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#rucas fanfiction
shewhobefuddles · 2 years
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I've been reading a lot of Lucaya fics lately, and one thing that has really struck me is a lot of writers' shared assertion that Maya never would have forgiven Lucas and it wouldn’t have worked out initially if he had chosen her over Riley, because while Maya could take the heartbreak and continue being friends, Riley would not have been able to handle the jealousy and perceived betrayal (because she feels like she is entitled to Lucas, for a variety of reasons), and both Maya and Lucas’s and Maya and Riley’s relationships would have imploded.
And with what we have seen of Riley's behavior (accusing Maya of turning into her and telling her to stop) when Maya gets good things in her life (passing grades, crush on a nice boy, new clothes, more positive outlook on life, etc.) this seems like a very likely outcome. As much as I would have wanted Riley and Maya to overcome these issues and preserve their friendship, Riley's emotional immaturity, tendency toward jealousy/insecurity, and savior-complex in their relationship is something that desperately needed to be dealt with on the show. Which we will never get, both because the show was canceled and because the writers were cowards who didn’t want to acknowledge Riley's many privileges in life, as well as her flaws.
Riley and Maya's friendship could not have survived Lucas choosing Maya.
Did Lucas realize this? Was that part of why he went along with it when Maya pushed him toward Riley? It seems likely.
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rya-kingsleigh · 2 months
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some things about me
1. HUGE RUCAS/LILEY SHIPPER - I will literally read every fanfiction, au, very bad fanfiction that exists just to have a sense of happiness! I also re-watch the series just for them -- BTW ambition on ao3 is such an amazing au for gmw/bmw **warning it will break ur heart 😭**
2. I'm currently 20 turning 21 soon - I don't wanna!!! And also it doesn't feel like it
3. Avid reader and maladaptive daydreamer - I looooovvvvveeeee reading sm!!
4. Avid movie/show watcher. I love bmw, gmw, shadowhunters - the show- marvel, harry Potter, and ofc more!
5. I'm unlabeled rn but I don't feel straight but I also don't feel queer, gay, or bi. I just love soo fiercely no matter the gender, even though my preference is mostly men , I think....idk. I just can't imagine being with anyone it grosses me out severely but I just daydream and have extreme crushes and a sense of impending doom.......I'm OK lol
6. Currently obsessed with reality shifting, music ofc- always, and the ambition ao3 au fanfiction, olivia rodrigo, Sabrina Carpenter, Beyoncé, & NF
That's all for now....hopefully none of my family find this....🩷
Also my name is rya (ree yuh)
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fanficsbykay · 3 years
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Seven Days
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Summary: The Clique's Six annual reunion is coming up and so are a lot of secrets and changes. Can one week bring friends closer together, or further apart? Find out in Seven Days, based on the Mary J Blige song. Rucas Centric. Joshaya; Smarkle;
Word Count: 2,190 
Chapter 1:  A Friend of Mine
MONDAY
She tossed the thin dark purple cardigan on and listened to Maya rant about the inconvenience of their impromptu reunion. Riley giggled as Maya waved off a euphemism about Farkle and Isadora flying in late that evening. Riley grabbed her keys and shuffled Maya towards the front door. Maya groaned and leaned back into Riley’s arms purposely making it hard for the bubbly brunette to move her. 
“Maya,” Riley chastised and the blonde smirked. 
“Oh come on Riles, do we really need to go get party supplies? It's just us six!” Maya groaned. 
“Maya it's been a year since all six of us were together! Aren’t you excited to see our friends?” Riley pouted. 
“Yeah, I guess,” Maya said and rolled her eyes. 
Riley knew it was a front, and that Maya was just as excited as she was. Despite being close the clique six had spread out across the continent for college. Maya and Riley stayed true, and both got into NYU. While Riley went to Steinhardt for English Education, Maya found her calling at Tisch for Collaborative Art. Although in different programs, they became roommates in a cramped two-bedroom, a gift from their parents. Their friendship never wavered and if anything it got stronger over the last few years. As their junior year ended they wanted to celebrate with their best friends. In just mere months they would be college seniors, and then off to more school or careers. 
“Farkle got us a suite,” Riley teased and Maya grinned. 
“A suite? Okay, Minkus, guess that business degree is working after all,” Maya mused and stood up straight. 
As the girls found their place at NYU, Farkle and Isadora found their place at Stanford University. Although Princeton University was their goal, they both realized the move across the country would do them good. It was no surprise that both of them had done well successfully that they were graduating before their friends. Farkle in the fall will be attending Stanford Graduate School of Business and Isadora will start her Ph.D. program in Neuroscience. Another reason for their motley crew of friends to come together. 
“It's more like a graduation gift from his parents,” Riley said and led Maya out of their apartment. 
“I can't believe those two geniuses are already going to their second degrees, I barely think I am going to make it out of my bachelor’s,” Maya groaned as Riley locked the door. 
The two linked their arms together and Riley giggled. 
“Maya you're doing great in school, As and Bs,” Riley exclaimed. 
“It's only because I am actually interested in school now, why couldn't we just jump to college?” Maya asked as they walked down the stairs. 
“That's not how life works,” Riley said as they left the apartment building. 
Loud city noises blare down the streets and the crowds shuffled through masses of New Yorkers. Both girls leaped into the mass and followed the flow down the street. 
“I hope Party City isn't crowded,” Maya said as Riley smiled brightly. 
A benefit of having an apartment in Union Square was that everything was close by to them. They could pop in, get some supplies and grab lunch all within walking distance. 
“I doubt it, no major holidays, just some graduations in a few weeks,” Riley said. 
“So … we talked about Smarkle, is there a particular someone you would like to talk about before we see them?” Maya teased. 
“Zay? I heard he might double major,” Riley shrugged. 
“What is he? Can he?” Maya asked as Riley nodded. 
“I mean he is a dance major, maybe he wants to do something in that field but more,” Riley said. 
“Sounds like a lot,” Maya mused. 
“I know but it's Zay, and Duke is letting him do it, why not take advantage?” Riley said 
Zay’s college choice was a surprise to all of them. They knew Zay was eclectic and loved to do different things, but they all assumed he would go back to Texas. He threw them for a loop when he decided to go to Duke University in North Carolina for Dance. They knew he liked ballet but didn't think he would take it on as a major. 
“Wait! You deflected! You know who I was talking about Riles. A certain cowboy down in Texas,” Maya teased. 
Lucas. 
Lucas’s choice was no surprise to Riley, she knew what he was interested in since they were in the seventh grade. So when he announced he was going to Texas A&M Riley was excited for him no matter what. They decided it was in their best interest to break up and stay as friends. Allowing one another to explore these new waters without being weighed down by a significant other. However, it didn't matter to Riley as she never found anyone to match Lucas on any level. Sure she went on dates and flirted around, but nothing was serious. No one was able to make her feel like he did. 
“Lucas?” Riley asked. 
“You said Huckleberry’s name, that's a big step for you,” Maya said with a grin. 
“I always say his name, it's you who insist on these nicknames, Maya we’re twenty-one now. Don't you think it would be a good time to drop the nicknames?” Riley asked. 
“What and miss out on annoying moral compass, do you know me Riles?” Maya fake gasped and Riley chuckled. 
“Yes I do, and to answer your question, there’s nothing to talk about, Lucas and I are friends, with the exception of Smarkle, we are all friends,” Riley said and directed Maya into Party City. 
“You two were always more than just friends,” Maya said as Riley dragged her towards balloons. 
“Why are we getting party supplies again?” Maya groaned. 
“Well while we are just becoming seniors, Farkle and Izzy are graduating. I thought it would be nice to have something like a little congratulations thing during our reunion,” Riley said as she perused gold and silver balloons. 
“Do we have to get gifts?” Maya asked. 
“I’m getting them cards, and I got them each something small, just a congrats thing. You don't have to, you know how I feel about gift-giving,” Riley said with a smile. 
“You love it you fruit loop, I guess I’ll look for something here,” Maya sighed and followed Riley down the aisles. 
As the girls scoured the store for supplies, they kept the conversation light about their friends. Catching one another up on information to prepare for the annual reunion. Maya laughed as she picked up small party favors and found two keychains for her friends. 
“Look one for each of them, the dollar sign for Farkle, and the brain for Izzy,” Maya said as she jingled them. 
Riley playfully rolled her eyes and smiled at her best friend. However, she knew the two would love Maya’s gift and treasure it because that is what friends do. 
“I have a special order to pick up,” Riley said as she walked towards the counter. 
“Special? Oh, Riles, what did you do?” Maya asked as Riley talked to the cashier. 
Riley emptied her basket of balloons, candy, and streamers. She smiled as the cashier revealed a bag with Stanford University decorations. 
“Of course,” Maya said. 
“It's going to be so much fun,” Riley said as the cashier rang up her things. 
“Fruit Loop, look I am going to the other cashier to pay for this, don't get any more supplies,” Maya chastised as she walked away. 
Riley playfully rolled her eyes once more and smiled as the Cashier scanned the items. Riley’s eyes caught a glimmer of gold and she saw a gaudy gold plastic necklace with a horseshoe. She bit her bottom lip in complementation and took the plunge. 
“Could I get that too?” Riley said as she pointed to the necklace. 
The cashier rang it up and gave her the total. Riley swiped her card with no hesitation and smiled as she was handed the bags. Maya had sauntered over with her small bag and raised her eyebrows. 
“Got everything?” Maya asked as Riley nodded. 
Riley sat at her desk as she edited her final paper for class. One click and she would officially be done with her junior year. However, she couldn't stop herself from continuously changing the ending. Something felt off, and she didn't know what it was. She glanced at the clock and saw it was well past 11:00 PM, and she was exhausted. She rubbed her eyes and stifled a yawn. 
Her phone vibrated and she glanced at it. It was a text but who it was, surprised her. She didn't know why he would text her so late but he had to have a reason. Sure they chatted outside the group chat but it was mundane, and not so late. 
Lucas: Hey you up?
Riley: Unfortunately, is everything ok?
Lucas: Yeah can I call?
Riley hesitated but ultimately confirmed that he could. Before she knew it, her phone was ringing in her hands. As she took a deep breath she picked up the call. 
“Hey,” She whispered.
“Hey,” Lucas responded. 
“Hey,” She repeated. 
“I thought we grew out of that,” He chuckled. 
“I thought so too,” Riley said as she leaned back in her seat. 
“Sorry to call so late it's almost midnight over there right?” He asked. 
“Yeah but it's fine I was up, I was working on my final paper,” Riley said as she scrolled through the document. 
“Riley Matthews hasn’t finished her homework, oh no the world is ending,” He joked. 
“Oh stop it, I have till tomorrow midnight to submit it but I wanted it done before … the reunion,” Riley said. 
“That's the Riley I know, am I interrupting? Do you want to finish it?” Lucas asked as he cleared his throat. 
Riley paused and leaned back in her chair. A part of her did want to finish the paper, but the other part of her wanted to know why he called, especially this late. 
“I think my brain is fried, I know something is wrong, I just can't put my finger on it, I can talk. What's up?” Riley said as she tried to make her voice sound light. 
“I kind of wanted to hear your voice,” Lucas said, his voice deepening. 
“My voice?” Riley questioned. 
“Yeah … I just needed to hear it. Talking to you has always been easy Riley, and I thought I would call one of my best friends,” Lucas said. 
Riley could tell something was wrong, but just like her paper, she couldn't put her finger on it. She twirled some hair around her finger and listened to him. 
“What did you want to talk about? Tomorrow?” Riley asked. 
“I’m excited to come home,” Lucas said and Riley could feel her heart race slightly. 
“Texas isn't home?” Riley asked. 
“No it isn't, not when everything I love is back in New York,” Lucas said 
“Like your friends,” Riley said. 
“Yeah but a particular one in mind. Plus I wouldn't feel so lost, and I think … I need to be found” Lucas said his voice lofty and Riley bit her lip. 
“Are you okay Lucas, you sound … off,” Riley asked as he chuckled. 
“You definitely know me the best, yeah I’m good, I had a drink and I think … it's getting to me. Don't mind me, I’m sorry for interrupting. Goodnight Riley,” Lucas said and hung up the call before Riley could say anything. 
Riley looked at the phone puzzled at what just happened. She thought about waking Maya but she decided against it. Instead, she crafted a long but well-intended text to the Texan. She needed him to know she wasn't judging him and that she was there for him. 
Riley: Hey, you sounded off. I know you said you drank but, it didn't seem like that was what was going on? You know you can talk to me always if you want to call back we can talk about what's bothering you. I hope you're okay Lucas, I’m always here for you. 
Riley sent the message and returned to her paper. She glanced at her phone every few seconds and waited to hear it vibrate back but it didn't. She sighed and started to type up her conclusion, so she could finally finish her paper. As she saved the document and uploaded it to her college portal, she checked her phone. Still nothing. As she submitted the paper, she got up from her seat and went to the bathroom to do her bedtime routine. 
Lucas crossed her mind with each task, and she wondered if tomorrow it would be easier to talk. She hoped all was alright, and she wished he would have told her what's wrong. As she finished her routine she bounded for her room. She flicked her light off and crawled into bed exhausted from the day. She grabbed her phone to plug it in to charge when she saw a new alert. She swiped through to see a response from Lucas.
Lucas: I love you. 
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rilesandlucas · 4 years
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18th Birthday
Thanks @abbiescholler for the request, sorry its late. 
A/n-OMG, tumblr, wattpad-Hello how are ya? It's been a crazy amount of time but omg it feels good to be back. I got this request way too long ago and I have some more free time now so here I am finally writing it. I missed y'all and I can't wait to revisit Riles and Lucas. Happy reading.
not proof read lol.
Riley skipped her way up the fire escape of her apartment, she was gleaming with excitement as her feet hit each step, her smile growing continuously. She reached the final step of the fire escape and slowly peered into the bay window, expecting to see her best friend and boyfriend patiently waiting to surprise her. However as her head slowly continued to look into the window she quickly realised neither of them were there. Her smile faltered slightly but she quickly brushed it off and considered that they were probably waiting for her inside. She jumped in through her bay window, her favourite starbucks drink that she had gone to get earlier in her hand, and grabbed her phone from her jean pocket. When she looked down at her phone she saw she had two texts from Maya and Lucas;
Lukey; Hey Riles, sorry I had to run out before you came back this morning, had to help my mum. Maybe see you tomorrow? xx
Maya; Won't b ova today Peaches, art stuff u get it, luv ya.
Riley sighed confused, 'Surely they didn't forget, this is way too 16 candles'. At that moment her Mother, Father and brother all burst in to her room, Balloons and cake in hand.
'HAPPY 18th RILEY' They screamed, partially in unison except for Auggie who glared at his parents because he thought they were yelling 'Happy birthday' instead. They all laughed at Auggie’s anger and gave Riley a hug.
'So sweetie, where are Lucas and Maya, I thought for sure they'd be here?' Topanga questioned while attempting to clean up Riley's room. She had grown to love cleaning Riley's room lately because it meant she could snoop on whether Lucas had stayed the night or not. She always laughed at how discrete Riley and Lucas thought they were being, but really they were anything but subtle, whether it was clothing left behind or both sides of the doona where clearly slept on. Topanga truly didn't care if Lucas did want to stay the night, the kids had just never asked her.
'No they're not here, I left this morning to get a drink and I swore they'd be here when I got back. I think they're pretending they forgot.' Riley sulked, she really didn't want to believe they forgot, but Lucas and Maya were horrible liars and it's unlikely they could pull off a big surprise, especially not later in the day. They usually would get too excited and cave before 10am.
'Look, I'm sure the group is just surprising you, I mean have you heard from Farkle, Smackle or Zay yet?' Cory questioned, he was quite concerned considering he really hadn't heard anything about a surprise from the group, so he wasn't really sure if their actually was one.
'I guess not, you're probably right, and maybe they just wanted me to have a morning with my family alone' The family burst into laughter at this statement, Maya and Lucas wanting Riley to be alone with her family and not spend time with them? It was unheard of. Alas, Riley brushed it off considering that she hadn't heard from anyone else and there's no way they'd all forgot. She scrolled through her facebook timeline as her family left to go make breakfast when a facetime notification popped up on her phone.
FARKLEY <3
Riley quickly answered hoping it had something to do with her surprise and was greeted by the faces of Zay, Smackle and Farkle.
'Happy birthday sugar.' She heard Zay yell from the back. Smackle quickly turned around and hit Zay on the arm.
'Zay, we promised Farkle he could say happy birthday first.' She scolded and Zay just rolled his eyes.
'Look, I'm new to the group, I've gotta let Riley know I care the most so I'm the favourite.' He retorted making Riley giggle. It was at this point that Farkle turned around and hit Zay.
'Zay, are you fucking serious, you've been our friend for two years and you still aren't the favourite, it's not gonna happen.'
'Umm guys hello.' Riley yelled as the three friends started to bicker.
'Sorry sugar, I know Lucas is the favourite cause ya know' Zay stated winking through the phone making everyone roll their eyes.
'Anyway happy birthday Riley, can we come up, are Maya and Lucas done with their surprise?' Farkle questioned through the phone.
'What surprise?' Riley inquired.
'We all just figured Lucas and Maya where surprising you, that's why we didn't come over. Now that I think of it they never mentioned it.' Farkle replied while climbing through Riley's window with Smackle and Zay in tow.
Riley got up from her bed and quickly hugged her friends who all had a balloon each and a big teddy bear. They all sat back down in the bay window and looked around for any sign of Lucas and Maya.
'Surely they didn't forgot, its your 18th. Although I mean now that I think of it Lucas didn't say anything, I thought it was just cause I can't keep a secret. But surely you brought it up Riles, you mentioned it to me like 8 times.' Zay spoke attempting to comfort Riley.
'I never brought it up around him cause I thought he was planning a surprise and I didn't want him to spoil it.' Riley peered sadly, she had accepted it, they must have just forgot. The group sat for a moment contemplating the situation, had the others really forgot?
'Well, for now let's do something fun, how about your favourite activity, Mini golf?' Farkle beamed and the group jumped up and ran out the window.
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Riley stumbled into her bedroom at 8 after going out with her friends. After mini golf Riley had still heard nothing from Lucas and Maya, so in an attempt to cheer her up, while Smackle and Farkle weren't looking,  Zay gave Riley some alcohol he had bought with his fake ID. Although Riley thought she was fine, the tequila had really hit her just as she reached home and she was now feeling really tipsy. She burst open her door and jumped onto her bed feeling a little lethargic. Just as she was closing her eyes she looked up and saw Lucas walking slowly out of her closet.
'Hi sweet girl' Lucas hummed walking over and embracing Riley. As soon as Riley was enclosed in his arms the smell of alcohol hit his nostrils and he jumped back.
'Riley-' He started but she bounced up and slapped and his arm.
'You're silly you forgot my birthday' She pouted her arms folded on her chest. It was at this point she had realised that Riley was most definitely drunk.
'Maya' Lucas called causing Maya to slid out from under Riley's bed.
'Ok, Huckleberry what don't you understand about pretend you forgot and I'll jump out in twenty and surprise her' Maya sassed pulling out her airpods.
'No Maya, abort mission she's drunk' Lucas spoke ushering to Riley who was singing and playing with her hair.
'NO fair, you said I couldn't get her drunk' Maya pouted hitting Lucas.
'OWW, no I didn't get her drunk, it must have been Zay.'
'Oh, well mad respect he did what I wasn't brave enough to do.' Maya beamed while pumping her fist to the sky. Lucas rolled his eyes and looked down at Riley, pushing her hair out of her face.
'Well what are we gonna do now?' Lucas questioned.
'I mean she had her fun today, let's just take her up there and sleep, she can see it in the morning.' Maya replied. Lucas picked Riley up as she was now silently sleeping and walked her to the roof, he placed her down right in the middle of himself and Maya and kissed her on the forehead.
'Night beautiful, Happy birthday'.
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Riley woke up with a pounding headache, she groaned as she slowly opened her eyes. It wasn't for a second that she noticed that the sun was quite a lot brighter than usual. She stretched her arms out expecting to be in her bed but instead was met by two hard objects.
'Ow', Lucas groaned after Riley's fist connected with his face. Maya laughed as she looked over at the exact moment that Riley's fist had connected.
'What are you two doing here. Why are we outside?' Riley questioned looking around. They were on the roof of their building laying on about 20 pillows and a large tarp was in front of them.
'Well princess, if you hadn't have gone out and gotten smashed, this was your birthday surprise.' Lucas replied kissing her hand.
'Yeah it's not gonna work now but we set this up with a projector we bought you and we were gonna watch your favourite movies, we still can we just have to wait till tonight .' Maya laughed pointing to the projector.
'That's why we had to hold off seeing you, we wouldn't have been able to not tell you for that long, plus we wanted some suspense and for you to spend some time with your family.' Lucas followed, embracing Riley in a small hug.
Riley stiffled a laugh and replied, 'I love you guys, even if your surprises never work out'. They all laughed and hugged each other while Riley looked over at her 'Happy birthday' sign. Best birthday ever, she thought to herself.
A/n Ok so thanks for reading, I can't believe these characters would be all grown up now, its crazy. I had no idea where to go with this but it carried well I feel. Let me know and send prompts, I have one to do which hopefully I'll do soon.
-xo Bay
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imaginarybird · 4 years
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Unwilling and unable to face everyone on her own when it comes time to attend Auggie and Ava’s wedding, Riley Matthews hires a solution in Lucas Friar. Loosely based on The Wedding Date.
Part One // Part Two // Part Three // Part Four // Part Five // Part Six // Part Seven // Part Eight // Part Nine
Rating: Around a PG 13/14
Notes: Well, I’d apologize how long it took to get this done and promise never to do it again but I think we all know it’s entirely possible given my track record. But I promise that I’m never gonna abandon the fic until it’s done so you will get an ending eventually. 
Continuing over from last chapter is a blanket content/trigger warning for  some non-graphic, veiled references to depression/suicide/death.
In this chapter, an explanation is given.
page break since they took the function away wtf tumblr 
“I wanna see what Claire can do.”
“I can’t do anything.”
“Now, everybody can do something.”
Lucas gets back to their room at the bed and breakfast about an hour after leaving the restaurant, and finds Riley curled up on the bed in a nest of blankets and pillows and watching The Breakfast Club on her laptop.
His first instinct after realizing that Riley had fled from the disaster of a party had been to try and call her cell phone, but that instinct had been proven faulty when, with one phone ringing up against his ear, Lucas had felt a second phone buzzing in the pocket of his khakis and remembered that Riley had asked him to hold onto hers due to a lack of pockets in her dress. She hadn’t retrieved the car from the valet and kids working there had insisted that they hadn’t seen her since they had dropped off the car at the start of the night (and Lucas had had plenty of time to ask around in the twenty minutes it had taken to retrieve the vehicle). With no way of reaching his client and no idea of where she might go aside from their hotel, he’d had no choice but to make the drive back and hope that she was already there or at the very least was safe wherever she ended up.
Finding her back in the room, safe and not completely devastated is a relief. He doesn’t know when exactly she decided to run or how much of Eric’s revelations she had heard, but he had been more than a little worried that the violation of her trust and humiliation would have been enough to do her in, regardless of the strides she had seemingly been making earlier in the day (and given exactly what Eric divulged the most irrational parts of Lucas’ brain had been busy visualizing exactly what he might find if it had for the entire ride home). Actually seeing her helps Lucas to breathe again.
Seeing her watching one of his favorite movies leaves him feeling a bit more even-footed with where she stands and how he might be able to be there for her moving forward.
The Breakfast Club has always been the visual equivalent of comfort food for Lucas--with just the right balance of humor and drama and everything else to not be too much no matter what mood he’s in, and helping him even things out and return to zero when he needs to. That Riley had gone back to the room and set to watching it after the night she had had leads him to believe that it holds a similar place in her heart. Just one more thing they seem to have in common.
She’s further in the movie than should be possible, but he reasons that she might have skipped ahead to a part that she wanted to watch.
He does that sometimes too.
Lucas kicks off his shoes at the door, only speaking when he’s seen her eyes on him so he knows he’s not starling her. “You made it back safe?” 
She glances down, blushing. “I ran down the street a bit to a bar and had them call me a cab.” She discloses softly. Her voice is strained, giving away that there had at least been some tears in the hour since they’ve seen each other. “I had some cash in my bra to pay them, and the manager here let me back into the room. I’m sorry I left.”
“I’m sorry I didn’t notice to come with you.” Lucas crosses the room, sitting on the edge of the bed. He doesn’t want to invade Riley’s space, particularly when he knows she’s feeling vulnerable, but he doesn’t want to talk from across the room either. Apologies shouldn’t come from a distance. Not if you mean them. “I let my curiosity get the better of me and I got distracted from what was really important.”
“No one with a pulse could look away from that fiasco.” Riley shakes her head, dismissing the amends. She pushes away from her makeshift nest and sits up. She’s still dressed for the party.“I needed to be alone for a little while anyway.” 
Given that it’s barely been an hour (less really if he factors in the time she spent getting back to the bed and breakfast) Lucas considers offering to go out and let her have her space for a while longer. It’s not that late and there are plenty of restaurants and bars in the area that stay open well into the night. Hell, he’d be happy just going to swim some laps somewhere and working out some of his own angry energy, vacillating under the surface over the damage that Riley’s so-called family have managed to cause her. If Riley needs time by herself, it would be easy to give it to her. 
“Do you want me to--,”
“Do you think it’s true?” Riley interrupts him. 
Her question comes in a soft, uncertain tone that doesn’t seem like a good fit on her to Lucas, and he realizes quickly that he’s not sure what she’s asking about; Cory and Eric had made a lot of claims while shouting at each other--any one of them might make her question things when she’s already vulnerable. “Do I think what’s true?”
“What they’re talking about…” She casts her eyes back to the laptop.
“It’s unavoidable. It just happens.”
“What happens?”
“When you grow up, your heart dies.”
“Do we all just...lose our ability to love and become our parents? Is that what’s waiting for us?”
OK. So maybe The Breakfast Club isn’t always the best choice for a movie. 
Lucas has always just found it comforting to see a group of kids he could really relate to opening up and being honest and finding small ways to buck at the system that’s strangling them, and he’s never gone down the path of wondering if there’s any truth to the cyclical nature of the world the characters are worried about.; since giving up on trying to please his family he’s been so certain that he’ll find a way to be better than them that he hasn’t had to. But for Riley--who had, as best as Lucas can discern, experienced her parents’ transition from loving and caring to conditional and dismissive--becoming some version of her parents is a very real fear. Of course it would be. 
He leans across her to press the spacebar and pause the movie, lest they go further down the existential rabbit hole (not to mention, he knows what confession is coming up and  while he can’t be sure if what Eric let slip about Riley’s state of mind when she left her family is true, Lucas hardly thinks an extra reminder on the subject will be helpful either way). “Riley,” he says as he draws back, “I’ve spent the last week wondering how outside of appearance you could possibly be related to your parents. Believe me, you’re nothing like them.”
“They never used to be like them either. I mean...when I was little, they were great. It’s just that the older I got...I didn’t need them in the same way and they didn’t understand me and they just...stopped trying. They drifted further and further, and put their focus on the people they thought needed it more. And then when I stopped following their plans and making the choices they thought were best for me...it was like I stopped being their daughter at all. I was just...the disappointment who shared their DNA.”
Riley tears her eyes away from the frozen movie. She only glances at him before looking down at her fidgeting hands, but it’s just long enough for Lucas to see the pain she’s grappling with. 
“Lucas, the idea that one day I might hurt someone like that, that I might do that to my child...It’s terrifying.”
“If there is one thing I am 100% certain about all of this, it’s that you are in no way capable of being that awful to someone.” Lucas can’t entirely explain his confidence given that he’s only been around for a few days to observe her, but he knows--just knows-- that Riley’s not the sort of person who could hurt someone the way her family has hurt her. Even unintentionally. He doesn’t believe for a second that she has enough malice in her heart to treat anyone that poorly and he can’t bear the thought of her spending any time whatsoever doubting and torturing herself over something that could never happen. “You are, without question, a bigger and better person than the people who raised you.”
“You can’t possibly know that.”
“Of course I can. Do you think for one second that if the situation were different, and your parents had to walk into a lion’s den like this that they could show up with a smile on their face and not cause a scene? Do you think they’d bother to show up at all?”
“I only came back because Auggie asked me to.” Riley shakes her head in protest. “That doesn’t make me better than them.”
Lucas lays a hand on top of hers, partly to reassure her that he’s not buying into her argument, and partly to ground himself; he’s here with Riley and helping her and as long as that’s the case, he doesn’t have to, and in fact can’t, give into his anger over the self-doubts her family has caused. “You came back for Auggie, even though you knew dealing with just about everyone else would be awful, because he’s your brother and you love him and you would have felt terrible letting him down. In a similar position, would your parents have made the same sacrifice? Would Josh and Maya? Or anyone else here?”
Riley doesn’t give him an answer.
“That’s what makes you better than them. You’re here in an impossibly difficult situation, standing tall in the face of all this...shit being thrown at you and barely sending a single angry word back, even though some of these people really deserve it. You are so strong and open and caring...There’s not a doubt in my mind that it would be impossible for you to turn into your parents, even if you wanted to.”
“I wish I had your confidence.”
Lucas takes in everything--Riley’s softness and the way her eyes flick down to their joined hands and her teeth worrying at the corner of her lip--and he feels his heart clench. It hadn’t taken him long after meeting her for Lucas to realize just how much Riley really had going for her, leaving him wondering why she needed to use an escort like him the first place, but the more he’s gotten to know her, the more painfully obvious it’s become that she just doesn’t see the same strengths in herself that he can see in her.
He brushes his thumb across the back of her hand, pressing down gently. “Riley, do you trust me?”
“Of course I trust you.”
Riley’s gentle smile and forehead crinkled ever-so-slightly in confusion plow into Lucas and it’s all he can do to keep himself from closing the short distance between them and drawing her into another kiss. It’s not the time, Friar. She’s had a roller coaster of a night and she doesn’t need your feelings mucking it up even more. Besides, she’s a client. Whatever you think is there, it’s not. He settles for fully taking his hand in his and squeezing. “Then trust that I’m telling you the truth and that I’m seeing the best in you, even when you can’t.”
Riley’s eyes slide closed. She takes a deep, controlled breath, her head tilting backwards as she exhales, shaking her head ever so slightly.
