This answers like one question and creates close to fifteen. You really like keeping people on their toes, don't' ha?
Yes.
I drop a lot of details generations in advance of answering them. Some later ones will drop a massive bomb on you readers. Wouldn't have it any other way!
Chapter 99: The Magic Winter
“They’re gonna be mad at me, aren’t they?” Tegan said, as she got her coat on. “None of them failed, daddy didn’t fail, did your mum fail?” Hephaestus shook his head no.
“What a reputation for me to have,” she continued.
“You have time to make up for it. The classes you failed would consist of, what, a semester?”
“Probably.”
“And you didn’t compromise yourself once by using bribe money,” said Hephaestus. “You can put it towards charity now.”
“There’s that.”
Winter started to fall on the university town again, and Tegan bundled up in her outerwear and had her luggage ready for the trip home, but Hephaestus had a stop to make. “I didn’t want to go to the ceremony because I knew you wouldn’t be there,” he said. “Let me just go to the Annex and get my diploma quietly.”
“You didn’t need to do that for me.”
“But I did, babe.”
“Let’s get your diploma, then.”
Hephaestus graduated in plain clothes and with a smile on his usually sad mouth. He had to have been up to something, and as it turned out, he was. He and Tegan exchanged some silent winks and eyebrow waggling on the flight back, but he still didn’t break his silence. As much as he knew that she knew, Hephaestus wanted to make their engagement special. He mulled over ways to pounce and surprise her with it, and go immediately to planning a wedding before his old joints gave out.
He also had to think of a cake for his birthday, but that roused different feelings in him. He could take after his dad and not age well, for all he knew. And in that case, he could only hope that Tegan would still love him.
They arrived home and set their bags down after the long flight and ride back from the airport. They were caught in yet another snowstorm. The seasons lined up for Twinbrook and New Simland, and considering that they departed in the winter and how Hephaestus never came home for breaks, it was as if he left Twinbrook in stasis. The roads had yet to be plowed.
Lily gave each of them a hug, and a judging side-eye at Hephaestus.
“So, we got a call from the Registrar’s office too,” said Lily. “It was your choice, really.”
“I know, mum. I’m glad I made it.”
“It’s odd. I can’t imagine what it’s like being your age and not knowing how to continue. Certainly can’t imagine being…
older.” Lily gave a fierce look at Hephaestus again.
“No, I think I know now. And you’ll like it, I know it.”
“Peapod, why don’t you show gram what you built? I need to ask Heph how it went too.” Tegan skipped off to find Annette and lead her to the moving van. She needed a few opinions on where to place such a big machine, and especially the opinions of the head of the household. That left Lily and Hephaestus alone. Franco was out doing old man things.
“Didn’t get a call about you. So I assume that you spent your whole time studying,” Lily said. “No parties, no women, nothing.”
“You were in the same major. Heck, you did the same concentration. There’s time for side-projects, right? I did well, aside from one C.”
“That’s good to hear. It’s not like you have any plans for getting hitched? I mean, too late now for you, right?”
“Never too late. I have something planned right now!”
“Oh, who’s the lucky lady?”
“Oh, Lily, you know!” Hephaestus believed she did. He also believed that she wasn’t
that opposed to it until she decked him in the nose a second later.
“Christ! What was that for?” he asked her, holding his bleeding nose.
“You’re my stepbrother, and this is how you prefer to act? I thought you were a little more dignified, I really did.”
Hephaestus didn’t respond. He cried though, considering how hard of a punch Lily had cultivated, and ran off to the bathroom to clean up and not scare the family with a bloody face.
He exited after stemming the bleed and taking a long shower, to find that Franco settled to be more of a domestic and caring man. Also, he found that he missed his own creation’s birthday. What a surrogate parent he was, forgetting something like that!
“Franco, when did this happen?” Hephaestus asked.
“I’m not against helping children,” said Franco.
