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    • I'm 67 and couldn't care less who knows. My whole family knows I wear at night to sleep and sometimes when I go out running errands.
    • Diapboy2004,lookit up they are REAL.I LOOKED THEM UP.Saw something about the a few years ago.HAVE ANY OF YOU LOOKED THEM UP IN GOOGLE?wHY DONT YOU LOOK UP ARE THE JAPAHESE GROUP MU2 REAL?BUT THIER NAME MUST BE IN CAPS.I WAS WRONG ABOUT WHEN SAW A WRIGHT UP ABOUT THEM.THEY JUST CAMEOUT ABOUT A YEAR AGO.
    • You seem to be such a beautifully open, pure and genuine person ❤️ 
    • They're pretty commonplace with developmentally disabled kids who scratch themselves when they're anxious or much more... Let's just say my wife, a former service coordinator with a state department of health, could tell you a hair-curler about a severely autistic kid who she recommended one of those back-locking onesies to the parents because the mittens had failed to keep him out of the back of his diaper for funsies like drawing on the wall... 
    • @butters11 Happy Birthday🎂, enjoy your day with a late gift of the next part of story!!!!   Chapter One Hundred & Thirteen: Part Four Martina stepped halfway out onto the porch, closing the door gently behind her so the rich Cuban aromas wouldn’t carry too far into the afternoon air. She rubbed her arms, voice thick with worry and her natural Spanglish slipping through. “Sí, mija… he’s hurt. Bad. There was a fight at the gym this morning. Some boy — Danny from the basketball team — pulled his pants down right in front of everyone. They saw, Harley. They saw what he wears under his shorts. Paul fought back, but he got hurt real bad — broken ribs, blood, everything. Lilly just left for Wolfson. He’s there now.” Harley’s bubbly mask cracked. Her eyes widened, and for a split second the playful sparkle vanished, replaced by something darker, sharper, possessive. Inside her head the thoughts roared to life. My special little one… hurt. Exposed. Laughed at. No. No one gets to do that to what’s mine. She had real feelings for Paul — deep, aching, genuine ones. She loved the way his eyes lit up when he talked about snowboarding down a fresh slope or rehearsing lines from To Kill a Mockingbird. She loved the shy little smile he gave her when she brought him a new plushie. She loved how he trusted her with his most vulnerable side. Those feelings were almost as strong as her overwhelming need to baby him — to wrap him up, protect him, keep him safe and small and hers. But that love had twisted into something fiercer, something that felt like ownership. Martina’s phone pinged in her hand. She glanced down, and her worried expression softened into a genuine smile. “It’s from Lilly,” she said quickly, turning the screen toward Harley with eager hope. “Look — he’s resting. He’s getting better already, he looks… he looking like our Paul, again” Harley’s breath caught. Dark thoughts flooded first, sharp and possessive. Look at my little guy… all hurt and broken. Whoever did this to him… I swear I’ll teach them a lesson they’ll never forget. Nobody touches what’s mine. Nobody makes my baby bleed. Then her eyes locked on the yellow giraffe. Pure, unbridled joy bloomed across her face like sunlight breaking through storm clouds. A single tear slipped free and traced down her cheek as a soft, radiant smile spread. The Long Knight. She brought it. My gift. He’s holding onto it. I thought it would take him weeks — maybe months — to accept something so openly little from me. But Lilly must have packed it. He let it stay right there beside him. He’s already associating the comfort I gave him as something he needs. My comfort. My love. He’s keeping it close even now. The joy was so sudden and overwhelming that Harley’s chest tightened with it, the tear of pure happiness catching on her smile as she stared at the photo. Martina noticed the rapid shift in Harley’s expression — the brief, far-away hunger followed by that strange, almost possessive softness — and it unsettled her. “Lilly said he’ll be over at Wolfson until Sunday. He’ll be home for his birthday. I’m going tonight before eight. Did you want to come with me?” Harley’s face lit up with genuine excitement, clapping her hands. “Yes! Tell Paul I’ll visit soon — I’ve got something super special for his BIG day. Eighteen is huge!” Martina managed a small smile despite the worry still twisting in her stomach. “Okay. I’ll tell him. Gracias, Harley… for caring about him like this.” Harley surged forward on her skates and wrapped Martina in a quick, tight hug. “Thank you so much for being here for him. You’re so amazing. Paul is lucky to have you in his life.” Martina hugged back, still a little confused but warmed by the sincerity. “Gracias… thank you, Harley.” Harley pulled away, spun on her rollerblades with a cheerful wave, and sped off down the driveway, pink braids bouncing behind her. Martina stood in the doorway, watching until the girl disappeared around the corner. She locked the door behind her and murmured to herself in a mix of Spanish and English, “Esa chica… she cares, pero hay algo más. Something that feels… off.” Harley rolled down the quiet suburban street, wheels humming against the pavement, pink ponytails bouncing. The selfie Lilly had sent burned behind her eyes. Seeing Paul hurt had flipped a switch deep inside her. I’ve already won his little side — that sweet, needy, gurgling baby boy who melts when I coo at him and tape him up nice and tight. But the big side… that’s the one I still have to win over to completely have him. I can’t rush this. I have to slow down, learn more about him — what makes his heart race when he’s big, maybe at the next pool party I’ll “accidentally” bend over just enough in my bright yellow thong so he gets a peek and can’t stop staring. Or I’ll wear that tight school-girl outfit he secretly loves — short plaid skirt, knee socks, the whole innocent-but-not thing — and watch his cheeks turn red. Hell, maybe I’ll even let him catch me wearing one of his own diapers under my shorts one day… just to show him how sexy it can be when it’s me taking care of him. A devilish little grin tugged at the corner of her mouth as the fantasies played out, heat rising in her chest.A shiver ran through her, almost anticipatory. But her deepest feelings didn’t center around seducing a man but instead caring for his most innocent and infantile self, even if he didn’t know that’s where he truly belonged. Harley’s heart just knew it.  Her mind drifted back to a recent afternoon in Paul’s room, mixed with how she wants things to be…   She had him on the changing table, shirt lifted, bare chest exposed. Her fingers danced lightly across his skin, tickling gently until he gurgled and squirmed with that perfect little laugh. “Aww, who’s my wittle squirmy wormy? Yes you are! Yes you are! Look at those tiny toes kicking! Such a silly baby!” The scent of baby powder filled the air as she shook the canister, the soft white cloud settling over his skin like fresh snow. She smoothed it in with slow, loving strokes, the silky texture gliding under her palms. “Feel that soft powdery tushy? All nice and protected for Mommy Harley. Such a good baby boy!” Then the fresh diaper — the adorable panda train one she had picked out just for him. The waistband was a cheerful teal-and-white stripe with a little blue tab at the top. The front and back were covered in bright, happy polka dots in purple, orange, teal, and green. Right in the center rode a big, smiling panda in an orange train car, waving one paw while holding a stalk of bamboo. Behind him chugged a whole colorful train: a blue koala in the next car, a purple bear waving, and a tiny purple cart at the end. The leg cuffs had cute ruffled gathers, and the whole thing crinkled satisfyingly as she lifted his bottom and slid it underneath. Harley leaned in close like a protective mommy, one hand gently pressing on his tummy to keep him from squirming too much. “Shhh, shhh, easy does it, my wittle wiggle-bug! Mommy’s got you. Look at the choo-choo train! Chugga-chugga-choo-choo! Here comes the panda! Toot-toot!” She made silly train-whistle faces, puffing her cheeks and blowing soft “toot-toot” sounds right against his belly, making him giggle