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Fix You
06. Out of Order
Author: OriginalCeenote
Summary: Laundry day.
Author's Note: Not much of note to say. Hope you enjoy.
Logan cursed as he closed the panel
on the dryer. It was official: His machine was dead.
D-E-A-D. The heating element was out and it needed a
new drum. The cost of repair was more than it cost
to schlep out and buy a new one.
His laundry hamper loomed tall and imposing in the
corner of his room, stacked to overflowing with
clothes that he’d stretched two days too long. His
whites still lay dripping in the Rubbermaid laundry
basket where he’d tossed them while the old Kenmore
gave up its death rattle. It was Saturday.
No way was he missing the Bruins game. No freakin’
way.
He sighed and rose from his uncomfortable crouch,
glancing at the basket once more before he retrieved
his cap. He fetched his large black duffle from the
hall closet and returned to the hamper. Logan
scooped armfuls of clothes into it and zipped it
shut, not without struggle since it bulged.
“Keys, keys,” he muttered to himself, patting his
pockets before heading into the living room. They
gleamed up at him from the coffee table. Logan
seldom used the small, wooden key holder Jean
brought back from their trip to Mexico, but it still
hung by the patio door. Aqui Estan Tus Pinches
Llaves was painted on the plaque, flanked by
cactuses and tumbleweeds. It didn’t match a damned
thing in the kitchen, something that still baffled
Logan to that day. Jean hated things that looked out
of place.
Minutes later he was balancing his basket of whites
and the duffle slung over his shoulder as he pushed
through the door of the Laundromat. The large bottle
of red PowerAde gleamed and sloshed atop his damp,
dirty socks.
He plunked his wash beside the heavy duty washer and
fished in his pockets for his spare change. The
laundry detergent dispenser was out of Tide; he
settled for two packets of Cheer granules instead,
and some of the dry bleach.
The Laundromat was nearly empty; two college-aged
girls chatted over textbooks as they dried their
delicates and stole looks at him, telling him he’d
gotten there early enough to beat the rush of
students. Weekends sucked.
An elderly woman was just folding up her belongings
and tucking them into an old-fashioned wicker basket
while he loaded his darks. He eyed the dryer she
abandoned covetously, since it was closest to the
television in the corner.
Now he could watch his game.
~0~
“I don’t wanna do laundry,” Katie complained sourly
as she fiddled with one of her Barbies. The doll was
had copper-colored hair and was wearing an outfit
Ororo would have been sent home from high school
for, back in the day. Toy companies should be
ashamed of themselves…
“Gran-gran doesn’t have a machine, baby.” Ororo was
reluctant to voice her real concerns out loud: She
didn’t feel safe in her apartment building anymore.
Her trips back to gather more clothing for herself
and Katie were brief; she always fled like hounds
were nipping at her heels.
Luke wasn’t answering his phone. Ironically, he’d
sent half the check before she could head back to
the DA. Way to cover your ass, Luke.
Ororo didn’t trust her ex as far as she could throw
him, and she couldn’t budge him an inch. Her
daughter had switched gears and quit grumbling in
favor of singing the theme song to Hannah Montana
under her breath. Her mother sighed her relief as
they parked Gran-gran’s car outside and fed the
meter for the full two hours.
Katie was garbed in her blue coat that she’d barely
outgrown so that Ororo could wash the red one. Katie
was getting Ororo’s money’s worth out of it,
diligently wearing home half of the playground
grunge everyday, making the fabric appear dingy and
gray. She nagged Katie to hold open the swinging
door for her as she balanced her laundry basket on
her hip.
Two girls who looked fresh out of high school turned
and shot Katie a smile. Katie glanced at them shyly
and froze in her tracks for a moment, then grinned
before she ran off toward the television in the
back. She was such a little flirt.
“Katie! Come help me load the wash!”
“Cartoons, Mom! They’ve got cartoons!” Ororo looked
in the direction her daughter had run and only saw
what looked like a hockey game on the set, getting
somewhat poor reception. She heard muted cursing
from over the edge of the machines, seeing the top
of a dark head. Great. Now Katie would learn
more new words.
“You can watch it when we get home!”
“They’ll be over,” she whined back, pouting back at
her from around the corner of the washing machines.
Ororo’s expression was full of warning and contained
no nonsense.
“Katie, what did I say about not listening the first
time I ask you something?”
“Mom…”
“Come over here and help load the wash. Now.” Katie
sulked, stomping her sneakers the entire way and
flinging her doll onto one of the hard vinyl chairs
bolted to the floor. “That’s not how we act like a
big girl.”
“Don’t wanna be a big girl.”
“Acting like a little girl will get you in trouble,
Katie. Straighten up and wipe that look off your
face.” Ororo could picture her own mother shaking
her head and grinning like the Cheshire cat, hearing
those age-old words she’d bestowed upon her when she
first brought Luke home: One of these days, child,
you’ll have a hardheaded daughter who’s just like
you. Grandmothers across the world worked their
voodoo with those wicked, vengeful words, including
but not limited to You want that, sweetie? You
can have it, or Ororo’s favorite, Mine are
grown, I get to come on over, play, and then hand
her back to you.