“What’s wrong?” Lucas frowns. He’s not sure what reaction he was expecting, but this isn’t it. Riley seems almost pained.
“People don’t say things like that.” Riley says. She brings her head back down, opening wet eyes to look at him again. Thumbing at the tears that are threatening to spill over, she looks away just as quickly, her gaze landing on her lap. “Not to me.”
Lucas doesn’t think about what he’s doing. He just wants Riley to look at him. To understand that these aren’t just lines he says to any old client. That he 100% means what he’s saying. 
He reaches over with his free hand, easing Riley’s chin up with the knuckle of his bent finger. “Then you haven’t been talking to the right people.”
Riley’s eyes go wide, but she doesn’t blink. Her jaw twitches, but she doesn’t open her mouth. Whatever response is lying in wait on her tongue, she swallows around it.
“Riley, you are...extraordinary.” Lucas says, his hand still hovering just beneath her chin. “And I don’t understand how nobody here sees it, or why the people in your life aren’t tripping over themselves every day to tell you, but you are. You have to believe that you are.”
Riley blinks. Her eyes flick down, then lock on his. She doesn’t speak. Several moments pass.
“I know it’s not-,”
“They all think I’m selfish. Self-centered.” Riley blurts out. She ducks away from his hand, pulling her own arm back. “Half the time I think they’re right.”
“I find that hard to believe.”
Riley speaks after taking a deep breath. “I met Charlie Gardner in preschool. And even back then he was a charmer.” 
“Momma! Daddy! Come meet Char-lee!” Riley runs to meet her parents at the door of the classroom. It’s not every day that she gets to have both of her parents at the same time--they both have a lot of responsibilities (her dad told her that was a grown-up word for doing things you don’t like instead of what you really want to be doing)--but today was her first day of preschool so it was special. She has so much to tell them about her day about all of the games they played and nap time and the snacks, but most of all she wants them to meet Charlie.
She grabs onto their hands and pulls them across the room, almost running into a partially constructed block tower and stumbling a little over an abandoned doll to the small table in the corner where she and Charlie have been coloring. 
“Char-lee, this is my mom and my dad. I call them momma and daddy, but they’re not your parents, so you can just call them their names. Cor-ee and Tuh-pan-guh.”
Charlie stops his drawing and holds out his hand “‘S nice to meet you.”
“And it’s lovely to meet you.” Her mom shakes his hand with a smile. 
Riley grins back. “Momma, Daddy, this is my boyfriend Char-lee.”
“Your what now?”
“Mr. Cory,” Charlie turns to her dad with a serious expression on his face, “when Riley is a grown-up lady, can I marry her?” “Sounds familiar.” Lucas comments when Riley reaches an obvious break in her story.
Riley nods. “Everyone thinks so. Charlie and I ‘dated’,” and here she puts finger quotes, “through kindergarten, when his parents got divorced and he moved with his mom out of the city. I missed him a lot, but it wasn’t long before I had plenty to distract me.”
It’s the first recess on the first day of first grade and Riley’s enjoying herself, picking some of the flowers growing at the edge of the playground fence. Most of her class is over on the blacktop playing a game of tag, or taking turns on the swingset, but no one had asked her to join them. She doesn’t really mind. She and Charlie hadn’t played a lot with the rest of the class last year so it’s not like she’s missing anything, and she’s used to making her own fun.
“Reminiscin’ this and that and havin’ such a good time,
“Oo-de-lally, oo-de-lally, golly what a day.”
She skips along, plucking a flower every few steps and singing a song from one of her favorite movies., not a care in the world. Then a little down the ways she spots another girl, blonde, with messy pigtail braids and scruffy pink jeans, climbing around the monkey bars by herself. Riley doesn’t think she’s ever seen her before.
 A new girl playing by herself who doesn’t even look like she’s having fun? That’s just not right. 
Riley bounds over to the monkey bars, and when the blonde swings down to the ground, Riley grins and thrusts her makeshift bouquet into her face. “Hi, I’m Riley! I brought you these.”
The girl blinks at Riley, looks down at the flowers as she takes them from Riley’s outstretched hand, and back at Riley before she smiles. She’s missing a tooth. “Maya Penelope Hart.”
“Maya and I were fast friends.” Riley pulls her knees up to her chest, looping her arms around them and resting her chin. “Inseparable. By Christmas she was like one of the family. If I did something Maya was there, and if Maya did something… well most of the time I was trying to stop her or getting dragged along for the ride.”
“Bit of troublemaker?”
“No. I mean….yeah, she did a lot of stupid stuff and had attitude that could power a small city if science could figure out how to convert it. Still does, from what I can tell. But really she was just a kid whose family didn’t have a lot of money and whose parents didn’t get along all that well and then her dad just up and left one day...she was angry and hurt and decided that if she made herself tough enough nothing else would hurt her.
“She had her problems but everyone does. And I was brought up that friendship means sticking with a person and setting an example. Giving and doing everything you could to help them grow into a better version of themselves.”
An admirable standard, Lucas thinks, but a lot to lay across the shoulders of a kid. Especially one with an already open heart. “That sounds like a lot to live up to.”
“It was. But it didn’t always feel like it. It just felt like... I had a best friend.”
“What’s your favorite color?”
Riley looks at Maya across the lunch table; all day her friend has been asking these sorts of questions --favorite animal, favorite tv show, favorite tv character--and Riley can’t figure out why, all of a sudden, after three months of friendship Maya is curious about that sort of thing. “Oh, I like every color.”
Maya shakes her head. “Yeah, but if you had to pick one. Or maybe two. Three tops.”
“Hmm…” Riley considers the options carefully. Favorite colors are no joking matter. “Blue. And red. And purple!”
“Interesting. Very interesting.”
A week later, at Riley’s birthday lunch, Maya hands her what used to be a plain white envelope, but that has been decorated with Maya’s somewhat familiar art style and is covered with cats and bunnies and flowers. Riley opens the envelope very carefully to preserve the art (much to Maya’s impatience) and finds a braided bracelet.
 A friendship bracelet. Like Riley’s seen some of the older girls at school exchange. It’s her favorite gift of the day.
Lucas shifts so he’s sitting next to Riley on the bed, feet up and off the floor; this is shaping up to be a lengthy conversation and he wants to be comfortable for it. “It sounds like you were really close.”
“Thunder and Lightning, that was us.” Riley confirms. “We never really had a big friend group but we always had each other, and it was all we needed. My family loved her and welcomed her with open arms even when she was getting into trouble… They all liked to say that she was the Shawn to my Cory.”
It shouldn’t surprise Lucas to hear the comparison--to have it officially confirmed that people were laying the weight of not one extraordinary, one in a million, relationship across Riley’s shoulders, but two--yet it somehow still leaves him stunned. Most of the adults he knows can’t handle living in the shadow of something like that, and she’s been dealing with it for over twenty years...And from all sides it seems like. “From what you told me that’s an impossible standard.”
“I was little and it was the story I had been told all my life. I just...thought I was lucky.” Riley shakes her head. “That I had such great examples in my parents and had found  a good person so I was able to build a friendship as great as my dad and Shawn’s, and I’d keep it as long as I put the work in.”
But something went wrong along the way. Obviously. Riley would almost certainly rather get a root canal than deal with Maya and the barbs Maya sends her way are far from the light teasing of a best friend, even distanced by time. She’s been downright hostile, and those on Riley’s side like Auggie and Eric are more than happy to return the favor. “So what changed?”
“For a long time, nothing. Maya and I were best friends. In middle school Charlie’s mom got remarried and he ended up back in the city at our school and it was like he’d never been gone. We got back together and everything was perfect.”
The parallels now are more than blatant and Lucas can see where the next bit of pressure will come in, but Riley keeps talking so he doesn’t get a chance to say anything. 
“I had my Shawn in Maya, my Topanga in Charlie.... I even had my own Minkus in Farkle.”
The names click together in Lucas’ mind. “Wait. That was really Farkle Minkus belting out Queen back there?” He had, of course, thought that the impossibly skinny man he had caught glimpses of on the stage while trying to help Eric and Shawn wrangle Cory looked familiar, but had dismissed his idea as a trick of the eye and mistaken identity. After all, why would the heir to one of the world’s richest and most innovative technology companies be at a party for a comparatively small wedding in Cape Cod?
“His parents went to school with mine. And then he went to school with me. Auggie’s not super close with him or anything but they were always friendly and our families our close enough to merit an obligation invite. And apparently an obligation attendee.”  From the rain clouds in Riley’s eyes that seem to shift and darken with her explanation, Lucas ascertains that there are likely problems between her and Farkle as well, though perhaps not quite as contentious as those with Maya or her family. “Anyway, he was one of our little group of misfits. Farkle, Maya, Charlie, and me.
“For a couple years, the four of us did everything together. Maya and I were best friends, Charlie really helped Farkle come out of his shell, I think we all helped Maya grow into a more hopeful, happier person... and Charlie and I were in love. At least, as much as you can be at that age.” Riley stops talking, casting her eyes down.
It doesn’t take a genius to see that the story is about to take the turn that truly starts the trouble; all the seeds have been planted, all they need is a good rainstorm to sprout up into a craptastic garden of problems. Lucas prompts her softly when she doesn’t restart her story. “Then what happened?”
Riley looks up, with an expression that Lucas can’t quite read on her face. “Maya’s world crashed down.”
It takes Riley a moment to notice the persistent tapping at her window. She’s half asleep, having gone to bed nearly twenty minutes ago, but when her brain finally registers the sound her eyes snap open. Her parents insist that she keeps her bay window locked at night, and her friends normally respect the curfew, but it is their preferred entrance to the apartment so she knows if someone is showing up late at night, something major has happened.
Sure enough, in the glow of her novelty bunny night light, she can just make out Maya on the other side of the glass.  Riley’s out of bed, unlocking the window in an instant.
“Maya--,”
“Can I stay here for a while?” Maya cuts her off, blowing past her as she crawls through the window to. She quickly stands and starts to pace at the foot of the bed. 
“Of course.” Riley nods, trying to keep track of Maya’s whirlwind pace. Her friend doesn’t have a bag with her, which makes her think that she decided to leave her place suddenly, and a part of her wonders if Maya had bothered to let Katy know that she was leaving, let alone where she was going. “You know you’re always welcome here. But why? I thought tonight was the night.”
Maya stops in her tracks, facing away from Riley. “Shawn said no. Mom asked, and he said no and they broke up.” She turns around, her face scrunching up as she tries and fails to contain her tears. “My mom and Shawn broke up.” 
“Wait.” Lucas blinks, trying and not quite managing to process the information. “Are you talking about your dad’s Shawn? He dated Maya’s mom?”
Riley seems to consider her answer for a brief moment. “Shawn and Maya have a lot in common. When they met he connected with her right away. I think he probably saw himself--who he was when he was a kid--in her and wanted to help her see that things could get so much better than what she was feeling. Hanging around more to be there for that led to him meeting Katy and after a little bit of contention, there were sparks, so they started dating. But…” 
“But?” Lucas probes. It takes him a brief study of her face as he waits for her to continue to realize that her careful consideration of her words isn’t reticence to share on the subject, but her thinking about all of the past events and relationships, probably applying a mature and further outside perspective than she could have managed as a teen. 
“But while Katy was falling in love with one of the first stand-up guys to walk into her and Maya’s life, and Maya was starting to think of Shawn as her dad and that she and her mom were gonna get a happy ending and have a family, Shawn was...I think he was enjoying being the hero and the mentor. Not a lot of people have ever looked at him like that. And when we were sophomores and Katy asked him to move in, he realized that they were on separate pages, and he couldn’t stay in the relationship. He said no and broke things off to do the right thing.”
Ouch. Lucas has been on both sides of that break up before and it’s not a good place. You either feel like a moron for not being able to read your partner and see what they’re feeling, or like a grade-A jerk for being the one to break their heart; he can’t imagine being a kid who thought they were getting a family out of it all and finding out that that was never really in the cards. “I’m guessing Maya didn’t see things that way.” 
“No she didn’t.” Riley shakes her head. “And the fallout was bad.”
“You gave Maya an F on her term paper?!” Riley storms into her dad’s classroom just after school lets out, unable to control her disbelief and anger after her friend had sullenly begged out of their afternoon  plans, apparently due to her mother grounding her via text after Riley’s dad had called to give her an update on Maya’s latest school troubles. “And a week of in-school suspension?! You know yours is one of the only classes that she even bothers to try in anymore and if you fail her she’s--,”
“I gave Maya an incomplete,” her father corrects, the picture of calm as he puts down his pen on top of the quizzes he’s grading and removes his reading glasses, “because she turned in an essay that she bought online that I’ve  already read three times this year from other kids. And instead of turning her into the Honor Committee like I did the other students , I gave her the in-school suspension to serve in the library to give her the opportunity to write the paper properly and get an actual grade on it.”
“Maya wouldn’t--,” Riley stops herself this time.  Because she knows her protest would be a lie. The Maya from last year, or even just three months ago wouldn’t have considered cheating and buying an essay , but the Maya that’s been showing her face with increasing frequency lately almost certainly would. She sighs, feeling her ire rush out of her chest in a flood. 
Maya had been steadily improving since middle school. Trying hard in all of her classes, building a good relationship with her mom, talking about paths she might take after school--some of which even included attending college.
But ever since Katy and Shawn broke up, it’s like Maya’s forgotten every bit of growth she’s made.  She’s rebuilt her tough shell and attitude in record time, shutting everyone but Riley out (and sometimes even her). She’s skipping out on homework and classes, and Riley knows a few people have said that she’s been starting to circle around some of the school’s most notorious burnouts… Nothing Riley has tried has gotten through to her, and she knows everyone’s waiting for things to go back to normal. For her to get things back to normal.
“Dad, I don't know what to do. I don’t know how to help her.”
Her dad leans back in his chair. “Riley, you know how hard it is for people like Maya and Shawn to admit that they want something, and then to have hope dangled in front of her only to have it snatched away...that’s not easy to deal with. She’s hurting in a big way, and it’s not going to disappear overnight.” 
“But I’m her best friend! I know I can’t make it all go away but it’s my job to make sure she gets through it.” 
“She needs to see that even though she didn’t get this, that doesn’t mean she’ll never get anything she wants.” Her dad advises. “You need to give her a win.”
“I’m sorry, what?” Lucas blinks, shaking his head in disbelief, convinced that he can’t possibly have heard Riley right. Because there’s no way that a grown man--a teacher--Riley’s father had actually told her it was her job to make her friend’s dreams come true so she would get back onto the straight and narrow; that’s just not what people do. 
Riley repeats Cory’s recommendation.
“That is...wow.” Lucas just manages to stop the first word that comes to mind, that word being insane, from coming right out of his mouth and casting too much judgement over the situation. Riley’s affect hasn’t changed much from that of a mostly neutral storyteller thus far and it’s hard to read how she feels about what her dad had advised her to do. Given that she’s choosing to trust him and open up (and hadn’t she said something about only a couple of people having heard the whole story?) the last thing he wants is to do or say anything that will make her regret or rethink the decision. “I mean, maybe my perspective is a little skewed since my dad would have given me the exact opposite advice and tell me to cut all ties if I had a friend acting like that but…”
“It’s OK if you want to say it’s crazy.” Riley says. She pushes herself off the bed and heads over to her suitcase, continuing to speak as she opens it and digs through its contents. “It is crazy. No reasonable person puts the burden of one person’s happiness and success on their sixteen-year-old’s ability to make that person’s life magically come together.”
“I mean....it’s not great.”
“Unfortunately, that’s not how I saw it back then. I just tried everything I could to keep Maya afloat and find out what she wanted so I could find a way to give it to her. I dragged Farkle and Charlie into it too.”
“It sounds like it took a while.” 
Pajamas in hand, Riley crosses to the bathroom and steps inside, though she leaves the door cracked and continues talking as she changes. “Til August before junior year.” She confirms. “Our class went on this team-building hiking trip thing right before school started.” 
It’s not the best start to junior year.  Oh, the hiking trip at Mount Sun was supposed to be all fun and games, a nice way for the class to have one last weekend of fun before the stress of AP courses and college prep kicks in.  But that’s not how it’s worked out so far. 
For one thing, it’s hard to have too much fun when both of your parents are there to chaperone. Not that she doesn’t love them and love spending time with them, but the trip was supposed to be her opportunity to have a few days away from the constant prodding about how she’s doing on the Maya front  (and maybe actually get to sit down with Maya, who has been dodging her for most of the summer, and have a real talk about what’s going on with her) not to mention a chance  for her and Charlie to catch up after a month of Skype dates while he went out of the city to visit his dad.  
Neither is very easy with her parents hovering.  
And her plans only get further dashed when, while bringing her bag upstairs to her assigned room, Riley had tripped and wrenched her knee on the steps, leaving her unable to participate in all of the planned activities.  Instead she’s been laid up with ice packs in the window seat of the lobby, watching her friends and classmates complete trust exercises in the front yard, chatting with lodge employees, and reading  once her class had moved on to other activities. 
It’s not the fun weekend she’d been looking forward to, although it improves a little when everyone returns to the lodge for dinner and even more when the chaperones make themselves scarce from the  game room  (and Riley’s trying very hard to pretend she did not hear her parents talking about making use of the lodge hot tub) and a fairly large game of truth or dare gets underway. 
Truth or dare is by no means her favorite party game, but if it lets her actually spend some time with her friends and not sit around by her lonesome, Riley is more than willing to dive in. 
“Truth.” Even if diving in means being at the mercy of Missy Bradford and her devious little smirk. 
“Did you and Charlie send each other any special pictures while he was away this summer?”
Riley refuses to blush at the implication. “Charlie and I don’t need to resort to sex to feel close to each other, if that’s what you’re implying.” From next to her, Charlie rests his hand on top of hers.
“So that’s a no.” 
“Not everyone has to take their clothes off to get boys interested in them.” Maya snarks and Riley feels a rush of optimism for her ability to help her friend; they may not have spent as much time together over the summer but at least she’s still jumping in to defend Riley. 
Missy purses her lips. “That’s not what I’ve heard.”
Yindra and Dave jump in to get the game back on track before things can get too heated, and a few innocuous lighthearted rounds go by before Darby targets Charlie for her turn, and Charlie picks dare..
“I dare you...to kiss someone other than Riley.”
Charlie immediately draws his hand back from Riley’s. 
The room titters; everyone there knows that Charlie was Riley’s first kiss--both the innocent peck of a kindergarten romance and the version that counted when they rekindled things in middle school--and since they’ve only had a few brief periods of turmoil where they weren’t actually dating, it’s generally assumed that neither of them have kissed anyone else. Even if just in the context of a game, this would be a big deal.
Riley trusts Charlie, knows their relationship is strong and comfortable and that a kiss given on a dare is not the same as a kiss you choose to give someone, so she gives him a small smile and nods her assent when he looks over at her, as though to make sure she’s OK with him fulfilling the challenge.
He nods back and returns the smile before turning back and scanning the room.
Riley only starts to feel funny about the whole endeavor when Charlie’s eyes lock with Maya’s. 
Lucas can guess where this is going. After all, it’s hard to forget Auggie’s comments from the confrontation on their first night there. “Tell me he didn’t…”
“Didn’t what?” Riley asks, coming out of the bathroom in her pajamas with her dress bunched in one hand. “Shove his tongue down Maya’s throat? No, it was nothing quite that dramatic.”
Riley sees the whole scene almost as if she’s floating above herself. 
Charlie inches into the middle of the circle of players on his knees and leans across to Maya. He sweeps her hair behind one ear, cupping her cheek. They draw closer together, lips parted, eyes closed.  And then they kiss. Not a brief peck, but a soft, lingering moment. 
Riley can see the way Maya’s shoulders tense. She starts to bring her hand up to Charlie’s chest at the same time that he starts to run his fingers through her hair, although immediately afterwards they both seem to remember where they are and who they’re with and they practically jolt apart. They stare at each other, breathing heavily as they draw their hands back.
The whole room watches, fixated.
It’s obvious, Riley notes while trying to school her emotions, that something more than a kiss for Truth or Dare just happened. There’s a sudden electricity lingering between Maya and Charlie--a connection or chemistry that goes further than the friendship and playful antagonism she’s noted between them before; because if anything they’ve always seemed like brother and sister to her, but what she just saw was definitely not something between faux-siblings. 
Her mind races, trying to process, but she’s all too aware that now is not the time for her to react. Anything other than a calm acceptance will have her classmates labelling her as jealous or juvenile.; more than that, she doesn’t want to make matters with Maya worse by making her think that she’s mad at her. 
So when Charlie finally returns to his spot next to her in the circle, Riley offers what she hopes is a smile of reassurance, and briefly squeezes his hand.
By the time Riley has finished this part of her story, she’s finished putting her clothes away and is glancing around the room. It takes Lucas a moment to realize that she’s trying to find something else to do while they talk; they’re at the part of the story where things are starting to go wrong and she’s maybe nervous of how he’ll react or embarrassed by it all  or she just doesn’t like to talk about it but it’s all manifesting as restless energy, regardless of how drained she was earlier. Or she’s just eager to not have to look directly at him while she talks. 
Either way, she’ll quickly run out of distractions in their small room, and he has a feeling if that happens, she’ll keep carrying the whole weight of her past entirely on her own. 
“It’s still pretty warm out.” He comments off-handedly, glancing towards the door towards their room’s little porch overlooking the beach. “Want to walk while we talk?”
Riley nods. “Yeah. That sounds nice.” 
A quick hop over their porch railing later and they’re down on the beach, walking away from the lights of the various hotels and inns at the top of the beach to the moonlit shoreline, cool sand pressing beneath their toes. Lucas decides that his best choice is to not push Riley further. He waits for her to speak and they walk several minutes in silence before she continues recounting her past. 
“I sat there for a few more rounds of the game, long enough that no one would think I was leaving because of the kiss, before I left saying my knee was hurting and I wanted to go get some more ice and aspirin from my parents and go to bed. I did go up to my room, but I just wanted to think.
“And I thought myself in circles. I knew Charlie wasn’t cheating--he’d been nothing but adoring and faithful our entire relationship--but he and Maya were obviously much closer than I realized and that closeness wasn’t what I thought it was. I couldn’t figure out if they really liked each other or if it was just that physical chemistry some people have...I didn’t know how any of it really came to be or what it meant for me and Charlie. I loved him with my whole heart, but he was clearly attracted on some level to Maya… I finally decided I needed to find my mom and talk to her about it and see what she thought.”
“Topanga, I don’t know what to do.”
Riley stops in her tracks, a few steps up from the bottom of the stairs, when she hears her best friend’s voice.  Before leaving her room she’d heard plenty of classmates returning to their own rooms as curfew was imposed; Maya hadn’t shown up in their shared space, but Riley assumed that was just her friend  doing her rebellion thing, looking around parts of the lodge they weren’t supposed to be in, not her taking the same chance Riley wanted to capitalize on for some private advice with her mother. Topanga was the chaperone spending a little extra time downstairs to make sure no students were breaking curfew and making trouble, so it should have been the perfect opportunity.
“I’m a little lost. Start from the beginning and tell me everything and we’ll see what we can figure out.”
Eavesdropping is wrong. Riley knows that. But she’s been confused about Maya and her behavior for months now, and to throw her kiss with Charlie on top of it...she’ll take any piece of information she can get, however she can get it. She stays frozen on the stairs, out of sight of Maya and her mom.
“Well, you know how Riley and Charlie and Farkle have all been trying to fix me?”
“That’s not what they’re trying to--,”
Maya blows right through whatever assurance Topanga is trying to offer. “Because of that, Charlie and I have been talking a lot more.  Texting and skyping all summer… We’ve gotten way closer. I just… he understands where I’m coming from so much better than Riley or Farkle. His parents had their divorce and things are still really messy there and...it feels like we have this connection.”
“A connection like you and Riley, or more like you and Josh?”
“Like me and Josh.” The words rush out. “I know it’s awful. He’s been Riley’s boyfriend for forever and they’re in love but there’s just something about talking to him and seeing him and being around him that’s so...good. And then tonight we kissed…”
“Oh Maya…”
“Not like that! The class was playing truth or dare, and Charlie got dared to kiss someone other than Riley, and Riley was right there and she told him it was OK so he started to look around the room and his eyes landed on mine and for a moment it felt like we were the only two people in the room. We kissed and it was like this fire ignited in my chest, it felt so good. I’ve never had a kiss feel like that. And I know he felt something too… But I just feel so awful. 
“I know nobody was cheating or breaking trust or anything but I know Riley and I know she only thought it was OK for him to do the dare because she thought the kiss wouldn’t mean anything, but then it was this amazing kiss and there were sparks and my stupid crush that I already felt horrible about is now this big ball of feelings.” Maya practically spits the word though her voice is starting to become thick with tears. “And I can’t ever do anything about them, even if Charlie feels the same way, because he’s Riley’s boyfriend. If they break up it’s not like they’ve only been on a date or two. They’ve been together for years, and Riley loves him so much, so I would never be able to be with him. 
“And I know I have to be OK with that because that’s life and that’s always been the way my life goes anyways so I shouldn’t be surprised, but...kissing Charlie felt right. It felt so right, and now it all hurts so bad.”
Maya starts to cry. Riley can hear her mom trying to soothe her friend, and pictures her drawing her into her arms to offer comfort. Deciding that she’s heard enough, Riley turns around to hobble up the stairs (hopefully silently), her own heart breaking as she starts to move. 
Whether it’s for her friend’s heartache or some other reason, she’s not entirely sure.
“All of that came as such a shock.” Riley confides. “Maya and Charlie’s relationship had always been...contentious. When he moved back to the city and we started dating she didn’t like that she wasn’t the only person in my world anymore, and he was the sort of guy that was never mean or anything but had this way of casually flaunting things. So they would butt heads a lot, even though over time it got much more good-natured. But they never seemed like they were getting particularly close.”
“I mean, it does sound like there were at least some elements of their relationship that they were hiding from you.” Lucas points out. “If they had been talking all summer and neither of them mentioned it to you...Usually a secret like that is a sign that they know it’s more than just talking and they’re feeling guilty about it.”
Riley nods, crossing her arms over chest. “That’s where I eventually landed after a lot of thought. For whatever reason, they hadn’t wanted me to know the whole picture. And suddenly I had it anyway. But I also knew Maya was trying to hold her feelings back and be a good friend, and Charlie was never the one to initiate the breaks in our relationship, even if it was an issue with him that was causing our problems, so somehow it was up to me to decide what to do.”
There are really only a couple of options that Lucas can see. Either Riley chose to break up with Charlie, fracturing the friend group (it’s only logical that he would drift away from the group without Riley to tether him to the others) or Riley chose to stay with him but it eventually came out that she knew about Maya’s feelings for him, prompting the idea that somehow she’s selfish for putting her own feelings first. Either way, he can see how the emotional fallout from such a choice could start to build the rifts that have been festering for ten years. 
“I didn’t figure out what that was until the next morning.”
Breakfast is...awkward, to say the least. 
Riley, Charlie, Maya, and Farkle have grabbed food from the buffet and settled in the far corner of the dining hall, away from everyone else. No one is talking. Well… no one but Farkle is talking. Which might be a product of the fact that he appears to be the only one there who has gotten any sleep, or because he’s never been one able to stew in an uncomfortable silence.
“I wonder if they’ll cancel today’s hike or have us go anyways.” He comments, glancing towards a window where rain is pounding against the glass. “I’m not sure everyone brought rain gear. The forecast when we were packing said that today would be partly cloudy.”
Nobody answers him. He continues talking anyways. 
“Of course, if we really wanted to know when it was going to rain we could get a bee colony and observe their behavior. A study in China determined that honeybees increase their activity and production the day before a rainstorm. They think that the bees are able to register changes in barometric pressure and in the….”
Riley feels slightly bad tuning out her longtime friend while she considers the conundrum sitting across her shoulders, but she reasons that finding a solution to the emotional entanglements that leaves everyone in her friend group content is more important to her than the activity patterns of bees.  So she ignores Farkle’s nervous babble and attempts to subtly study her friends, hoping a solution will jump out at her.
She starts with her boyfriend.
Charlie sits across from her. He’s resting his elbows on the table as he eats. He’s pale, the way he gets when he doesn’t get enough sleep (last year when his parents were renegotiating their custody agreement he had seemed to be a permanent shade of milk), and he’s mostly just staring at his plate. When he does look up, he’s very deliberate with his gaze, Riley thinks.; his eyes go to either the window or to her. Nowhere else. 
Then there’s Maya.
Her best friend looks absolutely miserable. Puffy, bloodshot eyes, hair up in a  messy knot instead of one of her normal intricate styles...she’s stirring her oatmeal and letting it drip from the spoon back into the bowl rather than eating it. Riley doesn’t know what advice her mother gave Maya after she had made her escape, but she knows that Maya has been silently gluing herself to her side this morning, distancing herself from Charlie as much as possible. 
The pair are very blatantly avoiding each other,  but when the boys had been coming downstairs that morning Riley had seen a moment where their eyes had met. It had been less than a second before they looked away and Charlie had hurried to reach Riley and greet her with their normal kiss on the cheek, and she’s fairly certain they haven’t looked at one another since. Which tells a story in and of itself. 
Riley thinks. Even though they hadn’t acted on anything outside of the game last night, it’s clear that something is happening between Maya and Charlie. She knows Maya felt whatever connection they had come to life when they kissed for the dare, and based on the way he’s acting, it’s probably reasonable to guess that the same is true for Charlie. At the same time, she knows Charlie has heard her parents’ story and spotted all the parallels it has to their relationship; he’s said more than once how great it is that they’ve found each other as early as her parents had and had their example to guide them, and if she lets him, Riley figures he’ll treat this problem as their own version of her father’s ski lodge affair--a hurdle, but something they can get past with a little angst.
Meanwhile it looks like Maya is willing to break her own heart further to let Riley and Charlie stay together. And Riley can only imagine what path that anguish will lead Maya down.
The very thought grabs at her heart. She’s supposed to be helping Maya find her hope and joy again, not making things worse. She’s supposed to be finding Maya a win.
Just like that, Riley knows what she has to do.
“The whole thing is actually really strange, because honeybees hoard resources and they wouldn’t need to--,”
“Farkle,” Riley interrupts his impromptu lecture softly. She pushes her plate away, and rests her hands, one on top of the other, on the table. “Can you give us a moment, please?”
