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    Parker Owens
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

A to Z - 67. Chapter 67 Epilogue

em>Epilogue
No special warnings for this chapter.
Questions and issues raised in this chapter or any other chapter can be discussed at the A to Z story thread here: http://www.gayauthors.org/forums/topic/40860-a-to-z/

Happily Ever After.

Well, 'ever after' hasn't happened quite yet. It has been seven years since your last entry in that journal. We were given beautiful matching bound books as wedding gifts, and you've been writing in a series of those ever since. Mine have become sketchbooks. After seven years, we're still together and still very much in love.

But 'ever' isn't here yet. We have a lot of life together left to live.

As for happily? Yeah. Happy. Definitely happy.

We've met plenty of people who are going through life unhappily for a lot of reasons. Some are victims of terrible misfortune, some suffer from their own bad decisions. Some choose unhappiness, over and over again.

Marilyn O'Shea told us that we could choose happiness, and I think we did, seven years ago.

This isn't to say every day since our wedding has been hearts and flowers. The world still has bigots and hopelessly small-minded fools. And, like any couple, we have had our trials and arguments from time to time.

The summer between junior and senior year in high school turned out to be pretty stressful. You insisted that I go to an architecture program at the University of Miami. It was important for me to do it, and the experience was really helpful. I learned a lot. But I didn’t want to go, because I'd be leaving you behind. We'd be apart, and I didn't want that. When I got back, I would be going directly to swim camp – and we'd be apart for two more weeks.

Those five weeks were brutal for both of us – we tried to use our cell phones to see each other every day, but you were working for Eustace again that summer, and cell service at the farm was pretty sketchy. It still is. You discovered that there were two places with a reliable signal: up at the pond, and up in the hayloft. Phone sex with you in the hay? Oh, boy.

When swim camp was finally over, I expected mom or dad to pick me up, but you surprised me and came to do it yourself. You'd gotten your driver's license while I was away and never told me. I'll never forget how I jumped into your arms in front of everyone in the lobby when I found you waiting for me at the dorm. And then you helped me pull a prank worthy of Frank on a couple of the guys who'd actually been hitting on me while I'd been there. But that's another story.

Best of all, Eustace decided that you were perfectly capable of watching the farm and handling the list of tasks that needed to be done for about a week. He figured it was time to take his grandkids on a fishing trip. He left us together at the farmhouse for a whole week.

Yes, we worked very hard; you wanted everything to be perfect when Eustace came back. But we also played – and not just in bed, either. We wrestled in the hayloft getting the hay in, discovered an icy swimming hole deep in the woods, and threw weeds at each other in the garden. You took me up to the pond for a starlight skinny dip. I will never forget making love to you on the grass under the stars for as long as I live.

We came back to the farm in the fall at Thanksgiving that year.

Eustace invited us – all of us, mom, dad, you and me, along with Ambrose and his family, and Allan Walker and his family, and your grandmother Walker – to the farmhouse. The place was packed. Eustace put all the younger children in a fixed-up space in the far back of the house, while the adults got sorted out in all the various bedrooms; you and I got the hunting cabin.

I get a blissful, warm feeling thinking about that, still.

I'd forgotten that you'd never seen a Thanksgiving before; never lived through the smells, the excitement, the anticipation, the joy, and, of course the taste of such a holiday. Come to think of it, I'm not sure I can remember a meal like that one, either. To watch you experience those days was a gift to add to the huge pile of things we had to be thankful for that year.

After the meal, we had to lean on each other for support as we staggered back to the cabin under skies so clear and cold that every star in heaven must have been visible.

Living at home while being married and in high school was weird. Hell, the situation challenged almost everyone. Our friends seemed unsure of how to treat us until we made it clear we weren't any different than we had been. At home, mom and dad had to learn how to talk to us as people who weren't quite adults, but pretty close. Chores and coordinating life got to be much more cooperative and less dictated. On the other hand, I had to learn to keep my voice down during what mom discreetly chose to call "playtime."

Now that was seriously embarrassing.

Mom and dad kept their promise to help us learn how to be a married couple. Dad gave me instructions on how to "fight fair," instructions that sounded a lot like Father Brewer's counsel. Nonna Costanza came back up to teach you how to cook Italian.

