Author Topic: Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley  (Read 245286 times)

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 119 Part Two
« Reply #345 on: February 22, 2020, 11:14:54 PM »


While Patrick helped Maria get through her father’s death and sort out her inheritance, Iris helped Plumboptimus re-learn the basics of gardening and fishing that he lost when his skill-specific chips were replaced with the A.I. chip that let him learn any skill.  It was still too early in the spring to fish in most of Sunset Valley’s icy and half-frozen fresh water, so they focused on gardening first.  “Mom and Dad don’t always do this, I know because the plants tell me, but we’ve got some really social ones in here that love it when you talk to them.  So when you come out to water or weed or harvest, just take a minute to tell them how awesome they’re all doing.”  She smiled at the crop in front of her.  “See, guys?  Just like I promised.  He’s not a plantsim like me, but he’s learning and trying hard.  He wants you to grow big and fruitful as much as I do.”

Plumboptimus picked up the megaphone they kept in the greenhouse.  “Iris is correct!  I am glad to weed, water, and fertilize you, and maintain your harvests.  I am eager to be your friend.  Please grow prolifically for me!  I will provide you with ample high nutrient fertilizer, fresh water free of contaminants, efficient temperature regulation, and additional artificial sunlight when you require it.”

Iris looked over at their heirloom flame fruit vine and giggled.  “Yes.  He does talk even nerdier than my old Dad that’s been harvesting you for generations,” she agreed before turning back to Plumboptimus.  “That’s our oldest special variety.  It seeded in the lawn way back in their old house before they won the lottery and before I was grown in here.  They saved and cultivated it and replanted it every growth cycle after it’s died back since.  It’s very proud of its heritage and how it’s been here the longest.  Think of it kind of like the Goth or Landgraab family of the plant town that’s our greenhouse.”

“Hello, flame fruit!  I am pleased to meet you and continue to care for you.”

Iris smiled at the plant.  “It says it’s glad to meet you officially and thanked you for introducing yourself.  It also says to please go easy on its tender leaves.  Sometimes in the past you tugged a little too hard.”

Plumboptimus beeped.  “I accept and appreciate your feedback.  I will moderate my pressure handling your foliage in the future.”



Between sessions of teaching Plumboptimus and keeping up with school, Iris still managed to get in her social time.  One rainy spring afternoon, she met up with some friends at the diner.  April was working that day, and when she saw Iris, she brought out their orders herself.  “Here you go.  One strawberry cream cheese French toast, one fried peanut butter and banana sandwich, and one deluxe chocolate stuffed brownie, with extra frosting because I know that’s how you roll, Iris.”

“Yes, I do!  Thanks!”

“No problem.  Enjoy, ladies.  Have a nice afternoon.”

“We will.  And I’ll be sure and let Orion know that you took good care of us.”

She gave a thumbs-up and returned to the kitchen, while Iris and her friends dug in.



She was hanging out with Rashida and Kristal.  They were all on good terms again, although Iris and Kristal still weren’t as close as they’d been before the drama with Lester.  “So that’s your brother’s girlfriend, huh?  She seems nice,” Rashida remarked.  “That’s so wild he’s in an open relationship, though.  He never struck me as the type.”

“Yeah, he was with Tara for ages,” Kristal added.  “He doesn’t get jealous at all?”

“Not from what I can tell.  They all seem cool with it.  He even hangs out with her and Adam, her other boyfriend, sometimes.  I met him once.  He’s nice.  Cute, too, and he likes gardening.  If he wasn’t too old for me and I wasn’t with Cameron, I’d probably go for him, at least for a date or two,” she said with a smirk.

Rashida raised an eyebrow.  “Hey, do you think he and April and Orion ever all…”

Kristal snickered into her sandwich.  “Oh, my Watcher, Rashida.”

“Yeah, really,” Iris echoed with a laugh after almost choking on her brownie.  “You almost made me snort frosting!  No, I really don’t think so.  As far as I know, he’s not even into guys that way, and I don’t think he’s gone out with any other girls while he’s been with her, either, even though he’s allowed.  Which I don’t get why, since everyone’s cool with it.  I mean, he might as well.  Why not?”

“Wait.  Are you saying you’d do that if Cameron wanted to?” Rashida asked, surprised.

“Whoa, no.  What I meant was if they all agreed to that situation, why not take advantage of the perks and have some fun with it?  But I don’t think I could do it, at least not for very long.  Cool as it would be to have a harem of hot guys at my beck and call, I know I’d end up jealous of their other girlfriends.”  She wondered right after she said that if she should’ve, given the history between all of them, but to her relief, it didn’t seem to bother them.



It had touched a nerve with Kristal, but not the one she was worried about.  “Most people would.  But at least they aren’t sneaking around and lying about it.  My dad should’ve taken a cue from them,” she said bitterly.  “And Mario.  I’m ninety nine percent sure he’s cheating on Rachelle and I’m not misunderstanding or reading too much into things, but whatever.  She won’t listen to me, even though I’ve gotten pretty good at spotting the signs after all the cheating I’ve seen going around.”

Iris suspected that last bit was a subtle dig at least in part at her, but since it was a fair one and she didn’t want to dredge up old drama now that they were friends again, she let it go.  Especially since Kristal had good reason to be bitter.  While the stuff with Lester was in the past, right now, her parents were going through a nasty divorce.  After decades of seemingly happy marriage, it came out that her father was having an affair with Kaylynn Bunch.  Enraged and hurt, Madison had told Christopher to get out, and he’d left, moving in with Kaylynn, who was also getting divorced.  She had moved into a new place, and now Christopher was living with her.  Kristal was devastated by it all, and furious at her father for betraying her mother and their family like that.  She’d had no idea her parents’ marriage was even in trouble.  Even worse, neither had Madison.  She found out from her friend Tori, Mario’s mother, after she spotted Christopher and Kaylynn out together on a night he’d told Madison he was working late.  When Madison confronted Christopher, he confessed, and that was when it all hit the fan in a vicious argument that Kristal had the misfortune of witnessing.



“Of course she doesn’t want to believe Mario’s cheating,” Rashida said.  “They’re engaged and she just found out she’s pregnant.  Who wouldn’t hope it’s not true?  Especially with all the stuff with your dad going on.”  She gave her a sympathetic look.  “And it sucks he seems to have his head almost as far up his plumbob as mine lately.  But at least I’m used to that.  Your dad always seemed so cool and nice and like he loved your mom.”  She, too, was going through a rough time at home.  Although her parents had never married, Jared and Emma’s relationship hit a breaking point and Emma could no longer stand to be under the same roof as him anymore, even sleeping in separate bedrooms.  But since they were in “his plum house,” Jared had said if she didn’t like how he was, she could go and take the girls with her.  He’d rather live alone anyway and he was tired of all their stupid drama.  While he wasn’t always so cruel and hurtful, and at times could be quite warm and affectionate, when he got into a mood, he could be downright abusive.  After years of it, Emma finally reached her limit, especially of him lashing out at their daughters as well as her.  So she did exactly what he said, and left him, using her savings to buy the house Morgana, Tad, Chris, and their kids used to live in for her, Rashida, and Edna.

Iris felt for both of her friends.  She knew she was lucky that her parents, even if they were decidedly old and nerdy and sometimes cringeworthy, very obviously loved each other and their family.  “Yeah, you guys have really had plum luck lately.”

“Well, at least my new house is nice, and Edna and I each have our own rooms now.  It’s nice not having Mom and Dad arguing all the time, too.  But I do miss him.  I know he can be a real llama sometimes, but he’s still my dad and I miss the weekend brunches and playing with the dog in the yard with him and stuff.  It’s not like it was always bad being with him.  Just when he’s in a nasty mood.”

Kristal nodded.  “I know what you mean.  I don’t hate my dad or anything, I just hate how he lied and hurt Mom.  I hate that he thought it was worth wrecking our family over some stupid fling with another woman who was also married, which just makes it worse.”  She set her sandwich down.  “But in a weird way, something good came out of it, I guess.”

“Oh?  What do you mean?” asked Iris.



Both Kristal and Rashida looked at her as Kristal elaborated.  “I… well, part of why I wanted to hang out today was to tell you this myself, Iris.  Considering everything that happened.”  She paused.  “Lester and I got back together.  We’re even going to prom together.”

“Second time hopefully the charm,” Rashida added dryly.

That caught Iris completely by surprise, although she supposed it shouldn’t have.  Lester and Kristal had been on friendly terms again for a while now, even back while they were still together.  He and Kristal were in art club together and Iris knew they worked on projects with each other.  Now that he was unattached, why wouldn’t he maybe rekindle an old flame if there was still something there?  He had always regretted hurting Kristal and said he cared about her even after he’d fallen in love with Iris.  But maybe now that things were over between them, things had changed between him and Kristal, too.  “Wow.  I had no idea.  That’s… that’s great.”  It was sincere, even if it hurt a little to hear.  But she had also moved on.  She was happy with Cameron and didn’t have any hard feelings.  Just a few regrets about how everything played out.

“I’m glad you’re not upset,” said Kristal.  “I admit, it’s kind of weird.  Part of me feels like it’s crazy to trust him again, especially since Dad just proved that even after decades of things being good, it doesn’t mean someone can’t ever cheat on you.  But when we were talking and I told him about my parents getting divorced and how much it sucks and hurts, he was really sweet to me about it.  He said he understood, and how sorry he was that he hurt me the way he did when we broke up.  He said he wished he’d done things differently and realized now how lucky he was with me and he was sorry he threw it away.  Then we talked some more and ended up kissing and… long story short, I decided to give him another chance, as long as he promised not to ever cheat or go behind my back or lie to me again.  And he did.”



That sounded typical of Lester, even if it made Iris a bit wistful knowing he’d asked essentially the same of her, and she hadn’t been able to convincingly commit to that.  But the truth was she and Lester weren’t suited to each other long term anyway, and him and Kristal getting back together eased her guilt about her part in breaking them up in the first place.  “Hey, I get it.  Things happen.  And no, I’m not upset.  You should be with someone who makes you happy, and if that’s him, then go for it.  It is what it is.  I’m with Cameron now and way over Lester, so I hope it works out for you guys.  Honestly, it kind of makes me feel better about the, uh,” she let out an awkward chuckle, “in-between stuff.  Which I’m still sorry about, too.  It was a plum thing to do to a friend.”

Kristal nodded.  “Thanks.  Besides we’ve all moved past all that bad stuff from last prom, so, let’s just say it’ll be a much better one this time.  I take it you’re bringing Cameron?”

“Oh, you bet!  I’m going to show my hot Simstagram model man off to the whole school.”  She looked at Rashida.  “And you’re going with Alfonso again?”

“Yeah.  And this time there aren’t any dirty little secrets to come out.  At least not from me.  Hopefully not from him, either, but I don’t think so.  I love him, but he’s like the opposite of a player.”

Iris raised her drink.  “Then here’s to our upcoming senior prom.  I’d say may it be a million times better, but since I’m pretty sure that factor is negative or a zero and I know how math works, I’ll just say it’s going to be awesome and leave it at that.”



Back at home, Boyd and Susan chatted over afternoon coffee.  Although they were technically retired, workaholic Susan never fully gave up her habits and still checked in on the lab almost every day.  Boyd went in a few times a week to keep tabs on his favorite experiments, too, and he still had several side projects at home he tinkered with, including some ongoing botany experiments in the greenhouse.  “I got a call from the bistro earlier.  They want some of our best plant steaks for some new vegetarian specialties they want to add to their menu.  Did we ever get the official okay from legal to sell those?”

“Not yet, but I’ll rattle their cage again.  Last I heard they were waiting for the rubber stamp from the health department.”

“All right.  I think the next crop will be higher quality anyway, so for now I’ll just send over a couple samples for their chefs to experiment with.”



“Sounds good.  Oh, speaking of legal, that reminds me.  Our lawyer emailed me this morning to say they finished setting up Jessica’s trust fund.  She’s good to go.  Between us and what Thornton left her, she’s pretty well set at the ripe old age of baby.”

“That’s great.  It’s too bad he never got to see her before old Grim got him.  Poor Thornton.  A heart attack out of the blue like that.”

“I know.  It was so sudden.  And I know he wasn’t young, but he was still so much younger than us.”  She chortled.  “Though our son-in-law would quickly point out that everyone is at this point.”

“That’s all right.  He’ll feel his own age once Travis graduates in a couple of years.”

“Oh, did I tell you that Blair told me he’s going to his first prom with Starla soon, and that our grouchy little grandson actually complained less than both Cycl0n3 and Chris about having to wear a tuxedo and formal shoes?  Kind of funny considering how bent out of shape he was about it back at Patrick’s wedding.”

“Heh, well, at the age he was then, I wasn’t thrilled about wearing fancy clothes when my parents forced me, either.  But now he’s got someone he’s sweet on to impress.”  He chuckled.  “As for Chris, hasn’t he lost the deposit on every tux he ever rented because he had some kind of mishap while wearing it?  The punch stain on one prom one, falling into the mud in the other…”

“Don’t forget when he accidentally leaned into the chocolate fountain at Patrick’s wedding buffet.  Pretty sure he ended up buying that chocolate dipped tux.”

“Maybe we should set up an extra accident fund for him in our wills,” Boyd said dryly.



“I think we’ve got him covered well enough with the general one,” she joked back.  “But since you mentioned funds, I just remembered.  We got a letter in the mail today from the future planning fund coordinator thanking us for our generous donations in previous years and politely hinting they’d like us to toss some more their way this year.  We did really well last quarter, so I was thinking we could up it a little this time and maybe inspire them to get a few more projects underway while getting a bigger tax write-off.  What do you think?”

“That sounds fine to me, honey.  Do you want to just mail them a check, or do you want to take it there in person?”

“I’d rather go in person.  I’m not too humble to admit I enjoy the grateful looks on their faces when they see the number.”

“Well, you earn them.  You’re very generous, and I’m sure they appreciate it.”  Boyd stood and smooched her on the cheek.  “You want to go today?  It looks like the rain’s giving us a break, and I wouldn’t mind getting out of the house for a bit.”

“Sure.  Let me grab my checkbook and my coat.”



The trip to city hall didn’t take long, and the future planning fund office was thrilled to receive the Wainwrights’ generous donation.  “I think that clerk wanted to kiss you when he saw that check,” Boyd remarked as they came back out, both in great moods.  “Luckily for him, I’m not the jealous type.”

“Don’t kid yourself.  I’m sure he’d have kissed you for that amount, too,” Susan replied wryly.

“Speaking of kissing, looks like they’re setting up the spring festival.”  Boyd gestured across the road to the park where workers were putting up the attractions, including the popular kissing booths that inspired the comment.  Neither had ever patronized those, since they had each other for smooching, but they did enjoy the seasonal festivals.  “Remember when we pegged the love tester to the maximum limit?”

Susan smiled.  “We’ve always had a way of sweet-talking electronics as well as each other.  Remember that year we entered the dance contest?”

“Ah, yeah.  Wasn’t that the same year Patrick ditched us to hang out with Maria as soon as they ran into each other?  They started dating a little while after that.”

“To be fair, I’d have ditched my parents and brother to hang out with a boy I liked at that age, too.  Not that I had them around very long after I was old enough for that, but you know what I mean.”  Her expression turned wistful, but not exactly sad.  “You remember what Jonathan was like, though.  He’d have razzed me endlessly.”

“I’m sure.  I recall being the subject of a razzing or two myself, as the ‘even dorkier boyfriend’ of his ‘dorky little sister’ as he so nicely put it.  But that’s just how older siblings are.  Patrick and Chris and Orion are just as bad.  Even Blair gets her occasional tease in on the younger set, and Iris rolls it right on down to Travis.”

“Well, she’s not the youngest when he’s around.”  Susan chortled.  “No wonder poor Travis is so cheery.  Good thing he gives as good as he gets.”

“If not better.  Cycl0n3 taught him well.”

“Don’t tell him that, though, Grandpa.  We wouldn’t want to encourage it,” Susan teased, taking Boyd’s hand as they strolled to the car.



When they got home, they planned to relax in front of the TV and watch the newest episode of one of their favorite shows.  Boyd had just turned it on to check the weather first, an old habit that he never gave up even though his phone app gave him regular updates, but before he got a chance to even see the forecast, both his and Susan’s phones sounded with an alert they hadn’t heard in a long time.  A very long time.

“Oh, my Watcher!” Boyd gasped, excited, while Susan squealed with delight.

“Our time app!  It’s Emit!  He’s trying to contact us!”  Long ago, after one of their first visits to Oasis Landing, the Wainwrights created an application that synced to the time portal and the time almanac Emit gave them.  It had been years since they heard from him, and they’d been through countless new upgraded phones since, but they still kept it updated and loaded on their phones hoping that Emit would be true to his word and that one day they would see him again.  Iris was still in diapers the last time, when he took them to Oasis Landing for what they wondered later might’ve been their final trip there after all.  So much time had passed that they wondered if Emit changed his mind or if he or they had inadvertently done something to the timeline preventing him from returning without catastrophic consequences. 

They were thrilled that wasn’t the case.  Even if they were very old now and had to wait a long time, Emit had finally come through.



“I guess that old 8-ball on the table was right after all.  He didn’t forget about us.”  Boyd smiled.  “I didn’t want to give up hope, but…”

“I know!  It’s been so long.  I’d hardly thought about him in ages, aside from whenever we’d donate to the fund or something like that reminded me.  But I was really starting to think something must’ve changed, or that maybe we just got too old to make it through the portal without having a heart attack ourselves.”

“The portal’s a wild trip, but I’d like to think we’re not that decrepit yet.  Assuming he’s not just popping up to update us and not inviting us to go back.  I hope he is.  I’d love to see it again.”

“Me, too.  I really want to know how we might’ve changed the future since the last time we were there.  And how our descendants are doing, if we even have the same ones still.”

“There’s only one way to find out.  Let’s hustle down there and see what he’s got to say.”



Author’s Note: The way I wrote Thornton’s death wasn’t too far off from how it happened in game. I got the notification that he wasn’t going to be around much longer, so I planned to have Maria invite him over that day.  She got up kind of late, and I went through her routine filling her needs with a shower and eating, and by then it was early afternoon, so I had her call Thornton hoping he wouldn’t die until after the visit.  He declined the invitation with the “Sorry, I don’t feel like coming over right now” popup, and I was thinking, nice, you’re dying and you still don’t want to visit your daughter.  They didn’t have a high relationship, but it was a small bit into the green, so still positive.  Okay, then, I’ll send Maria over to visit you.  I checked the map to make sure he’s home, got ready to have her grab Jessica and go, and then I got a popup that he died.  I guess Grim showed up right at or after the same time she called, and I should’ve had her skip the morning shower and go or try earlier.  D’oh!

Offline Supermanfan

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Re: Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley
« Reply #346 on: February 25, 2020, 10:59:00 AM »
Great story, I’m really enjoying it. It took me about a week or so to finish it. I really like all your characters and the way you write their personalities so well. It was sad that Thornton died before he could meet Jessica though. I am looking forward to Boyd and Susan’s trip to the future, I enjoy those parts. Also, I really think Iris should marry Cameron, then her name would be Iris Bloom.
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FYI, my name isn't really Brandon Taylor, it is just a name I used for one of my favorite Sims.



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Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 120
« Reply #347 on: March 21, 2020, 10:50:35 PM »
Great story, I’m really enjoying it. It took me about a week or so to finish it. I really like all your characters and the way you write their personalities so well. It was sad that Thornton died before he could meet Jessica though. I am looking forward to Boyd and Susan’s trip to the future, I enjoy those parts. Also, I really think Iris should marry Cameron, then her name would be Iris Bloom.

Thank you for the nice comments, and for the ones my blog as well!



Author’s Note: Sorry it was so long between chapters! With all that’s been going on in the world with Coronavirus, it’s been hard to focus as much on playing or writing, especially since I’m still working because I work in a healthcare related field.  I and my family are all fine so far, and I hope all of you reading are and remain safe and healthy as well.

Chapter 120



Hustling was a relative term for the Wainwrights at their age, but they were excited, and they hurried to the basement as fast as they could.  The portal was active, but Emit wasn’t there in person.  A holographic image of him was there instead.  “Boyd!  Susan!  Nice to see you again!”

“Yeah!  It’s been a long time.  Hi, Emit!”  Susan smiled as she greeted him, while Boyd nodded with her.

“It’s great to hear from you!  We weren’t sure we’d—”

“Still be around by the time I got back to you?” he guessed, looking them over.  “Oh.  I can see why.  Wow.  I know what year I was here last and what year it is now, but I didn’t really think about the math of how long that was in between for you.  Guess you are kind of getting up there, huh?”  He smiled sheepishly, but remained upbeat.  “But there was no need to worry.  Even if I plum forgot what year you died, it’s a simple matter to just go back to the right one.  Advantages of being a time traveler.  I can always make it there on time, even when I run late, so to speak.  Just doesn’t feel like it on your end.”



“We didn’t think you’d be back right away, but we figured it’d be before now,” said Boyd.  “Why did you wait so long?”

“Were you waiting for us to do something specific or was there something else going on?”

“Yes, and yes.  Doing what I do, there’s always stuff going on.  The unexpected is to be expected as a general rule.  But there were things I had to wait for you to do.  Build Plumboptimus, for one.  Great job on him and Cybelle, by the way.  That’s quite the robotic family you’ve got started.  A pity I won’t get to meet them in your here and now, but this virtual time travel only lets me go so far past the portal or almanac.  You also had a couple of lab projects it was best to let you finish without any accidental influence from me.  And, of course, all that alien-werewolf drama.  One wrong word about that and Maria might’ve never been abducted.”

Susan raised an eyebrow.  “You wanted that to happen?  Like Boyd with Orion?”

“It needed to happen.  She had to have that gene switched back on because some future werewolves down the line would suffer greatly without her alien-tinkered gene getting tossed into the pool.  You can tell her that someday, whenever you tell them all about me and what I’ve shown you, if it’ll make her feel better.”

“Maybe someday, but she’s still pretty angry and resentful about it now,” Boyd said.  “While I’m sure she’ll be glad it helped someone, it’s a cold comfort when you’re going through something that affects your life so profoundly.  Speaking from experience.  I love Orion and I don’t regret having or raising him, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still have nightmares about my abduction or wish I never had to go through that.  Or worry about him the way I always will because of who and what he is.”

Susan had another question.  “So, are you saying that Patrick and Maria have descendants that are werewolves?  We checked, and Jessica doesn’t have the marker.  Will they have more children, then?  We had the impression they might not because of the werewolf risk.”

“Maybe they change their minds at some point, or maybe they get surprised?” Boyd theorized.



“Remember that werewolves don’t only propagate their condition by passing it on to their children.”  Emit made an exaggerated snarling face and scratching motion.  “Not that I’m saying Maria ever loses it and goes around biting and scratching and making a pack or anything, but just for the sake of argument… All it takes is her to pass it on once that way before that werewolf can pass it to another, and so on.  Without Jessica being born with the gene, or Maria having any more children.  You know I can’t say too much about anyone in your lives now without jeopardizing the timeline, but I can say, without spoilers, that specific gene spreads and it traces directly back to her.”

“Wow.  That’s… surprising considering how she feels about it.”  Susan wondered if Maria would someday have a change of heart and accept and embrace being a werewolf, or if she would accidentally pass it on… and who might be the recipient.

Boyd wondered the same thing, although it was clear that was all Emit was willing to tell them about it.  “Yeah.  So, what can you tell us?  Or are you here to take us back to Oasis Landing so we can see for ourselves?”



Emit grinned.  “I knew you’d want to go back, and there’s stuff that’s changed that I know you’ll want to see.  The portal’s already set and ready to go whenever you are.”

Susan paused.  “Think we should change first?  We still have our old clothes from the earlier trips.  Assuming they still fit.”  She looked at Boyd.  “Yours might not.  You’ve lost almost, what, about ten pounds since back then?”

“Something like that.”  Although it hadn’t been intentional, Boyd’s appetite diminished whenever his back ached since both the pain and the medicine he took for it tended to upset his stomach, and that happened with increasing frequency the older he got.  Between that and how he often forgot to eat whenever he was caught up in a project, along with his sedentary habits, he’d lost some musculature over the years.

“And I’m about an inch shorter than I used to be,” Susan groused.  She’d lost height in her advancing age and, like Boyd, wasn’t terribly active so her muscles had also deteriorated some.

“Don’t worry about it.  We can set you up with some snazzy new ones when you get there.  Hop on through, and I’ll see you on the other side.”



After noting the exact time so they could return to right when they left, Boyd and Susan stepped into the bright light of the portal.  The trip was more disorienting than they remembered, and they held each other’s hands the whole way through, but they made it out just fine.

Oasis Landing looked just like they remembered it, and they supposed that was because there it was around the same time as it was when they’d last visited.  It felt strange since they were so much older themselves, and so much time had passed on their end.

“Things still look the same, but Emit said things changed,” mused Susan.  “Think it’s just our descendants, or is there more?”

“I don’t know.  Do you think that Plumboptimus or Cybelle could still be around?  We designed them to last indefinitely and take care of themselves.”

“In theory, I suppose.  But there’s a big difference between fifty or a hundred years and over three hundred.  Even if they took care of themselves without any issues, there was the wasteland disaster that could’ve destroyed a by-then ancient plumbot, and who knows what kind of people they might’ve run into after we were gone, especially if they got separated from family.  Or what our family was like in the generations between us and our kids and grandkids and Emit and Pl4sm4.”

“Yeah, I know the odds are against it.  Too bad.  I’d be curious to see if their A.I. would still remember or recognize us, or if it deteriorates and corrupts or loses data over such a long time.”



Almost immediately, a plumbot tailor greeted the Wainwrights and escorted them to a private room in the community center.  “Welcome, time traveling guests!  Emit Relevart tasked me with providing you with new attire for your visit.  Please follow me.”

She took their measurements and inquired as to their color and design preferences, and using some templates she had ready, fabricated customized outfits for each of them.  She gave each of them a final scan when she finished.  “Your fit appears to be optimal.  Is the comfort level as desired?”

“Perfect,” Boyd said.

“It’s great.  Thank you very much.  Our daughter would love you,” Susan remarked.  “She’d probably buy a whole new wardrobe.”

“I am not permitted to time travel, but I appreciate your positive feedback.  I would be happy to offer my services to your daughter if she joins you in Oasis Landing.  It has been a pleasure to serve you.  Have a pleasant evening and enjoy your stay.”  She beeped goodbye and left.



Emit met up with them in the hallway.  “Hey, look at you two!  Outfitted up and ready to hit the town.  It’s great having you both here again.”  He hugged each of them.

“Thanks.  It’s nice being back.  You look young as ever, I see.”

“Yeah, wish we could say the same,” Boyd joked.

“Well, you could, if you really wanted.  That experimental compound of yours is only still experimental at this point because you’ve chosen to keep it that way, and not make a marketable version of it or use it on yourselves.”



“Which I think you knew we’d do,” Boyd said.  “That we wouldn’t want to risk bending the laws of nature so far that they break.”

“You told us that in the alternate timeline where Landgraab Industries kept the rights to the formula that they just used it for wrinkle cream that generated low-risk extreme profit.  We wanted to do more and advance medicine with it, and we did that a point, but…”

“But while you applied it toward medical advances and disease-curing therapies, you didn’t want to mass-market a potion for immortality, either.  Because you know how dangerous that would be in the wrong hands.  Just like the vampires and fairies and even the rare witches and chefs who can make life-extending alchemy brews and ambrosia.”

“There’s a line from a movie back in our time about how you either die a hero or live long enough to become the villain.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m in no hurry to kick off and not arrogant enough to think I’m hero material, but… I also know myself well enough to know I could go dark side if I let myself go far enough down the rabbit hole,” Boyd admitted.  “And I don’t want that, to become some mad scientist who went too mad over time and eventually went full super-villain.”

“Boyd, you’d be the most neurotic super-villain ever,” Susan quipped before continuing on a serious note.  “But I feel the same way.  Neither of us want to wind up so old and jaded that we’re disconnected from reality or those around us that we care about.  We don’t want to be able to brush off our family and friends dying or life’s major events in a ‘been there, done that’ kind of way because we’ve been around so long that it doesn’t affect us anymore.  Or pick and choose who gets to join us in that extra-long life and who doesn’t, who lives or dies.  It’s not who either of us want to be.”



Emit nodded.  “It’s not easy living that way.  There are things you two have that someone like me never will.  I don’t have a family or children, or even lovers to speak of.  I’m one of your descendants, but my particular line?  It ends with me, whenever that happens.  Hopefully not for a long time, but someday.  And ideally, I’ll leave it a better world and timeline than I came into.”

“I’m sure you will,” Susan said.



“So, what all has changed?” asked Boyd.  “You said there was a lot and you knew we’d want to see it.  Just looking around, things look like we remember them.  Is it our descendants?”

“The ones we met last time, are they…?”

“They’re not the same,” Emit confirmed.

“More pieces to a puzzle that no longer exists,” Susan mused, remembering Emit’s analogy.

“There are memorials for them, if you want to see them.  I know how you felt last time, so I had that done for you before I brought you back.”

“Thanks.  We appreciate that.”

Boyd nodded with Susan.  “There were so many more this time.  The first time, it was just Donovan and Benjamin, and Leilani being someone totally different.  This time it’s not just Helena and Penny, but Orion and Iris’ descendants, too.  The aliens who kept their Sixam blood strong by marrying other hybrids, and those cute kids who looked so much like Orion at that age except for the hair, who liked our old tech.  And Iris’ plantsim line that lasted so many generations looking almost exactly like her until the one who re-engineered her condition to be more human-like, who had the grandson and great-grandson we met.”

Susan smiled fondly at the memory.  “Cheerful little Jarret, who liked both sunlight and sweets.”

“Remember, they do still exist.  Just not in this timeline.  They’re fine in theirs.  It’s just no longer ours.”



“I’m curious what the new ones are like, but I can’t help but wonder what we did to change them,” Susan said.  “The first time, you said it was because of how we won the lottery and bought the lab.  How that Patrick grew up into someone so different than the one in the timeline where that never happened and all the other things, like Iris never existing, Orion dying young and Boyd not long after him, did.  And that Donovan and Benjamin were that Patrick’s descendants.  That made sense.  But this time, there weren’t such dramatic changes.  We live in the same place, and we still own the lab.  As far as I know, we’ve been doing our projects like we always have, and at least to me, it seems like Patrick’s been on the same path since then, too.  Yes, he’s grown now, and he went to university and has a career and a child, but he’s still who he’s always been.  Bright, a bit impulsive and temperamental at times, a passionate musician and artist, and even still in love with Maria.  I know she took his name, so I can see why they might not be named Wolff anymore, but that seems like a minor change.  Is it the werewolf thing?”

“That’s part of it.  I suspected it could change his personal timeline when it happened, since the descendants you saw last time reflected only the most likely scenario relative to that time.  At that point, Patrick and Maria were still teenagers.  They hadn’t left home or had some of the life experiences they eventually did.  But they could’ve had a different story and outlook on life if, say, one or the other hadn’t gone to university or a different one, leading the abduction to happen on a different night in a different place, or if Patrick had taken a different job offer afterward, or if maybe Maria had decided to write only as a hobby and focus on art as her career, even if they stayed together.  I can project and predict all day, but it never accounts for everything.”  Emit chortled sheepishly.  “It’s almost embarrassing how many times I’ve had to go back and tweak timeline changes because I missed something.  And don’t even ask how many times I nearly negated myself out of existence over the years.”

“So, that’s why Orion and Iris don’t have the same descendants, either?” asked Boyd.  “Because they were even younger and there were things that could’ve happened in any number of different ways without affecting the greater timeline?”



Emit pulled out his almanac.  “Remember, Iris herself was a total surprise to me when you grew her.  But since she and her descendants didn’t impact my overall timeline project, I didn’t need to intervene if her line changed, especially if it wasn’t for the worse.  And Orion, all I needed was for him to survive long enough to have descendants and be who you raised him to be, a positive example of a Sixam hybrid that the world would remember.  Whether that’s as a genius scientist and engineer who carried on your legacy, or a crime-fighter, or a world traveler and explorer who dispelled ignorant stereotypes across the world, or even just as someone who used his alien powers to help others and made the world a better place in his own way.  Or any combination of the above.  The path itself wasn’t as important as the fact that he took it, so the details didn’t affect the big picture.  But they do affect his.”