Or, Lucas realizes, there was a third option. One where Riley ignored her own feelings in favor of following an extreme version of her dad’s ridiculous advice, and gave Maya something that she wanted. He can honestly say he’s dumbfounded. For one, because he truly can’t fathom that anyone would be quite so selfless as to do that, but for another, Riley doesn’t exactly sound sad or like she regrets doing it--she’s just...tired. 
“I don’t get it.” He says without much thought. “Did you realize right then that you didn’t love him anymore? Or that Maya’s happiness was actually the secret to stopping global warming or something?”
“What?” Riley stops and looks at him, furrowing her brow.
“I’m sorry I just...I can understand breaking up with someone you still love even though you know he’d stay because you’re pretty sure he has feelings for someone else. Or maybe giving your friend permission to date someone that you don’t love anymore. But I don’t understand giving your friend and your ex of sixty seconds your blessing to explore their feelings. All because your friend hadn’t gotten anything she wanted in a long time and was acting out?”
Riley crosses her arms over her chest, her posture stiffening. Belatedly, Lucas realizes that he’s started passing and sharing judgement, despite the fact that from what he can tell, she doesn’t deserve the judgement and doesn’t need any added pressure coming from him. He opens his mouth to apologize correct himself but Riley beats him to it. 
“I was stuck between two relationships.” She says. She casts her eyes down to the sand, where they stay. “Between two people I loved so much. A guy that could maybe be the person I married one day, and the girl that was my best friend. I didn’t want to lose either of them.”
“Riley…”
Riley starts walking, and Lucas hurries to keep up. “So I started doing the math. The odds of me meeting my soulmate in preschool and dating and marrying him and having kids and everything working out like my parents did...one in a million at best. That’s just not how it happens for people. But the odds of Maya and I staying best friends…? Those were a lot better. I mean, it’s still not super common but there are way more examples of childhood friends going through life together.”
“So you decided to kill two birds with one stone. Dive into what you thought was likely inevitable and break up with Charlie, and do what your dad told you was best and give Maya a reason to hope again by getting her a real chance at something she wanted.” Lucas fills in. “You didn’t want to lose them.”
She nods. “Happy people are less likely to leave. They had feelings for each other, and they weren’t going to do anything about them and eventually they weren’t going to want to deal with how ignoring them felt. Telling Charlie I didn’t love him anymore and giving them the chance to explore their feelings was the best option. And it all worked out. 
“They started dating, Maya straightened herself out... Junior year started and everyone was happy.” 
“Even you?” Lucas probes. Doing something that makes your best friend happy might usually make you feel good, but he has his doubts when that something means breaking up with someone you still have feelings for.
“I was happy for--,” Riley cuts herself off and shakes her head before starting over, a self-correction if Lucas has ever seen one. “I should have been.” She sighs. “I wanted to be. Everyone else was in a really good place, and I put them there which should have felt good but...even though I wanted them to be happy it wasn’t as easy as I thought it would be to watch it play out.”
“So anyway, would you be super mad at me if I skipped out on movie night tonight?” 
Riley doesn’t think much of Maya’s request; her friend hadn’t really said why she needed to miss their sacred tradition of Friday night movies and a sleepover, but she’s sure that whatever the reason, it must be important. They hardly ever cancel. “Of course not. We can hang out tomorrow instead.”
“Well, actually…” Maya hems, but doesn’t get to her actual protest before Charlie bounds up and pulls her into a deep kiss.
Riley quickly turns to her locker to swap the books in her backpack for the ones she’ll need for her weekend homework. The stabbing pain in her heart isn’t anyone’s business but her own, after all. For all Maya and Charlie and everyone else know, she’s thrilled for them. But if she has the option to look away and not plaster a smile on her face while the happy couple engages in the sort of close physical relationship after dating for a week and a half that she and Charlie had never achieved in their many years together… she’s going to take it. 
“Hey, beautiful.”
Riley closes her eyes at Charlie’s greeting. The nickname--and its implications--are just one more thing that he already has with Maya and never had with her. A nasty voice in the back of her head whispers that he’s always liked Maya better, because everyone always does, and that he only had ever asked her out when he moved back because it was the expected, safe option. She refuses to let the tears that prickle her eyelids at the thought move any further. She tells herself it’s not really true. It just feels like it right now because Charlie and Maya are in the honeymoon phase, and everything is more sweeping and romantic then.
“Did you ask her yet?”
“We were just in the middle of that.” Maya says.
“Ask me what?” Riley opens her eyes, finds the happiest ‘Smiley Riley’ expression she can manage and turns around again.  It takes everything in her not to let it falter when she sees how they’ve landed, Charlie standing behind Maya with his arms wrapped around her shoulders while she nuzzles against his neck.
“My stepdad needs to close up his brother’s beach house in the Hamptons since he won’t be back in the States until next year.” Charlie explains. “My family’s heading down tonight to make a weekend of it, and I asked Maya if she could come too, but she said she had to check about missing your movie night before she could say yes.”
Oh. 
Riley’s not sure if it’s her stomach or her heart that plummets through the floor.  Maybe both. Maya wants to cancel their sleepover--the sleepover they’ve only ever cancelled three times since its inception (and two of those times were because someone was in the hospital)--to go on a weekend with Charlie.  They had never cancelled anything with each other because of a boy, and here they are, changing everything once again.
She has to remind herself that this was her idea. She set this in motion and wanted this to happen; she wanted Charlie and Maya together because it meant that everything else would stay the same. And there have been some changes that she hadn’t anticipated and it’s a bit harder than she thought to watch her best friend date the boy she loves but at the heart of it it’s worth it. Because everyone is still there and friends and happy and that has to be the most important thing.  
She forces her smile a little wider. “The Hamptons? Maya you definitely have to go. And bring  a canvas. It’ll be beautiful there right now, I’m sure you’ll see something worth painting.”
“OK. So you were doing everything you could to let them be happy, and somehow that makes you selfish?”
“That part doesn’t come until later.”
“What comes next then?”
“What else? Public humiliation.”
“Riley, let’s just go. There’s no point in you making yourself miserable watching them. We can go back to my place and watch Pixar movies and drink milkshakes.”
Riley presses her lips together at Farkle’s offer. They’re closer than they’ve ever been (between throwing herself deeper into her school work and clubs to limit her time around the happy couple, and them sneaking off during the day and going on date after date, she and Farkle have been spending a big chunk of their time together) and he’s like another brother to her but their newly deepened relationship isn’t without its friction. As observant as he is, it hadn’t taken him long to figure out that she hadn’t been totally honest with Charlie and Maya about her feelings, and after he heard her out to get her reasoning and realized he wasn’t going to convince her to tell everyone the truth, he’s spent the last month and a half doing everything he can to distract her and make things a little bit easier. She loves him for it, but sometimes it’s clear by his suggestions that he doesn’t approve or understand. 
“I can’t just leave.” She protests softly, tearing her eyes away from where Maya and Charlie are dancing. “It’s homecoming. I’m on the committee that put the dance together. I have to be here.” 
Farkle raises an eyebrow, glancing around the decorated gymnasium; the dance is in full swing and everyone looks quite entertained and happy. “It doesn’t look like there’s going to be a streamer crisis anytime soon. And if there is I’m pretty sure the rest of the committee can handle it.” 
“Farkle, leaving early looks weird. People will have questions...it’ll be better if I just tough it out and stay.” She squirms a little under his discerning gaze, but relaxes a little when he reaches over and grabs her hand.
“At least come dance with me instead of standing here and torturing yourself.”
Riley nods, and he pulls her off to a far corner of the dance floor.
Some time later, Riley is chatting with Maya near the punchbowl, as Farkle and Charlie have gone to the small backstage area to get the sound system ready for the homecoming court announcements, and she almost feels relaxed; it’s easier when it’s just the two of them. 
“My mom’s been on my back all week about going to get a new coat before the weather changes,” Maya says, sipping from her punch. “So I was thinking we should totally have a girls day. It feels like it’s been forever since we’ve gone all out.”
Riley swallows back her instinctive response--that they haven’t gone out because Maya has been cancelling to spend time with Charlie--with a smile. “I love it! Where do you want to go?”
“I was thinking we go for the full makeover. Hair, clothes, the works.”
“Sounds great. New week, new us.”
“I’m just saying,” a voice filters out of the speakers on top of the music, “That you and Maya should tone down the PDA a little.”
Riley swallows around a suddenly dry mouth. It doesn’t even take her two words to recognize Farkle’s voice even with the music still blasting, and she quickly spots a handful of her classmates stop dancing and look around in confusion. 
“Why? We’re just happy together.” Charlie’s voice chimes in, and if Riley weren’t so paralyzed with fear and disbelief she’d notice the familiar stab of pain at the reminder of the differences between her relationship with Charlie and Maya’s. 
She can’t believe that Farkle is taking it upon himself to try and talk to Charlie about this. She can’t believe he’s doing it in public. She can’t believe that he’s apparently forgotten what happens when you turn a microphone on.
“Because…” Farkle draws out. “Not everyone is comfortable with it.”
“You’ve never seemed uncomfortable before, man.”
“Not me. Riley.”
The longer the conversation goes on, the more students stop their dancing. Maya crinkles her brow and stares at Riley. 
“Why would Riley have a problem with me and Maya?” Charlie asks.
And naturally, the DJ seems to catch on that something is happening and turns off the music the same moment that Farkle gives his answer. “Because she’s still in love with you.”
Lucas thinks back to his high school years. He thinks about his fellow classmates and his friends and his secrets, and although nothing that he kept to himself was quite so personally devastating as a secret love for someone close to him, and he wasn’t as close to anyone as Riley appears to have been with her friends, he’s not sure that he would have coped with any of his secrets being revealed to the entire school. Especially by someone that he trusted. 
Part of him growing up and letting go of his anger towards his family and becoming the sort of person that he could be proud of had been learning to be more open. Not to forget his past experiences but to let the past be the past, and look at everything else through a new lens. To look for the best in people. And he’d like to think that he’s come a long way with that but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t know the reality of things. 
People can be cruel. Teenagers especially so. And to be forced into such a vulnerable and open position without warning, around people that probably wouldn’t know better than to find the spectacle entertaining...he can’t imagine how much that would throw a person.
Especially someone who’s been working so hard to make sure no one knew the truth.
“Riley, I--...” He means to offer comfort, but cuts himself off almost before he starts; what is there to say exactly? It’s not like there’s any set of words that can undo the past or take away the hurt she felt in that moment. 
If Riley hears his aborted comment, she doesn’t say anything. “So I’m standing there, stunned. Just completely in shock. Not only because my feelings had just been broadcast to the entire school, but I couldn’t believe that Farkle would even share them with Charlie in the first place. I know everyone is staring, but I’m so floored that I can’t even think about what to do. And all of that would have been bad enough, but the night wasn’t over yet.”
“There’s more?” Now Lucas knows he wouldn’t have coped. 
“Riley, what’s Farkle talking about?”
Riley blinks in the face of Maya’s question. She can tell the eyes of her classmates are all locked on her and it’s so silent that it feels like the air is being sucked out of the room, but there’s only one thought running through her mind. ‘They know.’ It loops, over and over, getting tossed around as everything seems to tunnel out around her. 
“Riley!” Maya shoves at her shoulder and the world snaps back into focus. “What’s Farkle talking about? What does he mean, you’re still in love with Charlie?” 
There’s no getting out of it really. Oh, she could try to lie, to tell everyone that Farkle had misconstrued what she had said and this is all one big misunderstanding, but it’s not like anyone would actually believe her at this point. No one’s going to believe that the resident genius didn’t comprehend what someone was trying to tell him to the point that he spread completely false information. And really, the only reason she had gotten away with lying about her feelings in the first place is because she had gotten to plan what she wanted to say and how she wanted to say it; she’s an actress when she can prepare and anticipate but spontaneity is not her friend. 
Riley takes a deep breath, steeling herself, before facing Maya and giving her answer. “Exactly what it sounds like. I’ve been keeping it to myself because it’s not anyone else’s business or problem but...I still love Charlie.”
“That’s not what you said when you broke up with him at the lodge.” Maya protests, her brow furrowing deeper. 
“I know it’s not exactly…” Riley drops off as Charlie comes to a stop in front of them breathing heavily, having rushed from behind the staging area. Farkle, not known for his athletic prowess, is several feet behind. 
He says her name, but nothing else. For a moment they’re just staring at one another, and it’s almost the same as the quiet moments of comfortable tension in their relationship where everything just felt closer. More connected and intense. There’s a split second where Riley thinks that maybe there is still something there between them, in spite of the last couple of months. But the spell breaks just as quickly when Maya speaks again. 
“I don’t understand. At the lodge you said your relationship had run its course. You said he and I should explore our feelings.”
“Maybe we should take this some place a little more private.” Farkle urges shortly after his arrival, glancing amongst the trio and then crowd, rapt with attention. 
Maya ignores him. “Why would you say all that if it wasn’t true?”
“Because…”Riley hedges for a moment, trying to decide how honest she should be...how much detail she should share. But she quickly realizes that there’s not much use in hiding anything. Maybe things will be less awkward and horrible if they knew she had done this to make them happy. “I thought things would be better for everyone if I stepped back. The two of you had some kind of connection, whether you wanted to admit to it or not,  and I didn’t want that to come between us. I’d much rather have you guys as my friends than to lose one of you--or both of you--because I was keeping you from something you wanted. I thought that my feelings would fade, and as long as you two were happy, whatever I went through would be worth it.”
“Then why have Farkle come talk to me?” Charlie asks, finally finding his voice again. With more words spoken, Riley can hear the taut edge in his tone--the confusion, but also the anger.
She takes a step back. “I didn’t want Farkle to tell you anything.”
“But he did.”
“Guys,” Farkle steps closer to the group, gesturing between them, “don’t you think we should at least go out to the hall?”
They ignore the suggestion, staring at each other for a moment longer, uncertainty painted across their faces. Riley wouldn’t be sure that any of them were even breathing except she can feel the familiar tightness of inhaling through anxiety in her chest. She’s not sure what she expects to happen, or even what she wants to happen at this point; she can’t even begin to figure out what her next step would be to fix the mess that’s been created in the last few minutes, and although her mind is racing, all she can do is stand there and wait for someone else to step up. 
“Riley, you’re so special, and we were always good together. You’ll always be important to me.” Charlie says after a deep breath. Next to him, Maya tenses and Riley finds it even harder to take a breath. It’s entirely possible that Charlie’s next words are going to change everything between the group; it’s exactly what she’d wanted to avoid.“But when you broke up with me and told me to move on...that’s what I did.  Dating Maya has been amazing.” He reaches over, weaving his fingers through Maya’s. “We’re really happy together, going in a great direction...I don’t want to move backwards.”
“Riles, you know how much I love you, and I hate seeing you hurt,” Maya adds on, “but we didn’t ask you to step back for us.. And now that you have and we’ve been together for a few months…”
Riley knows what happens next sets the tone for their friendship. She can give into every ounce of the heartache that is the guy she loves saying in front of everyone that getting together again with her would be moving backwards--all but confirming that he thinks things with Maya are better than they ever were with her--and cry and make a scene and make it all but inevitable that things will change beyond recognition or repair. Or, she can go with the numb shock of it all. Stay calm. And maybe it’ll be clear that she’s upset right now, but at least it will leave the door open for things to stay mostly the same. 
“I would never ask you to give up the relationship you’ve found.” Riley jumps in as Maya trails off; her words fall flat, and even when she makes herself smile she know it sounds forced and strained. She presses on anyways. “That’s why I didn’t want anyone to know. It’s my thing,  not anyone else’s. You guys are happy, and that’s what’s most important.”
“After that...Farkle and I weren’t talking. I was upset he had violated my trust and he...was not used to getting things wrong or messing up in such a big way so I’m pretty sure he didn’t know how to apologize. So things were bad in that direction and probably even more awkward with Maya and Charlie…”
“The happy couple didn’t handle things very well?” Lucas has to think that a trio of well-adjusted adults would have trouble maintaining their relationships in a similar love triangle situation, so for a group of hormonal teenagers it would have to be next to impossible. 
“They weren’t sure if they needed to change how they acted around me, so they tried but that was changing a big part of their relationship which made things weird between them. Plus, I think all three of us were worried that the wrong comment or nudge or whatever would give someone the wrong idea or hurt someone so we were all tip-toeing around each other, and I don’t know if you’ve noticed or not but Maya doesn’t do all that great with awkward.” 
Lucas thinks back to the various derisive and sarcastic comments he’s heard the blonde make in response to an uncomfortable situation. “She doesn’t seem to.”
“It didn’t take much more than a week for her to hit her limit and take matters into her own hands.”
“Riles, can we talk about the Charlie thing?”
Riley is so taken aback by Maya’s question, coming in the middle of their art class that she drops her paintbrush. It’s the first time since homecoming that anyone has addressed what had happened directly and she’d been mildly hopeful that the radio silence would continue until a long time had passed; maybe several years down the line they’d be able to have an open discussion about the whole thing but she knows how precarious things are between them right now and even one comment could damage things further. Thankfully, Maya continues talking without waiting for a response, and she gets to find out more before she commits to anything one way or the other. 
“It’s just that...this is weird for all of us, ya know? You’re like my sister and I know you said that you’re OK with Charlie and me being together because you’re like, the greatest friend a girl could ask for, and the last thing me or Charlie want to do is do anything that hurts you, but we’re just...not really sure where the line is right now? Like I said, we don’t want you to be uncomfortable but as a couple we’ve always been more…” Maya shifts in her seat, tilting her head back and forth as she hems over her answer.
When two seconds go by and Maya still hasn’t finished her sentence, Riley takes the hint. “Physical?”
Maya snaps her fingers and points. “Exactly! It’s not like that’s the only aspect to our relationship but it is a big one, and I know you want us to be happy, but at the same time, it’s like I said, we don’t want to hurt you. So I guess what I’m asking is…”
“Maya, you and Charlie should have exactly the relationship you want.” Riley presses her lips together, then reaches over and rests a hand on top of her friend’s. “Don’t worry about me.” After all, she thinks as Maya grins and thanks her for being so understanding, and she bends down to retrieve her paintbrush, what’s one more sacrifice to keep your friends?
“She actually went to you, barely a week after she found out that you still loved Charlie, and asked if you were OK with them making out in front of you?” Lucas can hardly believe what he’s hearing. “And she was your best friend? How were you OK with that?” 
“At the time I thought I had to be.” Riley answers. As she walks she reaches up and takes down her ponytail, starting to braid her hair instead. “Remember? According to everyone my job as her friend was to give and do everything I could to make her happy and help her grow. How I felt was never a part of the equation.” 
Right. Lucas had almost forgotten that particular mountain of bad advice. How parents could advise that level of self-sacrifice to their child...even if Riley had been misinterpreting what they had been saying, shouldn’t they have stepped in and clarified at some point? Or maybe comforted her and given some advice?  Like when they saw her making herself completely miserable? His esteem for the elder Matthews, not particularly high to begin with, drops down a little further. 
“That said, it didn’t take me very long to realize that as much as I wanted to take all of my feelings about the situation and shove them into a box at the back of my closet where I would never have to deal with them, that’s not really something a person can do. Or at least that I can do.
“I wanted to be OK with Maya and Charlie being together, but even in spite of him saying flat out that his feelings for me had changed and putting that closure between us, I still felt something for him. It hurt to see them together and how different he was with Maya. I tried my best to swallow it down and hide it but I wasn’t very good at it and between that and the ongoing mess with Farkle… There was so much tension that it was easier for everyone if I limited my time with them.” Riley ties off her braid, letting it rest on her shoulder. 
“Wait, really?” 
“Alanis Morissette eat your heart out, right?” Riley huffs. “All I wanted to do was make sure my friends were happy enough to stick around and all I did was make it too painful for me to stay.” 
Lucas frowns. Sure, the choice that she made to break up with Charlie in the first place had been a mistake but it wasn’t the only factor that made things hard. From the way she tells the story, the others hardly sound blameless, not from his perspective. “And none of them saw a problem with how they were acting or tried to fix it?”
“They were getting along fine without me. I mean, every once in a while Maya and I would try and hang out on our own but things were still awkward. The more we were apart, the clearer it was that we didn’t have as much in common as we used to and we both felt like we had to be careful with what we said… so that didn’t last very long. By Thanksgiving or so I was pretty much entirely on my own.”
“What do you mean on your own?”
“I was a goofily optimistic, klutzy kid. Whose dad taught at her school. There weren’t a ton of kids lining up around the block to be friends with me. The ones who didn’t ignore me were happy I had lost the protection of Maya and Charlie.”
Lucas doesn’t like the sound of that at all. “Protection?”
“Farkle and I were easy targets for bullies and mean girls. But being friends with Maya and Charlie gave us a layer of protection, because Maya was tough enough to scare most everyone and Charlie was one of those guys that the whole school liked so nobody really wanted to upset him.”
“So what? You drifted apart and it was open season on Riley?”
“For a few kids, yeah.” It sounds so matter-of-fact and nonchalant coming out of Riley’s mouth that Lucas can’t tell if the anger simmering in his chest is an overreaction. 
“And nobody did anything?”
“Most people didn’t know. It was mostly texts and emails. Catty comments in the girls’ bathroom. Nothing super noticeable. It would have been completely manageable if I’d been in a better place. Anyways, we’re getting off track. That stuff was a factor, not a major point in the story.”
The hasty dismissal tells Lucas that his anger is not misplaced, and it likely wouldn’t have been manageable, whether or not she’d had the support of friends, but he knows better than to press the issue further. “OK. So it’s Thanksgiving, and your friend group is pretty non-existent.”He recaps. “Where were your parents during all of that? I would have thought they’d offer all the advice they could to try and help you keep everyone together.”
“Talking to them never really worked. My mom was super busy between work and Auggie and being Maya’s go to adult for advice, so every time I managed to get her alone for five minutes, something more important came up and she dashed off with a promise to make it up to me later. 
“And my dad...he was so reluctant to discuss anything about boys and my dating of them that we only had one real conversation about it and even that was less than helpful.”
“Riley, a moment please?” 
Riley stops packing up her books the moment her dad makes the request, while everyone else filters out of the classroom. He hasn’t kept her behind after class since middle school unless she’s left her lunch money at home and they’ve already had lunch today, so she’s not sure what he could possibly want. They haven’t had any papers or tests lately that she might have done poorly on.
When the room is empty, her dad sits on the edge of his desk, directly in front of her usual seat. “You know, as a teacher I hear pretty much all the gossip that circulates around this school. Not to mention I have students that come to me for advice when they aren’t sure what to do with the problems they’re dealing with.”
“I know.” Riley laughs nervously. Between her mom and Maya and the school’s gossip network he’d probably heard every last detail about her breakup with Charlie and the subsequent homecoming fiasco a few weeks ago. Does he want her to talk about that with him? Not that she’s completely opposed to getting some parental advice on the matter--she’s felt completely lost for a while now and could really use a little guidance--but her dad never wants to talk about this sort of problem with her. 
“And I can’t help but notice there’s been a massive change with you recently.” He continues, and Riley feels a bit better about her chances; sure they don’t normally talk about boys and those sorts of feelings, but if he took notice of her struggles, maybe he was swallowing back his reservations to try and be there for her. Isn’t that what fathers do? 
“Well, things have been--,”
“So what’s going on? Why aren’t you spending time with Maya anymore?”
Just as quickly the hope stoking in her heart plummets down to her feet. She’s so stunned that that’s her dad’s question she can’t even think of an answer. 
He only lets them sit in silence for a few moments. “Look Riley, I can’t pretend I understand what made you decide that breaking up with Charlie and telling him to explore his feelings for Maya was the right thing to do; that wasn’t really what I meant when I said you needed to find a way to help her be happy again. That said, what’s done is done.  Part of growing up is learning to live with the decisions we make. You can’t turn back the clock just because something is harder than you thought it would be.” 
Riley knows that. She doesn’t want to turn the clock back. She just wants to know how to get past it all and stop hurting, but she can’t figure out how to explain that to her dad. 
“The good news is Maya’s attitude has really turned around.” Her dad continues. “She’s doing good in school again, talking about what colleges she might apply to. However misguided it was, it looks like this was the win she needed. But she’s still hurting. None of it feels any good to her without her best friend by her side.”
“So, let me make sure I’m understanding this.” Lucas shakes his head as if to clear it; it’s not that he can’t believe that Riley’s dad would ignore her feelings in such a blatant way--almost every interaction this trip has been a demonstration of his skill in that area--but it just feels jarring to have it laid out that he’s been doing it since she was so much younger, and to hear how it chipped away at Riley’s picture of him. “Your dad hears the whole story, sees that you’re having a hard time, and sits you down to tell you to suck it up and go back to Maya?”
Riley nods. “That’s the way things were. If we fought, I apologized. If she got into trouble, I got her out of it. If she liked something I had, I shared it with her. So if she wanted her best friend around, I was supposed to find a way to make it work.
“I could tell my dad was let down that he was even having to talk to me about it, which was the last thing I wanted. Plus I was so lonely and tired, I thought that going back to my friends and dealing with a little heartache would be better than having no friends and disappointing my parents. I was the good kid. I’d never gone against what they wanted before and it didn’t seem like the time to start. So I told him I’d be better, screwed on my smile and put everything I had into being the only Riley anyone seemed to care about--the happy, helpful doormat. I told Farkle all was forgiven, told Charlie the time apart had done wonders and I was over him, apologized to Maya for abandoning her and went back to the old routine of jumping for her before she could even think to ask me to. As far as everyone else was concerned, the drama was over. All was well.”
Lucas can practically hear the narration continue in his head. But all was not well. Nothing Riley has just described to him was remotely healthy. He knows because he’s done it. He knows how ignoring everything he was feeling and pretending to be a person he wasn’t had chipped away at him and left him a mess that he’d barely been able to hold together long enough to make it to college and get away. 
And Riley is such a people pleaser she had probably thrown herself into the effort with 310%, no matter how hard it was to do so. 
“How long did that go on for?”
“A few months. I slowly realized that I was the only one really trying--no one noticed that I was faking everything, or how much I was constantly giving up or setting aside to make sure everyone else got what they wanted, and never getting anything more than a smile and a pat on the shoulder in return. Even the bullies realized no one was going to notice or care, so they kept at it. Still, I ran myself into the ground, trying to convince myself that I just wasn’t meeting everyone’s standards, and if I just pushed myself a little harder and gave just a little bit more, I would and things would get better. The only time I ever got to let it all go and breathe was if I was alone, and every time I did, it was harder to put the act back on.”
“Did you ever think about not putting it back on?”
“Not until April.”
“What happened then?”
Don’t you think it’s a bit pathetic to still be clinging to Maya and Charlie? It’s not like they actually want you around.
No one wants you around.
Not even daddy talks to you anymore. 
Who can blame him with how obnoxious you are? I’m sure your parents only let you stay with them because they can’t kick you out until you’re 18.
Riley clamps her teeth onto her inner lip as she scrolls through the latest additions to the group text she can’t seem to escape no matter how many numbers she blocks on her phone. They’re hardly the nastiest she’s ever been sent, but the harshness hardly seems to matter anymore; these days every comment seems to chip past her defenses easier than the last. Reading each word hurts, and even after she closes the messages and puts her phone down they keep running through her head. 
She never gets a break anymore. 
If she’s not dealing with the texts and the notes shoved in her locker and the not-so-accidental  shoves, elbows, and trips in a crowded hallway, she’s dealing with the drama of Maya and Charlie. They have officially exited the honeymoon phase of their relationship and are starting to face some challenges. And Riley gets put in the middle of every spat. 
Charlie needs insights into Maya’s personality. Maya needs someone to vent at. They both need help arranging grand gestures of apology. Riley provides it all with every ounce of sympathy she can drudge up, no matter how difficult. And boy is it difficult.
She’d never realized how needy her friends were until she was in the position of needing some support of her own. Now it’s hard not to  notice  how little they seem to care about how she’s doing.
After that, every interaction is harder and seems to drain her more, to the point where she’s taken to sneaking off in the afternoons and studying at a coffee shop near Bryant Park, a journey no one else is likely to make,  just to get a couple hours away from it all every day. She does her homework in peace, away from self-centered friends and nasty classmates (at least, if she turns her phone off) and it gives her just enough relief to be able to go back to her home and keep up the act that she’s just as happy, just as helpful, just as unaware of the imbalance in all her relationships (with both friends and family) as always. 
Riley’s settled in at her favorite table for one such afternoon, having been working for a good hour already, when the bell above the door tinkles. She doesn’t pay much attention to the customers that enter; the cafe is packed to the brim with students either avoiding their work or getting a caffeine fix prior to a late class as it is almost every day and she’s gotten quite adept at ignoring the chaos until it interferes with her work. 
Only…
“You think you’re so cute, don’t you?”
The laugh of blonde walking past her table to join the line of patrons sounds incredibly familiar. 
“That’s what you said last night.”
And so does the boy who has an arm slung over her shoulder.
“That was about your butt, not your face.” 
Reaching behind himself, he catches her hand just before it can land a playful slap on the aforementioned butt. “So you only want me for my body, is that it?”
“That and what you can do with it.” 
The blonde stretches up on her tiptoes, pulling him into a searing kiss, just as reality gives way to Riley’s shock.
The girl is Maya. But the boy is not Charlie.
Lucas is almost positive that he hasn’t missed the bit of the story where Maya and Charlie decided they weren’t meant to be together. And he’s certain that if their relationship was less serious and the type where they were open and free to see other people that Riley would have mentioned it before now. Which means that whatever was happening in the coffee shop, it was behind Charlie’s back, in spite of all the feelings professed and happiness claimed. “Do I even want to know who she was with?”
“Probably not but it’s part of the story so…”
Riley rushes to close her textbook and gather her things to make a hasty exit. She does not want to see anymore or even worse, have them see her; if they realize they’ve been caught, there will surely be a scramble to make her understand the situation and to convince her to keep the secret and she’s not ready to deal with that. She’s not sure she’ll ever be ready to deal with that. 
Unfortunately, the universe does not agree with her plan.
In her hurry to get her belongings together, her elbow collides with her tea, sending the cup to the floor (with what feels like a surprisingly loud crash for a paper travel mug). Several patrons turn to the source of the noise, including Maya who immediately starts to fluster. 