Their advice and example really helped when we applied to college, because we were both so tense and anxious that we wouldn't both get into the same university – me for architecture, you for agricultural engineering. You were absolutely adamant that if I got in and you didn’t, you weren't going to school.

We got the best deal at State. I got a swimming scholarship, and you got a full ride from a little-known scholarship fund for victims of violent crime. At first, it was me all the coaches and admissions people were after; later, it was you.

And it was you who supported me through some pretty dark times after my shoulder got injured in my junior year, and I lost my scholarship. You never wavered even when I wanted to quit and let myself go.

You never, ever wavered, not then, and not when I had to take an internship year in San Francisco two years ago. More time apart. You went to work while I went off to study and apprentice for a year. I was miserable until you were able to come out and rescue me. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

We had our fights, too.

One big disagreement was over money. Specifically, the money your father's estate left to you, once all the legal dust had settled. With the sale of your old house and everything in it, the amount turned out to be pretty impressive. And it turned out there was a rather large, mysterious savings account your father had maintained – it had thousands of dollars in it.

Your Uncle Ray cleared up that mystery for us, eventually. It was blackmail money. Your father had been setting it aside, month by month, to hand over to your uncle once he was released from prison. But your father, greedy, tight-fisted and cheap as he was, found excuse after excuse to put your uncle off once he got out.

Of course, they fought over it, and your dad was murdered. But your uncle never found the account number, so he never touched the money.

You wanted nothing to do with any part of it. You called it "filthy money," and refused every attempt by my dad to get you to deal with the cash at all. At one point, you wanted to give every penny away.

I argued that you ought to keep it, use it to go to college with, or use it to do something that your father would surely have denied you as a way of posthumous spite.

Eventually, you gave in, once I suggested a way for you to clean up the money from the estate by giving some away – you chose a charity for runaway kids – and letting my dad invest the rest for a while.

In the end, we were both right. Because you kept the money, we could use it for something really important; because it didn't go to college payments, we have a home of our own now. And not just any home. When Eustace decided it was time to get out of farming completely, you worked out a way for us to buy the farm.

It's ours, now, with no debt. We just finished moving yesterday, and we're unpacking all this week. I'll be able to travel on short trips for most of my work, and we're turning one of the rooms upstairs into my studio. My wedding present to you – that portrait of you I did when I first got you to pose for me the fall we met – that's going to hang in the living room. I had it framed right before our wedding, and it still suits you perfectly. We'll have a library downstairs, but these journals had to go on a shelf in the bedroom where I can see them every day. I don't think I'll ever want to leave.

Everyone congratulated us on making this move to the farm – our parents, Kaz and Terry, Ambrose, all our friends and family. And I think there may be a little bit of envy there, too. But I watch your face whenever you receive a compliment from someone. You always reply that you've just been very lucky.

In a way, that's true. You have. Good fortune let you survive eight years of brutal horror with your father. Luck brought you to Eustace; more luck brought you to me. But that's only part of the story. You’re the most courageous, persistent and energetic person I know. It took bravery to walk away from Carlsberg, courage to take to the road on your own. It took guts and persistence to stay on the road, day after day, in the rain, in the heat, hungry and weak and vulnerable. It took fantastic audacity to pretend – for a whole semester – to be a normal kid, while living a dual life as a homeless boy, hiding in the library closet. And it took courage to take me on as your husband, even though so many people didn't think it very wise.

You have been the great constant in my life. Your love for me, and mine for you, only seems to get better and stronger. More than this place, more than this house, you are home for me.

 

(Undated addition – written on the inside back cover)

I smile whenever I read this.

I sometimes sneak into the house while you're working, Zander, or when it's lunchtime and you're traveling, and I re-read your final note in this journal. You wrote it five years ago, and it still makes me happy. To anyone who reads this: I want everyone to know that Zander still makes me happy, even after twelve years.

A lot has changed in the five years we've been here.

The farm is expanding – the flock is bigger and healthier now than when we took over. I've made some great contacts that get me better prices for both wool and meat than Eustace got, which means there's money for improvements.

I'm thinking about how we can branch out, try other things. I want to try fruit trees; Zander wants to build three or four rental cottages for vacationers. Architectural gems, by the look of their design sketches. They'll attract aficionados who might pay to stay in something stylish or offbeat. Maybe you're onto something, Z.

