The break in Bo’s perceived anonymity almost threw off the rest of his walk, the sudden realization that his sister would be visiting soon and that he would either have to share everything or work twice as hard to keep it a secret, an obviously apparent thought in his mind as he continued.
His concentration faltered as he noticed that he had reached his destination, the frustration of what he must deal with far too demanding of his concentration to actually focus on the world around him. The restaurant was one that he had been to before, though not in a long time, he could just remember happy memories, though it was just beyond him to recall them all the happiest stuck out. First travels to the city when he was just barely thirteen, his vocal coach bringing him to the restaurant after rehearsal.
Bo’s phone buzzed, and he glanced down, finding shelter from the sun just underneath the cabana of a bodega as he clicked it on.
OSM:
You mind if I bring
someone else along?
Nine Fourty Two a.m.
OSM:
No one special.
Nine Fourty Three a.m.
OSM:
Well…
Nine Fourty Four a.m.
Bo felt almost nervous, emphasis on almost. Though, he could assume that whoever it was was someone that Oscar wanted to bring along, and felt that the connection between the two of them was something that he could handle.
Bradley answered with a smile on his face, though he knew that Oscar couldn’t see him.
Bo:
Sounds great!
Nine Forty Six a.m.
The additive of an exclamation mark was not a usual trait of the man’s texting, as he saw no point in using anything beyond a period or a question mark. The addition was something used as, what he hoped, was a comfort to Oscar. Whoever the newcomer was, it had to be important, or something unable to be put off.
At least, that was only what he could assume.
It was fairly difficult to not overthink the situation, but Bradley just shrugged, finding the shade of the cabana comforting as he surveyed all that was around him.
Those passing by were all stuck in their own world, concentrating solely on whatever task was at hand and no matter what could potentially stop them on their way through was forgotten. The world was simply a setting in which their life played out, and by no means would they ever acknowledge their own lack of understanding of it all.
Bo found himself smiling, the potential of what all was in store had always been amiss in his life, and in an almost awful turn of events a shock to his life brought the potential to light. Helping those that he could, and existing despite the limitations on his own.
“Bo!” The voice that shouted his name was distinctly familiar and notably masculine, his eyes scanned the crowd, recognizing the smiling face of Oscar-Michael Torres as he made his way through swarming down the streets. “Hello!”
It was said with a bright smile and an energetic wave, the excitement all too palpable on his face. Bo found himself smiling just as wide as he made his way out from underneath the safety of the cabana and into the street.
Bradley almost felt the smallest amount of anxiety as he approached, the worry that Oscar would once again extend a hand to him to shake and the awkwardness that would ensue strong in his mind as he and Oscar met in the middle to the right side of the tree. Cautious that they were all tucked enough out of the way to avoid the awkward interaction of New Yorkers bumping into them.
“Hi.” Both Bo and Oscar smiled as they spoke at the same time, the latter tucking his hand against his chest in a way of actively not reaching out to shake Bo’s hand. It was done with a smile, and both the action and the grin brought comfort to Bo.
It was then that Bradley noticed the small form tucked just behind Oscar’s legs. Barely reaching hip-height with her dark hair and bright eyes. Bo found himself kneeling, the action altogether awkward and unbalanced, his right leg just barely able to bend at the right angle to make the trip to the ground.
“Hello there.” Bo kept his voice soft, his right hand pressing into the ground to hold him steady as he waved to the girl with his left hand. She smiled, before ducking her head behind Oscar’s legs again. “What’s your name?”
She squeaked, the hand that she had on Oscar’s jeans tightened, it was quite obvious to Bradley that she was nervous, and understandably so.
“This is Jessamine.” Bradley lifted his eyes when Oscar spoke, finding the other man incapable of meeting his eyes.
Bo glanced back at the little girl once again. “Hello there Jessamine, my name is Bo.” His voice was just loud enough to be heard through the crowd that passed by them, and the girl smiled, her hand reaching out and making a grabbing motion, one that Bo could only assume was an attempt at a wave.
He stood, taking his time to right his leg and use caution as he moved. The feeling of his leg extending was a natural one, the false joint weighted enough to extend on its own. It was an overall awkward movement that he was able to play off as natural, a bright smile on his face despite the discomfort.
Bo looked at Oscar, the same distant look in his eyes as he bent at the waist to pick up the little girl. Jessamine tucked her head into Oscar’s shoulder, and Bo couldn’t help but smile.
“Is she yours?” Bradley was entirely unbothered no matter the answer, and he watched as Oscar nodded his head slowly. “Well, I think she’s fantastic.”
It was said slightly louder than necessary, and Bradley watched as the little girl picked up her head, looking at the man with the smallest of smiles on her face. Oscar swelled with pride, finding a sort of comfort in the kindness of Bo and the welcoming of his daughter.
