by: Sebtomato | Complete Story | Last updated Aug 6, 2023
Chapter Description: The photo with the bubble bath
Cringe. We both got a little carried
away.
Method acting? The heat of the moment? Whatever
the reason, I wasn’t expecting to end up with a wet diaper. I sure as hell didn’t
expect Lucas to poop in his.
I think back to when I wrestled with
Lucas, when I sat on top of him and stuck the Binky in his mouth, when I
cuddled and stroked him.
Seriously, what happened? Was dressing up
like our toddler selves enough to make us think and behave like actual two-year-olds?
I sit across from Lucas. No more
cuddling. We can barely look each other in the eye.
I think back to my Etsy order. The
onesies and diapers weren’t cheap, made-to-measure. The store catered for
role-players and adult babies - the seller even had hypnotic mp3 files that
promised to take away the listener’s bladder control.
I made a point of telling the seller that
I wasn’t an adult baby, that I wanted to pose with my twin brother and recreate
childhood photos for our father’s birthday. I just needed outfits and some
props. She responded by throwing in the pacifier, rubber duckies, and even the
beachball at no extra price. At the time, I was ecstatic.
But what did I really buy? Did the Etsy
seller send me hypnotic onesies, or a mind-controlling pacifier?
That’s crazy. That’s impossible. I made
sure that we took off our pajamas anyway.
We’re just in our diapers. Our icky, soiled diapers.
“That was cringe,” I say.
Lucas giggles. He’s always been the
sillier one, if I’m honest. That’s why I’ve taken charge most of the time.
He’s still holding the Binky, and he
wriggles his toes, just like he used to when he took off his feetie pajamas as
a little boy. He looks distracted, he looks like he wants to take off running
around the house.
I take the pacifier, toss it back into
the tote and say, “Let’s get serious.”
“Sowwy,” Lucas lisps. He twists his lips.
“Sorry.”
“We have to get cleaned up.”
My brother nods more emphatically. As if
he’s just remembering that he’s wearing a poopy diaper, he rests his hands in
front of his crotch. It’s a weak attempt to cover up his diapered condition,
and it does nothing to disguise the nasty smell.
“We still have to take the picture.”
Lucas groans. “Don’t want to. The jammies
are too hot.” There’s a whiney tone to his voice.
“We won’t do that one.” I don’t want to
put my onesie back on either. Although, a part of me does. A little part of me
wants to be all pink and fuzzy and wait for Mom and Dad to get home so that
they can clean up the mess. Because isn’t that their job?
I give my head a shake, feel the wiggle
of my pigtails. I tell myself to stop thinking about fuzzy onesies, especially
the kind that comes from an Etsy seller that also happens to produce hypnotic
mp3 files.
“We have to take some kind of photo. The
bath one, maybe.” I tap my chin with my finger, remembering how good it felt to
suck on the Binky. Missing that Binky, more than a little bit. I feel
distracted, dissatisfied, and more than a little anxious.
“But it got so weird,” Lucas protests. He
points at me and then himself. “It’s weird right now!”
True. I’m sitting across from my brother,
naked from the waist up, and wearing a wet diaper. This is not a moment I’d
want anyone to walk in on. I think back just a handful of minutes, to holding
and stroking Lucas, petting him and cooing at him like one of my old dolls, and
I feel the blush rise in my cheeks.
I harden my jaw. “The quicker we take a
photo, the quicker we can get back to normal. I’m not going through whatever we
just went through and coming away with nothing!”
Lucas squirms on his rear, obviously
uncomfortable. “But…” He gives me a begging look that I remember so many times
from our childhood. When he was tired, when he was bored. When he wanted the
game or chore to end. “Lily, we tried, okay? But this is crazy.”
I shake my head, and I’m once more reminded
of the pigtails I took pains to arrange in the bathroom. I touch them with my
fingers. Not a look I would try back at school, but if I was wearing my special
jammies, I would look cute. I would look adorable. I imagine surprising Daddy
when he comes home, I imagine running into his arms, and I get a warm feeling
inside.
“You got a strange look on your face,”
Lucas says. “What are you thinking about?”
I clear my throat. “Lucas, we came this
far. I know things got weird, but if we’re sensible, it won’t happen again.”
Lucas looks down at his fingers. “I’m all
gross,” he says. That whine in his voice makes my teeth hurt. “And I look like a dumb baby.”