and kick even more. She fastened the tapes with deliberate care — rip… rip… rip… rip — pulling each one snug so the panda smiled perfectly across his front. “All taped up nice and tight! Who’s Harley’s most beautiful bouncing baby boy in the whole wide world? Hmm? Who is it?” Paul had screamed with pure toddler joy, lisping through the pacifier in full baby babble. “Mee! Mee! Pawy is Hawey baby boy! Choo-choo! Pandy!” “Yes, yes, YES he is!” she had squealed back, leaning down to blow a loud raspberry on his tummy. “Paul will be Harley’s baby forever and ever! My perfect wittle baby boy in his big thick diapee! Yes he is! Yes he is!” The memory snapped away still rolling down the street with fresh determination blazing in her eyes. The tear sliding down Harley’s cheek fell silently. But before it reached her jaw, the scene shifted. Another tear. Another place. Another man. Thousands of miles away. Inside a dimly lit production trailer on a closed studio lot, Bryan Goldhawk stared at the same photo on his phone. The trailer smelled of stale coffee and instant ramen, the only light coming from the glowing screen and the faint glow of the city through the small window. He was still in his filming clothes — a rumpled button-down and slacks — hair messy from hours under the lights. The shoot had wrapped for the night, but sleep was the last thing on his mind. A single tear slipped down Bryan’s cheek and landed on the screen, right over Paul’s swollen eye. The FaceTime call connected. Lilly’s face appeared first, tired but determined, holding the phone so Bryan could see Paul clearly. Paul’s eyes fluttered open at the sound of the ring, still hazy from the sedation. A thin nasal cannula rested under his nose now, the oxygen tube allowing him to speak clearly.  Paul sat upright in the hospital bed, shoulders slumped forward under the pale yellow blanket patterned with little lemon slices. The sports mobile above him turned slowly, casting gentle shadows across the pastel walls — footballs, basketballs, soccer balls drifting in quiet circles like tiny planets suspended over a fragile universe. Bryan felt the breath leave his lungs. Paul’s right eye was swollen nearly shut but on the mend, maybe t least better than this morning. The bruise had deepened into a dark bloom across his cheekbone, and small butterfly stitches ran across a cut on his face. His lower lip was still faintly swollen, the skin cracked where dried blood had been cleaned away. But it wasn’t the injuries that broke Bryan’s heart. It was the way Paul was trying to smile. Trying. “Hey… buddy.” His voice cracked immediately. Lilly sat beside the bed, one arm wrapped gently around Paul’s shoulders, holding the phone so Bryan could see him clearly. Paul’s hands were still encased in the soft hospital mitts — awkward white cotton barriers resting uselessly against the blanket. “Hi, Dad.” The words were quiet. Fragile. But real. Bryan forced himself to breathe slowly. He couldn't fall apart right now. Not when Paul needed him steady. “Tell me what happened.” Not a demand. Not an accusation. Just a father asking his son for the truth. Paul swallowed. His throat felt dry. He hadn’t realized until that moment how badly he needed to talk to his dad. So he told him. Everything. Well almost..... Bryan listened with quiet focus. He leaned closer to the screen as Paul described the shots — the drives, the steals, the final shot that won the game. “You beat him?” Bryan asked softly. Paul shrugged. “I guess.” Bryan smiled through wet eyes. “That’s my boy.” But then the story darkened. Paul hesitated, the memories flashing again — the yank, the laughter, the pain. His voice came out shaky at first. “Danny… he pantsed me after the game… everyone saw the diaper… they laughed… I hit him… he hit me back… ribs… everything hurts…” Bryan nodded slowly. “You defended yourself.” Paul hesitated. “I guess.” A long pause followed. Then the spiral began. “What if they blame me?” Paul whispered. His eyes drifted away from the screen. “What if campus security thinks I started it? What if they expel me? What if they take away my credits?” His chest rose and fell faster now. “What about the play?” The words cracked. “What about the play, Dad?” Lilly felt his shoulders tense under her arm. The tracker on Paul’s wrist pulsed faintly between yellow and orange. Bryan saw it. His voice softened immediately, the way it used to when Paul was small and scared of thunder. “Hey… hey. Look at me, son.” Paul lifted his eyes slowly, the nasal cannula brushing against his upper lip with every shaky breath. The thin plastic tube made it easier to speak, but nothing could ease the storm building behind his ribs. “You’re not in trouble right now,” Bryan said calmly. His voice carried the quiet steadiness of someone who had learned to anchor storms. “You told me the truth. You defended yourself. And we’ll deal with the rest together.” Paul tried to slow his breathing. But the panic had already taken root. “I… I have to talk to campus security this afternoon,” he mumbled, voice cracking. “What if they blame me? What if they say I started it? They could expel me, Dad. Take away my credits. What about the play? I’m supposed to be a headliner… I can’t… I can’t lose that too…” His words tumbled faster, each one laced with fresh terror. The tracker flashed brighter orange. Paul’s good hand clenched the sheet, knuckles white. Inside his head the spiral spun wildly: They’ll call me the problem kid. The diaper boy who started a fight. No college will want me. The play will recast me. I’ll be the guy everyone whispers about in the halls forever. I ruined everything. I always ruin everything. Bryan’s heart twisted so hard he had to grip the edge of the trailer table in Tokyo. He could see the fear in his son’s eyes — the same fear he had carried for years after Rachel died. But this time he refused to let silence win. “Paul… breathe with me for a second, okay? In… and out. That’s it. You’re not alone in this. I’m right here, and we’re going to figure it out step by step. Did anyone from the school already contact you? Do you know what they’re asking?” Paul shook his head, still fighting the rising tide. “No… but I just know they’re gonna blame me. Everyone saw the diaper. They’re already calling me a freak. How am I supposed to walk back into that school? How am I supposed to be… normal again?” The tracker edged closer to red. Paul’s breathing grew shallow and desperate again, the nasal cannula fogging slightly with each panicked exhale. Bryan watched his son unravel and made a choice. He spoke gently, giving Paul the one thing he had never been given at that age — agency. “Paul… do you want Lilly to give you your pacifier for a minute? Just to help you breathe and calm down? It’s okay if you do. It’s your choice.” Paul shook his head immediately, stubborn pride flaring through the pain. “No… I’m okay. I can do this. I don’t need it.” But he wasn’t okay. His chest heaved faster. The orange light pulsed brighter. The fear kept pouring out in broken fragments. “They’re gonna expel me… I’ll lose everything… the play… my future… I don’t even know if I have one anymore…” Bryan’s voice stayed steady, but his own eyes glistened. He asked again, softer this time, still giving Paul the power. “Buddy… would it help? Just for a minute. No shame in it. You’re still my son whether you use it or not.” Paul hesitated, but he was exhausted, hurting, terrified — quietly won. He gave the tiniest nod. Lilly reached for the pacifier clipped to the hospital gown and slipped it gently between Paul’s lips. He sucked on it hard for several long seconds. His shoulders loosened slowly. His breathing steadied. The tension left his jaw. The tracker eased back toward yellow. After a minute the pacifier slipped loose and dangled against the hospital gown, still wet from his mouth. “Better?” Bryan asked, his voice thick with relief and love. Paul nodded, exhausted but calmer. “A little.” Bryan smiled softly through the screen, the guilt and love warring in his chest. “Good. I’m proud of you for letting yourself have that. We’re going to get through this. All of it.” Lilly watched the exchange quietly. Something in her chest tightened — not jealousy, but a profound, aching tenderness. Here she was, thousands of miles away from Bryan, yet she could feel the fragile bridge forming between father and son across an ocean and a screen. The bond between them had been strained for so long, cracked by grief and distance and Bryan’s stubborn silence after Rachel died. But right now, in this sterile hospital room with its pastel walls and lemon-dotted blanket, that bond felt real again. Fragile. Precious. Like something that could still be saved if they were brave enough to reach for it. For a moment none of them spoke. The only sounds were the soft beep of the monitor and the gentle whoosh of oxygen through Paul’s nasal cannula. Paul’s mitted hands rested uselessly on the blanket. His bruised face was still swollen, but his eyes — clear for the first time since the sedation — held something raw and searching.   