, Danny. If memory serves, weren’t you Marcus’s bottom bitch that year? He basically gave you my spot just as long as you, you know… dropped the soap every once in a while. Now just move.” Danny shoved him again, harder. “You’re not getting it, Goldie. I’m here to give you what you want — well, not Amber, but a chance to play for my spot on the team.” “Bullshit,” Paul snapped back.   “No it’s not, Paul.”   Paul turned. Marcus was standing up on the bleachers, walking down slowly, still leaning over the railing with that same smug, shit-eating grin. “Marcus, I’m not in the mood for games here. I have to—” “You have to go nowhere, Paul. See, you’ve been spending way too much time on the stage, holding more than my girl’s hand, according to some people I trust. So today, Danny is going to teach you a lesson in what it means to be humble and humiliated. Or you’re going to show me that you aren’t that pathetic fuck boy I knew you to be. Either way, Paul, you’re not leaving until one of you scores 13 points. 1-on-1 rules — well, I’ll let you boys figure that out.” Marcus reached down, snatched Paul’s water bottle, and took a long, deliberate drink with that same grin. “That’s fuckin’ awful.” Then, with a casual flick of his wrist, he spilled the rest of the drink onto the sideline, splashing all of it across Paul’s right shoe. “We could use some tunes, Paul.” Marcus hit play on his iPhone. DMX’s “X Gonna Give It to Ya” blasted through the gym speakers, the heavy bass echoing off the rafters. Paul watched Marcus lean in and give Danny a pep talk, Danny unsnapping his pull-away pants to reveal shorts underneath, then taking the ball and starting to warm up with aggressive dribbles. Paul’s mind spiraled. This is a trap. Marcus is still pulling strings. Danny’s going to humiliate me again. And my Step-In… it’s already damp. If I move too much, if I fall… they’ll see. They’ll all see. Fear clawed at his throat, but something deeper — the same stubborn part of him that had fought back in the last fight — refused to run.   Danny bounced the ball once, hard, then checked it into Paul’s chest with a smug grin. “Let’s see what you got, Goldie-Hawk. Try not to choke this time.” The opening bass line of DMX’s “X Gonna Give It to Ya” slammed through the gym speakers — “X is gonna give it to ya… X is gonna give it to ya…” — the beat vibrating up through the polished hardwood and into Paul’s bones. The 12-15 championship banners hanging from the rafters swayed gently overhead in the air currents, deep crimson red, metallic gold, and black, the 2023 national title banner gleaming like a taunt. Paul caught the ball, jaw tight. His heart hammered against his ribs as he dribbled once, low and controlled. Danny exploded forward without warning. His elbow drove straight into Paul’s side — a dirty, vicious shot disguised as a reach-in. Pain flared sharp and hot. Paul’s breath left him in a gasp, knees buckling as he hit the floor hard, the ball squirting loose. The impact jarred his side, sending fresh fire through his torso. Danny scooped the loose ball, took two dribbles, and laid it in easy. “1-0, bitch,” Danny taunted, laughing. “That all you got, Goldhawk? Come on, X gonna give it to ya — but not today!” “Stop, drop, shut ’em down, open up shop…” Paul pushed himself up, teeth gritted. The song thumped on as Danny checked the ball again. This time Danny used his bulkier mid-section like a battering ram, shouldering Paul off balance on every drive. Paul hit the floor three more times in quick succession — hard, jarring falls that made his vision flash white. Each time Danny scored easily. 4-0. The trash talk never stopped. “Stay down, LOSER! Try and get your shit together, you pathetic little BITCH!” Danny laughed as he drained another easy layup. Paul’s lungs burned. His side felt like it was on fire with every breath. The secret beneath his shorts felt heavier, the fear of exposure clawing at the back of his mind. Don’t let him see it. Don’t let anyone see it. But the song shifted into its aggressive hook — “X is gonna give it to ya…” — and something in Paul changed. He stopped hesitating. The gritty version of himself — the one that had survived everything — rose up. He channeled that inner Allen Iverson energy: scrappy hands, quick feet, relentless. He started stealing the ball on drives, knocking Danny down twice with clean, hard shoulder checks that sent the bigger boy sprawling. Paul drained two tough mid-range jumpers, then another from the elbow, the ball kissing the glass and dropping through with clean swishes. The score climbed: 8-6. Danny’s eyes widened. He got physical again, throwing a vicious elbow after grabbing a rebound, catching Paul in the side once more. Paul crumpled for a split second, but he fought back. Danny scored two quick buckets to make it 10-8. Then the game tightened. Paul stole the ball on the next possession, drove baseline, and knocked Danny off balance with a slick spin move. Layup. 