We might have the money to buy some more acreage soon, so we'll see.

Some things you forgot to include, Zander: how did you forget Terry and Kaz's wedding the summer after we graduated? Their kids – twins! – call us uncles, as if they don't have enough of relatives of their own. Or the time you just about got into a fistfight because some guy in college was flirting with me? I had to drag you away, but deep down, I felt thrilled at your protectiveness. Or what about our trip to Africa? You joked that the only scenery I looked at were the shepherds and their flocks. You left out a couple of trips south to see Delia Walker. Do I have to remind you how I felt about all those beach boys ogling my husband? Or remember how you got me out of my self-conscious funk and into the surf, where nobody cared what I looked like, and all I could do was take joy in your abundant happiness? Remember?

Maybe you're right. Maybe I am too focused on how lucky I've been. Fine. Maybe I should say that I've been blessed. Is that better?

Every day God sends is a blessing when I wake up next to you.

Tonight, we've had another blessing which has me taking notes again. Right after the supper dishes were put away, someone came rapping on the kitchen door. There stood a thin, wiry boy, maybe fourteen. Tangled red hair, searching green eyes. I didn't need to ask his last name – it was obvious.

He had cuts on his cheek, chin and forehead. Bruises were going to blossom elsewhere on his face, I could see. He stood there a moment. "My name's Reed. Reed Anderson, and I'm looking for work. Do you got any?" The teenage voice just about cracked. His lip trembled.

I wanted to wrap the kid in a hug, but you were more sensible.

"Nope, no work tonight," you said cheerfully, "but we've got some leftover supper, if you need, and a table to eat it on. Come on in."

Food lit the boy's eyes right up.

I put together some supper really fast, while you peppered the kid with questions. Turns out little Reed got caught sucking off one of his cousins in the tool shed. His daddy decided to 'beat that gay shit right out of him.'

Didn't work; daddy's been beating on Reed for about a month now.

There's a room upstairs for Reed. You're upstairs with him right now, helping him shower and getting his cuts cleaned. He's staying. I took some pictures, and I'm calling Ambrose in about fifteen minutes. We'll fix Reed's daddy if I have to take on the whole damn Anderson clan. And we're keeping his boy.

See what happens? I spend a few minutes writing in the old journal, trying to calm down and think rationally, and I'm just getting angry again.

But there isn't any backing down on this. Reed isn't going back to Andersonville. You're right, Zander: you are my love and my hope and faith; we're home for each other. And I think we're about to discover that there's room in our home for someone new.

But that's going to be another story.

em>I wish to express my deep, deep gratitude to Craftingmom for editing all of A to Z. Her wisdom, encouragement, patience and enthusiasm were invaluable.
If you have any final thoughts or comments to make, please leave a review. I have appreciated and valued every one of them.
Copyright © 2016 Parker Owens; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments



DAMN, You pulled tears from this old man, again. Thank you for Andy and Zander. Yes, thank you for the evil ones and their final comeuppance. Thank you for the wonderful, beautiful people whom you have populated this novel with, the kind I like to think make up the great majority in our world. I cried a lot, but there were lots of smiles and even a few laughs. Don't you dare stop writing because we need more. Future publishing, perhaps? As ever, Johnny

  • Like 5
On 03/12/2016 01:48 AM, said:

CONGRATULATIONS PARKER OWENS ... WOW!

 

"Happily Ever After" fittingly begins your beautiful epilogue. I am slightly reluctant to use phrases like "fairy tale" and "magical" even though "A to Z" is magical and is a modern day fairy tale, a modern day Odyssey. I can just as readily use the phrase "photo realism" to describe the combination of excellent writing, brilliant story telling, and realistic potrayal to explain what brought this powerful and uplifting story to life.

 

Andy captured my heart back when he was Stefan. The darkness of his experience made me want to turn away, but I could not. In the first review I wrote for GA, I asserted that you had created a wonderful and compelling character; I asserted that to be the essence of good literature. I reassert both sentiments in my final review. Of all the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of stories I have read, from amateurs and Nobel laureates alike, your Andy, our Andy, is my all time favorite!

 

Thank you ...