“Hey, me too!” I give what I hope is a
persuasive smile. Rhetoric is a big part of what I study at school, it’s all to
do with getting other people to do what you want. And a big part of rhetoric is
providing the facts. “We’re not babies, not really. Really, we’re big, right?”
Lucas nods, but he doesn’t look entirely
convinced. “’Cause we go to uni…univer…to school.”
I giggle. “That’s right,” I reply. My
brother’s so silly sometimes. “We’re only visiting here, ‘cause you moved to
Cinci…Cincy, and I moved to Columbus, and we came home to visit with Mom and
Dad. Remember? They’re coming home soon, and in a few days it’s Dad’s birthday.
And then it’s Halloween, and then Thanksgiving, and then… “
I wiggle my eyebrows for the winning
holiday. “Christmas!”
Lucas’ face brightens as that idea lands.
“Fire,” he whispers.
“That’s why we’re dressing up and
pretending,” I go on, getting into the swing of my rhetoric. SI remember now,
there’s three parts: ethos, logos, and pathos. The words sound funny in my
head, greasy, as if I can’t quite nail them down. But really, it’s about
sounding like you know what you’re talking about, about making a connection
with people.
Lucas has always loved Christmas, and
even though he’s big now, I know he still gets excited about it.
I say, “We’re pretending to be little, so
we can make an old photo for Daddy. ‘Cause Daddy got sick, and we want him to
feel better on his birthday.”
What’s wrong with Dad? The exact nature
of his illness isn’t clear to me, but I know it it’s something big. Something
that needs a real special gift, so Daddy knows how much me and Lucas love him.
I can picture the look on Daddy’s face
when he sees the funny photo! He’ll laugh and he’ll gives us kisses and cuddles
and tickles, and he’ll probably think it’s the best gift he ever got.
Isn’t that what Mom said on Labor Day?
He’ll love it!
I smile. “For Daddy’s birthday,” I say
emphatically.
“For Daddy,” says Lucas, and I know that
part of my rhetoric has landed even better than Christmas. Lucas loves Daddy. “So,
he can feel better soon.”
“That’s right,” I reply. “It’s just for
pretend.” I wiggle on my butt, showing off my silly diaper. “We’re not really
babies!”
Lucas giggles as well, and then he nods.
“We’re big kids.”
“Right.”
Lucas pokes at his own diaper with a bemused
expression and then points at the discarded onesies. “Do we gotta wear our
jammies again?”
I shake my head. “No.” I got carried away
with the silly pajamas, I’m not going to let that happen again. “I got a better
idea.”
“Huh?”
“We’re both messy,” I say, although
really, I only got a little wet while Lucas went poop, but I don’t want to make
him feel bad. “If we do the bath photo, we can get clean at the same time.”
Lucas makes a perfect ‘oh’ of
understanding with his lips. “Bubble bath!” he shouts, and then he blushes.
“Bubble baths are fire.”
I nod. “So, we take off our messy
diapers, and then we run our bath, and then we take our picture. Okay?” I hold
out my hand for Lucas to shake, because I want it to be serious and not babyish
like before. I want the thing called ‘ethos’.
Lucas shakes my hand and looks me in the
eye. “Bet.” He gets to his feet, pulls at his diaper which looks so full, it
might just fall to his ankles. He rubs at his eyes. “Um…who’s making…who does
the bubbles?”
Good question. I realize abruptly that
Mom would normally run our bath. I shake my head at that idea. Mom’s not here,
and besides, we don’t need Mom. As I keep reminding myself, we’re not really toddlers,
we’re just pretending.
I see Lucas’ uncertain expression and I
do what I’ve always done; I take charge.
I give him a firm look. “Don’t go
anywhere.” I go to the tote and retrieve the bottle of Raw Sugar bubble bath I
picked up from the Walgreens on Cemetery Road. I go to the bathroom, plug in
the stopper, and turn on both faucets. I flip open the bottle, turn it up-side
down, and take just a teensy bit of satisfaction in squirting thick blue liquid
into the tub. In seconds, the bathroom is filled with the scent of cherries.
How much should I use? Again, I wish Mom
was here to help with part. I know that we need plenty of bubbles, so we don’t
show our private parts in the photo, so I just keep squeezing until the
bottle’s empty. That should be enough.
I pull at the tabs of my diaper and let
it fall down. I pick it up, wrinkling my nose at the smell of pee, I roll the
diaper up and realize it belongs in something we don’t have – a diaper bin. I
take it back to the bedroom and place it beside the tote.