Then Paul said something that surprised even himself.   “I don’t want to talk to Mindy.”   Bryan tilted his head slightly on the screen, the Tokyo trailer lights casting soft shadows across his tired face. “Why not?”   Paul stared at the lemon-pattern blanket, tracing one of the tiny yellow slices with his gaze as if it could anchor him. His voice grew quieter, almost childlike in its honesty.   “I don’t like talking about my feelings.”   Bryan waited, patient, the way he wished he had been years ago.   Paul swallowed hard. The words came out like they had been locked away for a lifetime.   “Because you didn’t.”   Bryan blinked, caught off guard. “What do you mean?”   Paul’s voice trembled now, but he kept going, the truth spilling out like blood from an old wound that had never properly healed.   “When Mom died… every time I tried to talk about her you got sad. So I stopped asking. I talked to Martina a little… but not for that long.”   He stared at his hands — the useless white mittens resting against the blanket like soft restraints on his heart.   “I thought real men cried in private… where nobody could see them. I wanted to be like you, Dad.”     Silence filled the hospital room.   Bryan closed his eyes for a long moment. When he opened them again, they were red-rimmed and glistening. The guilt he had carried for years — the guilt of thinking silence was strength — crashed over him like a wave.   “I was wrong.”   Paul looked up slowly, surprised by the raw honesty in his father’s voice. Bryan’s voice was steady but heavy, the kind of honesty that only comes after years of carrying something alone.   “I didn’t cry in front of you because I thought I was protecting you. I thought if I fell apart, you would too.”   He rubbed his face with one hand, the motion weary and unguarded.   “But after your mom died… I cried all the time. Every night after you went to bed. I talked to a friend who helped me through it. I should’ve seen a therapist too. But I was stubborn. And I didn’t realize you were learning from how I handled things.”   Paul stared at him, the words landing like gentle rain on parched ground. Bryan leaned closer to the camera, eyes locked on his son’s.   “I should’ve shown you it was okay to talk about pain. That crying didn’t make you weak. That asking for help didn’t make you less of a man.”   A pause.   “That’s on me.”   Paul felt something strange loosen in his chest. Not relief exactly — it was too soon for that — but a tiny crack in the wall he had built around his heart. For the first time in years, he didn’t feel like he had to carry the silence alone.   Lilly watched them both, tears slipping silently down her own cheeks. She had only been in full mama bear mode for three short months, but in this moment she understood something profound: healing wasn’t just about her holding Paul. It was about Bryan learning to hold him too — and Paul learning he was allowed to be held.   For a moment none of them spoke. The only sounds were the soft beep of the monitor and the gentle whoosh of oxygen through Paul’s nasal cannula.  Bryan’s voice came through the screen, gentle but sure.   “You’re becoming a man,” he said softly.   The words landed with quiet weight, not as a lecture, but as an acknowledgment. “That means you get to decide what kind of man you want to be.”   Paul nodded slowly, the simple truth of it sinking in. For the first time in week’s, he felt seen — not as the broken little boy, not as the kid who wet himself under stress, but as someone standing on the edge of adulthood with choices still ahead of him.   Then his voice dropped, barely above a whisper. “I’m scared of turning eighteen.”   Bryan frowned, concern deepening the lines around his eyes. “Why?”   Paul stared at the lemon-pattern blanket, tracing one of the tiny yellow slices with his gaze as if it could anchor him. His voice grew quieter, almost childlike in its honesty.   “I don’t see a future.”   Bryan’s heart cracked open right there on the screen. The guilt he had carried for years — the guilt of being away so much, of letting silence become the language between them — rose up like a wave. He could see the fear in his son’s eyes, the same fear he had carried after Rachel died. But this time he refused to let silence win.   “You absolutely have a future,” he said firmly, leaning closer to the camera so Paul could see every ounce of conviction in his face. “You have a big, bright future, Paul. And when I get home, we’ve got a lot to talk about. But here’s one thing I can promise right now.”   Paul waited, the nasal cannula brushing his upper lip with every shaky breath.   “In the new year… after the play… we can enroll you in an online media class through FIU.”   Paul blinked, surprise cutting through the fog of pain.   “There’s no prerequisites,” Bryan continued, voice steady and warm. “You don’t even need your high school diploma yet. And it counts for real college credit.”   Something shifted inside Paul. A spark. The big side of him — the part that still dreamed of directing, of telling stories, of being more than the kid who needed diapers when stress hit — lifted its head for the first time since the gym.   “So… like a real class?” he asked, voice small but hopeful.   Bryan nodded, a small smile breaking through. “A real challenge. Something that’s yours. Something that says you’re still moving forward.”   Paul smiled faintly — the first real smile since the fight. For the first time since the gym that morning, his big side surfaced again, pushing back against the fear.   “I could do that.”   “I know you could,” Bryan said, pride and love thick in his voice. “You’re stronger than you think, Paul.”   A knock interrupted them. The nurse stepped inside quietly. She was middle-aged, calm, and kind-eyed — the sort of presence that made hospital rooms feel less frightening.   “Hey there,” she said gently.   Paul blinked as she approached.   “I think we can give your hands back now.”   Paul looked down. Only then realizing how much the mitts had been bothering him — how they had made him feel small and trapped. The nurse carefully untied the soft fabric closures. One mitten slid free. Then the other. Paul slowly flexed his fingers. The sensation startled him. His hands trembled slightly as circulation returned — tingling, prickling warmth flooding back through his palms. He spread his fingers. Closed them. Opened them again. For the first time all day, his hands felt like his again. Something about that simple freedom nearly made him cry.   “There we go,” the nurse said gently.   She glanced toward Lilly. “There’s a member of Bishop Gates Academy security waiting outside.”   Paul nodded slowly, the brief spark of hope still flickering in his chest.   “I’m ready.”   Bryan’s voice softened through the screen.   “I love you so much, son.”   Paul looked at the screen, eyes glistening.   “I love you too, Dad.”   “We’ll talk tomorrow,” Bryan said. “Just remember one thing.”   Paul waited.   “Tell the truth.”   The call ended.   Lilly leaned forward and kissed Paul gently on the forehead, lingering there, her lips warm against his skin. She whispered, so only he could hear, “Do you need a change, baby?”   Paul blushed deeply but shook his head. “Yes… but it can wait.”   Lilly smiled softly. Then looked toward the door.   “I want to talk to your dad for a minute outside.”   