10-9. Danny pushed back, but Paul was in rhythm now. Another steal, another mid-range jumper. 10-10. The gym felt electric. Tyler, watching from the sideline, called out the score every few points. “Ten-ten!” Marcus leaned against the bleachers, arms crossed, watching with narrowed eyes. The song built to its climax — “X is gonna give it to ya… X is gonna give it to ya…” — as the score hit 11-11. Marcus stepped forward, voice cutting through the beat. “Squash this piss-ant, Danny boy. Next and final score is worth two points. Game winner.” Danny grinned viciously. “Time to end this, Goldhawk.” Paul felt everything narrow — the weight of every stare in the gym. But the fear vanished. In its place rose something raw and unstoppable. Paul broke Danny’s ankles with a lightning-quick crossover. Danny’s feet tangled, stumbling backward as Paul exploded toward the basket for the layup. Danny recovered faster than expected. He leaped from behind, swatting the ball away mid-air with a vicious block, then shoved Paul hard in the back. Paul hit the hardwood face-first, the impact jarring his body. The ball rolled loose. Danny sprinted after it, grinning like a shark. Paul, desperate, kicked out his right leg. Danny’s foot caught it, tripping him forward. Danny crashed face-first onto the hardwood with a heavy THUD, the ball rolling away — straight into Paul’s hands. Paul felt a sharp tweak in his ankle, but adrenaline drowned it out. He pushed up, ignoring the fire in his side. Danny scrambled to his feet, eyes wide. Paul rose on his back left foot, planted, and launched a high-arcing jump shot. The ball hit the rim… bounced off the backboard… and fell through the net with a perfect swish. Game winner. The song hit its final thunderous beat — “X is gonna give it to ya…” — as the ball rattled through the hoop and bounced away across the silent court. Paul stood there, chest heaving, side screaming, ankle throbbing. He had won.   Danny didn’t clap. Danny didn’t smirk. Danny stared. “You cheated,” he said, loud enough for the small group to hear. “Just like you’re always trying to get Amber to cheat on Marcus behind his back. That’s your thing, right? Co-starring with Amber, you two together so you can play the hero while sliding your hand up her skirt after rehearsal? Pathetic little FUCK BOY that’s what you are, Paul.” A couple of guys shifted awkwardly, watching in the bleachers. Marcus looked like he might step in. No one did. Paul’s chest rose and fell, lungs burning. He didn’t answer right away. He’d won fair. Everyone on that court knew it. The scoreboard didn’t lie. But truth doesn’t matter when pride is bleeding out in front of an audience.   Danny stepped forward — too close now, crowding Paul’s space, the scent of his cheap body spray cutting through the gym smell.   “You always cheat. That’s your thing, right? Little Paul Goldhawk and his special tricks.”   Paul exhaled slowly, forcing his voice to stay even. Calm. Too calm. “I beat you. Now about that spot....”   That’s when Danny’s hand moved. Not a shove. Not a punch.     A yank.     