"Yeah," he said, and while he'd practiced what he was going to say beforehand, he found his mind a complete blank.
"You there?"
"Yeah," he repeated. "Hi, Maureen."
Hank heard a low, murmured question in the background, and Maureen's muffled reply including the words "Hank," "I have no idea," and "I hope not."
"Everything's all right," he said, loud enough to cut through whatever conversation was happening.
"I could say 'what, I can't call up my ex-wife for a friendly chat?' but we both know I haven't been in the habit of it," Hank said. "I get it, it's probably weird to hear from me out of the blue."
"It's a little weird."
"All right." Now Hank could hear the faintest hint of...not a smile, perhaps, but maybe something more
Hank closed his eyes. "I took the day off work next Friday. For Cole's birthday." When Maureen didn't respond, he forged ahead. "I wanted to ask
"Oh." It was very quiet, just an exhalation of surprise. "You want to talk. To me."
"I really do," Hank said, "and I--listen, Maureen, some things have changed for me lately."
"I don't know," Maureen said, a little shakily. She'd never been much of a crier, but he could hear the brittleness in her voice.
"Maybe not," Maureen agreed, with a weak laugh.
"Good," Hank said, aiming for as much sincerity as possible. They'd never been good at this shit, talking plainly with each other. Being honest instead of stubbornly trying to nurse their wounds in private. "That's. I'm glad."
"Listen," Hank said, after a handful of seconds had passed. "We're going to go in the afternoon around 3, so that's when to come by or when to steer clear if you don't want to run into me, all right? You don't owe me anything. I understand
"Who's we?"
"Huh?"
"You said 'we' were going to the cemetery. I'm just curious."
"I'm seeing someone," Hank said. "It's pretty serious, and he wants to come along. Feels like the right time to bring him with me."
"I'll think about it. I'm not blowing you off, but I can't decide right now."
"Sure." Hank chuckled. "Shit, I'm just glad you picked up at all when you saw it was me."
"What?"
"I don't know what I thought, but it made me worry about you. Haven't done that in a while."
Hank couldn't quite manage to voice
"This guy you're seeing," Maureen said cautiously, after another stretch
"Listen, I'm just as surprised as you are. But yeah, I am."
"Honestly," Maureen said, "I don't know if I'm more surprised that you're dating again or that you called because you wanted to talk to me, but it sounds like he's been good
"It's mostly Connor," Hank said. "He's like that."
"Maybe I should meet him, then," Maureen said thoughtfully. "I'll let you know, all right?"
"Yeah," Hank said. "I'll let you go, I don't want to keep you from whatever else you got
"Maybe," Maureen said, and this time the smile in her voice sounded genuine. "Thanks for calling, Hank. It was good to hear from you."
"You too," Hank replied, and he was surprised by how much he meant it.
[tbc]
"All right, I think," he said, "although she needed some time to think it over, which
"So I've gathered," said Connor, settling next to Hank on the couch and leaning into him; at the obvious prompt, Hank obligingly wrapped his arm
"I want you there," Hank said firmly. "I'm gonna feel shitty and awkward no matter what, because I'll be at my son's grave."
"I do," Connor said, squeezing his hand again. "Of course I do."
Hank exhaled deeply as his eyes finally stopped prickling with the threat of tears. "And maybe Maureen will come,
"I hope so," Connor said. "I think I'd like to meet her."
"She'll love you, I bet. She thinks you're a good influence on me."
"I don't want to take too much credit," Connor preened, "but I'll accept
"Don't get a big head, hotshot," Hank grumbled, but he lifted Connor's hand to his mouth and gave it a kiss.
"I'll do my best," Connor said. "I'm proud of you for making that call, though; I know it was difficult to reach out when you weren't sure it would be welcome."
"Actually," Connor said, "Annie messaged me while I was out; I have some juicy work gossip to share, if you'd like to hear it."
"Please," Hank said. "You know just what I need, sweetheart."
It still felt terrible, of course, but it felt terrible in a better way, somehow. The pain felt like something he could take into himself and keep safe and find a way to live with, eventually.
Connor was a sweet, supportive presence, of
"You do enough," he said, any time Connor voiced that worry, and he hoped Connor could tell how much
"I am gonna be a mess for the rest of the day, you realize," Hank said, as they drove the final miles to the cemetery. "Even if things with Maureen go well, even if I seem okay while we're there, I know I won't be. Not making
"I do," Connor said. "And I'll be there with you. If you need space tonight, I understand, but if you want--"
"I don't think I'll need space," Hank said. "I won't
"It's important," Connor said. "I'm glad you asked me." He took one of Hank's restless hands in his own.
"He'd like you, I bet," Hank said softly.
"I hope so. I'm sure I
They rode in silence for a few minutes more, until Hank took the final turn into the cemetery. It was still mostly green, even in late September, but a few yellow maples and deep red oak trees stood among the beech trees spread throughout the cemetery.
"Yeah," Hank said, reaching into the back seat for the flowers they'd picked up on the way, "we wanted a place he would have liked to come, you know? Maybe it seems silly, but..."