“No. I mean, Piper’s in school already?”
“Ask Annette for the recap. She was there. I’m just tutoring her while I wait for my next shipment of paints. I don’t know how I ran out so quickly!”
Annette first asked Hephaestus why he still looked like hell. He didn’t skirt around what Lily did, and expressed his confusion too. “I thought that she’d like me thinking about popping the question. And, I guess I know now why she doesn’t.”
“She’s just one of many of us. It is a little sad, because you have only one person to fight, and boy, can she fight.” Hephaestus hung his head in slight defeat.
“Don’t look so sad!” Annette said. “At least Bryant’s out of the picture? Doesn’t that make you happy?”
He smiled with that sad, Bayless mouth, which took enough effort to make happen. “I won’t let it get me down. I just need a good idea.”
“I’ll leave that one up to you.”
“So, anyways Annette,” he said. “Piper’s growing up already?”
“I know! It seems like it’s been so short. But I’ll give the proud father the details, and the pictures! I had a friend take them.”
Before getting carried to one of Annette’s birthday cakes, Piper cried and fussed for a ride on the spring rider. For a split-second, Annette wanted to refuse so that she wasn’t enabling a spoiled brat, but then Piper looked her in the eyes with those beautiful black eyes and no longer could the old woman refuse her demands.
Annette cooed over the tot while she had her last assisted ride on the spring rider. It was rated for 60 pounds, so Piper had a little more use of it ahead of her, but without the help from an elder enthralled by her adorable adorableness.
“Okay nooboo, time to get off,” Annette said.
“No!” Piper crossed her arms in defiance.
“Yes, don’t you want to grow up.”
“Nuh-uh, Nettie.”
She grabbed her up by force. “There’s cake at the end of this.” That calmed Piper down enough, especially when she saw the actual cake on the table.
One of Annette’s cake sweetened the deal a lot for little Piper.
Because Franco was out at the time, Annette had to do her best with dressing a little girl. The only child she ever had to dress was her son, and Piper balked at all of the grey clothes presented to her. There went Annette’s best plan! She gave up and let Piper pick out what she wanted, which ended up being a matching outfit in retina-damaging hot pink. Big, pink-framed glasses completed the look and the prescription was as close as they were going to get until they got to the doctor’s.
Best of all, Piper didn’t need to nag anyone for a ride on the spring rider.
“Aww, my little cloneboo is growing up into a beautiful, artificial young lady,” said Hephaestus.
“I’ll say. I hope you and Tegan have a little boy soon. Piper might be older, but she’ll make for a hot cougar.” Hephaestus shrugged. He’d be fine with a lesbian daughter getting paired with Piper too, Annette’s hopes be darned.
She was young. It wasn’t worth much thought.
And in the world of romance, she could always turn to grandpa Franco for advice.
Snowflake Day was approaching, set for a week after they arrived back from university. In that week, Tegan settled back into the nightly grind of flushing out ghosts, and Hephaestus got a warm welcome back to the theatre. What didn’t happen was a proposal. Hephaestus kept saying that he just needed time to perfect it, when in reality, he was stuck on a good ring to give Tegan. Did she want a sapphire as blue as the bow on her head in the center, or a traditional diamond? Silver or gold? Platinum? Heck, what was even her ring size?
But even as he grew older, he had to stop fretting over it. A little bit of time lost in marriage was worth making it right and absolutely right.
So instead of getting a ring, Hephaestus bought gifts, as did everyone else. The list was long, including family and friends and long-time family friends. It was the first party in a long time without Bryant on the list, something that made the collective six members of the household breathe a sigh of relief and pure bliss.
Guess were greeted, inoffensive pop music played, and the scent of rosemary, sage, and Annette’s stuffed turkey filled the house. Everyone giggled and speculated what waited for them underneath the wrapping paper and packaging.