Lucas points at me and giggles. “You’re
all naked!”
I roll my eyes and then point to the
bathroom. “Go wipe yourself off so we can take our bath.”
Lucas looks utterly confused. “But…the
bath…”
I shake my head. “You’re not getting in
the tub with a poppy butt!” He looks stung, and I feel kind of funny, standing
there without my clothes on, bossing my brother around.
I soften my tone. “Wipe as much off as
you can, okay? You don’t have to be perfect.” (Although, obviously, I would
prefer it if he was).
He nods, mollified. “Okay.” He sniffs the
air. “I can smell the bubbles!”
He toddles away, and I give him a couple
minutes to clean up his mess. I stand in the bedroom, and I again miss my
stuffies. Did we really give all of them away? Every single one? Even Mister
Bear?
The idea makes my eyes sting and my
stomach hurt. And then I remember…I took Mister Bear to school!
I sigh with relief, but that feeling is
cut short by the belated realization that I just stood in front of my brother,
completely naked, and all he did was giggle at me, like it was funny.
Do I look funny? Do I look silly?
Lucas can be such a little kid sometimes.
I look down at my chest, my hips and the
parts in-between. I don’t look like a baby, that’s for sure. I’m pretty sure
I’m all grown-up, which manages to feel good and scary at the same time. Either
way, as I listen to the tub filling in the bathroom, I know I’m plenty old
enough to run a bath.
I walk through to the bathroom, and I
groan at the sight of my brother standing at the toilet, reaching around his
back with a handful of toilet paper, rubbing at his rear.
How gross! What a mess he’s making! The
smell is still there, despite the pretty smell of the bath bubbles – I can’t
stop smelling the poop.
“Flush it, at least,” I tell him sharply,
staying in the doorway.
He does as he’s told and then turns and
pouts. “It’s not fair, I can’t reach!” He holds out a fresh wad of toilet
paper. “Can you do it?”
I make a disgusted face. “No way! Your
mess, you can clean it up.”
Oh, that smell! I wish Mommy was here to
fix this!
I walk carefully past Lucas, worried that
he’ll reach for me with his icky, poopy fingers, and turn off the faucets. The
bath looks plenty full.
“It won’t come off,” Lucas whines. He
bats at the dried smears on his thighs.
I look him up and down. He’s not
completely clean but I don’t want to take all day. “You’re good enough. Come
on.”
He sticks out his bottom lip. “It’s
itchy,” he says.
I sigh. “You’ll feel better once you’re
in the bubbles.”
I enter the tub first, remembering how it
used to be tricky to get in when we were little, Mom or Dad lifting us over the
edge. It’s easy now because we’re big. I sit at one end, letting Lucas take the
end with the taps.
The bubbly water rises, and I gasp when
Lucas gets in, bubbling water splashing over the edge. “Careful!” I cry.
“You’re making a mess!”
Lucas frowns. “Not my fault.” He sits
down across from me, splaying his legs so that his feet come around my hips. I
roll my eyes at the sudsy water on the bathroom floor.
“You better clean that up later,” I say
firmly.
“Not my fault,” says Lucas again, and his
face brightens. “’Cause it’s physics.” He smiles proudly. “We learned that at
school. Cause the water and me, and you, it…” he wrinkles his nose the way he
always does when he’s trying to explain something complicated.
“Fine,” I say, “It’s physics.” I bring my
knees up to my chest, party to make room and partly to cover my breasts, at
least a little. Why had I thought this was a good idea? An acceptable idea? We
barely fit like this, and it’s…strange. I rest my hands on my knees. “You’re
the physics expert, big deal.”
Lucas nods. “It is so a big deal. Physics
is everything! He waves his hands, sending a spray of bubbles to me, the tiled
wall and the floor. “My teacher…my professor says- “
I hold up a hand. “Great. You know all
about it.” I point towards his crotch, hidden by water and bubbles. “Get busy
washing, mister, I don’t wanna be in a bath with a stink-monster.”
Lucas pouts. “I’m not a stink monster!”
“I’m just teasing. But you should get
cleaned up.”
He sniffs. “So should you. You wet your
diaper, remember.”
“Fine, we’ll both get clean.” I reach for
a yellow sponge and clean around my legs and in-between. My skin feels slimy,
and I wonder if I used too much bubble liquid.