“And what we saw last time was based on how they were then, not now, when any number of those details could’ve changed,” Boyd guessed.

“Something like who and when Orion chose to share the secret of who he really is to someone other than family would do it.  I just needed him to do it at some point, but when didn’t matter so much, as long as the results this far down the line were the same.  And Iris, well, she was influenced by all of you, including her older siblings, who all made small choices here and there that affected those closest to them.”

“So they could change again after we go back,” said Susan.  “You’re the only one who never seems to change.  Blair’s line, through either Chris or Travis.”

“And you still can’t tell us which, or what happened to the descendants of the other.”

Emit chortled.  “Like I said, I’ve learned to be careful about that.  I’m sure you have your theories anyway.  I just can’t confirm or deny them.  And you’ve got a fifty percent chance of being right.”

Susan exchanged a look with Boyd before turning back to Emit.  “Regardless, I think we’d like to meet the new descendants anyway.  Or at least see how they changed and how they’re living and doing.”



“I imagine they must be doing at least as well as the last ones, right?  We’ve only made more money and advancements since then, more for our family to inherit and benefit from.”  Boyd paused as that reminded him of their plumbots.  “Speaking of which, what about Plumboptimus and Cybelle?  Are they still around?”

“We designed them to last indefinitely, so…”

“No.  I’m afraid not.”  Emit loaded up a file for a quick reference, then closed it when he noticed Boyd and Susan peeking over at the almanac.  “Hey!  There are spoilers in here I can’t let you see.  But without saying too much, they did stay with your family for quite some time.  Several generations.  But not this many.”

Boyd had caught a glimpse of the screen, which had their children’s and some of their grandchildren’s names on it as well as the plumbots and some names he didn’t immediately recognize.  “They didn’t go… rogue or bad or anything, did they?”

“Nothing like that.  Just time and circumstances.  Be proud of them.  They served your family loyally and faithfully until the end, and they were loved and appreciated by all of them.”

“I’m glad to hear that.  They are like family to us, you know.  Our robot children,” Susan said with a smile.



“I know.  But that brings me to another important change that I brought you here for.”  Emit loaded up another file on his almanac and grinned at Susan.  “You, Susan Wainwright and my great-to-the-eighth grandma, are now ensconced in history with a legacy statue.  You are known as the Great Philanthropist of your time, a generous visionary who donated a fortune to ensure that the future would be a better place to live.”

Susan gasped.  “I have a legacy statue?”

“Yup!  It’s right over in the park.  After I verified it wasn’t a blip and it was there to stay, I knew it was time to come and get you.”

She was almost giddy with excitement.  “Wow!  They made a statue of me, Boyd!  Can you believe it?”

“That’s great, honey!  You deserve it.  I’m so happy for you.  And proud, too.”

“I’m honored!”  Her heart pounded with excitement.  “But what about Boyd?  Not that I’m complaining, but it was his money, too, and all we’ve done, we’ve pretty much done together.”

“You signed the checks, you got the credit.”  Emit looked at Boyd.  “Sorry.  If it helps, your name is on the plaque with hers, at least.”

Boyd smiled.  “She makes a prettier statue anyway.  I’m fine with a notation.”  He was just glad they got the credit and not someone else entirely, like Emit told them happened in the original timeline with the Landgraabs.  He and Susan had always been a team anyway, and that kind of recognition meant far more to her than it did to him.  If only one of them could be the statue, he was glad it was Susan.  He squeezed her hand.  “Congratulations.  When can we go see it?”



“I’d recommend tomorrow, so you can see it in full sunlight and after a good night’s sleep in a dream pod.”  He paused, and then added, “Which I’d recommend, even if you’re not tired.  Your original anti-radiation treatment has long since worn off, and if you’re not going to get a new one while you’re here… well, at your age, the less time spent here, the better for your health’s sake.  You’ll be all right for a day or two, but I wouldn’t push it beyond that, even if you do stay well rested, nourished, and out of the wasteland, which I’m sure I don’t have to remind you would be a bad idea to go anywhere near.”

“Wasn’t planning to, even if there are a lot of fascinating wild nanites and other specimens out there,” Boyd agreed.

“The bot emporium always has nanites and such up for sale anyway.  And you can find them around here, too.  There are a few colonies right out by the solar farm.”

“We’re staying off the windcarvers and jet packs, too,” Susan added with a knowing look at Boyd.  “Right?”



“Maybe just one little spin on a jet pack.”

“Right?”

“We could do it together.  One last joyride.  We’ll stay close to each other and stay low.”

“You don’t even use the packs we took home, Boyd.”

“That’s because I don’t want the kids seeing it.  You think I want Orion zipping all over town in one of those trying fancy maneuvers when it’s hard enough to get him to not drive his motorcycle in bad weather?  At least the Galaxa has safety features.  And you know Patrick and Iris would have to show off, too.  Maria might not, but, oh, I don’t even want to think about how Chris or Tad might hurt themselves if they heard about it and tried.  They’re both clumsier than a herd of llamas in a china shop, even if they probably wouldn’t do it in front of their kids and inspire them to try, too.  Travis has a little more grace than his brother, but he does like one-upping him and Iris.  Blair and Cycl0n3 might be sensible about it, but then again, Blair does tend to think she’s invincible and Cycl0n3 might think it’s worth a calculated risk even being as old and out of shape as he is because, you know, a jet pack is really cool…”

“Speaking of old and out of shape, remember that you have a bad back that absolutely can’t take another fall, no matter how cool a jet pack is,” Susan pointed out firmly.  “I’d probably break something if I crashed, too.  No, Boyd.”

He sighed.  “That’s why we won’t go high.”

“You do realize your own rules should apply to you, too, right?  What if I was the one insisting on doing this and you were worried about me?”

“I know better than to think I can stop you when you insist on doing something, so I’d join you to help ensure your safety.  But I also know you’re a brilliant woman and have good judgment—”

“Then you should listen to me now.”

“—most of the time.”

Susan raised an eyebrow.  “Most of the time?”

“Everything has a slight margin of error that can result in the occasional miscalculation.”

“Mmm-hmm.”

Emit was amused by their playful argument.  “Well, I’ll leave you two to hash out the great jetpack debate, and I’ll see you in the morning.  Though I will say on a note of irony considering your age, that if you put it on youth settings, it’s pretty hard to hurt yourself.”  He waved.  “Good night.”



Boyd and Susan retired to the room Emit reserved for them in the community center, but while Susan had a sonic shower and changed for bed, Boyd got on the holo-computer instead of getting ready to turn in himself.  “What are you doing?” she asked after coming out of the bathroom in her new nightgown.

“Just looking up a couple of things before bed.”

“Let me guess.  Some of those names in Emit’s almanac?”

“Simwave was one of the plumbot names we considered when we were building Cybelle.  You saw it, too, didn’t you?”

“Yes,” Susan admitted.  “And Raul Wolff.  And probably, like you, I wondered if he’s someone Esme or Hilda might end up marrying someday.  But I didn’t see any more than that, and I’m assuming you didn’t, either, if that’s what you’re looking up.  Which I doubt Emit wants us doing given what he said out there about spoilers from our timeline.”

“Careful as he is?  If it was that big a deal, he’d have made sure we couldn’t find anything that significant on their holo-web before giving us access to it first.  He knows us pretty well.”  Boyd frowned.  “Besides, any detailed genealogy database with information that old is apparently all behind paywalls you need an account for that I, uh, haven’t quite worked out how to make without legitimate credentials from this time yet.  So, no.”

“Which I’m sure he was counting on if that information is on there,” Susan remarked dryly.  “He knows us indeed.  What are you looking up, then?”

“I know I probably shouldn’t, and it might be asking for trouble, but… when he talked about Orion, and how it didn’t matter what path he took as long as he took it—”

“Boyd!  You are not trying to find Orion or any of our kids on there?”  She groaned.  “You know that’s exactly the kind of thing Emit explicitly warned us against!”

“I know.  Ordinarily I wouldn’t, and I’m not looking for anything major, but…”

“But what?  No!  Stop!”



It was Boyd’s turn to sigh, and he closed the screen, looking back at Susan with a combination of guilt and anxiety.  “Why did he say ‘crime-fighter’ as one of those options?  Along with engineer and world traveler or explorer?  A thousand different hypothetical scenarios and he had to mention that one?”  Boyd’s brow furrowed more deeply.  “Orion’s not studying to go into law enforcement.  Or the military, and I hope he stays as far away from government jobs and databases as he can, forever.  But if that’s not what Emit meant, then I can’t help but worry… Susan, you know how he’s always had this idealized view of those crazy Golden Llamas, even after what they did to Blair.  Saying things like he knows they’re vigilantes but trying to do the right thing.  And you know how he is.  So I can’t help but wonder, and worry…”

“Whoa, Boyd.  Calm down.  Orion’s not going to run off and join the Golden Llamas.”

“Are you sure?  Because I’m not.  Think about it.  He’s got that same stubborn honorable streak Blair does, and while I’m the first to say it’s a credit to their character, it’s not when either of them get caught up in that something-to-prove attitude, which Orion has in spades.  And he thinks he’s invincible to boot.  Remember the mummy?”

“As if either of us are going to forget that,” Susan said on a mildly frustrated note.  “But I think you’re panicking over something Emit probably just said as a hypothetical what-if.  He’s seen tons of predictions and varied timelines that did or didn’t happen.  Yes, Orion might’ve done that in some timeline, but that doesn’t mean he’ll do it in ours.  Besides, Orion told us himself he wants to help run the lab after we’re gone, and that was the very first scenario Emit mentioned, him being a scientist and engineer who carries on our legacy.  But he never said which scenario would happen, and he certainly didn’t say anything about Orion being a Golden Llama.”



“No,” Boyd agreed.  “Maybe you’re right and I’m just overthinking it.”

“Since you already looked, did you find anything?  You might as well tell me if you did, so we can both deal with it.”

“All I saw was some general stuff we already knew or could’ve guessed.  Orion was the first Sixam hybrid known to the world as such.  I didn’t get to any specifics on how he came to be known that way.”  He chortled.  “You stopped me before I got past the most basic future Simpedia style article.”

She smiled at him.  “It’s probably for the best.  Though I’ll admit a part of me wishes I’d let you get away with it a few minutes longer, so we could’ve learned just a tidbit or two of forbidden knowledge.  Because then I could just blame you and be innocent of it myself.”

“Letting me do the dirty work, huh?  I see how it is,” he teased.

“I’m the Great Philanthropist.  I can’t have any stains on my reputation,” she replied wryly, and took his hands.  “But now let’s go to bed before either of us cave in to temptation and try to look up anything else we shouldn’t, okay?”

“Okay.”  He squeezed her hands back.

“And I’m guessing you didn’t get a chance to run any searches on Patrick or Iris or any of the grandkids?”

“Those would’ve been next, once I assured myself I wouldn’t have to worry about Orion turning into a Golden Llama after we’re gone,” Boyd admitted.

“Again, probably for the best.  And if I’m wrong and Orion does do that at some point, feel free to blip back from the other side and haunt him with a lecture about his reckless life choices.”  She smooched him.  “Now go and brush your teeth and change for bed.”

“Yes, dear.”



Once they were settled into the dream pod, Susan turned to Boyd.  “So, what should we dream about?  Do you want to dream together, or try solo dreams?”

“Let’s do one together for our first night back.  After a day here tomorrow, we’ll probably be inspired in slightly different directions anyway.”

“Sounds good to me.”  They looked over the list.  “So many choices.”

“Yeah, but a few I can do without.”  Boyd pointed to the option to dream about working out.  “That sounds more like a nightmare to me.”

“I don’t even want to do that awake,” Susan agreed with a chuckle.  “What about this one?”  She pointed out an option about dreaming about advanced technology.  “We could program a dream where we get to try all the stuff Emit doesn’t want us to.  Looking up our family, peeking in his almanac…”

“Toss in that jetpack flight you don’t want me taking, and you’ve got a deal.”



“All right then.”  Susan input the settings and kissed Boyd good night.  “Sweet dreams.”

“You too, honey.  See you soon in dreamland,” Boyd replied as they settled in, the capsule closed over them, and they began their dream together.

Offline Sonshine

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Re: Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley
« Reply #348 on: April 18, 2020, 07:02:31 PM »
This is a little off topic, but I feel is still interesting:

This is for Cheezey and anybody else who will find this VERY interesting. I was reading an article about some cures for this COVID virus and one of the companies working on this is actually named H. C. Wainwright!!! When I saw that, I was thinking oh my word! There is actually a REAL scientific lab named Wainwright!! :)

If anybody is interested, here is the article.

https://www.jpost.com/HEALTH-SCIENCE/Israeli-COVID-19-treatment-with-100-percent-success-rate-tested-on-US-patient-624653?amp=1

Offline Cheezey

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Re: Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley
« Reply #349 on: April 30, 2020, 03:58:14 PM »
This is a little off topic, but I feel is still interesting:

This is for Cheezey and anybody else who will find this VERY interesting. I was reading an article about some cures for this COVID virus and one of the companies working on this is actually named H. C. Wainwright!!! When I saw that, I was thinking oh my word! There is actually a REAL scientific lab named Wainwright!! :)

If anybody is interested, here is the article.

https://www.jpost.com/HEALTH-SCIENCE/Israeli-COVID-19-treatment-with-100-percent-success-rate-tested-on-US-patient-624653?amp=1

Normally I prefer to wait until I have an update to comment, but this made my day! :D

Sorry I only saw it now.  I know it's been a while since I updated, but the day to day stress of the virus situation and working during it has sapped a lot of my creative energy the past month or so. Thankfully my family and I are all fine, and we don't live in a hotspot area here in the US.  As for the story, I have been working on the next chapter and it will be coming, though, I promise. I haven't given up on the story.  Coming back and seeing this was a bit of a kick to the old inspiration, so thank you! Stay safe and healthy out there, everyone.

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 121
« Reply #350 on: May 03, 2020, 11:50:26 PM »
Author’s Note: I know it was a long break between updates. As I said in the comment above, even though I’ve been lucky enough that I didn’t get sick and nobody in my family has, the whole COVID-19 situation has had me too stressed and burned out to focus on my game and story much for the past several weeks.  If you’re still reading, thanks for sticking around, and I hope you’re safe and in good health, too!



Chapter 121



The Wainwrights’ shared dream about living it up with advanced technology free of the restraint of Emit’s rules or the physical limitations of their old age turned out to be an adventure.  It started off fun.  They dreamt that they woke up and started their day in a futuristic diner where they had a decadent synthesized breakfast full of all the things doctors tended to advise individuals their age not to eat often, without any indigestion or ill effects.



Next, they dreamt they went out on the windcarvers and rode them around with all the agility and ease they had when they were younger, after their first infusion of the treatment.  That’s not to say it all went perfectly, but the dream pod was like that.  Sometimes, it would throw the dreamer a curve ball if the programming was left to allow for an occasional random chance event, which they did to keep it interesting.  Susan had a little stumble on her ride and almost collided with a door in an entryway, but it was only a close call, and she was fine.



They dreamt they went to the library and researched all about their descendants, starting with their grandchildren and going straight on down each line, learning about all the achievements and accomplishments of the subsequent generations.  They learned that their family would produce famous scientists, artists, doctors, chefs, actors, and even politicians, including one vice president.  They were proud and excited to know their family would be so successful for so long.



They also dreamt that they went back to the wasteland and found all sorts of amazing specimens.  They discovered new crystal plant strains, new caches of alien tech, and an incredible nanite mutation that had never been seen before that had been created by the unique radioactive environment of the disaster area.



As the dream neared its conclusion, Boyd and Susan returned to the community center to take their jetpack ride.  They had fun at first, zipping around in the air and trying out maneuvers they probably wouldn’t have been brave enough to attempt in real life.  They felt alive and free, and like Icarus of the old myth, Boyd especially soared high in the sky without a care in the world.



That was when the random chance element took the dream on a sinister turn.  Boyd flew higher and higher, exhilarated, and then lost control of his jet pack.  With a terrified scream, he shot up, and then crashed straight down.  Susan heard, but she was powerless to do anything but land and watch in horror as her husband plummeted to his death.

“BOYD!  NO!”



Susan sobbed uncontrollably as the Grim Reaper appeared over Boyd’s charred and lifeless body, but then, the dream took another twist.  Boyd wasn’t ready to leave the world of the living yet.  Old as he was, there was too much he still wanted to do and too much he wanted to live for. He certainly wasn’t going to give up and die in Oasis Landing, away from all of his family back home but Susan, leaving her to explain the tragic tale of what happened to him while they were off on a future trip none of them even knew they took.

His death flower was still in his pocket, and as Grim loomed over him, he thrust his floral life insurance policy toward him like a lawyer with a loophole that would get even the guiltiest client an acquittal.



Grim was stern, but not without taste, and one thing he could not resist was a perfectly cultivated death flower.  It was the one surefire way to bargain one’s way out of death.  “Ah, Boyd, you sly old man. You’ve already lived so long, yet you still cling to the mortal realm.  Are you certain you’re not ready to cross?  We both know you’re old and tired, and this radiation is aging you and Susan more by the moment.  She and the rest of your family will grieve your passing, but it won’t be that long before she joins you.  Your departed loved ones are waiting for you on the other side. Are you sure you don’t want to go to your eternal rest?”

Something about his deep and distinguished voice was inviting, and Boyd’s dying mortal body ached for relief.  But despite that, his heart and mind yearned to stay.  “No.  Not yet.  Not here.  Not like this.”

“Very well.  Know that it is your time, even in this other time, but since this is such an exquisite specimen, I’ll spare you this once.  But don’t make a habit of courting me, and remember, this radiation here is deadly… to you both.”  He gestured to the still-sobbing Susan, who could not hear their ethereal conversation.  “Tread carefully in this second chance, Boyd Wainwright.  Your insurance policy has been cashed in.”  Grim stuffed the flower into his robe, and with a wave of his arm, restored Boyd’s spirit to his body and vanished into the evening air.



Alive again—sore and charred, but alive—Boyd got his bearings as an elated Susan rushed over and hugged him.  “Oh, Boyd,” she sobbed through tears that had changed to ones of relief and joy.  “You’re alive!  You made it!  I saw Grim for a moment, and you weren’t moving and—”

“I’m alive.  I’m okay.”  He hugged her back every bit as tightly.

“Don’t you ever take such a risk again!”  She choked up.  “You hear me?  I told you it wasn’t safe!  I told you!”

He clung to her, trembling and thankful.  “Yes.  Yes you did.”

“Listen to me.  Promise me you will.  Promise me, Boyd!  I love you and I can’t lose you!  I won’t!”

Eyes closed, he continued to hold her tight.  “I promise.  And I love you too.”



Boyd woke up immediately after that, but Susan remained asleep.  He was glad to be alive, and that the jetpack crash had only been a nightmare, but it left him feeling unsettled.  He almost woke Susan up to talk to her about it, but he decided against it after thinking about how Emit said they should stay well-rested while there, and Grim saying in the dream that the radiation aged them by the second.  Why ruin her rest over his anxiousness from a nightmare?  It was just a dream anyway.  Dream pods make them feel realistic, but they’re not real.



Boyd got up, used the bathroom, and drank some water to get a parched feeling out of his throat.  The dream’s realism left both that and a phantom burning scent in his nostrils, enough that his anxiety drove him to double-check the pocket of the pants he wore to Oasis Landing wearing for the death flower he usually carried.  It wasn’t there.  Unfortunately, that made him feel worse, but he couldn’t be sure that it hadn’t fallen out in the portal or if maybe he just plain forgot to put it in his pocket that day.  The latter was unlikely, paranoid as he was, but the former was plausible enough.  The portal was blinding and disorienting while passing through it, and he and Susan had both stumbled and struggled going through it.

Susan woke up after Boyd finished checking his clothes and eyed him with concern.  “Hey.  Are you all right?  That dream was—”

“Terrifying?  Yes,” he admitted before adding with a touch of dark humor, “You know, if you wanted to keep me off the jetpacks, you didn’t have to program me dying in a fiery crash to drive the point home.”

“Oh, you know I’d never do that to you, even if that probably is what it would take,” she teased back before turning serious.  “It was pretty awful on my end too, watching you die like that.  Even if you did get better.”

Boyd shuffled where he stood, still on edge.  “I know it was just a dream, but I can’t find my death flower.  Crazy as it sounds, what if…?”



“Boyd, you’re alive and well,” Susan reassured him.  “You’re fine.  You probably just forgot to put it in your pocket this morning back at home.  Or maybe it fell out in the portal.  We both got knocked around quite a bit in that turbulence.  Relax.  It really was just a dream.”  She smooched him on the cheek.

“You’re right.  It’s just… well, that’s probably the closest I’ve ever come to kicking the bucket.  Aside from when I had Orion, maybe, though I didn’t see Grim then.”  He shuddered, although he did feel somewhat better after talking to Susan, especially now that he was back in the real world.  “Which I’d rather not do again anytime soon.  In a dream or real life.”

“You won’t.  Think about it.  Would Emit have brought us here if it was likely to do us in?  He’d have foreseen that, and if so, taken precautions to prevent it.”

“Unless we’re meant to die here.”

“He’d have had to pickpocket both our death flowers, then, and I’ve still got mine.”  She retrieved it from the clothes she wore to Oasis Landing and held it up to demonstrate.  “See?  And I doubt Emit would’ve warned us about going into the wasteland or reminded us about the radiation if he expected us to die here.  Just chalk it up to an eerie coincidence that’s messing with your head and try to let it go and forget about it.”

He smiled thinly.  “Easier said than done, but okay.  I’ll try.  You’re probably right.  I defer to the enlightened wisdom of my dear Renowned Philanthropist.”

“I’m always right.  And just to prove it, I’ll even go on a jetpack ride with you, if you still want to try it after that dream.  For a nice low, easy flight on the youth settings like Emit suggested.  That ought to dismiss whatever haunting thoughts you’ve still got.”

Boyd was surprised.  “Wow.  You are confident.”

“I am.  Besides, I have to admit it does sound like fun.”

“Assuming neither of us dies.”

Susan chuckled.  “Yes, Mr. Positive.  Assuming that.”



Little did either Boyd or Susan know that, after they left to enjoy a synthesized breakfast in the community center’s kitchen, Emit stopped into their room and used his holo-computer to interface with the dream pod.

“Nano-llamas,” he muttered, frowning as he looked at the screen.  “So that wasn’t a glitch, and my calculations didn’t prevent it.”  He sighed as he read over the biometric data the pod collected during Boyd and Susan’s slumber.  The dream pods measured and monitored their occupants’ vital signs as a part of their function and had an emergency feature that alerted for medical help if readings indicated an occupant might be in distress.  While one occupant’s data remained in the normal range, with only some heart rate elevation coinciding with the more stressful elements of the dream, the other’s heartbeat and breathing indicated they had gone into full cardiac arrest during sleep with flags indicating that a medical alarm had nearly been activated.  Had only three more seconds passed before they returned to normal, paramedic plumbots would have been summoned, although from what medical knowledge Emit had, he surmised even that might have been too late, had those numbers not miraculously reversed themselves.

“Thank the Watcher I was right about the death flower at least.  Oh, Boyd.  You don’t know how close you came there.”  Emit closed the screen and left.  He had already decided that he wouldn’t burden either him or Susan with that knowledge, either.



Meanwhile, Susan was right that their actual jetpack flight turned out to be nothing like the nightmare.  After breakfast, they went up to the roof, strapped their packs on, and enjoyed a fun flight around together.  It was a little nerve-wracking at first, especially for Boyd, but much like riding a bicycle, neither had forgotten how to maneuver with them and they did just fine.  They even did a safe little air twirl and dance together before they landed.



“See?  Here we are, safe and sound.  No catastrophe.”

“If you’d asked me last night before that dream, I’d have thought you saying that and not me would be the most unbelievable thing about it.”

“Do you feel better about the dream now at least?”

“Yes, although I still wish I knew for sure what happened to that death flower.  Whether I dropped it or forgot it.  I hate thinking my mind might be going in my old age.  What if I did drop it in the portal?  Where do things go if you drop them in between times?  Does it stay in that flux state?  Could I pick it up if I happened to see it on our way home, or does it eventually just blip out into some random time between here and there?”

“I don’t know.  But if it does, someone in that in-between time could get a nice unexpected death pass.”

“I hope that doesn’t screw up the timeline.  Though I suppose Emit would probably just pop there and snatch it away before anyone could grab it if it did.”

“Managing timelines must get so exhausting.  All those details, and if you mess up just one…”  Susan shook her head.  “I wonder if you tallied it, just how old poor Emit really is.  How many times he’s had to reverse his age, how many death flowers he must’ve burned through.  He must carry them.  I can’t imagine that with all he’s done and been though, he hasn’t had close calls that ended up too close.”

“He’s probably got a stash or a secret garden of them somewhere.  Maybe a gardening plumbot dedicated to keeping him supplied.”  Boyd chortled.  “Speaking of which, I guess if I don’t find mine, I better see if Plumboptimus or Iris has any more planted when we get back.  They harvested the last one for Jessica, but I don’t know if they ever replanted any.”

“I’m not sure.  Other than the steak plants we still need, we left the spring planting plan up to Iris.”

“Well, she’s taught Plumboptimus back up to intermediate level gardening.  Hopefully that’s one of the advanced plants she put in there for him to learn on.”



Although Boyd and Susan were eager to meet their descendants, the first thing they wanted to do was see Susan’s legacy statue for themselves.  It was an impressive piece, an excellent likeness of her kneeling, holding a giant simoleon, carved in opalescent marble stone.  “Look at you, Renowned Philanthropist!” Boyd remarked while Susan beamed as they admired it.

“I can’t believe I’ve really been memorialized like this.  It’s such an honor!  Though you should be with me on that pedestal.  You contributed as much as I did.”

“Like I said before, it doesn’t bother me, honey.  You deserve this and if history remembers you as the benefactor because you signed the checks, I’m glad.  I don’t need to have my nerdy old mug on a statue.  Emit said my name’s in the journals with yours and like Emit said, it’s on the plaque, too.  That’s enough for me.”  He gestured to the inscription.  Susan Wainwright, the Renowned Philanthropist.  Generous philanthropist, scientist, and visionary Susan Wainwright, along with her husband Boyd, struck it lucky winning the Lotto of old.  After building a scientific empire furthering their knowledge for the benefit of simkind, Susan Wainwright generously donated much of their fortune to forward-thinking projects that formed the foundation of many of the technologies, comforts, and luxuries still in use today.  It was followed by her full name and years of birth and death.  “And I must say, your nerdy mug makes a gorgeous statue.”



“Thank you, although I wish they could’ve immortalized me looking just a little bit younger,” Susan quipped, even though she was still aglow with pride as her gaze fell upon the year of her death.  It was still a few away from the time they had left, but seeing the number felt eerie.  “I guess the year I die isn’t enough of a spoiler for Emit to worry about, but I’m not sure how I feel about knowing exactly how much time I have left.”

“Maybe it’s not necessarily a spoiler.  Your legacy statue could be a fixed thing, but that date might be able to change if we change something when we go back that doesn’t affect you getting the statue itself.  And even if is that year, there’s no exact date.”

“But even knowing the year, I could very well fulfill my own prophecy, even subconsciously.  My body might just think it’s time to give out because I saw that number.”

“Careful, honey.  That sounds dangerously close to my brand of paranoid overthinking.”

“Maybe you’re a bad influence.  I have been around you for a decade or several,” Susan teased back.  “You and your dream pod deaths with disappearing death flowers.”

“Hey, look at it this way.  At least you know you’ve got a few years.  I’m still in the dark.  For all I know, I could go tomorrow.  We’re both well past our natural expiration dates.”

“Don’t even joke about that.  You may be the one who died in that dream last night, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t awful on my end losing you and suddenly being a widow, too.”  She met his eyes and gestured to her death year on the plaque.  “And I don’t want to live that time without you here with me.  So you better stick around.”

Boyd squeezed her hand and smiled at her.  “I promise I’ll do my best.”



After admiring Susan’s statue, they toured the rest of the park and took pictures of the legacy statues.  Although Emit’s was still the same, it looked like some of the others had changed like The Renowned Philanthropist had.  The Pioneer of Plumbotics definitely had.  Boyd remembered that one in detail, since he had hoped he might become it someday.  However, even though it was different, the new one was not him.  But since he and Susan never took pictures the first time, neither could remember for sure if The Trendsetter or The Lustrous Entertainer had changed or not.  The Wainwrights were hardly fashionistas, so neither committed that name to memory, and while they wondered back then if it was possible that Patrick could become the musician statue after they gave him the laser rhythm-a-con, they didn’t remember that statue in full detail, either.

“It might’ve changed, but even if it did, it’s someone named Braden Hammons now,” Boyd noted with a hint of disappointment.  “I wonder if he could be related to Patrick, like if he ends up passing that laser rhythm-a con on to a future generation.  But there’s no way to know without looking it up, and Emit probably would’ve told us if this guy was a descendant of ours.  It would’ve been cool if Patrick did end up being the first to make a name for himself in a whole new genre of music, though.”

“I suppose we’ll have to settle for him merely being a rock star and a respected artist in mediums from his own time,” Susan mused playfully.  “However will we cope with such disappointment?”

“Guess we’ll just have to manage,” he replied with a smile.  “Ah, well.  We already have two members of our family in this park anyway.  We’re Wainwrights, not Landgraabs, so we don’t need to take over all of them.  Besides, can you imagine how bent out of shape Maria would be if she found out Patrick had a legacy statue and she didn’t?”

“I can, and I’d rather not picture it.  For all our sakes, since we live with them.”  She chortled.  “Though that’s easy for me to say since I do have a statue.”

“Deservedly so, esteemed Wainwright Matriarch and Renowned Philanthropist.”

“Matriarch of a family bearing your name, technically, Wainwright Patriarch,” she pointed out wryly.

“You get a statue; my name gets passed down.  Sounds fair to me.  I can live with that.”

“Me too.”



When they were done touring the park, they took a picture of themselves together.  Someday, after they got back home, they would tell their family about their amazing trips to Oasis Landing.  Maybe some of them would be lucky enough to go one day, too.  They hoped so, although they suspected that if it did, it wouldn’t be until sometime after they were gone.



Although they were eager to meet their descendants, they had a couple of hours before the first meeting Emit arranged, so they stopped by the bot arena.  There were no shows that early in the day, but they were able to go on a tour and meet some of the plumbot gladiators.  The Wainwrights came out newly inspired with ideas to try with their own plumbots once they got back to their own time.



Their next stop was the bot shop, conveniently next door to the bot arena.  Now that they were so much more proficient at plumbot building, they appreciated much more the variety of things available as everyday items in Oasis Landing time.  Back in their own time, they had to build all their specialized tools, parts, chips, and nanites from raw materials.  While it had been invaluable in teaching them how everything worked, now that they understood it so well, the convenience of being able to buy those things off the shelf was great.

“Wow, what a great selection of nanites.  I’ll take all of these,” Boyd told the plumbot clerk, named Mortimer, which made him think of Mortimer Goth and wonder what he would think of a plumbot sharing his name.  “This too.  Oh, and this.”  He selected a tool kit from the menu.  “And, oh, I cool!  I didn’t know there was a chip for that!  I’ll take it, and one of these, too…”



After browsing some programs on the demo bot building station, Susan struck up a conversation with a plumbot named Number Eight about tune-up tools.  Although Plumboptimus and Cybelle had their own, they could always use more efficient upgrades.  “So you recommend this one as the best for self tune-ups?”

“Yes.  It has always performed optimally for me and comes with a lifetime warranty.  If you have adequate funds for it, I highly recommend it for any plumbot—household, utility, or free-living.  Sentient plumbots choose this brand more than any other.”

“Really?  That sounds like a good endorsement to me.  Thanks for your input.  I’ll get some, then.  My plumbots at home deserve the best.”