Oscar didn’t want to interrupt the connection, but he spoke despite the wish, “Should we go in?” Bo just nodded as a response, waiting for Oscar to lead the way as he matched his strides with the man.
There was no limp, no slightly different step, it was as if his distracted state gave him some sort of newfound forgetfulness while in the presence of his friend (or maybe more) and the adorable daughter that he had just been introduced to. The memory of what he was missing an almost afterthought as the trio made their way into the restaurant.
It fell upon Bo to speak to the hostess, and the moment that she acknowledged their presence they were on their way to a table to be seated.
“What can I get ya started with?” She was energetic, and smiled brightly at the smallest member of the party, offering a menu and a pack of crayons.
The responses were passed around the table, Bo first, with his tea, milk, and sugar. Oscar, who took a liking to the aztec mocha listed in the specials, and a chocolate milk for the littlest member of the party. With the promise of returning in a few minutes with the drinks, Bo’s attention turned to the Torres pair sitting on the other side of the table.
Oscar was observing the menu with an unwavering look, his eyes flitting across the pages with a sort of bliss-like look to them. As if the best he could do in this moment was to figure out exactly what he would order from himself. Jessamine beside him was scribbling furiously, the blue crayon gripped tightly in her left hand, the rest in her right.
Bo found himself smiling.
“She’s adorable.” He muttered it across to Oscar, as to not disturb the little girl beside him, both adults looked down at the wonderful little girl entirely content in her scribbling art.
Bo watched as Oscar took his time to speak, though he felt no need to pressure the conversation into anything more than just pleasant conversation. It was Oscar who brought the topic to light, the softest of smiles on his face but a haunted look in his eyes.
“She’s my everything.” His voice was just barely above an audible sound, Bo strained his ears to listen, the need to hear every word strong as he listened to the man speak. “Her mother,” a pause, Oscar considered his words, “She and I were just friends, and truly such, there was a connection between us that I couldn’t consider.”
It was a cryptic way of speaking about an old friend, and Bo was entranced without any sort of forewarning. Jessamine continued her drawing, all the more immune to the seriousness of the conversation around her, her only thoughts on the paper and crayons in hand.
“Her name was Celeste, but everyone called her Cress, and when she had just turned twenty-seven,” another pause, “I was nearly thirty, though I hate to admit it.” Oscar laughed, a sort of dry laugh that missed the humor. A pause, and he seemed to reconsider everything.
“This isn’t a conversation to be had over coffee and tea and breakfast foods.” Oscar seemed to regret ever speaking the first time, but Bo smiled softly, reaching across the table in a moment's confidence that he didn’t expect to have.
Bo’s hand touched Oscar’s, and in that moment there were no germs and there was no dislike of skin to skin contact, just the two of them in the midst of such turmoil and happenings. Bo did not blame the sudden halt in conversation, he just nodded a look of what he hoped was comfort was passed from Bo to Oscar.
“It’s alright.” No statement could be truer, and Oscar found comfort in Bo’s words. Oscar was the one to pull his hand back, but only as a favor to the waitress. Whose hands were stacked high with a trays of drinks, a strained look in her eyes.
“Thank you,” She muttered it the moment she set the drinks down, before pulling her notepad out of her apron pocket. “What can I getcha?”
Bo pulled his hand back from the table top, tucking it into his lap and smiling brightly at the waitress, whose name tag said ‘Meg.’ “I’ll just have french toast please.” It was said with a sure fold of his menu and a grateful pass over to her.
Meg’s attention turned to Oscar and Jessamine, the former prodding at his daughters side and motioning for her to go on and order. Bo easily admitted that the little girl's confidence was something to be admired as she gleefully asked for chocolate chip pancakes. Oscar followed with a supposedly more mature order of waffles with strawberry syrup.
It was quiet for a moment after Meg left, the three at the table glanced around for a moment.
“I’m not sure where to start.” Bo said it with a smile, “I haven’t done this in a long, long time.”
Oscar just nodded, shuffling in his seat as he appeared much more eager to hear what Bo had to say.
“I like chocolate, and I can’t drink coffee anymore. I like to read, and hear people tell stories.” Bo shrugged, reaching for his mug and taking a sip. “My full name is Bradley Oliver Jones-”
A pause, and a sudden look of vague recognition.
Bo smiled as he continued, “Currently employed as a counselor, I run a few groups in the area. I like music, and the color yellow.” He shrugged, unsure where to continue from there.
Jessamine poked her head up rather aggressively, smiling as she shouted (probably much too loudly), “I like yellow too!”
Oscar motioned in a soft way to watch her volume, before commenting in a confused tone, “What happened to blue?”