I wet my face with cupped hands of water
and it’s soothing, calming, to feel the warmth and smell the cherries.
I open my eyes and sigh. I know for a
fact that Lucas has more work to do than me, but he’s not washing; he’s distracted
by the water on the floor. He’s probably distracted by the ‘physics’. He’s such
a silly boy!
He glances at me. “Are we gonna get in
trouble? It’s kinda messy…”
I laugh out loud. Since when does Lucas
notice a mess? And then I see his worried expression and I shake my head. “I
don’t think so. It’s for Daddy, remember.” I nod, my confidence growing. “Mommy
can help.”
Lucas smiles, his expression relaxing.
“Mommy always helps,” he agrees. He skims the top of the bubbles with his
hands, and then he scoops a handful of bubbles and places it on top of my
knees.
“You got snow,” he says, giggling.
It’s silly, but I think it’s funny as
well. I scoop my own bubbles and put some on his feet, his toes peeking out of
the water beside me. “You got snowy toes,” I announce, and then we’re both
giggling.
“It’s all physics,” Lucas says, looking a
little more serious. “My teacher says if you don’t understand physics, you
don’t understand the whole world.”
I give Lucas an indulgent smile. “Is that
right? So, you know everything in the world?”
He shakes his head. “I mean…” His brow
wrinkles again with the effort of thinking and explaining. “It’s about how
stuff moves…and what moves stuff.” He holds a fresh scoop of bubbles in the
palm of his hand. He grins. “Sometimes they move fast!” He takes a deep breath
and the blows, sending a mess of bubbles that land on my breasts.
He squeals with laughter. “You got snowy
boobies!”
And that’s funny, until it isn’t. I scowl
at him. My brother, who doesn’t have ‘boobies’. Who’s just a boy. A boy with
broad shoulders, sure. A boy with big muscles and a flat belly, but still just
a boy.
“You’re so immature,” I tell him. “You’re
not even clean yet and I’m not helping you.”
Lucas sticks out his tongue. “I don’t
need your help.” He grabs the sponge and suddenly starts squirming in the
water, rubbing at himself.
“You’re being too splashy,” I say.
He replies, “And you’re too bossy.” He
tosses the sponge in the air and we both watch it come back down with a splat
on the water. “You don’t know the world,” he says haughtily. “’Cause you don’t
know about gravity.”
I glare at him. “I know words…I know
about persuasion – which is why you always do what I tell you.”
“I don’t!”
I smirk. “You really do. It’s all reh…” I
frown. What was the word? And then I remember. “It’s all red trick.”
“Huh?”
I sigh. I can feel the parts of my body
above the water starting to sweat. I think I made the bath too warm. “Doesn’t
matter. Are you clean?”
Lucas looks down at himself, as if he can
inspect his body through all those bubbles. “Yeah,” he says, with more
confidence than he deserves.
“Well then,” I reply. “Photo time.”
He blinks in surprise. “Oh, yeah! The
photo!”
“You need spiky hair.” I reach over and
shape his hair with the bubbles, tongue peeking out of the corner of my mouth
as I concentrate. “There,” I say, “Perfect!”
We grin at each other. It’s a good
moment. We are twins, we are always each other’s best friend and that will
never change.
Lucas reaches to touch the top of his
hair.
“Careful,” I say, “don’t squash it.” I
smile, remembering. “You had bubbles in your mouth. In the photo. Like you were
eating them.”
“Yummy bubbles,” says Lucas, and he
giggles. It’s obvious, he won’t be able to resist repeating the act. Sure
enough, he takes a small scoop of the bath water and licks it gingerly with his
tongue.
He screws up his face. “Yuck!” he exclaims.
“It’s all soapy!”
“Oh, Lucas,” I say, and he’s such a silly
boy but I love him.
We look at each other, and I don’t know
who feels awkward about it first. But I realize how close we are to each other,
how naked we are with each other, and Lucas is looking away and so I do as
well.
“We better take the photo.” I reach for
my own hair and pull out the ties. I don’t have pigtails in the picture.
Lucas nods. “You need a duckie,” he says.
“Dad put a duckie on your head.”
I groan. “I left the duckies in my room.”
I tilt my head at Lucas. “Go get one.”
He looks indignant. “That’s your job!”
“What? I’ve done everything!”
Lucas shakes his head. “I don’t wanna get
out, it’ll be cold.” There’s the return of his whiney voice, and I rub the
sides of my jaw.