After they finished shopping, it was finally time to meet the first family of their descendants.  All of their children had some in the area, although Blair’s only descendant was Emit.  Patrick had a household of two, Iris had a household of two, and Orion had a household of four.  They double-checked the almanac for the address before heading there.  “So, Patrick, Maria, and Jessica’s descendants are first.  Alec and Tessa Wainwright.  Looks like whoever Jessica eventually marries takes our name and carries it on down the line.”  She smiled proudly.  “Probably because we’re so prestigious and rich, with a family history of fame and fortune spanning a couple generations by the time she’s grown up.  On our way to becoming one of those established old money families instead of nouveau riche.”

“Maybe.  Or maybe she ends up not bothering with marriage and just has her kids on her own.  Could be the father runs off or turns out to be some jerk not worth marrying, or he’s one of those free spirit types like Orion’s hooked up with.”

Susan was a traditionalist at heart, and that thought disappointed her.  “I’d hope our sweet granddaughter has better luck and judgment than that.  Nothing against April, I like her, but we both know her thing with Orion’s not going to last long-term, and he’ll probably end up heartbroken again when it ends.”

“Guess we’ll find out when we meet his descendants.  The almanac didn’t say who else they were descended from other than our bloodline.”

“Maybe they’ll tell us, or we can figure it out.”  She shrugged.  “And getting back to Jessica, I’d like to think she’ll grow up with enough smarts, taste, and confidence to weed out any losers, bums, or gold-diggers that try to charm her.”



“Me too, but you know how love can be blind and make a fool out of anyone, no matter how smart they are.  Our kids are no exception and I doubt theirs will be, either.  We probably wouldn’t be ourselves if we hadn’t both picked out the right one so early.”

Susan chortled.  “You think as paranoid as you are, you’d get suckered in by a pretty face?”

“It’s possible.  I fell for that smart, pretty redhead in my chemistry class pretty quick, after all.  If she’d turned out to be some heartbreaker, I’d have been thrown for a loop and probably wouldn’t have trusted anyone for ages afterward.  But luckily for me, you were just as amazing as I believed you were from the get go.”

Flattered, Susan smiled back at Boyd.  “Well, I got pretty lucky with you, too.  I never could’ve put up with someone all high maintenance like Patrick does with Maria or the on-again, off-again nonsense Tara put Orion through, or something like April’s harem of other boyfriends or some of the things Iris does with the boys she dates.  And don’t even get me started on Cycl0n3.  The kids call her Saint Blair because they think she’s a goody-goody, but I think she should be sainted for putting up with that big mouth of his for so many years.  No, I got very lucky with you, even if you do drive me a little nuts sometimes.”  She smooched him.  “And I hope that in the long run, all our children and grandchildren and so on down the line are as happy as we are.”

“So do I.  Now, let’s go meet them and find out.”

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 122
« Reply #351 on: June 02, 2020, 10:57:15 PM »
Chapter 122



When they arrived at the home of Alec and Tessa Wainwright, their descendants through Patrick’s line, Boyd and Susan were thrilled to see that they lived in a beautiful futuristic mansion on a ridge overlooking Oasis Landing.  It was such a sharp contrast to the run-down home of meager means that the very first descendants of Patrick’s, the ones they met on their first trip so many years ago, lived in, and noticeably more lavish than the one owned by his descendants from their prior trip, too.  “Looks like they’ve kept the family fortune over the generations.  I’m glad Patrick’s line will be so successful.  They’re better off in this timeline than any of the others.”

“Rock stars make good money, and successful novelists rake in the royalties,” Boyd mused.  “Even if Patrick and Maria keep living the high life after we’re gone, they could play with what they make and still be filthy rich on what they inherit from us.  Not to mention what Thornton left them, and Maria will probably get at least a little inheritance from Morgana, too.  Doctors of her expertise usually do pretty well.”

“They do.”  Susan rang the bell.



Alec and Tessa Wainwright turned out to be a young couple, recently married, with no children yet.  It was difficult to tell at a glance which was their bloodline descendant, however, because both looked like they could be related to them.  Alec’s facial structure was remarkably similar to both Boyd and Patrick’s.  He also had Patrick’s ears, which he’d inherited from Susan, the same slender build that ran in both Boyd and Susan’s families, and Maria’s eye color.  Tessa, on the other hand, had the fiery red hair and green eyes that Patrick had inherited from Susan, but she resembled Maria in other ways, especially in her large-boned build that both Maria and Tad had inherited from their father.

“It’s so incredible to meet you!  This is such an honor,” Tessa gushed after Alec invited them in and introduced them to her.  When he answered the door and Boyd and Susan explained who they were, he almost tripped over himself rushing in to call to her.

“We’ve knew we both came from interesting heritage—that’s actually how we met—but even with the Time Keeper living here in Oasis Landing, few of us are lucky enough to get a chance to meet a time travel ancestor,” Alec explained.  “I can see the resemblance.  What about you?”

“My hair used to be your color, longer ago than I’d like to admit,” Susan said wryly to Tessa.  “And so’s our son Patrick’s.”

“But you resemble him, too.  And me, when I was closer to your age.”

“That’s probably because we’re both related to you,” Alec replied.

“And you’re married?”  Susan raised an eyebrow as she and Boyd exchanged a look, but neither Tessa nor Alec seemed fazed.

Tessa gestured to a nearby arch.  “Come on in to the living room.  It’s a better place to talk.”



Their living room was well-furnished and spacious, with a large futuristic projection TV and seating area.  Through the windows Boyd and Susan could see the house had a lovely private patio with a pool as well.  “Your home is very nice,” Susan remarked as they entered, too curious to wait to sit down before continuing their conversation.  “But, and I hope this doesn’t come off as rude or blunt in your time, since I’m not sure how things might’ve changed, you surprised us saying you’re related to each other and married.”

Boyd nodded with her.  “Yeah.  That’s… not really done in our time.”

“Well, if you mean like marrying your brother or sister or aunt or uncle or even a first cousin, that’s not really done now, either,” Alec assured them.  “But if you go far enough down the line, you’d be surprised how many of us here in Oasis Landing have a distant family connection in one way or another.  After the wasteland disaster, only so many around here even survived and even fewer were still able to have children.”

“Alec and I met at a genealogy club.  We both went there curious about our history because growing up we’d each heard from our families that we were Wainwrights related to famous ones from way back.  It’s a pretty common name and while we both knew we weren’t related to the alien or plantsim Wainwrights, everyone knows that those lines both trace back to the scientist family way back in the time of the Renowned Philanthropist.  Back when I was a kid, my grandmother told me we were related to her, too, but I didn’t know exactly how and through what branch.  The alien and plantsim Wainwrights have much better genealogy records that trace right back to you two, but lots of everyday humans like us born with the name Wainwright claim to, too.  Some actually are related, but some aren’t.  So I wanted to find out for sure if I really was, and if so, am I a direct descendant of the Renowned Philanthropist or maybe even related to the branch that was secretly werewolves?  Though supposedly the last of them ran off into the mountains over a hundred years ago and vanished, and I’m definitely not a werewolf, so I still have no idea about that.  I’ve also heard that the Time Keeper, Emit Relevart, is distantly related to you, and a Wainwright by blood, but from everything I’ve researched, I’m not related at all to him except maybe as far back as you, and neither is Alec.”



Alec continued after she finished.  “Long before I met Tessa, my father told me growing up that we were descendants of the Renowned Philanthropist Wainwrights, but he didn’t know exactly how because so many records were lost beyond his grandparents, destroyed in the wasteland disaster.  It destroyed so much ancient archived data!  Ugh.  Such a tragedy!  Anyway, the genealogy society has worked for decades collecting records from wherever they could trying to rebuild it all.  Like Tessa, I wanted to find out more about my distant roots.  Being a direct descendant of the Renowned Philanthropist and being able to prove it would be such an amazing honor!”  He beamed with pride.  “And of course I am, which I knew before you got here, but getting to meet you in person is even better!  But back to what I was saying, while Tessa and I were working together to discover this, we found out that we were indeed both direct descendants of yours through your son Patrick Wainwright and your granddaughter Jessica Wainwright.  We’re both descended from her children, but not the same ones.”

Tessa smiled.  “And while we were working together and discovering that, we really hit it off and, well, here we are.”

“Oh, I see.  So that’s several grandparent generations back you’re connected, then,” Boyd said with noticeable relief.

“Nobody would consider that meaningfully related in our time, either.  Though it’s interesting seeing what genes continued to express along lines that split a bit past us.”



“And Tessa, I can still see some Wolff in you, too, which is where, if I had to guess, that werewolf branch of the family you mentioned came from,” Boyd remarked.  “That’s our son Patrick’s wife, Maria, Jessica’s mother’s side.  She’s one.  It runs on her father’s side of the family.  I have no idea if there are any Wolffs in this area anymore, though.  Our grandson through our daughter married a different member of that family, but none of our descendants through her have that name.”  He and Susan both wondered again if Emit was Chris or Travis’ descendant, and what happened to the descendants of the other, but that was a mystery Emit was determined to keep secret.

“I’ve heard the name before, but I don’t know anyone specifically, and it wasn’t in any of my genealogy reports.  So I actually am related to the werewolf branch?  Wild!  We were never able to find out much for sure about them because there isn’t anyone around here anymore who knew the werewolf Wainwrights before they vanished.”



Alec turned to Tessa.  “If she was Patrick’s wife and Jessica’s mother, that means I’m connected to them, too.  We both are!  And even if we’re not werewolves, we just discovered something entirely new and previously unknown about the werewolf branch of the Wainwright family to add to the archives!  Sweetheart, isn’t this the most amazing thing that could’ve happened today?”

“I know!  I can’t wait to update the database!” Tessa gushed.  “Sorry, totally new information and a chance to work on the database we designed is like icing on the cake.  I love computers almost as much as I love him.”

“But not as much,” Alec teased on a playfully jealous and flirtatious note.

“Oh, of course not,” she replied, squeezing his hand.

Boyd and Susan found the exchange cute.  “It’s all right.  We both completely understand how it is to get excited over computer and tech programs.”

“Being scientist moguls of your time?  I’m sure,” chuckled Tessa.  “Guess I come by it honestly.  I like to think that our brains are a family trait, too.  Alec and I only met when we got into the genealogy club together, but we were both top of our class and always aced math and science and logic.”

“My mother liked to tell me I was too smart for my own good, but I don’t like to brag too much.”

Tessa snickered.  “The plum you don’t.  But that’s okay.  I love you anyway.”

Both Susan and Boyd were amused.  “If it’s any consolation, we said the same to our children, your ancestors.  I think you’re safe in your assumptions that smarts run in the family.”  She smiled at them.  “And speaking of which, since you are our descendants, and I am the Renowned Philanthropist…”



“…here’s a little something extra you can say you got from me as proof I was indeed here, you did meet me, and you are related.”

Tessa and Alec both gasped, then leapt with excitement as Susan handed them a generous sum of money.  It was currency from their time, which could be verified at any Oasis Landing financial institution as genuine and exchanged for a ridiculous value given its age and rarity.  She also handed them a frameable check bearing her signature showing the amount as a keepsake.

“Oh, my Watcher!  Thank you so very much!  Oh, this is just… oh, I don’t have words!” Alec exclaimed dramatically.

Susan and Boyd enjoyed their enthusiasm and smiled back at them.  “You’re very welcome,” she told them.  “We wanted to do something special for you as our descendants.”

“Not that you’re not doing pretty well already, but a little extra never hurts,” added Boyd.

“And we appreciate it so much.  Thank you!”



After that, Alec and Tessa insisted that Boyd and Susan sit down and join them for a little while to chat some more.  They had a nice talk in their living room, learning a little more family history on both sides.  Alec and Tessa were curious about Patrick and Maria, and of course Jessica, but she was still so little in their time that there wasn’t much they could say about her other than to say that she wasn’t a werewolf.

Tessa and Alec were excited to find out more about Patrick and Maria, however, and unlike their previous descendants, they didn’t know that Maria had been a novelist or that Patrick had been an artist as well as a musician.  They didn’t have any copies of Maria’s works, although Tessa said she was going to search for them on their holo networks, but they did have a copy of a song that Patrick allegedly wrote later in his life.  They listened to it, and it was a brilliantly composed piece, but it struck them uneasily in the same way Maria’s novel had after their last trip.  The song was bittersweet, about a couple that had a passionate love for one another, but it had a nebulously worded ending that could be interpreted as them either going off into the sunset together or dying together, perhaps by their own hand, if one took the darkest interpretation of the lyrics.  Of course, a song could have as many different interpretations as it did listeners, and often even the artists themselves said what a song meant to them wasn’t necessarily what it would to anyone else.  They knew logically that all it meant for sure was that Patrick had at one point been inspired to encapsulate a feeling like that into a musical work, but it still left them wondering because Patrick and Maria did both have volatile moments that were concerning at times.



They enjoyed their visit and would have gladly taken Tessa and Alec up on their invitation to stay as long as they wanted, but after a couple of hours they had to go.  They could only stay in Oasis Landing for so long, and they still had two more sets of descendants to meet.

“Thanks so much for coming by, and for your generosity,” Tessa said as they prepared to leave.  “We wish you could stay longer.”

“You’ll always be welcome here if you want to come back, you know.”

“You’re very welcome, and thank you for the offer.  It was delightful meeting you both,” Susan said.

“Yeah.  I wish we could stay longer, but unfortunately we can only be here so long before we have to go back to our own time.”

“The radiation, right?” guessed Alec.  “I know the levels we’re used to aren’t anything like they were in your time.”

“That’s part of it.  Time travel rules, too.  If we stick around too long, things might get…”

“Majorly mucked up,” Tessa finished Boyd’s sentence for him.  “We understand.  We’re so glad you came, though.  We’ll never forget meeting you.”

Alec shook both their hands.  “It was truly an honor.  Thank you both.  We’ll always remember this, and tell our own children all about it someday.”

“We’ll never forget you, either.  We’re glad we could come,” Susan said, while Boyd nodded beside her.

“Absolutely.  You two take care.”



It was evening by the time they arrived at their second destination, the household belonging to Iris’ descendants.  According to the almanac, they were a middle-aged married couple named Terrence and Tucker Wainwright who had no children.  They also clearly still had the family’s wealth, residing in a beautiful futuristic manor in a wealthy neighborhood.  “Iris’ line has done well, too.  Though I’d have expected the plantsims to be the ones living out on the ridge closer to nature,” Susan remarked.

“If they’re even still pure plantsim.  Last time they were hybrids that re-engineered themselves a couple generations back.”

“I wondered about that, too.  If it was unique to that timeline, or it’s something that happens no matter what in any timeline where Iris exists.”

“I guess we’re about to find out,” Boyd said as Susan rang the bell.



The man that answered the door was obviously human, but when Susan introduced herself and Boyd to him, Tucker Wainwright was just as enthusiastic as any descendant would be.  Inside, in better light, they could see where he might resemble Iris or Susan somewhat, but since he was obviously not a plantsim, they guessed that was just coincidence and he was the spouse and not her genetic descendant.

They were correct.  “Ah, so you’re here for Terrence.  Guess I should’ve known my boring roots wouldn’t be the ones bringing in time travel ancestors.  Especially not compared to an old illustrious line like the plantsim Wainwrights, when I’m not even a plantsim and just married into their proverbial family tree.”  He sounded mildly bitter, but remained cordial enough.  “Terrence!” he shouted.  “Come here.”



“Oh, I heard.  And it’s such a hardship marrying for both love and money, eh, Tucker?”  Terrence Wainwright was a bit sarcastic toward his husband, but still smiling as he rounded the corner to join them.  Although he was green, Boyd and Susan noticed that he did not appear to be fully plantsim, and they wondered if their theory was correct, that the hybridization of Iris’ line was inevitable.  He clearly resembled Iris and Susan in some ways, and plantsims did sometimes naturally change gender depending on how the seed was cultivated and harvested.  But he was not a complete clone, given his human-like blond hair and green eyes, and despite his long sleeves and pants, they could see enough of his skin to tell that he didn’t have the foliage on it that Iris and other pure plantsims did.  He greeted them warmly.  “Forgive him.  He can be a little thorny at times.”

“Thorny?  Ugh.  You’ve got no style with puns, even plant ones.  Leave them to me.”

“I’m sorry, I forgot I was dealing with a humor expert,” Terrence quipped back before returning his attention to Susan and Boyd, extending his hand to each.  “He actually is quite funny, despite the mean little barbs he slips in.  He thinks because I’m a programmer, I’m too serious to be funny.  But that’s just one of his endearing quirks.  Anyway, it’s a pleasure and honor to meet you both.  I’m Terrence Wainwright, and you’ve already met my husband Tucker.”

“I’m Susan Wainwright, and this is my husband Boyd.  Emit Relevart brought us here from—”

Before she could continue, Terrence’s eyes widened, and he cut her off.  “The Susan Wainwright, the Renowned Philanthropist?”

Susan beamed with pride while Boyd chimed in.  “That’s her.”

“By all the… The Time Keeper brought the ones who made the first seed of my branch of the family to meet me?!” Terrence gasped, amazed and impressed, and Tucker did the same.  “The first plantsim I’m descended from was your creation, wasn’t she?”

“Yes.  Iris Wainwright,” Boyd confirmed, while Susan continued.

“We engineered her seed.  My DNA was used in it.”



He looked her over.  “Yes!  I can see the resemblance.  That’s incredible!  Wow!  Look, Tucker!”

“She does kind of look like you.  That’s incredible!”

“I’ve seen your statue and I always noticed how much she, I mean, you, looked like some of my ancestors.  The plantsims of old.  My great-grandmother Heather looked very much like you, although she was full plantsim and had classic plantsim features.”

“We noticed you’re not a full plantsim,” Susan remarked.  “In our time, we haven’t seen that yet.  It hasn’t been done.”



Terrence nodded.  “No, that was something my family did a few generations back.  When the wasteland disaster happened, the plantsims were affected in ways humans weren’t.  The anti-radiation treatment they gave to the survivors helped some, but the changes in the soil and water were toxic and destroyed some nutrients that were essential to us.  We started becoming malnourished and weak despite being able to photosynthesize.  So my grandfather, Aspen, tinkered with the ancient spice formula that they used to use to change back humans who turned themselves into plantsims by eating forbidden fruit.  His formula made it so that we could take on some human traits and metabolize food better, but it also made us more human in other ways.  Eyes and hair like mine, less foliage on the skin, and while some of us still only reproduce with seeds, others can only have children like you humans.  A few can do both, but it all depends on your genetics.  My mother was Aspen Wainwright’s daughter, and he gave himself the cure before having her.  She came from a seed, but her genetics were altered from the treatment, and she had me the human way with my father.”

That fascinated both Susan and Boyd.  His account was remarkably similar to what Iris’ previous descendant, Patrick Wainwright, the one who coincidentally had the same name as their son, told them on their last trip about his family turning into hybrids.  He never mentioned it happening out of necessity, but they supposed it made sense.  If the wasteland disaster was a fixed event, then its effects on the survivors would also be a constant, and they would have to find some way to mitigate them, or they would perish.  They were glad that Iris’ line managed to do so in both timelines, and they wondered if it was because she would have a key role in managing the family’s scientific business someday.  They hoped so.



Terrence and Tucker invited them to sit and continue their chat.  “So, how about I get us a round of synthesized drinks, and you two tell us what it’s like to be historical legends and what it’s like living in your time?” Tucker suggested.

“That sounds great,” said Boyd.  “Thanks.”

“While he does that, can you show us any pictures of your parents or grandparents?” Susan asked Terrence.  “We’re really curious as to how your plantsim genes have changed with that formula your grandfather made, or if Iris’ genes changed at all over time.”

“Sure.  Like I told you earlier, my great-grandmother, Heather Wainwright, looked enough like you that, according to my parents and grandparents, she often boasted that our line came directly from the Renowned Philanthropist and would pose by the statue as proof to show off the resemblance.  She died before I was born, but my grandmother lived to be a hundred and spent a lot of time around her.  I have a few old images of her.”



Terrence retrieved a digital album archiving some old family images, and sure enough, the one he said was his great-grandmother looked almost exactly like Iris would as an old woman, and like Susan would now if she was a plantsim.  It was an eerie parallel to their last trip when Iris’ descendant from that timeline showed them a picture of his grandmother.  Even though they were not the same individuals and were from completely different timelines, they looked nearly identical aside from their age and personal hair and dress styles.  “That’s amazing,” Boyd remarked.  “If you showed me that picture and told me it was Iris herself in the future, I could believe it.”

“She’s still a teenager in our time.  Not far off from graduating and being on her own, but still.”  Susan studied the picture before scrolling to the next one, showing a distinguished looking plantsim man with a foliage beard and glasses.  She noticed that he somewhat resembled her long gone father, except that unlike him, he had not started balding in middle age.  “And this man here, is that your father or grandfather?”

“That’s my grandfather, Aspen Wainwright.  The one who engineered the spice formula to give us human traits.  I believe this was taken around the time he developed it, although I don’t know if he’d had it yet there or not.  The deficiencies and radiation affected his eyesight, hence the glasses.  Most of the rest of our line had perfect vision.”

“I always have, too,” Susan admitted.  “Even as I got older.”

Boyd chortled.  “Good thing it was her DNA in that seed as far as that goes.  I’ve been near-sighted since I was five.”



After Tucker rejoined them, they continued their talk.  Terrence showed them more family pictures and told them about his parents and grandparents, while Susan and Boyd told him all about Iris and her interests.  When they mentioned Iris’ natural charm with the boys, Tucker wryly said that must be a family trait because Terrence was an incurable flirt himself.  Terrence was quick to point out that he couldn’t help being a natural charmer with an eye for attractive people, but it was all harmless and he was completely devoted to him.  However, the gleam in his eye as he said so very much reminded both Susan and Boyd of Iris, even if his eyes were more human than hers.

Terrence did not know all that much about Iris or her children, other than she had two and his family was descended from her daughter Rose’s line.  Her other child was a son named Sage who supposedly had the physical features of his father rather than Iris.  He didn’t know the father’s name, though, only that both of Iris’ children bore the Wainwright surname and the male line moved out of the area generations ago, long before the wasteland disaster, and they had no records of them beyond Sage.



Before they knew it, a few hours had passed and both Boyd and Susan were exhausted despite wishing they could stay longer.  It was clear that Terrence was tired, too, although as it got late they noticed he had some strong caffeinated tea that must’ve been something only a hybrid plantsim could tolerate, because Iris would feel “sick and wilty,” as she put it, if she had more than a small amount of caffeine.

“It was so amazing meeting you and learning all this family history,” Terrence said as they said their farewells.  “I never thought I’d actually get a chance to meet any time travel ancestors, and certainly not the Renowned Philanthropist herself.”  He hugged Susan, then turned to Boyd.  “It was an honor to meet you, too.  You two achieved so much in your time and created such a legacy, not just in my family line, but the others, too.  The alien Wainwrights and the humans that claim your bloodline.”

Tucker flashed a coy smile of pride at his husband.  “Although I’d say I married into the most attractive branch.  Pun intended.”

“It always is with you,” Terrence bantered back.

“I have to agree he’s a good-looking fellow.  It runs in the family,” Susan said on a wry note.  “And if he’s as much like our daughter as I suspect, he’s well aware of that.”  She straightened as they bid them farewell.  “It was wonderful meeting you both, and we’re proud to call you our descendants.  Thank you for the time you spent with us.”

“It was our honor,” said Terrence.

“And thank you for that generous gift,” Tucker added.  Susan had given them a cash gift and check keepsake just like she had Patrick’s descendants.

“You’re very welcome.”

“You two take care, and best of luck to you both,” Boyd said with a wave as they headed for the door.



After that, the Wainwrights returned to the community center for the night.  As much as they would have liked to meet Orion’s descendants that day, too, it was far too late to visit anyone now, and they were both tired.  Although they couldn’t stay in Oasis Landing too long, Emit assured them that one more day would be all right as long as they stayed clear of the wasteland.  They would rather meet them after a full night’s rest in a dream pod—without any dream mishaps this time, hopefully—and be able to spend time with them without feeling rushed or tired.

“It’s fascinating how the plantsims had to hybridize to survive here.  I wonder if that happened to all plantsims around the world, or just the ones close to the radiation like this?” Boyd mused.

“I don’t know.  I wish we could’ve found out more about the other line that moved away.  The mysterious Sage who looks like the father they don’t know the name of.  I wonder what the deal with that is.  Bad marriage?  Or maybe he just wasn’t interesting enough to make it into the history accounts?”

“I can’t see Iris lasting too long with someone boring.”

“It doesn’t take too long to make a seed, but I see your point.  Though the way Cameron goes on about working out and the gym, that could bore me to tears.”

“Think it’s him?  Mr. Bloom?  He’s already got a plantsim approved name, and Iris does seem pretty fond of him.”

“Maybe.  But considering she hasn’t even gone off to university yet, and she doesn’t seem to be the settle down type, if I had to guess, it’s probably someone she hasn’t even met yet.”

“Saved from spoilers again, whether we like it or not.  Though now we know more about the kids she has someday.  Rose and Sage.”

“And knowing the year I die is on my statue, I won’t ever get to meet them.  Not if the dates Terrence had for when they were born were accurate.”

“I doubt I’ll be around, either.  Guess that’s why it was okay for us to find out.”



“Speaking of finding things out, what do you think of Alec and Tessa hooking up in some kind of futuristic family reunion?  I know they’re not meaningfully related as far back as they’re connected, but still…”

“Made me feel like a Bunch,” Boyd quipped.  “Our family tree gets big enough to send out runners that pop up everywhere.  Kind of like how in Sunset Valley now, almost every family has a Bunch in it or close to it.”

Susan chortled.  “Including ours, if Travis stays serious with Starla.”

“Well, he could do worse.  She seems like a good kid, and not nearly as flaky as poor Penny.  Remember when Patrick was born and you joked that growing up together back on Maywood, they might end up dating someday?”

“Yes.  That would’ve been an interesting match if it ever happened, but it’s probably for the best it didn’t.  Patrick loves Maria, and if they never got together, we wouldn’t have Jessica.  Not to mention there never would’ve been some mysterious vanished werewolf line in our future family tree.”

“What do you make of that?  Jessica’s descendants aren’t werewolves because she isn’t, but if there are some later on, it must mean they do have another child at some point.  Emit hinting that Maria might bite someone to convert them could’ve just been misdirection to keep us from knowing spoilers for certain.  While the werewolf curse can transmit that way, it doesn’t alter the DNA to the point that it makes someone a blood relative.”

“And it would have to be a child of Patrick’s to have the Wainwright name, unless they divorce at some point and she simply doesn’t change her name before having a child with someone else.”  Susan frowned.  “Or she has an affair and doesn’t tell Patrick the child isn’t his, but I find that hard to picture.  Despite all her other dramatics, she doesn’t seem like she’d cheat on him.”



When they got back to their room, they changed for bed and relaxed in the dream pod.  “One more day left and lots to do in it,” said Boyd.  “I wonder what Orion’s descendants will be like and how different they’ll be from last time.”

“The others changed a lot, but none of them were worse off.  I guess we’ll find out tomorrow.  We should visit the memorials of the past ones, too, before we leave.  It’s only right, since it was our actions that booted them to an alternate timeline.”



“Yeah.  I agree.”  He brought up the controls of the dream pod.  “What do you think we should go for this time?  I’m going to say no to advanced tech again and definitely no to ‘dream about dumb luck’ after last night.”

“Good call.  Hmm, how about this one?  Dream about a happy life?  That seems nice and restful with a low chance of stress and untimely dream death.”

 “Sure.”  He paused.  “But I’m turning off the random chance events just in case.”



Author’s Note: Originally I planned to have them meet all the descendants in this chapter, but once I got going, I decided it would work better as two.  I’m already working on the next one, so ideally it also won’t be another month between chapters! 



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Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 123 Part One
« Reply #352 on: June 18, 2020, 09:22:34 PM »
Author's Note: This chapter is wordy and image-heavy, so it's split into two posts.



Chapter 123



Boyd and Susan woke up well-rested and refreshed after a pleasant “happy life” dream in the dream pod, and they had breakfast at the community center.

“We have full access to Oasis Landing tech, and you pick a sugary breakfast cereal instead of something fancier?” Susan teased.  “I’ll never understand you.”

“We don’t have Fruti Bobs in our time.  These beat anything from a box back home.”

“Maybe we should try to get the program for it on that synthesizer we’re bringing back to tinker with this time.  In the meantime, I’ll enjoy my smothered scone with spiced pomegranate jam.”



After breakfast, they visited Orion’s descendants.  According to the almanac, they were a married couple named Tyron and Lola, with two teenage sons named Kane and Drew.  Like their other descendants, the alien Wainwrights clearly still had their share of the family fortune if their opulent futuristic home was any indication.  “Nice to know they’re just as well off as the others.  Is that a pool on their upper deck?”

“Looks like,” Susan said on an approving note as Boyd rang the doorbell.



Lola Wainwright, a middle-aged alien hybrid, answered the door with a smile.  Both Boyd and Susan noticed immediately she had more human blood than Orion, with a skin tone that looked like a blend of Orion and Eni Jish Xip’s green Sixam skin and a human skin tone, and a very human hair color.  Her facial structure reminded them very much of Orion and his alien genetic mother’s, however.  “Oh, cosmos!  For once, I’m having a lucky day!  Time travel ancestors?  Of mine?  I can hardly believe it!”

“Great guess!  Did you glean that telepathically, or do we stick out that badly?” Boyd asked, mirroring her smile.

“I never guess lucky.  I’m the unluckiest woman you’ll ever meet.  I must’ve broken a room full of mirrors while crawling under twenty ladders as a toddler as the old superstitions go.  But yes, I read it, along with your name:  Boyd Wainwright and Susan Wainwright.  Two famous historical figures that I have the honor of a family connection to!”  She eyed them in amazement.  “Which means you must be them, that Boyd Wainwright, Orion Wainwright’s human father, who was married to the Renowned Philanthropist.  My many degree great-grandfather and his human wife.  I’m a direct descendant of yours and Orion Wainwright, the first publicly known Earth Child of Sixam.”  She gestured for them to enter.  “Please, come in!  Make yourselves comfortable while I get my husband and sons.”



Lola’s husband, Tyron, was a Sixam hybrid like her.  However, his facial features were more distinctly human than hers while his hair was more like Orion’s, human only in that he had it at all, but with the coloring of his alien genes.  Their sons were similar, one bearing a strong resemblance to his mother while the other did his father.

“These two are our esteemed ancestors, brought here by the Time Keeper,” Lola introduced them.  “Boyd Wainwright, Orion Wainwright’s human father, and his wife Susan Wainwright, the Renowned Philanthropist.”

“Yeah, I picked up on that,” the boy with the human hair remarked in a mildly surly tone toward his mother while looking Boyd and Susan over curiously.  “Too bad we didn’t know you were coming.  I’d have made one of my famous snacks for you.”

“Nothing’s stopping you from making them now.  Make the candy stuffed brownies,” the other boy quipped back.  “Kane’s a really good cook and can even do it without a synthesizer.  He also made programs for some of them.  But not those.”

“Because they’re my secret recipe!  Besides, we both know you’d just sit on your lazy plumbob and scarf down half of them yourself!”

“Boys, come on now.  Let’s stay polite for our guests.”  Tyron turned to Boyd and Susan.  “We’re all pleased to meet you, even if these two could use a refresher on manners.”

“Hey, I wasn’t rude!” Drew piped up.  “It’s an honor to meet you both.”

“It’s nice to meet you, too,” Boyd said.

“Yes.  It’s a pleasure.  And don’t worry,” Susan said, turning to Tyron.  “We’re used to teenagers.  Our youngest still is one, and we’ve had teenage grandchildren, too.”  She looked at Kane.  “You remind me a bit of one of them, even if he’s not in your direct line.  One of our daughter Blair’s sons.”



Lola and Tyron invited Boyd and Susan to sit down, and even though they were curious about their guests, Kane immediately turned their projection TV on out of habit.  “Oh, stars!  Really?”  Lola turned it back off, shaking her head.  “We have time travelers here and you turn that on?  Kids.”

“It was just for background.  I thought they might want to know what future entertainment is like,” Kane muttered, while Drew tried to identify the movie that was on for a few seconds.

