Disclaimer: The characters of "Roswell" belong to Jason Katims, Melinda Metz, WB, and UPN. The Whitlams songs belong to Tim Freedman, The Whitlams, Black Yak Records and Warner Music Australia. They are not mine and no infringement is intended.
Couples/Category: M/L M/M, AU
Rating: Mature (substance abuse and suicide themes)
Summary: Max and Michael are both dealing with the death of Isabel. Will they find life is still worth living for?
Author's Note: This is a little challenge I set for myself. I have been listening to the new CD from 'The Whitlams' (great Australian Band), non-stop since it was released a couple of weeks ago. So with that kind of obsessive compulsive behaviour it follows that I would come an idea for a fic!
So here's the deal - as the CD is a two-disc set, the first disc will be about Max and Liz, and the second disc will be about Michael and Maria. I'll post alternate chapters from each disc so there's something for everyone. Oh, and I've replaced Roswell with Sydney, just so if fits the lyrics better.
The first couple of chapters are just setting the scene, so they are a little shorter, but hopefully it will build up towards the end (and we might even get some dialogue!)
And if anyone wants to read ahead, you can check out the lyrics on http://www.thewhitlams.com (or better yet buy the entire back catalogue of their CD's

DISC ONE - LITTLE CLOUD
Been Away Too Long
Everything looks strange to me like a recurring dream
I think I know what’s coming ‘til it turns out wrong
I’ve been away, away too long
I can’t change where I’ve been the bad I’ve done and seen
But my heart has a home and it got here on it’s own
I’ve been away, away too long
I’ve been away too long
Through a doorway in the night towards the sound of cheering
I’ll be gone at a minute to 12
You don’t want to have to see me turn into myself
I’ve been away too long
There’s a warmth that I miss familiar like a kiss
But the girls had no name and the singer no song
I’ve been away, away too long
I’ve been away too long
Through a doorway in the night towards the sound of cheering
I’ll be gone at a minute to 12
You don’t want to have to see me turn into myself
I’ve been away
When we burn the cane the mice all run
When the cane is burnt the mice all run
When the fire burnt out I came back home
When the cane was burnt I came back home
There’s no gate and no wall in my way at all
And if Janis died for my sins even I can start again
I’ve been away too long
I’ve been away too long
Through a doorway in the night towards the sound of cheering
I’ll be gone at a minute to 12
You don’t want to have to see me turn into myself
I’ve been away too long
He thought he knew what he was doing by leaving Sydney. The city had been suffocating him since the death of his sister. Every landmark, every street, every corner reminded him of Isabel. They were twins, and without her he felt as if his soul had been cut in half. He was no longer whole. No matter what he did, he could fill the emptiness he felt inside. The only time he came close was when he was drunk – at least then he could forget, for the briefest of moments, that he had a sister once.
In a moment of clarity, somewhere in between his last hangover and his next drink, he decided that he needed to leave. He needed to go to a place where he wasn’t reminded of her every single second of every single day. He didn’t want to picture her swimming in the beach pool at Bondi, behind the counter at the local fish and chip shop, jogging along the cliffs to Coogee. And he definitely didn’t want to picture her lying next to him on the sand, looking up at the night sky, pointing out the constellations – one of her favourite pastimes.
Now that she was gone, the streets where they spent their childhood seemed bare, as though they were missing the only thing that had ever made them special in the first place. He had left Bondi years ago when he started university, but somehow, every weekend since her death, he found himself walking up and down the beach, expecting any moment to see her walking out of the sea. When he realised, once again, that she wasn’t coming back, he made his way back into town to the local bar, to drown his sorrows, and try to forget - again.
He knew he needed to clean himself up and try and survive here without her. It’s what she would have wanted. And he could see, if he didn’t do something soon, he would be joining her far too soon.
So he deferred his university degree for a year and took a 24 hour flight to New York. Probably not the best place to go if you are trying to find the quiet life, but it was where Isabel’s husband had fled after her death. Maybe, together, they could see their way through to the other side of their grief.
Max, Michael and Isabel had all been best friends ever since they could remember. It was only natural that Michael and Isabel would eventually pair up. They were married when they had barely graduated high school. Two years later she was diagnosed with cancer. She was told she had a year to live if she was lucky. She wasn’t. They had six months to say goodbye.
That was a year ago. Since then, Max had spent more time drunk than he had sober. And apparently the memory of his sister did not fade with the change of location.
Being with Michael wasn’t the best influence on Max, as they would usually end each day with a bottle of scotch, or two, between them, verbalising their grief until there wasn’t anything else they could say. Max knew that Michael was taking it hard, and was withdrawing into himself, but Max really didn’t know what he could say to bring him back, when Max felt like he was dying too.
Max began to spend more and more time in bars, and less time with Michael. Michael was a miserable drunk and had started the habit of locking himself away in his room for days at a time. So Max preferred to spend his nights in bars with strangers, than with his best friend. Strangers didn’t talk about the past, and didn’t need him to make them feel better when he was feeling depressed himself. They cheered when he walked through the door, happy to see him each night, content to share the midnight hours with him, no matter what mood he was in. All he had to do was shout a round every once in a while, and they were his friends for life.
So every night, from 12 until dawn, he was in a bar somewhere downtown, only really feeling like himself when he had a drink in his hand. Every other minute of the day he felt like an impostor, just going through the motions until the clock struck midnight again.
Max was a loud drunk, and a flirtatious one. After a couple of beers he was anyone’s. And there had been quite a few of those ‘anyone’s’. He had never had a problem picking up women in the many bars he frequented. And he definitely didn’t have any problem leaving them the next morning before they could wake and ask for his number. Or before they could tell him their name.
But one night, when he was staring at the bottom of another empty glass, contemplating asking the barman for another, he thought for the first time of the home he had been trying to forget. He knew he was only biding his time before he would return. The need to run from his past was replaced with the desire to live to see his future. He had to live the life that his sister had been denied, otherwise what was the point of being here at all? Isabel wouldn’t want to see him wasting his life like this.
It had been a year since he had last seen the beach. Only in the dreams that plagued him in his restless sleeps, night after night, reminding him that he had a home once, and he had been happy. His hometown was calling him back, saying she hadn’t finished with him yet.
He packed his bags, and took a flight, feeling a gentle warmth in the depths of his heart, that he hadn’t felt since his sister’s death. He had a hope for the future, that perhaps he wasn’t cursed to be miserable for the rest of his life. There was nothing stopping him from living the life he was destined for, without the drink to numb the pain.
He had done a lot of things that he was ashamed of, but it was not too late. The past year he had spent shedding the grief and his anger at the world. But now, now he could start his life over, and find the happiness that his sister and best friend had been denied.