Hephaestus enjoyed himself too, in spite of not being much of a partier and feeling particularly old that day. He noticed a late guest walk in through the front doors too, right before gifts were about to be opened. Black hair, tan skin…lots of the town had that. His blue, denim jacket told everyone to watch out, though.
“Oh Bunny, I bet your gift is just terrible,” he said, yawning while Bunny picked up her gift (grandmother’s privilege; Tegan bought her a new necklace).
“Don’t even tempt it,” Bunny muttered to him. Everyone in the household wanted to punch that crasher, and while Tegan might have felt a twinge of it, she told everyone to calm down and enjoy the gifts. There was no use turning the family’s party into an outright riot.
His presense still scared her, and the guests didn’t all pay attention to her requests. Mickey Whelohff booed him and threatened to leave. Tegan handed him her gift to him (
The Anarchist’s Cookbook, in mint condition) before he left.
Bryant couldn’t bring her down. A dozen other great guests and a pile of gifts outdid any of Bryant’s unpleasantness.
He picked up a box, in spite of no one being uninformed enough to buy him something. Franco recognized the wrapping job. “Bryant, that was meant for Piper.”
“Ooh, I always wanted a little sweater like that!” Bryant cheered. One of the elders rushed upstairs to pack
something for Piper, just to give her a nice Snowflake Day.
A rainbow lava lamp worked well enough, yes.
Hephaestus tried to get up to splash his face with cold water in the bathroom, but his knees started to lock up. Goodness, that hurt. He was feeling old. If he determined it right, he was getting old too.
“Tegan!” he whispered to her. “We gotta leave. Now.”
“Okay, honey, okay,” she replied. She waved good-bye to all of the guests and gave Bunny a hug before Hephaestus dragged her out the door, running in a limping, worrying run.
“Golly, Heph? Why the rush?”
“I have something to do, and I can’t do it in front of them.”
They arrived at the pool, where it was too snowy to swim or do anything but use the hot tub. It beat celebrating the end of Snowflake Day at the hospital or on the bridge.
“Heph, really, what is this? We’re missing the turkey!” Tegan said.
“Something that might disappoint you,” he said. “And me too, for sure.” As the snow fell, so did a few sparkles. Tegan went into cheering mode as soon as she noticed them.
Alas, Hephaestus got the third-worst Snowflake Day gift. The worst was reserved for someone else, and no, the bag of burnt turkey giblets that Annette procured from the roast just for Bryant was still a little better.
The second-worst was Buck Green receiving thirst and death for his last Snowflake Day of many.
And what the worst could have been was overshadowed in Hephaestus’ mind by him trying to find something dignified to cover his old bones that was still in lilac plaid. For the end of winter, a sweater worked well. He did age better than his father did, which was an upside to things. The real test was if Tegan still liked her old lover being a lot older.
She took to warming herself up in the hot tub, sans clothes because her dress was dry clean only.
“Happy birthday, dear,” she said to him. “You’ve never looked better in a kilt.”
“Aww, really?” he asked.
“Can’t lie about that. It’s cold out, why don’t you join? And you don’t need to wear your clothes like you normally do.”
Tegan’s phone rang while they kissed, but she let it ring. And then it did again, and for a third round.
“Maybe someone really needs me,” she said. “Sorry, I have to take this.” She got herself dressed and called back the number that called her three times in a row. The color left her skin as she ran from the pool and down the street. Hephaestus trusted that she would tell him if something went horribly wrong, and relaxed until a lonely soak felt too rough on him.
Perhaps he could get his joints moving again and take a walk.
His walk took him far, so far so that he was on the other side of town and up a hill in the cemetery. On a cold, haunting night, the graveyard was anything but haunted. Only the wind stirred the bushes, and the silence was in stark contrast to university. Voices and demons and ghosts and ghouls filled the cracks and still autumn air over there, but Twinbrook fell silent, leaving Hephaestus in a confused peace.
It wasn’t worth fretting about; he started to walk away until a spectral noise caught his attention.