Katie reluctantly threw herself into the task,
picking up individual items like single socks,
panties or Ororo’s brassieres and dropping them into
the machine. Ororo scolded her on a hiss when she
inadvertently dragged one of them onto the floor,
out in the open. Just what she needed, with a man on
the other side of the row of dryers who could come
see her unmentionables out in the open. Her scrubs
went in last, right after she emptied change out of
the pockets. She gave Katie two quarters and sent
her skipping to the soda machine to get them a
Sprite.
Ororo was so absorbed in the drowsy thrum of the
machines and the Terry McMillan book she brought
that she didn’t notice when Katie disappeared. Her
Barbie lay all on her lonesome on the chair.
~0~
Logan was stealing glances at the screen every few
minutes as he folded his whites, finally dry, and
searched for missing socks.
The puck fouled, costing his team a goal. “Are ya
shittin’ me?” Logan griped. “No friggin’ way!”
He thought he felt eyes on him, but every time he
peered around to see, there was no one there. He
headed back to the heavy duty machine to remove his
darks and replace them with an old blanket that had
seen better days.
When he got back to the set, he was greeted by the
theme song to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
He made a low sound of disgust under his breath.
From the back, he saw a head full of fuzzy brown
curls bobbing back and forth to the tune.
As though she had forgotten something, she darted
off, never seeing him. Her build and that hair were
both oddly familiar, but he never saw her face.
He punched the channel to his game into the remote
and went back to sorting his socks. You snooze, you
lose, he reasoned.
He still felt eyes watching him, this time catching
girlish sneakers disappearing around the corner of
the row of washers before he could see the culprit.
Stinker. Logan suppressed a grin.
Ororo looked up from her book to spy Katie peering
around the corner of the machines, being entirely
too quiet and pensive.
“What are you up to, Katie?” She looked impish and
entirely guilty as she spun to face her mother.
“Nothing,” she chirped, running to retrieve her doll
and studiously watching the white load swirl around
in the machine.
“Uh-huh,” Ororo muttered, cocking an eyebrow over
the edge of A Day Late and a Dollar Short.
“Likely story. Be good.”
“I am!” Katie swung her legs back and forth and
fiddled with the doll’s hair, rigorously abusing it
with a pocket-sized comb.
She was so damned much like Luke.
One chapter of Ororo’s book later found Katie
missing again.
Logan had one more rinse cycle to go and one last
quarter (of his game). He drained the last swallow
of PowerAde and chucked it into the garbage, gaining
two points.
When he came back from the vending machine with his
Coke, he was greeted by Go, Diego, Go!
“Shit!” he yelped before he could stop himself.
“Oooooooo! You said a bad word!” a childish voice
informed him, nearly making him drop his soda.
Wide hazel eyes stared up at him accusingly as she
stood with her arms folded, a battered Barbie
clenched in her grip.
It was the troublemaker with the ball. That meant…
“KATIE! What are you doing over here?” Ororo saw the
cause of her daughter’s continued absence. “You can
watch that mess at Gran-gran’s, Katie. Let the nice
man watch…oh. Hi.” A lecture on bothering strangers
evaporated on her lips as she recognized him, taking
in his Saturday rags and the well-worn Ropers on his
feet. The brim of his Yankees cap was pulled low
over his face; he tipped it up in greeting as she
approached.
“Yer daughter here don’t much appreciate my taste in
TV,” he explained with a shrug.
She looked harried and mussed, but she was still
striking, even without makeup. A pair of flannel
sweats just one step shy of pajama bottoms draped
long, slender legs. Her sweatshirt was a faded
periwinkle blue embroidered with an Old Navy logo.
Katie picked that moment to beat a hasty retreat,
darting off toward her mother’s machine. Ororo’s
hands rose to rest on her hips. She tsked under her
breath as she faced him.
“I wondered why she was so quiet all of the sudden.”
“That’s the signal to run,” Logan drawled. “Never
trust silence in any kid under the age of 18.”
“You sound like an expert.” Her error only struck
her after the words were out of her mouth. His smile
faltered slightly, but he recovered.
“I always considered myself a novice at that kinda
thing.” They shared a long, tense look, loaded with
unspoken questions. Ororo’s eyes projected an
apology.
“You can put it back on whatever you were watching.
Unless you were enjoying this.”
“Still better than half the crap they show on TV
nowadays,” he admitted.
“You don’t worship at the shrine of ‘Survivors’ or
‘American Idol?’, then?”
“Ya’d hafta hand me a letter opener ta stab myself
in the eye with before turnin’ on either of those.