“Whatever,” I say, “I’ll do it.” Which
means I have to get up and Lucas will see all of me. Even if I’m covered in
bubbles, he’ll still see me.
“Don’t look,” I say.
“Look at what?”
“Me.” I wait until he closes his eyes,
screwing them tight like when Mommy washes his hair, and he doesn’t want
shampoo in his eyes. I get up, pushing on the sides of the tub, and then
stepping carefully over the side. My feet are slippery on the tiles. I definitely
used too much bubble bath, and I forgot to put the mat down. Again, I wish
Mommy was here to help.
“Don’t look,” I tell Lucas. “Count to ten
before you open your eyes.”
I walk carefully out of the bathroom and
feel better once I’m walking on the carpet. Lucas sounds funny when he counts.
Clumsy, as if he’s having to work hard.
I think that maybe doing the bubble bath
was a mistake, that we’re being silly like before. I remember sitting on top of
my brother, both in our fuzzy jammies, I remember putting the Binky in his
mouth and watching his eyes go glassy and dumb.
I won’t use the pacifier again. Even as I
see it in the tote. Even as I know it would make me feel more comfortable, less
weird about standing in my bedroom, naked but for the slimy, slippery bubbles.
“Ten!” Lucas shouts from the bathroom.
“Ten, ten, ten!” And I think about counting and playing hide and go seek. I
smile. I could hide in my room; I could climb into the tote and pull the lid
over me.
But that wouldn’t work. Silly. The tote
is clear plastic.
And then I feel a hard bump of anxiety in
my belly. Because we’re not playing hide and go seek. The counting was about me
being naked, and I’m in my room, dripping on the carpet and starting to shiver
in the cold after the warm bath, because I’m supposed to bring a rubber duckie.
I reach into the tote (which I can now see would be impossible for me to fit into, I’m much too big) and pick out a duckie.
I
hold it in my hand, I hold on tight, as I think about my messy morning, about
how ever since Lucas arrived, nothing has gone according to plan. Because he’s
messy. Because he’s silly.
But
it’s okay. I’m in charge. I’ll make sure we stay sensible
I walk out of the bedroom and through to the bathroom which is steamy and smells of cherries. I see Lucas and I laugh at the expression on his face. He looks so serious, so thoughtful, but he’s also got the silliest of hairstyles. All spikey!
I
almost laugh out loud, but I manage to control myself. I don’t want to hurt his
feelings, I don’t want to point and giggle, especially with how serious Lucas
seems.
“Sorry
about dragging you,” he says. “I know you’re smart. You’ve always been better
with words.” He shrugs. “I’m just a dumb jock.”
I
giggle. “With spikey hair!”
Lucas
laughs as well, reaching to touch his mohawk which has started to droop.
“You’re
not dumb,” I say softly. Because he’s not. He’s just silly sometimes. I grip
the yellow bath duckie and remember that sometimes, I’m silly as well.
“I’m
just interested in case and effect, you know?” Lucas takes the sponge and
wrings out the water. He lets it spring back to size on his palm. “It’s
gravity, it’s energy, it’s…” His face brightens. “It’s even sound!”
I
step towards the tub. I should get back in. Where it’s warm and bubbly. Where
we can have wriggle around in the water, and where we can take our special
photo of course.
Lucas
says, “Like when your phone buzzes to wake you up in the morning.” He drops the
sponge and grins at me. “Do you see the sound when it happens?”
I
frown. “No.”
“Right,”
he replies, “But you hear it, you…” He looks so cute, trying to find the
perfect words. “You experience it,” he says slowly, working through the
syllables. He laughs, clearly delighted with his example. “If it weren’t for
physics, Lily, you'd sleep in. You’d be late for class!”
The idea makes sense – Lucas is so smart sometimes! – and I’m glad that Lucas isn’t whiney anymore.
He sounds better now; he sounds like a big boy.
I
hold the duckie, I squeeze it between my fingers, and all of a sudden, I find
it hard to hold onto Lucas’ ideas about physics, about sound and energy.
How
does it work? Does Lucas wake me up in the morning? The idea feels slippery in
my head, like it wants to leave, and I’ll be left without smart ideas, I’ll be
just a girl standing on a wet bathroom floor, all naked and shiny and showing
off my boobies…
I
squeeze the duckie again, hoping for a squeaky noise, eager for a quack. I’m
disappointed when there’s no sound, just a soft hiss of air against my palm.