"I don't think it's silly," Connor said. "You chose a place to
Hank nodded, unsure of how to respond. He'd slowly begun the process of speaking about Cole at all, about
"Maureen said she was showing up earlier, so she could have some time alone," he said, "so she should be
Connor gave him a gentle smile. "I am. Are you?"
"No," Hank said, "but here I go, all the same." He held the bouquet in front of him like a shield, looped Connor's arm through his, and stepped through the gate onto the gravel path.
The bond was still there. She knew things about Cole, about those precious years they'd had together, that no one else did. He didn't
"Hank," Connor said softly, with a gentle bump to his side. "Is that Maureen waving at us?"
"Oh, yep," Hank said, peering at the tall figure ahead. "Sorry, was lost in thought. That'll be her." He waved back. "Huh. She cut her hair."
"Hank! It's good to see you."
"Yeah," Hank said, hoarsely. "You too, Maurie."
"And this is--Connor, right?"
"Just over a year old," Connor said, shifting his stance slightly so that his LED was impossible to ignore, "but age is a complicated concept for us, I suppose."
"Oh," Maureen said, after a startled pause. "I didn't realize."
"No reason you
"There's a story there, I bet," she said, finally.
"Well," Maureen said, a little too cheerfully, "as long as you're both happy." She didn't quite sound skeptical, but it was clear she had a lot of questions. Hank couldn't blame her, he supposed, but
"We are," Connor interjected, looping his arm back through Hank's and giving it a squeeze. "We're very happy." He offered his other hand to
"Oh, don't start with that," she said. "Just 'Maureen' is fine." She angled her head back over her shoulder, where Hank saw the
Hank let out a long, slow exhale. "Yeah," he said, nervously straightening the flowers in his hand where they'd been slightly jostled on the walk from the car. "Let's go see our boy."
He knelt down when he reached the grave,
Hank shook his head and leaned forward, resting his forehead against the stone. He'd never
He felt a hand on his shoulder. Not Connor's hand; smaller and more
"Thank you," he said, finally. "I'm glad you're here."
"So am I," she said. "It's hard, but it's hard when I'm alone, too."
"Yeah."
"I brought Cole something, if that's all right," he said, quietly.
"Of course," Maureen
"I know he liked dogs, like me." Connor opened his hand to reveal an intricately-folded origami corgi. "I thought he might like this."
"Of course he would, sweetheart," Hank said, already starting to cry again.
"Christ, do you remember the ladybug cake?" he asked, turning to Maureen.
"I had nightmares about that damn cake for months," she said. "I still hate ladybugs." She turned to Connor. "He was obsessed
Hank is trying valiantly to stifle his laughter, but he's struggling; something about the tension and heightened emotion
"He threw the ladybugs onto the cake?" Connor asks.
"He threw the whole cup," Hank says. "Just chucked it at the cake. He had terrible aim, the way
"Oh dear," Connor says, but Hank can see him trying not to laugh, too.
"We ate the cake," Maureen said, "but I had to go scrape off all the icing those damn bugs had touched beforehand. It turned out there were
"That was very sweet of him," Connor said, "but I can understand why you wouldn't want ladybugs on his cake."
"He was mad at us for making a fuss about it,"
Once the first
"I have a photo of him with Sumo
"Can you send that to me?" Hank asked. "I have a few, but not that one, I don't think." He held his hand up when Maureen held her phone out so he could look. "I don't think I can right now, but I want
Maureen nodded and look at him thoughtfully. "This is the most you and I have talked about Cole since he died, isn't it?"
Hank sighed. "Yeah, I think so. I didn't feel like I could, for a long time. I'm still getting used to it."
"You don't have to," Hank started, but Connor smiled sadly and leaned in to kiss his cheek.
"I know, but I think it'll be good to give you two a moment." He looked at Maureen. "If that's all right?"
They were quiet for a long moment, as Connor's footsteps faded away down the path. Hank was struck by how odd it felt to be alone with Maureen, when they'd spent nearly a decade together. Things had been slowly unraveling between them
"Thank you," Maureen said, eventually, "for calling. I know we've given each other space here, in the past, but you're
"There's a lot I miss," Hank said. "But yeah. I do."
"What I don't understand," she said,
"I did."
"Well, can you walk me through it?"
Hank scratched the back of his neck. "I don't know what to tell you, Maurie. I was wrong about androids. Hell, I was wrong
"And he fell in love with you."
"Listen, I was just as surprised as you are. And I don't--I'm not trying to be a dick, but if it's
Maureen laughed, the exuberant, braying laugh Hank had loved so much when they'd first gotten to know each other. "Oh my god," she said, when she'd calmed down enough to talk again.
"What have I been telling you? Do you think I'd bring someone here, today of all days, if I didn't love him so much I'd tear off my own arm for him?"
I figured I'd start this update with a "hi this is an ongoing thread" tweet since it's been....a while! I didn't want to abandon this, I just had to take care of other things before I could come back to it. :)
ok let's go:
"Pretty much everything about Connor has been unexpected," Hank said. "I didn't see myself here when I met him, that's for sure." He wasn't sure how much of that
Maybe he and Maureen wouldn't ever be close enough that
"How about you?" he asked, not caring if it was too transparent of an attempt to change the subject. "Are you seeing anyone?"