We got a nice set of snapshots into Happily After - but as Zander said, 'ever' hasn't happened yet. But I am content to see Andy and Zander together, loving, beloved, and happy. You have offered many thoughtful comments, and many words of support: thank you, from the bottom of my heart. And thank you for taking the time to read A to Z from beginning to end.

  • Like 4

Nicely finished off, leaving a gap to write a sequel should you choose to. Thank you for sharing this wonderful tale, this is one that I avidly looked for every time I opened the site page. I am normally a Sci-fi reader so your story is a bit out of that genre but your well rounded and convincing characters and situations kept me entertained and constantly coming back to check for updates. My interest was maintained through out and I was able to engage in the tale with both intellect and emotion, this is important to me to enhance my experience and enjoyment from reading. Thank you again for this wonderful story and I do hope that there will be many others presented by yourself.

  • Like 5

I hated having to read the epilogue, but it was absolutely brilliant. Perfect, and I loved it. Reed was a surprising but lovely addition. There are indeed possibilities to fill in the 'ever' part of their HEA and that leaves me hopeful that we run into Andy and Zander again..

 

I'm grateful to have been a part of Andy and Zander's journey. I was both moved and inspired by their tale. Thank you for this incredible story Parker.

  • Like 5

Thank you for introducing us to Stefan and taking us on an epic journey through Eric and ending with Andy. There were so many twists and turns to Andy's story, but it never felt like you were just jerking us around randomly without reason or purpose. Parker, you are particularly skilled at hinting in one direction and then taking us to a completely different level.

 

A to Z has been the gem that I had been searching for ever since I first started sifting through the dreck-filled 'sanitary landfill' that is Nifty. In the years that I've been reading Gay fiction online (after decades of reading physical Gay books) I have found a handful of extremely talented authors who equal or better those who have been published. You have joined that select group, Parker Owens!

 

While I am still waiting for many sequels A to Z, I look forward to your other future creative efforts! I think I have provided you with many possibilities for continuing Andy and Zander's story far into the future. (Hint: some authors write semi-related stories set in the same location and others extend their tales into multiple generations.)

 

I look forward to writing many reviews of your stories to help me recover from the conclusion of this stage in Andy's life with Zander.

  • Like 3
On 03/12/2016 02:17 AM, mayday said:

Another one that tops the previous one.

Every action and reaction mentioned is in character with "our" two young men, it simply fits the expectations I have of them. I love the idea that Andy now is at home "with" Eric in the same place. Where he formerly dreamed of being loved, in a lover's arms - now he really is. Especially the pond...

I love the two getting through their times of separation unscathed, although it was difficult. That they travelled. And what a moving ending - promising, too (perhaps of more stories to be told?). You promised no more cliffhangers - well, I think you are underestimating my wish for more, which may have construed a cliffhanger out of the very last scene. In a way what will follow has been laid out already by A and Z's characters, but... just allow me to hope for some more of their story.

Somehow the very last chapters in their bliss and joy balance the terror and pain and hopelessness of the very first, which were so hard to read because you made us feel what Stephan felt just as acutely as we can bask in their happiness now.

Von ganzem Herzen Danke, Parker!

Thank you for your many very kind and encouraging reviews. The epilogue was a coda, a sigh of contentment, perhaps. And maybe a hint of adventures untold. The farm is just the place for the boys to be home for good. And yes, the pond must be one of their special places...thank you for picking up on that. And from my heart to yours, many, many thanks for reading A to Z.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 02:31 AM, Onim said:

Beautiful epilogue to an amazing story...sitting here imagining all of the tears that are being shed with the ending of this story!! You brought out every range of emotion in us, with each chapter...and we loved it...looked forward to it...pined for it!! Thank you for sharing the talent!!! :wub::thankyou:

I am so glad you liked the story, so glad you felt it worth the time to read. And believe me, I looked forward to each posting, too. Thank you for your thoughts and encouragement, and most especially for reading A to Z.