Lucas
looks at me and smiles. “You found it,” he says.
Found
what? I blink.
Oh.
The duckie. I hold it up and peer at the yellow plastic. Why did I go and get
it?
To
play with? To play in the bath with brother?
Lucas
beckons me with curled fingers. He looks a little impatient. “Get back in,
we’ll take the shot.”
I
look questioningly at my brother. The shot?
And
then I blush to the roots of my hair. No. Silly Lily. For the photo. For
Daddy. I clear my throat. “Got it,” I say. But really, I haven’t got it.
Because my head is mixed up, my brain is messy. And now, I’m afraid.
Lucas
grins. “Put it on your head,” he says, “Just like Dad did.”
For
Daddy. A gift for Daddy.
I
stand at the tub, and I place the duckie on my head, and I stand as still as I
can, so the duckie doesn’t fall off. It’s a balancing act, it’s like a dance
class from years and years ago, but I’m not trying to stand on one foot, I’m
just trying to keep the duckie from falling.
“You
got it,” Lucas says.
I
sigh happily. It’s like magic, I’m not afraid anymore. There’s something about
having the duckie on my head. Something that makes my scalp tingle and the
space between my ears feel all warm and melty.
“That’s
awesome,” says Lucas, beaming. He points up at me, and he says, “Dad’s gonna
love this.”
“I
wanna see!” I shout, and I turn to look at myself in the bathroom mirror. I
want to see who I am, but the mirror is covered in steam, which makes me a
smudgy mystery.
“Fell
off,” Lucas says sadly.
I
squat down to retrieve the duckie. I put it back on my head, stand up straight,
and I giggle, because Lucas keeps smiling at me.
I
giggle harder. I put fingers in my mouth. They taste a little soapy, but I
don’t care. I ask around my fingers, “Daddy love it?”
“Sure,”
says Lucas. “He beckons me again. Come on, Lily, the water’s getting cold.” And
then he frowns. “Ah crap, we forgot the camera!” He looks up at me. “Where’s
your phone, Lily?” His nose wrinkles. “Where’s mine?”
I
suck on my fingers, shake my head. I don’t know where the phones are. Do we
really have phones? Aren’t they for big kids?
Lucas
waves at me. “Lils? Earth to Lily? Where’s your phone? And why are you sucking
on your fingers? That’s not part of the photo.”
I look down at him. My silly, bubbly brother. And I look down at myself, which makes the duckie fall from my head. I grab at it; I hold the duckie against my chest. I nod with satisfaction. “My duckie,” I murmur.
“Gonna make a picture
for Daddy.”
“Lily,”
says Lucas softly. “You’re sounding kinda…” He gets to his feet, and I can see
all of him, all of his muscles and bubbles and bits.
He
looks at me with a concerned expression. “You feeling okay?”
I
nod. “Uh-huh!” I suck harder on my fingers and keep hold of my duckie. “Take a
picture,” I say, even though my tongue is being lazy. Tay-kuh pik-shuh.
Lucas
looks impatient. “We need a phone, remember?”
I look back at my brother, I see the steam rising from his skin, and I feel a panic, just like I did on the first day of school before Lucas held my hand and made me feel better. If I didn’t have my special duckie,
I might get panicky
because I don’t know where my phone is, and I must have one. Because I’m a big
girl, I’m a big girl just like Lucas is a big boy, and-
The
duckie helps. The duckie in my hand helps me have the best of ideas.
“Lily,”
says Lucas. “I think it’s happening again.” He reaches for me but I take a step
back, almost slipping on the tiles.
My
mouth opens. I’m so silly! Of course I know what happened to my phone.
“Give
me the duck, Lily, give me- “
“Daddy
tookit!” I blurt.
I
laugh at Lucas’ confused expression. “Daddy done a scavengy hunt!”
Lucas
shakes his head. “No, Lily, that’s not- “
“Hundred!”
I throw the duckie at the tub, the duckie wants to swim, and it bounces off
Lucas’ chest before falling into the bubbles. I giggle, remembering the rules.
“You gotta count to hundred!”
“Huh?”
I
rush out of the bathroom. “Gonna find phone!”
I’m
the best at scavengy hunts. I can find the phone first because I’m such a smart
girl!
The Gift
by: Sebtomato | Complete Story | Last updated Aug 6, 2023
Stories of Age/Time Transformation