One lone, grey spirit approached him, looking unlike any other ghost Hephaestus had seen. Hellish forms removed from normal human forms usually haunted Hephaestus, but the spectre that night looked all too human. He noticed its big ears first, coming into vision before any other details did. No matter; they weren’t that uncommon. The details painted the picture better: a long, slightly-downturned nose, a resting face that frowned, and small eyes that glowed white with spectral energy.
He remembered those pictures that Hannah showed him, even if they were so far in the past. It wasn’t any big-eared swamp elder. Just the right big-eared swamp elder.
“Dad!” Heph cheered, running towards him with arms outstretched.
“Son!” Tay embraced Hephaestus on impact. His spiritual form felt like the enveloping steam in a hot shower; light and warm.
“Oh, dad, I thought I’d never see you,” he said. “You look better than how mum described you.”
“Yeah, my last days were rough,” said Tay. “I can see again now, I can stand upright, it’s not that bad of a tradeoff, but I really wish I was there for you. Even for a day.”
“Can we take a seat somewhere? I just walked a mile, and at my age…”
“Sounds fine. I’d love to talk with you until the afterlife calls me back.”
They took a seat at one corner of the cemetery. “So,” Tay said. “Is life treating you well?”
“Pretty well. I have a beautiful woman, and a good job, and a degree like mum had. Though I went with art.”
“Bah, I never got that artsy-fartsy stuff. But, a beautiful woman, huh? I haven’t checked up on this world in so long. Tell me who it is.”
“Well, you remember Franco. I bet you do,” Hephaestus said.
“How could I not? What a sweet guy, and he made your mum so happy when I was gone.”
“It’s his granddaughter. Well, the older one. She’s green and really pretty, and didn’t you go to school with Bunny Curious?” Tay nodded, and mentioned having a crush on her and her pretty little pout back in the day. “She’s her granddaughter too.”
“Aww, she sounds like such a sweetpea.”
“I’ll say. I’m just stuck on something. I’m old now, and it’s now or never when it comes to marrying her. Any tips for me, dad?”
“No tips. We never got married, and I hope Hannah mentioned that to you or else she’s just a bad storyteller. But…I think I might have one thing, if it’s still in this world. I had to have left it in the drawer back home.”
He got up from his seat and focused his energy, until a white box appeared out of thin air. Tay gave it a shake.
“Here it is! I was meaning to give this to your mum until the crap hit the fan for my health,” Tay said, presenting the box to Hephaestus. “It’s nothing fancy, but it should have gone to the finest lady in Twinbrook back then, and now it’s going to the finest one living here now.”
“Oh my god, thank you,” Hephaestus said. “She’s gonna love it.”
“I hope she does. Have a little more success than I did, okay?”
“Alright, I promise. Is mum doing alright?”
Tay started to fade a little. “She’s doing as well as a ghost can. Tell Franco I said hello and thanks for making her happy.”
He disappeared into the aether, but Hephaestus still whispered a “thanks, dad” as the yellow smoke settled. His old bones, rattled by the snow and cold, needed a nap, and Hephaestus was ready to settle into a slumber on a hard bench until his phone rang. Tegan’s number was on the screen.
“I hope it’s all okay,” he muttered, sliding across the screen to accept the call. “Hey babe,” he said to her.
“Hi. Just wanted to tell you that I’m at the hospital right now. It’s…it’s Franco.”
Now, those words. Those were the worst Snowflake Day gift.
Word Count for this chapter:
2,995Word Count so far:
199,515We're almost at Chapter 100! Ignoring, well, the ending of this one, it's awesome because just as we're getting to chapter 100, we have:
- Almost 30,000 views
- Nearly 200,000 words
Both of which may be exceeded by the time the next chapter is posted. Thanks to
everyone for the views! The fact that I can keep racking them up in spite of how dead the TS3 boards are is a miracle.