His fingers hooked the waistband of Paul’s gym shorts and ripped downward in one violent motion. The elastic snapped with a sharp twang. Fabric slid down Paul’s thighs in a rush of cold air. The disposable Step-In was suddenly on full display — soft, bulky, unmistakably a diaper. The front panel showed a cheerful cartoon raccoon with colorful dots and numbers; the sides gathered in that tell-tale crinkled elastic that screamed what it was. The padding was swollen from the game, the leg cuffs hugging his thighs in a way that left nothing to the imagination. The gym didn’t gasp. It laughed. Sharp. Disbelieving. Cruel. The sound hit Paul like a second punch — laughter bouncing off the rafters, phones already coming out, his world tunneled: hardwood beneath his feet, faces above him, the thick pull-up on full display. The soft, padded bulk crinkled faintly as he frantically yanked his shorts back up — fingers shaking so badly he missed the waistband twice. Humiliation burned hotter than any physical pain ever could. They see me. They all see me. The diaper boy. The freak. The one who can’t even control his own body. Danny’s fist came next. The sucker punch connected with Paul’s jaw in a sideways CRACK — bone on bone, the impact vibrating through his skull like a struck tuning fork. White-hot pain exploded behind his eyes, radiating down his neck in jagged lightning bolts. His head snapped sideways, teeth clacking together hard enough to draw a little blood from the inside of his cheek. The metallic taste flooded his mouth instantly.   He hit the hardwood hard.   The impact slammed the air from his lungs in a white flash — THUD — his back and shoulder blades slapping the polished floor with a stinging slap that left his skin burning. Pain flared across his ribs as he skidded a foot, the pull-up crinkling softly against the varnish. His vision blurred at the edges, stars bursting behind his eyelids. Laughter swelled louder, echoing off the rafters.   “Diaper boy! Look at him!”   Danny loomed, grinning viciously as he stood over Paul, voice loud and vicious, playing to the small crowd like a bully on a stage.   “What’s the matter, Goldie-Hawk? Can’t even keep your pants dry like a big boy? No wonder Amber’s still texting you — but— what if we all went and told her? Would she still be texting you then, would she feel sorry for the little piss-baby who still shits himself every time someone looks at him wrong. Fucking diaper-wearing loser!”   Something inside Paul snapped. Not pride. Not ego. Something older. Something primal roared to life.   Paul launched himself forward.   He tackled Danny square in the chest, driving him backward with every ounce of rage and fear and humiliation he’d been carrying for months. Their bodies collided with a meaty THUMP, Danny’s back slamming into Paul’s chest as they crashed into the painted key. Sneakers scraped wildly across the floor, palms slapping hardwood. Paul mounted him before Danny could react.   The punches came wild.   Right — his knuckles smashed into Danny’s cheekbone with a wet SMACK, skin splitting under the impact, the jolt traveling up Paul’s arm like electricity. Left — connecting with the temple, the sound a dull CRACK that made Danny’s head jerk sideways, blood already welling from a small cut. Right again — smashing against shoulder with a meaty thud, the force vibrating through Paul’s fist and into his wrist. Danny’s arms flailed, trying to guard, but Paul was a storm — fists flying with raw, desperate fury. Each punch carried the echo of laughter, the snap of elastic, the flash of cameras. Sweat flew from Paul’s hair with every swing. Two of his knuckles split open, warm blood slicking his fingers, the pain sharp and bright. Danny bucked hard, rolling them. Paul’s back slammed into the floor — WHAM — pain detonating  with Danny throwing a solid right, snapping Paul’s cheek back. Danny, scabbling back to his feet, took a moment before....... Danny’s foot came down. The first kick landed square in Paul’s ribs. Sharp. Hot. Like a branding iron pressed against bone. Pain exploded outward in white-hot spikes, stealing Paul’s breath in a choked gasp. The second kick stole his breath completely — a brutal boot to the same spot, driving the air from his lungs in a violent whoosh. His vision tunneled black at the edges. The third kick made something crack inside him — not loud, but wrong. A deep, sickening pop deep in his side, like a dry branch snapping underfoot. The pain was immediate and nauseating, radiating through his torso like lightning. The fourth kick sent pain radiating down his side — a searing line of fire that made his left leg buckle. The fifth kick folded him in half. Paul coughed violently, and the taste of iron flooded his mouth — thick, metallic, warm. Blood. A thin but steady trickle escaped the corner of his lips, running down his chin in a slow, warm line, staining his neck and soaking into the collar of his jersey in dark, spreading patches that grew with every ragged breath. The coppery scent filled his nostrils, mixing with the smell of sweat and polished wood. He tried to breathe. Air wouldn’t come. His lungs spasmed uselessly, each attempt sending fresh agony through the cracked ribs. Danny stood over him, breathing hard, eyes wild with victory, still taunting loud enough for everyone to hear. “Stay down, you fucking baby! Go home to mommy and — Oh wait — you can’t go home to mommy, can you?”   