Paul nodded. Flexing his fingers one more time. Feeling them. Feeling himself. The final bell had rung nearly twenty minutes ago, but Bishop Gates Academy still sounded like a rumor factory with marble floors. Voices rolled through the senior hallway in waves — locker doors slamming, sneakers squeaking, laughter cracking too sharp to be kind. The story had already splintered into a dozen versions of itself. In one, Paul had started it. In another, Danny had “just been joking.” In a third, Paul had apparently shown up to school “already wearing one,” like humiliation had been some kind of premeditated act. Every retelling shaved away the human cost and added another cheap line. That was how private schools like Bishop Gates survived their own cruelty. Not by denying it. By accessorizing it. The late-afternoon light through the clerestory windows had gone pale and thin, flattening the crimson-and-gold banners that lined the corridor outside the theater wing. The building looked expensive even when it was ugly. Especially when it was ugly.   Marcus came down the hall with his backpack slung over one shoulder, moving with that same easy, practiced confidence people mistook for moral stability. Navy quarter-zip. White undershirt. Dark slacks that looked too expensive for high school. Hair still perfect in that casually curated way that had always made girls think he was effortless and boys think he was inevitable.   He slowed as he reached Amber’s locker.   Empty.   His jaw flexed once.   He’d expected her there. Arms folded. Eyes red maybe. Angry, definitely. But there. Waiting. Giving him a chance to manage this before it slipped too far out of his control.   Instead he found only the open hallway and the echo of conversations dying as he arrived.   “Your girl’s not here.”   Lila swept in from the adjacent row of lockers like gossip had physically pulled her across the floor. Her tone was bright with that awful kind of curiosity that was really delight in a prettier dress.   Marcus glanced at her. “Yeah?”   “She’s still in the theater,” Lila said, lowering her voice only enough to make it feel more intimate, not kinder. “Sitting and sulking on stage. Probably mourning her dead friendship with the diaper boy.”   She laughed at her own line before continuing.   “What a freak, Marcus. Seriously — have you ever smelled any of Paul’s pissy Pampers on Amber’s clothes after rehearsals? Yuck.”   Marcus gave a short scoff, just enough to keep the rhythm of the hallway intact.   “Gross, dude. I’d totally puke.”   A few nearby students laughed.   The sound hit the air like static.   Lila leaned closer, thrilled now that she had an audience.   “I hope Danny’s alright and all. I mean, I heard little baby boy broke his nose.”   Marcus shook his head, almost amused despite himself.   “No, Danny’s nose is just fine.” He looked past her for a second, replaying the blood, the chair, the sound of tooth against hardwood. “His front tooth, though? He swallowed half of it when Paul decked him. Little bastard isn’t that bad of a fighter.”   Lila blinked, impressed despite her cruelty.   “Sure, Marcus. I’m sure when he waddles down these halls again everybody’s gonna be real scared when droppy-poopy-pampers comes back.”   That got another burst of laughter.   And for one ugly, private second — one he would never admit out loud — Marcus savored it.   Not the diaper part. Not really. But the destruction.   The proof that Paul had finally been knocked out of whatever fragile little heroic comeback he’d been building. The proof that he could still be reduced. Still be made small.   It tasted bitter and satisfying at the same time.   And then, because he knew exactly how much of himself the hallway was always seeing, Marcus straightened and smoothed the look off his face.   “We should all support whatever decision Paul makes,” he said, tone easy, reasonable, all-American. “Danny wasn’t wrong for playing a game with him. He was wrong for pantsing him and putting something private on blast like that.”   The hallway quieted just enough to hear the shift.   Lila tilted her head, reconsidering him with fresh admiration.   “Amber’s lucky,” she said. “You’ve got a really good head on your shoulders.”   Marcus smiled the right smile. The one that hid more than it revealed.   Then he turned toward the theater. Because if Amber was where Lila said she was, there was no putting this off anymore.   The late-afternoon light had gone pale and thin, but Marcus walked through it like he owned every shadow. The banners overhead rippled slightly as he passed, gold threads catching the dying sun like tiny warning flags no one ever bothered to read. He could feel the eyes on him — the way they always were — and he adjusted his posture just enough to give them exactly what they wanted: the calm, collected king who had everything under control.   Inside, though, the satisfaction still hummed low and dark.   Paul finally got what was coming to him.   The thought tasted like victory, even if he’d never say it out loud. He had spent three years watching that kid hover on the edge of Amber’s life — always the quiet friend, always the safe one, always the one who made her laugh in ways Marcus never quite could. Now the mask was gone. Everyone had seen the truth. And Marcus had won.   He pushed open the theater doors. The theater was mostly dark when Marcus stepped inside.   Not black. Not abandoned.   Just dim in that eerie between-state where a room built for spectacle had been stripped back to structure. The ghost light wasn’t on yet, but the low house lights beneath the stage lip cast a faint amber wash across the first few rows. The seats rose in shadows beyond that, velvet swallowing detail, armrests catching the occasional gleam like silent witnesses waiting for the next act.   Amber sat on the edge of the stage.   Not center.   A little off to stage right, where Scout usually waited before crossing into one of Declan’s transitions.   She was still wearing the same clothes from that morning.   The bloodstains were dry now.   Brown-red smears along the sleeve of her cream blouse where she had helped Paul walk. Darkened streaks across the front of her camel sweater where she had held him up. A thumbprint near her knee. Another across the cuff. She hadn’t changed. Hadn’t cleaned up. Hadn’t performed recovery for anyone. The fabric still carried the faint metallic scent of blood mixed with medical antiseptic.   Her shoulders were rounded forward, not in weakness, but in thought so heavy it had changed the architecture of her body. The girl who had once moved through these halls like she owned every spotlight now looked smaller, quieter, as if the weight of what she had seen today had pressed her down into the wood.   She was murmuring something softly to herself. Marcus couldn’t make out the words. Only the shape of them — the low, broken rhythm of someone trying to hold a friendship together that had just been torn apart in public.   Her fingers kept turning the engagement ring where it hung from its gold chain, rolling it back and forth with her thumb like she was trying to warm it back into meaning. The diamond caught the faint stage light and flashed once, cold and sharp, before disappearing again into the shadow of her palm.   Marcus stopped in the aisle. Watched her for one second too long. And quietly muttered to himself, “Here goes everything.”   He walked down the aisle and climbed the steps to the stage without speaking. Amber didn’t look at him right away. That unsettled him more than if she’d shouted. When she finally did turn her head, the look she gave him wasn’t explosive. It was worse.   Focused. Measured. Investigative.   Like she had already built the board in her mind and was now waiting to see where he placed himself on it. Marcus sat beside her, leaving space between them.   Not enough to feel cold. Enough to feel careful. For a moment neither of them spoke. The theater breathed around them. A loose cable creaked somewhere backstage. The HVAC kicked softly overhead. The room smelled faintly of dust, sweat, old curtains, and makeup powder baked into wood. The air tasted like every secret this stage had ever held — and every one it was about to expose.   