  • Like 4
Guest Prateek

Posted

There is this clear, brown, whiskey-ish tinged glass of Earl Grey resting lazily on the table in front of me. Its been sitting like that for ten minutes now, and even though I really want to sip in the warm liquid and feel my nose and throat react to the subtle strength of the concoction like a cold child wrapped in the benevolence of a blanket, I merely inhale the aroma and stop. And smile. And remember. And isn't this story similar to this cup of tea – magnificent in his beauty like amber in a crystal goblet, but something to inhale, not something to sip from too soon? Or ever? Three nights ago, I came across this story and I finished it this morning. And there is something about this story that makes me sit at my laptop right now and drop a review, and with it, a part of me no one really knows about.
A to Z has made me question the very principles I live my life by. I have always believed that each one of us is capable of so much love that if we let it all out, the world will collapse under the weight of it. So I have loved in a reserved way, you know, the way you love people as if they belong to other instruments. As if they are not yours to love completely. This story changed exactly that about me. Andy and Zander are two of the most beautiful characters I have come across and they make me believe in the idea of a soul-mate. Their story has left me wondering about hopefulness that comes with the feeling of love and all the revealing of the bare bones of humanity.
Knowing Andrew and Alexander has been a mesmerising journey filled with intrigue, pain, love, tears and that feeling that makes that younger, duller part of you go slack, shift and then come loose like a noose knot coming undone at the drop. And I cherish this feeling so much that I'm sure that one of these days, I will revisit this story and live the tale of Andrew and Alexander once more (and cry once more).
This story is not just a majestic idea bound in alphabets and paragraphs. It is the gloriously written plot of a novel which holds the promise of indecipherability since its inception in the author’s brain. If anything, It is that. To top it, it has two of the cutest characters. And since remembering them puts me off-track in a strangely lunatic sort of way, I should probably focus on gulping down the cup of Earl Grey, now cold, but also pregnant with reflections of my thoughts, or the story. A cup of tea, sometimes, is all it takes.
To end it all, I thank you, Parker Owens, for giving me this story and with it, bringing a change in me that was desperately required. Thank you.

WOW !!!! What an awesome story, this is by far now my most favourite story on GA, (Sorry Circumnavigation, you come a close second now).
Thankyou for this great story, and if their is a sequel coming, I am very much looking forward to reading it.
Thanks again to you and your editor for an outstanding job, definitely worth an award.
Kind Regards from Down Under - Quokka

  • Like 4

There are stories that you want to go on forever because you're not ready to say goodbye to the people, I say people because they have become much more than simple characters in a story, they are distinct persons in themselves. You have given us this sort of story. I'm not yet ready to say goodbye and yet I must. You've told us that their happiness not only continues but grows, as Andy says, they are blessed.
There is far more I could say but it would be redundant of what many have already said so I'll simply say ... Thank you!

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 03:19 AM, crazyd said:

Parker what can I say the epilogue just like the rest of the story was fantastic. I hate to see it end. Maybe in the future you'll let us know how the guys and their families are doing. Thank You for a wonderful story.

I'm really glad you liked A to Z. Andy and Zander will certainly haunt my mind for a long while to come. Thanks so much for your reading the story, and for your very kind comments. For now, we must rest as Andy and Zander rested the day after - happily and contentedly.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 04:18 AM, starboardtack said:

So, it comes to and end it appears. What a wonderful journey you have taken us on. One thing I want to hold up is the way that you would start a chapter with a sentence, an idea or and event and I would go, "Where the hell did that come from?" Then you would go about filling in the back story. I guess what I want to say is that the way you handled it did not at all feel like foreshadowing which is a technique that often is tiresome, trite, or poorly used. The way you handled it was masterful. You did have me on pins and needles though when you started the chapter with Alex awakening on a wooden floor in a room without a toilet just after running into the truck driver. I wasn't sure what was going to come of that and I REALLY appreciate not being able to figure out story lines ahead of time. I look forward to reading your next endeavor. Oh, if you publish under any other names, please point me in that direction -- I want to read more of your work.

I am glad that the plot lines weren't too transparent to you. Andy describing the cabin at the beginning of chapter 63 threw a number of readers; I apologize for that. You are very kind in your remarks - there are many other writers on GA who inspired me, to whom I look as examples, and whose work I greatly admire. I hope you have as much fun as I did discovering them. I haven't published anything anywhere else, or under another name. In truth, A to Z was the first thing I wrote. It was a compelling story, and consumed my time for quite a while. Thank you so much for reading Andy's journal and for leaving your generous review.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 04:32 AM, mattchew said:

What I love about your stories is that I never know that's going to happen next. I'm always one to guess what's going to happen when I read a book or watch a movie... I just can't do that with your story. I appreciate it, and it made the story much better to read.