Danny leaned down, hawked a thick glob of blood and snot, and spat it directly onto the back of Paul’s neck, the warm, sticky mess sliding down his skin.   “Because she’s fucking dead! Right? She probably killed herself after giving birth to you because she failed to get your dad a better son than the piss-stained retard they ended up with!”   For half a second, Paul saw it clearly: He loses here. He loses everything here. But adrenaline is a cruel and generous mistress all at once.   It flooded Paul’s veins like liquid fire, burning away the pain for one blinding moment. His cracked ribs screamed, but his body moved anyway — raw, animal, unstoppable. He scrambled up off the hardwood, blood dripping from his split lip and the fresh gash on his cheek, smearing across his chin and soaking the collar of his jersey in dark, wet patches. His left hand trembled violently, but he didn’t care.   He lunged.   His fingers hooked the back of Danny’s shirt and yanked with everything he had left. Danny’s body jerked backward, feet slipping on the polished floor. Paul drove forward, shoulder-first, slamming Danny hard into the stack of folded metal chairs against the baseline.   The impact was chaos. CLANG—CRASH—SCRAPE—   Chairs exploded outward like broken teeth, metal screeching across hardwood, folding frames clattering and bouncing in every direction. Danny’s shoulder hit first with a sickening THUD, the force rattling through both of them. Paul felt the jolt in his own cracked ribs like a fresh knife twist, but he held on, teeth bared, blood running down his chin in warm rivulets.   Danny stumbled up, dazed, blood trickling from his nose, eyes wild with fury and didn’t see it—a right hook  — connecting under Danny’s jaw with a sickening SNAP, the impact jolting Paul’s entire arm, knuckles grinding against bone so hard he felt the vibration in his teeth. This came from somewhere deeper than rage — a straight, ugly, desperate right that connected under Danny’s jaw with a wet, cracking POP.   Danny’s dropped. Paul dropped with him.   The two of them crashed to the hardwood together in a tangled heap of limbs and blood — Danny hitting first with a heavy, boneless THUD, namely on his ass, before falling to his side, Paul collapsing half on top of him, their bodies sliding several feet across the polished floor from the momentum. Paul’s cracked ribs ground together on impact, sending a fresh white-hot blade of agony through his side. His head bounced once against the wood, the cut on his face smearing a long red streak across the varnish.   For a long, terrible second, neither of them moved.   Then Paul pushed himself up — not to his feet, but at least to one knee. His body swayed violently, vision pulsing black at the edges. Every breath felt like knives twisting between his ribs. Two of his knuckles were split open and raw, blood dripping from his fists onto the floor in slow, heavy drops.   Danny lay motionless a few feet away, groaning softly but able to at least roll onto his back.   The gym was dead silent.     One of the other players — Tyler, a tall, quiet senior with a buzz cut and a letterman jacket draped over the bleachers — finally moved. He jogged down from the stands, sneakers echoing in the stillness, and crouched beside Danny. Without a word, Tyler hooked his arms under Danny’s shoulders and dragged him across the floor to the far wall, the sound of Danny’s heels scraping the hardwood the only noise. Tyler grabbed a water bottle from his bag, soaked a clean towel, and began gently mopping the drying blood from Danny’s split lip and swollen cheek. The red streaks smeared across the white towel like watercolor.   Paul’s eyes lifted. Marcus had finally stepped onto the court.   