Thinkin’ ‘bout downgrading my cable package ta just
show the stuff I’m gonna watch. I don’t need that
many choices.” He didn’t add that it was because he
lived alone. Instead he popped open his can of Coke
and took a thirsty gulp. Ororo silently watched his
throat working down the liquid. Lean cords of muscle
stood out in his neck, and he was slightly stubbled.
He had on his “weekend face.”
She decided she liked it.
She was stirred from her reverie when he asked “How
ya holdin’ up, darlin’?”
“Excuse me?” The question momentarily confused her.
“Oh. Me? I’m…okay, I guess.” She motioned to Katie,
who was oblivious to the grownups’ conversation and
making her doll dance to her offkey singing.
“It can be a shock, havin’ something like that
happen to ya…ya said yer name was ‘Roro?” Somehow,
he knew he had it wrong, but she smiled, taking
several years from her face.
“Ororo,” she corrected him, but she was flattered he
remembered. He catalogued it briefly as he began to
fold his laundry and pile them in a huge duffle on
the bench. He was meticulous, flattening each shirt
and smoothing out the wrinkles before folding them
in threes. Then she realized she was staring at his
hands.
She reached around him to pluck the remote from atop
the washer, grazing him. He stiffened, taking in the
faint whiff of her scent that brief contact had
given him. She flipped through the channels until
she landed on his game. “That it?”
“Yup.”
“I’m in your way. I’ll let you get back to-“
“Don’t worry about it. Yer not in my way, Ororo.”
“Was my daughter in your hair?”
“Didn’t occur to me it was her til she heard me…ah,
sneeze.” It was a feeble lie.
“Gesundheit,” she offered. Her lips twisted, telling
him she didn’t believe him, either. “Little rabbits
have big ears, too.”
“That one does,” Logan retorted, drawing her gaze
back toward Katie, who was diligently studying them
and kicking the leg of her seat in time with the
thump of the tumbling clothes. Ororo beckoned to her
to come over.
“Say hello to Mr. Howlett, Katie.”
“Hi,” she mumbled. Her hand crept into her mother’s
and she swung it back and forth, a universal sign of
impatience.
“Ya keepin’ yer mom busy? And are ya stayin’ on the
sidewalks?”
“Yes.” Her expression was indignant this time.
“Good girl. How old are ya, Katie?”
“Ten.” She puffed up with pride.
Gayle’s age. He was right. That took him
back. Way back. The memory of a slender nurse
watching him from the hospital doorway, round with
child, returned to him in a rush.
“Do ya still work in Pedes?” he asked. She seemed
startled.
“Sometimes. I’m an ER nurse now.”
“Don’t sound like a walk in the park.”
“Neither was Pedes,” she admitted quietly. “But I
still love my job.”
“At the end of the day, that’s kinda all that
matters.” Katie picked that moment to intervene.
“Why do you watch hockey?”
“It’s my favorite.”
“It’s boring,” she complained.
“Why do you watch Ninja Turtles?” he challenged. He
planted his hands on his hip and waggled his
eyebrows at her.
“Because it’s not boring old hockey.” That’ll put
you in your place. The look Ororo gave him
screamed it. Katie had graduated from merely
swinging Ororo’s hand to hanging on her and trying
to drag her arm out of the socket.
“Katie, stop that, please.” She excused herself.
“We’d better go. The natives are getting restless.”
Her feet didn’t want to obey her.
He smelled good. She caught a faintly metallic scent
on him, coupled with detergent and fading cologne.
When she’d leaned past him earlier, she could have
sworn she caught the scent of his hair.
He was handsomer than she remembered, seeming less
intimidating when he wasn’t wearing his dress blues.
When he raised the brim of his hat to scratch his
forehead, the overhead lights shone in his eyes, not
black like she’d assumed before, but a dark coffee
brown with a warm amber cast. Like the Coke he was
drinking, she mused, if he’d poured it into a glass.
Fine lines flared out from the corners, naming him a
man who knew how to laugh, despite the sadness in
their depths.
Katie had already taken off again. “Mom, let’s go!”
She yanked open the door to the dryer and hastily
pulled items into Ororo’s basket.
“Cheemaneez!” Ororo hissed, or what sounded like it,
to Logan’s ears. She hurried to rescue her
delicates.
Logan enjoyed watching her move. He stole looks at
both females as he finished his own chore and slung
the duffle over his shoulder.
He called back to them on his way out. “See ya
around, Ororo. Katie.” Ororo looked up and waved,
still distracted by Katie’s attempts to gather the
rest of the clothes from the machine.
“Oh. Sorry! ‘Bye, er, Logan!” She wondered why he
did a double take as she waved at him.
Too late she felt the article of clothing she
clutched in the hand she was waving with.
It was the same bra she’d nabbed from Katie before.
She crumpled it and jerked it behind her, feeling a
hot flush spreading through her cheeks. His smile
widened to a grin she could only describe as…what?
Amused? Smug? Full of devilment?
No. None of these.
Shit-eating.
She could have sworn his shoulders shook as he
disappeared out the Laundromat door.
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