The little girl fixed a glare on her dad, “Bo likes yellow and now I do!” She prodded his arm with the yellow crayon now in her hand, before looking back down at her drawing and continuing as if never interrupted.
Oscar just shrugged, an amused smile on his face as he observed his daughter drawing for a moment. “I’m not gonna say I haven’t done this in a while, but I’ve never just,” Oscar paused, as if trying to find the best way to phrase what he was trying to say. “I’ve never just asked someone out after bumping into them on the street and texting with them for a few days.”
Bo appreciated his honesty as he nodded and smiled, readjusting in his side of the booth as he waited for more words from Oscar.
A painful jolt flashed up Bo’s body from his right leg, the stump suddenly aching from an unknown movement coming from under the table, and Bo winced without meaning to be vocal about it. Oscar looked concerned, before Jessamine suddenly apologized loudly. She had been tucking her legs under her and the toes of her boots hit the fake knee joint.
Normally Bradley would not have been as sensitive to the incident, but the strange feeling from this morning could not be forgotten, especially as Jessamine delved into a story of her dog eating socks. Bo couldn’t bring himself to concentrate on the words for some time, the throbbing pain only easing after he set his hand on the false seam and applied the slightest amount of pressure.
Meg returned with the food, and Bo found himself out of it all, a smiling face that didn’t reach his eyes and seemed to be hollow. Oscar couldn’t seem to notice, his attention turned to sharing tales of his times on stage as Bo just nodded along, making comments every now and then with a slowly reforming attention span. The throb that seemed to echo in his ears did not ease much, but a smile sat on the man's face despite it all.
Bo could not believe someone as apparently wonderful as Oscar would show any form of interest in him, but it was there, on full display at times, though in the smallest of ways.It all started with how Oscar approached Bo outside at the beginning of their (assumed) date; the remembered fact of Bo’s dislike of shaking hands and the way that he just smiled said hello to him with an incline of a head. Then onto the introduction of Bo to Jessamine and the careful offer of a hand to help him stand after his kneeling to greet the little newcomer, and w
Bradley had only been with his therapist for just over a half an hour and he was already wishing that he had made some sort of excuse to not show up. As a Doctor of Psychology, he fully recognized that therapy was something that everyone could benefit from. He himself had benefited from it throughout his first years on Broadway, so he wasn’t opposed to the process of therapy, just more specifically the fact that he was forced to do it.The largest part of him believed he should have made another attempt at changing his therapist, but the board saw no reason why. Though, the absolute smallest, and probably least rational, part of him muttered promises of this potentially helping.Potentially being the optimal word.More than anything all of this was required of him. No rational person would want their Psychologist to be not entirely right in the head, Bo had mostly come to terms with his leg, or lack thereof, so he didn’t particularly understand the entire situation anymore. One signatu
Nearly three days later Bo had not heard a single word from Oscar.While the realist (and perhaps optimistic) side of his mind told him that it was because of the fact that Oscar was not only working on a musical, but also a single dad, the smallest part of his mind chanted that it was because he didn’t care to co
“A little more,” Bo muttered, holding his fingers in the air to show the amount he wanted Oscar to add to the soup. The recipe wasn’t very complicated, but had a lot of ingredients that needed to be used, and it wasn’t centered around measurements.It was one of Bo’s favorites, and his go-t
There are three things that Doctor Bradley Oscar Jones is sure of.The first is the inumberability of the stars, and that try as he might he will never be able to name every single one of them. As poe
It was surprising for Lydia to come home in such a flurry. The ‘flurry’ so to speak, represented the fact that, in a small miniscule way, their entire friendship relied solely on how dramatically she greeted him the next time she’d see him. The surprise was more about the fact that she was back in general.
Chapter Eleven“I think more than anything life is not a lot harsher than people make it out to be.”
Bo felt as though he couldn’t breathe by the time the pair of them stepped back out onto the street, though the feeling was in the best way. The last half hour after he had completed his singing was full of, what felt like, mind numbing information overload, and at this point and time, Bradley felt like he would burst from potential excitement.