He looked effortlessly collegiate —lean but solid from years of weight room discipline, his dark curls cropped close and neat in that perfect, just-out-of-bed way that took twenty minutes in the mirror. His smile was quick and certain, the kind yearbook photographers adored and girls whispered about in hallways. Today he wore a fitted navy polo with the collar popped just so, expensive dark joggers that hugged his athletic frame and a sleek silver watch that caught the fluorescent light every time he moved. He was the picture of the all-American jock who knew exactly how good he looked — mature, self-obsessed, untouchable. Marcus was holding back a fit of laughter, the corners of his mouth twitching as Paul limped toward him instead of the exit. The mix of anger, rage, humiliation, loss, and adrenaline still spiking through Paul’s veins wouldn’t let him walk away. Not yet.   Marcus’s smirk faltered the moment their eyes locked. Paul wasn’t looking away. He wasn’t shrinking.   He was staring straight at him — blood on his face, breathing ragged — but his gaze was steady, almost unnervingly calm. For the first time, Marcus didn’t see the pathetic “fuck boy” he’d always written Paul off as. He saw a glimmer of something else: someone more serious, someone wrestling with real pain and refusing to give in to fear. The thought flickered across Marcus’s mind — Maybe I should get him to the nurse — before he shoved it down.   Paul closed the distance, each step a labored effort. His ribs screamed with every inhale, the cut on his cheek stinging as fresh blood trickled down. He leaned in close to Marcus’s left ear so only he could hear, voice ragged but pushing through the pain.   “I know it was probably you… you who told your boy to do this to me.”   Marcus’s sly grin flashed for half a second — the mask of the guy who always won — before he feigned innocence, shrugging with exaggerated confusion.   “You’re right, Paul. I did tell Danny to humiliate you on the court if he got the chance in a game of pick-up between you two. Seems you ended up embarrassing him after all, although…”   Paul cut him off before he could finish.   His voice was unsettlingly calm — nothing like the raw rage he’d just unleashed on Danny. It was quiet, measured, the tone of someone who had already accepted something painful and final, like standing at a grave he’d dug himself.   “Marcus… just shut the fuck up and listen, alright?”   The words landed heavy in the silent gym. Marcus’s smirk faded.   Paul continued, each sentence carrying the weight of finality, the kind of sadness that comes when you bury something you once loved with all your heart.   “This thing between us… it’s over as of today. What I’m saying is you won. You got the girl of my dreams because you were more mature than I was. You took your shot and you won, so… congrats.”   Tears welled in Paul’s eyes, hot and sudden. He didn’t wipe them away. They spilled over, cutting clean tracks through the blood on his cheek. His voice cracked, thick with the ache of letting go of a fantasy he’d carried for years — Amber had never been his, not really, except in the quiet corners of his mind where he’d built entire futures around her smile.   “But let me give you an early wedding gift. A piece of adult advice.”   Paul swallowed hard, the words tasting like goodbye.   "You’re poisoning her, Marcus. With all this cruelty. You’re infecting her, turning her into a monster she’s eventually going to regret. And when she finally sees it — when she wakes up one day and realizes what you’ve made her become — she’s going to erase you. She’ll leave you for somebody who doesn’t take her for granted the way I did… and the way you’re doing now. Somebody who won’t poison her.”   Paul’s voice broke completely on the last words, fresh tears falling freely now. The pain in his chest wasn’t just from the cracked ribs anymore — it was the raw, honest grief of finally releasing the version of Amber he’d built in his head, the version that had kept him going through so many hard days. He had loved her in the only way he knew how at the time — quietly, hopelessly — and now he was choosing to protect her anyway, even after she’d hurt him, even after she’d chosen someone else.   “Have a great life, Marcus. I hope you listen, I hope you make her happy beyond her wildest dreams every single second you're with her. But I won’t hold my breath for an RSVP.”   