“Riley!” Her eyes widen and she jumps away from her companion. They both rush to speak at the same time. “This isn’t what it looks like!”
“What are you doing here?”
Riley is fairly certain that there’s no alternative explanation for what she’s seen that would excuse Maya and her Uncle Josh making out in a coffee shop when earlier in the day she and Charlie were making moon eyes in the cafeteria and feeding each other bites of slightly stale cafeteria cake. She’s never been one for confrontation with her friends or family, but the heat of frustration and upset rises before she can even think to swallow it. “I study here where I can get some peace and quiet. I’d ask why you come here but I make it a point not to waste people’s time by asking questions I already know the answers to.” She turns back to the table pulling several napkins from the dispenser to try and deal with the mess. The sooner she cleans up the spill, the sooner she can leave and not have some sort of embarrassing emotional reaction. 
“Riles, this isn’t what it looks like.” Maya repeats her initial insistence. 
“Are you still dating Charlie?”
“Wh--I--that’s--,”
“It’s a simple question Maya.” Riley cuts off her sputtering, turning back around. She can practically feel her frustration and anger sparking in her eyes, something she normally does everything she can to tamp down. She finds she doesn't care.“Are you still dating Charlie?”
“Well, yeah but--,”
“Then it’s exactly what it looks like.” 
“That was the last straw for me.”  Riley informs. “I was done. I had given up the boy I loved for Maya, and even though they were supposedly both happy with each other, she turned right around and cheated on him. And because it was with Josh, she didn’t even see it as all that wrong.”
Lucas is beginning to wonder if they’ll run out of beach before the story is over. Every piece of Riley’s tale seems to bring up more questions to unpack than it answers, and he has a feeling they haven’t even reached the climax yet. “Why would it matter that it was Josh instead of someone else?”
Another heavy sigh escapes Riley’s lips. “Ever since they first met, Maya had the biggest crush on Josh. And even though she could be pretty bold and obnoxious about it,  Josh never really shut her down other to bring up their age difference. But as time went on even that got to be less and less firm.”
“Three years is a big gap when you’re still a kid but it just keeps shrinking the older you get.” Lucas nods, familiar with the argument.
She nods. “The attraction was definitely reciprocal. And they had an unspoken agreement that neither of them were supposed to just wait around and not have a love life, but if, when the age gap wasn’t so...problematic, they were both available, they were probably going to give things a shot.”
Which still doesn’t explain how the fact that it was with Josh made Maya think she had some sort of pass on the cheating thing. The key word Lucas could pick out of Riley’s explanation of the agreement was ‘available’, which Maya clearly wasn’t. “How does that make it OK for her to date two people without both of them knowing and agreeing?”
“Come on, Riles. You could at least talk to me. Let me explain.”
Riley spins on her heel, whirling to face Maya; she and Josh have been chasing after her since Riley had stormed out of the cafe, some five blocks thus far, trying to get her to stop and listen to whatever it is they have to say. Riley can’t say that she’s particularly interested in the explanation right now, but she also knows that Maya isn’t going to give up her pursuit any time soon, and she had been so flustered upon her exit that she hadn’t thought to do the sensible thing and get on the subway or hail a cab where they wouldn’t be able to immediately follow. “Fine.” She bites out, crossing her arms over her chest. “Explain.”
“Josh and I...it’s totally unexpected. We only got together last week.” 
Riley blinks, uncertain as to what in those two sentences was supposed to make her understand the situation. Maya hesitates but keeps talking.
“There just hasn’t been a good chance for me to talk to Charlie yet.”
“That’s funny, I seem to remember you being with him before classes, study hall, lunch, PE...I wonder if any of those times would have given you the opportunity to bring something like this up? Or, and I’m just throwing things out here, what about right now? I mean, surely if you stopped shoving your tongue down my Uncle’s throat you could find the time to sit down with  your boyfriend and tell him that your feelings have changed.”
“Riley, that’s not fair.” Josh jumps in.
Maya nods, continuing after him quickly. “It’s not that easy. Charlie and I have been together a long time, I can’t just break up with him out of the blue. He deserves better than that.”
Riley doesn’t even know where to begin with that. The belief  that the few months Maya and Charlie have been dating could be considered a long time...the idea that carrying on a secret relationship with someone else is somehow kinder than breaking up with a person...the light insinuations about Riley’s own break up with Charlie...it all flabbergasts her to the point of stunned silence, which Maya seems to take as the dawning of Riley’s understanding, and she’s more than happy to keep talking. 
“So it’s not that we’re trying to have this secret affair or anything. I just need a little time to figure out how to tell him in a way that won’t hurt him. It’s not like I don’t care about him. I’ve been really happy with him while we’ve been together--he’s a great guy and he  was exactly what I needed to get me through until--,”
Maya cuts herself off, but all it takes is a glance down to her hand, still interwoven with Josh’s, for Riley to fill in the blanks. He was exactly what I needed to get me through until Josh and I could be together. Whatever Maya’s feelings for Charlie are, they don’t compare to her long-harbored feelings for Josh. When the time came and opportunity rose up  Charlie was ultimately nothing more than a placeholder for her.
Riley can barely swallow around the rock that forms in her throat. “I have to go.”
“Wait! But Riley--,”
Riley ignores their duet of protests. “Good luck with your new relationship.”  The words don’t come out happy, enthusiastic, or anything remotely resembling an actual congratulatory message, but Riley’s not sure if she means them at all or is just habitually wishing them well so she doesn’t correct herself or add anything else, instead turning and stepping off the curb to hail a --thankfully empty--approaching taxi. She gets in quickly, shutting the door in Maya’s face and rattling off her address to the driver. It’s nearing dinner time so even if her study time hadn’t been interrupted and her sanctuary invaded, she’d need to be thinking about heading home anyways; she can only hope that Maya will take her fast exit as a sign to stay away, and that her parents will, for once, be understanding.
“I’m guessing they weren’t.” 
“It went better than I thought it would.” Riley shrugs. The answer doesn’t give Lucas much hope that things are about to take a turn for the better. “I had a few days of quiet. My parents didn’t sit down and talk to me about what was going on or anything, but they also didn’t make me see Maya or Josh either. It’s stupid looking back on it but even that little bit of inaction on their part was enough to give me hope that they were at least somewhat on my side; they knew what was going on so it seemed like maybe they were accepting my feelings about everything, even if they weren’t actually trying to help me through it.”
If nothing else, the fact that Riley had ever seen this bare minimum of effort--that doesn’t even really seem like much of an effort at all--as them being accepting spoke volumes about their relationship and how they had been treating her. Only there’s no good way for Lucas to say that without coming off at least somewhat judgemental of Riley that he can find, so he once again stays quiet. 
“It was a different story once Maya came clean and broke up with Charlie.”
“How so?” 
“Nobody liked that she had cheated on him. And you’ve seen how the Matthews’ act with people they disagree with.”
Lucas nods.
“Ending the situation with Charlie and getting his forgiveness got rid of that issue and repositioned her halo. She had done what she needed to do to be happy and made things right so to speak. Me being upset about it regardless of that was the only thing keeping things from going back to 100% normal.”
“That doesn’t even remotely begin to--,”
“‘Riley, we let you have your tantrum but you’re dragging it out a bit long, don’t you think?’ ‘Maya’s your best friend. Can’t you see it’s hurting her that you’re not happy for her?’ ‘It’s time to stop acting like a child and be reasonable.’” Riley cuts him off, parroting the words with such precision and bitterness that it’s clear these are very specific, very real examples of things people--not just people but her family--had said to her. “Maya was the priority. She was the mature one who had earned her feelings and I was the kid, who didn’t understand the depth of what they were talking about  and acting out because I wasn’t getting my way.
“The longer I stood my ground and didn’t crawl back, begging for her to forgive and accept me, the harder it was to deal with anyone. My parents especially. They made their disappointment in me very clear, and didn’t bother to even try and hear where I was coming from. All that mattered was that I had stopped prioritizing my friendship with Maya over everything else and Maya was unhappy, so I was in the wrong.”
Lucas doesn’t even realize his indignation has made him stop walking until Riley turns around to face him, brow furrowed. “But you were unhappy too.” He protests. “And you were their daughter. Not Maya. What made them prioritize her feelings over yours?” He doesn’t expect Riley to have an answer for him, not really, but it’s such a foreign concept to him; as hard as his parents were to deal with and as much as they didn’t really consider his feelings on anything, they also never would have put anyone ahead of him except for themselves.
“They saw her as another daughter. And to them this was my big rebellion. They raised me to be the best parts of them put together. Smart, strong, loyal, hopeful, giving… Cutting ties with Maya went against everything they had told me to be. And if they were upset with me before, it only got worse when I turned down Charlie’s promposal.”
“Charlie’s prompos-- you mean he had the nerve to ask you out again?”
“Our school always had a Spirit Week in the spring that ended with a lip-sync competition. Charlie took the lead for the junior class performance and put together a One Direction number that ended with him asking me to prom and me saying no which nobody, including him, understood.”
“Riley, can we talk?”
Riley stops gathering her books, briefly closing her eyes to steel herself for the pending conversation; she knows exactly what Charlie wants--the same thing he’s wanted for the past two days--and unfortunately her habit of lingering in the safety of a teacher-supervised classroom rather than rushing out to the madness of the hallways with the rest of her fellow students has given him an easy opening that she can’t evade. “There’s nothing to talk about Charlie.” She says, reopening her eyes. She does her best to keep her voice firm, and returns to collecting her things. Maybe if she stays firm and keeps moving it will all be over quickly. “You asked me out. I said no. That’s the end of the discussion.”
“It can’t be.” Charlie protests, He takes a step forward, laying his hand on top of hers to still it. “I know you still have feelings for me.”
It would be easy to melt into his touch. It’s gentle and familiar and everything Riley has been craving for months. She could give in and the entire mess would be done with. It just...wouldn’t be real. 
Her hesitation comes to a grinding halt and she jerks her hand back. “I don’t want to be with anyone who thinks being with me is a step backwards for them.” 
“Who said that?”
“You did.” Riley sweeps her things into her arms and stands, unable to believe that the conversation that had caused her so much heartache was so inconsequential to Charlie that he had forgotten it.
“If I said that it was only because I was confused.” He sidesteps in front of her, blocking her path. “Riley, I know the past few months have been a lot but I still care about you. We can make this work. I mean….look at what happened with your parents.” He gestures towards the front of the classroom, where her dad is trying and failing to look like he’s simply writing out his next lesson plan on the board and not hanging on every word of the conversation. “They broke up and saw other people in high school and look at them now! Married for seventeen years! That could be us one day.”
Riley looks to her dad, eyes wide pleading for his assistance; surely he must understand how crazy Charlie’s premise sounds. The odds of her parents’ relationship working in spite of all of their hurdles and separations was one in a trillion. And really, the circumstances of their breakup and what happened in the aftermath were so different than this.
But her dad just nods. “He’s right Riley. Your story isn’t over yet.”
“If it’s my story that means I get to say when it’s over.” Riley argues, though she feels a stabbing in her chest and her resolve starts to weaken at the disappointed frown that deepens across her father’s face. She tears her gaze away, glancing at Charlie one last time. “I don’t know if you’ve genuinely realized that you still care about me or if you just don’t want to be alone, but I’m sorry. Either way, my answer is no. And it’s not going to change.” She ducks around her ex and hurries out of the room before either he or her dad can say anything else. But she still hears their chorused objections, and can’t stop her tears from falling as she rushes down the hall.
Riley wraps her arms around herself as she finishes this portion of the story, squeezing tightly. Lucas can’t tell if she’s getting cold in the night air or just trying to comfort herself. “From that point on I was on my own. If I caught my parents’ attention all I ever got was a lecture; my so-called friends spent most of their time explaining all the ways that I was being a selfish bitch--that’s if they could even be bothered to talk to me or spend time with me at all. Classmates harassed me, teachers just wanted to talk about my falling grades...It felt like the only person who still liked me for me was Auggie, and that was only because he was too young to understand why everyone else was mad at me. I couldn’t exactly confide in him.”
Riley stops walking. She turns to the ocean for a moment, chewing on her lip with eyes cast downward. It’s obvious that she has more to say but needs a moment, whether to simply gather herself or find her words or something else entirely.
It’s all Lucas can do to not reach over and offer her comfort. He’s hardly a stranger to consoling his clients; in this line of work he’s often called on by people with baggage and he considers it a part of his job to help how he can--how he would want to be treated if he were opening up to someone--yet with Riley he finds himself hesitant. She’s been warming up to him and getting much more comfortable with physical contact, both within the context of their feigned relationship and outside of it, but he can’t help but worry that the emotional place the story is putting her in will render that ease and the effects moot. Riley is clearly vulnerable at the moment, and the last thing he wants to do is anything that will make the situation harder for her.
(There’s also the added complication of their earlier kiss and how every touch between them seems to carry such a weighted spark, but thinking about that is going down a road that Lucas knows will lead to trouble so really, his reluctance to act is based solely on his concern for Riley and not on his worries over the complications of the growing tangled knot of feelings in his chest. Really.)
He’s so caught up in his mental debate and the ominous uneasiness over where the story is going next that he almost misses when Riley starts to speak again.
“I started drowning, and I couldn’t see anyway to save myself. I started to think that maybe I shouldn’t--,” Riley cuts herself off as her voice grows shakier. When she starts again, it’s still thick and wet, but firm. “Uncle Eric wasn’t wrong when he said that if he hadn’t stepped in I wouldn’t be here anymore. By the time my dad called him at the end of the school year I was in a really bad place.”
“Riley! Light of my life, the one and only, my favorite niece in the universe!” 
Riley’s bed jolts with the impact of an adult launching himself onto the end of the mattress and bouncing as he settles. The movement causes her to fall out of her position, huddled on her side and staring blankly towards the window, and onto her back. She doesn’t move to correct it, or to look at the newcomer. She knows it’s her Uncle Eric, and knows, because her parents aren’t subtle in the slightest, that he’s there as their last ditch effort to make her see reason and crawl back to her friends. 
It’s a specialty of his, understanding people and repairing relationships, and she knows her parents are hoping that he can make her see the light. That as her favorite uncle somehow his words will get through to her and she’ll rethink her choices. 
Only Riley is well past the point of going back. And she doesn’t really want to look her favorite uncle in the eye while he tells her how big of a disappointment she is; she’s done that enough with everyone else in her life and to do it again would just be too much. Even hearing it will be too much but it’s not like she has a choice. She never has a choice. 
“It is a beautiful day at the start of the summer and I find you holed up in your room.” Eric says, a teasing exasperated tone gracing his voice. “The curtains on your windows aren’t even open. What gives?”
“I didn’t feel like getting up.” It’s the first time Riley has said more than a word here and there in a number of days and her throat grates. She’d add a shrug to her words but she can’t muster up the extra energy. 
“But days like today are meant to be experienced! Haven’t any of your friends been by to drag you out?”
Riley closes her eyes. For all of his positives, nobody ever said subtlety was her Uncle Eric’s forte. “We’re not exactly on speaking terms. Or even friends.”
“Yeah, I heard.” The bed starts to shift as Eric moves; Riley can tell he’s wriggling his way up to put her head on the pillows near her, even without looking. “What’s up with that?”
Definitely not subtle. 
“If you’ve heard we’re not talking then you’ve heard the story.” Her parents surely would have ranted every event as they saw it to him in order to get him to come down so quickly. She’d only overheard their conversation about asking for Eric’s help a couple of days ago and while the Senate wasn’t currently in session he had plenty of other work that he couldn’t normally just walk away from. Someone had to have said something to convince him it was urgent. 
“Well,” He draws out the word, “I’ve heard their side of things. I want to hear yours.” Eric nudges at the side of her head with his own temple; it’s his usual playful way but it seems wrong, if only because she hasn’t felt anywhere close to playful for close to a year now. 
She shakes her head minutely. “It’s not that different.”
“Considering how the story I heard sounds nothing like you, I’ll bet it is.”
Riley doesn’t dare trust the glimmer of hope that sits in Eric’s words. Sure, they might mean that he knows she’s a better person and he’s willing to actually listen and believe her, but at one point she’d thought the same about her parents. And her grandparents. And Uncle Shawn. If she thinks for one second that Eric might actually be on her side, it’s only going to hurt more when he’s not. “I don’t care. There’s no point.”
Uncle Eric exhales heavily. “Ri, there’s always, always a point,” he says, fumbling for her hand and weaving his fingers with hers. “If you really don’t want to talk about Maya and Charlie and Josh or whoever else then I’m not gonna make you. I couldn’t care less about them. I want to know about you and how you’re doing. The truth.”
The truth. 
Just the idea sends Riley’s breath into a hitch. 
The truth is that she’s beyond exhausted, and lonely, and she’s more than starting to think that everyone’s right and she’s being a horrible person. Half of the time just breathing hurts. It feels like every negative thought she’s ever had-every upset and bad mood she’s ever bypassed and tried to ignore in favor of being happy- has multiplied by a thousand and returned to come crashing down in a wave across her shoulders and she’s drowning. Swept beneath the surface and drowning and there’s nothing for her to try and grab onto. 
Riley shakes her head and her breath hitches again. This time her shoulders move with it and before she knows it, tears are falling hot and fast down her cheeks. Despite her best efforts she’s a sobbing mess within moments, but Eric just sits up properly and hoists her up into an embrace, rubbing her back and murmuring into her hair while she cries into his chest. 
“Eventually I calmed down enough to actually talk to him and tell him the whole story and what I was feeling.” Riley finishes. “And Eric just…promised me that I wasn’t doing the wrong thing, and that he was going to do everything he could to help me.”
“Like having you move in with him and Linda.” 
“Well it started with just a summer internship he found me with one of his colleagues. I went and stayed with them while I did that and he got me into therapy and kept my dealing with my parents to the absolute bare minimum. And when I told him that I didn’t want to go back to New York for my senior year he didn’t fight me, just found some family friends in education who were willing to call in some favors to help get me a super late interview at a great prep school he lived near and took the hit of telling my parents that I wouldn’t be going home.” 
Lucas nods, trying to reconcile the explanation Riley has given with the display at the karaoke party between the Matthews brothers. It’s not exactly difficult. “Hence your dad saying he stole you.”
“Exactly. Only it was all my choices, Uncle Eric just didn’t want me to be the one to tell them when I was in such a bad place. And ever since then, and when I decided to go to college out west, every time I see my family or talk to them, it’s exactly what you’ve seen. Awkward and  uncomfortable at the best of times, outright hostile and downtrodding at others… they don’t hate me but they don’t exactly like me either.”
Lucas thinks over that assessment. It’s not totally inaccurate; the Matthews’ certainly aren’t trying to freeze her out of being there for Auggie or anything like that--they aren’t actively trying to make Riley miserable--but it’s clear that their affection comes with conditions. You either think and act a certain way or you don’t belong. And even though he doesn’t think Riley is all that far from fulfilling every one of those standards in the present day, because she didn’t do exactly what they wanted in high school and refuses to apologize for it or be a doormat any longer, her family is refusing to see that.
His family had been similar, although he had definitely been further away from their idea of what a perfect son was, and they had treated him like that every time he drifted for as long as he could remember, so when he finally realized how wrong it was and had gotten out from under them, it had been a fairly easy choice to cut the cord and decide he wouldn’t deal with them anymore. Riley didn’t have that blessing. She had a family that had loved her unconditionally right up until the point that they didn’t, so she had more dissonance to reconcile in their behaviors; she had something that most everyone would want to try and get back.
Lucas doesn’t want to overstep any boundaries, or give advice where it’s not wanted, but he knows this is a painful and tricky situation and not many people involved can look at it without the blinders of family on. Even Eric, who had done so well to remove her from the toxic situation in the first place is clearly reluctant to do or suggest more, only throwing direct blame tonight when pushed by the situation. Ultimately it feels like, as an outsider who has taken on taking care of Riley, he needs to try and say something. 
“Do you ever think about not coming back? I mean, I get why you’re here for this. It’s Auggie’s wedding, and he’s a good guy and your brother so that’s pretty unavoidable but outside of this...why are you even talking to them at this point?”
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madelinecoffee · 5 years
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Is This Seat Taken? Ch. 3
Summary: Rucas Senior Year AU. Riley’s a loner who doesn’t really have any friends, besides her twin brother Josh but she keeps to herself in school. Something happened the year before where she missed the 2nd half of the year but she’s back for senior year and Lucas’ heart is ready. He’s had a crush on her since he moved to Philly in 3rd grade and he’s convinced this is the year they’ll move up from the class-friends label and into something more. This is not a completely fluffy fic, I’m going to be diving into some deep shit so if that’s not your cup of tea please leave *this does  include some serious depression if it goes beyond that I will trigger warn it*
A/N: Hi friends! New chapter! Let me know your thoughts on it all! Things are moving fast, because as I told Feli I cannot write slow-burn. This is leading into something big going down so prepare yourselves.  Tagging:  @iwantyoutochooseme @celluloiddreams @imaginarybird Words: 1879 Previous: Ch. 1 Ch. 2
Lucas stares at her shocked for a moment before he can do anything other than breathe but once it settles in that Riley is asking him on a date all he can do is frantically nod as he figures out how to use his voice.  She’s smiling softly at him as he nods and when he does get his voice to work it cracks as he manages a “Yes”, before he clears his throat and tries again
“I would love to go on a date with you Riley.” Riley beams up at him they decide on 11 am at Blue Max’s they’re walking out of school before it dawns on Lucas that they never decided on transportation or if they were going to meet there. This entire time Riley’s been back he’s never seen her drive, Josh always does. But he thinks he remembers her having a white Toyota, but all he’s seen was Josh driving and it wasn’t the Toyota.
“Do you want me to pick you up for our date?” Lucas can’t help but smile as he says date but his nervousness shows through as he rubs his neck
Riley looks at him for a moment and he sees panic flash through her before she shoves it down.
“I would love it if you would pick me up” Josh is giving her a look from the car and Maya is giving Lucas his own look as well, so before Lucas has time to fully react she hugs him tight and jogs away to Josh
 When Lucas gets over to the car Maya’s giving him a weird look, “What’s wrong with your face?”
“What?”
“Your face, you look like someone injected you with happy serum or something I don’t know. But you’re smiling way to much”
“Oh well Riley just asked me out” He states with glee as he starts up the car
“WHAT!” Maya shrieks as he pulls out of the parking lot
--
It’s the next day and Topanga is helping Riley get ready for her date by offering her support
“You’ve liked Lucas forever, and he was always such a nice boy, I’m sure it will go well” Topanga smiles warmly at her daughter while he daughter gives her a look
“Mom I’m sure it will, Lucas has always been the nicest and from what Josh, Maya and Zay say he likes me a lot.  I’m not worried about it being a nice time. I just, it’s our first date. And I want it to be perfect.”
Topanga nods, “You know what Joanne says about building things up to be perfect in your head sweetie.”
Riley nods, “And that’s the other thing! I have told him about any of that! Or The Thing. And I don’t think I’m ready to fully but I want him to know some and god Mom now I’m stressed out! Maybe I should just cancel!” Riley makes a move to grab her phone, but Topanga grabs her instead
With a fierce look in her eye Topanga talks to her daughter, “Riley this could really be the start of something beautiful but that means you have to give it a chance. You don’t have to tell him about The Thing, but you could tell him about some things that are a result of The Thing or some things that caused it. But whatever you decide is up to.” Before Riley can respond the doorbell rings, Riley jumps up smooths out her dress and runs down the stairs, but when she opens her door it’s only her Uncles.
“Uncle Eric! Uncle Jack! What are you doing here?” Riley deflates
Both of her Uncles smile, “We’re here to meet Lover-Boy” Eric states proudly
“We’re also here to offer our favorite niece support as she goes on her first date.” Jack stated as he nudged his husband while Eric nodded,
“Yeah that too”
Before Riley could say anymore the doorbell rang again, “That had better not be Aunt Morgan and Aunt Morgan.” She stated as he gave them a look. But standing on the other side of the door was Lucas holding a bouquet of flowers wearing blue jeans, his boots, and the flannel she had complimented him on before. He completely lost his breath as she opened the door. She had a bun on top of her head but most of her hair was down, and she was wearing a purple dress that flared above her knees out with a pair of converse.
He handed her the flowers while he tried to close his jaw, “You look wow”
Riley giggled prettily at him, “Thank you, and come in for a second so I can put these in water”
Lucas nodded as he stepped in not expecting the three Matthews men to be staring him down.
Jack started, “If you hurt that little bean so help us god-“
“We will end you and hide your body so no one can find it-“ Eric continued
“And make your disappearance look like an accident, but that won’t be a problem will it Lucas.” Cory finished
“No sirs” Lucas answered confidently
Riley shot daggers at her family as she walked back in, “You guys stop.”
Lucas chuckled as he grabbed her hand, “Don’t worry they’re only looking out for you. You ready to go?”
Riley nodded, ”Yeah all my stuffs in my pockets! Look this dress has pockets!” As if to prove her point she put her hand that wasn’t holding his in her pocket and smiled at him as he beamed down at her.
--
Riley was having a wonderful time, he had opened the door to his car for her and helped her in, he bought her coffee even though she argued, and he was holding her hand occasionally running his thumb over her knuckles. They had been talking about everything and nothing for the past couple of hours and Riley couldn’t stop smiling. The coffee shop was small but cozy, there weren’t too many people around and the noise wasn’t overwhelming.
They had talked about some important topics, like how Pluto was still a planet and how they both loved animals but Riley wanted to fill Lucas in on some things. She drew at the same courage she used when she asked him out,
“Lucas there’s something I want to tell you, it’s kind of serious” Lucas gestured for her to continue, “So I really like you and I really want whatever this is to continue-“
“Me too” Lucas butted in for reassurance
“But there’s a few things you should know about me before that. Um for one I hate large crowds and loud noises.” Lucas nodded he knew things just from watching her,
“And um. I’m really really really insecure, I don’t mean to be and my family tells me there’s no reason to be but I often feel out of place and inadequate.”
“Oh Riley” Lucas comforted squeezing her hand but letting her continue
“That’s why I don’t always eat with you guys, it’s overwhelming. And why I’m so glad you’re my automatic partner because the idea of choosing someone freaks me out. Though I’d choose you anytime, over anyone.”
“Me too, thanks for telling me Riley. But I had already kinda figured out the first two.”
Riley gave him a curious look, “How?”
Lucas turned bashful, “Well you’ve been like that since we were kids, and uh I watched you a lot. Not in like a creepy way but in like a---I liked you way. And as for you being insecure, it’s okay. If I have to remind you everyday how perfect you are, I will”
The two smiled at each other with their hands on the table as Lucas spoke again,
“Since we’re sharing secrets, um I kind of have a temper. When I was younger pre-moving here I had some serious anger stuff and um at the start of high school it came back and I went to therapy for it. Which has helped a lot, and I box on the sides now to work off some of the anger. But I just wanted you to know.”
“Thanks for telling me that Lucas, and if you ever need to talk about it. You know I’m your girl right?”
Lucas nodded, “I do” There was a pause where Lucas debated with himself if he was really going to do it but before he could fully process it, it was out of his mouth. “I know it’s our first date and everything, but would you be my girl all the time?”
Riley cocked her head to the side, “Like your-your?”
“Girlfriend” Lucas finished smiling
“YES!” Riley shouted as she launched herself across the table to hug him
--
On Monday none of their friends were surprised that the two were officially dating after only one date. They’d been pinning a lot. But the girls of their high school did not seem to like the idea, and Riley noticed. All sorts of girls had been trying to date Lucas since middle school and nothing, Riley Matthews goes on one date with him and they end up dating?
Riley brought it up with the group as they ate lunch that Monday, “All these girls won’t stop giving me the death glare and it’s giving me the heebie jeebies.”
Maya nodded, “Yeah I heard a bunch of them talking in the bathroom about it, I told them to mind their own damn business. You two make each other happy, it’s that simple.” Riley gave her a grateful smile
Lucas piped in before Riley could respond, “No one’s said anything, mostly because I doubt they would say anything to you and we’re always together. But I can feel their daggers” Lunch continued on as normal and as did their school days.
Riley and Lucas would go on dates and outings on Saturdays; sometimes they’d go with the group sometimes Riley would ditch Lucas just to hang out with Maya. But after a few weeks things settled down in their personal lives and things seemed good.
--
It was early October now and school had really picked up, it seemed to the gang that their teachers had all gotten together and assigned projects and papers. Lucas knew it was stressing Riley out because she had made a few comments on it, and he could tell she was drawing into herself. But mostly she seemed fine, she came to school went to class they held hands and sometimes they kissed at her locker. She seemed mostly fine if not a little more tense than usual that are why it surprised Lucas when she wasn’t at school on Friday.
She had texted him, “Hey Blue” which was her pet-name for him considering how much blue he wore, “I won’t be at school today, I’m not feeling right. Could you take good notes for me and get my work?” Complete with three purple hearts
Lucas went over on Friday after school with Josh to drop it off.  Her door sign said she was taking a nap so he and Josh went to play video games downstairs as he waited for his girlfriend to wake up. They were having a good time until they heard a crash from upstairs.  
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yuniesan · 5 years
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Rucas Holiday Bingo - Surprises in Santa Land
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This is for the Work as an Elf Square on the Holiday Bingo Card
A/N: Everyone gets to visit Santa when they’re growing up, well if your faith allows it, usually you see those mall Santa’s on TV, but here in NYC we have Santaland which is at Macy’s. I mean there’s still mall Santa’s but the Macy’s one is the one everyone tries to go to because it’s one of those traditions you have to have growing up. Also, I worked there, and while it is magical when you’re there, when you work there you get a crash course in Holiday retail, and it’s a nightmare I swear.
Also, it started snowing just as I finished writing this.... so the snow is blessing our favorite couple!!!
Surprises in Santa Land
Riley could always remember the day when she knew that December would be the greatest month ever. She had been six years old, and her parents had taken her to the mall to see Santa while they were visiting her grandparents, everything felt magical. When she was eight they took her to see Santa on her birthday, so that she could ask for two presents, one for her birthday and one for Christmas.
That was the first time they had taken her to see Santa at Macy’s, she had asked them why she couldn’t see him when he was at the store since they lived closer, and why she always had to go with Josh when they were in Philly. Auggie had been a year old at the time, and her parents had wanted to find a way to fulfill Riley’s wish. So as a family they had gone for the first time, getting on the long line to see Santa. When they walked through the maze Riley had seen nothing but magic all around them, the music, the little town displayed next to them, and at the end Santa’s Village with elves walking around.