“I think we saw that one anyway.  You should go make brownies instead.”

“You should stop being a mooch and synthesize something yourself if you’re so hungry.  And while you’re at it, go get something for our guests so you’re not rude, either.”



“I think that’s a good idea,” Tyron chimed in from where he sat in an easy chair beside the one Boyd settled into.  “How about both of you get some refreshments for our guests?  Is there anything in particular you two like?  Our synthesizer has hundreds of recipes.”

“Whatever you’ve got is fine, thanks,” Boyd replied while the boys went off to the kitchen.

“Pardon them.  They’re too young to truly appreciate how rare and special a visit like yours is, but I’m sure they’ll be fascinated with what you’ve got to say once you get going.”

They could overhear Kane and Drew arguing in the kitchen over what was good enough to bring out.  “It’s all right.  Like Susan said, we know how it is, and from what I can see, they seem like good kids.”

“They are.  We’re proud of both of them.  Kane’s the older one and like Drew mentioned, he’s a wonderful cook.  He’s thinking of becoming a chef someday and wants to publish synthesizer recipes or instruct culinary plumbots.  He can be surly and less than social sometimes, but he’s bright and talented.  Now Drew, he’s a bit more like me.  Not just in looks, either.  We’re both outdoorsy types and love nature.  Though he likes hitting the steep mountain trails while I’m fine with a casual stroll in the park or fishing by the harbor.  But he’s young and full of energy.”

“I hear you.  I’m not one for rocky mountain trails either.  But Orion wouldn’t mind that, although he’s not so much a nature lover as much as he is one of those types full of energy who likes challenging himself physically.”

“That’s most certainly not me.  But then, I’m not the one here who’s his direct descendant.  My line originated overseas.”



It was then that the boys returned with synthesized snacks and drinks, and Lola helped herself to some while Kane picked up a video game controller.  “Before you get on my case, Mom, I’m listening.  I can multitask.”

“You really are something,” scoffed Drew.

Susan continued with the previous conversation.  “You said your ancestors came here from overseas?  Did they come to meet other people with your type of… lineage?”  She paused.  “I’m sorry.  Is ‘hybrid’ is considered rude or offensive in your time?  That’s what we call Orion.”

“Nah.  ‘Hybrid’ is fine,” Drew assured her.  “We sometimes call ourselves that since none of us are full-blood alien.”

“We’re around fifty percent, give or take.  Tyron and I met through a service that arranges matches for Sixam-bloods like us.  We have nothing against full humans, of course, but we both wanted children that would inherit our abilities as well as our looks.  It can be hard being alien, even with the last name Wainwright to get respect.  There are still some ignorant and hateful people out there who are cruel to those with Sixam blood,” Lola explained, while Kane looked up from his game.

“They keep it to themselves more when they know you’ve got powers, though.  The hybrids who are like twenty percent and look it but don’t have powers really get the shaft from llamas like that.”

Both Susan and Boyd were sorry to hear that, although they were not surprised.  Emit had told them the history behind the wasteland disaster and that it would always happen even with Orion living a full life as a positive example centuries before.  He had said that it would make things better, and avoid an all-out war with Sixam, but not that it would fix everything.  “That’s a shame.  I’m sorry,” Susan sympathized, while Boyd nodded with her, echoing the sentiment.

“Thank you,” said Lola.  “I imagine it wasn’t easy for you, either.  Back in your time, you had to hide Orion’s lineage completely during his early life, right?  You feared your own government would kill him?”

“And experiment on him, just for being part alien?” Drew added, while Kane and Tyron also looked over, curious about the answer.



“In our time, officially, nobody claimed they knew that Sixam existed or that abductions happened, although there were rumors about them,” Boyd told them.  “But people who believed it and talked about it were pretty much considered crackpots, especially when I was younger.  I looked into it and believed it, and thought evidence of it was being covered up, but until it actually happened to me I never had anything that, as a scientist, I could call irrefutable proof.”

“Wow,” said Tyron.  “Even knowing what they are and that they’re real, abductions are… upsetting to most.  Especially if the memory wipe is botched, or even when it’s not and the subject is implanted with a hybrid and they don’t understand what’s happening to them.  It’s illegal by our interplanetary treaty, but it still happens from time to time.  When it does, it’s usually criminal elements or rogue agents on Sixam that are blamed.  Most of us hybrids nowadays are from family lines originating before those agreements, but sometimes individuals volunteer for the procedure and that’s legal.  I can only imagine what it must’ve been like for you back in those days.”

“It was traumatic.  Probably the most terrifying thing that ever happened to me.  I love Orion and I can’t imagine him not being part of our lives, but that experience was…”  Boyd shuddered.  “Anyway, after my abduction but before Orion was born, when we bought out the lab from the Landgraabs, that was when we discovered documentation about Sixam and alien experiments in the top secret vaults.  Although they hadn’t been going on for years, back when they were, their scientists were collaborating in secret with the military, so obviously some higher-ups in the government knew, and they were pros at covering things up.  Then shortly after that, Orion came along.  We had a pretty good idea of what could happen to him if the wrong people found out the truth about him, so we made up our own cover story for his protection.  We told everyone he was a baby we adopted, and that his birth mother gave him up because she couldn’t take care of him due to a rare genetic condition that we wanted to help him with and study.”

“Our money and resources and connections were a big help in pulling that off,” Susan added.  “I don’t know how well we’d have been able to protect him if it happened before we won the lotto and took over the lab.”

“Sounds like you were kind of a philanthropist right away, using your money to help your new alien son,” Drew said.

“I suppose, though at the time we were just trying to keep him safe.”

“Whether he liked it or not,” Boyd added wryly.  “Usually not, especially as he got older.  Orion’s strong-willed and sometimes I think he thinks his alien abilities and martial arts make him invincible.  He’s got a good heart, and he’s as smart as a whip, but he’s too fearless for his own good sometimes.  A lot of these wrinkles and gray hairs were inspired directly by him, though that’s not to say my other kids can’t claim their share, too.”

“How old is Orion now, when you’re from?” asked Tyron.

Lola was also curious.  “Most of what we know about him is after he told the world about who he was, and what’s in my genealogy records.  I don’t think I’ve seen any pictures of him younger than that.”



“Well, if you want pictures, here are some.  Real old fashioned non-digital types that were school pictures and some I printed out for hard copies.  Like the old grandpa I am, I’ve got all my kids and grandkids in here.”  He stood and pulled out his wallet.  “This one’s Orion’s graduation picture, probably his most recent.  He’s in University now.  Oh, and that one was him and his brother dressed up for a school prom, back in Orion’s first year of high school and when Patrick was a senior.  He’s the redhead next to him.”  He pointed to another one.  “Oh, this is an oldie, from a birthday party for both him and Iris, our plantsim daughter.  He was just starting elementary school and Iris was a toddler.”

Tyron looked at the pictures, then passed them to Lola, who in turn shared them with Drew and Kane while they continued to chat.  Tyron got out a holo-book and projected an image of what looked like a more mature Orion, perhaps in his thirties or forties, standing on a platform or pedestal like he was addressing a crowd.  “This is what we know of him.  It’s probably the most famous image of Orion Wainwright, where he told the world he was a Sixam hybrid and that aliens were real.”

The image and imagining that sent an instinctive shiver of dread through Boyd, although he’d known for a long time that Orion would do that someday and it was for the best.  But Emit never said that Orion himself would be fine after doing so, only that alien hybrids and alien relations would benefit from it.  To a paranoid man like Boyd, that lack of confirmation made him fear that something would happen to Orion or his family afterward.  Susan always tried to reassure him that was just fear talking and there was no proof something like that would happen, but without proof that it absolutely didn’t and couldn’t happen, Boyd would always worry anyway.



Drew was the last to look at Boyd’s pictures before passing them back.  “Orion at my age looks kind of like Kane, except with better hair.  Like mine.”  He grinned at his brother.  “Was he like either of us in person?”

“You two strike me as bright kids, so I’d say he’s like both of you that way.  He’s not a whiz in the kitchen like you, Kane, but his girlfriend is.  She’s quite the chef.”

“Oh, is that our great-great-great whatever grandmother?”  He turned to his mother.  “What was her name?”

Both Boyd and Susan also curiously awaited Lola’s answer, but she hesitated after locking eyes with Boyd, as if she read something from him that gave her pause.  “I—I know her name, but I don’t know if I should say.  He’s not married and doesn’t have any children in your time yet, does he?”

“No,” Boyd admitted.

“I’m sorry.  The last thing I want to do is be rude since I’m so incredibly honored that you’re here, but… oh, knowing my accursed luck, I just can’t shake the feeling that if I did tell you, it’ll change something you do when you go back that might inadvertently wipe us all out of existence.”  She got up and went toward the kitchen, upset for ruining the mood of the visit.



The others followed.  “Aw, come on, Mom.  That’s not going to happen!  The Time Keeper wouldn’t have brought them here if—”

“Stop, Kane.  Do you want a list of the times I tempted fate only to have it slap me upside the head?  The birthday party I arranged for you where not only your grandmother died, but your cake caught fire and nearly burned the house down while torching Mrs. Planeson’s hover-car?  The time we went to the museum for a fun outing and I scathingly critiqued one of the new art pieces only to find out that not only was the artist standing right behind us, but she just happened to be the wife of the business associate your father was working on a major account with?  Or how about the time I tried a new brand of cartridge for the food synthesizer only to get a defective one, and all our food tasted like week old fish until you and your father managed to fix it?  Or when I took us on that shortcut that got us lost in the mountains?  Or—”

“But none of that’s the same,” Drew argued.  “That stuff just happened because of bad luck.”

“I’m not going to risk it.”  Her voice took on an emotional edge as she turned to Boyd.  “I’m sorry.  Ordinarily I’d say my luck was on a high today meeting you two, but experience has taught me that the old saying about pride going before a fall is true.  Some of my worst days started feeling like my best ones.  I truly would love to tell you!  But since you don’t already know, and I sensed your thought about how this might be one of those things about your children Emit Relevart might not want you knowing even though you’re very curious…”

Boyd and Susan exchanged a look.  “Hey, it’s all right.  We get it.  Emit would probably agree with you, anyway,” he reassured her with a smile.  “And as far as worrying goes, I can’t throw any stones about that.  Just ask Susan.”

“Oh, definitely not.  I’m married to a master worrywart.”

“I just hate disappointing you.”

“There’s no shame in being cautious,” Tyron told her.

“He’s right.  We understand,” said Susan.  “In fact, this is as good a time as any to show it.  Boyd, shall we?”

He knew what she meant and nodded.  “Go for it, honey.”



Susan took out the satchel of currency and keepsake check she’d put together for Orion’s descendants and handed them to Lola.  “Here you go.  A little souvenir to remember us by.”

“And something to show off as proof in case anyone tries to call llama load on it,” Boyd added with a grin.

The whole family was thrilled, but Lola was so happy they were not upset with her and being so generous despite her not telling them what she knew that she did a happy little dance while waving the check.  “Wow!  My stars!  This is just… oh, with my luck running this good, I don’t dare press it any farther!  Thank you so much!  You two are just… you’re absolutely incredible!  Thank you!”



Unfortunately, they had to leave shortly after that.  Although Boyd and Susan enjoyed meeting Orion’s descendants, their time in Oasis Landing was dwindling and there were still things they wanted to do before it ran out.  Lola hugged them farewell.  “I’ll never forget meeting you, and how generous and gracious you were even though I couldn’t tell you everything.”

“We still learned a lot, and meeting you was more than worth it.  Besides, I figure if you can’t tell us now, odds are it’s because we’ll find out before we kick off.  So that’s not exactly bad news, that we’re not on death’s doorstep yet.  Because as old as we are?  Sometimes it feels like it.”

“I’m sorry the radiation is so hard on you,” said Tyron.  “We’d have loved to have you stay with us longer.”

“And we wish we could,” Susan replied.  “It was wonderful meeting all of you.”


Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 123 Part Two
« Reply #353 on: June 18, 2020, 09:25:48 PM »


After they left, Boyd and Susan went to Oasis Landing’s cemetery.  Now that they had met all their current descendants, it felt right to stop and pay their respects to the ones they had met on previous trips who were no longer a part of their timeline.  Although Emit assured them they still existed in an alternate timeline somewhere, they were permanently gone from this one, with nothing but Boyd and Susan’s memories and the data from Emit’s almanac to show they ever existed at all.

The first ones they viewed were the memorials of Helena Wolff and her daughter Penny, Patrick’s descendants from their previous trip.  They remembered how friendly they had been, and how Helena gave them the copies of Maria’s future novels to read that hinted at things they later saw occur in both Patrick and Maria’s lives.  They thought about how after they went back, sometimes they would speculate about things they read in the novels, especially when they would change, like when Maria’s author name did after she and Patrick got engaged.  They wondered back then if it meant they would not see Helena or Penny again when they returned to Oasis Landing.  Now, seeing their memorials, it drove it home and overwhelmed them.



The next memorials they viewed belonged to Patrick and Jarret Wainwright, Iris’ previous hybrid plantsim descendants.  They fondly remembered Patrick, who was the first to tell them about Iris’ descendants becoming hybrids in his timeline.  They remembered him showing them the picture of his grandmother, Dahlia, who had been a near clone of Iris.  Patrick’s wife, Paige, did not have a memorial, since she was not erased from existence, but she was no longer connected to them and would not have known them other than as historical figures had they encountered her now.  They had liked her too, though, and remembered her as well.  And when they looked at little Jarret’s memorial, they couldn’t help but get misty-eyed thinking about his adorable plump cheeks and how cheerfully he had told them how he loved cobbler and fishing and the outdoors, just like Iris did.  They hoped he would grow up happy and successful in his timeline, whatever it was now.



Across the courtyard from those memorials were the ones for Orion’s descendants.  Ronald Wainwright and his three children, Charity, Markus, and Micah, were all lined up in a row with flowers on each side.  Boyd and Susan had found the bright and enthusiastic children delightful even though Ronald hinted that for him, raising them alone was stressful and overwhelming.  They missed them, but they were also glad that Orion’s new descendants did not appear to have the marital problems that poor Ronald did, whose more alien-blooded spouse had decided he was “too human” and abandoned him and their children to go live on Sixam.

“I wonder if Orion will end up with that problem in the opposite way.  If one day, whoever he’s with will decide the alien thing is too hard to handle, and leave, like Tara did,” mused Boyd.  “Lola only said he has a wife and kids someday.  Not that it would last forever, and a lot of marriages don’t, even without that kind of stress.  It is a lot to accept and deal with, especially in our time.  Probably even after he tells the world.  That might make it even harder, just in a different way.”

“I had the impression it was the deception Tara couldn’t deal with more so than the alien thing, but maybe it was both.  It’s not like Orion wanted to talk to either of us about it, not that I could blame him.  But she was pretty high strung, even more than you, I think.  Maybe even if she had gotten over him keeping it from her, the threat of abductions and keeping secrets and worrying, especially about kids they might’ve had someday if they got married, would’ve been too much for her in the long run.”

Boyd let out a rueful chuckle.  “Higher strung than me?  That’s saying something.  You might be right, though.”  He eyed the memorials, deep in thought.  “What if it is April?  Just because she’s young and not into committing now, maybe later she changes her mind.  Some people do about that stuff as they get older.”

“Maybe.  Though I didn’t see any signs of blue hair in those descendants,” Susan remarked dryly.  “Guess that means it’s not natural.”

“Ha.  What a shocker, huh?  Probably wouldn’t look bad on Orion’s coloring, though.”



Their final stop at the cemetery was the memorials that Emit put up for them last time, the ones of Donovan Wainwright and his son Benjamin Trent.  They were Patrick’s descendants that they had met on their very first trip to Oasis Landing, back when Patrick was a toddler, Chris was a baby, and they still lived on Maywood Lane.  Before Orion and Iris, before they owned the lab, and before they won the lottery with numbers they had gotten on that very trip.  Donovan and Benjamin and Leilani, who in this timeline was no longer in Oasis Landing or connected to them in any way, had been a nice family that Boyd and Susan enjoyed getting to know, even if it was saddening to see how they struggled financially in a poorer section of Oasis Landing.  They wondered whatever became of them in the timeline they were in now, a timeline that Emit told Boyd and Susan did not end happily for them, either.



After paying their respects to their lost descendants, Boyd and Susan visited Mercury Stellar Observatory for a tour and a chance to learn even more about the advances of science in Oasis Landing time.  They observed some stellar activity and learned more about Sixam, and then took an opportunity to experiment with zero-G for fun.  That turned out to be more stressful than expected, however.  Boyd and Susan were not in the best shape physically and doing that drove the point home in spades.  Boyd wrenched his already fragile back, leaving him in need of a strong painkiller, which, thankfully, a medic plumbot at the facility had readily available.  Susan did not injure herself, but the experience was a strain on her system.  She nearly passed out and felt so weak, wobbly, and woozy afterward that she had to rest for a good twenty minutes before she could walk again.

“Getting old is the worst, except for the alternative,” she grumbled as they left.

Boyd rubbed his sore back as he hobbled alongside her.  “You can say that again.”



That was more than enough exertion for them for the day, but they wanted to make the most of their time in Oasis Landing.  After they left the observatory, they went to the bot arena to watch a live competition.  As time travel guests of Emit Relevart and with Susan being the Renowned Philanthropist, they got some of the best seats in the house.  They had a great time seeing the best of the high-tech professional plumbots compete in a spectacular show while they reclined in luxury seating.



Afterward, they treated themselves to a fancy dinner at Oasis Landing’s exclusive lounge, the Erutuf.  Although some of the food was synthesized, it was a step up in quality and selection from the options at the community center or Sam’s Synth’d Staples, and it was served in such a way that they could tell at least some of it was also prepared by hand, even if it was by a plumbot chef.

Susan enjoyed the house olive platter appetizer while Boyd browsed the nectar list.  “Wow.  Non-synthesized nectar, some of it almost as vintage as we are.  This one was just 114 years after our time.  Think we should try it?  Modern-ancient nectar?”

“What’s the blend?  I want something that pairs well with what we’re ordering for dinner.”

“Gralladina fran and cranerlet nuala with hints of avornalino, meloire, pomelo, flame, cherry, and the zest of life.”

“Ooh, that is a nice mix.  Order it.  The zest of life might put a pinch of it back into us after that zero-G ordeal.”



After they ate and enjoyed their future-to-them-but-ancient-to-the-future nectar, Boyd and Susan stayed to watch the lounge’s live entertainment, a talented laser rhythm-a-con artist named Fawn Lacey.  Although they were too tired for any dancing, the music was good with a catchy beat.  “It’s too bad Patrick’s not here,” Susan mused.  “I bet he’d get all sorts of inspiration watching a pro from this era play.”

“Do you think Emit will ever bring him or any of the other kids here?  Or do you think he won’t bother because they’re not in his direct line?  He never brought Blair or Cycl0n3, and they are.”

“It’s anyone’s guess what Emit will do.  Maybe if he has some sort of timeline project reason, he might.  Who knows?  But regardless, I think we should tell them about him before our time’s up.”

“If for no other reason than to explain what the plum the portal is and not to freak out if a blue-haired time traveler appears in the basement someday.  And so they know how important it is to keep it secret and out of the way of nosy guests, and to keep it off limits to their kids until they’re old enough to understand what it is.”

“Definitely.  Imagine what could happen if a couple of kids wandered through an opened portal on a lark to who knows when?”

Boyd shuddered.  “I already did, way back when Patrick and Orion went nosing around down there without permission when they were kids, and they asked us later what the ‘mad scientist junk’ in the basement was.  Well, Patrick was technically a teenager, but that’s still a kid in my book.”

“I’m so glad it wasn’t active, and they didn’t hurt themselves.  Makes you wonder what else the kids got into over the years that they didn’t ‘fess up to or get caught at.”

“At this point, I think I’d rather not know since, presumably, no one got hurt.  It’s better for my nerves that way.”



It was late by the time they got back to the community center, and Boyd and Susan were exhausted despite their relaxing evening out.  Although they hated to admit it, they knew how much of a toll being in Oasis Landing and its radiation was taking on them, and that staying even one more day would be pressing their luck.  They decided to talk to Emit as soon as possible.

But there was a slight delay when they arrived.  On the ground floor lobby were several of the local plumbots, including Delta, who Boyd had befriended on his very first trip to Oasis Landing and who Susan had also met on a previous trip.  She greeted them cheerfully, scanning them both.  “Boyd Wainwright and Susan Wainwright, the Renowned Philanthropist!  It is a pleasure to see you two again!”

“Hi, Delta!”

“Hello.  It’s nice to see you, too.  How are you?”

“Performing optimally, thank you!  How are you doing?”

“Well, but very tired,” Susan replied.  “We’ve had a long couple of days here with lots to do, but we had a great time.  Unfortunately, we’re leaving soon.  We’re on our way to talk to Emit now.”  She turned to Boyd.  “If you want to chat a minute, I can go ahead and find him.”

“Sure.  That’s fine, honey.  I’ll catch up.”

“Sorry to say hi and run on you, Delta.  It was nice seeing you again, though.”

“It was nice seeing you, too, Susan!  Have a good night and a safe portal voyage.”



After Susan went up the elevator chute, Delta turned to Boyd.  “You appear to have aged significantly since I last saw you.  Many years must have passed in your time.”

“More than a few, I’m afraid.  I’m an old man now.  But I’m glad you still recognize and remember me.  You’re the first plumbot I ever met.”

“My memory circuits are excellent,” Delta replied on a note of pride.  “I am proud to be the first of my kind you encountered.”

“I’ve built a couple of plumbots in my time back home now.  Emit said they didn’t make it to your time, but I like to think you’d have liked them if you could’ve met them.”

“I would have liked to.”  She eyed him curiously.  “I regret to hear you are leaving soon.  Do you plan to return to Oasis Landing?”

Boyd’s smile turned wistful.  “I’d like to say yes, but I don’t think this old body will make it through another trip here.  So, unfortunately, this is probably the last time I’ll get to see you.”

“Oh, I am sorry.  It was always a pleasure socializing with you and Susan.  I wish you both well in your future in the past and in all your future endeavors.  I will store you fondly in my memory banks.”



“You, too.”  He hugged her.  “Take care of yourself, and stick around a long time.”

“I shall do my best to function indefinitely.”

Function indefinitely.  The words stuck with him.  While it was great for a plumbot, he could not help but think that was exactly what he and Susan had decided not to do.  They wanted to live a long and fulfilled life, yes, but not so long that it became just functioning indefinitely.  “Glad to hear it.  Goodbye, Delta.”



Susan found Emit already in his private room at the center, but he had not gone to bed yet, so that was where Boyd caught up with him and Susan.  “I was just telling Emit how we finished meeting our descendants today, and the last few things we did.”

“Oh, good.  What about the stuff we want to take back with us?”

She nodded.  “He says that’s all fine.  I also told him our concerns about how much longer we should stay.”



“And unfortunately, I think you’re right,” Emit said on a regretful note.  “What Susan described going through after the zero-G and you hurting your back, well, that kind of thing is usually pretty safe for anyone who’s not infirm or elderly.  No offense meant, of course,” he added with an apologetic nod to Susan.

She nodded back, while Boyd responded.  “It’s all right.  I’m well aware I’m older than dirt.”

“I hate to see you two go so soon, but if you’re sure about not taking any more treatments…”

“We are,” said Susan.

“Then I guess it’s time.”



Emit gave each of them a heartfelt hug.  “It was great getting to know and working with you.  I know for you it’s been years, practically a lifetime of me blipping in and out.  For me, relatively shorter, but just as meaningful.  Directly interacting with your own ancestors isn’t a risk a time traveler takes lightly, even an experienced one like me.  But it was worth it, and you two have helped me more than you’ll ever know.  I’m proud to call you my great to the eighth grandparents and the generations between us my ancestors.”  He paused.  “Well, maybe not Pl4sm4 Sw0rd, but every family’s got a black sheep or two.”

“Do you think you’ll ever go and meet any of the others?  Blair or Cycl0n3?  I know they’re not scientists like us, but…”

“If you recall, I did meet Blair, briefly, although that wasn’t intentional and bad timing considering she almost arrested me.  But she was just doing her job and I don’t have any hard feelings.  Except maybe towards Nancy Landgraab.”  He made a face.  “She really was a pain in the capacitors.”

“Yeah, we were thinking more intentionally,” said Boyd.  “I’m sure Blair would be thrilled to meet you and see Oasis Landing.  Cycl0n3, Chris, and Travis, too.  Especially Travis.  Even if he’s not the one that’s technically your descendant.”

Emit chortled.  “Nice try, but I’m still not biting.  I told you, I can’t tell you that.”

“Can’t really blame us for trying,” teased Susan.

“No.  I wouldn’t expect any less.  Curiosity to a dangerous degree runs in our family.”  He took a long look at them.  “Take care of yourselves.  I’d say to make the most of that time you’ve got left, but I already know you will.”

Susan nodded.  “Thanks for everything.  We’ll never forget you.  We also plan to tell our kids about you, at least some.  Share our stories about you and this place, explain a few things, and so they at least know what the portal is on the off chance you do ever come back to meet any of them.”

Boyd eyed him curiously.  “Do you think you will?”

“Oh… anything is possible.  I have all the time in the world, after all.”

“I guess this is goodbye, then,” Susan said wistfully.

“Because we won’t see you again, will we?” asked Boyd.

“Not in this life, I’m afraid.”

“That’s what we figured.  Good luck, Emit, and thank you.”

“We’ll miss you,” Susan added.

“Same, Great to the Eighth Grandma and Grandpa,” he replied warmly, and escorted them to the portal.



After some plumbot helpers of Emit’s got the items they wanted safely transported through, the Wainwrights stood beside the portal and looked out at Oasis Landing from the community center’s rooftop patio.  “So this is really it,” Boyd said thoughtfully.  “Our last firsthand look at life in the future.”

“But we go home knowing we made it better.  For not only our descendants but all around.  We made a difference.”

“And we might even change more when we go back, with the things we brought and the time we still have.”

She squeezed his hand.  “I suppose we’ll never know for sure, but I like to think we will.  Do you think Emit will ever come to any of the others?  Even if it’s not Blair and Cycl0n3 or whichever of the boys is his ancestor, maybe the other?  Or Patrick or Orion or Iris?  After all, he cared enough about the werewolves to make sure Maria was abducted, and he’s not related to them, and the alien relations Orion and his line have a role in obviously matter to him.  And he said he found Iris interesting because she was a plantsim and a surprise…”

“I hope so, and considering he never told us not to tell them, even after we said we would, I’d say it’s a good possibility he’s at least thinking about it.”

“Then when we get back, we better start thinking about where and when to start, because it’s quite a story.”

Boyd chuckled.  “Somewhere between, ‘Hey, Patrick, here’s some new laser rhythm-a-con music, now go get your brother and sisters over here and we’ll tell you about where we got it,’ to ‘By the way, you know how you thought the spaceship on the roof and the ancient occult spell book and potions in the basement were the weirdest things in the house?  Yeah, about that…’”

“Oh, Watcher.  We really have our work cut out for us, don’t we?  They already think we’re a couple of little old mad scientists.  Imagine what they’ll think now.”

“That we’re more highly accomplished little old mad scientists than they previously thought.  Especially since one of us even has a statue in her honor to prove it 354 years later in the future.”

Susan couldn’t help but smile at that.  “I suppose I can live with that.”



And with that, Boyd and Susan took their final look at Oasis Landing, committed it to memory, and stepped into the time portal to head home.

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 124
« Reply #354 on: June 26, 2020, 10:56:40 PM »
Chapter 124



After they returned from Oasis Landing, Susan and Boyd discovered how much of a toll the trip had taken on them physically.  They were exhausted and slept for the better part of a day after coming home.  Even after resting, they felt weaker and slower, with more old age aches and pains than ever.  Before, they only needed to use a cane on occasion, like when Boyd’s back would flare up or they were on their feet longer than usual.  Now, they needed them for walking more than just a few feet.

“I hate being a decrepit old woman with a cane.  I feel like everyone’s staring at me feeling sorry for the helpless little old lady or something.”

“Oh, honey, you’re not decrepit,” Boyd reassured her.  He was more used to the cane, but he did not like needing it any more than she did.  “You still look lovely and dignified.  No one would dare say otherwise.”

“Only because they know I’d shove my cane somewhere the sun didn’t shine if they did.”

“Well, if you’ve still got the energy to do that, I’d say you’re still pretty spry.”



While the canes slowed them down physically, they did not stop them from putting what they learned and brought back from Oasis Landing to good use.  Boyd reverse engineered the nanites he acquired and learned how to construct them in the present, and he also upgraded Plumboptimus to better quality and higher efficiency.  Since he was their first plumbot, some parts of him were more crudely made due to their comparatively novice skills at the time.  After the upgrade, though, he was advanced as any they could build now.



Susan tinkered with their new imported food synthesizer.  Although they had a working prototype of their own, having an actual Oasis Landing machine to work on was a fun project.  She hoped to make theirs run just as efficiently, and in the meantime, the Oasis Landing version was a nice novelty.  It only came with the basic recipes, and Susan had not figured out how to program custom recipes into it yet, but they did get a program for Boyd’s Fruti Bobs for it that she installed.

For now, they kept that in the garage workshop with some of their other non-secret experimental tech, like the other food synthesizer and body sculptor they brought home from the lab.  They did not tell anyone else where it came from yet, and the rest of the household assumed it was just more tech from Wainwright Innovations’ development shop.  Even Orion, who worked in that division part time, did not ask beyond being curious what it was.  The lab had so many projects that it was near impossible to be familiar with all of them without reading reports nonstop.



Although they planned to tell their family about Emit and Oasis Landing eventually, they decided to hold off on doing it right away.  It was a long and involved story, and they wanted to give as much detail as they could when the time came to gather everyone and tell it.  In the meantime, they kept working on projects that were reasonably close to finished and chronicled every detail they could remember.

Boyd re-read through Maria’s unwritten novels and noted changes in the text.  They were artifacts that survived the timeline changes even though poor Helena Wolff, who gave them to them, had not.  It seemed that Maria wrote the novels in both versions of the timeline, but parts of them did change.  Fortunately, even though the text of the files changed with the timeline, the notes Susan made after reviewing previous versions had not, and she had made comprehensive ones of things she thought might have been inspired by some experience Maria drew from real life.

One stark difference he noticed was that the last time Susan read them, years ago, there was no mention of werewolves in either novel.  Now, however, one of the main characters, a “kind but often sour-tempered” man named Brad who ran an orphanage, had a “hideous family secret” and disappeared on the full moon.  It was later revealed that he was a werewolf.  Boyd and Susan, when he told her, found it amusing that Maria gave her hated curse to a stand-in for her brother instead of herself, but Susan quipped that Sofia had enough angst without adding that to the pile, so even someone like Maria might find that overly dramatic.  They felt more uneasy than amused, however, when later on in the story Chad bit Redd, Sofia’s hot-headed artist lover, and turned him into one, especially when Redd almost tore the head off of a longtime enemy in a wolfed-out rage.  They hoped that was purely a product of Maria’s imagination and there was no real life inspiration beyond Patrick’s temper.



Susan updated her notes with all the discrepancies Boyd found, and included them in her detailed chronicling of everything related to Emit and Oasis Landing.  That alone was quite a project, but well worth it.  Although she felt like she had enough time, knowing the spoiler date of the year of her death on the statue, she also knew it was possible that anything they did now in the present could change it.  It made sense to have a written record anyway.  Memories were fallible, and it would make a good reference to make sure nothing was left out.  It was also a backup in case something happened to her and Boyd before they got a chance to tell them.  She did not like thinking about that, but people their age often became sick or otherwise incapacitated even if they were still alive.  They had to be pragmatic.