Marcus felt the silence press against his ribs. He had walked in here expecting anger, tears, maybe even a fight he could smooth over with the right words and the right smile. Instead Amber sat perfectly still, turning that ring like it was the only thing keeping her from falling apart, and he realized for the first time that he might not be able to fix this with charm alone.   He swallowed once, then spoke, voice low and careful.   “Amber…”   She didn’t answer right away. Her thumb kept turning the ring. Once. Twice. Three times.   Then, very quietly, she said, “You told Danny to do it.”   It wasn’t a question.   Marcus felt the floor tilt beneath him.   He opened his mouth, the practiced denial already forming, but the look in her eyes stopped him cold. She wasn’t guessing. She knew.   “What were you doing there?” Amber asked.   No greeting. No setup. Just the question.   Marcus stared out at the empty house. The rows of velvet seats stretched into darkness like silent judges waiting for his defense. The stage lights above them cast long, theatrical shadows across the wooden floorboards, turning the moment into something that felt scripted — except this time he wasn’t sure he knew his lines.   “I heard he was there.”   Amber’s voice didn’t rise. It didn’t need to. “That’s not an answer.”   He nodded once, jaw tight. The easy confidence he wore like armor in the hallway felt suddenly heavy here, under the weight of her gaze.   “I knew Danny wanted to mess with him.”   Amber’s jaw tightened, the small muscle jumping beneath her skin. “Mess with him how?”   Marcus swallowed. The answer mattered. The order mattered more. He could feel the careful calculation happening behind his eyes — how much to give her, how much to hold back, how to frame it so he still looked like the good guy in this story.   “He’s been pissed for weeks and concerned for me,” Marcus said, voice low and measured. “About the team. About the play. About you. About US breaking up because of him.”   Amber looked at him now. Sharply. Her eyes, usually warm and quick to laugh during rehearsals, had gone cold and dissecting.   “What did you tell him?”   Marcus exhaled slowly through his nose. The truth tasted bitter on his tongue, but he knew he couldn’t lie his way out of this one. Not completely.   “I told him Paul needed humbling.”   The words landed hard between them, heavy as stage weights.   Amber’s face barely moved, but something in her eyes did. Not shock. Confirmation. Like she had already suspected it and was only now hearing the confirmation out loud. Marcus saw it and felt a flicker of unease — the first real crack in the version of himself he’d been selling all day. So he kept going, digging the hole a little deeper in the hope he could control how deep it went.   “I told him if Paul wanted to act like he could just walk back into everything — the stage, your attention, all of it — then maybe somebody should remind him where he stood.”   Amber stared at him.   There it is, Marcus thought. There’s the version of me he hears in his own head when he’s alone.   “And then?” she asked, voice dangerously quiet.   Marcus rubbed a hand over his mouth, buying time. The theater felt smaller now, the air thicker.   “I didn’t tell him to pants Paul.”   Amber looked away.   That hurt more than if she’d yelled.   “I didn’t,” Marcus said again, more firmly this time, as if repeating it could make it cleaner. “And I didn’t tell him to beat the shit out of him either.”   “But you didn’t stop it.”   No point trying to dodge that.   “No.”   Her fingers tightened around the ring on the chain, knuckles whitening. Marcus watched that small movement — watched her hold the symbol of him like evidence in a trial he was already losing.   “I respected you too much to lie to you,” he said quietly.   Amber gave a humorless laugh, short and bitter.   “Is that what this is?”   “I’m telling you enough of the truth that you don’t have to drag the rest out of me.”   She turned fully toward him then, and he saw how tired she was. Not sleepy. Spirit-tired. The kind of tired that comes after witnessing someone break open in front of you and realizing your own hands aren’t clean.   “Do you have any idea what that looked like?” she asked.   Marcus didn’t answer.   So she did it for him.   Her voice was quiet, but every word cut like a stage direction he couldn’t escape.   “He was on the floor, Marcus. Bleeding. Laughing turned into screaming and then into silence. And the whole time I kept thinking… this is what we did to him. This is what you helped make happen.”   Marcus felt the words land like punches he couldn’t block. For the first time all day, the easy smile he’d been wearing since the gym felt like it was cracking at the edges.   “You don’t get to call it some ‘thing,’” Amber snapped, voice cracking with a raw anger he had never heard from her before. “It’s not a diaper thing, Marcus. Paul is trying to overcome a serious medical condition.”   Her words cut through the dim theater air like a spotlight sweeping across the stage. The faint amber wash from the house lights caught the dried bloodstains on her sleeve, turning them a darker, accusing red. She sat straighter now, shoulders no longer rounded in defeat but squared with a fury that had been building since the moment she saw Paul on that stretcher.   “Take away the popularity contest,” she continued, voice trembling but gaining strength. “Take away the rich-kid private school bullshit. Take away all of that. And what’s left?”   She answered her own question before he could even open his mouth, the words landing with the weight of a final curtain.   “A man fighting to stay healthy.”   The word man landed harder than any insult could have. It echoed off the empty seats, off the velvet armrests, off the wooden stage boards that had held so many performances. Marcus looked down at his own hands, suddenly unable to meet her eyes. He hated how much it echoed inside him — because Paul had said something like that too. Not exactly the same words. But close enough that the memory rose up sharp and unwelcome: blood on Paul’s face, tears cutting clean tracks through it, voice ragged and calm at the same time.   "You’re poisoning her, Marcus."   Marcus swallowed hard. The taste in his mouth was bitter — the aftertaste of every casual joke he had made, every whispered instruction to Danny, every time he had told himself it was just harmless fun.   Amber saw the shift.   Saw the ghost of another conversation moving behind his eyes. “What did he say to you?” she asked quietly.   Marcus looked up.   For a second he thought about lying. Not a full lie. Just omission.   The kind he was good at — the kind that had kept him on top for years. But she knew him too well. Better than anyone. That had always been the problem. Amber didn’t fall for polish when she actually looked. So he told her. “After the fight,” he said slowly, voice low and careful, “he came up to me. Barely standing. And he said… he said I was poisoning you.” Amber went still.   Marcus forced himself to continue, the confession tasting like ash.   “He said one day you’d realize what I’d made you into and you’d leave me for somebody who didn’t take you for granted.”     The silence after that was brutal. Amber’s eyes filled.   Not because she thought Paul was right. Not because she thought Marcus was wrong.   Because both of them had managed to strike something true from opposite sides of the same wound.   “I hate that I can even hear him saying that,” she whispered, the words barely audible above the soft creak of the stage. Marcus laughed once — bitter, small, the sound dying almost before it left his lips.   “Yeah.”   She looked back out over the stage. Over the seats. Over the room where she and Paul had spent the week rebuilding enough trust to stand in light together again. The faint amber glow from the house lights caught the tears on her lashes, turning them into tiny, trembling stars   Inside her chest something twisted painfully. Because she loved Marcus. That had never been in question. He was magnetic in a way Paul never had been. Marcus filled rooms the moment he entered them — not with noise, but with presence. He took space like it belonged to him. He made the world feel bigger, brighter, more alive. When Marcus laughed, heads turned. When Marcus spoke, people listened. He was the kind of boy who walked into any room and instantly became the center of it, effortless and inevitable.   