December had always had this magic touch for her, the moment the month arrived, she would jump for joy and decorate her room with every ornament she could find. Her parents had found it quirky, and her friends weren’t the most supportive because of her love of things like Secret Santa, but it didn’t matter to her because there was nothing that could get her down when December came along.
She had gone through high school with her traditions and had wanted to keep them for college, as all of her friends scattered, Riley off to NYU, Lucas off to one of the CUNY schools, Maya at the New School, Farkle and Smackle at Princeton, and surprisingly at NYU Zay with Riley. Josh had graduated, but had stayed in the city, his relationship with Maya finally getting to where they had always wanted it to be, the long game finally over, because if Riley had wanted one thing to stop it would be the pining between the two of them.
The fourth year of school, Riley had decided to get a job at Macy’s, she wanted to buy something for Lucas for the holidays and it was a little on the expensive side for her because she didn’t really have money. Even with internships and work study, all of her money went into saving up, because she was never sure if she would have enough money after she graduated and moved out of her parents’ house. The job was as an elf at Santaland, the magical place from her childhood, and she couldn’t have been happier because it was like living a childhood dream. They paid their employees very well and even allowed them to walk the parade which made the whole experience worth a million dollars to her. She had finished the semester only working three days a week, but once she was done they had allowed her to work more hours as the crowds started coming in.
“Welcome,” she would say to everyone as she greeted them into the maze, where they would wait.
Her family and friends hadn’t known that she was there, and she was glad for it too, they only knew that she had taken a holiday job, because she couldn’t babysit her brother anymore, since her was old enough to take care of himself. She always worked crowd control for some reason, but it hadn’t mattered to her as long as she saw the excited faces on the little kids. It reminded her of when she was little and going to see Santa, but she had realized that she hadn’t seen Santa that year and she really wanted to, even as an elf, because it would be a memory she would treasure.
The last day, which was also the shortest day they had to work, was actually the hardest for Riley, the line was longer than usual, and people were irritating her for some reason. She hadn’t seen her friends in weeks, as Josh had taken Maya to Philly, because he was going to propose there while they spent the holiday with Riley’s grandparents, Farkle and Smackle had gone off to Alaska, because they had wanted to study something, Zay was in Texas baking with his grandmother, and she didn’t even know where Lucas was at all. It was the first time that they hadn’t done Secret Santa, which made her melancholy, and the people waiting to see Santa himself had resorted to trashing the place as they went along, not caring about the magic of the place at all.
Each time she had to change her station she had found something that shouldn’t have been where it was, one of which was a used diaper, which she thought was gross, she had to pick it up and put it somewhere else. Again gross. The magic of the holiday was fading, and she didn’t like losing that part of herself, but she also wanted it to be done because some people didn’t believe in boundaries if they were leaving their trash all over the place, not caring about the place they were visiting.
So, when the last person had walked through leaving Riley alone dressed as the saddest elf in the place, she sighed and started cleaning up everything around her just like she had done every night since she had started working there. Her co-workers rushing around, excited to be going home for the holiday, while she was still sad about not having the chance to spend it with her friends and family.
“Hey Riley,” one of her co-workers said to her as she walked by. “The boss wants to see you in the village, she said you were the only one who hasn’t taken a picture with the big guy.”
“Yeah well,” she said looking around, the place was clean, but she still wanted to find a way to get her spirits up, she loved Christmas. “I guess I was busy, but I’ll be there in a minute.”
Riley wanted to smile, she didn’t want to have her moment with Santa, her wish to be tainted by the way others acted, or by the fact that she missed her friends. So, she took several breaths, watching as the little train made its final journey for the year, before walking to the end of the maze where Santa’s village stood with its little houses and the north pole candy cane at the center. She was going to smile for her picture, and then she would go home and treasure it for the rest of her life.
When she got there, she looked up to where the candy cane stood and came face to face with Lucas for the first time in what had felt like a million years. He was smiling, wearing her favorite blue sweater of his and a pair of black jeans, contrasting with the red, white and green of the village. He was smiling at her, and she could feel her heart speed up as he did so, because he looked gorgeous and she looked like a haggard little elf.
“Hey,” she said to him smiling for real for the first time that day.
“Hi,” he said which strangely had always been her words, and now it was weird that it was backwards, but it still felt right.
“Hey,” she said walking towards him, reaching out to take his hand, and smiling.
“I wanted to surprise you,” he said after a moment. “We’ve all been so busy lately, and I’m not sure if you’ve noticed but all of our friends abandoned us.”
“Yeah, I noticed,” she said, no bitterness in her voice, because Lucas being there made up for everything bad that had happened during the day.
“I asked your boss for permission to come here today, so that I could surprise you, and take you to dinner, but I think maybe you might just want to go home Riles, because you look a little tired.”
“Not anymore, not since I saw you,” she could feel her face flush, he would always have that effect on her, especially when he surprised her like this.
“Well, I had two reasons to be here today,” he said smiling as his ears turned red, she had noticed it when they had first started going out, how when he was embarrassed or blushing, it would show on his ears first. It was cute, and she loved it the most, when they cuddled she would always nuzzle up to his ears, and he had started putting cologne there too, which made her want to stay close to him all of the time.
“Other than seeing me dressed like this?” she gestured to her outfit with a goofy grin, all of a sudden feeling the magic of the holiday coming back.
“Yeah,” he answered with his own grin. “The first was to surprise you with dinner, and the second was to well,” he got down on his knee and took her hand. “Riley Matthews, you’ve been the sun in my life for almost ten years now, and while we’ve had some ups and downs over the years, we’ve always come back to one another. You’re my soulmate, my better half, the love of my life, and I want to spend the next hundred million years being with you,” he pulled out a small ring, it looked like the one she had seen at a vintage store a few months before, when they had been on a date, and had decided to walk around. “Will you do me the honor of being my wife?”
It was there in that moment, while she was dressed as an elf, surrounded by Santa’s Village, where she remembered why she loved Christmas so much. It was because of the people she had always been with, her friends, her family, and most of all the man kneeling in front of her.
“Yes Lucas, I will be glad to spend the rest of my life with you, and even when we turn to stardust, I will still be there right next to you.”
With a grin, he stood up and put the ring on her finger before pulling her close and kissing her, the grin still on both of their faces, the cheers of the people around them. In the most Christmas place in the world, because there was a magic in the holiday, one that she had always known, and almost lost, only to find it again.
When they pulled away, Riley was surrounded not only by her coworkers, but her friends and family who had been hiding without her knowing. Lucas having planned the perfect proposal after all, even having everyone tell her that they would be somewhere else. Mainly because none of them would have been able to keep the secret, especially with how her father had been for so long, and who had currently faked a heart attack. Which meant that he hadn’t known about the proposal, and it made her laugh out loud when she saw him, before she gave Lucas another kiss, taking his hand and bring him to Santa’s house, because she wanted a picture of the moment so she could remember it for the rest of her life.
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gmwships · 6 years
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This is adorable ❤️
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cowgirlangel95 · 7 years
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Them Ol’ Songs
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1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
Chapter 6: What I’d do
Lucas gazed out of his apartment window and eyed the snow as if fell to the ground.  Each one reflected the soft yellow glow coming from the strings of lights hanging along the streets as it made its way down, turning the world into a snow globe.  He couldn’t help but sigh as he shook his head.  It felt like he just returned from Pappy Joe’s ranch, but it was already New Year’s Eve.  After he got back, Lucas was determined to talk to Riley.  However, December was filled with the holidays plus her birthday, so she was bound to be busy.  On the plus side, this time gave him to think.  Why Riley?
He would do anything to hold her in his arms again and have her close to him.  His heart yearned to love her like that again, but many would argue that he never stopped.  He would climb up to the sky and take down the stars for her.  Lucas would lasso the moon just to hear her say that she loved him. He chuckled as he heard Farkle’s voice in his mind, that it would be impossible to accomplish such things. But that was the point.  He would attempt the impossible for her.
Lucas wanted to be the one living just to give her love – and he already proved that to her that night. He had to know how she felt.  If she felt the same way, then they could work past what happened.  That through the good and the bad, they still had each other, and major decisions must involve more than one party.
Lucas let out a sigh as he sat down in his recliner.  There was one big way that the answer was Riley – she was the only one who could soothe his anger.
Lauren could calm him down – her touch and her words helped to put out the flame of anger, but the embers were still there, waiting for a strong enough breeze to bring the fire roaring back to life.  Riley could deplete the fire’s energy source and leave the cold ashes to be scattered.
A knock on his apartment door brought him out of his thought filled haze.  Before Lucas could move from his spot, Zay and Farkle let themselves in.
“Hey, hey, hey,” Zay greeted.  “What’s going on?”
“Not much, can’t you tell?”
Farkle brought over a nearby bar stool and sat down while Zay leaned into the counter which separated the kitchen from the living room.  “We wanted to know if you were going to Maya’s party tonight.  Or, you know, get out and let loose a little since you’ve been a bit uptight recently.”
Lucas shrugged.  “I got the invite, but I’m not sure if I’m going to go.”  Sure, he thought about the possibility that Riley may be there, but he didn’t want to talk about that if she was out enjoying herself.  No, that’s a private conversation… that needs to happen soon.
“That may be good in case Riley –” Zay started, but was quickly stopped by Farkle elbowing him in the ribs.
Lucas raised an eyebrow as his heart dropped.  “What? What about Riley?”
“Nice going, big mouth,” Farkle groaned.
“What.  About.  Riley?!”
Farkle pinched the bridge of his nose and took a breath.  “Isadora went to go see if Riley wanted to go to Maya’s party with a coworker of ours.  That was about two hours ago, and I have yet to hear anything… so we should assume she said yes.  I probably won’t know for sure until tonight when I’m picking her up because she wanted to spend the day with Riley as well.”
Lucas ran his hand through his hair as a sharp pain pierced through his heart.  While he still may have a chance, his odds were not looking good.
“I’m sorry, Lucas.  I didn’t know if I should say something to her or not.  You’ve been pretty quiet about everything since your break up with Lauren.  Do you want me to tell you if she’s going to the party?”
He shook his head. “Don’t worry about it, and no, I don’t,” he replied as he turned to Zay.  “Did you say anything to the girls?”
“No way,” Zay answered as he held up his hands in defense.  “This is one Lucas story that should be told by you and only you.”
“This is all my fault for waiting this long to talk to her.  I should have said something earlier.”
Zay raised an eyebrow. “Waitin’ too long?  You had a long term relationship end!  Don’t blame yourself for what’s happening right now. If it’s meant to happen, it’ll happen. You were the one to say you didn’t believe in coincidences – maybe this is another one of those moments.”
“I sure hope so.”
OoOoO
As he made his way through town, Lucas once again found himself fixated on the snow falling around him. Instead of partaking in the usual festivities, he found himself enjoying the semi-quiet streets.  Everything around him – the glittering snow, the calm atmosphere – reminded him of Riley.  If she was here with him at this exact moment, Lucas knew she would be twirling around in front of him.  It wouldn’t be for long, but it would be long enough for her to savor the moment.
Lucas stopped in the middle of the sidewalk and shook his head.  “What am I doing?” he asked the open air.  Lucas forgave her long ago, and he eventually got passed the pain. There was no more waiting.  He couldn’t dance around the ‘what ifs’ anymore; he had to take matters into his own hands.
Lucas needed to talk to her. Now.
He pulled out his phone and dialed Zay’s number.  After the phone rang a couple of times, his best friend finally answered.
“Zay, where’s Riley’s apartment?”
“Lucas?  What’s going on?”
“Don’t worry about it now; I’ll fill you in later.  For now, just tell me where her apartment is.”
As Zay rattled off where Riley’s apartment was located, Lucas turned on his heel and headed towards the street where the building was.  Despite not living in this area for the past four years, he still had it engraved in his memory.
Lucas walked into the apartment complex and was welcomed by the much appreciated warmth.  He headed up to the second floor and found her apartment door.  Lucas chewed the inside of his cheek as he debated on knocking.  After a moment of deliberation on whether or not to knock or try calling her to meet up instead, Lucas knocked.
He waited.
No response.
Lucas tried knocking again, even though he knew the attempt would be fruitless.  He knew there was a good chance she wouldn’t be there.  There was no doubt in his mind now that she went to Maya’s party, and it was likely that even if he did try to call, she wouldn’t have picked up.
I’ll wait for her in the lobby, he decided, despite knowing he may be waiting for her for a while.
After he turned on his heel, Lucas’ eyes met the most beautiful doe colored eyes he’d ever known and loved.  His heart began to swell as the two of them stood there, merely looking at each other in disbelief.
“Lucas,” she breathed.
He took a step towards her. “Hey Riley… can we talk?”
A/N: This chapter’s influence – Just to Hear You say that You Love Me by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill.  I’m not entirely happy with this chapter, but there was only so much I could do.  The next chapter will be there talk!  I have it outlined, but it’s a matter of finding time to write it.  I’ve been busy with work, my job search, amongst other things, but I’ll try my best to get it up soon.  Let me know what you thought!
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rucaswriterweek · 7 years
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Day 4--Under-Rated
Today we’ve got a few authors we think you should all read. We won’t list specific stories today, we’ll just give you links to their catalogues. Some you might have missed, some have moved on, but all are amazing and you should totally go and binge read their stuff. *some do write more than just Rucas*
Rose-Garden-Twilight https://www.fanfiction.net/u/636979/Rose-Garden-twilight
Aznmissy04 https://www.fanfiction.net/u/4513210/Aznmissy04
@yuniesan https://yuniesan.tumblr.com/GMWFanfics
@buffys​ https://www.fanfiction.net/u/4681685/halfbloodvics
plutoondeck https://www.fanfiction.net/u/7039789/plutoondeck
rileytown https://www.fanfiction.net/u/6894248/rileytown
poledra182 https://www.fanfiction.net/u/3137868/Poledra182
@betttyscoopers https://www.fanfiction.net/u/1570967/rileym-rowanb
@grizbehr https://grizbehr.tumblr.com/fiction
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seriestrash · 7 years
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You Me Her
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Chapter Twelve: White Knight
Word Count: 3972
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Riley takes the winter break to focus on herself. She works on extra college admissions, preparing for her winter musical audition and she spends time with her family and friends. All the while, Riley pushes the Lucas issue to the back of her mind. 
Riley returns to school in the new year ready to face the music. Well, rather than ‘face the music’ Riley was ready to mute it. She had decided that she didn’t need answers because answers weren't going to change her mind. 
Riley had done a pretty decent job avoiding Lucas all day. That changed after second last period when Riley exits her History class. Lucas waits until he sees Kai wave Riley off before he approaches her.
“Where are you headed?” Lucas asks as he now walks beside her. 
“The courtyard. I have a spare.” Riley states. 
“Most people with a spare last period would just go home early.” Light nerves can be heard in Lucas’ laugh.
“I’m going to revise my half of the lines for the play auditions after school.”
“You auditioning with Kai?” Lucas asks. 
“Yep.” Riley pops the P. 
“I can stand in for him if you like, read his parts to help you rehearse?” Lucas offers.
“No thank you.” Riley rejects politely. “Shouldn’t you be getting to class?”
“I can skip. What’s the worst they could do, kick me out?” Lucas chuckles. “We’re practically graduated.”
"Don’t tell me you’re one of those seniors that believe they’re invincible?” Riley almost snorts. 
“No way but ditching one class isn’t going to ruin an otherwise good record.” Lucas smirks. 
“As I recall you were in detention the evening before the dance.” Riley highlights. 
“Simple misunderstanding..” Lucas rubs at the nape of his neck. “About that night...”
Riley stops abruptly just by the door leading out to the courtyard. “That wasn’t my way of smoothly making an opening for us to discuss it.”
“I just want to explain myself.” Lucas says.
“Giving an explanation doesn’t make what you did any less lousy.” Riley folds her arms. 
“Maybe how I handled things wasn’t the best way to go about it but I did the wrong thing for what I truly believed to be the right reason!” Lucas speaks quickly and with little sense. 
“Can you understand why I don’t want to talk about this?” Riley asks.
“Yes..” Lucas gives a sheepish nod. 
“I guess some things don’t change.” Riley’s eye roll is barely noticeable but definitely still there. 
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Lucas knits his brows. 
“Wonder boy.” Riley eyes him. “It’s your White Knight syndrome, your Hero complex. Your need to look like the good guy to me right now is because of that.” 
“My what?” Lucas looks confused. 
“You want to save everyone. Me and Farkle from bullies, Zay from his big mouth,” Riley laughs so he knows she’s not trying to insult Zay. “Maya with the art program... You even punched my ex-boyfriend in the face for saying mean things about me and we’re not even friends.” 
“We’re not?” Lucas questions. 
Riley gives Lucas a confused look. She’s unsure if he’s being serious or not. How did he miss the past two years of silence between them? 
“So protecting people I care about is a bad thing?” Lucas backtracks to fill in the silence.
“No I guess not.” Riley shakes her head. “But the difference now is that I don’t want to be saved. Not by you.”
“Can we please just go out there and talk about things?” Lucas softens. 
“I’m trying my best to be rude to you and you still want to talk?” Riley frowns. 
“Yes.” Lucas nods. 
“Fine.” Riley sighs heavily knowing Lucas wouldn’t drop the request. “But once it’s all out there can you respect my wishes to leave the past in the past?” Riley questions. 
“Absolutely.” Lucas nods. 
The two make their way out into the empty courtyard and each take a seat at the table across from one another. Riley folds her hands together and waits for Lucas to begin. 
After a moment of silence passes Riley finally speaks up. “Usually the person initiating a conversation is the one to start speaking.” 
“Right.” Nervous laughter escapes Lucas. “I don’t really know where to start...” 
Suddenly something the middle school librarian said flows to the forefront of Riley’s mind. “You like a good story, Riley? Then start at the beginning.” 
Riley literally shakes the thought from her mind. “Just... Talk.. I’m sure you’ll make sense of it all eventually.” 
“Texas.” Lucas says with a deep breath. 
“Oh wow we’re going right back.” Riley grimaces. 
“I know it seems stupid...” Lucas bops his head. “But Texas was the first point in the triangle...” 
“You’ve thought this out thoroughly...” Riley shifts in her seat. 
“I’ve only gone over every detail a million times since, well, since we stopped speaking...” Lucas deflates.
“Texas.” Riley matches Lucas’ tone and breath from before, no longer wishing to stall this conversation. 
“I meant everything I said to you after riding Tombstone, about how important you are to me and how you made New York feel like home.” Lucas says.
“Lucas, what’s the point of this?” Riley cuts in. “I know what happened in Texas. I was there. You rode Tombstone, I called you my brother and you moved on to Maya three seconds later.” A light bitterness in her tone. 
“That’s not exactly what happened.” Lucas frowns. 
“I know I already said I can’t be angry with you for believing things I told you and I’m not but my feelings can be hurt that you accepted the truth so easily.” Riley says simply but Lucas struggled to keep up. 
“It’s more complicated than that.” Lucas is still frowning. 
“Fine. Explain things.” Her light bitterness returns. 
“I get how you see it that way, like I moved on instantly but that wasn’t what happened.” Lucas shakes his head. “After Tombstone, I was still so amped up that I felt invincible. It gave me the courage to feel like I could ask you to be my girlfriend again. I was ready to do that but then the whole brother thing happened... It confused me and I’m not going to lie, when you told me Maya had feelings for me it confused things further, I’d never looked at her that way before. That rush I was feeling after Tombstone mixed with the confusion of  everyones supposed feelings towards me and it all just blurred into question marks.”
“So you’d never thought of Maya romantically until I pushed it?” Riley questions. 
“Not seriously. I mean there was that thing with the yearbook but I thought that was pretty stupid.” Lucas shrugs. “Maybe I do have a white knight complex or whatever you called it because instead of trying to figure out how I felt I started to think of a way to make everyone else happy. If you didn’t like me and Maya did, I thought maybe I should give her that chance and I tried with the date at the bakery but it all felt so wrong. The next few months were awkward, no one was saying anything about it, we just pretended like it didn’t happen...Then New Years...”
“Again, I was there.. Is the play by play necessary?” Riley cuts in again.
“I’m hoping my perspective on things is.” Lucas frowns. “It’s not like I was asked back then how I felt.” 
His comment rubbed Riley the wrong way but she manages to keeps her composure. “I know that Maya and I had a bad habit of prioritising each other over anything else but you were more than capable of expressing your own feelings.” 
“I’m sorry I didn’t mean-” 
“It’s fine.” Riley stops him. “New Years, Farkle outed my feelings.” 
“I was so shocked to hear him say that you still loved me but I quickly realised I was only fooling myself into thinking that I was okay with us just being friends.” Lucas continues. “Then we moved into the triangle phase.” Lucas looks just as unimpressed as he did in the midsts of that confusing time. "A decision that took me far too long, I know.” Lucas shakes his head out of disappointment in himself. “There were three main things that factored into my eventual decision.” Lucas takes a deep breath. “Jellybeans, Maya’s identity crisis and Evan.”
Riley gives Lucas a squinted look. Jellybeans probably should have been the most confusing factor but it was Evan that triggered her the most. 
“Do you remember that night you broke into the school with Maya and came back to your apartment covered in purple paint?” 
“I had my dad’s keys so technically it wasn’t breaking in.” Riley defends her innocence. “But yes...The beginning- Or end of Maya’s identity crisis, I guess.. ” 
“Well earlier that day Farkle and Zay were helping me with this experiment. We used the scales at the bakery and some jellybeans. One question, one point to whoever I answered...”
“Maya and I were reduced to a point system?” Riley wears a mild glare. 
“I know it sounds bad but my intentions were genuine.” Lucas is sincere. “So Farkle and Zay started asking questions like ‘who makes you laugh?’ Things like that.” 
“Let me guess, you answered both of us for all of the questions?” Riley interrupts. “Or the scales were at least level in the end?” 
“How do you know?” Lucas pricks up a brow. 
“It’s just a triangle cliche.” Riley scoffs. “Two girls who couldn’t be more different yet your feelings are almost impossible to distinguish between.” 
“But that’s not true!” Lucas says quickly and with passion. “I mean, the scales did end up level but that was because I was trying to even things out without even realising what I was doing. When the guys asked me a question you were the first thing that came to my mind. Every time. Then I made a connection for Maya. For an hour after the scales experiment I was staring at the two piles of jellybeans. I kept trying figure out a way to tip the scale one way. Suddenly I realised how silly the whole jellybean thing was because I knew I could go on forever giving both of you credit for your great qualities but feelings can’t be explained with pros and cons. Then I realised the importance of me answering you for all the questions first. Whether you fell, or were pushed or walked right up to me on the subway that day, it was you. You were the one I couldn’t stop thinking about for days. You were the one who made me feel safe enough to share my dreams with you-”
“If everything was so clear then what happened?” Riley cuts in. He may be saying the right things but since it was the wrong time, Riley didnt have it in her to listen. "That was weeks before the nature trip where you finally chose Maya.” 
“That’s where the other factors come into play. In those weeks.” 
“Right, a confused Maya and the Sherpa.” Riley acts disinterested. 
“After I realised there wasn’t really a decision to be made I went to your apartment to try and tell you how I felt. You eventually arrived with Maya,  covered in paint. I tried to tell you who I chose.” Lucas watches Riley’s face for recognition but she remains neutral. “You even asked if it was you and ‘yay’d’. Then I was told my decision didnt matter until some other things were figured out, like who Maya was and how she felt...”
“As usual, Maya and I prioritised each other before anything else.” Riley reiterates a point she made earlier about her past friendship. 
“It’s not a bad thing at all.” Lucas says. “It just made me realise that choosing you could mean hurting Maya and hurting Maya meant I could lose you.” 
“So you waited until the nature trip?” Riley questions. 
“You and Maya were figuring things out for yourselves and so was I.” Lucas says. “I was trying to figure out how I could choose you without losing you.” 
“And Evan?” Riley asks quietly. “The last factor.” 
“When you dated Charlie I may have been a tiny bit jealous.” Lucas grimaces and it slowly fades back into his blank but nervous expression. “But when I saw that you spent all night talking to Evan I was just.. Sad... Like I knew this lousy game we’d been playing for months was finally over and I’d lost.” 
“You thought I moved on?” Riley knits her brows together. 
“I saw that you could move on.” Lucas says softly. “I had been worried that choosing someone could cause pain but I realised that not choosing was doing more damage... I didn’t like the feeling your conversation with Evan sparked. I was terrified. I may have thought it over a hundred times after the scales experiment but I still acted quite irrationally with my decision. Instead of giving you the purple jellybean like I planned I somehow got it in my head that limiting us to a friendship would be the best way to keep you in my life and maintain- or at least work back up to the connection we had.” 
“That’s stupid.” Riley says her thought aloud and once she realises, she has to commit to it. “You didn’t want to lose me so you let me go?” 
“That’s exactly what you did in Texas, prioritised our friendship over anything else because risking it with romance was just too scary.” Lucas argues. 
“That’s completely different.” Riley’s finding it difficult to keep her composure. “I stepped back because of the romantic potential I saw in two people I cared about. I thought that maintaining our friendships would be enough for me. I tried to prevent a triangle, to prevent heartache. Then Farkle outed my feelings at New Years and I could have denied it but I didn’t. I owned my feelings and was a willing participant in a triangle with my best friend. If you were so scared of losing me why didn’t you just push to stay friends?” 
“I did. I practically begged you to promise me at the lodge that we’d stay friends and when you were acting strange afterwards I showed up in your room and asked if we were okay.” 
“I meant before that, if you really wanted to be with me but thought that could mean losing me then why be with Maya at all?” Riley frowns. “Why not leave the triangle behind and let us all be friends?” 
“We tried that before. It didn’t work...” Lucas matches Riley’s crescent fallen expression. 
“So you chose Maya even though you wanted to choose me?” Riley squints her gaze. 
“Like I said, I knew if I hurt her I’d lose you.” Lucas says.
“You expect me to believe that you chose Maya and dated her for two and a half years because you wanted to maintain our friendship...” Riley coaxes her head. “...A friendship that ended before your relationship did?” 
“I know it sounds far fetched but It’s more complicated than that.” Lucas sighs. “Maya and I don’t love each other. We never did- Look, I can’t share Maya’s truth, maybe if you talked to her it could clear up a bit of the mess-” 
“No.” Riley places her palms firmly on the table top. “I let you explain yourself, now it’s time to leave the past where it belongs.”
“I was hoping that leaving the past behind meant we could start fresh.” Lucas is hopeful. 
“Lucas, I consider us to be the past.” Riley shakes her head. 
“I know it’s hard to believe.” Lucas tries to fight his case more but Riley was already done. 
“What’s hard is not feeling like a second choice.” Riley’s voice wavers. “It feels like you dated Maya and when it didn’t work out with her you wondered what it would have been like if you chose different.” 
“But Riley-” 
“No, Lucas.” Riley cuts him off. “You can have my forgiveness if that’s what you need but you can’t have a second chance.” 
“I should have risked it all.” Lucas states. “I should have fought for you and I know you loved me at some point. You even admitted to lying about being relieved I chose Maya-”
“After you chose Maya I was entitled to say whatever I wanted to protect my feelings.” Riley interjects. “You don’t get to pick one girl and then be upset that the other isn't falling to pieces right in front of you.”
“You’re completely right and I understand but that’s not-”
“I’m not sure you do understand, Lucas because after three years you come to me and expect that I’ve been waiting all this time for you.” Riley tries her best to stay calm. “Surely you had to know that any and all chances at a romantic ending for us ended the moment you chose Maya?” 
“I did know that.” Lucas nods. “But I lost our friendship anyway. So call me selfish for coming to you but I figure I have nothing left to lose.” 
“You’re selfish.” Riley says as she stands up. 
“Riley-” 
“No.” Riley stops him with a mixture of anger and sadness swirling inside her. “Let’s say I believe your awfully convenient argument that you acted out of love for me. Is it supposed to be a good thing that you dated someone I considered to be a sister without having genuine feelings for her?” 
“Like I said, that’s a whole different side to the story I can’t really tell you.” Lucas wishes he could just scream the full truth but he knew it wasn’t completely his to share. 
“I don’t need to hear Maya’s perspective on things just like I didn’t need to hear yours.” Riley says. “It doesn’t change anything for me. This conversation was for you.” 
“I know I deserve the coldness but it still really sucks.” Lucas still has his huffy childlike nature Riley used to find cute but now it just upset her further. 
A moment of silence passes. One long enough to get Riley to open herself up to past vulnerabilities. “Part of me wished that you would chase after me, when I left you at the campfire back in Texas.” Riley speaks softly and avoids eye contact as she talks. “I felt horrible for feeling that way but I did. I wanted you to tell Maya you were sorry but it was me, I was the one you wanted to be with...” 
“I’m telling you now.” Lucas reaches out for Riley’s hand but she pulls it away. 
“And I hear you, Lucas.” Riley nods with sad eyes. “But I can’t believe you.” 
“What can’t you believe?” Lucas asks desperately knowing this conversation was nearing an end. 
"I can’t believe that I wasn’t worth risking it all for.” Riley flicks her gaze up to him for a moment before standing. “I need to love myself enough to believe that I am. I have to.” Riley nods, she scoops up her backpack and makes a few strides towards the door. 
“I already admitted to that monumental mistake.” Lucas says calling her attention back. “And I’m telling you now that I still love you. Isn’t that enough?” 
“How can you possibly love me?” Riley wears a look of pain. “You don’t even know me anymore.”
“You’re, Riley.” Lucas stands from his seat in a desperate attempt to make her stay. “Two measly years doesn’t change that.” 
“That’s where you’re wrong, Lucas.” Riley has one hand on the door handle. “I’m different now. I’m happy.”
Five words had never hurt as much to hear as those. He’d felt heartache and distance and the loss of something special but those five words packed more of a punch than than any of that combined. No emotional or physical pain had ever hurt as much as the implication that Lucas contributed to or caused sadness in such a bright human being.  
The two are just looking at each other in silence. Lucas can’t string a sentence together so Riley delivers one final statement before closing the door. “I’m not the girl in Texas who looked back to see if you were following.” 
As Riley closes the door behind herself Lucas is left wondering if she sealed away any hope at a second chance along with it. 