She tackled the project with her usual zeal and enjoyed it more than many would have, even Boyd.  Although he loved science, he had always regarded the report writing aspect of it tedious and tended to procrastinate on it when it was necessary.  Susan did not mind, though.  She liked working at her computer with little Jessica often in the room, cooing away happily in her baby mat.  It was nice being around her granddaughter, and made her nostalgic for days long past, when her kids and other grandchildren were that age.  It seemed like it was not that long ago that the baby girl in the study with her was Iris, with Orion toddling around her and Patrick talking to his imaginary friend while playing on the easel and Blair, a young woman then, might’ve brought little Chris by.  Now, that was Patrick’s baby girl on the play mat.  Orion was grown and attending university, Iris was nearly a young adult herself, and Blair and Cycl0n3 were old enough to collect Sim Security while their kids were also grown up or nearly so. 



One thing that really brought that point home was when Jessica got a surprise in the mail from Moonlight Falls.  Like her father, Iris, and Blair’s children, little Jessica received one of the mysterious dolls.  Fluffs, Jessica’s doll, was similar to Buddy, Patches, and the ones Chris and Travis had gotten, but this time they knew what it was even if none of them knew exactly who sent it.

Patrick and Maria set it in Jessica’s crib and discussed the matter.  No one in Maria’s family had ever gotten any, and while she knew about Buddy and Patches and the spirit dolls, she found the notion of their daughter having one a little “weird and creepy.”  Still, she conceded that she was used to Buddy and Patches and left the final call as to whether Jessica should keep hers up to Patrick since he was the one who had firsthand experience with one.

Buddy was annoyed to be called that by a “drama queen werewolf who had no room to talk,” but Patrick blew that off since Maria and Buddy would never be each other’s greatest fans.  He was glad Maria couldn’t see or hear Buddy except for whatever she sensed while transformed, because then he would have a real mess of drama on his hands being that neither could see past their own plumbobs about certain things, in his opinion.  He loved them both anyway, but it was true.

As for Fluffs, Patrick decided to keep the doll.  Even though Buddy had caused him frustration back when no one believed him about him, he had been a loyal friend to him his whole life and, at times, he was the only one he felt he could fully confide in without judgment.  Even Maria, who he loved wholeheartedly, Patrick could not voice certain thoughts to without feeling like they were better left unsaid.  Perhaps it was because of what Buddy was that made him different, but he was.  Patrick did not want to deny Jessica a chance at a meaningful lifelong friendship like that.  And at least, unlike his parents with him, he would believe Jessica about Fluffs when the time came.  She would not have to endure the second-guessing and the well-meaning but misplaced concern about her sanity that he did.



Patrick had just set Jessica down for a nap with Fluffs when Buddy came in.  “So, what can you tell me about Fluffs here?  She is one of you, right?  And she is a she?”

“Yeah, she’s a girl.  And not much, other than she’s young, like Jessica.  Same age.”  He looked at her.  “We grow up with you.  The people we’re sent to.”

“And you don’t remember anything before that or whatever.”  Buddy had told him that before, but he wanted to make sure.

“Nope.  I just… am.  Like you.”

“Like reincarnation, if you believe in that stuff.  You don’t remember stuff from any previous lives.”

“If you believe in that stuff at all,” Buddy scoffed.  “But that’s what the geezers said it was probably like when they finally admitted I existed anywhere but in your head.”

“So, Fluffs will probably be curious about a lot of things, then.  Like I was.  You could help her understand.  Kind of like she was your kid, if you want.”

“Hah.  Yeah, I could, but I didn’t sign up for that, any more than I signed up for being Patchy-kins’ big brother.”

“You still act like it anyway.  Besides, you like Patches, even if she gets on your nerves sometimes.  Admit it.”

“She’s all right,” he conceded.  “A lot better than that nasty little gnome of Alien Boy’s.  Which reminds me, spring is here.  Soon I can punt his pointy hat into the pool again.  Maybe I’ll teach Fluffs that.”

“Glad to hear you’re going to set a nice positive example,” Patrick teased, while Buddy grinned.

“What are best friends for?”



While Patrick and Buddy discussed the arrival of Fluffs and his potential doll fatherhood, Patches helped Iris get ready for her senior prom.  “You look so pretty!  Cameron’s going to be dazzled when he sees you.”

“I hope so.  I want to be picture perfect to match my hot Simstagram model.”

“I don’t think you have to worry about that.  You’ll look amazing together and have a great time.”

“Heh.  Well, I don’t think I could have a worse time than last prom.”  She knocked on her dresser.  “But I’m not tempting you, fate.  Knock on… well, this isn’t actually wood, but close enough.”

“At least you’ve got a different date this time.  Kristal and Rashida, now they’re the ones really tempting fate.”

“Rashida never messed around on Alfonso again and he seems over it, so I guess it’s all in the past for them.”  She shrugged.  “As for Kristal and Lester, if they’re happy, that’s cool.”  She still felt a little bad about how things ended with Lester, but she was over him, and at least she and Kristal were friends again.  They still were not as close as they used to be, and Iris kept her distance from Lester to keep things from getting awkward again, but even they were on casually friendly terms.

“Do you know who Lane’s going with this time around?”

“Marci Stokes, I think.”  Iris barely knew her, other than that she was younger than them, in Esmeralda’s class, and she used to babysit Rashida’s little sister when Rashida had after school clubs and could not watch her herself.  “Hopefully, he learned his lesson and didn’t sleep with any of her friends behind her back right before prom this time.”  She finished touching up her lipstick and flashed a dazzling smile.  “There.  I think I’m good to go.  Wish me luck.”

Patches nodded in approval.  “Good luck, but I don’t think you need it.  You look gorgeous!”

“Aw, thank you!  I’ll let you know how it went when I get home.”

“I can’t wait!”



The limo picked up Iris first, then Cameron since his house was closer to the school.  She went inside to greet him, and he beamed when he saw her.  “Wow!  You look incredible!”  He handed her a pink corsage.  “Here.  This is for you.”

Being a plantsim, it was hard to impress her with flowers, but they were pretty, and she appreciated the thought behind it.  “Thank you.  They’re lovely.”

“I think you’re lovelier, but I’m glad you like them.  They do match everything okay, right?”

“They’re fine.”  She put them on and admired how he handsome he was in his crisp white tuxedo.  “You look great, too.  You ought to post this on your Simstagram.  Show off how good those workouts can make you look all dressed up.”

“Not to mention how hot of a date you can get looking like that, right?” he replied with a flirtatious wink.

“Oh, you’re so cute!  We should get going, though.  We don’t want to be more than fashionably late.”

Apollo, Cameron’s father, came over to see them off.  “Hi, Iris.  You look fantastic.  My son’s a lucky guy.”

“Thank you, Mr. Bloom.”

“You’re welcome.  You two have a good time.”  He looked at Cameron.  “Remember to call if you run late.”

“I will, Dad.  See you later.”  Iris could hear the edge in his tone indicating it was not the first time he had been nagged that way.  It amused her because she could relate.  Boyd had said the same thing to her on her way out, although in her case it was because her father worried needlessly while in Cameron’s it was because he was flaky and forgetful and more than once he had neglected to call or text when he should have.  He took her hand.  “Come on.  Let’s go.”



Iris and Cameron were not the only ones getting fussed over on their way to prom.  When the limo pulled up in front of the Sw0rd house, Travis hoped to get to it without a final gushing commentary from his mother.  He had already endured repetitions of how handsome he looked and how Starla was just going to be so surprised and love how distinguished her grumpy pants t-shirt wearing boyfriend cleaned up, and oh, they were going to have such a fun and romantic prom together!  While he accepted that was just how she was, it did not make it less annoying hearing it over and over.

Cycl0n3 was less repetitive, but his remark that Travis looked “pretty good for being in a penguin suit” and “kind of like one of those old-timey stage magicians” did not inspire confidence when Travis thought he looked halfway decent in his more old fashioned style suit, especially for the discomfort and effort of dressing up.  Blair stuck up for him, reassuring him that he looked handsome and dignified and his father would not know what fashion was if it bit him in the plumbob, but Cycl0n3 just protested that he did not say Travis looked bad, just that all suits looked stuffy and uncomfortable and that was why he never liked wearing them, either.  He did agree that Travis looked nice, but then he added that if he really wanted to impress Starla with that “kind of Goth outfit,” that he could always add a top hat.

He was glad when the limo beeped its horn.  “I’ve got to go, or I’ll be late, and then this will be funeral garb.  So, see you later.”

Blair hugged him.  “Have fun and ignore your father.  You look fantastic, and he still thinks that ratty old yeti t-shirt is the height of fashion.”

Travis rolled his eyes, but he accepted the hug.  “I will.  There’s actually nothing wrong with yetis, but I get what you’re saying.”

“Ha!  And you said he had no taste.  Have fun.  Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.”

“Like that narrows it down.”

“Don’t get arrested, intoxicated, or otherwise in trouble, either with the law, the chaperones, or Starla,” Blair clarified.  “Other than that, have a ball!”

“Heh.  Sure, but I’ve really got to go now.  Bye!”



When Travis arrived at Starla’s house, he presented her with the flowers he got her.  “Uh, happy prom?”  He was not sure what the appropriate greeting was, but he was so distracted by how pretty she looked that he could not come up with anything better on the fly.  Much like his father, sarcasm was more of his forte than charm, although he liked to think he could pull off sincere, even if not suave, when he tried.  “You look great!  Really pretty.”  And she did.  While she was wearing a less traditional prom outfit, a silken skirt and blouse combination, she looked lovely for the occasion and the bold blue seemed to make her eyes shine all the brighter.

“Thanks.  You, too, all sharp dressed up in a tux.  I’ve never seen you in one except in the pictures from Patrick’s wedding.”

“It taught me how to sit through hours in a suit and dress shoes and pretend I know how to dance while not stepping on Esme’s feet because Mom and Maria had to have us in the wedding pictures.  But at least it means I got enough practice not to step on yours.”

“Good, because these don’t have steel toes,” she teased back as her mother came over to see them off.

“Travis!  Wow, you look fantastic!  Starla, you’ve got quite a handsome man escorting you here.”

“Thanks,” Travis said, while Starla responded in a tone Travis recognized and identified with all too well after dealing with his parents.

“I know, Mom.”

“And he brought you flowers, how sweet,” Darlene remarked.  “I’ll find a nice vase for you to put them in.  Now, you two go off and have the time of your lives!  Prom should be a night to remember.  I still have fond memories of mine.”



Starla side-eyed her.  “Didn’t you go with Dad?”  Her parents had her not long after her mom graduated high school, but they broke up when she was young.  Darlene and Michael had reconciled once after that, briefly, but that did not last either.

“Yes, but just because it didn’t work out long term doesn’t mean I didn’t have a good time or that it was somehow ruined by what happened later.  I really loved him back then.  Unfortunately, sometimes things with your high school sweetheart work out, and sometimes they don’t.”

“Well, gee, thanks for that vote of confidence for me,” Starla said on a sarcastic note, while Travis felt inexplicably torn between sympathizing and snickering.  He could not wait to compare notes on pre-prom parental gaffes once they got to the limo.

“Oh, you know that’s not what I meant.”  Darlene dismissed her sass with a wave.  Blair and Cycl0n3 were not the only parents in Sunset Valley used to grumpy teenagers and she took it in stride.  “All I’m saying is I’m sure you two will have a wonderful time.  Now go and have fun.  Enjoy yourselves.”

“Thanks.  See you later,” Starla replied as they headed out to the limo.



While the younger of Blair’s children was off to prom, the older was in a new situation, sending his adopted stepdaughter off to her first one.  Despite not being into the “romantic girly stuff,” Esmeralda was excited about the dance because she had fallen head over heels for her date, Owen Frio.

“Wow, Esme!  You look so pretty!” Hilda exclaimed.  “I’ve never seen you dressed up like that before.”

“She’s right.  You look lovely,” Morgana agreed.  “Owen will be dazzled.”

She blushed.  “Thanks.  I hope so.  I feel so weird like this, and I hope I do okay dancing.  I think the last time I did any formal dancing was back at Patrick’s wedding.”

“And then you were stuck dancing with my grouchy little brother, so I think you’ll do fine,” Chris teased her.

“You’ll have fun, Esme.  Just not too much.”  Tad chortled.  “Watch for people spiking the punch.  You don’t want to end up coming home hammered like Aunt Maria and Uncle Paddy-cakes did after their prom back in the day.”

Caleb snorted.  “I bet Uncle Paddy-cakes is the one who spiked it.”

Esmeralda’s eyes went wide, while Morgana hushed him.  “Oh, stop.  He did not.  It was one of their classmates and it was a serious matter.  Penny Bunch got very sick from it.”

“Not to mention Maria couldn’t walk straight.  Yeah, that was quite a sight,” Tad told the kids.  “You should’ve seen it.  Snooty Auntie Maria completely plum-faced and tripping in her heels over everything in sight.”

“So, like you klutz into everything on a regular day, then?” Caleb needled him.

Tad made a face at his little brother, while Esmeralda shifted and smoothed down her dress.  “Don’t worry about it,” Chris told her.  “You look great, and you’ve got more natural grace than either me or Tad, so you’ve got that going for you.  We stomped the plum out of each other’s feet.”

“Yeah, but we had fun.  You will, too.”

“I hope so.”  The limo beeped outside.  “Guess it’s time to go.”

Tad hugged her.  “Have fun.  And if Owen’s dad takes any pictures of you two all dressed up together, have him text them to me.”

“I will.”

“And if you happen to spot Travis doing anything embarrassing, please text pictures to me,” Chris added.  “I can always use more blackmail material.”

“Sure,” Esmeralda agreed with a giggle, and then headed out.



Despite her anxiousness, she had nothing to worry about.  Owen, looking dashing in his own tux, told her she looked gorgeous, and they started their night off with a steamy kiss in the limo.  They had a wonderful time together.  By the second dance, Esmeralda stopped worrying at all about whether her moves were good enough, and she just enjoyed being there with Owen.  She never even noticed if Travis said or did anything amusing enough to pass along to Chris later.



Fortunately for Travis, there was nothing bad for her or anyone else to notice, anyway.  He and Starla kept to themselves for the most part, and neither were inclined to show off complicated dance moves or go out of their way for attention.  Rather, their attention was all on each other, with the occasional snarky remark about classmates of theirs who were showing off.

“Iris sure seems to be angling for the prom queen crown,” Starla remarked as Iris and Cameron twirled by them in a flourish.  “Bringing her Simstagram model boyfriend and doing moves like that?”  Although Cameron did not go to school with them and was finishing his senior year remotely online from his old private school in Bridgeport, most everyone there knew who he was anyway.  Iris had introduced him to all her friends shortly after they started dating.   

“Unfortunately, it shows that she took scouting and not ballet back in elementary,” Travis scoffed when he saw her over-compensate and stumble, although she did not fall because Cameron caught her in time.  She played it off with another I-meant-to-do-that flourish.  “It does explain the masterful angling, though.”



Travis and Starla were not wrong that Iris hoped she might get the coveted prom queen crown, but her fancy dancing was mostly a celebration, knowing and showing everyone that she was having an absolutely great time with the most perfect date ever.  A stark in-your-face contrast to the winter dance, where she had been so hideously humiliated that she left wanting to bury herself in the dirt until spring rather than face everyone at school afterward.  She noticed Lane with his date, Lester with Kristal, and Alfonso with Rashida, and she wondered if any of them had similar thoughts.  Not that it mattered, because it was all ancient history and totally behind them, but still, she smiled just a little broader and danced a little happier knowing that this time, prom night was coming up roses instead of filled with fertilizer.



Her night got even better when she was pronounced prom queen.  She had hoped she was a serious contender, but she was not the only popular girl in school, even if she did have the hottest date and prettiest dress in her humble opinion.

She accepted the crown with a beaming smile and twirled with Cameron in delight.  “I’m so excited I actually got it!”

“Did you really think you wouldn’t?”  Cameron smooched her.  “I figured you would.”

“Well, I hoped, but no, I didn’t think it was a given or anything.  It’s not like we were the only good-looking dancers with a lot of friends in class.”  She admired her crown.  “But it sure feels like a nice reward after how horrible my last prom was.”  Although Cameron had not been in Sunset Valley then, she told him her woeful tale of it when they decided to go to this one together.  “I’m so glad you came with me.”

“I told you we’d have a good enough time it’d make you forget that llama load.”  He put his arm around her.  “Congratulations, Your Highness.”

She leaned in closer, enjoying his embrace.  “As a queen, it should be Your Majesty, but thank you anyway.  I couldn’t have done it without my Prince Charming.”

“Aw, I don’t get to be King Charming?”

“Maybe someday.  In the meantime, you’ll have to settle for being a royal consort.”

He grinned.  “Does that come with the benefits I think it does?”

She let out a flirtatious giggle.  “Oh, possibly.  Perhaps we can discuss it in the limo on our way home.”



While the teens danced the night away at prom, Boyd and Susan visited Blair and Cycl0n3 so they could catch up and give Cybelle a tune-up and the things they got for her in Oasis Landing.  “What a nice surprise!”  Blair greeted each of her parents with a hug.

“Quite a whack with the old stick we got seeing Travis, Iris, and Esme all off to prom tonight, huh?” Cycl0n3 quipped from his rocking chair.  “Sure makes me feel old.  It must be even worse for you, with Travis being your actual grandkid and Esme the honorary great-granddaughter.  At least I’m still a generation behind you two.”

Susan refused to dignify his trolling with an answer while Boyd just chalked it up to typical Cycl0n3 and chose to be amused.  “The cane is enough of an old stick for me without worrying about that.  I just hope they all have a good time and stay safe.”



“Speaking of staying safe and ‘old sticks,’ what’s with the canes?”  Blair eyed her parents with concern.  “How long have you had that much trouble getting around?”

Boyd waved his hand dismissively.  “Oh, my back’s been terrible for ages.  You know that.”

“Yes, but it didn’t used to be so bad you needed a cane all the time.  Did it just flare up, or did you fall and hurt yourself and not tell anyone again?”  Although Chris had kept his word and not tattled to Blair, Susan told her later after she thought the statute of limitations on well-meaning lectures was up.  She was wrong.  Blair called her father almost immediately and went on to him about taking care of himself to the point where it felt like she was the parent.  He knew it came from a place of love, but it did not make it any more fun to listen to.

“No, Blair.  I just…”  He sighed.  “I’m just old.”

She frowned, more out of concern than frustration, as she realized just how frail and old her parents had become.  “I know, but… just, please, be careful and take care of yourselves.”  She turned to her mother.  “Both of you.  Mom, what happened to you?  I never saw you use a cane before.  How long have you been having trouble?”

“I can walk fine.  I just get dizzy spells and aches sometimes and I feel a little more stable with it.  That’s all.  Like your father said, annoying old age.”  Susan shot Cycl0n3 a sharp look.  “No comments from the peanut gallery.”

“Nah, not when you’re dealing with serious stuff like that.  I’m sorry.  That sucks.”  He cracked a rueful smile.  “Besides, I’ve got no room to talk about old age here from my rocking chair with my own bum back.”



Boyd decided it was time to redirect the depressing conversation.  “Well, we’re not completely obsolete yet, so try not to worry.  Why don’t I go get started tuning up Cybelle?”  He looked at the plumbot.  “You ready for your upgrade?”

“I am pleased to accept that.  Thank you!”

While Boyd explained the particulars of Cybelle’s upgrade to her, Blair continued talking with her mother.  “Why didn’t you tell me you were having dizzy spells?  That could be more than just age, you know.  Did you actually go to the doctor?  I know you can be just as stubborn as Dad when it comes to things like that.”

Susan tried not to be annoyed that her daughter was talking to her like she was one of her children.  “Morgana said it’s probably just a bit of hypoglycemia.”  It was a half-truth, since she had once asked Morgana about her occasional lightheadedness in a casual conversation at a family gathering, although it was well before their Oasis Landing trip.  “You don’t need to worry.  Your father and I are both fine.  Just dealing with some of the downsides of, you know, getting up there.”  Even though she accepted it, it still hurt her pride to admit that she was old.

It was enough to mollify Blair, although she could tell her mother was downplaying it for her sake.  “All right, but promise me you’ll tell me if you or Dad do get sick or have any more problems.  I want to know.  I love you and I want to be there to help you if you need it.  Don’t keep me in the dark.  And definitely don’t avoid the doctor just because you don’t want to hear bad news.”

“I won’t, sweetie.”

She shot her father a knowing look.  “That goes for you, too.”



“I won’t,” Boyd replied while working on Cybelle.

“You better not,” she asserted playfully.  “Just because you’re my parents doesn’t mean I can’t go all retired Cop Mom on you, too.”

“Oh, I know that full well.”

Cycl0n3 snickered from his rocker.  “I love it when, for once, I’m not the one in trouble.”

“Well, we’ll give you five minutes and that’ll change,” quipped Susan.

“Oooh.  Careful, there.  You’re sounding an awful lot like a grumpy old lady with that cane.”

That time Boyd snorted.  “You should’ve given him more credit, honey.  It didn’t even take him one minute, let alone five.”

“He’s why I’ve got just as much gray hair as the rest of you, even though I’m the youngest,” Blair giggled.

“Ah, you wouldn’t know what to do without me keeping your skills sharp.”



Boyd finished upgrading Cybelle.  “She’s all ready to go.  Outfitted with an extra chip slot that I took the liberty of adding a simulated emotions chip to.  She can now comprehend and experience something akin to our emotional states.”

Blair was impressed.  “Wow, cool!  You’ve got feelings now, Cybelle?  How are you feeling now?”

“I am happy,” she replied on what sounded like an upbeat note.  “I enjoy interacting with all of you.”

“Happy is the default, and I set her in the mode where she can change her emotions on her own as she responds.”

“You can also set her in a specific mode if you want, but most of the time, her A.I. will sort itself out, so it shouldn’t be necessary,” Susan explained.  “Just keep in mind that she can read your emotional state and tone to an extent when you interact with her.”

“Sure.  I wouldn’t be mean to her, anyway,” said Blair.

Cycl0n3 nodded.  “I’ll keep my snark to a minimum until I figure out how she deals with it.  Wouldn’t want to get an angry zap like Plumboptimus gave Orion that time.”

“And I’ll warn Travis not to get snappy with her.  Sometimes he can be a little grumpy-pants when he gets impatient.”

“In that case, she should be good to go.  Oh, Boyd, did you give them the new tune-up tool yet?”

“I was just about to.”  He handed it to Blair.  “This will tune her up more efficiently.  She’ll probably do it herself often enough that you won’t need to, although checking every so often never hurts.  And, of course, if you run into any issues, call us.”

“That goes for you, too,” Susan told Cybelle.  “If there’s anything you want us to fix, let us know and we’ll take care of it.”

She beeped happily.  “Thank you.  I will store that in my protocols.”

“Yeah, thanks,” Cycl0n3 echoed.  “You’ve spoiled us with her.  She was great before, and now she’s even better.”

Blair smiled at her parents.  “It was great having you over, too.  Thanks for coming.”

“We were happy to,” said Boyd.

“Now you two make sure you don’t overdo it.  Get enough rest and keep yourselves tuned up.  Got it?”

They could not help but find her persistence endearing.  “Got it, officer,” Boyd agreed.

“Will do.”



Orion went to Sunset Valley’s martial arts academy that night.  April was working, and none of his friends were doing anything interesting, either.  Since he did not feel like tagging along with his parents to visit Blair or bumming around the house with Patrick, Maria, the baby, and Plumboptimus, he decided to do some martial arts practice.  Although he could also do that at home, the academy had better ambiance for it.

It was not crowded at that hour, and the lobby was empty.  He changed for practice and headed to the training room.  At first, he thought he had the place all to himself, but as he started down the hall, he sensed even before he could hear it that someone was in there.  Someone familiar…



He stopped short when his eyes confirmed what his heart and mind had already sensed.

She was wearing a green belt now, breaking oak boards with the same precision and grace she always had while training.

Tara!

Orion’s heart soared through a spectrum of emotion.  He had no idea she was back in town.  They were still friends on social media, but he had unfollowed her to stop seeing unwanted reminders about her while getting over her.  He still looked her up on occasion, but the last time he had, she was still in Shang Simla, training with the masters of the Resolute Fist.

“Tara?”



Her hand snapped the board in two, and she turned around, startled.  “Orion!”  She was just as surprised to see him as he had been to see her.  “Hi.”

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 125
« Reply #355 on: July 20, 2020, 09:08:56 PM »
Chapter 125



When their eyes met, Orion sensed that Tara was both glad to see him and anxiously wishing they had not just run into each other like that.  He could relate; he felt much the same.  “Welcome back.  I didn’t know you were back in town.  And now you’re a green belt, I see.  Congratulations.”

“Thanks.  I earned it back in Shang Simla shortly before I left.  I posted about it, and that I was coming home, too, but I guess you didn’t see it.”  Immediately after she said that, she bit her lip, regretting it.  That was stupid.  Why would he bother reading my feeds anymore?  He probably just never unfriended me because he didn’t want to hurt my feelings.  He must think I’m such a pathetic weirdo.  No, stop!  Don’t think that.  He can probably hear it.  Oh, Watcher, what if he does?!

He had, and he truly wished he had not.  It would have been easier and less awkward.  No, I never unfriended you because I still care about you, even though you told me you were going off to study in Shang Simla because you had to get away from me.  I unfollowed you to try and get over you!  If anything, he felt like the pathetic one, because despite everything, his heart still soared imagining that she might be bothered by him not reading her feed because she still had feelings for him.  “No, sorry.  I haven’t seen your feed in a while.”  He paused and decided it would be better to just say why since she would wonder anyway.  “You wanted distance, and I thought it would be good for me too, to move on and not dwell on the past.”



She shuffled in place.  “It’s okay.  I understand.  I didn’t mean… sorry if I offended you.  I guess I was just caught off guard.  I never expected to run into you here tonight, it being a weekend night and all when most people are out with their friends or… whatever.”

He knew she meant April.  If Tara had been peeking at his feed like he did hers before he made himself stop, she had to know about her.  There were pictures of them together and mentions of their relationship.  If she had then gone on to look at April’s profile to see what she posted publicly, well, she was far from secretive about her polyamorous lifestyle.  But he had no room to judge.  The last time he looked at Tara’s posts, she posted about having a wonderful time with a guy she met in China, even if she did not link to or name him.  Orion took that as a final kick in the pants to stop torturing himself by looking her up.  It was over; they had both moved on.

Supposedly.

“Not tonight.  My friends or whatever are all doing other stuff, so I came here to practice in the peace and quiet.”  He smiled.  “Guess great minds think alike.”

“I guess so.”  She paused, feeling awkward.  “But I was almost done anyway, so I can leave and let you practice in peace.  I don’t want to be in your way.  Besides, I promised Mom I’d bring her some takeout for dinner when I got back, so I’ll just go ahead and do that.”



Orion was more disappointed than relieved.  “You don’t have to take off for my sake.  I don’t mind you being here.”  He met her eyes.  “I like to think we’re still friends, right?  And if you want to talk about something neutral, you could tell me what it was like studying and training with the Resolute Fist, one martial artist to another.”

“Of course we’re still friends.  I never hated you or anything, Orion.  You know that.”  She looked down.  “But it’s not exactly a neutral subject.  It was good studying there and I learned a lot, but… well, I left for a reason.  I don’t want to bother or burden you with that, though.”

“Oh.  Sorry.  I didn’t realize.”  He supposed it was a small victory that he had not automatically picked up on that, although he found it increasingly hard to resist the temptation to consciously read her and find out why.  “But if you want to vent or something, I don’t mind.  Have you tried the juice bar here yet?  We could grab one and chat for a few before you go.  Pre-workout for me and post-workout for you?”

“Sure.”  A hint of a smile broke through her anxiousness.  “It’s nice to see you again, Orion.”

He smiled back at her.  “It’s nice to see you, too.”



The juice bar was self-serve, and Orion whipped up a power blend.  “You okay with raspberry mint?”

“Yeah, that’s great.”

“You’ve probably had your fill of plum and pomelo flavors for a while, huh?  I remember when I went, they were everywhere.  They were good, but I bet after months you start missing the classic Sim Nation flavors.”

“A little bit.”  She sipped at it.  “Thanks.”



After cleaning the mixer, Orion picked up his glass, and they sat down together.  “So, if it’s okay to ask, what happened over there?  I can’t imagine you flunked out.  I know how dedicated you are, and from what I saw when I did look at your feed, you were doing well, and obviously you got to green belt since then.”



“No, I didn’t flunk out.  The training and studying, that went great.  I learned a lot, and my instructor, Shen Su, was amazing.  Really skilled, and patient, too.  He was one of the few who really got me and didn’t hold my natural foot-in-mouth disease against me.  I learned a lot about calming mediation from him.  Sometimes it even helps me relax when I’m alone and my anxiety ratchets up.”

“That’s good.”  Orion was glad for her.



“Yeah.  But he didn’t coddle me, either.  He was very by the book in training.  He kept me focused and on task.  Corrected me when my form was even the slightest bit off, but never cruel about it.  He was the kind of mentor you could really respect.  The worst thing was feeling like you disappointed him, because he didn’t lecture or berate you.  You just knew to do better and it made you want to try harder and not give up.”

Orion nodded.  That made sense, and it seemed like the kind of environment that would be good for someone like Tara, who often took criticism to heart or harsher than intended.

“He was nice off duty, too.  And kind of a ladies’ man outside the academy.  He had girlfriends and admirers all around Shang Simla!  But he was professional with us, his students.  It was highly frowned on to get personal in the romantic sense with anyone at the retreat.  Definitely not between students and mentors and discouraged between students.  ‘Romances are distractions,’ he would say.  They didn’t care if you were involved with someone outside of your training, as long as it didn’t distract you from it while you were there.  But when it was between students, he said it was ‘proven more times than bricks in the great wall’ that students can’t keep themselves focused when they’re involved with each other.”   She let out a rueful laugh.  “Which should’ve made it ideal, since that wasn’t what I was there for anyway.” I even went there to get away from that.

Orion sensed that unspoken bit, although he suspected that was because he thought the same thing when she said it, and his brain just auto-confirmed it.  He stayed silent while she continued, however.



“But that was more of a suggestion than a rule to Lee.  Lee Yao, one of the guys studying there with me.  He was nice, and charming.  Always laying on the compliments and being flirty.  At first, I tried not to think much about it, but after I got my green belt, we were paired up a lot for sparring and study sessions.”  Her voice took on a wistful edge.  “We became friends, and he was so sweet, and said he found my quirks, meaning me putting my foot in my mouth all the time, ‘cute.’  And I was lonely.  I went there partly so I could be alone, but…”



“But you got lonely after a while, especially when you remembered what it was like not being,” Orion guessed.  He could relate, although it hurt hearing her talk about it since them breaking up had been her choice.  But he had brought that on himself by asking in the first place.

“Yeah.”  She picked up on his tone.  “Sorry.  I shouldn’t have bothered you with this stuff, even if you said—”

“No, it’s okay.  I asked.  And it sucks that things got complicated.”  He offered her a rueful smile.  “So, what happened that you had to leave?  Did your mentor find out about you getting involved with this guy?”

“Heh.  If only it was that simple.  No.  That would’ve just gotten me a disappointed talking-to.  Which would’ve sucked, but not been worth leaving over.”



She took a swallow of her drink and continued.  “At first we just hung out together outside of the Resolute Fist retreat.  Having lunch in town, him showing me some of the local landmarks and sites, stargazing at the scholar’s garden.  Stuff like that.  Then we got closer and more than just friends, and stuff just happened.”  She closed her eyes.  “I fell for him.  Stupidly, idiotically, and against all my mentor’s advice and better judgment.”

Her voice cracked a bit.  “See, the worst part was that it wasn’t that he didn’t love me back or whatever.  I think he did, in that I don’t think he was just playing around or using me or lying.  I think he really did like me and feel something for me.  It just turned out I wasn’t the only one.”



“He had at least one other girlfriend, that I found out about the hard way one night when he took me out dancing to a fancy lounge in town.  We were having a great time, a really romantic night, and then this woman—and she had to be at least fifteen years older than him if a day—comes storming over and reads him the riot act for cheating.  Again.  See, I wasn’t the first.  I was just the most recent.  ‘This is what you’re studying up at the retreat, huh?  How to seduce silly naïve foreign girls?”