But the image that kept returning to her mind wasn’t Marcus.   It was Paul.   Curled in the hallway alcove outside the blue door. Trying to breathe through the pain and the panic. Pacifier in his mouth because his body couldn’t calm down on its own. Blood on his chin. The tracker flashing orange. The way he had looked at her — broken, ashamed, but still reaching for her like she was the only safe thing left in the world. And the two versions of her life — Marcus and Paul — suddenly felt like they belonged to different moral universes.   The silence after that felt heavier than anything else they’d said.   Amber stared at the stage floor, the worn wooden boards that had held so many of her and Paul’s late-night rehearsals. The faint amber wash from the house lights caught the dried bloodstains on her sleeve and turned them a darker, accusing shade. She could still feel the weight of Paul’s body leaning on her as she helped him to the annex. She could still hear the soft sucking sound of the pacifier and the desperate little whimpers he tried to swallow.   The worst part was realizing she wasn’t innocent either.   “I bullied him too.”   Marcus looked at her.   Amber’s voice dropped, barely above a whisper, but the theater carried every word like it was amplified.   “When I first found out about his condition…”   She shook her head, the memory burning behind her eyes so hot she had to look away.   “I acted like the biggest jerk imaginable.”   She didn’t describe it. She didn’t need to.   The memory burned hot enough without words — the way she had pulled away, the cold jokes she had made to protect her own image, the distance she had put between them the moment things got complicated. The way she had chosen popularity and Marcus over the boy who had once stayed up all night running lines with her.   “I thought I was protecting myself from something embarrassing,” she said quietly, voice thick with shame.   “But really?”   She looked up, eyes meeting his with a clarity that felt almost brutal.   “I was protecting my reputation.”   Marcus didn’t respond.   Because that part he understood perfectly.   The silence stretched between them again, heavier now, filled with the weight of two people who had both contributed to the same wound and were only now seeing how deep it ran. He looked at her and asked the question that had been building in him since he saw she wasn’t at her locker.     “Are we done?” Amber’s breath caught.     Tears slipped down her face now, quiet and tired, tracing clean paths through the faint remnants of dried blood on her cheek. She didn’t wipe them away. She let them fall, as if the theater itself deserved to witness this moment.   “No.” It was hiesent, full of potenieal regret and a desperation to keep what they built.    Marcus closed his eyes for half a second, the relief so sudden and sharp it almost hurt. Not triumphant. Not earned. Just real — the kind of relief that comes when you realize the thing you feared losing might still be salvageable.   But Amber kept going, voice firmer now, steadier.   “No,” she repeated. “But we both need to do better.”   The relief that hit him was immediate and ugly in how deep it ran. He had spent the entire day playing the part of the untouchable king, and now, sitting on this empty stage with the girl he had almost lost, he felt the crown slip. He crossed the space between them and opened his arms carefully, like he wasn’t sure he deserved contact.   Amber stepped into him. The embrace was not romantic at first. It was exhausted.   Two eighteen-year-olds trying to hold together something larger than either of them had the maturity for yet. Marcus’s arms closed around her slowly, one hand resting between her shoulder blades, the other cradling the back of her head. Amber let herself sink into him, forehead pressed against his chest, the faint scent of his cologne mixing with the theater dust and the lingering metallic trace of Paul’s blood still on her sweater.   Marcus pressed his face into her hair, breathing her in like she was the only steady thing left in his world. Amber let herself stay there just long enough to stop shaking, the tension in her shoulders finally easing as the weight of the day began to settle.   When they pulled apart, she wiped under her eyes and looked away, embarrassed by the emotion that had spilled out so freely.   “Can you drive me home?” she asked, voice small.   Marcus nodded immediately. “Yeah. Of course.”   Amber twisted the ring again on the chain, the diamond catching the faint stage light like a tiny, uncertain star.   “My mom’s still at the hospital with Paul. I think I want to visit him tonight or tomarrow.”   Marcus gave a small, crooked smile that tried and failed to be light. “I guess that’s by invitation only.” Amber looked at him.   “Yeah.” A beat. “Unfortunately I don’t think Paul’s up to seeing a jerk visit him.”   The word hit exactly the way she intended — not cruel, but honest. Marcus smiled without humor, the kind of smile that acknowledged the truth rather than fought it.   “Fair.”   Then, after a pause, more quietly: “Maybe I should start being less of a jerk.”   Amber looked directly into his eyes. The softness in her voice made it land harder than any shout could have.   “Not maybe, Marcus.”   She reached out and took his hand, squeezing once.   “You either do or you do not. And I know you can be better.”   He exhaled slowly, shaking his head with a small, self-deprecating laugh.   “Ugh. You and your Jedi stuff.”   For the first time all day, Amber laughed.   Real laughter. Small, cracked, but real. It echoed softly through the empty theater, bouncing off the velvet seats and the wooden stage like the first note of a new scene.   “You keep that secret to yourself.”   Marcus smirked faintly. “Who else knows?”   Amber’s expression changed. The laughter left, replaced by something almost reverent.   “My friend...I mean he's in the hospital,” she said softly, “was the first.”   Marcus looked at her for a long moment. Then nodded. Because there was nothing clever left to say. The hallway outside Paul’s room at Wolfson Children’s Hospital carried the quiet, respectful hush of a place built for healing. Soft overhead lighting cast a gentle glow along the pastel walls, and the faint scent of antiseptic mixed with the distant aroma of cafeteria coffee. A few nurses moved silently in the distance, their footsteps muffled by rubber soles. The only sound near Paul’s door was the low, steady beep of monitors drifting from inside.   The door opened with a soft click.   A campus security guard stepped out — a solid, official-looking man in his early forties, broad-shouldered and in excellent shape. He wore the crisp navy uniform of Bishop Gates Academy security, complete with a polished badge, pressed slacks, and a leather belt that held his radio and a small notebook. His salt-and-pepper hair was neatly trimmed, but it was his face that carried the unmistakable 1970s detective vibe: a thick, well-groomed mustache that curved slightly at the ends, strong jaw, and thoughtful eyes that had clearly seen their share of teenage drama. His name tag read “Officer Rodgers.”   Lilly had been waiting just outside, arms crossed tightly over her chest, pacing a short path in front of the door. The moment the guard emerged, she straightened, her mama-bear instincts flaring even through her exhaustion.   Officer Rodgers gave her a respectful nod. “Mrs. Goldhawk?”   “Lilly,” she corrected gently, extending her hand. “Thank you for speaking with him.”   “Pleasure to meet you, ma’am.” His handshake was firm but kind. “I’m Officer Rodgers from Bishop Gates security.”   Lilly didn’t waste time with pleasantries. Her voice was direct, laced with the raw worry she had carried since Whitney’s call. “What do you think of my son’s story?”   Officer Rodgers took a deep breath, his shoulders rising and falling once as he chose his words carefully. He looked her straight in the eye — no sugar-coating, no corporate spin.   “I don’t know your son, Mrs. Goldhawk. And honestly? That’s a good thing. From what I’ve learned about Paul today, everything signals a great kid caught up in a really ugly first-time fight.”   