Riley was spiralling quickly but she did her very best to compose herself as she waits for Kai outside of his class. One the final bell sounds he bounces out of the room excited for their upcoming audition. Instantly he notices Riley’s off mood but she assures him a dozen times she’s fine and just nervous for the audition, which of course Kai doesn’t buy but chooses to drop the issue for now not wanting to shake her anymore before they go on stage. 
The two best friends arrive at the auditorium where there find Noah and Caitlin already waiting to show their support. They take seats with them and listen as Ms. Mitchell calls the auditions into order. 
The auditions were being run a few different ways, singular, in a pair or a combination of both. Riley and Kai were going for the combo with some dialogue between the characters they were auditioning for; Riley for Dorothy and Kai for the Tin Man. Then, the two would separate to perform individual songs. 
When it’s Riley’s and Kai’s turn take to the stage, Riley spots Lucas sitting alone in the back watching. Kai notices him too and gives Riley a silent look to communicate that she should ignore him.  
They begin their lines, they’d been over their audition bit a hundred times after Christmas and could execute it perfectly. Riley felt robotic throughout the audition, like she was just rehearsing again with Kai. Her mind clearly focused on other things. An audition that on it’s own should have landed her minor roll but once it comes time for their individual songs Riley comes to a realisation; she had let Lucas’ presence shake her back during her Grease auditions and again she’d let him taint her experience with A Midsummer Nights Dream but this time Riley was determined to not let him get the better of her. Instead, Riley used it to her advantage. Every bit of emotional strain and confusion was worked into her rendition of ‘Somewhere Over The Rainbow’. Once Riley finishes her transcending performance everyone, even Kai - whom stands side stage - is left with mouths agape. 
The drama teacher Ms. Mitchell shakes off her stunned expression and thanks Riley. The brunette wanders back to her seat with Kai whispering his amazement to her the whole way. Once seated again, Noah and Caitlin both share their dotting reviews too. Caitlin bounces once her friends are finished auditioning but the other three hang around to show support for the rest auditioning. 
Riley’s getting her things ready to leave when Ms. Mitchell asks if there are any last minute sign ups wishing to audition. Riley is already halfway to the aisle when Lucas shoots up in place and calls out. “I’d like to audition please.” 
Noah looks between his boyfriend Kai, radiating with heat on one side of him and Riley on the other, completely frozen in place. Not sure who to support in this situation he awkwardly grabs at both of them. 
“Ah, Mr. Friar.” Ms. Mitchell turns her attention to him. “I believe I haven’t seen you in here since you quit A Midsummer Nights Dream two years ago. How am I supposed to trust you’ll be anymore relable in this play?” 
“I can assure you Ms. Mitchell,” Lucas says to the teacher but then flicks his gaze directly at Riley. “I’m not going anywhere.” 
Oh boy.
End Notes: This took so long but u guys wanted to FULL explanation so I tried to spare no details!!!!!! Next chapter, Lucas fights for Riley but has a cute musically gifted boy with dimples already worked a place into her heart????? And the play!! How’s Kai going to be professional if Lucas lands a part? 
stay tuned! let me know what you think pls!
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maryeemeeh · 7 years
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Home Base
A/N: Rucas one-shot that just popped into my head one day.  Summary: It’s the semi-finals. One win away from advancing to the State Championships. The bases are not loaded…but Riley Matthews sure is.  Word count: 1,346
His shoulders were heaving with unsteady breaths. Lucas could feel the heat of the sun bearing down on him as a bead of sweat slowly made its way down the tip of his nose. The crowd was screaming incomprehensively, the cheering squad blowing their horns. His eyes glanced at the scoreboard. It was the bottom of the 9th, the visiting team from Eleanor Roosevelt High leading by one, as the Patriots of Abigail Adams High were out to bat, with 1 out and a player on first base.
Nerves were settling in as he watched his teammate and best friend Zay on home plate, waiting for the next pitch. His gaze then scanned over the crowd, coming to a halt in the front row bleachers when he met Riley’s eyes. He suddenly forgot how to breathe as the rest of the world fades away. She smiled at him and waved; motioning to the jersey she was wearing. It was his old baseball uniform from last year’s season.
“Strike 3! Batter out!” The umpire behind home called out, causing Lucas to quickly avert from her gaze and looked to Zay’s direction. He could hear the muffled sounds of defeat coming from his teammates behind him in the dugout, as they were one out away from being eliminated in the semi-finals. It was almost like last year all over again. Back then, they faced Eleanor Roosevelt for the State Championship and lost to the pressure. With a hit-by-pitch, Lucas allowed the batter a runner on base and helped kick start their momentum, which would ultimately lead to Abigail Adams High turnaround loss.
“What?! Are you kidding me?” Her voice was angry and mixed in with the noisy crowd, but he could pick up Riley’s voice anywhere, under any circumstances as he saw she was now on her feet, trying to get the attention of the umpire whose back was turned to her. “That ball was way above the box. Are you blind?!” With a smile on his lips, he watched her argue rather impressively and standing her ground—he swore her bones were sharper and her brown eyes fiercer. It was unlike Riley to look so pissed, but he found her over-the-top spirit and competitiveness adorable nonetheless. “It’s okay, Zay. Keep your head up.” Riley applauded him as he began walking back towards the dugout. “That should have been a walk.” Her best friend Maya was next to her, shaking her head in amusement before gently pulling Riley’s arm to sit back down.
“Oh thank God, someone shut her up.” Lucas heard someone blurt out from the visitor’s dugout of the opposite team as Lucas narrowed his eyes at him. He was tall and thin with short dark hair with a smug look on his face that reminded him so much of Charlie Gardner.
“Hey!” Lucas raised his voice, just loud enough for him to hear as it garnered stares from neighboring players. “That’s my girlfriend you’re talking about.”
He looked over his shoulder sharply at Lucas and raised a brow, an amused smirk playing across his features. “Well that’s unfortunate for you, bro.” He chuckled as his teammates snickered along with him.
His jaw clenched as Lucas tightened his grip on the bat. He felt the tension on his shoulder relaxed a bit once Zay put his hand on top of it.
“Let it go, man. Charlie 2.0 is an ass.” Zay quipped as Lucas quietly chuckled, still amazed how much they think alike.
“Yea, well I think I like the other Charlie better.”
“Ha! I concur.” Zay looked over at Lucas and saw that his green eyes were sharp and determined, his muscles firing angrily. He knew his best friend wasn’t about to let this one go. “Oh come on, man. He’s not worth it.”
Lucas waved Zay off as he makes his way towards the visitor’s side of the dugout, stopping just outside of it while carrying the bat loosely over his shoulder. He knew if he kept talking and trigger a fight, he could get kicked out. And his team needed him. He couldn’t let them down, and he wasn’t about to. So he chose his next words carefully.
“Just so you know, my girlfriend is amazing.”
“Oh boy.” Zay muttered from behind.
“She may be over the top at times, but that’s what I love about her. She’s passionate, high-spirited, kind, loyal, and funny. She goes to every single one of my games, and we would have incredible make-out sessions afterwards—win or lose.” He boasted as he felt a wave of confidence surge through him. He looked over his shoulder where his teammates were grinning at him, nodding their heads in approval while his coach waved at him frantically to let it go. He nodded, turning his attention back to his opponent who was suddenly speechless and caught off guard. Even the other players were shocked as Lucas smiled. “You’re about to lose this game.” He said finally as he walked away and made his way towards home plate. He was next to bat as he took a few swings out of the box before stepping in and wait for the pitch.
He breathed in deeply, and then locked gazes with the pitcher on the mound. The first ball came in too high.
Ball one. 
“Come on, Lucas. You can do this! I believe in you!” He heard Riley yell from the top of her lungs as he glanced over at her, and took in the proud expression on her face. With a smile, she gave him an encouraging nod.
The next pitch was too far in, Lucas had to jump back to miss the ball from hitting him on the side.
Ball two. 
The chatter of the stadium could be heard as the ball was thrown again towards home and the first strike was called.
“Looks like you’ll be eating your words, Friar!” Lucas was heckled from behind by the other team as he took another deep, nervous breath and got ready for the next pitch. It was a fastball right down the center and at just the right speed. The satisfying clang of the bat making contact with the ball echoed through the stadium. The ball soared past infield and over the outer field before disappearing behind the fence.
The crowd leapt to their feet and erupted into a triumphant scream of pure ecstasy as he dropped the bat and tossed his helmet to the side and made his way around the bases at a slow jog. When he got to home, his teammates had gathered around the base as he walked through it, screaming and running towards him with wild, gloriously happy looks on their faces.
Even as he was swarmed by his teammates, his eyes swept the cheering stands, looking for the one face that stood out and mattered to him the most. The person he’d hit that ball for to make it home. Brunette hair. Brown eyes. Riley.
His Riley.
His home.
Finally, all he had been working for, and she was there to see it.
“Oh my God, Lucas. That was amazing!” By the time she stepped onto the field, she fought her way through the excited crowd and threw herself at him the moment they locked eyes. She wrapped her arms around his neck as he wrapped his around her petite waist, slightly lifting her up from off the ground. So many thoughts and feelings were running through his head at that moment, he managed to forget about winning the game that advances them to the State Championships altogether. “I knew you could to it!”
Riley pulled away a few seconds later and smiled brightly at him. “Anything you want to say, champ?”
“Yes.” Lucas stared at Riley, completely mesmerized by her; and that breathtaking enchanting smile of hers. He leaned forward and kissed her with longing, with his love for her infusing in every fiber in his body and soul. He pulled away and leaned his forehead against hers, smiling before he whispered. “You’re an incredible person, Riley Matthews. And I love you.”
F i n 
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fanficsbykay · 4 years
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Girl Meets Senior Year | Ch. 2
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Summary: Three years have passed since Lucas and Riley fought on the first day of High School. The two never spoke again until one fateful night, the night Lucas saved Riley. Now he must save her from herself and not fall for her in the process. Rucas AU Centric. Joshaya x Smarkle x ZayxOC
Word Count: 1,968
Trigger Warning: Sexual Abuse
[1]
Chapter 2 Girl Meets Shattered
3 Years Later
"I believe that two people are connected at the heart, and it doesn't matter what you do, or who you are or where you live; there are no boundaries or barriers if two people are destined to be together" - Julia Roberts
Riley sat at the counter of her Mother's café and scribbled feverously in her notebook.
"Cake?"
Riley looked up and saw Zay standing in front of her with a slice of chocolate cake. Zay grinned and placed the small dish in front of her notebook. She smiled softly and stuck her finger in the chocolate mousse. Riley brought her finger to her lips and moaned at the taste of the sugar.
"Zay you are awesome! I am glad my Mom gave you this job" Riley commented as Zay passed her a small silver fork.
Zay had scored a job at Topanga's a year ago as a Waiter and it has helped him keep everything on track. Riley wasn't surprised that Zay was good at his job, he loves the people and they love him. Between serving the guest and snacking, he made everyone feel important. He was no longer Robin Lunch; he was Zay Best Waiter Ever.
"Well it does help that you are one of my best friends," Zay said as he took a bite of her cake.
"Zay!" Riley scolded with a laugh.
"Quality assurance" Zay mumbled with his mouth full.
"And?" Riley said as he took another bite.
"It's ok" He joked and Riley let out a laugh.
"Zay Man!" Riley turned around to see Maya walking with a messenger bag.
"No love for me Peaches," Riley said, taking a bite of her cake.
"Well that depends on you Honey, did you finish the next chapter?" Maya asked.
Riley smiled triumphantly and pulled out her iPad and notebook. Maya grinned and snatched the two out of her hands.
"Riles! You've been holding out on me! Now I can draw Violet and Peaches, I've been lacking some great art time" Maya cooed and flipped through the pages.
"I still can't believe you two are creating a graphic novel," Zay said as he took the last bite of cake and grabbed the plate.
Riley tilted her head in disbelief of Zay eating her snack and let out a chuckle. Yet he was right who knew that Riley Matthews could write so well. It was well known Maya had amazing artistic abilities, but one day Farkle and Maya read a short story that Riley wrote. They couldn't believe that Riley had a way to convey her emotions onto paper.
So junior year Riley and Maya began writing a series called Violet and Peaches. The series was about two best friends that fought crimes and had the ability to turn into cats. It was a silly idea, but anything could be possible in their world.
Their little crew actually would have weekly meet-ups and read the adventures and discuss what they believe should happen next. Maya would sketch the new ideas and Riley would write it all down. Farkle has even suggested that they submit it to publishing companies to get offers. However, Riley declines every time while Maya boasts about being the next great graphic designer.
"Believe it, Zay!" Maya said and stopped at a page.
"Riles this is it, this is Violet and Peaches next adventure, I love it," Maya said and a bright smile graced her face,
"Thanks," Riley said and shrugged.
"No drawing Maya we have to head to the Homecoming Game!" Zay said as Maya pulled out her sketchbook.
"Do we have to?" Maya whined and frowned.
"Of course Riley here is our homecoming queen nominee," Zay said and threw his apron onto the countertop.
"Zay you have to lock up," Topanga said as she came from behind.
"But Mrs. M, the game, Riley, Cheerleaders!" Zay rambled and widened his eyes.
"Mom, I got it," Riley said and walked behind the counter.
"Riley aren't you supposed to be at the game to walk across and everything?" Topanga asked.
"I'll be a few minutes late it's fine, really besides, we are closing in twenty minutes, guys go have fun, it gives me private Riley writing time," Riley said and placed her hands under her chin.
"Riles, you sure?" Maya asked as she stood from her seat.
"Totally fine Peaches!" Riley said and grinned.
"Zay!"
Riley's grin faltered from her face when she heard the familiar voice. A voice that she didn't hear often, yet it still sent waves throughout her body. She looked down at the grain of the counter before she felt his presence nearby. He didn't acknowledge her or greet her, but he did glance at her.
"Lucas dude what are you doing here?" Zay asked as Maya glanced between Riley and Lucas.
"Dude you said we were meeting up at four-thirty, it's almost five" Lucas laughed as Zay patted his arm.
"Sorry late shift today, but come on we are all going to the game now," Zay said as Maya grabbed Riley's hand.
"Coming Maya?" Lucas asked as he turned to the Blonde.
"Yeah, Huckleberry" Maya retorted before giving Riley a squeeze.
The three began walking towards the door as Topanga followed slowly behind them. In a silent walk towards the subway, the three of them did not say anything. It could have been the awkward tension or the fact that Riley's mother was a few feet behind them.
"What the Princess isn't joining?" Lucas asked and rolled his eyes.
"Lucas!" Maya scolded and pinched his arm.
Maya didn't want Lucas bashing Riley especially in front of her own mother. Lucas wasn't surprised at Maya's actions; however, he was surprised at her using his name. He didn't make it easy for his friends to spend time with him whenever Riley tagged along.
Somehow he would end up canceling or make Riley feel uncomfortable that she would leave. It was like a switch came on inside of him that made him have to hurt her feelings. Maya had every right to be protective, but he just could not help himself.
"Sorry, Maya I guess I forget you have to protect the Princess" Lucas said and let out a chuckle.
Maya rolled her eyes and shoved him into Zay which made them fall on the ground. Topanga came over and Maya pulled her away from the two boys. Zay jostled Lucas off of him and stood up.
"Why Lucas? Why do you have to be an ass about Riley?" Zay demanded.
"She makes it easy Zay," Lucas said and stood up from the ground. He wiped his jeans and shook his head in anger. Lucas clenched his jaw and made fists before releasing them.
"Cut it out, at least for tonight! It is our last homecoming game and I want to enjoy it with all my best friends" Zay begged and clasped his hands together.
"Whatever let's just catch up to Maya so we can't sit with Smackle and Farkle," Lucas said as he pointed to the subway.
"Crap I left my wallet back at Topanga's, I think Riles is still there" Zay commented and smacked his pants.
"Look I got it don't worry, I won't say anything mean to the Princess," Lucas said and rolled his eyes.
Zay bit back his words and just held up his hands to allow Lucas to go to the café. At least in his mind, the two had to say something to one another. Lucas handed Zay his MetroCard before walking back to Topanga's. He had no idea what he was going to say to Riley and he hoped he didn't have to. He walked down a flight of stairs to see the door closed and the lights were off inside of Topanga's.
Lucas was surprised to see the lights were all off at Topanga's and placed his hands on the glass. He peered into the darkness to see nothing but an empty café. He pulled the door to see that it was unlocked and felt uneasy about what was going on. Despite not speaking to Riley, he knew she wasn't irresponsible to leave the place unlocked.
"Um hello?" Lucas called out as he walked into the dark café. The bell rang over his head and he reached to his left to find the light switch when he saw something from the corner of his eye. Lucas fell back into the glass door with a heavy shove shattering the glass. He groaned and noticed that the person was dressed in all black and was running up the stairs.
Adrenaline began to build up in him and he scrambled onto his feet. He scurried inside and began looking for Riley.
"Ri- Ril - Riley?!" His voice shook with vulnerability and he was surprised he even got her name out. Chairs were strewn haphazardly on the floor and the café counter was bare except for a rag. Lucas heard a whimper and knew where she was. He slid to his knees and saw Riley lying face down behind the bar. Her hair was spread out around her and her skirt hiked up.
"Riley?" Lucas cried and picked her head up as she cried again.
"Lucas?" She questioned as tried sitting up.
"Riley, please stay still I have to call the cops" Lucas begged as he searched for his phone in his pocket. His fingers trembled as he dialed the police and his voice cracked. After reading off the numbers to the police and hanging up he looked down at Riley who was curled in a fetal position.
He studied her as he noticed her underwear further away from the two and he froze. That was a question he didn't want to be answered right now. All that he knew was that she needed him and the three years of anger melted away. She pulled down her skirt and tried sitting up which made Lucas move away.
"No Lucas please, don't leave me" She cried and held him tightly.
"Please I know you don't like me, but don't leave me alone, please Lucas, please"
He held her tightly as she broke down within his arms.
"Don't worry Riley I got you, no one will hurt, no one" He whispered.
He held her for about five minutes before the cops arrived. Before he knew it Riley was on a stretcher and cops were asking him about twenty questions at once. Yet it didn't matter because he just stared at Riley as she was strapped in and crying.
"Son?" The Officer asked.
"I … I … didn't see him sir, but I know he was heavier and taller than I" Lucas croaked.
The Officer noticed Lucas's gaze and patted him on the back. He comprehended that Lucas was not going to be helpful until he knew that Riley was going to be alright.
"Lucas?" Riley cried and Lucas walked over. She grabbed his hand and began to cry as the paramedic placed an IV in her arm.
"I'm right here Riley," Lucas said as she squeezed his hand.
"Young man, only family can ride with her, you can meet us at Mount Sinai," The Paramedic said as Riley gripped his hand tighter.
"Please" Lucas begged as the stretcher moved away from him and Riley thrashed crying for Lucas.
Lucas stood dumbfounded and watched Riley begged for him. Thumps filled his ears and he realized his own heart was racing for her. He was scared for her and he did not know what to do.
"Son?" The Officer said and Lucas turned to him. The Officer handed Lucas's what he could only figure was Riley's bag and some papers.
"Go to her," The Officer said as Lucas without a second thought ran out of Topanga's.
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rilesandlucas · 4 years
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Ok I wanna do more rucas one shots, send me any prompts
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imaginarybird · 7 years
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Unwilling and unable to face everyone on her own when it comes time to attend Auggie and Ava’s wedding, Riley Matthews hires a solution in Lucas Friar. Loosely based on The Wedding Date.
Part One // Part Two // Part Three // Part Four // Part Five // Part Six // Part Seven
Rating: Around a PG 13/14
Notes: ~12,000 words, several crises of self-confidence, pep-talks from angels like @sand1128, @shebe67, and @frankchurchillsaysrelax among others, and so many other things...I can now present to you Chapter Seven of Cold Cape Cod Clams.
One line in this chapter is based off of a text featured on Texts from Last Night, because I’m shameless and couldn’t resist. 
In this chapter, the karaoke party continues, Riley feels conflicted, and Cory brings his own special touch to the party.
It takes a moment to register in Riley’s brain. Lucas’ lips are on hers. Lucas’ lips are on hers. His one hand is at the back of her head, gripping her hair with his fingers. His other hand is on her elbow, drawing her closer still.
She and Lucas are kissing.
And not on the cheek like she thought might be necessary to maintain their charade, or even a quick peck on the lips that had been considered and quickly filed in the ‘only in your wildest dreams Riley, now focus!’ part of her brain. This is full-on kissing.
‘Part your lips, go weak in the knees, and feel your heart freeze in your chest before it rushes back into action with a fluttery electric fervor’ kissing.
When did this become her life? 
It’s all too easy for Riley to melt into the moment (this is not the way she’s used to being kissed) and to forget where they are and what they’re actually doing. At least until the raucous applause and wolf-whistles of the crowd grow so loud that they cut through the pleasant passion-fog rising in her head. After that it takes all of half a heartbeat for Riley to remember they’re on stage, singing karaoke at Auggie and Ava’s party, that the only members of her family not present are her parents, and that Lucas is the escort she hired to be her date for the wedding not the man so seemingly perfect she might as well have dreamed him into existence, sweeping her off of her feet.
She breaks contact first, breathing heavily biting the corner of her lip to try and quell her furious blushing. It doesn’t help, particularly when Auggie returns to his hosting duties, forcing his way into the space now between her and Lucas. 
“Putting on a show for all of us, let’s give it up one more time for the man putting the moves on my sister, Lucas Friar!”
The applause swells a second time. Lucas’ hand finds the small of her back as they exit the stage and Riley wonders if it’s possible for a person’s cheeks to get warm enough to cook an egg through sheer embarrassment alone. It definitely feels like it. Between falling victim to the moment and kissing Lucas for such a lengthy period of time, forgetting herself and actually enjoying kissing Lucas, and the ribbing of the crowd, it’s suddenly all too much, too fast.
This morning she still could barely contemplate talking to her family or most anyone else at this party without thorough preparation, planning of escape routes, and a general sense of absolute necessity and a little over twelve hours later she has not only started asserting herself and showing that she’s actually not just a broken little mouse fumbling away their every attempt to ‘fix’ her, but she’s also started showing off. Grandstanding and singing to give everyone a taste of how happy and strong she is now. 
Never mind that the only source of happiness they’re going to notice is the completely manufactured relationship with Lucas. 
Never mind that this was never a part of the plan to begin with.
Riley can’t help but be embarrassed by her actions. Lucas was just supposed to be a support tool for the week--someone to stand by her so she wouldn’t have to face every stare and snide comment on her own. Yes, it was an added bonus that his presence might shut one or two people up or give them the impression that her love life is blossoming just as much as her professional life that they don’t seem to care about has, but it was never her intention for their ‘relationship’ to be anything more than quietly solid in the background of the wedding festivities. He was supposed to help her blend in and what did she just do? Only everything she could to make them stand out.
They (and really just her) are going to be a big topic of conversation again for the foreseeable future, all because she wanted to show off. And to top it all off, Lucas had been so good at doing it (because it’s his job, she reminds herself) that when he had been serenading her, staring into her eyes, dancing, and indeed kissing her, she had actually felt adored. Like she was the center of his world. So now she can’t even think his name without her stomach doing a somersault and her heart trying to convince her that there was a genuine spark somewhere in that moment.
She could just about tunnel into the earth and die for how much she wishes she could go back in time ten minutes and rethink what she was doing.
“I’m sorry for doing that.” Lucas’ lips near her ear, softly speaking as they weave through the party back to the table, draw Riley out of her shame spiral. What on Earth does he have to be sorry about?
“For doing what?”
“Kissing you like that.”
Riley stops in her tracks. Lucas is either apologizing because he thinks that she’s so different and delicate compared to his other clients that he doesn’t even consider kissing to be a part of this particular job, or because he’s noticed how incompetent she’s been at reigning her growing feelings and hiding them and he’s nice enough that he actually feels bad for exacerbating the situation even though it’s really her that’s putting him in an awkward situation. And either way, she��s feeling off-balance enough, and tired enough, and (in ways that she’s not sure she wants to examine too closely) secure enough with him that the very idea of the apology annoys her. “Why would you be sorry for kissing me?”
“I just mean, it wasn’t fair of me to put you in that position. It’s not something we’ve talked about and--,” Lucas explains, keeping his voice soft. He reaches to take her hand, but Riley pulls out of his reach.
She knows she can’t cause a scene and has to be mindful of her words, but she’s done with this attitude Lucas seems to have adopted that somehow, she’s different from all the other women he works with. To have him keep placing her in this separate category--making it clear that he’s doing things differently with her than he normally would because of who she is as a person--stings just as much as her family’s dismissive treatment, and she’s tired of maintaining her walls on both fronts.
Honestly, it would be so much easier to contain her own feelings if it felt like he was treating her just like any other client.
“Lucas, kissing me is part of your job. As my boyfriend.” She tacks on, thankful that it’s at that moment the crowd is cheering the current performer’s raunchy dance moves on. “I get that I’m probably a little different from the girls you’ve...dated in the past, but would you ever have apologized for kissing them in public?”
“Probably not.” Lucas at least has the grace to look moderately hard-pressed and contrite as she calls him out. “I just don’t feel right about getting-,”
Riley holds up her hand. “I know you appreciate how hard this week has been so far for me and you’re trying to make it easier. But honestly, it’s harder for me right now because I’m stuck constantly second guessing what I’m doing with you. I need you to just...be my boyfriend. Nothing more, nothing less.”
“You’re right.” Lucas sighs, pressing his lips together. “I’ve been complicating things, and I’m sorry. For doing that, not for kissing you.” He hastens to correct himself, the corners of his mouth upturning as he does so. “Forgive me?”
In spite of the emotional rollercoaster of the last fifteen minutes, Riley finds herself relaxing in the face of Lucas’ smile. It’s impossible not to, what with the soft glint that seems to show up in his eyes when he’s looking at her. Damn it. Boundaries, Riley. Boundaries. “Of course.”
“Oh, my goodness you two are just so cute together!” After a quick detour to the bar to grab some drinks, Riley and Lucas arrive back to the table to Linda’s effusive chatter. “I know you weren’t actually singing together but Lucas, when you brought her up on stage to dance with you...oh! And that kiss! I swear, I could have just melted right there.” 
Eric, with his arm slung around his wife’s shoulders raises his drink in a salute. “She’s right. The both of you were good. Not as good as we’re gonna be when we get up there and recreate the first dance from our wedding, but good.”
Riley, feeling on more even footing than she had prior to her conversation with Lucas, thinks back on her uncle’s hodge-podge of a wedding, marred by weather disasters and a general comedy of errors, and can’t help but grin; the party won’t know what hit them. “Are you going to do the actual first one, or the official one from the reception?”
“Oh, we’re doing the actual first one.” Eric nods emphatically. “That one was the real representation of our relationship, after all.”
“What am I missing?” Lucas glances between Riley and the couple. “What was so special about your first dance?”
“Our wedding was....” Linda trails off, searching for the right phrase. “A hilarious disaster. It was storming, so everyone’s hair and clothes got wrecked, we got evacuated because of a risk of flash floods, and about five hundred other things that went wrong. But Eric and I were determined to get married anyways. So, in a storm shelter full of strangers, we had our notary perform the ceremony.”
Eric jumps in. “And of course, the most important part of any wedding after the vows is the cake. Followed by the first dance. But we didn’t have any cake so we had to skip right to the dance. And without the band we had hired--,”
The strains of the next karaoke performer start to get louder, interrupting Eric’s explanation.
“No chance, no way. I won’t say it no, no.
(You swoon, you sigh. Why deny it, oh oh?)
It’s too cliché, I won’t say I’m in love…”
They all glance towards the stage to see who’s performing, temporarily forgetting that their conversation. Riley vaguely recognizes the petite brunette in dark-framed glasses as someone she’s seen on Farkle Minkus’ arm at events over the past few years, but not enough to remember her name, or if they have even been introduced to each other. Farkle still tends to shy away from her on most occasions.
Her own recollection on the subject is cut short. Lucas, who’s sipping his drink when he turns to look, seems to gasp in surprise (at least that’s what she thinks happens since his eyes widen a little too) while he’s drinking, causing him to cough and sputter. She reaches over to thump gently on his back a couple of times. “You OK?”
“Yeah.” Lucas nods coughing twice more for good measure. His cheeks are red and eyes a bit watery but that seems to be the end of it. “Just caught myself off guard with that sip. Went down the wrong pipe.”
Riley has to wonder what the actual explanation is because there’s no way that someone as smooth and together as Lucas actually just...took a sip before he was ready to. That’s the sort of thing she would do as a certified klutz, but not him. Something else must have happened, but Lucas changes the subject before she can ask.
“So... you were saying about your first dance?”
“If you see a painted sign at the side of the road, that says fifteen miles to the --,”
“LOVE SHACK!! Love shack yeah, yeah.
“I’m heading down the Atlanta highway…”
In the face of Linda and Eric dancing...well, the kindest word for it would be enthusiastically, on stage and belting the B-52s at the top of their lungs, Lucas blinks. “This is really the first song they danced to at their wedding?” 
Riley can’t help but laugh. Even when they hear the story of Eric and Linda’s impromptu wedding, most people don’t believe it. At least unless they’ve gotten to know the happy couple. But people know that Eric is a Senator, and they recognize that even though he seems a little quirky and tends to simplify the issues as he talks about them, so they assume that he has some level of tradition and decorum instilled in him. Then they get to know him and realize that when he’s happy--when he’s full of exuberance and love and joy--there’s not an ounce of tradition in him. And Linda is usually more than happy to follow. “They didn’t have a band or a DJ with them in the storm shelter, they had the radio. It was the first song that came on. So... it’s their song now.” 
“What was their first dance supposed to be? If everything had gone right?” Lucas asks. 
“They won’t tell anyone.” 
Riley stiffens involuntarily at the newcomer to the conversation’s voice. Her grandmother has always been loving and doting (in many ways more so than her mother has) but she’s equally hard to please. Her displeasure with Riley’s path in life has been slightly subtler than that of Riley’s parents, but nonetheless, it’s been easy to notice. 
“They were going to surprise everyone anyways, and Linda insists that every that happened was meant to be, so talking about what they were planning is a waste of time.” Amy Matthews continues, as Riley and Lucas stand and turn to greet her. Alan is next to his wife, awkward as ever with his hands in his pockets.  