A celebration was in store, this was decided by Oscar the moment the pair stepped outside of the hospital.And a celebration that it was.Oscar treated Bo to a dinner at the taller man’s favorite restaurant, a small pizza place on the corner of seventh and twenty two. Bo had been predictable, his choice of cheese pizza and a Dr. Pepper alongside a slice of cheesecake, Oscar followed suit.Bo had not been very verbal, but Oscar did not mind. He had enough to talk about with small comments from the taller man when he could reply.When Oscar and Bo arrived back at the home, the man was much more touchy than usual. He very rarely let his hands wander away from Oscar, his hands trailing up and down the smaller man’s waist and back, revelling in the way that he cou
The Board of Directors had spoken briefly to each other before the entrance of Doctor Bradley Jones.It had not been brief, but rather long term and over dramatic.The head, Maria Merrywether had run the hospital for the last nine years. It had been her decision to offer the position of Assistant Head of Pediatrics to Doctor Jones, and it had been the best one yet in her position.She had seen the bias that many of her associates had taken towards the doctor and decided to ignore it, seeking the best position possible for him and noticing almost immediately how well suited he was for Bellevue Hospital.It had been his decision to start a program in Africa as well as South America, and it had been his quick work that saved the lives of so many young children that had made
“Breathe Bowie.” Oscar is reassuring, his eyes lock with Bo’s in the window glass. “You’ve got this.”Bo nods, his hands shaking as he attempts to tie his tie properly. He smooths out the lapels relaxing ever so slightly as Oscar sets both his hands on his shoulders. He takes a deep breath. “I know.” He repeats the two words two more times.“Hey, hey. You know this inside out, no matter what they say to you, everything will be alright.”Bo could not be sure if he believed the man, but he nodded nonetheless.They had only been waiting for twenty minutes, but with every second that passed Bo couldn’t help but wonder if all
He knew she was coming.He knew.It had been mentioned and planned and brought up on nearly every call, and still the knowledge of actually having a date that his sister would arrive fucked everything up.Bo says that he is excited and chatters on about the plans that he will include Oscar in if able too. But the consideration of how much he would enjoy his time with both his sister and husband bounced back and forth in his mind.It was entirely his fault that Mel was not aware of his current three limbed life. She was a busy business woman, and when he had had his accident she was on her way to runn
The moment Bo was given permission to stop wearing his brace, he appeared in better spirits.In Oscar’s eyes, he appeared calmer and overall in a happier mood. His voice was constantly bright and missing the monotone voice that had been apparent the entire time while Bo was healing. He relied on schedules and consistency and it wasn’t until Bo got too much news in too little time that Oscar saw just how fragile his thining was.For Bo, everything started to change after a call from his sister.He was calm externally, his voice bright and common as he answered the call after his shared lunch with Oscar and Jessamine. The pair watched him walk away, smiling as he answered.“Mel!” He smiled, feeling a happiness underneath all of the stressful thinkin
It was Oscar’s fault that they had fallen back asleep.The smaller man was like a heater, and due to the slight over exertion of both men in the early hours of the morning neither man was particularly surprised when they fell back asleep.Oscar was draped across Bo’s chest, his head nestled in the crook of Bo’s neck. When the taller man woke up hours later it was only due to the repeated knocking on the door of Oscar’s room.Though he quickly realized he could call it their room.“Dad!”Neither man actually reacted to t
Oscars words to Bo had left him breathless almost immediately.Though it could in part have something to do with the kissing that continued for much longer than he had expected.Seconds after his partner’s declaration, Oscar’s hands were back in Bo’s hair, pulling at it from the roots in a way that brought a small throaty sigh from his lips every time Oscar tugged.Bo felt a strange sense of passion at Oscar’s continuation of the movement, and used Oscar’s sensitivity to his cold skin as a marker for their continuing. Bo delved his uninjured right hand under the man’s shirt at the back, tracing up his spine as far as he could get the shirt to hike up.“God
When Bo wakes up it is with an arm around his waist and a warm hand splayed across his stomach. Oscar’s breath is on his shoulder, the smaller man’s steady exhales muss the hair that has grown a bit longer than usual behind his ear. He is overwhelmed by the earthy smell of Oscar, all oakwood and soft dirt after it rains.“Petrichor - the word comes from petra, which means stones, and ichor, the ethereal blood of the Greek Gods. Plants release an oil that stops their seeds from germinating when it would be too difficult to survive.” Bo’s voice was soft, slight. He didn't mean to keep speaking, but it was obvious that Oscar was not bothered. His insistence to finish the quote overtook his urge to be quiet. “The oil soaks into the pores of the stones, and is set free with water. They say it’s the smell of waiting, paid off.”To Bo, there could not be a better way to wake up, with a quote and Osc
Lydia Nine found herself entirely incapable of thinking about anything else other than how the future would look for Bradley and the new potential friend that she had found in Doctor Emily Howards. Though phrasing it this way made her feel like a giddy high school student with a crush, rather than the impressive woman that she is now.The woman knew barely anything about the doctor, and yet found herself putting together pieces of a life she did not live or even have insight on.Lydia guessed that Emily practically lived at the hospital, just like Bo had.She figured that the woman would spend most of her time walking through the halls, and that, like Bo, she was often told to take a break once a week and not return until she had slept through at least one, maybe even two, nights.