Lilly’s shoulders loosened just a fraction.   The guard continued, his tone measured and discreet. “I won’t pretend I don’t know about his medical condition. The school has the basics on file for situations like this. And I’ve seen enough high-school cruelty to know how vicious kids can be when they smell vulnerability. From the four students who witnessed the whole thing, and from Paul’s own account, this reads as self-defense in my book. He didn’t start it. He reacted when someone crossed a line no one should ever cross.”   Lilly exhaled a long, shaky breath of relief, the kind that came from a mother who had been bracing for the worst. Officer Rodgers’s voice stayed even. “If there’s any sort of punishment, the harshest one will likely come down on Danny. It wouldn’t surprise me if expulsion is on the table for that boy. Paul lucked out in one way — at the time of the fight he was still seventeen, and the Bishop Gates handbook is far more lenient on first-time offenders under eighteen. I can’t speak on next steps; the Vice Principal is in charge of that. But everything from the initial report looks good for your boy.”   Lilly nodded, tears of relief pricking at the corners of her eyes. “Thank you. That means more than you know.”   Before she could say more, a weak but urgent voice called from inside the room.   “Mom… I could use some help.”   Officer Rodgers offered a small, understanding smile. “Sounds like you’re needed. Have a good night, Mrs. Goldhawk. Go to him. That boy’s had a long enough day.”   Lilly thanked him again and slipped back into the room, closing the door softly behind her. Lilly’s heart lurched the moment she saw him.   Paul was trying to stand.   He had swung his legs over the side of the bed, one hand gripping the raised rail for support, the other clutching the back of his hospital gown to keep it closed. His face was tight with effort and pain, the nasal cannula still in place, the bruises on his cheek and around his eye stark under the soft lighting. His bare feet hovered just above the floor, toes curling as he fought to keep himself upright.   “Paul!” Lilly closed the door quickly and rushed to his side. “What are you doing out of bed? The doctor said especially bed rest is a must.”   Paul sighed, the sound pained and embarrassed. He held the back of the gown tighter, the faint crinkle of the thick Safari diaper underneath unmistakable. “I… I need the bathroom.”   Lilly understood immediately. She took his hand, steadying him as they took a few careful steps. But only a few feet from the bed, Paul’s face twisted. A sudden cramp hit him hard. His body betrayed him before he could stop it.   “Lilly… I—I—I’m so sorry… I couldn’t hold it.”   The humiliation hit him like a fresh punch. His knees buckled slightly as the warmth spread inside the already-used diaper, the squish unmistakable. Fresh tears sprang to his eyes — not from pain this time, but from raw embarrassment. Lilly saw it all — the shame, the defeat, the way his shoulders curled inward like he wanted to disappear. She didn’t hesitate. She wrapped her arms around him right there in the middle of the room, rubbing slow, soothing circles on his back.   “It’s alright,” she whispered, voice full of love and zero judgment. “It’s alright, baby. I’ve got you.”   Paul sobbed once, the sound small and broken. “I didn’t want to poop my pants… it’s too gross.”   Lilly kept holding him, rocking him gently side to side the way she had learned these past three months. She pressed her cheek to his hair, breathing him in — the faint hospital scent mixed with the boy she had come to love so fiercely. “I get it. Nobody wants that. But think of the day you had, Paul — all the stress, the pain, the drugs. Something like this was bound to happen. That’s why the doctors said stay in bed. You’re not the only patient — young or old — who’s had this happen to them.”   Paul’s voice was thick with tears. “I know… I just didn’t want a stranger to change me.”   Lilly pulled back just enough to look at him, her eyes soft and full of maternal warmth. She lightly cooed, the tone gentle and familiar without being overly babyish — Paul wasn’t regressed right now, but he still needed comfort. “Do you want me to do it?”   Paul looked down, cheeks burning, but he nodded quietly. “Yes… only if it’s not too gross.”   Lilly smiled, brushing a strand of hair from his forehead with her thumb. “Honey, nothing’s too gross for the people you love.”   She moved quickly but tenderly. She brought the diaper bag over from the chair, unzipped it, and laid out the changing mat on the bed. Paul lowered himself carefully, wincing as he felt the squish beneath him. The Safari diaper with its familiar jungle print was already heavy and warm.   Lilly kept her voice soft and reassuring as she worked, the occasional gentle coo slipping in to keep him calm. “There we go… nice and easy, sweetheart. You’re doing so well.” She peeled the tapes open with practiced care, the familiar rustle filling the quiet room. The booster pad had done its job, but the mess was still there.   She started with warm wipes, moving slowly and thoroughly, cleaning every trace with gentle strokes. “Just breathe for me… that’s it.” Once he was clean, she reached for the lotion, squeezing a generous amount into her palm and warming it between her hands before smoothing it over his skin in long, soothing circles. The light scent of the lotion mixed with the hospital air, turning the moment into something almost ritualistic — care, not shame.   Next came the rash cream. She applied it carefully, her touch feather-light over any reddened areas, making sure every inch was protected. “This will keep you from getting sore, okay? We’re taking care of you.”   Finally, she shook out ample amounts of powder — a soft, generous cloud that filled the air with its familiar, comforting scent. She patted it in gently, the fine white dust settling over his skin and into the fresh Safari diaper she slid underneath him. The powder made the padding feel even softer, almost cloud-like, as she fastened the tapes snugly and added the green Safari-themed plastic pants over top, snapping them into place with a quiet, reassuring crinkle.   “There,” she said softly, patting the front gently. “All clean and dry again. My brave boy.”   Paul let out a long, shaky breath, the embarrassment fading into quiet gratitude. Lilly helped him back into bed, tucking the lemon-dotted blanket around him once more.The soft knock at the door came just as the last rays of sunset painted the pastel walls in warm peach and rose. Lilly looked up from her chair beside Paul’s bed, still gently stroking his hair, when the door opened and Martina stepped inside. Martina’s arms were already open. Lilly rose immediately, crossing the room in three quick steps. The two women embraced tightly — Lilly taking Martina’s heavy bag from her shoulder without a word, setting it aside so the older woman could move freely.   Martina pulled back just enough to cup Lilly’s face, then turned toward the bed. The moment she saw Paul, her eyes filled. She crossed to him in a rush of love, leaning down to press soft, repeated kisses to his forehead, her voice spilling over in that warm Spanish/English rhythm that always felt like home.   “Mi principito… ay, mi niño… what happened to you? How much pain are you in, mijo? Why would my little prince need to fight like that, huh? Tell me, tell Tía Martina…”   Paul’s eyes glistened as he looked up at her. Martina’s kisses and the familiar scent of her perfume — jasmine and warm spices — wrapped around him like a blanket. For a moment the hospital room felt smaller, safer, more like family.   Martina pulled over Paul’s feeding tray table with one hand, the other already reaching into her bag. She set a medium-sized container on the tray, then a small cloth bag of crusty bread still warm from the oven. The lid came off and the rich, savory aroma of her ropa vieja filled the room — tender shredded beef simmered with peppers, onions, tomatoes, and cumin, the kind of dish that tasted like love and memory.   