Not that that’s particularly surprising either. Like father, like son, grandpa Matthews hadn’t known how to handle his granddaughter turning out to be a girl, even after going through the process with his own daughter (though Eric swears things were just as bad when Morgan was growing up so in this case, Riley knows it’s not specifically a her thing, just a Matthews’ family trait seemingly carried on the ‘y’ chromosome). 
“The two of you looked very happy up on stage.” Her grandma says after a perfunctory greeting has been exchanged and they’re all sitting at the table. 
“I’m glad it comes across because we are very happy.” Lucas lays his hand across Riley’s on the surface of the table. “Riley’s the best thing that’s happened to me in a long time.” 
It’s a small gesture, but Riley can’t help but marvel at how it helps her relax. There’s a large part of her worrying over what her grandparents have really come over to say (that it’s actually just to compliment her and Lucas is beyond unlikely) and the reassurance that someone is here with her to back her up--that Lucas is here to back her up--quiets the worry in ways that she’s not used to. She’s quick to smile at him to show her appreciation. “What about you and grandpa? Will we be seeing the two of you up there?” The answer to the question is unlikely to be yes which is, a bit unfairly, why Riley chose to ask it. Her grandmother has a lovely voice and is in no way averse to showing it off once in a while, but her grandfather would probably rather undergo a root canal; Ava may have decreed performance a condition of attending her party but if there’s a way around it, Alan will surely find it.
Indeed, Riley’s grandfather raises his drink to his mouth. “We’re still exploring our options.” 
AKA, finding a way out of doing it at all.
“Well, I’m sure whatever you land on will be great.”
Amy accepts Lucas’ compliment gracefully and then, as expected, she moves to change the subject as Linda and Eric’s performance gets a touch louder.
“Sign says, ‘Stay away fools!’
“‘Cause love rules, at the Love Shack…”
“Anyway Riley, we really wanted to come over to talk to you about what happened out on the boat today.”
Riley relaxes a little more. That’s doable and familiar. People witness what looks like a medical emergency get handled by a professional and they like to talk about it, to say how cool it was or to sing some praise of the professional. Most of the time she sees it happen to the doctors she works with, but she’s gotten it once or twice too, and if that’s the conversation her grandparents want to have she can get through that a lot easier than the subjects she was anticipating.
“The way you handled everything out there was very impressive.” Her grandfather begins. “Things were chaotic but you kept your cool and got everyone else to calm down and do what needed to be done.”
Riley starts to demur the comment, firm in the belief that doing things she has trained and studied for isn’t particularly impressive, but her grandmother speaks before she can get much out.
“And I really think it was a wonderful gesture.”
“A gesture.” Riley blinks, unsure of where her grandmother is going with such a comment. Her stomach starts to clench with the sudden flip to uncertainty.
Her grandmother nods. “Yes, a very nice one. Rushing to your father and Josh’s aid like that after being away for so long… Doing what you did was a wonderful way to say that you’re done being stubborn and you’re ready to apologize and start mending fences.”
Riley nearly pushes away from the table for the way her stomach clenching turns to an icy element sitting on her chest at her grandmother’s words. Of course she had made the wrong assumptions about the elder Matthews’ intentions. They haven’t given her praise without wanting something else attached in over ten years. “That...wasn’t what I was doing.”
Lucas starts moving his thumb, swirling soft circles on the back of her hand.
“Of course it was!” Her grandmother dismisses. “Rushing to their sides and doing what you could--,”
“I was just doing my job. I would have stepped up for anyone.” Riley protests. “If someone needs medical help, it’s my job to do what I can.”
“But you’re just a nurse. You hand out compresses to little kids.”
Her grandmother couldn’t have known that this glib disregard for what she does would be enough to flip a switch in Riley and make her go from hurt and uneasy to hurt and ready to do something about it (because Riley hadn’t known either) but flip a switch it does. “Actually grandma, nurse’s work incredibly hard and there’s no such thing as just a nurse. And furthermore, I’m not just a nurse. I’m a nurse practitioner in a pediatric emergency room.
“That means I have my master’s degree. I can write prescriptions. Most of the patients I see are my own, not a doctor’s who I’m assisting. I tell people the best news of their lives when their family member is going to make it and the worst news of their lives when I have to tell them that they’re not. The injuries that dad and Uncle Josh were dealing with were nothing compared to the traumas that I see on a daily basis. So sure. I’m just a nurse. I am damn proud to be just a nurse.”
For a moment, Riley thinks she’s done, and breathing heavily, she watches her grandparents stunned reactions. But when she notices her grandfather opening his mouth to say something, she finds a few more words. “And by the way, you would know all of that if you spent even one iota of the time you spend lamenting the fact that I don’t just blindly follow my parents’ example listening to me instead. But I haven’t had the same best friend since I was five, and I haven’t married my childhood sweetheart, and I know until I do, I might as well just be any other nurse in the world to you, not your granddaughter.
“So as just another nurse, let me make it clear. What I did today was my job, not an olive branch. And given how this family has treated me the last twelve years, believe me when I tell you that you won’t be seeing any grand gestures coming from my direction. Not when I know the reception I’ll get.”
Riley stands, holding onto Lucas with one hand and grabbing her drink with the other. She starts to walk away, more than happy to take the route of retreat in order to avoid dealing with whatever fallout standing up for herself might cause. Particularly now that it’s the second time in a single day that she’s done so without facing many consequences. She knows her luck and that this is not it. The other shoe will drop eventually and while Lucas’ pep talk earlier covered a little bit of ground as to why she should be OK with it if and when the repercussions come (and maybe contributed to this instance of bold attitude and speaking her mind) a few wise words from a guy she’s only just getting to know was never going to undo a lifetime’s worth of aiming to please.
So Riley grabs Lucas and tries to flee before either grandparent can formulate a response.
After they make it a few steps away and Lucas has caught up so he’s walking next to her instead of trailing behind her, he leans in, smirking next to her ear. “I can think of a gesture or two you could give them.”
“Lucas!” Riley admonishes, although she’s unable to contain her giggles as she imagines the proposed scenario. Her family would be shocked. And horrified. And if she were the sort of person who did that kind of thing, it would be pretty funny. At least for a second or two until her manners and guilt caught up with her. “You’re terrible.”
“I’m just saying…” Lucas starts to guide her towards a corner of the patio that appears a little less crowded. “They’ve kind of earned it. And it would fit with the whole badass thing you’ve been rocking all day.”
If Riley had needed proof that Lucas is just saying what he thinks he should because she’s paying him, this is it; no one in the history of ever has described her as a badass. “Who have you been watching all day? Clearly it wasn’t me.”
“Oh, so taking charge at the scene of an emergency isn’t badass? Telling off your mother while you’re covered in your father’s blood? That’s not badass?”
Riley snorts. “You make it sound like I’m the one who stabbed him.”
“No, you’re just the one who was willing to take the future use of his hand into yours, if not his life.”
Riley still can’t figure out how Lucas gets that beautiful soft glint in his eyes, or how he can take something that she does every day and make it sound so special. It’s an incredible trick.
No wonder all the reviews on his website were so positive.
“Riley, I know it’s not always easy to see something that you do for work as something extraordi--,” 
“There you are!” 
A heavy hand clamps down on Riley’s shoulder in time with the boisterous shout and she can’t help but yelp and drop her drink in surprise. The glass shatters on the deck by her feet. She and Lucas both turn, with Lucas grabbing her forearm and guiding her to move behind him. 
“I have been looking everywhere for you!” The enthusiastic visitor, Riley realizes a split second after her panic hits, is her father. “This place is crowded. Who knew Auggie had so many friends?” 
Her dad is disheveled, to put it mildly. His injured arm is heavily bandaged, splinted in a sling. His shirt buttons are done up unevenly, his shirt isn’t tucked into his pants properly… A glance down at his feet reveals that instead of shoes, he’s wearing slippers. Riley can’t believe her mother let him out of the hotel room at all after the day they’ve had, let alone let him out looking like such a mess. 
“Dad, you just had surgery, you should be resting back at the--,”
“Surgery, smurgery.” Her dad cuts her off, scoffing. “I wanted to come and see you. You saved me today and we have so much to talk about.” 
Riley takes in the whole picture. Her dad’s appearance, his unrestrained overenthusiastic tone, pupils the size of pinpricks… She sighs. He’s not reacting well to whatever pain medication he’s been prescribed for his injury. “Dad, where’s mom? She needs to--,” 
Her dad steps forward, moving his hand back to her shoulder. He glances from side to side, as though checking their surroundings, and lowers his voice to what he probably thinks is a whisper. “Shh! Topanga fell asleep. We have to be quiet so we don’t wake her up. She doesn’t want me to come here.” 
Of course. 
“If Mrs. Matthews is asleep, how did you get here?” Lucas asks. He gently takes her dad’s hand off of her. “You didn’t drive, did you?” 
“I called an Uber on my phone.” 
Riley opens her mouth to say something else, but Lucas shakes his head, warning her off. “An Uber?” He prompts. 
“They’ll pick you up from anywhere.” Her dad enthuses, while Lucas starts to walk with him, guiding him to back towards the rest of the crowd.
Her dad continues to ramble, and Riley feels more than a little guilty for staying behind and leaving Lucas to find a solution to the problem (or at least someone to hand her dad off to), even though he had stepped up without her asking him to. She just has a feeling that if her dad gets the chance to have whatever conversation he’s gotten it into his head that they have to have tonight, that things will just get messier; either her dad will say something awful while his filter is at less than full effect that he’s restrained himself from saying sober and any hope of reconciliation that Riley’s still holding in the deepest, most secret recesses of herself will be crushed for good, or with his inhibitions loose and his sense of self riding high from the weighty experiences of the day he’ll try and fix things. Which wouldn’t be bad if Riley thought he might actually mean it, or could guarantee that when the medication wore off his attitude wouldn’t go right back to where it’s been.
As it is, she doesn’t want to, nor does she think she’s in the place to risk the heartbreak that will come from either of those paths. 
If her dad is experiencing some kind of turnaround and wants to make things better, actually wants to talk things through and apologize, then they can do it when he’s not high on any prescription narcotics. 
But Riley is 99.99% certain that he’s not, and that conversation isn’t anywhere close to being on the horizon.
“Huggin’ and a-kissin’, dancin’ and a-lovin’ and a love shack…”
Around her the party bursts into enthusiastic applause as Eric and Linda’s performance comes to its conclusion. Riley quickly decides that if she works to help Lucas take care of her dad, by way of sending someone to help him, then she at least will be doing something and might feel a little bit better. She heads towards the stage to grab her Uncle and fill him in on the situation.
“Seen any good movies lately?” 
“Nope.” 
“TV shows?” 
“Not really.” 
“Well, I’d ask you if you’ve read any good books but I’m pretty sure with a guy like Lucas in your life any thoughts about reading before bed begin and end with the Kama Sutra.”
Riley nearly chokes on the water she’s been sipping anxiously as Linda’s attempts at keeping a distracting and benign conversation going veer off course and catch her attention again. Her Aunt (in-law)’s valiant efforts to draw her attention away from the potential disasters of her dad’s presence as it stands and to keep her from travelling too far down the path of blaming herself for the entire mess have not been entirely effective to this point; it’s all too easy to get caught up in the worry of the unknown and get pulled into her own thoughts about it all. But Linda brings out the big guns with that comment and draws her right back to the moment. “Ha ha.” She deadpans, glancing around the patio.
Farkle Minkus is on the stage, putting on an enthusiastic, athletic performance of ‘Don’t Stop Me Now’. Auggie and Ava are just to the side, waiting to resume emcee duties. Out in the crowd, things are busy and packed enough that Riley struggles to pick anyone out without taking extra time to really scrutinize the details. She doesn’t think that she can see Lucas or Eric or her dad anywhere, but it’s not very comforting when she’s a) not positive that that’s true and b) not sure what might be happening wherever they have ended up.
“I’m just saying…” Linda smirks, sending Riley a knowing look out of the corner of her eye. “You can’t work the shifts you do, maintain your relationship, and have time for Oprah’s Book Club. And there’s no missing the heart eyes he’s been sending your direction all night so we know your relationship isn’t suffering…”
Riley blushes at the implication. She’s mostly gotten used to the winking implications about her relationship with Lucas (there’s no denying that he’s incredibly good-looking in what Zay would call a ‘I wouldn’t kick them out for eating crackers in my bed’ kind of way, and no one at the wedding appears to be shy about talking about those sorts of things) but it’s a little different with Linda, who for a long stretch of time was a sort of catch-all female in Riley’s life, acting as a big sister/mother/best friend...whatever Riley had needed at the time. With all the history between them, she might actually expect to hear some details. 
Details that, of course, Riley doesn’t actually have.  She’s not sure what she should do. Be semi-honest and just say that she and Lucas haven’t gotten there yet? Lie and make something up? Her mind goes completely blank of rational ideas. 
“I’m a sex machine ready to reload! 
“Like an atom bomb, about to oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, explode!”
Farkle’s lyrically appropriate dancing doesn’t help matters. 
“I, uh, well...I--,”
“OK, my idiot brother is safely in the hands of Shawn, who just needs the valet to grab his car so he can deliver Cory back to the bed and breakfast and what I’m sure will be the wrathful hands of Topanga.” Riley is saved from having to truly answer Linda by Eric and Lucas’ arrival at the table. “So, I am like, 97% sure we’re in the clear and the crisis has been averted.” 
“I just don’t understand what possessed him to come here.” Linda comments as Eric and Lucas take seats. “I mean, I know he’s never had the best reaction to pain medication but doesn’t he normally just sit in front of the TV and get sucked into a marathon of Unsolved Mysteries and get all paranoid?” 
Lucas scoots his seat closer to Riley’s. “Well, when he wasn’t singing the name game under his breath, he was mostly just rambling.”
A pit forms in Riley’s stomach, sinking straight down to the floor. Lucas’ statement is just vague enough to be obviously hiding something. “And what was he rambling about?” She clips out softly, starting to fiddle with the wrapper from her straw. 
“Hard to say.” 
“Mostly nonsense.” 
Eric and Lucas answer in unison, and entirely too quickly.
Underneath the table, Riley aims a firm, but gentle toe to the shin of her Uncle. “And what would the average person listening to this nonsense hear?” 
“Did you just kick my shin? I am a respected member of the United States Senate. I could sic the FBI on you for this.” Eric’s attempts at deflection are good, and with a different topic, Riley might go along with them, but she knows what he and Lucas are doing. Trying to hide something, probably to try and protect her. 
Only she doesn’t want to be coddled or protected. She wants to know as much as possible about where she stands with her father. “I’ll kick it again if you don’t answer the question. What was dad doing here?” 
It takes two more beats of silence for the men to answer her. In the end, Lucas is the one to step up to the plate.
“He was talking about...repairing your relationship.” He sighs, finding her eyes. “Going on about how he never should have let you leave, and how he thinks you two have to fix things.” 
Well. That answers that question. Granted, Riley had already figured on it being the case, but having her suspicions confirmed doesn’t do much to make her feel better. On the contrary, knowing just takes away the worry that Lucas and Uncle Eric were hiding something totally heinous from her and the sinking feeling makes way for a jumbled mix of uncertainty and annoyance. 
“Because that couldn’t have occurred to him any other time in the last ten years.” She huffs, flicking the straw wrapper across the surface of the table.
“Riley…” Linda draws out her name, with the sort of sadness peppering her voice that makes Riley’s stomach turn for how much it sounds like pity. 
“It’s fine.” Riley shakes her head, pressing her lips together. She wants to nip that in the bud almost as much as she wants the night to be over with altogether so she can take five minutes to think about all of the myriad developments that have happened away from the pressure of actually interacting with people while she does it. She just needs to make sure Linda and Eric know exactly how OK with this she is, and the she can hopefully change the subject. “We all know he doesn’t actually mean any of it, so there’s nothing to be upset over.” 
The confusion on her Uncle Eric’s face surprises her. He’s always been her biggest--and at times her only--cheerleader when it’s come time to distance herself from her parents and look at things without the added filter of the need for a parent-child relationship. Now he looks like he doesn’t understand where she’s coming from at all. “You don’t think he means it?” 
“I think he’s emotional from experiencing a trauma and high as a kite and it’s messing with his feelings and making him act like he wants to fix things. He won’t feel the same way when he sobers up.” The words come out clinically; it’s not easy to detach from the fact that the ‘he’ in question is her father, but Riley has forced herself to get better at it over the years. If she constantly looks at their actions while thinking of Cory and Topanga as her parents, it hurts too much. Her hopes float to the surface or everything feels more personal and she can’t help but take it that way and crumble. It’s better to separate herself when she can, particularly in situations like this where she has to defend her choices. 
“Well, yeah, he’s high right now,” Linda concedes, “but it’s lowering his inhibitions. I’m not saying you should talk to him until he’s sober, but people sometimes need a push to say things that they’re afraid to on a--,” 
Riley cuts her aunt off. She’s not going to get sucked down that road and if she can stop anyone else from going down it, she will. “When exactly has Cory Matthews ever needed a push to fight for the relationships he wants? Because I have heard all of the stories, and to my recollec--,” 
“Damn it, Cory! When did you get to be so nimble?” From several tables away, Shawn’s winded voice cuts through the noise of the party and interrupts Riley’s thought.
They all turn to look. Sure enough, her dad is back. He’s got one of the binders that holds all of the potential karaoke songs. Actually, he appears to have taken the binder out of the hands of Ava’s maid of honor, and is flipping through it with gusto. “Nobody told me this was gonna be a karaoke party. I love karaoke! I’ve got to sing something!”
To his credit, although Shawn had apparently lost control of his charge at one point, he’s trying to regain it, grabbing onto her dad’s elbow and attempting to pull him away. “No, you’ve got to come with me back to the bed and breakfast. Topanga’s waiting for us.”
“I’m not going anywhere.” Her dad protests. “I came here to talk to Riley and I’m not leaving until you people stop hid--,”
“O-K.” Lucas says a little too loudly, drawing her attention away from the sloppy rant. He loops an arm around her shoulders. “I don’t know about you but I am dying to get my hands on something with chocolate. Why don’t you and I go take a look at the dessert bar until things get a little less...crowded?”
The ease with which Lucas can manipulate a situation, from changing a topic of conversation to removing someone from a situation is something Riley can’t help but marvel at. Especially when he just seems to know it’s needed without any nudges or prompting. He seems to just know how to navigate these things. 
“Yeah.” Riley nods, speaking softly. Being just as eager to avoid defending her belief that her dad doesn’t actually want to fix things to Eric and Linda as she is to avoid her dad realizing she’s there and trying to talk with her again, she’s more than happy to go along with Lucas’ diversion. “Something with chocolate sounds perfect.”
They receive no argument from Eric or Linda, just a set of understanding nods, so Riley and Lucas stand and start heading towards the opposite area of the patio. As they walk, Riley can just hear her dad’s boisterous, insistent comment to Shawn.
“This place doesn’t have the Theme from Ghostbusters. I’m just gonna have to pick something else, and sing the words to the Theme from Ghostbusters.”
“You know, we don’t have to stay.” Lucas says as they arrive at the dessert spread. Although the suggestion had probably been primarily made as a polite excuse to escape the scene and serve as a small distraction, Riley had quickly decided that the day had been enough of a roller coaster before the party had started with its singing and kissing and fighting (and now the grown-up version of hide and seek) that she had more than earned a trip to the sugary buffet table to load up a plate, indulge, and bury some of her feelings under a mountain of ganache. When given the chance, she had made a beeline for the sweets. “We’ve been here nearly two hours and we both did the karaoke thing… Auggie’s not gonna blame you for cutting out early when he hears about the stuff with your grandparents and the thing with your dad…” 
Riley shakes her head. She can’t leave. It doesn’t matter the circumstances and whether or not people know about them, if she’s the first to leave the party, especially if the rest of her family is still there, it will just be more fodder for everyone. They all love to talk about how she runs from things and leaving this would be one more example. She won’t add fuel to that fire. Not after fleeing the welcome party their first night here. 
And she definitely doesn’t want Auggie to hear anything about the fight with their grandparents, or their dad’s behavior.
Especially their dad’s behavior.
“We’re not leaving. And Auggie’s not finding out about any of this.” She answers firmly, grabbing a plate and starting to survey her prospects.
“I get why you don’t want to leave,” Lucas concedes after a moment’s thought, “because you’d never hear the end of it from some of these people.” And as he loads his own plate with a variety of mini cupcakes, Riley notes the hint of annoyance (or is it disgust?) in his voice, but it shifts just as quickly over to curiosity. “But why shouldn’t Auggie know about what happened? It’s his family too.”
“Exactly.” Riley glances over and sees that Lucas’ expression is still fairly puzzled. She sighs. “First of all, Auggie loves them. He understands why I don’t get along with them, but he hasn’t had the same problems with them that I have and I’m not going to do anything that might spoil that for him. Especially the week of his wedding.
“Second, Auggie still thinks that someday my parents and I will work things out. If he gets wind that my dad was trying to talk to me and ‘fix things’,” Riley makes finger quotes with her free hand, just to make sure Lucas knows how much she thinks the entire thing is total crap, “then he’ll think the same thing that Uncle Eric and Linda obviously did, and he won’t understand why I don’t agree and won’t indulge in the conversation.”
With their plates loaded down with desserts, they start to walk, seeking out a free space that won’t leave them too close, or too far, from the crowd. “And why exactly is that?” 
Riley nearly clenches her jaw; she didn’t really think Lucas would question her or try and make her second guess herself over this. He’s been on board with all of her other decisions and reasoning, and for him to do so with this, arguably the hardest one for her to make and stay firm on, stings. She’s grown far too used to having his support.
“I’m not trying to change your mind,” Lucas clarifies as they reach a tiny, bar-height table top without seating and set their plates of sweets on it, “I just want to understand where you’re coming from.” 
The hurt laps back. Riley takes a settling breath, and searches for the right words. Of course, once she finds them, it’s difficult to hold them back or to stop finding them. “The very idea that someone can only express their feelings about or to another person if they’re drunk or high is not nearly so endearing or sweet or exciting as people like to act like it is. At best, it’s awkward and sad. At best. Because they’re either hiding their feelings because they know they’re in some way inappropriate or they haven’t said anything because the feelings don’t actually run that deep or even exist at all, being altered just takes away the person’s filter, and come the glaring reality of sobriety, everyone is going to be confused and disappointed.”
“And you think your dad falls into the second category?” Lucas probes.
“Well, I know he’s not a heartbroken suitor on a tv drama who thinks he has to stay quiet about his feelings because I’m happy with someone else.” Riley stabs at a mini-cheesecake with her fork, carving off a bite but making no move to eat it. “Look, you can ask almost anyone, and they’ll tell you how naive I am because until I’m proven wrong I’ll believe the best in people. And for all of our differences, I still talk to my family regularly. There’s no reason for him to think that I wouldn’t give him a chance if he came to me and wanted to genuinely make an effort to fix things between us.”
“Maybe he doesn’t know how to do it.” 
It’s almost a fair enough point. A parent is supposed to take the high road and love and care for their child regardless of what happens and if her dad realized he had fallen short of that goal, he probably would struggle to know how to handle it. Only there are options other than talking. And it’s really only almost a fair enough point if you don’t know Cory Matthews or his history with other problem relationships.
And Riley gets the feeling that Lucas thinks he’s just having a conversation...just playing devil’s advocate with the girl he’s spending time with for the week, but she has to correct him and even explain it in this minor way makes her heart clench and lodge in her throat. 
“Even if he didn’t know how to say the words, my dad has had every opportunity to change the way he interacts with me. Over ten years of opportunities, actually. But he hasn’t. And I know you don’t know him, and you only know the few stories I’ve told you, but I know him, and I know them all. And I know that he fought harder to stay friends with Uncle Shawn’s ex when they broke up in college than he ever has to talk to me.
“And that’s how I know he doesn’t mean whatever this is tonight.” 
Riley could say more. She actually almost wants to say more. That’s how easy it is to talk to Lucas. There’s something about how he listens; he barely even has to say anything, but the gestures he makes--the small nods and ‘mm-hmms’ and the brushes of his hand or knee against hers--make Riley feel so important and valued...like what she’s saying matters and is being understood, that she could almost open up right then and there. She could tell him the whole story. There’s a split second where she considers it. 
At least until they show up. 
“Mind if we interrupt?” Her Uncle Josh, bandage on one hand, his other hand gripped firmly by a rather blank-faced Maya, approaches the table. He rocks on his heels as they stop and looks, to Riley’s assessment, like he almost wants to be biting his lip. When they were kids, he would always do that whenever he was nervous. 
“What I want hasn’t ever stopped anyone before.” Riley clips. She steps to the side, closer to Lucas. He wraps his arm around her shoulders, drawing her closer still until her side is pressed against him. “What do you need Josh?” She knows the question probably comes off as rude (she can’t exactly keep the sigh or the exhaustion out of her voice when she speaks) but she can’t really find the energy to pretend to care. She maybe could have managed after the encounter with her grandparents but the moments with her dad have drained her, and she knows for the rest of the night she’ll have to leave every barricade she has up when dealing with family.
Josh swallows around his first breath, speaking on the second. “About what happened on the boat today. I wanted to tha--,” 
“There’s no need.” Riley cuts him off. She’s not going through this dance again. Not twice in one night. “I was just doing what I trained for.”
“Even so,” Josh is not deterred, though he licks at his lips before he continues, “what happened today was a lot and you couldn’t have been expecting it, and I know things between us and with you and your dad aren’t the best… I don’t want you to think that I don’t appreciate the way you stepped up. So... thanks.” 
Riley feels Lucas’ fingertips tighten on her shoulder, but he doesn’t say anything, so she doesn’t know exactly what part of Josh’s comment he doesn’t like. She knows which part she doesn’t like, she’s just not sure it’s worth diving into that rabbit hole. She presses her lips together, forcing her instinctual response back. “You’re welcome.”
It quickly becomes evident that Josh either didn’t think that she would accept his gratitude so quickly, or he just didn’t plan on what would happen when she did, because he doesn’t say anything else. A beat passes. Then another. And then another. 
“Seriously?!” Maya whacks the back of her hand against Josh’s chest, not quite glaring at her husband, but close just the same. “You make me come over here because you just had to talk to Riley and this is all we’re going to do? Thank her and stand here, catching the awkward?” 
“I’m trying to be the bigger person.” Josh hisses in return. As though they aren’t standing a mere foot and a half away in total view. 
“Well you succeeded.” Riley says quickly, glancing down at the floor and working her jaw over the words. She doesn’t bother to inject any tone or expression to make them convincing; this is just...going through the motions necessary to extract herself from the conversation without another fight. She’s too tired for another fight. “So thank you for that. I think we’re all set.” 
Now Maya is pretty much glaring at Josh. “I thought we were coming over here because you figured out how to get her back.” 
Riley’s first instinct is to take a step back. The only reason she doesn’t is Lucas’ steady presence against her. You figured out how to get her back. As though she was a cherished possession lost in an ill-advised poker bet, and not, you know, a person who makes her own decisions.
“I had an idea.” Josh replies. “But I didn’t know if it would--,” 
“Work?” Riley cuts him off, crossing her arms across her chest. “No, it won’t. And I have to tell you, the single-minded tendency of everyone in this family to color their every interaction with me with an attempt to draw me back to the family like a little lost lamb isn’t endearing me to the thought either.” Riley feels Lucas brush his thumb on her shoulder in a reassuring squeeze, but her focus is on the expressions setting on Josh and Maya’s faces.
In an instant, Maya’s obstinate annoyance appears to shift and mold itself into a glistening expression of disbelief. “Riles, you can’t really mean that.”
“I’ve been saying the same thing since I left, Maya.” Riley shakes her head, exhaling in grim, spiritless laugh. “It’s just that none of you have been listening. Come on Lucas,” she steps out of his embrace to grab at her plate, even though she no longer feels much like eating it “there must be some corner of this place where we can sit in peace.” 
Lucas follows her example without saying a word. His free hand finds her back and they turn to leave.
They make it two steps and Riley almost thinks they’re home free. Neither Josh nor Maya are the sort of people who think before they speak; they both move based exactly based on what they’re feeling in the moment and deal with consequences later, so it seems most likely that if they have anything to say, they already would have said it. Naturally, that’s not the case, as in the middle of the third step, Josh’s downtrodden voice cuts through the air.
“Wow, you really do hate us now, don’t you?”
And Riley’s torn between anger and sadness. Because she just can’t tell. Is Josh making some sort of play? An attempt at guilt-tripping her because the Riley he knows would have been horrified at the implication that she hates anyone, let alone her family?  The thought of the potential emotional manipulation makes her face heat up. And yet that there’s a chance that he’s being honest and thinks that she could somehow hate him (a concept that baffles her, even with their disagreements) and the very thought leaves her feeling so cold and heavy that the sadness wins out. She turns back around.
“Putting myself first is not the same as hating you. I could never hate you, Uncle Josh. Either of you.” 
“No, you just won’t talk to us.”
“Maya, I left because I was spending every ounce of myself on meeting everyone’s expectations and being the perfect friend and perfect Matthews, and none of you noticed or cared what that was doing to me.” Riley allows some of the rawness pushing at her being to bleed into her voice because to try and contain it all would at some point make her break. For so much of her life Josh was more like a beloved older brother than an Uncle, and her friendship with Maya felt deeper than anything she could possibly imagine; Riley’s felt close to the edge all most of the night, tiptoeing closer and closer with every fraught encounter, and this is just one more thing she has to deal with and fight against, lest it push her exactly where she doesn’t want to go. “And I can tell from the way you talk to me that things haven’t changed, and until they do--,”
“Oh come on, you left because you’re a drama queen and things didn’t work out exactly the way you had them figured in your head, and we weren’t coddling you anymore so you had to throw a temper tantrum.” 
Maya’s words stop the breath in Riley’s chest, and she can’t explain why. They’re not any crueler than anything else she’s faced over the years. They’re probably not even the cruelest words Maya’s ever sent her way if she really thinks about it. But somehow in this moment they take her back to a time when having her feelings dismissed and belittled by Maya still hurt. 
She’s a little surprised when Lucas leaves her side to step in front of her, directing a coldness in his gaze that she’s never seen before at Maya. “You know, for someone who supposedly wants to reconcile, you’re pretty rude.”