Her voice wavered.  “I felt so stupid.  So pathetic.  It was just like how humiliated I was after I found out Tom was cheating on me back in high school, except that this time, Lee came after me saying how sorry he was, how he never meant to hurt me, he really cared about me and thought we could have something while I was here in Shang Simla.  That he thought me and Sima would never meet and we both meant a lot to him and that was why he didn’t leave her.  Because I’d be going home eventually anyway, and it would just be a romance for both of us.”

She sobbed.  “How could I have been such an idiot?  I should’ve known there was something more to it when he said not to link him up on our social profiles when we started dating.  I thought it was because he wanted to keep it discreet so there wouldn’t be gossip or lectures at the retreat.  Not because his other girlfriends might see it.  None of them showed on his profile, either.  I can only wonder what he told them.  Probably the same llama load, not wanting a distraction lecture from the mentors.”



“I tried to stay anyway and finish my training… but I couldn’t.  My mentor was right.  It was too distracting.  Being around Lee all the time, because he was still training, too, and having to spar and study and train with him.  I couldn’t focus.  My confidence, my performance, it all tanked whenever he was around.  Master Su tried to help me through it, but I kept feeling like I let him down and disappointed him, too.  So I decided to come home and finish my training here.  There was no sense in me taking up a slot that someone else could put to better use.  Especially not with Lee planning to stay and join the order there.  So I talked it over with Master Su and made arrangements to work on my programs here.”  She sniffled.  “He told me that despite my distraction, I was one of his best students and had real talent.  And he hoped I would take this as a learning experience for more than just martial arts and come out stronger for it.  Which was nice to hear, but…”



“Did you?”

“Did I what?  Come out stronger?  Hell if I know.  All I really seem to have figured out is that I’m plum at realizing when people aren’t…”  She stopped herself before she put her foot in her mouth again, but the thought continued unspoken. …being honest with me.

Orion sensed it anyway, since she was emotional enough to be broadcasting, and it hit like a punch in the gut.

“Don’t blame yourself about me.  I had a lifetime of practice hiding who I really was and my cover stories down cold.”

Her lip quivered.  “Oh, Watcher, you sensed that.  Look, I didn’t mean—”



“Yeah, you did, but it’s fine.  It’s true.  I lied to you.  I ruined your ability to trust me by not telling you sooner.  I hate that there’s nothing I can do now to change that, and that it screwed up everything we had.”

“The way you lied isn’t the same, Orion,” Tara admitted.  “I realize that now, better than I did before.  While I was in Shang Simla, I didn’t just forget about you and everything that happened between us.  Master Su told me that it’s easiest to let things go when you can get to a place of acceptance, but to get there you need to reach a certain level of understanding.  I meditated on that, on some of my unresolved feelings, to try and resolve them.  I really do understand that you had good reasons and you never wanted to hurt me.  That you tried to do what you thought was right by everyone involved.  I forgave you for that a long time ago.  I really wish I could’ve gotten past being so scared to trust you again.  And being scared of… the other stuff.”

He lowered his voice.  “The alien stuff, you mean.”



“Yeah.  It’s—it’s a pretty big thing to wrap your mind around, and as much as I tried, that took some doing, too.  Especially with what you told me about them abducting Maria because she was with Patrick.  That kept me up nights and gave me nightmares where that’s exactly what happened to me.”

And that was before we knew what Maria’s abduction did to her with the werewolf gene, Orion thought ruefully.

“I hope this doesn’t come out wrong, because I really don’t think any less of you because of it.  I don’t.  It’s amazing in a way.  But it’s also scary as plum.  I hate that I feel that way, because I know what kind of person you are.  I don’t believe any of that was a lie, how you felt about me and treated me, and all the good times we had together.  I know you loved me.  You never would’ve told me if you didn’t.  I get that.  Honestly, I didn’t even want to admit this to myself for a while, but aside from the lies, I was terrified of what you being alien really meant.  Not just the abductions, but the lifetime of keeping it a secret, especially if we got back together and got more serious.  That I’d have to worry about them abducting me or my family while not being able to tell them the truth.  Not to mention what it might mean if we ever got married and had kids, what it’d be like worrying about them and what they’d have to go through like you did.  And that on top of that, I still felt like I couldn’t know for sure that you were being honest with me even after you promised you would, while knowing that you could be reading my thoughts at any time without me realizing while half the time I’m there second guessing whether the things someone says are what they really mean.  And because of all that, no matter how much I still loved you or wished we could be back together, I couldn’t stop being afraid to feel that way because I was sure it was a disaster waiting to happen.  Because it seems like that’s always how it goes…”  She sighed, embarrassed by her emotional ramble.  “I’m sorry.  You really didn’t need to hear all that garbage.”



“No, I actually did.  I’m glad you told me.  You know, I’m so used to keeping my secret because I always have, but I didn’t realize how hard that might be for you, for someone not used to living that way.  Because I thought I could protect you from being abducted, once you knew everything, I figured things would be easier from there.  I never thought about it like that.  For everything I did pick up on, I can’t believe I never sensed I was making you feel like I had some advantage over you that made you scared I’d abuse it.  I’d never do that, at least not on purpose, so it never occurred to me you might be afraid I would.  But after finding out I kept the alien stuff from you, I can see why you would.  I’m sorry.”

“I know.  And thinking back over things, all that time we were together when you could’ve abused your powers and hurt me if you wanted, but didn’t, I do believe you wouldn’t.  I know you’re not that kind of person.  But you know, fear isn’t rational and it’s hard to get over.  Like right now, I’m fighting an awful little whisper in my mind wondering if you’re reading me right now, and if you are, what you’re thinking.  It says what if he’s just really good at manipulating you, like Lee just did, and you’re wrong again, just like you always are?  I don’t want to listen to it, that mean little voice in my head that tells me how much I suck all the time, but it’s hard not to wonder if it might be right?  Because I am wrong a lot.  Look at my track record.  Look at all I screw up.  How can I trust my own judgment?”  She looked down.  “And I probably shouldn’t have even said that, but I’m sure you sensed it anyway.”

“Enough of it.  Sorry.  It’s still hard not to tune in to you, especially talking like this.”  His voice grew thick with emotion he thought he had finally gotten over.  “Even if I shouldn’t after all this time.  But for the record, I’m not.  Manipulating you, I mean.”



“I know.  Deep down, I just can’t believe you would.  It’s just… well, you know how I get.  Probably better than most.”  She smiled wistfully.  “That’s something I still miss about you, you know.  I never realized how good I had it, when it came to you sensing and understanding me despite me constantly sticking my foot in my mouth, even though it weirded me out.  But it wasn’t until I was with someone who couldn’t do that, that I realized just how amazing it was being with someone who always knew what I meant even when I managed to say it the worst way possible.  You never held it against me.”  And you loved me anyway.  And now it’s too late…

It was bittersweet to hear, spoken and unspoken, that Tara had missed him as much as he missed her, and it kindled a spark of hope that Orion thought he had all but extinguished.  He had moved on because he thought she had, but if she still had feelings for him…

“I still miss you sometimes, too,” he admitted.  “We had a really good thing.”



Orion both saw and felt Tara’s flash of reciprocal feeling before she balked.  “Yeah, we did, but your girlfriend probably wouldn’t appreciate us rehashing that too much.”  She gave him a pointed look.  “Or would she?”

So she had peeked at April’s profile.  That gave him more guilty satisfaction than he wanted to admit.  Orion had never posted more than the most casual details of his outings and dates with April online, and of her other lovers, Adam was the only one he had ever even mentioned, and not in any context that would raise eyebrows to anyone who did not know the situation.  “April’s not the jealous type.  Besides, we’re not exclusive.”

“So I heard.”  She paused, and Orion felt a stab of shame at how much he enjoyed the burning curiosity radiating from her.  “I have to say, that’s… not the kind of thing I ever imagined you’d be into or okay with.  I know I couldn’t deal with it.  Cheating is a deal-breaker for me.”

“It’s not cheating when everything’s out in the open and there aren’t any secrets.  That’s what it was like going in.”

Tara raised an eyebrow.



“So to speak.”  Orion shrugged.  “She told me up front she was in an open relationship with another guy who was cool with her seeing other people.  I liked her, so I took the situation for what it was and went for it.  Like I said, no one’s keeping any secrets.”

Tara bit her lip as a hurt note crept into her voice.  “Not even you?” Did he tell her when he took so long to tell me?  A girl who sleeps with other guys all the time?



That stung, and he stiffened.  “Seriously?  Not that it should even matter to you since you dumped me and ran off to China to get away from me, but no, for the record, you’re still the only one not in my family that knows.”  He frowned, glad they still had the place to themselves since this was not the kind of conversation he wanted to have anywhere, let alone in public.



Tara stood, abashed.  “I’m sorry.  You’re right.  I should’ve kept my mouth shut.  It’s none of my business.”

“But you wanted to know.”

“Yes,” she admitted, flustered.  “I guess since you can probably figure it out anyway, I wanted to know if you trusted her more than me.  It’s stupid and petty and jealous because we did break up and I did go off to Shang Simla to get over you, but apparently, I never did.  And I wondered if you loved her enough to tell her, or if it was just me.  Because I’m pathetic and still hung up on a stupid idea that we—oh, Watcher.  I need to go.”  She made a move for the door, but Orion stopped her.



“No.  For once in your life, don’t just freak out and run off!”  He put his hand on her arm, his voice warm and imploring.  “Please.”

She stopped, and he faced her.

“You’re not pathetic and you’re not stupid.  And you’re also not alone.  In case it’s not obvious, I’m not over you, either.  I still love you, Tara.  I don’t think I ever stopped.”

“You have a girlfriend right now.”

“Yeah.”

“Don’t you love her?”

“Yeah.  I do.  She means a lot to me, just like I’m sure you loved and cared about Lee.”

“Lee was a cheating llama who lied to me and his other girlfriends.”

“But you still loved him until you found that out, even if you were still in love with me.”

“What are you trying to say here, Orion?  Spell it out, because I’m honestly clueless,” she begged.

“I’m saying if you want to give things another shot, it’s not too late.”

“What about April?”



“She’ll understand.  Like I said, she’s not the jealous type.  Besides, I’m just as free to see other people as she is.”

“Yeah, well, I’m not that free-spirited.  I’m not into sharing.”

“I know.  I wouldn’t ask you to.”

She stared back at him.  “You’re you saying you’d leave her to get back with me?”

“If you wanted to get back together, I’d end the romantic relationship with her, yeah.  I’d still be friends with her, but that’s all.”

“Heh.  Like we’ve been friends?”

“No.  Like actual friends without the romantic tension.  April can handle that.  I’ve seen her do it.  I can, too, and I would, for you.”



The space between them closed a bit more.  “You make it sound so tempting.  That it could be you and me again, just like the old days.  Before it got messed up.”

“Because it can.  Only better this time.  No more secrets.  Nothing to hide.  Just you and me, a little older and wiser now, together.”  He took her hand, and she squeezed his fingers.

“There really are no more secrets?  Nothing you never told me?  No surprises?”

“No.  Well, not about me, anyway.  My family’s gotten a new, uh, quirk or two since we were together, but I can tell you about that later.  Maybe over dinner tomorrow?”



Tara could not help but smile.  “Sure.  Sounds great.  But now I really should head out and get that takeout I promised Mom.  And let you get on with your practice session.”

“It was well worth the delay,” he assured her.  “Have a good night.”

“Good night.”  She paused.  “You’re not going to pick me up in that spaceship, are you?”

“Would you rather I use my motorcycle?”  Her eyes went wide, and he laughed.  “I’m joking.  I remember how your dad is about the motorcycle when there’s even a minute chance of ice or frost.  About as bad as mine, even if I’m too old for him to say no to about it anymore.  Doesn’t stop him from nagging, though, and I’m sure yours is the same.  No, I won’t give him a heart attack or get you a safety lecture, I promise, and I definitely won’t freak anyone out with the ship.  I’ll borrow one of my family’s cars.  Though if you ever do want a ride in the Galaxa, just say the word.”

“Maybe on the second date,” Tara joked back with a nervous laugh as she headed to get changed.  “See you tomorrow, Orion.”

Orion grinned, happier than he had been in a long time.  “See you tomorrow.”

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 126
« Reply #356 on: July 31, 2020, 10:53:06 PM »
Chapter 126



Determined not to screw up his second chance with Tara, Orion asked April to meet him for lunch the next day so they could talk.  He hoped it would go as amicably as he believed it would.  Although she still had other lovers, Orion knew that she loved him, too, and he hated the possibility of hurting her.  He hoped they could remain friends.

Since she had to go to work shortly after lunch, they met at the pizzeria in the commercial lofts by where she lived.  “Hey,” she greeted him with her usual playful flirtation before taking on a more concerned note.  “What’s going on that you need to talk about?  Is everything okay?”

“Yes and no.  I hope so, but… well, let’s order and we’ll talk when we sit down.”

“Oh, dear.  This sounds like it’s a garlic bread and extra cheese kind of talk, huh?”

“Does it show?”

“Kind of, yeah.”



They ordered and sat down, and April cut to the chase.  “All right.  Lay it on me.  So, who is she?”

Orion was surprised that she guessed so easily.  “How’d you know?”

“Babe, I’ve been down this road a time or two.  I can tell what’s up, and it’s written all over your face.  Your little green nose wrinkles when you’re keyed up about something,” she said with a coy but sympathetic look.  “It’s okay.  Really.  Tell me what’s going on.”



“You know me better than I thought.”  Orion was relieved but also sad.  Even though they both knew this day would come, it was still hard to end things, even on a good note.

“We’ve been pretty close.  I’d say we know each other pretty well by now.”

Orion nodded.  “Yeah.  I just don’t want to hurt you.  I know the deal and I know we were never exclusive, but still.  You mean a lot to me and I love you.  You know that, right?”

“Aw, babe.  Of course I do.  But just like you know I love you and Adam and Chase… sometimes, when he’s not being a llama, anyway, I also know our kind of deal isn’t really your thing long-term.  I knew this would happen eventually.”  She met his gaze.  “I’m a little surprised and curious, though, because I didn’t know you were seeing anyone else.  You could’ve told me.”

“I know.  That’s why I am, now.  It just started,” he admitted.  “Again.”



“Again?  Oh, that explains it,” April said with a smile of realization as their order arrived.  “You’re getting back with Tara, aren’t you?”

Although she had never met Tara formally, she knew about her.  During her and Orion’s time together, they had a few serious talks about their past experiences in relationships.  Orion had told April what happened with Tara and, in a way that left out the alien details, how it had ended and the subsequent back and forth between them with her eventually leaving for Shang Simla to get away from it.  April also knew that Tara was back in town because she came into the diner the night before to pick up takeout.  Guillermo was working the register and chatted with her, and afterward, he gave April a heads up that she was that Tara, Orion’s ex.  April had wondered if that meant things with her and Orion might change, because, like everyone else close to him, she knew full well that he was not over her.  She was not jealous the way someone else might have been because she was fine with her lovers having other lovers, but she knew that Orion, deep down, was not wired that way.



“How’d you know?”

“Guillermo said she was back in town.  He rang up her order last night.”

He chortled.  “Man, you weren’t kidding when you said the diner was one of Sunset Valley’s biggest gossip hubs.”

“Don’t be upset with him.  He was just looking out for his friends.”

“Nah.  I’m not.  I whined a lot to him about my love life or lack thereof after Tara and I broke up.  It was a fair trade for being his sounding board about Mario Kayes jerking him around,” Orion remarked before turning serious again.  “But yeah, Tara’s back.  I ran into her last night.  We talked and… she still loves me.  And I still love her.  I didn’t realize how much until I saw her again and we were there together.”  He met April’s eyes.  “I’m sorry.  I really am.  Because I do love you.  You’re a wonderful person and sweet and sexy and fun to be around, not to mention an amazing cook.  You were there for me when I was in a really bad place, and you brought me out of it, and you’ve been there with me since.  We’ve had so many good times together and I hate to just up and—”



“Babe, it’s okay.”  She cut him off, stood, and hugged him.  “Really.  I understand.  I’m not mad or upset.”  She smiled wistfully.  “Maybe sad, because, like you said, we had a lot of fun together, and I love you, too.  But I want you to be happy.  I know that you and me, this thing we have—had—was never going to be forever.  Someday, you want a more settled down, marriage and kids and lifetime thing.  I’d never hold you back from it.”  She sniffled a bit.  “I’ll just miss you for a while, that’s all.”



“I’ll miss you, too.  But we can still be friends, right?  I’d like to if you would.  Even if we aren’t, you know, involved, I still like hanging out with you and Adam and the occasional game of pool at Mick’s that sometimes I even win now.  Not to mention that homemade pasta.”

She chuckled.  “All that fancy food tech at home and you still want my pasta?  I’m flattered.  Especially since Guillermo also has the recipe.”

“He doesn’t use Adam’s organic ingredients.  You turned me into a bit of a food snob.  Now his pies and that artisan bread he makes on the other hand…”

“Oh, my Watcher.  I know.  I wanted to smack Adam with the butter knife after he ate an entire half loaf while I was at work and didn’t leave me any for breakfast.”  Her expression turned wistful.  “I’m going to miss you, Orion.  I know I’ll see you around, but… I won’t be offended if you keep your distance for a while.  I may not get jealous, but I know other girls do, and I don’t want to cause any drama between you.  I know she left you over trust issues.”

“She did, but she can’t expect me not to have friends, either.  She’s either willing to try and trust me or she’s not.  I guess I’ll see.”

“Still, I don’t want to make it harder for you.”  She gave him a coy look.  “That is, after one last kiss goodbye, maybe?  For old times’ sake?”



“Sure.”  He pulled her into his arms one final time and kissed her.  It was warm and affectionate, and he savored the moment before it ended and morphed into a friendly hug.  “Take care, April.  Thanks for understanding and, well, everything.”

“And thank you for being such a sweetheart, tall, green, and mysterious.  I had a wonderful time with you.  You take care of yourself, too, and good luck.  I hope she makes you as happy as you deserve to be.”

“Thanks.  Guess I’ll see you around, then.”  He let her go, glad that things had worked out, but sad saying goodbye nonetheless.

“Sure.”  He could tell she felt much the same.  “Bye, Orion.”

“Bye,” he said, and exchanged a parting smile with her before heading out into the spring rain.



While Orion was out at lunch with April, Susan and Boyd puttered in the greenhouse with Plumboptimus.  His adaptive learning chip was working well, and with regular instruction from them and Iris, his gardening skills were back to a moderately advanced level on their own without any supplementary chip needed.  Susan was taking genetic samples of their life fruit and special steak plants, while Boyd planted their first omni seed.  The lab had been tinkering with a unique genetic variant of that for some time, and now they wanted to grow one at home to find out if it was realistic to consider marketing to skilled home gardeners who did not have the benefit of timed industrial lighting, water, fertilizer, and climate control beyond a typical greenhouse.

“The weeds are really going bananas now that it’s spring,” Susan remarked.  “You’ve got your hands full keeping up with all this, don’t you, Plumboptimus?”

“It takes a significant amount of time to maintain.”

“Maybe Iris needs to have a chat with them and find out what you can do to help send the weeds packing,” said Boyd.  “I know she hasn’t been able to come out here and help as much.  Senior year’s got her pretty busy.”

“She assists me often.  They are simply growing at a more rapid rate in the current sunlight and humidity conditions.”

Susan chuckled.  “That’s spring for you, and where the expression ‘growing like a weed’ comes from.”



“Speaking of growing like a weed, can you believe it’s almost Jessica’s birthday already?”  Boyd stood and brushed the dirt off his hands against the side of his pants.  “She’s getting so big.  Soon she’ll be toddling all over the place and into everything.”

Susan chortled.  “And Patrick wants to buy her finger paints for her birthday.  Finger paints!  Yes, that’s a splendid idea for an energetic toddler with no concept of what that could do to a nice hardwood floor or carpet.  I told him, why don’t we just get her a nice kiddie tablet with a painting program or even have the development shop make us something akin to the digital easel, but he just said, ‘Mom, digital art is nice and all but there’s no substitution for working directly in a medium and it’s good for motor skills.’  He played the art snob card on me.”

Boyd chuckled.  “Honey, he is an art snob, and so is Maria.  That shouldn’t surprise you.  And he’s not wrong about the motor skills.”



“Which she could also develop on a tablet.  If he wants a medium for her to work with, why can’t she take after Daddy sculpting in play-doh or draw with markers or just about anything less messy than finger paint?”  She made a face.  “Remember way back when Blair was in kindergarten and we got her finger paints, and she got them all over the kitchen table and ran around the house giggling and painting the walls with her hands?  Or Iris making those lovely dirt streaks everywhere with her fertilizer covered hands at that age?  No thank you to that again, even if Plumboptimus would be kind enough to clean it for us.”  She sighed.  “But you know how he is.  He doesn’t listen to me.  Maybe he will when she gets that stuff all over one of Maria’s designer blouses or sweaters and he hears about it from her.”

“Well, more often than not, a man is more likely to heed an angry rant from his wife than he is from his mother.”

“Speaking from experience, are we?” Susan remarked with a raised eyebrow before continuing.  “Anyhow, I think we should just get her a nice tablet for her birthday and load it up with all sorts of fun activity programs.  Learning, numbers, reading, and some fun art and music programs for her to play with, even if it’s not up to Mr. Artsy’s lofty standards.  She can carry it around and play with it wherever.”

“I’m sure she’ll like that.  Just don’t be shocked when he goes ahead and gets her the finger paints anyway.”

“Oh, I won’t.  And I’ll try not to say ‘I told you so’ when she inevitably ends up graffiti-ing something like his guitar.”



Said “Mr. Artsy” had, in fact, just gotten changed to do a little sculpting and brought Jessica with him into the study where Maria was working on a painting.  “Hey, I like how that’s coming.  Those colors are great.”

Maria set her brush down and turned around.  “Thank you!  I’m not finished yet, but I’m getting there.”

“I thought I’d join you and do a little sculpting and let Jess chill on the mat in here with us.  She’s up and full of energy and Plumboptimus is still out there weeding the greenhouse forest with my parents.”

“Are you sure that’s a good idea?  The thinner fumes over here are a little strong for a baby, aren’t they?”



“No, I don’t think they’re that bad, especially over by the mat.  I barely even smell it unless I’m right up close.  Besides,” he snuggled her, using a baby-talk tone, “Jessie here’s a tough girl, and she’s used to funky smells.  You get to be living here with us artists and our paints and the mad scientists doing their chemistry stuff in the lab upstairs, and Auntie Iris and Plumboptimus dragging their fertilizer through the house on the regular.  And she fits right in, making her own little biohazard disasters in those diapers.”  He bounced her, grinning.  “Yes she does.”

Maria scoffed.  “Well maybe it’s just my ‘lucky’ werewolf nose that’s sensitive then, but okay.  You have a point.  But you are going to do clay or wood or something kind of quiet, right?”

“No chainsaw, you mean?  Nah, not today.  Just some good old clay.”  He smiled.  “Maybe she can watch Mommy and Daddy and pick up a tip or two, huh?”

“It’d be cute if she becomes an artist like us, but you never know.  We don’t all take after our parents.”

“Your mom’s an artist.”

“Yeah, and Dad was a tycoon and I’m definitely not that.  And you’re hardly a mad scientist.”

“No, but I do get mad a lot,” he quipped.  “But that’s okay.  I’m still going to get her some finger paints for her birthday, because they’re lots of fun for a kid, artist or not.”



Maria snickered.  “Grandma’s going to be thrilled.  She tried to talk me into talking you out of that over coffee this morning, you know.”

“Eh, Mom’ll get over it.  She’s just bitter because Saint Blair in a rare moment of non-sainthood back in her kiddie years went Picasso all over their house with some finger paint.  I’m sure it was a llama to clean, but we’ve got a plumbot for that if it happens.”

“If I didn’t know better, I’d say you were trolling her.”



Patrick smirked.  “Nah.  I leave that sort of thing to jolly old Uncle Cycl0n3.  Speaking of which, did you let him and Blair know when Jessica’s party is yet, or should I message them?”

“Your mom told them, actually, when Blair called to tell them all about Tad and Chris adopting Raul.”  The whole family had just found out that Tad and Chris took in yet another foster child, a boy named Raul that was a little younger than Hilda.  Tad called Maria with the news right away, but he had asked her to only tell Patrick and maybe Orion and Iris because Chris wanted to be the one to tell his grandparents.  Unfortunately, proud grandma Blair beat him to delivering the news that they were honorary great-grandparents once again.  “I still can’t believe she actually beat Chris to the call.”

“I can.  Blair loves the whole doting granny role.  She’s not a bad doting auntie, either.”  He tickled Jessica, who giggled.  “Yeah, you know Aunt Blair spoils the heck out of you.”

“Oh, I know,” Maria giggled.  “We got another cute flowery spring dress from her for Jessica in the mail yesterday, and she messaged me saying how she knows she doesn’t really need more clothes but it was so adorable she just knew she’d look perfect in it and she hoped we liked it.”

“That was nice of her.  And hopefully, Chris won’t be too annoyed that she stole his thunder about Raul.”



Chris was not exactly annoyed, but he did grouse good-naturedly about her being so enthusiastic that she had to tell her parents before he got a chance to.  Boyd and Susan called him afterward to congratulate him and Tad anyway, which he appreciated, but he still messaged Travis to tease him for “not stopping Mom and Dad for five whole minutes so I could call Grandma and Grandpa myself, huh?”  Travis replied saying that he ought to know it was beyond his power to shut them up any more than he could, and to that, Chris could only agree and laugh.

Raul was a nice kid, but like Hilda, he came from a rough background.  He lost his parents very young and had been in the system for several years, bouncing from foster home to foster home.  He was sarcastic at times, but in a goofy and jokey way that cried out for attention.  He was frequently in trouble in school for being disruptive, usually clowning around in class and blowing off his homework, and for drawing unflattering pictures of the teachers who disciplined him.  The latter would not have been so bad if said drawings were not on notes that he passed around to his classmates for laughs or drawn on the school sidewalk where he was caught doing it.  Stunts like this had earned Raul a list of detentions, suspensions, and one expulsion after a disciplinary action too many, and he was now in Sunset Valley after the last district and his previous foster parents deemed him too difficult and transferred him out.

Tad’s heart broke when he heard that story, and he wanted to help him.  He remembered all too well what it felt like when he was growing up and his father made him feel like he was a disappointment and an inconvenience that would never be up to his standards.  He talked it over with Chris and then the rest of his family, including Caleb, who Raul would have to share a room with.  None of them minded, and shortly thereafter, he joined their growing family.



While his teachers and previous foster parents did not always get or appreciate Raul’s sense of humor, Chris found him easy to relate to and goofed around with him often.  He taught him a few gags and jokes of his own and also tried to help him learn how to express such things without getting into trouble.



Grandma Morgana encouraged Raul’s artistic inclinations in a more productive way than authority figure mockery.  She only rarely used her easel these days because the arthritis in her hands had become so severe in her old age that she could not paint for long, but she was thrilled to set it up for Raul.  She bought him new paints and canvases so he could practice whenever he wanted.



Watching him learn to paint brought back fond memories of when Maria was a little girl doing the same thing, and Morgana remembered how proud she had been watching her learn, improve, and develop her own style as Raul did the same.



Morgana had always wanted a large family with many children.  Although she never had the happy marriage and only had three children of her own by two different fathers, still having Caleb with her and living with Tad and Chris and their adopted children felt like a fulfillment of that wish even if some were grandchildren.  She also kept in close touch with Maria and saw baby Jessica frequently.  Now in her golden years she was surrounded by her large family, and she cherished her time with all of them.

Raul settled in easily with the rest of his new family, too, with only the occasional typical sibling spats between the children.  He liked playing outside with Caleb, who was more like a big brother than an uncle in the same way Patrick was with Chris, and he played video games with him and Hilda almost every day.  Sometimes Esmeralda joined them, especially when she was the one watching them, but since she was so much older, they did not have as much in common.

Raul also made a friend in Diddy, since he, like everyone else in the house, enjoyed petting, treating, playing with, and generally spoiling the lazy old cat.



Nobody spoiled Diddy more than Chris, though.  He knew his beloved pet was a ripe old age past the average life span, and he was thankful every day that his good health kept him going.  “Yes, I’m so glad you’re not jealous of Raul,” he baby-talked to him.  “You’re still my favorite fuzzy wuzzy furball, yes you are!”  He fluffed him affectionately.  “Who’s a good old fat lazy kitty?  Who loves all this attention?  You do, that’s right!”



While the Wolff branch of the family grew bigger, Iris would soon be branching out in a new direction herself.  Her senior year of high school was winding to a close, and before long she would graduate.  The ceremony awarding her achievements in debate club for the year brought that home.  “Congratulations, sweetie,” Susan told her afterward.  “You did wonderfully.”

“Yeah, a top member of your team.  Way to go!” Boyd added.

“Thanks.  I love hammering down the competition with logic.  Especially the condescending llamas who I could just tell thought I was up there getting by on my looks and not my brains.  I can’t believe there are still some cave sims that think that way.”

“They’re just jealous that you’re both better looking and smarter than them, dear.”

“Oh, I know.  And they deserved to find out the hard way how painfully wrong and ignorant they are.”

Boyd chuckled fondly.  “You are your mother’s daughter, that’s for sure.  I couldn’t be prouder of you.”



Her trophy looked nice displayed in her room, although it reminded her that she still had to finish her university applications.  Her grades were good enough to get her into the school of her choice, and even though her parents did not pressure her for it, she was heavily leaning toward Sims University anyway.  Not only were her parents, Patrick, Maria, and Chris all Sims U alumni, but it was also home to a community of plantsims and the school offered generous scholarships and benefits to plantsims as well.  Rich as the Wainwrights were, Iris did not need the financial assistance, but the other networking, education, and career boosting perks and programs were appealing.

It would be an adjustment going to school so far from home, but she did not think it would be a bad one.  She liked the idea of new places to see and people to meet.  She would miss her friends and family, and Cameron if he did not go there too, but he had not decided where he was going after high school, either.  A university in Bridgeport offered him an athletic scholarship, and another tried to recruit him for a sports program through his Simstagram, but he had not yet accepted either.  He was considering a career as a competitive bodybuilder, personal trainer, or trying out for professional sports, but he had not decided for certain yet, and while a university education could be useful for that, it was not necessary for it.



Iris wanted him to apply to Sims University, too, but Cameron’s father, despite his moderate wealth from his former modeling career, balked at the cost without a scholarship, especially since it was more of an academically elite school rather than a sports-focused one.  Cameron was a first-class athlete, but he was only a B to C student in high school, and he had a flaky attention span when it came to anything that did not capture and keep his interest like fitness and bodybuilding did.  He would have flunked his high school algebra without overtime put in by a tutor, and his final Simlish grades would have been worse if Iris had not proofread a couple of his essays for him while they did school work together.

Still, she helped him study for the university aptitude test, and gave him pointers on his application essay.  “I’m not even going as a Simlish major.  It shouldn’t matter,” he grumbled.  “I’m not writing essays for a living.”

“I know, but every major will have to write papers.  Some professors might be cool about letting grammar or typos slide here and there and just grade on content, but a bunch of these academic types are snobs about stuff like that and they’ll penalize you over a sentence fragment even if everything you wrote was right.”

“Yeah, I get what you’re saying.  It just sucks to have to do it.  I’m not a writer and figuring out training routines or explaining how carb-loading works shouldn’t have to be complicated or over a certain number of words.”



Despite his grousing, he appreciated her help, and he gave her a romantic thank you hug when his draft was done.  “Thanks.  I can probably finish and submit this tonight.  It’ll be nice to have it over with.  Dad’s been nagging at me to finish my applications anyway.”  He smiled at her.  “Here’s hoping I get in.”

“They’d be stupid not to take you.  You’re a Simstagram star and you’d probably improve any of their teams if you joined them.”

He scoffed.  “Yeah, well, with the reputation a couple of them have, that’s not a high bar.  But a Sims U phys ed degree would look nice hanging on my wall when I have my own training practice someday.  And I hear the fraternity there is pretty wild.”

“If Patrick’s stories are even half true, then yeah.”  She leaned in closer and eyed him playfully.  “Though if you’re hoping I’ll do like those juiced up sorority girls and go around streaking at parties, forget about it.”