There was so much emotion involved in the story and you've portrayed the characters feelings and emotions so perfectly and so relatable.

I'm really sad to see the story is over, but I'm glad that I don't have to wait for more chapters. I'm very pleased with the ending and enjoyed all of the twists and turns of this story.

I really look forward to other stories that you will write in the future! Thank you for A to Z, it was a pleasure to read. :)

Andy's tale is most unusual, and unsurprisingly has many unexpected turns. I am glad it was not too predictable, and that you could relate to the characters. I, too, am sad to see the end. Andy and Zander have a permanent place in my psyche now. But after all they have been through, it's time for them to rest. I'm so glad you enjoyed this, and I thank you for your very kind review.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 04:41 AM, Nahrung said:

Hi Parker...

 

Thanks for the wonderful ending to a wonderful story. Even though I was sad to see it end, I also think it ended just as it should.

 

Thanks for responding to my rather lengthy and involved Reviews. You were always very gracious and patient. HEHE, I started to get the impression that you spent as much time, or more, responding to reviews than you did writing the story.

 

I'm also very much looking forward to reading 'Reed's Journey' or perhaps 'Andy vs. The Andersons'. Anyway, you have a WINNING plot line going here! I don't know if authors get tired of the plots and characters they create or not. I sincerely hope that YOU don't get tired of this one and will continue... :worship:

I smiled at this. Fortunately, the story was almost entirely written before I began posting it. Replying to reviews was relatively easy in addition to doing minor edits (I missed typos three or four times running!). There are many elements that could lend themselves to more story telling related to Andy and Zander someday. But for today, they have earned a good rest. Thank you for reading A to Z, and for your many kind and thoughtful reflections.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 04:56 AM, Zenith said:

Thanks for writing this heartwarming story--I know it took a lot of work on your (and Craftingmom's) part. I think it should be required reading for every high school sophomore in the world!

I am very happy that you liked A to Z, especially after the first few very difficult chapters. Craftingmom deserves my undying thanks not only for her tireless efforts at editing, but also for her ongoing encouragement over months of correspondence. But for her urging, I might have been too bashful to post the story in the first place. I grinned at the idea of A to Z being required reading - can you imagine school authorities making every student get a GA account? Now there's a thought...

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 05:38 AM, stanollie said:

DAMN, You pulled tears from this old man, again. Thank you for Andy and Zander. Yes, thank you for the evil ones and their final comeuppance. Thank you for the wonderful, beautiful people whom you have populated this novel with, the kind I like to think make up the great majority in our world. I cried a lot, but there were lots of smiles and even a few laughs. Don't you dare stop writing because we need more. Future publishing, perhaps? As ever, Johnny

I wrote this story to try to illustrate exactly what you pointed out - that the world is mostly populated with wonderful, generous and kind people. That they are also often clueless, misguided or obtuse is also on show in A to Z. I really appreciate your having read A to Z, and I hope waiting for the real, unalloyed joy in Andy's life was worth the wait. Thanks again.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 07:05 AM, Puppilull said:

I'm so happy to see them happy together and building a life together. Maybe we can get a little sneak peek into their lives further along. It would be interesting to hear about Reed.

Thank you for an amazing story!

I wasn't trying to tease (too much) about Reed. I would like to hope his life would be one in which he can learn about love and acceptance earlier than Andy did. I know Andy and Zander would be good to him, and good for him. I am glad you enjoyed the story, and the epilogue. Jag vill framföra mina hjärtliga tack.

  • Like 4
On 03/12/2016 07:35 AM, bubby1234 said:

Oh dear,me of little faith,i very nearly gave up on this story in the early chapters,but you would not let me,it has turned into one of my all time favorites,you sir are a master at what you,i thank you for making me stay with you and adding to the price of Kleenex shares (i used a lot of them)

I am sorry I sent you to the store for more tissues, but I am very glad you persevered through the story. The terrible early chapters slowly give way to growing warmth and sunlight in Andy's life, and we see him become the young man he was meant to be. Thank you for reading and finishing A to Z, and for the kindness of reviewing.

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