Maureen raised an eyebrow at him, but shrugged and said, "hell, no. I'm done with all that for good, I think. Do you remember Laurie?"
Hank cast his mind back, trying to place a face with the name. "Uh yeah, she was real short, right? And had that tiny dog, the black one?"
"Of course that's what you'd remember," Maureen said, rolling her eyes.
Hank was startled, for a moment, to hear that Maureen had moved and he hadn't heard about
She snorted. "It's working out so well my sister's convinced we're together but I'm too embarrassed to tell her, and won't believe otherwise no matter what I say. I've just given up correcting her. We're happy and I don't really
"It's good, isn't it?" Hank said. "To feel like the rest of your life is someting to look forward to. Something you can picture at all."
Without *me* was pretty easy for you, Hank thought. It was unfair, he knew; at the end, they'd been no good for each other, and they'd been heading
None of that was worth saying aloud, certainly not then, so Hank just coughed and ran his finger over the trailing vines carved into the stone.
Hank sighed heavily. "I was just trying to join him. Wanted to get the waiting around to die part
"Oh," Maureen said, a soft exhalation of surprise, and when Hank turned to look, her face was pale.
"What, it wasn't obvious?"
"It's not that," she said. "I didn't think you'd admit that's what you were doing."
Hank shrugged. "I feel like shit about it,
"Jesus, Hank," Maureen said. "I didn't expect I'd ever hear that from you."
"A year ago,
"And he's a big part of that, huh?" Maureen angled her head toward the path behind Hank; when he turned, he saw Connor slowly approaching from the northern side of the cemetery. He waved, when he saw them
"He is, yeah. We've both got our shit to deal with, and we're still sorting it all out, but we're good for each
"It sure seems like it," Maureen said, thoughtfully. "Clearly he's dressing you, since you're wearing a nice sweater in a reasonable color."
"He fuckin' *made* this for me," Hank said. "Of course I'm going to wear it."
"I did!" Connor replied with a smile, once he'd rejoined them. He was, as always, delighted to be asked about a knitting project.
"That counts as wizardry in my book," Maureen said. "Not a crafty bone in my body, I swear. But it looks
[thought I'd finish this tonight but nope! we're near the end though folks]
"He does know that flashing his forearms like that makes him hotter, right?" Maureen said, holding her hand to her mouth as she leaned close to Connor as if it could keep Hank from overhearing her.
"I keep telling him that," Connor said,
"All right," Hank grumbled, firmly pulling his sleeves back down."That's more than enough of that, thank you."
"The man can't take a compliment to save his life," Maureen stage-whispered, and Connor nodded his solemn agreement.
"Maybe you'll have better luck than I did," Maureen said with a rueful smile. Hank tried not to flinch at that; he hadn't been great, with her, at accepting compliments of any kind. At some point she'd
"Anyway," Maureen said, waving her hand as if to cast aside the moment's awkwardness, "It's time for me to head home. I had some time with Cole before you arrived; I know you may want to have that chance too." She exhaled, suddenly looking very tired. "I've
"You don't—" Hank started, but he stopped himself; he wasn't in any position to tell Maureen what she did and did not need to do around him. If she didn't feel comfortable breaking down in front of her ex
"Yeah," Maureen said. "If someone had asked me, a week ago, if I wanted to run into you today, I don't know that I would have said
"That's fair," Hank said. "I get it, considering the state I was in the last time you heard from me. I wouldn't have wanted to pick up for me either."
"But I'm glad I did," she said, quietly.
"It was."
Maureen took a half-step forward, stepped back, then closed the distance between them in two quick strides and wrapped her arms around Hank. "Oh, give me a hug, for fuck's sake," she said, when Hank's surprise froze him in place
He did, and it was an odd, half-familiar feeling. Her hair smelled the same, even though it was shorter, and as they embraced he could feel that she'd lost a little weight since he'd last seen her, but she still held him the same as she always had, arms wrapped
"You too," she said to Connor, once she'd pulled away from Hank. "If—are
"It's fine to ask," Connor said, "and yes, I guess you could say I'm a hugger." He stepped forward to meet her, and they shared a brief embrace.
"I'm glad I got to meet you," she told Connor, so quietly Hank wasn't sure he was meant to hear it.
Connor murmured something Hank couldn't quite make out.
"Don't wait another year to call me," she told Hank. "And I'll—I'll send you those pictures, when I get home, of Cole and Sumo. I might have a few more lying around, too."
"Well," Hank said, once he heard the sound of the car's engine, "that went about as well as it
"It was interesting to meet your ex-wife," Connor said,
"Hard for either of us to imagine it too, I'm sure," Hank said with a laugh. "We're both happier this way."
"I know I gave you both time here by
"No," Hank said, not needing time to consider. He wrapped an
"Then I'll be here as long as you need me," Connor said, and Hank was as thankful as he'd ever been, in that moment, that he trusted Connor enough to believe him.
🌸🌸🌸the🌸end🌸🌸🌸