The three of them ate together in the quiet evening light. Martina fed Paul small, careful bites when his hands trembled, Lilly snapped photos on her phone and sent them straight to Bryan with soft captions. The meal wasn’t fancy, but it was everything — warmth, family, normalcy in the middle of chaos. Paul’s little side peeked through in the way he leaned into the comfort, while his big side felt the safety of being cared for without shame.   Later, as the curtains were being drawn by a nurse, Paul came out of the bathroom, toothbrush in hand. He stopped short. A roll-away bed had been set up in the corner of the room — neatly made with fresh linens, a pillow, and a folded blanket.   He looked at Lilly, confused.   She took his hand gently and guided him back into bed as the nurse slid up the left side of the bed rails. “I asked Terry if it would be alright for me to spend the night,” Lilly said softly. “He agreed — at least for one night — that you’d have somebody familiar to watch you. Unless you don’t need me to stay.”   Paul couldn’t help but blush and smile. “No… I’d like it very much.”   The nurse handed Paul a paper cup with his pain meds for the night and a paper cup of water. As Lilly was fluffing her pillow on the roll-away bed, the door opened gently again and there was Nurse Marigold, all smiles and sing-song.   “Special Delivery!”   Lilly smiled as she met her at the door, taking from her Paul’s Safari-themed sippy cup. Marigold wished Paul a good nighty-nighty. He blushed and said thank you as Lilly approached the bed and sat down in the large comfy chair next to it. She presented Paul’s sippy cup — the hospital had warmed up the milk and added the vanilla Lilly thought he could use a pick-me-up.   He happily took the cup, his little side aching for some relief after the tough day.   Lilly stroked Paul’s hair and asked gently, “Do you want to regress this evening? I can’t rock you, but I could read or…”   Paul shook his head no, then asked in a small voice, “Sing?”   Lilly looked confused. “Do you have a lullaby?”   Paul shook his head again. “No… the song you played that time coming back from the pier. I liked it. It helped me after a hard day… and today was the hardest and most painful yet.”   Lilly smiled, watching Paul drink slowly from the sippy cup. “Alright… but if you hear dogs barking outside, then you know how bad my singing voice is.”   With the sippy cup still in his mouth, Paul showed his little side, talking around the spout in soft, babyish lisps. “No Mommy… I fink you hab a pwetty boice. Sing fow me.”   Lilly’s heart melted completely. She leaned in as close as the bed rails allowed, her voice rising in a soothing, loving tone that wrapped around the room like a warm blanket. She even had the instermental play on her phone, desperatly hoping it masked her voice     “Lay your weary head down… Dry your tired eyes… Lay your weary head down… And rockabye…” Paul leaned as much as the cold metal bars would let him, straining toward her with every ounce of trust left in his battered body. The bruises along his cheek and the fresh stitches pulled tight, but he didn’t care. Lilly extended her arm over the rail, her hand gentle as a whisper, fingertips carefully caressing his cheek—avoiding every tender spot, every purple shadow, every tiny stitch. Her thumb traced the line of his jaw with infinite care, as if she could wipe away every cruel word and every cruel hand that had touched him today. In that quiet touch Paul felt something shift deep inside: his big side that had fought so hard today finally exhaled. He wasn’t alone. He was safe. Lilly’s love was the one thing the world couldn’t take. “I sing, ‘Everything’s gonna be alright… Rockabye, rockabye… Everything’s gonna be alright… Rockabye, rockabye, rockabye…’” The melody floated out of the hospital room and into the night. "Well, she still lives with her mom outside the city…" The scene cut like a television montage—smooth, emotional, wordless music carrying the story forward. Martina stepped into her apartment, the familiar scent of Cuban spices still clinging to her coat. Amber and Marcus waited on the couch, faces tight with worry. Marcus stood first, Amber’s hand on his back, giving him the courage. His voice cracked with real regret as he began, “I was a part of the reason why Paul got hurt today—” but the sound faded into silence as we lingered on their faces, the weight of guilt and love hanging heavy between them. No words were needed now; the truth was already sinking in. "Down that street about a half a mile… And all her friends tell her she’s so pretty… But she’d be a whole lot prettier if she’d smile once in a while…" Lilly’s free hand slipped under Paul’s chin, gently tickling the soft spot there. A small, genuine smile broke across his bruised face despite everything—the pain, the shame, the fear of tomorrow. For the first time since the gym, his eyes crinkled with real joy, and Lilly felt her own heart lighten. She had spent months learning how to mother him through the hard days; tonight she was finally seeing the reward in that tiny smile. "But you know, even her smile, it looks just like a frown… She’s seen her share of devils in this angel town…"   The frame cut to a dark storage locker. The metal door rattled upward with a metallic groan, light spilling in like a secret being revealed. Harley stepped inside, her bubble-gum pink pigtails swinging, a dangerous little smile playing on her lips as the shadows swallowed her. "And everything’s gonna be alright… Rockabye, rockabye… Everything’s gonna be alright… Why don’t you rockabye, rockabye, rockabye…"   Inside the locker, Harley sat slowly in an old desk chair, the wheels creaking. She stared at something just out of frame, her expression softening into pure, possessive adoration. One hand reached out, fingers gently stroking the top of a teddy bear’s head in slow, loving circles. The smile on her face was soft now—almost tender—but the glint in her eyes promised she would never let anyone hurt her special boy again.   "I told her, I said, “I ain’t so sure about this place… It’s hard to play a gig in this town and keep a straight face… It seems like everybody’s got a plan… It’s kinda like Nashville with a tan…” Bryan walked through a driving rainstorm on a private tarmac, collar turned up, suitcase in hand. The pilot waved him toward the waiting jet, shouting over the storm, “Are you sure you want to take off in this?” Bryan stopped, rain streaming down his face, and answered with quiet steel, “Are you telling me a little rain would stand in your way of seeing your son in the hospital?” The pilot smiled despite the weather. “No sir… but can we wait thirty minutes for a better window?” Bryan nodded once. “Yes. Absolutely. I need to get home safe—not just home.” The camera lingered on his determined eyes as thunder rolled overhead. "But everything’s gonna be alright… Rockabye, rockabye… Everything’s gonna be alright… Why don’t you rockabye, hey, rockabye… Everything’s gonna be alright…"   Back in the hospital room, Paul finished the last sip of warm vanilla milk. A tiny bit dribbled down his chin, and he didn’t even care. His little side had finally found the relief it had been aching for all day. "Rockabye, rockabye, hey… Everything’s gonna be alright… Why don’t you rockabye, rockabye…" We return and finally see what Harley had been staring at her smile widening with quiet, dangerous certainty. "Lay your weary head down… Dry your tired eyes… Lay your weary head down… And rockabye… Why don’t you rockabye… Say, bye-bye… Bye-bye…" Lilly gently eased the empty sippy cup from Paul’s lips. She reached into the diaper bag and slid his pacifier between them instead. He accepted it without protest, sucking softly as his eyes fluttered. She leaned down, pressing the gentlest kiss to his bruised cheek, then another to his forehead, her lips lingering just long enough for him to feel every ounce of love she carried.   “Sweetest dreams, my brave boy,” she cooed, voice barely above a whisper. “Mommy’s right here.” She turned off the light. The room fell into soft purple-and-gold nightlight glow as Lilly settled into the chair beside him, still humming the last notes of the lullaby. Paul’s breathing evened out, the pacifier bobbing gently, and for the first time all day the weight on his chest felt just a little lighter.
  • Mommy Maggie.jpg

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