“Heh.  Bet you’d look pretty hot, but you know someone would get a picture and post it, and that would suck.  You’ve got a lot of followers now, too.”

She batted her eyelashes.  “I know.  Being your girlfriend really made me popular.  Not that I’m complaining.”

“You’re a hot plantsim and you’re interesting and you post cool stuff.  What’s not to like?”

“Aw, you’re so sweet,” she sighed flirtatiously, imagining the fun of nights out partying and doing other exciting things at Sims University together as their lips met for a good night smooch.

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 127
« Reply #357 on: August 07, 2020, 09:36:41 PM »
Chapter 127



After his “let’s just be friends” lunch with April was over, Orion felt both optimistic and encouraged by how things were going.  He was glad she did not have any hard feelings and that he had not hurt her by ending things.  Although they would miss each other, he knew it was for the best.  He and Tara still loved each other, and if there was any chance for a reconciliation and a future together with her, he had to show her he was serious and not just keeping his options open.



Orion also wanted to be as charming as possible, so he took the advice Maria gave him when he told her and Patrick that he was getting back together with Tara and going out with her that night.  “You should bring her some flowers when you pick her up.  While some might say that’s a little cliché, I personally have never known anyone that didn’t appreciate an unexpected thoughtful romantic gesture, cliché or not.”

“Yeah, flowers never hurt,” Patrick agreed.  “The arboretum and greenhouse both sell some nice arrangements.”

“The arboretum did our wedding’s flowers.  I thought they were just a touch higher notch, even if they are a little more expensive.”

“Okay.  I can stop by there before I pick her up.”  He had already asked his father to borrow his car, since Boyd rarely drove much anymore anyway, especially at night when the glare made it hard for him to see even with his glasses.  Too many years in front of bright computer monitors and TV screens in poor lighting combined with his age were to blame for that, but he would never admit it.

Patrick looked over at Orion.  “Good luck.”  I hope you don’t need it this time.

He wished he had not sensed that unspoken additional thought, but he supposed he could not blame him for being wary that he was going back to Tara after everything that had happened.



Iris was blunter about it, and actually voiced that sentiment, although she tried not to be too harsh with her concern.  “I know you still carry a torch for her, but really.  You guys broke up ages ago and you both moved on, at least kind of.  Are you sure you want to go there and put yourself through all that drama again if she gets cold feet or gets scared again and changes her mind?”

“She won’t.  She’s had all this time and she doesn’t want it to be over any more than I do.  That’s why it’ll work.”

“That’s why you want it to work.  It doesn’t mean it will.”

“It doesn’t mean it won’t, either.”

“I hope so, for your sake.”  She bit her lip.  “Look, you know I don’t hate her or anything, so this isn’t meant to be a slam at her.  But she’s not exactly the most stable person in the world.  I know you can read her so I’m sure you’re sure she means it when she says she wants to get back together, and that’s great, but what happens if something sets her off again?  Just please take some time and think on it before you rush back into being super serious again, okay?  You don’t want to wind up hurt again.”  She gave him a concerned half-smile.  “It practically took a backhoe to dig you out of the funk breaking up with her put you in last time, after all.”

“I get what you’re saying, but things really will be different this time.  We’ve both learned and grown a lot.  Besides,” he added with a smirk to lighten the mood, “now that April and I are just friends, I don’t have to feel super awkward every time you comment on how hot you think Adam is.”  He paused and added, “Though he’s still too old for you, so don’t go there and break poor Cameron’s heart.”



She rolled her eyes.  “I love Cameron and you don’t need to worry about his poor little heart.  I’m not going to break it, even if I do have to point out that absolutely nobody would think it was a big deal if I dated someone Adam’s age after my birthday which isn’t that far off, anyway.  But we were talking about your heart and not mine or Cameron’s, and since you’re bound and determined to follow it no matter what, good luck tonight, big brother.”  She smiled at him.  “I hope things work out.”

“Thanks.  Me too.”



Orion left early enough to take a trip to the arboretum, where he purchased a lovely bouquet of painted yellow and red tulips for Tara.



After giving her the flowers, which she put in a vase before they left her house, they went to the restaurant up on the hill for dinner.  “This is really nice.  I haven’t had a good lasagna in ages.”

“I’ve always liked their food here.  The pasta’s homemade, too.”  He paused, thinking that was something he probably would not have noticed before dating April, but obviously, he did not say that.

Tara picked up on it, too, even without the benefit of powers like his.  “Guess you got used to that kind of thing dating a chef, huh?”

Orion felt bad that it was that obvious, but he supposed Tara knew him better than most despite everything.  “A little, though Mom and Patrick can be food snobs, too.  He took a culinary class at Sims U and Mom’s the one that told me this was a good type of nectar to pair with this kind of dish.”  He paused.  “Though for the record, I talked to April today and told her everything.  So you don’t need to worry that I’m still involved with her that way or anything.”



Tara was surprised, but happy.  “Wow.  You really meant it, what you said last night.  Wait, not that I’m saying I thought you wouldn’t, but…”

“But you’re surprised I followed through that fast?”

She nodded.  “Yeah.  Thanks for getting what I meant.  I realized after I said it how it sounded.”



“I really do want to give things another shot.  You know how I feel about you, and I want you to feel like you can trust me again.  Like before.”

“I know.  It means a lot that you were willing to do that.  I know it couldn’t have been easy.  Breaking up with someone never is.”  Oh, Watcher, Tara, did you really just say that to him?  You’re such a dumb llama!

Orion was not sure what to say to that, because it did sting coming from her, but her self-berating afterthought was so intense that it might as well have been broadcast to him even if her embarrassed realization had not also been plastered across her face.  “No, it’s not, but I guess we’ve both been there,” he said after a moment.  “It’s okay.  I’m not offended.”

“You picked up on that.”  Tara was even more embarrassed.  I’m already ruining things.

“No, you’re not,” Orion responded to that one as well.  “Hey, you did say it was one of the things you missed about me.  And it is nice being with someone who knows about it, too.”



She eyed him curiously.  “You never told her you could do that?  Even without getting into… you know?”  She paused.  “Sorry if that’s too personal.”

“No.  It’s okay.  I didn’t tell her much about that stuff because we weren’t in the kind of relationship like, well, like we were.  She knows I’m intuitive, but I never got into specifics.  Just said it was a lucky aspect of my condition that I can read people pretty well.”

“Kind of like you told me back before you told me all of it.”

He nodded.  “Yeah.”

She met his eyes.  “I never told anyone about you, you know.  Not a soul.  Not a word.”



“I know.  I never thought you would.”

“I still felt like I should say so anyway.”

“I’ve always trusted you.  Like I said back then, I wish I’d told you the night you told me about Wilbur and asked me to never keep anything from you.”  He paused.  “Which I guess is something else I should tell you now, in the spirit of not keeping things from each other.  He knows I know.”

Tara was shocked.  “What?”

“He doesn’t know you know, but he knows I do.  After we broke up, he showed up at my house one night.  Skulking around in the Golden Llama uniform.  He was looking out for you, actually.  He thought I was sketchy, and my parents were, too.  But I didn’t tell him anything other than to butt out and stop being a llama and to leave me and my family alone, and that if he didn’t, I knew who he was.  I didn’t let on that you knew and told me, instead I just said that his mask didn’t hide his jawline and I recognized him after so long dating his sister and my brother being in his band.  Nothing happened after that because I think he was afraid I would blab, even though I wouldn’t unless I absolutely had to.  I don’t want him to go to jail.  But I also don’t like him assuming my parents are criminals and I definitely don’t want him or any of the Golden Llamas poking around things like the Galaxa.”



Tara closed her eyes and picked up her nectar.  “Oh, my Watcher.  Wilbur did that?  He is such a… wow.  I don’t know what the plum he’s thinking, still doing that stuff.  I hoped he’d stopped, if not for his own sake, then for Rodrigo’s.  He doesn’t need to grow up with his dad in jail or worse.  It’s bad enough he doesn’t spend that much time with him between the band stuff and not even moving in with him and Penny, never mind getting married even though they’re supposedly still together and engaged, but…”

“That might have more to do with her cheating on him than the Golden Llama stuff, but who knows?”

“Yeah, I heard about that, too.  They’ve got more drama than an episode of Paternity Court, which they’re probably only not on because her side action was a girlfriend and not another boyfriend.  Honesty seems to be an alien concept to them both.”  She paused.  “Ooh, sorry, I didn’t mean—”

Orion chortled.  “It’s fine.  I know what you meant.”



From there, their conversation continued happily, with fewer awkward moments and misunderstandings between them as they caught up on other personal subjects and topics and got to know each other all over again.

They talked through dinner and dessert, and the nectar they ordered with it.  Tara told Orion more about her time in Shang Simla, both her achievements and personal experiences, and he told her about his classes, the degree he was finishing, and how he planned to help take over and manage the family lab after his parents were gone.  “Patrick and Blair don’t have the time or background to devote to running it, but I can be more hands on, especially when it comes to the tech division.  Iris is thinking about doing it, too, which I hope she does because botany is way more her thing than mine and she’d be much better at that part.  Chris said if we needed his medical background to help on the board someday, he might be able to find time, but he’s so busy at the hospital and with the kids he and Tad adopted, I’d hate to add even more to his plate.  Travis is interested in helping run the lab someday, too, but he’s even younger than Iris, so it’ll be a while before he can even if he still wants to by the time he’s done with school.”



“It’s great that you’ll be able to keep all that stuff in your family.  Mine doesn’t have any kind of legacy like that.  Mom did well with the SVPD before she retired, but Wilbur’s version of it is significantly less legit, and the band is his official career anyway.  The closest we’ve got is the job I just got.  I was going to tell you about that.  Dad talked to the team management and suggested they hire me to teach them martial arts conditioning and discipline techniques in addition to their regular sports training.”  Tara’s father Marty was a retired sports superstar that used to play for the Llamas, and even though he was an old man now, he was still remembered fondly by sports fans all over for his achievements during his career.  He received a generous pension and was still friends with many current players and the stadium and team management.  “It’s been pretty cool so far.  Apparently being Marty Keaton’s daughter that studied martial arts in Shang Simla makes me seem like a real bad llama to them.”  She chuckled.  “Little do they know that while my dad’s not exactly a pushover, my mom was always the real bad llama of the house.  She’s the one me, Wilbur, and Dad never wanted to make mad.”

“That’s great, though!  Congratulations!”

“Thanks.  It’s a little nerve-wracking teaching, because I don’t feel like an expert or anything, but they seem to like it okay.  I also get great seats for games as a perk, which is nice.  We should go to one sometime.”

“I’d love that.”  Orion smiled at her as the server came and left their check.  “It’s a shame we don’t have an excuse to hang out here longer, because I hate to go.  It’s been so great catching up with you and being with you like this again.”



“It has,” she agreed as they stood.  “I’m not really up for going to any bars or clubs, but maybe we could go back to one of our houses and talk more or something?”

Orion’s heart soared as she said that with a little flirtatious lilt in her voice.  Even if nothing romantic happened beyond meaningful conversation—and maybe a smooch or two?— he would be beyond thrilled to end the date on that note.  But as timing and luck would have it, there was a full moon that night, and that was not the time to try for any kind of romantic reconciliation at the Wainwright mansion.  Not when he had not yet gotten a chance to tell her about Maria, or that during this particular full moon she and Patrick were trying a test run of seeing if she could control her werewolf abilities enough to stay at home rather than locked up in the lab.  “That would be great, but I can’t take you to my place tonight, so we’d have to go to yours.  There’s… family stuff going on that I don’t want to blindside you with.”



That caught Tara off guard.  “What do you mean?”  He said he didn’t have any more secrets!

Orion tried not to take it personally when he sensed that, but it stung that she feared the worst so quickly, before he even had a chance to explain.  “It’s nothing to do with me.  It’s Maria.  I can tell you more about it later, but it’s another Wainwright Family Secret,” he made a little quotation gesture with his hands like it was a mock trademark, “so I’d rather not go into it here.”

Tara still seemed a bit wary, but she relaxed.  “Okay.  If you want, we could go to my house.  No one will be there to hear any private conversations or bother us.  My parents went on an overnight fishing trip in the mountains and they’re staying at a lodge since I’m home now to feed Libby and let her out.”



“Sounds good to me.  Let’s go.”  Orion took her hands as they started for the door.  She squeezed them back and smiled at him, and it made him both hopeful and glad that she was already getting past her moment of distrust.



When they got back to Tara’s house, they talked, and Orion told her the whole story of why he did not want to bring her or anyone else home on the full moon.  Although it was Maria’s issue and secret, Orion felt Tara had a right to know because the aliens—and by extension, him—were indirectly responsible for it since they had abducted her and switched the gene back on.  He also trusted her to keep the secret.  She had kept his and Wilbur’s, and Wilbur did not even know she knew he was a Golden Llama.  “Wow.”  She let out a nervous laugh after shuddering.  “That’s terrifying!  I guess I should feel lucky nothing like that runs in my family if they ever do abduct me.  Which I don’t think they have.  At least I hope not.  And they won’t, right?”

Orion was relieved that hearing Maria’s abduction had a side effect like that had not scared Tara off all over again.  He hoped it wouldn’t, but knowing how anxious Tara could be, he had been afraid it might.  “No.  I’ll tear them a new one myself if they try, and I don’t think they ever did before.”  He did wonder if the nightmares Tara told him she had about it were just that, but he chose to believe they were, since she did, and Eni Jish Xip had never told him otherwise.  “My parents laid into Eni Jish Xip pretty hard about taking anyone connected to us even before they knew what it did to Maria, and you know her.  Suffice it to say she didn’t hold back much when she met her for the first time.”

“Hah.  I bet.  But wow.  That must’ve been so scary for her.  For all of you.  You really had to bio-drain her when she was a werewolf?”

“I couldn’t risk her hurting Mom or anyone else.  But it didn’t hurt her.  Just knocked her on her plumbob.  One good thing about being a werewolf is it makes you pretty tough.”

“And you said their daughter isn’t one?”

“No.  Jessica’s as normal as Patrick.”  Orion snorted.  “Not sure that’s saying a lot, but that’s something else entirely.”

“And no one else knows or has figured it out.  That’s wild.”

“Oh, no.  Maria would flip her plumbob if that got around.  She hates it, and that she can’t be cured.  You know how she is.  Being a werewolf doesn’t exactly fit her image.”

“No, I guess not.”

“That’s why she doesn’t want to hide at the lab anymore.  Penny works there and she was doing some overtime on a project the last time Maria had to go, and she saw her.  She had to lie about why she was there at that time of night and got real upset that she could’ve figured it out.  So she decided it was too risky and that it would only be a matter of time before someone else might see her and put it together and gossip even if they’re supposed to keep things confidential.  But she has learned to control herself better now that she’s been through it a few times, so she wants to try staying at home where there’s less risk of someone finding out.”



“Well, I’m glad you told me, and I promise I won’t tell anyone.  I understand why you didn’t want to go there tonight.  Hopefully, everything’s okay.”

“I’m sure it is.  If it wasn’t, I’d have gotten a freaked-out text from someone by now.”  He leaned in close.  “Besides, I’d much rather be here with you.  I really enjoyed being back with you like this tonight.  It was great.”

“You sound like you want to leave.”  The disappointment in her voice was evident even without being able to sense it, too.

“No, not at all,” he assured her.  “I just figured it was probably getting late and I didn’t want to push things by…”

“By what?”

“By kissing you before I was sure you wanted me to.”

“I’d have thought you could sense that.”

“It’s not foolproof, and I didn’t want to be presumptuous.”  As much as he did want to kiss her, he could not help but remember how impulsively doing that after reading her feelings turned out last time, on his birthday.

She gave him a sultry look and put her hand on his knee.  “You can presume, if you want.”



And Orion did want, so he did.

This time was far better.  That kiss led to another, and then into another meaningful conversation that lasted the better part of an hour before turning into a second make-out session…



…that ended in Tara’s bedroom.



Orion never made it home that night, and he could not have been happier about it.



Author’s Note:  Originally, I planned for this to be only half of a chapter, but it and the other half ended up full chapter length in both text and images when I wrote it out.  On the bright side, that means the next chapter is already written, and it will be posted within a couple of days. 

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 128
« Reply #358 on: August 09, 2020, 10:22:31 PM »
Chapter 128



While Orion had a night of romance on the full moon, Patrick and Maria’s was more of an adventure.  It was not quite moonrise yet, but Maria was already on edge.  She paced around the house in her sweats, unable to focus on anything knowing what was coming.  Painting or writing for distraction was out of the question, and even sitting in front of the TV cuddling little Jessica could not get her mind off it.  She put Jessica in the swing while Patrick paused by the bar.  He had already had a couple of juices, and truth be told, he wanted another, but he knew it was not wise to compromise his reflexes too much tonight.

“Probably no more than an hour now,” Maria remarked with a sigh.  “I hate this so much.”

“I know, baby.  But at least you’re here and not at the lab, like you wanted.”

“I know.  And I know I should be fine, but… oh, Watcher.  I really hope I’m not making a mistake.”  She had been confident that she could control herself well enough to stay home earlier, but now that the moment drew near, she was second-guessing it.



“You’re not.”  He hugged her after she got Jessica swinging away to a nap.  “We went over everything, and the last times you changed, you did so much better.  You remembered a lot more afterward, and we’ve figured out what some of the things that trigger the wilder behavior are.  We’ve got all that covered here, and nobody’s going to randomly come by or work late or ask what’s going on.  And right now it’s just us and Plumboptimus here.  Mom and Dad are out at the movies, Iris is out with Cameron, and Orion’s on his hot reunion date with Tara.”

“Oh, I guess I’m just chopped liver then,” Buddy sulked from behind him.  “Everyone forgets the invisible guy.  I can get you forgetting Patchy-kins since you can’t talk to her, and Creepy the Gnome and his other gnome pals are basically just glorified lawn decorations with attitude, but I’m offended.”

Patrick rolled his eyes.  “Yes, Buddy, you too.  But Maria can’t see or hear you, either.”

“At least not for another hour or so.”  Maria had been able hear Buddy once, the first time she transformed, but she barely remembered that, and it only came back to her after the first time she caught the doll spirit’s scent in her normal state.  She could not always detect him that way, but sometimes she did, especially if it was close to the full moon or her own emotions were running high, like now.  “And I knew he was here.”

“He’s a pain in the plumbob, but he’ll watch out for you, too,” Patrick said.

“Yeah, that’s me.  Good old reliable Buddy, guardian of the house of weirdos, I mean, Wainwrights.  Me and Patches and maybe Fluffs someday, if she ever wakes up to say hello.”



“I just hope we’re right that I won’t hurt Jessica and we shouldn’t have sent her over to Tad and Mom’s for the night.  I’ll never forgive myself if I do something to her in that… that state.”

“Baby, we went over this,” Patrick reassured her.  “You remember it yourself.  That first time you transformed after she was born, when you were at the lab and she wasn’t there, you flipped out when you didn’t see her and didn’t know where she was.  You thought someone took your baby and you dented a steel security door trying to get through it to find her.  You didn’t calm down until I came home and got her and brought her to show you.”  He smooched her.  “You love little Jess so much that even as a werewolf you were ready to tear up anyone and everything that might’ve hurt her.  If anything, the maternal instinct carries through.  Willie told you that when you talked to her, too.”

“She did, and I know, but… I can’t help but be scared.  I know I can control it better than I could at first, but what if I can’t control it enough?  What if I’m wrong?”

“I’m not worried you’re going to hurt Jess.”

“Not on purpose, no, but like you said, I dented heavy steel.  What if I grab her too hard or accidentally scratch her trying to hold her or something?”



“You won’t.  You held her last time in the lab.  We brought her with us last time, and you didn’t freak out when you transformed because you saw her there and didn’t have any reason to think anything happened to her.  I went in with you and let you hold her, and you were both fine.”

“Even if your parents did have a sniper drone with a stun ray in the ceiling on standby, just in case.”

Patrick chose not to remark on that, as he had not told Maria about his father’s paranoia in putting that in the room at the lab where Maria spent her werewolf time.  Although Patrick did not stop him, because he would not have been able to forgive himself if he was wrong and something did happen to Jessica, he thought it was overkill.  He would never let Jessica near Maria in that state in the first place if he thought there was any chance she might hurt her.

“I know,” Maria conceded with a dramatic sigh.  “I’m just scared.  I don’t like being out of control like that.  I don’t like being like that.  At all.”

“I know, but you’ll be fine.  We also know you’re significantly less… growly when you transform on a full stomach, which is why Mom grilled you up a prime tri-tip steak before they left.”  He smiled.  “Come on.  I’m hungry, too.  Let’s go eat before moonrise.”

“Yeah, we’ve got to prevent the werewolf from being hangry by giving her steak before the moon rises,” Maria muttered sarcastically as she followed him to the kitchen.

“At least it’s good steak,” Patrick replied.

“Great.  I can enjoy it with the last few minutes of my refined palate, before digging through the garbage becomes appetizing.”



Despite her grousing, Maria enjoyed her steak.  At her age, Susan did not cook as often as she used to, but her skill at it was still on point, and the meat was seasoned and cooked to perfection.  Maria thought it tasted even better than usual.  She knew that was probably because of her imminent transformation which always made her crave meat, but at least eating it now she could appreciate it and not just literally wolf it down.

Buddy followed them in and noticed Orion’s gnome sitting in the middle of the floor.  The Wainwrights had three other gnomes on their property now—an Egyptian one they got on their trip, a spring-themed bunny one that just showed up in their greenhouse one day, and a stone-looking sculpture gnome that Patrick discovered inside a block on the sculpting station—but Orion’s was the only one Buddy actively despised.  He believed it was evil and would cause them harm if not kept in line.  “Even Creepy Beardface knows something’s up tonight.  He’s probably hoping Maria will wreak havoc he can watch after she transforms.”  He sneered at it.  “Get the plum out of here before I punt you into the pool again.”



Maria just finished eating when she started to feel off.  She was shaky, and her heart was racing.  She stood up and took a deep breath.  “Oh, no.  I think it’s happening.”

Patrick also got up.  “It’s okay, baby.  Just try to relax,” he said, while Buddy stood by and watched.

“Oh, boy.  Here we go,” he muttered, more concerned than sarcastic.



Maria took several deep breaths, but she could no longer speak as her transformation began.  She lurched forward, letting out a scream that took on an unearthly growl, and then threw her head back, howling, as her body shifted and changed.



Her hair fell out of its brushed style into a wild tangle around her shoulders while fur erupted on her torso and limbs and her claws and fangs grew.  Her facial features twisted into a beastlike caricature of her normal appearance while her eyes changed color and glowed a bright yellow.  Maria let out a feral snarl, then threw her head back and howled at the moon that she could not see from inside but could still sense and feel.



“Holy plum!  How can you ever get used to that?!” a freaked-out Buddy shrieked, turning away, shaken.  He had never seen Maria transform before.  The only other time it ever happened at the house was the very first time, but he had been downstairs with Patrick and Orion when she changed, and none of them witnessed the transition then.

Patrick was more used to it, although he had also been shaken the first time he watched her transform in the safety of the lab.  He had seen it more than once since, but it was still unnerving even though he knew what to expect.  He took a steadying breath and carefully went over to her so as not to startle her, glad she was not reacting to Buddy’s hysterics.  He knew she could sense him in that form, and he did not want her to get the notion to terrorize him, even if she might not be able to physically harm him.  “Baby, it’s me.  Paddy-cakes.  Are you okay?”

She looked at him, calming down as she sniffed in his direction and caught his scent.  “Paddy-cakes.”

“You’re all right, Maria.  You’re at home, remember?  Just here in the kitchen with me and Buddy.  He’s a little scared, so if you smell or see something weird like him, don’t worry about it.”

“I’m not scared!  I’m—I’m just weirded out!”  He shuddered, and then glowered down at Orion’s gnome, who he could swear was laughing at him.  “Oh, go sit on your pointy hat, you little llama,” he snapped at him sourly.



While Buddy was freaked out and Orion’s gnome was cruelly amused, Plumboptimus barely registered Maria’s transformation on his A.I. beyond her change in appearance.  “Maria is in werewolf form now.”  He bleeped it as an observation as he came in to tidy up the kitchen while Maria sniffed Patrick up close and personal.

He had gotten used to her feral behavior in werewolf form.  During the most recent full moons at the lab, he went into the isolation room with her both for support and so he could understand the werewolf behavior better.  She would be like this for the rest of her life, after all, and the last thing he wanted to do was make her feel lonelier or like he did not want to be around her when she was going through that.  “Guess you noticed I used that new body spray you got me,” he remarked with a chuckle as she shoved her face into his armpit and gave him a deep sniff.



She was relatively calm for the werewolf state at the moment, and Patrick wanted her to stay that way.  He petted her affectionately on the shoulder.  “Seems like you’re feeling pretty good.  You need anything?”

She panted a bit.  “Outside.”

That was instinct talking.  He knew rational Maria absolutely would not want to go outside and give the neighbors an opportunity to see her like that, so he tried to talk her out of it since that would be easier than physically preventing it.  “No, you don’t want to go out.  It’s all wet and muddy from the rain you know how you hate getting your shoes dirty.  Let’s stay inside.  Besides, we need to stay near Jessica.  She just woke up in the swing and Plumboptimus put her on the mat to play.  We’ve got to make sure we can hear her if she needs us.”

Maria sniffed at the air.  “Jessica.”

“She’s in the study.  She’s—”

He did not get the chance to finish his sentence before she darted off at full wolf speed to go to her.

“Holy llama, she’s fast,” Buddy remarked, still unnerved.  “You sure the baby will be okay with her?”

Patrick put his hand on his chest and took a deep breath.  “Yeah, but I’m keeping an eye on her anyway.”  He bolted after her.



Maria already had Jessica by the time he got there, but just like he expected, she was fine.  She was snuggling her, making soft little grunts that he assumed were a werewolf’s way of comforting their young.  “See?  She’s fine,” Patrick said gently as he approached.  “She knows her mom.”  He watched Maria cuddle her, and although he was not worried she would hurt her on purpose, when she snagged a claw on her blanket, it made him anxious.  They were sharp.



It was then that Boyd and Susan returned from their movie, and they went straight to the study with Plumboptimus and Buddy in tow once they found out Patrick and Maria were in there.  “She’s got the baby.”  Boyd said it calmly, but with an anxious look that said, Are you sure that’s a good idea?

“We’re just checking on her.  She’s fine.”  Patrick turned to Maria with an idea that would put everyone more at ease.  “Hey, why don’t we go out and walk on the patio?  You wanted to go outside.”  Their patio was enclosed and out of view of the neighbors, so he was not concerned about that.  “But it’s too cold and wet for the baby.  Wouldn’t want her to get a chill.  We’ll be okay, though, and Mom and Dad are here now to help Plumboptimus take care of her.”

“We’d be happy to,” Susan chimed in, using the same cheerful tone to keep Maria calm.  “I’ve been too busy to get a chance to play with her today anyway, and I’d love to.”

“Come on.  Let’s set her back on the mat and go out,” Patrick encouraged her.  “It’s not raining anymore, and you could see the moon…”



“MOON!”  Maria growled excitedly.  She was still holding the baby and did not hurt her, but it made Patrick nervous anyway, and his parents and Buddy even more so.  He could practically feel his father’s anxious stare.

“Yeah, the moon’s real pretty tonight.  Here, hand me Jess.  I’ll give her a snuggle, and then we’ll go out.”

“Outside!”  In her excitement, Maria practically shoved the baby into his hands before bolting for the door.



Unfortunately, the door she ran out was not the patio door, but the one to the hall.

“Uh, the patio’s not that way…” Buddy remarked.

“I know!” Patrick snapped as he put Jessica back on the mat.  When they all heard the front door slam a moment later, he let out a string of profanity that in normal circumstances would have turned his mother colors.  “Keep an eye on Jess,” he shouted to them before chasing after his errant werewolf wife.



“Maria!” Patrick shouted when he got outside.  “Maria!  Plum!”  He looked around and spotted her in the side yard.  He wanted to get her back inside quickly, before she did something that got herself or someone else hurt, or got spotted, which would no doubt get him blamed when she reverted to normal.  He had assured her things would be fine at home, after all.  “Maria, baby, come back!”



He caught up with her near the back of the property, thankfully only a distant sight from any of the neighbors.  Despite the full moon, it was still dark enough that they would only look like silhouettes from that far if anyone was looking.  “Hey, wait up!” he panted, a stitch forming in his side from the sudden sprinting.  He had the annoying thought that he should be in better shape than that, even if he didn’t exercise in the treadmill or gym sense much.  It wasn’t like practicing guitar, performing on stage, or painting and sculpting for hours on end was sitting on his plumbob, after all.

Maria bent over and sniffed at the grass.  “You’re giving me a workout tonight,” Patrick quipped.  “I thought we were just going to take a stroll on the patio.”

She looked at him, then howled up at the moon.

“Yeah, it’s pretty, baby.  But it’s all damp and muddy out here.  Come on.  Let’s go back to the patio.  Or maybe the roof deck.  You’d get a lot better view from there.”

Her grunt back at him clearly disagreed, and Patrick sighed inwardly.  While he was glad she did not seem inclined to run around ravaging Summer Hill Court, all it would take was one nosy neighbor spotting her and noticing something off to cause a load of drama he could do without.



He put his hands on her shoulders gently.  “I’m cold, baby,” he urged with a playful and pouty tone.  “Please go in with me?  Let me get my coat.  Then we’ll go up to the roof together and look at the moon there.”  He stroked the side of her neck since she seemed to enjoy it and having him so close.  It was an odd sort of an affectionate gesture more akin to something one might give to a cherished pet rather than a lover, but Patrick was desperate, and it was working, so he rolled with it.  “Please?”

She grunted as if not quite convinced, but nuzzled him in a way that signaled agreement.

“Thank you.”  He kissed her forehead.  “Now I won’t get all cold and shivery.  We don’t want that, for me or you.  Come on.”  He took her hand and led her back to the house, relieved.

When they got inside, however, she got distracted again once she caught the scent of the steak they ate earlier lingering in the kitchen.  While Patrick could no longer smell it, her acute werewolf senses could, and she wanted more.

“Hungry!”  She wrenched away from Patrick to find the food.



He ran after her.  “Okay, we can grab something to…”  He stopped short when he caught up with her at the refrigerator after she found nothing left on the table and all the dirty dishes already in the dishwasher.  “…eat?”

She had the fridge open and growled hungrily into it, and then she grabbed the first thing that appealed—a fresh raw ground beef patty from a pack that Plumboptimus purchased on a shopping trip earlier that day.

“In the mood for burgers, huh?  Okay, we can fire up the grill and…”

Maria shoved it into her mouth and chowed down on it like she had not eaten in a week.

Patrick winced, and hoped that would not make her sick after she changed back.  “Never mind.”  He was glad Buddy and his parents had not seen that, either.  The last thing he wanted was to hear grossed-out commentary or a long-winded worried lecture about food poisoning from his father.

She took a second patty after that, and while Patrick considered stopping her, he also considered that he would rather have full use of his uninjured fingers for playing guitar and for his art, so he let her go with only verbal suggestions to maybe eat some cheese or something cooked.  She did that after the second patty, impressively wolfing down an entire bar of his mother’s imported Gouda in about three bites, and then she slammed the door with satisfaction, licking her chops.



“Nice and full now, huh?”  He eased himself in front of the door to discourage her from eating herself ill.  Her werewolf form might be able to take it, but he suspected her human one would wake up seriously regretting it if she kept going.

She leaned back and howled with delight, and Patrick imitated the gesture playfully in the hope that it would distract her.  He had done that with her in the isolation room during previous transformations, and she liked it.  “Glad you got in your near-midnight snack, baby, but I’m getting tired now.  How about you?  Want to go lie down?  Check on Jess and then go to bed?”  He hoped so since he was getting tired himself.  It felt like he had been chasing her around for hours.  Somehow, it had not been that exhausting back at the lab, but then, it was a much smaller area that she had been confined to there.

Maria went to the sink and guzzled some water straight from the faucet, then howled at the moon again before turning toward him.  “Lie down?”

He took her hand.  “I’m ready.”