Paul stepped back, tears still falling, but his eyes never left Marcus’s. There was no anger left in them now — only a deep, exhausted sadness and a strange, quiet strength.   Then he slowly turned his back on him.   His breathing was still ragged, each inhale a knife between his ribs. He leaned down — half his body folding with the pain — and picked up his backpack from the floor. The strap felt heavy on his shoulder as he straightened, wincing, and began to limp toward the exit.   Behind him, Marcus stood frozen.   “Paul…” he whispered.   Then louder.   “Paul.”   The name echoed once, sharp and almost urgent, but Paul didn’t hear it. The heavy gym door swung shut behind him with a final, metallic clang. Marcus shook his head, jaw tight, the smirk long gone. He turned and walked over to Danny. Tyler was already there, helping him to his feet. Together, they half-carried, half-walked the dazed bully out the opposite exit, the sound of their footsteps fading down the hallway. The wall clock above the senior lockers read exactly 7:45 a.m. The Friday morning hallway at Bishop Gates Academy buzzed with controlled chaos — lockers slamming, laughter echoing off the tiled floors, the faint scent of fresh coffee from the atrium cart mixing with floor wax and teenage perfume. Students moved in waves, backpacks slung over shoulders, voices rising and falling like a living soundtrack. Amber walked through it all with purpose and poise, her long auburn hair falling in soft waves over one shoulder. She wore a perfectly tailored camel-colored knit sweater that hugged her figure just right, layered over a crisp white collared blouse, paired with high-waisted dark-wash jeans that flared slightly at the ankle and sleek tan ankle boots. A delicate gold chain rested against her collarbone, the small diamond engagement ring from Marcus catching the fluorescent light every time she moved — a subtle but unmistakable tie that pulled the entire fall outfit together. She looked every bit the composed, beautiful eighteen-year-old senior who had it all figured out.   She reached her locker, spun the combination, and pulled the door open. Lila slammed it shut with a gleeful bang, eyes wide with gossip-hungry delight.   “Amber! Have you heard yet?”   Amber blinked, confused. “Heard what?”   “About Paul, obviously.”   Amber’s stomach tightened. “What about Paul?”   Lila didn’t lower her voice.   “He’s a DIAPER BOY.”   The words hit the hallway like a dropped tray.   Amber’s skin crawled. She didn’t react. Didn’t flinch. Didn’t let a single muscle move.   “Wait,” she said carefully. “What are you talking about?”   “Oh my God, Amber,” Lila laughed. “It happened this morning at the gym. Like 7 a.m. Danny crashed his one-on-one.”   Amber’s pulse began to climb.   “They played,” Lila continued breathlessly. “And apparently Paul won. Which— honestly? Against Danny? Didn’t expect that from a freak like him.”   Amber swallowed.   “And then?” she asked.   Lila’s smile widened.   “After he won? Danny pantsed him.”   Amber’s stomach dropped.   “And that’s when they all saw it.”   Saw what.   “A freaking baby diaper,” Lila said, laughing. “Like full-on. Cartoon. Everything.”   Amber felt something cold crawl up her spine.   “We joked he was young but Amber— how did you NOT know your friend failed potty training completely?”   A few students nearby snickered. Amber’s jaw tightened.   “And if that wasn’t bad enough,” Lila went on, “a fight broke out.”   “A fight?” Amber repeated.   “Yeah. Paul slugged him. Or I guess fought back. I heard there was blood and everything. Danny was ruthless but Paul sent him into chairs. Knocked him out.”   Amber’s breathing changed.   “Marcus helped Danny to the nurse’s office,” Lila said, shrugging. “He even tried to help Paul.”   Amber’s head snapped up.   “Wait — Paul isn’t in the nurse’s office?”   “Nope. Nobody knows where he went.” Lila smirked. “Probably went home to mommy for a bottle. What a LOSER.”   Something in Amber snapped. Not romantic loyalty. Not guilt. Not nostalgia. It was something else. The image of Paul she had allowed herself to hold — the helpless one, the spiraling one — collided violently with what she’d seen on stage over this last week.   He had stood under lights and commanded a room. And now they were reducing him to a punchline. Amber closed her locker slowly.   “Grow up, Lila.”   The hallway quieted.   “What?” Lila laughed.   “You’re eighteen,” Amber said sharply. “Act like it.”   Lila blinked, thrown. Amber stepped away. Fast.   She wasn’t thinking about Marcus. She wasn’t thinking about reputation. She was thinking: Find him. Amber rushed past a blur of lockers and startled freshmen, her boots clicking sharply against the tile. She crossed from one building into the open courtyard, the crisp early-December air nipping at her cheeks. A few brave students sat at the picnic tables, steam rising from their coffees and breakfast sandwiches, string lights wrapped around the large palm trees overhead glowing softly even in daylight. The water fountain in the center had been turned off for the season, its basin dry and silent.   She pushed through the next set of doors into the quieter wing closest to the atrium and the daycare center. The hallway grew emptier, the noise of lockers fading behind her. That’s when she heard it — a muffled whine, a choked cry, a low groan of pain.   “Paul?” she called out, voice echoing down the empty corridor.   No answer.   She followed the sounds — a soft sucking noise, then another sharp groan and a swear word muttered under someone’s breath.   She rounded the corner and found him.   Paul was huddled in the same shadowed alcove she used to spy on him from, the one right beside the blue door that led to the medical annex. He was partially hidden by the dim lighting, but the state of him was horrifying. He leaned heavily to one side, his right hand wrapped protectively around the left side of his chest. Two knuckles on his left hand were split open and still oozing blood. The side of his face bore a fresh, angry cut, his jaw was swelling fast, and his right eye was already puffing shut. Blood trickled steadily from the corner of his mouth, staining his chin and the front of his white Jaguars jersey in dark, spreading patches. A dark wet spot had bloomed across the front of his shorts. And worst of all — clenched between his teeth — was his pacifier. He was sucking on it rhythmically, desperately, trying to self-soothe even as tears streamed down his battered face.   “Paul…” Amber said softly.   He startled, eyes flying wide, the pacifier still in his mouth. Fresh tears spilled over as he whispered her name around the silicone nipple, muffled and broken.   “Amber…”   She crossed the distance in two strides and sank down beside him on the cold floor.   “Oh my god, Paul… what happened? Are you — I mean, how bad are you hurt? All this blood… we need to get you help.” Paul’s face crumpled. He pulled the pacifier out with a wet pop, sobbing openly now. “No… no, they ALL saw, Amber. They all saw me. I’m done. I can’t… I can never come back again. Go away. I know you don’t care. Nobody cares about the diaper boy now.”   He was spiraling hard. Amber’s eyes flicked to his wrist tracker — the light flickering between orange and red, the numbers climbing fast. She knew she had to act. Putting their broken friendship aside, Amber wrapped one arm firmly around Paul’s shoulders.   “Come on. We’re getting you help.”   Paul released more muffled cries and groans as she helped him stand. It quickly became obvious he couldn’t put weight on his right side. Holding both backpacks in one arm, she supported him as they limped the few feet to the blue door. Paul’s voice was slow and painful, every word forced out between shallow breaths.   “In… my backpack… laminated blue keycard… swipe it.”   Amber fished it out, swiped the card, and pushed the heavy door open. Paul threw himself onto the exam table in the center of the small medical room, curling in on himself. Amber shut the door behind them and looked at him, heart breaking.   “Paul… what do we do? How do we get you help?”   He pointed weakly toward the intercom on the wall. “Press the red button… ask for Whitney.”   Amber pressed it. “Hi, yes… um, this is Amber. It’s Paul — Paul Goldhawk. He needs some help in here fast. He’s bleeding. He’s in pain.”   Whitney didn’t respond over the speaker. Less than two minutes later the black door connecting the annex to the daycare center opened and Whitney rushed in. She took one look at Paul — hunched over on the exam table, battered face, blood, the dark wet spot on his shorts, the pacifier now clutched in his trembling hand — and her expression shifted from professional calm to deep, genuine concern.   “Oh my goodness…” Whitney exclaimed, glancing at Amber. “What happened?”   Amber gave the short version she’d heard. Whitney listened, a tinge of panic layered beneath her overwhelming professionalism, care, and concern.   She approached Paul gently. “Where does it hurt, sweetheart? What happened and by who?”   Paul groaned, voice breaking. “I got in a fight… when he… he pantsed me and everybody saw what I was wearing under my shorts. I can’t… I can’t breathe.”   Whitney watched the spiral begin and immediately shifted into soothing, professional mode. “Okay, slow down for me. Lie down slowly.”   She cradled Paul’s head as he lowered himself onto the padded exam table. That’s when she saw the full extent — the blood, the wet spot, the struggle for breath. Her eyes flicked to the tracker still flashing orange-red.   Whitney’s voice shifted — calm, clinical.   “Amber, can you stay one minute?”   “Yes.”   Whitney grabbed the phone.   “This is Whitney in Annex Two. I have a student with a 405 code — altercation with potential rib fracture. Notify the VP and campus security. We need EMS at the blue door by the annex — closest entry for paramedics. Yes. I’ll ride with him.” She turned to Amber. “Can you help me sit him up for just a second?”   Together, they eased Paul upright. Whitney listened to his lungs with her stethoscope, then gently probed his side.   “These ribs are probably broken,” she said quietly. “We need to get him to the hospital.”   Paul was sobbing more openly now, mumbling through the tears. “What other people are gonna say… how I’ll be out of the play because of the fight…”   Amber stepped in, almost like a big sister. Remembering what her own mother did when Paul had bad days, she approached softly and helped uncurl his fingers from the pacifier. She brought it to his lips gently.   “Paul… you were so brave when you told me how this helps you. You can use it right now to calm down. Otherwise things will only get worse.”   He fought it for half a second, then nodded, eyes pleading. He took the pacifier, sucking hard, the rhythmic motion slowly easing the worst of the spiral.   Whitney thanked Amber for the help. “I’ve got him now. You can head back to class — he’s in good hands.”   Amber hesitated at the door, she looked back once. Paul’s eyes were half-closed, pacifier in place, chest rising unevenly.then slipped out. Whitney worked quickly but tenderly — removing Paul’s jersey top and shorts, placing both in a large plastic bag and sealing it with his name and hers. She removed the wet Step-In, fluffed out a fresh diaper, slid it under him, and applied cream and powder with practiced, respectful care. She pulled a pair of his jeans from the backpack but left them unbuttoned.   Paul’s tracker finally dropped to yellow. He removed the pacifier, calmer now.   “Shirt?” he asked hoarsely.   Whitney shook her head gently. “No, sweetheart. When the ambulance gets here they’re going to need to check those ribs and your breathing. It doesn’t make sense to put it back on.”   Paul’s voice was small. “Will you… stay with me?”   Whitney smiled softly. “Yes. I’m not going anywhere.”   Outside, a small crowd of students had gathered near the blue door by the daycare center as the ambulance lights flashed red and white against the palm trees. Amber stood among them, arms wrapped around herself, watching as the paramedics wheeled Paul out on the stretcher. Whitney walked beside it, phone pressed to her ear.   “Yes, Mrs. Goldhawk… there’s been a fight. Paul probably has at least one broken rib. He’ll be admitted to Wolfson Children’s Hospital. Yes, I’ve also contacted Dr. Rowe — she’ll meet us all there.”   The ambulance doors closed. The siren wailed once as it pulled away.   And Amber stood there in the crisp December morning, the engagement ring on her gold chain suddenly feeling very heavy against her chest, wondering how everything had gone so wrong so fast and how could any of it every be repaired.
    • Hello Little Sherri  Yes there ist still hope and modern medicine does what it can and i know he is in the best hands. And we are fully commited to walk this way on his side. Together.  THANKS for your comment.  Thanks for your comment too I appreciate it a lot.    Thanks you all, for writing me in this dark moments.  Annie
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