“Back off Sheriff Woody, nobody asked you.” Maya scoffs and rolls her eyes. 
“Sheriff Woody?” Lucas repeats, blinking and staring blankly at his newly taken on adversary.
Not that Riley thinks they’re becoming mortal enemies or anything. It’s just that unless Maya has changed a lot since high school, she kind of sees everyone who doesn’t do things her way or agree with her as completely against her and gets defensive, and with Lucas probably not inclined to pull any punches...she can see the way this conversation is headed.   
“From Toy Story…?” Maya explains, but gets no reaction in return. “The cowboy…? Because you’re some kind of goody-two shoes huckleberry from Texas…?” Lucas wrinkles his nose and shakes his head, but otherwise doesn’t say anything, and Maya’s exasperation wins out.  “What? Are you so charming and perfect that no one’s ever insulted you before?”
Lucas’ eyes widen and his voice drips with barely disguised derision when he speaks. “Oh! That’s what you were going for. Ok, yeah. No. I get insulted all the time. I just wasn’t expecting a Pixar reference to be hurled at me but I totally get it now. I’ll get right down on your level and shouldn’t have any more trouble keeping up.” The wink that he sends Riley’s way, causing Maya’s eyes to flash and Riley’s heart to seize and flutter doesn’t help matters.
“Now who’s being rude?” Josh moves forward, squaring up right in front of Lucas. 
A part of Riley worries that they’ll fight; she doesn’t think that Lucas, who appears to have an ironclad control over his every reaction from what she can tell, would start anything but she also doesn’t exactly see him blinking or backing off from Josh’s posturing. And Josh… 
Well, the Matthews’ men have been known to lose their tempers and throw a punch on occasion. 
“I’ll give you two as much respect as you give Riley. You just have to figure out if you can dish out what you think you deserve.”
Maya shakes her head. “Look, there are two sides to every story and I don’t know what pretty Princess Riley told you, but she’s not some innocent victim in all of this. She started the whole thing when made a choice and didn’t ask any of us how we felt. And then when it all worked out she refused to be hap--,”
“I don’t care.” Lucas shrugs, cutting her off. His nonchalance only seems to bother the pair standing opposite more, particularly as he takes a step back and removes himself from the direct confrontation with Josh. “Riley’s important to me. You two aren’t. You can resolve any issues that exist between you on your own. Or not. As long as Riley’s happy, I’m happy. But if you want respect from me, you’ll show respect to her. End of story.” 
“Seriously, did you cast a spell on him or something?” Maya angles towards Riley. “Guys are never this into you. Especially guys like him.”
The words are another reminder of the cruelty of her past that Riley won’t allow herself to contemplate. And she doesn’t have time to. Maya speaks and Lucas blinks as he listens and it’s like watching him shift into an entirely different person. His posture becomes stiffer, seemingly more solid, while he squares his jaw and takes a tiny step forward. His gaze becomes so hard and full of contempt that she can almost picture the actual flash of lightning going off in his eyes, acting as a warning sign to those who dare cross his path. And Riley might be imagining things but he suddenly looks taller. 
“Do you want to repeat that?” He challenges, voice as forceful as the look in his eyes. And was that a hint of drawl, lapping at his words? 
Riley is suddenly rethinking her assessment that Lucas might start a fight, and uncertain as to what his motivations for doing so might be, she is more than eager to remove him from the situation and calm him down. She sets her plate on a nearby table and reaches for his hand. “Lucas let’s just--,” 
“Oh come on, Riles.” Maya teases with the sort of edge in her smile that makes it clear that it’s not in jest at all. “Don’t neuter him completely. Don’t you want your handsome hero to rescue you from Big Bad Maya?” 
“You’re the only one here to ever ask to be rescued by someone, Maya.” Riley snaps off.
“Right. You were just constantly running away from your problems. So much better of you.”
“Look.” Josh edges himself between the two girls. “We’re getting off track. We just came over here to try and get you to see that we still care about you. We want you back in our lives Riley.” 
Lucas follows Josh’ action, standing tall over the older man. “Really? Because what I saw was a couple of bullies trying to emotionally blackmail Riley and chip away at her self-esteem until she felt like you were the only people she deserved. So if that’s you being nice and making your case I’d hate to see you with someone that you don’t want around.”
Josh shakes his head. “This is not a situation that involves you man, back off.” 
“And I already told you. If a situation involves Riley, it involves me. If you can’t wrap your head around that, I’d be happy to talk a little slower for you.”
Riley sees Josh’s fist start to clench as Lucas speaks. She sees him start to draw back as the insult sets in. She contemplates the best method of interference to prevent bloodshed or a larger brawl, and settles on yanking on Lucas’ hand as hard as she possibly can while she steps to the side, drawing him out of the line of fire. 
Josh’s momentum carries him straight into the dessert buffet. It, rather miraculously, doesn’t collapse and cause a huge commotion, although his face does wind up directly in a pile of cupcakes. 
At the same time, up on the stage, Riley sees one of Auggie’s friends getting ready to sing his song. “Alright everyone,” he says in a playfully smooth and deep lounge lizard voice, “tonight has been fun but it is time that we slow things down a bit. I want you all to find your lovers, head out onto the dance floor, and hold on tight.”
Riley doesn’t particularly care what song he’s about to sing. It’s as good an excuse as any to remove themselves from the situation before Josh or Maya attempt to retaliate. “That’s our cue!” She starts walking, Lucas’ hand still in hers, before anyone can question it.
“And rain falls angry on the tin roof,
“As we lie awake in my bed…”
Somehow, they actually do end up dancing in the middle of a small, crowded dance floor, half in the frame they’ve been practicing for the big reception number, but mostly just swaying back and forth, middle-school style.
This is such a weird night, Riley thinks. 
Continuously swinging from one extreme to the next. Dread, joy, confusion, rage...this party has had it all. Even a little bit removed from the near-fight with Maya and Josh, Riley can feel the tension bleeding out of Lucas’ form. He hasn’t said anything since she had maneuvered their escape, just allowed her to lead the way, brooding all the while, and Riley can’t help but think that maybe intervening had somehow been a mistake. 
“Was I supposed to let Josh hit you?” She asks quietly as they sway.
“What?” The question jolts Lucas out of his seething. 
“You looked like you were ready for a fight, I pulled you out of the way when Josh started swinging...now you’re all tense and sulking…” Riley explains. “Would you be happier right now if I had let Josh hit you and you could have thrown a punch his way too?”
Lucas shakes his head. “No, you did the right thing. I was baiting him and Maya when I shouldn’t have been… We never even talked about how you wanted me to handle defending you. If I’m supposed to get physical or just be the bigger person, but they kept mouthing off and insulting you and I just saw red. They are--,” Lucas drops off, briefly closing his eyes with a laughing exhale. “I know they’re technically a part of your family but wow, are you nothing like them. Have they always been like that?” 
Riley tries to choose her words carefully. One thing that Maya said that was actually true was that there are two sides to every story. And as frustrating as she finds them and as much as she’s been hurt by their choices over the years, it’s not exactly fair of her to go and badmouth them behind their backs. “Maya’s dad left her and her mom when she was really little, and she’s always used sarcasm and insults as her first way of expressing and protecting herself. Even with people she cares about. So when things aren’t going her way she tends to get a bit...nasty.”
“And Josh? That Shawn guy? The rest of your family? What’s their excuse?” 
“Based on what you told me, I would have thought that you’d be pretty familiar with the behavior of a disappointed family.” Riley knows it’s a bit unfair to turn the conversation on its head and redirect it to Lucas, but she’s not sure how much longer she can keep on talking about her problems with her family; not when Lucas has a tendency to point out the hard truths in completely reasonable ways and forces her to confront them. And definitely not after navigating all of the actual confrontations that she’s navigated today. 
“When you disappoint the Friars, they call you a disgrace to the family name and then freeze you out entirely. From what I can tell when you disappoint the Matthews, you become the target of passive-aggressive attacks on who you are and everything you do.” 
“And I’ve dropped out, I’ve burned up, I fought my way back from the--” 
“OK, OK, enough of the prom flashbacks. It’s time for something important.” 
Riley can’t come up with a response to Lucas’ assessment of her family because the party comes to a halt. And the party comes to a halt because someone climbs up onto the stage and takes the microphone from Auggie’s friend. A very familiar and unsteady sounding someone. She squeezes her eyes shut, letting her head fall forward against Lucas’ chest. “I can’t look. Tell me that’s not--,”
“Do you want me to lie?”
“Oh god.” 
“I have been trying to talk to Riley all night.” The man on the stage slurs into his stolen microphone. “Riley Matthews. You know, my daughter? That Riley?”
Riley isn’t going to look. She can’t. To look would be to acknowledge that this is actually happening and there’s no way that this could possibly be an actual thing that’s happening.  
Maybe when the yacht hit those waves earlier, she had actually hit her head and this entire day has been a coma dream. 
Yeah. That’s a completely reasonable explanation. She’ll go with that.
“And everyone keeps distracting me and taking her away from me. Like I don’t have the right to talk to my own daughter.” 
Only Riley knows what it feels like when someone is staring at her. And slowly but surely, she feels sets of eyes boring into her as the party goers locate her and seek her reaction. 
She doesn’t have one to give. 
She slowly pulls back from the safety of Lucas’ arms but all she can really feel is the cold dread, sliding down over her like a dozen eggs cracked over her head. Riley turns towards the stage, heart seized in her chest; this is certainly one of many train wrecks she’s been desperately trying to avoid. And it will be done live, in front of an entire party. 
“But they don’t understand. They don’t get it. I just want things to be good again. And if I can’t talk to Riley alone then I’ll just have to do it here. Riley, I know you’re out there, and this song is for you.” 
Her father starts to sing, and while the backing track from the performer he interrupted has halted, no music starts up for him. 
“We were as one babe, for a moment in time.
“And it seemed everlasting, that you would always be mine…” 
Riley knows that her jaw falls open, completely slack. She can hear the party-goers’ reactions--some shocked gasps and comments, some giggles--and is certain that there’s probably also a lot of pointing, but it all seems to tunnel out around her in a blur; all she can see is her disheveled father, bumbling about the stage and belting horribly off-key into the microphone.
He’s singing. To her. He’s singing to her and everybody knows it.
The mortification rises, a freezing tide of panic and nausea, but Riley can’t move. She can’t do anything. Not even look away. She’s stuck, frozen and staring, too horrified and heartbroken and five million other things that she can’t even begin to identify to do anything else.
“Why isn’t anyone stopping him?”
“You’ll always be a part of me.
“I’m part of you indefinitely….” 
Lucas’ question goes unanswered.
Even if Riley knew the answer, and she doesn’t, she couldn’t speak if she tried for the lump lodged in her throat. Riley’s no stranger to embarrassment; junior year was one giant experiment in indignity.  But she’d rather go back in time and live through that whole mess ten times over than be at the center of this nightmare.
She’s long given up on the hope that someday her parents would realize they missed her more than anything else and would try to make amends, but for a long time that was the dream. Not a sweeping romance with Prince Charming or being the best at whatever she chose to do, or winning the lottery and being able to help people without worrying another day of her life. Just...having her parents (or even just one) looking to make things right and rebuild their relationship. Riley had spent a lot of her time in senior year and college imagining what the conversation and reunion might look like, and while she stopped considering it a real possibility a long time ago, there’s still always been a small part of her insisting that it could happen.
Her optimism had been picturing heartfelt conversations, apologies, and tearful hugs.
Reality had given her fumbling, tone deaf public humiliation. And it’s chemically altered and most likely insincere to boot.
Not that anyone else is going to see it that way.
“But inevitably, you’ll be back again.
“‘Cause you know in your heart, babe, our love will never end…”
They’ll see the same thing: a wounded, heartbroken father, pouring his feelings out onto the stage just to try and get his callous, uncaring daughter to talk to him again.
Never mind that it’s only happening because he’s high on painkillers (surely that just means he’s been so upset that he needed a little extra courage to act on his feelings). Never mind that the song he’s singing is wildly inappropriate (weren’t you paying any attention? He’s high on painkillers. His judgement’s a little clouded). Never mind what actually happened to cause the split in their relationship in the first place (it was over ten years ago. Can’t bygones just be bygones?). Never mind that nothing close to an apology has passed through his lips (whatever happened it had to be her fault. He’s already being the bigger person by making this gesture).
There’s no winning after this. Of that Riley is certain. Everyone’s either watching him or watching her, waiting to see what happens. And she can either suck it up and stifle all of her feelings to join her dad and earn the party’s cheers only to return to the status quo in an hour or a day or however long it takes for the euphoric glow of the Vicodin to wear off, or she can listen to her gut and walk away, protecting herself but proving to everyone else that she just doesn’t care about her dad anymore.
Both ways end with their relationship still stifled and distant. One just dangles hope in front of her face and makes everyone like her for a little while before yanking it away again.
It’s probably not worth it.
“Oh, don’t you know you can’t escape me.
“Ooh darling, ‘cause you’ll always be my baby…”
“What do you want me to do?” Lucas asks, sliding his hand down her arm to wrap her fingers in his. 
With a touchstone drawing her back from the cold and her thoughts, Riley’s struck by two things: the uncertainty and the agonizing pounding of her heart. 
She doesn’t know what to do. Lucas has so far done everything she’s asked of him, so she could send him up to the stage to drag her dad off and put an end to the performance but doing that wouldn’t really end anything. Everyone’s watching and waiting, and that’s not going to go away now that the idea is out into the universe. What comes next is going to be the conversation point whether her dad’s on that stage or not, and whatever she chooses is a no-win answer and Riley just wants to cry because none of this is supposed to be happening.
Her reunion with her parents was never supposed to be like this. 
Her relationship with her parents was never supposed to be like this. 
But it is, and now there’s no masking it out of politeness. Everyone can see it in its full fundamentally broken and ugly glory. And it hurts. More than she would have thought considering she’s been dealing with it for over ten years. 
Maybe it’s because she’s tired or maybe it’s something else, but whatever the reason, this suddenly feels like a fresh wound and Riley doesn’t know what to do. 
“I--,” She starts and breaks off just as suddenly. Her voice cracks, wet and tiny and weak and that’s not the sort of thing she even lets her best friend hear most of the time, let alone a deck full of partygoers or a near-stranger fake boyfriend; Riley can’t move forward without at least trying to swallow that down and be strong. “I think I’m ready to go back to the hotel now.” 
“We can do that.” Lucas nods. He starts to navigate them through the throngs of people, drawing her closer when the partygoers notice and start variations on pointing, commenting, and giggling. 
Riley leans into the embrace, trusting Lucas to guide her and deal with anything else that might come into their path. She draws from his steady warmth and gentle presence, keeps her eyes on the ground as she walks, and doesn’t even realize that she’s lost the battle with her tears until her vision becomes so blurry that she can barely tell when her feet step in and out of view.
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yuniesan · 5 years
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Girl Meets Season 6 - Episode Seventeen – Girl Meets Us Against the World
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Synopsis: The Journey from High School and into College will test everything Riley knew about her life, her friendships and her love. What life lessons will she learn in her first year of college?  
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A/N: Gods this was hard to write, but it needed to be written. I know that a lot of people don't say anything, they don't trust that their voices would be heard. Remember your voice can be as loud as you want it to be, because no one has the right to take anything from you without consent.
I didn't give names to the other girls, because I wanted them to reflect all of the victims that remain unnamed because of fear, because they think that the system wouldn't do anything, because they couldn't remember anything other than pieces and feared being called a liar.
Now excuse me while I go and write something fluffy for tomorrow.
Episode Seventeen – Girl Meets Us Against the World
Riley was in the hospital for the night as they checked her out, it had taken her a while to calm down after her parents had arrived. Lucas always standing nearby, which was a comfort all on its own for her because it meant that he wasn’t trying to find the guy who had attacked her. Her hand bandaged because the punch had caused her to break two fingers on the guy’s jaw, her wrists hurt, and her head was throbbing. There was too much going on, too much pain, too much thinking, she wasn’t sure what she wanted to do.
It wasn’t until she was sitting in her room, Lucas next to her when she noticed the bruises on her wrists, they were faint, but she knew that they would only get worse as the day went on. The police had taken her statement, they had taken Lucas’s statement since he had been the one to call 911. They talked to her parents, all before leaving saying that they would continue to look into the matter.
Her parents were nearby, she could hear her mother talking on the phone, the small breeze every time her father paced the room. But all Riley could see were the bruises on her wrists, the feel of his hands on her as he pushed her into the stairwell. Even though she had fought back, it still felt like a violation, the marks were on her body as a reminder. She survived this, like everything else that had come her way, but it frightened her that it had happened because she had talked to people about keeping safe. The fact that she naturally wanted to help people stay safe, had caused her to become a victim and it hadn’t felt right to her. This wasn’t supposed to happen just because she was trying to keep others from becoming victims.
Lucas didn’t touch her which only made her feel like she had been tainted in some way, even though she was sure that he was just giving her time to get through it. But for some reason her mind was telling her other things, she was overthinking everything, she didn’t feel like herself, it felt like she wasn’t even in her own body. She was crying again just because she felt cold and there was nothing, she could do about it, even though she had a blanket around her, she shivered. It was shock, she knew that, but it felt wrong, she just wanted to be the happy person she always had been, she wondered how long it would take to get back to that place.
It wasn’t until the heaving came where she jumped up and ran out the door towards the bathroom, throwing up everything that she had eaten in the last day into the toilet, where she felt like all she could do was fall apart. She jumped when she heard the bathroom door open, even though she was dry heaving into the toilet.
“Riley,” Lucas said to her, and she knew he would get in trouble for being in the girl’s bathroom, but just having him close was find with her, if that was all she could get. “If it’s okay with you I’m going to touch you.”
When she nodded, she felt his hand move her hair from her face, as he rubbed slow circles on her back. She leaned into his warmth for a minute, as the feeling of throwing up slowly stopped, when she sat back, she grabbed onto his shirt and held on to him. The one comfort she had at the moment, and she knew that when her friends found out they would be running towards her too. But all she wanted was for Lucas to be there next to her, holding onto her, to feel safe instead of feeling like someone had just taken everything from her and left her hollow.
A wash cloth was slowly rubbed on her face as she closed her eyes, she could smell her mother’s perfume, which meant that she was nearby. She hadn’t realized just how tired she was until she fell asleep there in Lucas’s arms as her mother cleaned her face.
Lucas was furious, he was holding back his anger because every time he looked at Riley and saw that empty look in her eyes, he couldn’t help but want to hold onto her, but he wasn’t sure if she would let him. When she had run off, he went after her because he couldn’t hold back anymore, he wanted to protect her more than anything. Even though he knew that she could protect herself, but he didn’t know what to do, he didn’t know how to handle the situation without finding the guy and beating him within an inch of his life.
He carried her to her bed and laid her down, but when he went to pull away, she had grabbed onto his hand. She was seeking comfort, and he knew it, but he was afraid that him being so close would trigger something.
“Don’t leave,” she said in her sleep addled state.
“I’ll only leave if you tell me to,” he told her getting as close as he could with her parents there, sitting on the bed while she put her head on his lap, never letting go of his hand. Watching as her father paced the room again once she had settled down.
Her mother had left the room to make another phone call, she had been on the phone from the moment they had gotten back from the hospital. Lucas slowly traced the slowly forming bruises on Riley’s wrist, trying to make her feel his hands and not the memory of what had happened to her before she had run into him. He wasn’t sure about everything that had happened, only hearing pieces of conversations between Riley and the police, or the conversation she had had with her mother in the hospital after she had broken down.
He was angry, but he also knew that Riley wanted him to stay calm, she needed him to be there for her in the same way she was always there for him. No Texas Lucas, just Lucas. So, he sat there and held onto her hand, running his other hand through her hair as he listened to her breathing as it slowed until he was sure that she was finally asleep. Mrs. Matthews walked in through the door, looking at them with a grim look on her face, he knew that the lawyer in her would do anything to protect her daughter, from how she looked he also knew that a storm was brewing.
“He’s saying that Riley had been the one to attack him,” she said to Lucas and Riley’s father. Lucas saw red, he wanted to find the guy and make him pay, but Riley’s hand in his kept him grounded as he breathed through the anger coursing through him. “He showed up at the police station and filed a report, the school is getting involved in this too, because of who his parents are because they have influence here, which means we’re in for a fight.”
“But Topanga, she has bruises on her wrists, she has one on her head and her fingers are broken from fighting back, what else would they need to know that he’s done something wrong?” her father questioned, looking at his wife with a sad look on his face. “I know this could have happened anywhere else she could have gone, but it still hurts to think that it happened here.”
“Yes, I know that Cory, but right now I have to make sure that this is something that we can handle without it blowing back on her,” Lucas heard her say. “We need other people to come forward, we need people who are willing to stand at her side, because I need as many people who have been in the same situation with him as the perpetrator before I can take this in front of a judge, and even then, he could use the time to smear her name. This isn’t something that’s going to be quiet.”
“Is this school so worried about their donors, that they would overlook something like this happening to their students?”
“No, because the current law protects Riley, but anything beyond that might be a fight that we have to be ready for or else it’s going to have a huge blowback.”
The room was quiet after that, everyone not saying anything, Lucas just listening to Riley breathe, while she held onto him. He needed to be strong because he needed to keep her safe, sometimes he wishes that he could go back to that debate class from freshman year of high school and hold onto that innocent part of Riley. Just for a little while, but he knew she still existed under the strong woman she had become. In the end he was sure that she would take this moment and fight with everything inside of her, and he would be right there standing next to her, because he was going to be stronger for her. He wasn’t going to fight others, all he was going to do was help her fight for herself and be there when she needed him.
Riley hadn’t been sleeping when her parents were talking, she had just wanted to feel Lucas next to her, the comfort was enough, almost like he was recharging her and that she would get up and use that energy to fight everyone who tried to make her seem like this was all just some random act and nothing more.
She didn’t move at all until the door to her room swung open and hit the wall, making her jump up, remembering the banging sound on the door as Lucas called 911. Her heart was racing and she didn’t know if she could do anything other than cling to Lucas’s arm, as her friends all walked in, smiling at one another. It was then that she realized that no one had called them to tell them what had happened, and she was pretty sure that her parents and Lucas thought the same thing.
“My brother,” Josh said with a smile that died the moment his eyes landed on Riley who was curled up against Lucas trying to find a way to make herself smaller.
The rest of them turned to see what he was looking at, and the room descended into chaos, as everyone asked what had happened. Somehow the room full of people made her a little shy all of a sudden, even though they were all friends and family. Lucas took her hand and slowly rubbed small circles on her palm, slowly calming her down. Riley’s parents closed the door and made everyone sit, but none of them sat next to Riley or Lucas, the bed was theirs and theirs alone at that moment, almost as if anyone getting closer would trigger something for Riley.
“Can someone tell us what happened?” Maya asked, a worried look on her face, Josh put his arm around her as she looked to everyone in the room. “I mean everything was fine yesterday when I left you at the library.”
“Maya,” her mother said sighing as if she knew that this would be one of the hardest conversations she would have with someone that wasn’t a client, or like the conversation she had had with Riley before they had sent her off to college. “We have to explain this to you all, but none of you are allowed to react too loudly, Riley’s still a little frayed because of it.”
Sam looked over at her, as realization dawned on her face, “Oh my god, the rumors about the attacks,” she whispered out loud.
Smackle and Maya were the first to react, both looking between Sam and Riley, slowly remembering that conversation so long ago. The weeks Riley spent talking to other girls about safety and protection against something happening.
“But nothing had happened in weeks,” Smackle said her voice calm, but there was something there, a pain that Riley could hear.
“Riles,” Maya said her voice soft, “Honey, please tell me you’re okay.”
Riley knew that Maya was scared, they had all been safe, they had all made sure that nothing would happen, because college was supposed to be an experience for them all. It hurt for Riley to see the sadness in all of their faces, the guys unsure of what to say, the girls all knowing that it had been a possibility with all of the rumors that had been going around campus about the possibility of someone going after girls.
“Nothing happened,” Riley said, her voice low as if she were afraid that if she talked any louder than her attacker would come back. Lucas squeezed her hand, reassuring her, even though she still felt scared about what had happened.
Her mother spent the next ten minutes telling everyone in the room about what had happened, sending Riley and Lucas out of the room. Riley had grabbed her toothbrush and her hairbrush and went to the bathroom while Lucas stood by the door and talked about stupid things just to keep her company. She knew that she would have to keep reliving what had happened but for just a small moment she just wanted peace and quiet.
It would take two weeks before Riley felt safe enough to go to her classes without having Lucas right next to her, helping her. She was alright with being with someone at all times, but she knew that they all had their lives and needed to keep going. In those two weeks, her attacker had started a smear campaign against her, one that her mother had drafted out a defamation law suit against.
“No one messes with my kid,” her mother had said to her when they had had lunch on Friday. Which had now become something she looked forward to each week, because it meant getting to know her mother through a different lens.
It reminded her of that time in high school were that girl didn’t like her, and how angry her mother had gotten over it. It was strange, because they had had their ups and downs as mother and daughter over the years, but this had brought them closer together.
Riley had been sitting in the library waiting for Lucas to come pick her up when someone approached her. For a minute every instinct in her wanted to stand up and hide somewhere, but she stood her ground and found herself face to face with two girls who she had only ever spoken to once during the Fall semester.
“Hi,” she said trying to sound cheerful, but failing, it was hard getting back to her old self, but she was trying to find a middle ground.
“Hi, you’re Riley right?” the red headed girl said, and when Riley nodded the girl pushed her friend forward and made her sit. “We need to talk.”
They talked for half an hour, Riley finding out that the shy one, had once been a vibrant junior at the school, until one day she had gone to a party, and had woken up behind a dumpster, with bruises on her body and the feeling of something wet between her legs. And even though she had reported it to the school, and to the police nothing came out of it because she couldn’t remember what had happened. Her only memory was the same guy that had attacked Riley being really sweet to her one minute and then nothing the next.
“We’re not the only ones,” she said tears in her eyes. “No one will listen to us because his family is powerful, and they donate millions to the school.”
Riley felt something stir inside of her, hearing what she was saying, she remembered being that girl in high school and middle school, fighting for the girls to be noticed as something other than eye candy for the boys, for girls to show they had an interest in STEM subjects. For girls to be allowed to be at the same level as boys. No one had the right to reduce them to this, and she felt that urge to fight grow within. She asked them to gather everyone they knew had been attacked by this person, never calling him by his name because why should he have agency over them and bringing them to her room. Calling her mother as she told them this, they set up a time, right before those big Friday night parties, so that they could meet and discuss this with her mother in the room.
Riley wanted to fight, and if it was just them against the whole world she would fight because that’s what her mother had taught her to do, that’s what she always tried to inspire in her friends, in her classmates, in the world. She wanted them to fight for their right to be heard, for the world to know what was happening, so that they were no longer stuck in the back hiding because someone was more powerful than they were.
Lucas picked her up just as they finished their talk, the girls shying away from him as he stood next to her. Lucas never touching Riley, until she reached out for him first, he had been giving her the option a lot, and while she missed the way they had been, she was grateful that he was a kind person who would consider her feelings before his own. Riley introduced him, telling them that he was a good person, he walked them all back to the dorms, dropping them off one by one, making sure that everyone was safe. He didn’t complain about it, because Riley knew that he was the kind of person who would do anything to help others. She had learned this from what had happened between him and Zay, from what had happened when she had been bullied, or when Farkle had been bullied. This was who he was, and she was proud of him for being able to get past his own issues to help people.
Once they were in her room she told him what she had talked to the girls about, and he had offered to help her in anyway, even if it meant staying out of the room while the whole conversation happened.
“Thank you, Lucas,” she said smiling at him, for once it had felt like the real her was slowly coming back out. “Thank you, for everything you’ve done, and not just these last few weeks but for everything that we’ve been through over the years, because you are one of the most special people in my life, and you’ve helped me become a stronger person.”
“Anything for you Riley, anything,” he said with a smile pulling her in for a hug. “Because you’ve made me a better person.”
They stood there for a moment, just being with one another, in this moment, because she knew that there was a real fight brewing. Not between them, but between Riley and the world hell bent on making her college experience a living hell.
Riley’s mother had organized a team of lawyers, all female, to work on what they had planned out, every girl that had come had signed paperwork to protect their identities, they signed orders against the person who had gone after them, they wrote down everything that had happened and the ones who had reported it to the police or had gone to the hospital brought all the records with them.
Lucas stood watch in the hallway, because he knew that the person who had attacked Riley and had later accused her of assault, lived in her dorm, even though they had filed a motion to have him removed because she hadn’t felt safe with him around. The school had ignored the request, going against the law, which was there to protect Riley. To them the whole thing was a he said she said situation, and they had only advised mediation and nothing else. So, Lucas was always around, keeping an eye on things, making sure that Riley was protected.
The mounting evidence, and the fact that her mother was a top attorney, and a scary one at that, had finally caused not only the school but the police to look into the claims. The news stations had started to pick up on the story as more victims had come forward. They were all protected against being exposed, but Riley was still scared because she didn’t want this to force her into the public light. All the articles named the victims by letter, but Riley being the only one who hadn’t been drugged had been forced to reveal more than any of the others. She was ready to fight, she knew it was going to be hard, she had seen how the world treated victims, but she didn’t want anyone else to fall prey to this one person any longer.
Everything ended fast, mainly because her mother was really Godzilla like her father had called her, she was fierce and protective, but she was also the first to slam all the evidence and affidavits down on the police sergeants desk, and later the dean of the college’s desk. Telling them that if they didn’t do anything about it they would have their little corner of the world turned upside down the minute everything hit the national news circuit.
Her attacker was expelled a week later after the story hit the internet, with people criticizing how the school had handled the whole thing, going all the way back to when the first attack had been reported. Pictures of Riley’s injuries out there for the world to see, the only thing not visible was her face. She had written the article herself, under the same name she had written all the other articles she had done during her days on the writing magazine. She wrote about how hard it had been to fight against the person who had attacked her, and how it took a while before she could get the feeling of their hands out of her mind, she wrote paragraph after paragraph on the other victims, and how everyone had failed them. She wanted to know that if it was going to be them against the world, then the world was going to know their story.
This was when she finally started feeling normal again, because she knew that she had the power to change something, even if it took a long time to achieve it. Something she had learned from her mother, the fierce New York attorney.
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