They saw Plumboptimus in the hallway and he told them that Susan already put Jessica to bed for the night.  They checked in on the baby, sleeping peacefully in her crib, and Maria leaned in and nuzzled her before going back to their room with Patrick.  It looked like she was finally winding down, and Patrick was relieved.  “We’ve had quite a night, huh?  You ready to crash?  I sure am.  You wore me out.  I’m not used to all this running around.”

She hugged him and nuzzled him affectionately.  “Aw, I love you, too, baby,” he said.  Her romantic instincts were not muted in werewolf form, and to her werewolf mind, Patrick was her mate whether he was a werewolf or not.  It was not the first time she got a little frisky with him like that, although he never did more than cuddle or smooch her in that state.  Maria was not in her right state of mind transformed like that, and he would never take advantage of her even if he didn’t find the thought of getting it on with a transformed werewolf a little too kinky for his taste.



It didn’t stop her from getting playful, though, and she pulled Patrick onto the floor with her to wrestle around—what he suspected was some kind of affectionate werewolf foreplay.

He could not help but laugh as he tumbled over.  “Come on now, baby.  I said you wore me out.  Let’s just get these shoes off and go to bed, okay?”

Maria giggled through a series of excited pants, and tugged at his shirt, tickling him through the fabric with her claws.

“Oh, we’re going to play that game, are we?  Okay.  I can do that, too.”  He tickled her belly, making her roll around and giggle harder.  It was harmless fun, and maybe a little weird, but it kept her happy and content as opposed to excited or dangerous, and that was what mattered.



They goofed around on the floor for a bit longer, and then Patrick finally got her shoes off and brought her into bed with him.  He did not bother to change beyond kicking his own shoes off, and he lay there with Maria, holding her close and encouraging her to fall asleep.  She rested her head on his shoulder, and finally, she started to drift off.  “Nice and comfy now?”  He closed his eyes as they settled into the pillows together.  “Ready to go to sleep?”

“Paddy-cakes.”  She murmured against him, kissing his neck in a half-nip.

“I’m here,” he whispered back.  “And you did fine tonight, just like I knew you would.  I think we can make staying at home on the full moon a thing, instead of going to the lab.”

“Stay home with you.”  She drew her arm tighter around him, and he stroked her back as they snuggled.

“Yeah.  Right here with me, baby.”  He kissed her lightly on the lips and closed his eyes.  “Good night.”

Offline Cheezey

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Brilliant Minds: The Wainwrights of Sunset Valley - Chapter 129
« Reply #359 on: September 11, 2020, 10:16:46 PM »
Chapter 129



Spring was in full bloom in Sunset Valley by the time it was little Jessica’s birthday.  Patrick and Maria threw a party for her, and Maria brought her to the cake so she could blow out her first birthday candle.  “That’s my girl,” she encouraged her.  “Careful.  We don’t want to get frosting on our cute clothes or Mommy’s sweater.”

“Yeah, we save that for when she eats the cake,” Patrick remarked while Plumboptimus imitated human celebration by attempting to blow a party horn beside him.  No noise came out since he did not have the ability to blow out air from there, and he beeped at it with frustration.

“I cannot sound the celebratory noise maker.  Please accept my apologies and well wishes for Jessica instead.”

“It’s all right.  Thank you,” Maria said, while Cycl0n3 offered his own helpful hint from the other side of the room.

“Just stick it in your exhaust port.  If it’s in the same place humans have them, it’ll be hilarious!”

Blair let out a childishly amused groan, while the rest of the room ranged from rolling their eyes to smirking or snickering.  Patrick was somewhere in between, and he fired off a sarcastic response.  “You would suggest that.”



The more Jessica grew, the more she resembled her father in appearance as well as in not being a werewolf.  She had his coloring, with the same fiery red hair, green eyes, and skin tone, and her facial features clearly came from him as well.  One thing that she did get from her mother, though, was Maria’s larger-boned strong build that both she and Tad inherited from their father instead of what Boyd jokingly called the Wainwright “beanpole” genes that all of his and Susan’s children other than Orion had, and which Blair had in turn passed on to both of her sons—most likely because Susan and Cycl0n3 had similar physiques as well.

Jessica was a bright and inquisitive toddler.  She was not as accident-prone as Chris or as “nerve-wrackingly fearless,” as Boyd put it, as Orion had been, but she was interested in odd things.  At that age, Patrick and Travis were easily distracted by the swing or the television and Iris by playing outside or in the greenhouse in colder weather, but Jessica got the notion to play with things other children might ignore, and she would poke at them for a long time trying to figure out what they did or how they worked.   

Like her father before her and her Aunt Iris, Jessica loved her mysterious handmade doll.  The Wainwrights knew that Fluffs was yet another spirit doll, but they still had no idea who in Moonlight Falls sent them, or why.  Since they had all been beneficial so far, they were not overly concerned, except when Boyd overthought it and wondered if it was possible to get an evil or malicious one or when he pondered who was watching their family and sending the dolls in the first place.

Jessica bonded with Fluffs almost immediately.  She carried her around and often asked for her if she did not have her, especially at bedtime.  Sometimes, Maria could detect a similar scent from the Fluffs doll that she did when Buddy or Patches were around, or when she was near their physical dolls.  She had only seen Patches’ doll a handful of times since Iris kept her in her room, but like Buddy, her doll would vanish or move when the spirit was active.  The Buddy doll was only ever in his designated spot when Patrick was not home, but sometimes he still appeared in other places in the house, like the rec room or study.  Patches did not wander as much, but when she did, she usually turned up outside or in the greenhouse.



Jessica was playing with Fluffs when Caleb showed her his doll, Rags.  “Mine’s kind of like yours.  Your cousin Travis gave him to me.”

She giggled and poked Rags on the nose playfully, and then held out Fluffs as if to introduce them.  “Fluffs!”

Blair thought it was adorable and picked up Jessica.  “Aw!  Maybe they can be friends, too, huh?”  She looked at Caleb.  “And Rags looks like you’ve taken him on a few adventures since I last saw him.”

“Some, yeah.”  Although Caleb was a pre-teen now and tended to only play with the doll at home, he did take him outside often and into places like tree houses.  He brought him along to the family gathering since Chris told him Patrick and Iris had similar dolls and he wanted to compare them.  He was surprised to find out that Jessica had one, too.



“That’s great!”  Blair smiled at Caleb, then bounced Jessica.  “Are you going to do that, too?  Go on lots of adventures?  Or do you watch lots of cartoons and movies with her like your daddy did with Buddy?  I wonder if maybe since you look so much like him, you’ll take after him and be a little redheaded spitfire and get into all sorts of trouble?” she teased, tickling her, making her giggle louder.  “Yes, I think so!  I see mischief in that cute little smile!”

“Hey, I didn’t get into that much trouble,” Patrick protested, and then glanced over at Chris.  “Besides, there’s another redhead that meets those qualifications, and you raised him.”



“Oh, Captain, I could never hold a candle to your expertise on such matters,” Chris said from where he was chatting with Orion.  “I’m just a modest doctor, not a wild partying rock star.  Besides, which of us belonged to the party frat at Sims U?”

Patrick was tempted to counter that asking which of them got their naked plumbob caught on camera at a toga party and had it wind up on social media, but he did not want to embarrass him that much, or get into a tit-for-tat match where Chris could turn around and bring up some of his youthful indiscretions that his family had not heard about.  “I don’t remember you turning down too many invites,” he said instead, and then turned to Blair.  “Besides, Jess is only a little mischievous.  Not much trouble at all.  Nowhere near what I’m sure Chris was.”

“You’d know.  You were right there with me.”

Orion smirked.  “So was I for a lot of it, and the truth is you could both be llamas when they weren’t looking.”

“Hah.  This from Mr. Innocent.  I clearly remember some plum you did on that China trip, and from the tales Travis and the others have told me, Egypt too, oh releaser of cursed mummies.  Oh, and perhaps you remember that time you tried to put a joke program on my dad’s computer, and he caught you?”

“Uh-huh.  And perhaps you remember how I didn’t rat you out or let on that you were busy rigging the shower with hair dye the whole time both your dad and mine were giving me long boring lectures about the computer thing?”



“Whoa, what?”  Cycl0n3 overheard and came over, wagging a finger at Chris.  “That was you?”  He turned to Orion.  “And you were in on it?”

Orion grinned.  “It was a little chemistry experiment.  My computer prank was just a bonus project, but I didn’t count on getting caught.  Turns out you vastly overestimate your subtlety at age ten.  But it did create the perfect diversion for Chris to pull off the shower prank without any of you seeing.”

“Heh.  I always figured the Captain was the culprit behind that.  A prank with bright colors and dye, and a smart llama teenage artist who thought plum like that was funny, it all added up.  Chris denied having anything to do with it and while I suspected he knew, I figured he was just covering for dear old Uncle Paddy-Cakes so Blair wouldn’t call Grandma and Grandpa over there and get him in trouble.  Honor among thieves, or pranksters as the case may be.”

“Why does everyone always assume this plum is me?”  Patrick threw his hands up in the air.  “I’m innocent!  And only Maria gets to call me that.”

“Fine, Captain.  And I’ll give you not guilty, but ‘innocent’ is a stretch.”  He eyed Chris.  “And shame on you for lying to your poor trusting parents.  Since you’re too old to ground now, I hope you at least feel an unbearable burden of guilt for your wicked crime and the subsequent years of deception.”

“Yup.  The guilt tears me up inside every time I think about how ridiculous you looked and how hard I laughed,” Chris replied with a grin.   

“He also sent me pictures, since I helped,” Orion added, amused, and Patrick chimed in again.

“Those I saw, and for the record, I feel absolutely no guilt from how hard I laughed.”

“Well, boys, after all this time I’ll concede you got me good, and I have to admit it is pretty funny.  I’d have chosen Boyd or Susan as my target of choice, but I can understand your desire not to be disinherited, humorous as a bad dye job on them might have been, and I know you all knew better than to mess with Blair.  So, well played.  That said… two of you now have children, and I hope they’re all listening and taking notes.  And that they’ll gleefully pass them on to the ones too young to get it yet,” he nodded toward Jessica, “and the ones you’ll eventually have someday,” he finished with a look at Orion before heading off to grab a post-cake cup of coffee.



“No worries, Dad.  I’ll be happy to fill them in if they missed any highlights,” Travis quipped with a sly look at his older brother, who made a sarcastic face back at him before resuming his chat with Orion.  Hilda and Raul had wandered out into the hall now that they were done with their cake, but Caleb and Esmeralda, who had brought her boyfriend Owen along, had both heard and were amused by the exchange.

Boyd was also amused.  “Such a dutiful uncle you are, Travis.”

“Well, Grandpa, family is important, right?” he replied with a smirk.

“Indeed,” Boyd agreed wryly.

“And speaking of family, and heirlooms, I was wondering something.  You have a grimoire, right?”

Knowing Travis as well as he did, Boyd raised a suspicious eyebrow.  “Yes.”

“Cool!  Can I see it?”



“And may I ask why you’re interested in a book of alchemy, talismans, and summoning spells I acquired purely for research purposes?”

“Same thing, basically.  Research.  Curiosity.”

“Uh-huh.  The same kind of field research you and Orion got into in that tomb in Egypt?”  Boyd gave him a knowing look.  “That’s not stuff you should be messing with.  I got that book years ago after paying a… rather ridiculous sum of money to a witch in Moonlight Falls who made it quite clear that novices should not screw around with the spells in there.  In fact, when she sold it to me, she made me sign a waiver disavowing all liability and said that she’d charge twice to ten times as much to fix any magical mishaps that might occur from me poking my nose into realms where it doesn’t belong.”

“Aw, Grandpa, I’m not going to open any portals or summon any demons here or anything.”

He eyed him sharply over his glasses.  “You shouldn’t be doing it at home or school, either.”

“I’m not going to summon anything at home or school, I promise.”

“Or anywhere,” Boyd emphasized.  “I’m serious.  Like I said, I only have that book for research, and there are some dangerous spells in there.  The sort that only a real evil llama, a certifiable madman, or a complete idiot would attempt.  Since I know you’re none of those, I want you to swear to me like you were swearing on a blood oath spell, of which there are some in that book, that you will not take any of the ‘research’ you would like to do with that book and attempt anything ill-advised or dangerous.”



“I won’t.”

“I mean it.  The mummy was bad enough, but Orion can’t bio drain and Sim Fu you out of a bad black magic accident, and your grandma and I have nowhere near the experience or expertise to do it, either,” he warned.  “There’s a reason it’s locked up in the basement lab.  We’re not witches or alchemists or fae or otherwise experienced with magic and alchemy.  We’re scientists.  Ones who understand that there are universal laws and things we do not fully understand or comprehend with our science yet, and therefore should not tamper with lightly.  We also understand that you youngsters get ideas in your head about your invincibility and what might seem like innocent fun or amusing to try with that sort of thing.  For instance, I recall a boy around your age who, upon being shown that grimoire, immediately mused about how much he would enjoy using a bee potion on a high school rival.”

“Yeah, that sounds like something Patrick would do,” Travis remarked, while Buddy, who was in the room because Patrick was, overheard and commented, even though neither Travis nor Boyd could hear him.

“As if you wouldn’t.”

Boyd was of similar mind as Buddy on that.  “And I remember you saying not so long ago how much you’d enjoy having Maria’s werewolf powers to, how did you put it, ‘put some unholy fear into a couple of llamas at school’ and make them ‘crap their pants’ or something along those lines?”

“Grandpa, I swear!  I won’t do anything like that or try to hurt or curse or scare anyone.  I won’t even summon imps into any high school llamas’ lockers, as satisfying and hilarious as that would be.  I just want to see what kind of stuff is in there.  If it’s like the books in the alchemy shop in town, or if there’s even weirder or more esoteric stuff in one like yours that you can’t just buy off the shelf and apparently have to bribe cranky old witches to get.”



While Travis tried to convince Boyd to let him see the grimoire in the basement, Raul and Hilda looked at the various artifacts and curios that their adoptive great-grandparents had on display in their home.  It was Raul’s first time visiting the mansion, and Hilda had only been there a couple of times.  “Wow!  I knew they were super-rich, but look at the size of that gold bar!  It’s got to be worth a fortune.  And those skulls, are they some kind of crystal?”

“I think that one’s turquoise,” Hilda said, recalling what Chris had told her when she asked him on a previous visit.

“Did they find them in pyramids in Egypt?  Are they cursed?”

Hilda made a face.  “I hope not.  But Esmeralda said one of their magic gnomes is.  Supposedly.  But she might’ve just been messing with me or trying to scare me.  All their garden gnomes are magic and move around.  Caleb said Travis told him that and Iris said it was true, too, so I don’t think they’d both lie.”

“That it’s cursed or that they’re magic?”

“The magic part.  The cursed part I don’t know.”

Raul snickered.  “Boy, guess that’s one way to keep people from stealing all your stuff.  Let it get around that it’s cursed and you’ll die or have all sorts of bad luck if you take it.  No one would risk stealing it then.”

“I’d be more worried that Plumboptimus would have an anti-burglar ray or something.  I don’t think security robots sleep.  And Orion knows Sim Fu, too.”

“I saw they have an alarm, too.  Guess you have to when you’re bazillionaires with all that expensive cool stuff.”



As he passed Raul and Hilda on his way to pick up the birthday girl and give her a hug, Tad noticed them going from the gem and metal display to admire one of Susan’s ancient Chinese vases, and he warned them to be careful.  “You don’t want to know how many decades of allowance it’ll take to pay for that if you break it.”  They grumbled and Tad thought he heard Hilda mutter that he should talk about breaking things by accident, but since he was not certain, he let it go and just went over to pick up Jessica.  “Happy birthday, Jess!”  He bounced her.  “I hope you’re not going to make the terrible twos too hard on your Mom.  Just do it a little to keep her on her toes.”  He made a playful face at her, making her giggle.

“Thank you, Uncle Tad.  I love you, too,” Maria remarked dryly.  “Interesting how there was a distinct change in your parenting style from your own children to mine.  I just heard you give yours a Dad-style lecture before encouraging Jessica to troll me.”

“I didn’t tell her to troll you, I told her not to troll you too hard.  And tell me you were trolling saying I sounded like Dad, thank you very much.”

“Maybe I was being a little sarcastic,” Maria conceded.  “Though I do think you want to spoil her.”

“Hey, she’s adorable and she’s my niece.  How could I not?  Besides, you and Patrick are good to my and Chris’ kids.  It’s only fair.”



“I guess I can’t argue with that, but fair warning, if you give Jessica any toys that are obviously meant to annoy me, I’ll personally pay you back ten times worse than Cycl0n3 did with Esme and the Dr. Fart.  And you have lots more kids than I do.”

“Oooh, you hear that, Jess?  Mommy’s making big meanie threats.”  He pretended to attack her with a claw hand.  “She underestimates my and Uncle Chris’ ability to get creative.  But we’ll be nice, because nobody wants to be on your mommy’s bad side.  You’ll find that out soon enough if you haven’t already.”

“Hardy har har.  What’s that supposed to mean?”

Tad rolled his eyes.  “Relax!  I was just kidding.  Boy, now who sounds like Dad?”



He looked down at Jessica, then back at Maria.  “It’s hard to believe he’s been gone this long.  She was just born when he…”

“I know.”  Maria nodded.  “I hate that he never got to meet her.  I think he would’ve loved her, though.  Even if he didn’t like kids and never wanted us.”

“Yeah, but he still loved us in his way, and hey, at least we learned how important it is to be there for ours.  He always said he wanted to set an example for us.”

Maria chortled darkly.  “I think he meant with responsibility and hard work and ambition, but you’re not wrong.”  She smiled at her brother.  “You do really well with yours.  Sometimes I’m a little jealous of how easily it just comes to you.  Even like back when we were teenagers.  You had such a way with Caleb compared to me.  Of course I love Jessica to death, and I’d do anything for her, but you and Mom just have this knack for how to handle them that I don’t.  All the crying and the laundry and the trying to figure out what they want?  I think it’d be a lot harder without Plumboptimus, and of course Boyd and Susan doting over her, Iris amusing her by talking to the plants with her, and even Orion giving her the occasional bio-manipulation to help her sleep or calm her down when she’s fussy.”

“Well, I won’t deny I’m jealous of your cleaning bot.  I’m glad my kids are old enough that I can give them some of it for chores so I don’t have to do it.”  He gave Maria a curious look.  “So, does that mean you don’t think you’ll have any more children?  No little brother or sister for Jessica someday?”

“Is that you or Mom asking?  Because she’s been, shall we say, less than subtle about how much she loves having lots of grandchildren and wouldn’t it be so nice if Jessica had a little playmate sibling to grow up with like I did…”

“Kind of both,” Tad admitted.  “Mom would definitely fall over herself with glee if she heard you were having another baby, but she didn’t put me up to asking or anything.  I just wondered.”



Maria sighed wistfully.  “I’ve thought about it, but I don’t know.  Patrick would like to have another someday, but he wouldn’t push me to have a baby unless I also really wanted to.  He knows how I feel about the whole werewolf thing and I don’t want to pass that curse on.”  She looked at Jessica.  “She’s so lucky she didn’t get it.  I’m terrified to try my luck twice now that I know.  I’m not sure I’d have risked having her if I’d known before I got pregnant.”

“Wow.  Really?  I know sometimes I give you a hard time about being, well, you, but seriously, I know and so does everyone else that you’d love any kid you had even if they were a werewolf.”

Maria did not appreciate his barb, but she let it go since it was technically a compliment.  “It’s not that I think I wouldn’t love or accept them, it’s that I don’t want them to go through what I do and feel like a complete freak every full moon.  Or worse, that they might like it and want to do the whole pack acceptance thing and run off to Moonlight Falls and be that.”  Her voice wavered.  “I know how awful it makes me sound, and it’s not like I think our cousins are terrible or anything, even if them not wanting to take in Esme because she wasn’t one of them was messed up.  But the whole thought of living like that and enjoying it is just… I can’t fathom it.  I’m sorry.  And I don’t want to pass that issue on to my kids.  I don’t…”  She bit her lip as she realized who she sounded like.  “Oh, Watcher.  I am like Dad.”

“There are worse ways to be like him than not wanting your kid to go through something you did.  But I think if you had another baby who was one, you’d do all right.”  He paused.  “I’m not saying to change your mind if that’s how you feel, just that, for the record, no one that matters would love or care about them any less.  You and Patrick wouldn’t.  I wouldn’t.  Chris and our children wouldn’t.  Mom and Caleb wouldn’t, and I’m sure none of the rest of the Wainwrights or Sw0rds would, either.”

“No, they wouldn’t, but… it’s just not something I’m ready to deal with yet.”  It was clear she was done talking about it, so Tad just nodded, bounced Jessica affectionately, and changed the subject.



Across the room, Boyd and Susan took a moment away from the party guests to chat.  “So, did I overhear correctly that you let Travis go and look at the spell book in the basement?”  She was surprised.  “I didn’t see that coming.  Especially without supervision.”

“So am I, now that I’m second-guessing it,” Boyd admitted with a touch of anxiousness.  “But yes, I did.  I don’t know what all you overheard while you and Morgana were chatting at the table, but Iris agreed to show it to him and keep him out of trouble.  She was either impressed by his persistence, or tired of listening to his shameless pleading.”

“Or maybe him bringing it up got her curious about it, too.  But regardless, I’m sure she at least learned her lesson about summoning ancient evils back in Egypt.”

“Thanks, honey.  Now I definitely won’t worry,” he replied wryly as his brain ran right out of the station on that train of thought.

She could tell, and she patted his hand.  “Don’t worry.  They’ll be fine.  Iris won’t let him open any hell-gates.”

“I hope she doesn’t let him take notes or pictures, either.”

“If she’s smart, she won’t.  And she is our daughter, and I dare say, I remember how I was at that age and I would’ve known better than to do any dangerous spells.”

“Yes, but he’s also our grandson, also quite bright, and I remember what I might’ve tried at that age despite being smart, thinking I knew enough to know what I was doing, especially before I somehow magically inherited my father’s habit of worrying about everything right around the time Blair was born.”  He met her eyes.  “He won’t be foolish, will he?  I tried laying on the ‘you know I’m counting on you to be responsible’ tactic hoping that conscience might kick in if mature judgment fails, just in case.”

“That might be fighting a little dirty, but it usually worked on his mother, so, not a bad call,” Susan replied cheekily.



Down in the secret basement lab that only family members even knew existed, Travis gleefully browsed his grandparents’ ancient tome of magic while Iris looked on.  “Hey, there’s a potion here that can turn someone into a zombie.”

“A zombie apocalypse potion?” scoffed Iris.  “Gee, what could possibly go wrong with that?”

“Heh.  It doesn’t say if the zombies it makes can infect others and create more zombies, or if you just need more potions if you want a zombie army.  It also looks like there are two versions, a temporary one and a permanent one.  The permanent one requires specific beetle and mushroom types and looks really complicated to brew while the weak one skips some steps and is just like ‘if you have a mushroom on hand’ so I guess any fungus works.”  He made face.  “Sounds like when my dad tries to experiment with his macaroni and cheese or when he puts weird plum on pizza.”

“So what kind of things are you looking for?”

Travis shrugged.  “Nothing specific.  Just wanted to see what was in here and if there was anything cool.  Starla and I were talking about going to Simhenge and…”  He paused as he turned a page and something caught his eye.  “Whoa!  There’s instructions for a potion that, if I’m reading this right, can actually infuse you with magical abilities and make you able to cast spells if you weren’t born with ‘natural magick affinity’ in your blood?”  His eyes went wide.

Iris stepped closer.  “A witch potion?”

He skimmed the text.  “Two, no, maybe three versions?  Yeah, this one here is supposed to just attune you for witchcraft, but it lets you stay otherwise normal and human.  Then there’s another one that says it aligns you to the fae, but there are warnings about the trickster magic and it changing ‘your corporeal nature.’  Same with one after that talks about genies.  Heh.  Yeah, talk about your tricksters, the evil genie trope is a thing for a reason.”  He skimmed further.  “Wow, then it gets into potions that totally change you into supernatural creatures like vampires and even werewolves.  If I could make that, I could get Maria’s powers and show her their real potential.”



“Oh, just what we need, you both wolfing out and you showing off and setting off her ego in wolf mode,” Iris quipped.  “Seriously, don’t do anything like that at least until I go off to Sims U.  I love her and all, but I have to live with her.”

“I thought she was learning to control her powers now.  Mom said Grandma told her that it went okay the last time she transformed and stayed here, except for a few minor incidents.”

“She didn’t attack or hurt anyone other than giving Patrick more of a workout chasing her around than he’s probably had since his last mandatory gym class in school.  She also chowed through a bunch of stuff in the fridge including some raw meat, which sounds pretty gross, but it didn’t make her sick or anything.”  She gave Travis a curious look.  “You’re not seriously considering trying that, are you?  Because making a werewolf potion for yourself sounds like the kind of thing Dad expects me to stop you from doing.”

“Nah.  If I was going to try something like that, I’d chug the witch potion.  Magic works all the time, not just on a full moon.”

“I’m going to assume you’re not serious.”

Travis frowned as he read over the witch potion in more detail.  “I’m seriously sure this sounds more complicated than anything I can brew up on the old chemistry station in my garage anyway, so it’s moot.  Besides, who has a supply of dead toads, moonstones, and ground up light beetle parts just lying around?  Well, other than maybe Grandma and Grandpa at the lab.”  He chortled.  “But they’d definitely question why I’d be asking for that, and I’d need another lexicon to understand some of this advanced alchemy jargon if I wanted to try making it.”  He shrugged.  “I could also just try to buy one from the elixir shop.  They must know someone legit in Moonlight Falls that makes them.  But I bet they’re expensive as plum, and I don’t think Mom and Dad would approve of me dipping into my trust fund for that, and I need their permission until I’m adult.”

“Yeah, pretty sure that’d be a hard no from your mom at least, especially if she ran it by my mom and dad first.  And I probably shouldn’t ask or remind you, but do I even want to know what you were originally looking for in there to try at Simhenge with Starla before you got distracted by the idea of a do-it-yourself witch potion?”



“Oh, that!”  He grinned with enthusiasm.  “Nothing bad.  It’s just something we were talking about after watching a movie.  We wondered if there were any spells or talismans that made it easier to focus its alleged supernatural energy to either sense or see the kind of things drawn to that.”

Iris couldn’t help but laugh.  “Wow.  All the horror movies you watch, and the mummy thing that actually happened in Egypt, and you would still try that?  You’re either braver than plum or just plum crazy.  I’m not sure which.”

“And now you sound like the old people, or Patrick doing his best imitation of them,” Travis quipped back.  “I didn’t say I was actually going to summon anything.  Just observe.”

“Knock on the portal, just not open it?”

“Something like that.”

“Ha!  I can picture it now.  You and Starla on a hot date at Simhenge, on a full moon with a Ouija board.  Most people would be making out and getting all cozy under the stars in that romantic and picturesque, if not unusual, locale, but no.  You two aren’t getting busy, you’re busy trying to commune with the supernatural world instead.”

“What, are you jealous that your gym bro Cammy-pooh has never taken you anywhere as cool as Simhenge?”



“Hey, for the record, my gym bro ‘Cammy-pooh,’ which is a really stupid pet name that I would never use, by the way, has taken me to lots of cool places ranging from scenic beaches and mountains which he can actually hike without getting winded, unlike you, to all sorts of cool clubs and restaurants or wherever else we’re in the mood to go.”

Travis held up a hand in protest.  “Relax.  I didn’t mean anything by it.  I like Cameron.  He’s a vast improvement over Lester the Hipster.”

“I didn’t realize I needed your approval on who I date,” Iris retorted sarcastically.

“You don’t.  I just never liked the llama.”

“I know.”

“So is Cameron also going to Sims U after you graduate?”

Iris frowned.  “He hasn’t decided for sure yet.  He hasn’t heard back from them.”  Although he had submitted his application later than she had, Iris hoped the lack of response was because they had a lot of applications to go through, and not that he was sitting in a “maybe” pile instead of a definite yes.

“Oh.  That sucks.”

“Yeah, well, even if he doesn’t, he has good offers from other schools, including one with a good scholarship from Bridgeport.  So it’s not like it’s his only option.  But whatever.  You know how slow the mail can be.  I’m sure he’ll hear soon.”



“Good luck.”  Travis gestured to the spell book.  “There are luck potions and talismans in there, you know…”

“Thanks, but I think he can take his chances.  Besides, it’s Sims U he wants to get into.  Not Plumwarts.”

“Hey, I’d totally go there, or at least to Everglow State over near Moonlight Falls.  Did you know they have some of the best parapsychology and supernatural research programs in the country?”

“I didn’t, but it sounds like something right up your alley.”  She stretched.  “So, are you done poking through that, or do you want to look for one final spell before we head back upstairs, Mr. Potter?”

“Funny.  Nah.  I’m good for now, and you can even tell Grandpa I behaved and didn’t try or take any evil spells with me, so he’ll let me come back another time when you don’t have to babysit me.”

Iris smirked.  “So you can copy some evil spells?”

“Not evil ones, but possibly one or two that Grandpa might… worry unnecessarily about me copying down for research purposes.”

“Right.  Well, go for it, but if you’re serious, you might want to copy down that luck potion for yourself first.”



While Iris and Travis pondered potions in the basement lab, Orion had Tara join him in the study for a private conversation.  She had messaged him earlier saying that she would be late getting to the party, but she had not said why.  When she arrived shortly after cake, she seemed off, even for her.  Although being anxious at social gatherings was nothing new for Tara, Orion had a feeling there was more to it than simply her being on edge around his family.  They all knew they were back together and had been for a few weeks now.  Before the party, Tara had mused to him that she supposed they must not like her much anymore since families always side-eye exes after breakups, but Orion assured her they would not be like that, and that if anyone did say something rude, he would step in and tell them to mind their own business.  He knew she would be nervous anyway, but even after she got there, no one was anything but polite, and she was quiet and said very little, even to him.

It was that last part that bothered him, because he knew it meant something was bothering her, but he had not been able to sense what.  With so many guests in the house and everything going on, there was so much projected energy that there was no way he could focus while still appearing like a casual party guest at his niece’s birthday celebration.

When he finally got a chance, he pulled her aside to talk, and closed the door behind them.  “Tara, what’s wrong?”  He reached for her, concerned.  “I can tell something’s been bothering you since you got here.”



She turned away, unable to look at him, and Orion could practically feel her anxiety ratcheting.  Unfortunately, whatever it was had her in such an emotional whirl that he still could not get a sense of what it was about, other than it had something to do with him.  “I… oh, Orion.  I’m sorry.  I didn’t mean to… not here, but… we need to talk.”

He felt a pit in his stomach hearing those words and sensing the fear radiating from her.  No.  Please, no, not again, his heart all but cried.  The thought of losing her again so soon just after getting back together was unbearable, and he could not imagine why she would even be having second thoughts.  Things had been wonderful between them since that night at the restaurant and afterward, and they had not even had as much a misunderstanding!  What could have happened?  He wondered if someone from Sixam might have tried to abduct her despite him sending a message to Eni Jish Xip asking her to please not let anyone from Sixam bother Tara, to which she had responded saying she would do her best.  Orion had even checked the skies over the Keatons’ house a time or two on nights they were not together, and although he could not watch every second, he never saw anything suspicious when he did.  He hoped they had not done it anyway, and he braced himself for the worst.  “Okay.  What’s wrong?”

“I don’t even know how to say this,” she started, her voice breaking with emotion.  “It’s… oh, Watcher, Orion.  I didn’t think—I mean, I thought… at first I thought it was a mistake or I was worrying over nothing and then it wasn’t and I realized… there’s no way it’s not…”  She sniffled.  “And I was so late, that’s why I was even late getting here.  Because I had to make sure.  And then I didn’t know how to tell you, at what’s supposed to be a happy thing like Jessica’s birthday, and ruin it, but I just can’t not tell you…”

“Tell me what?” Orion asked, unable to parse her ramble, but nearly as frustrated as she was upset.  “What happened?”



Tara took a deep breath, then blurted out in a panic the last thing he expected to hear.  “Orion, I’m pregnant.  And there’s no way it’s anyone’s but yours.”