Flowers From 1970 New Converted Flipbook PDF Compress
Flowers From 1970 New Converted Flipbook PDF Compress
Flowers From 1970 New Converted Flipbook PDF Compress
By astronomika.
Crystal Ball…………………………………………………..........................
Paint……………………………………………………..................................
Time Capsule…………………………………………………......................
Concepts……………………………………………………...........................
Suppression……………………………………………………......................
A Happy Family……………………………………………........................
The Stetch…………………………………………………….........................
Time’s Torture………………………………………………........................
The Vase……………………………………………………........................
The Notes……………………………………………………........................
Chapter Text
Crystal ball
George walked up the steps of his house, keys in hand and a dark look
on his face.
The neighborhood had been quiet except for the occasional passing
car, which did not help his ongoing battle with isolation and
loneliness.
The quieter it was, the louder his thoughts were, and so as he entered
his empty home which housed a quiet so large a drop of a pin would
be highly audible, his head filled with a mass of concepts.
He trudged his way up to his room, carrying his jacket in his hand as
he threw his keys onto the desk and collapsed on his bed.
He waited a while, his mind the only thing keeping him company, and
it wasn't good company. All he had were regrets and scenarios of
brighter futures had he made better decisions in the past.
Suddenly he heard a ring come from the other side of the room. It
wasn't coming from his cellphone, but from the vintage telephone he
had found in his house when he first moved in.
He had spent weeks trying to repair it but eventually gave up, but now
it seemed to be fully operational.
He ran to the phone and answered, "Hello?"
"Hey Sap, can you believe Governor Schlatt had a heart attack and
died today? That's insane." A man on the other end of the phone
mumbled into the phone.
"I'm sorry, but you must have the wrong num- Today?" George asked,
confused.
"Oh well sorry then, but yeah today. It's all over the papers." The
voice answered, not bothering to end the call even though it was the
wrong number.
George raised his brow, "Are we talking about Governor Schlatt of
Florida?" "Yeah, who else." The man answered, his shrug visible in
his tone.
"Schlatt died over fifty years ago, though?" George was convinced he
was talking to either someone very uneducated or downright insane.
The man laughed loudly, "I don't know about you, but I don't
remember Schlatt dying in 1920." Now George knew the man
couldn't do math. Fifty years ago was not 1920.
"Everyone knows it happened in 1970. Then his right hand man
Tubbo was almost assassinated the next day." George told the man.
He did not know why he was so hellbent on correcting a stranger, but
he did so nonetheless.
"Tubbo? Everybody loves Tubbo. He's fine and giving a speech right
now, listen." The phone sounded like it was moving, and suddenly put
up to a radio.
The radio was barely audible, but George could make out words like
"This is a tragic loss." and such. It definetely sounded like Tubbo.
George figured he was talking to a crazy person and hung up. He
walked over to his bed, thought about the phone call for no more than
3 minutes before falling asleep.
---
It was the next day. George brought up a bowl of cereal to his room to
eat. He seemed to stare at his cellphone, waiting for calls and texts of
"how are you?" from people that never seem to come.
He booted up his computer to watch videos, when suddenly the old
telephone started ringing again.
George hesitated for a bit. Did he really want to talk to a crazy person
again? Then again it wasn't like there was anyone else that would talk
to him.
He sighed then picked up the phone. "Hel-"
"How did you know." The same man said into the phone.
"What?"
"About Tubbo. How someone was going to attempt to kill him today."
He asked seriously.
George rolled his eyes, "I told you. Everyone in the state knows, we
learned about it in school and everything. Didn't you? Also why do
you keep saying 'today?'"
"What's the date for you?" The man asked George.
"Uh..." George tapped his phone to check the date, "July 28, 2020."
No response. Just heavy breathing that sounded like hyperventilating.
After a while the man spoke again softly, "It's July 28, 1970 here."
Now this was confirmation that whoever George was talking to was
crazy. "Look if this is some kind of prank I'm just going to hang up.
This isn't my phone and I'm not 'Sap' or whoever that is."
"WAIT." The man yelled, "Do you live on 821 Manburg street?"
George started freaking out. The man knew his address. He was going
to end the call and contact police or- or-
"Don't freak out!" The man read his mind, "That's my old house. Well
it's my 'old house' for you but I live there right now. Does the upstairs
bedroom still have the hideous flower wallpaper?"
"Yes." George answered hesitantly.
"That means they haven't changed it since I lived there! Give me a
sec." The man was silent for a while until George heard a clicking
sound. It was a pen uncapping.
"What are you doing?" George asked.
"Look in the corner of the wall, near the window." The man told him.
"Why-"
"Just do it." George heard what sounded like scribbling on the other
side of the phone. George hesitated, but walked anyway to the corner
of the room, "What am I supposed to be
looking at-"
Suddenly, old worn out pen marks started appearing on the wall
slowly, like burning wood. "Hi" it said.
"Do you see that?" The man on the other side of the phone asked,
before audibly capping his pen again.
"Y-yes." George was hyperventilating and clutching his chest. This
surely was not possible. "Who are you?"
"Who are you?"
They both asked at the same time, but the man answered first, "My
name's Cl- Dream." "Dream?" George raised a brow.
"It's a nickname. I don't want to give you my real name yet since you
could be some government spy or something."
George chuckled, "Well I'm George."
"So tell me George, who wins the world series next year? Asking for
a friend." Dream asked, half jokingly.
"I'm afraid I can't tell you that." George responded, "Well technically
I can, but morally it's pretty wrong."
"Darn, thought that was going to work." Dream tsked, "So tell me
about the future. Wait does that sound nerdy? Hm, tell me about
2020."
"Well..."
Paint
Chapter Text
"...I can't tell you much. Isn't it science fiction common knowledge
that telling someone of the past too much would mess up the future?"
George told Dream.
"I suppose you're right." Dream sighed, "Well I know now that I
moved out, since you live in my house now."
"So who's Sap?" George asked.
"My friend Nick. We call him Sapnap, and I'm guessing you have his
telephone but I don't know why it ended up there at my house."
"Really? That's what you're confused about? What about the whole
'talking to someone from a different time' part?" George mentioned.
"Obviously I'm confused too." It's like Georhe could hear his eyeroll,
"So how old are you?"
"24." George didn't know why he was telling this to a stranger, but his
loneliness and desperation got the best of him.
"I'm 21." Dream answered with no hesitation, and George only
assumed that he was a confident sort of man.
"What do you do for a living?" George let curiousity replace his
anxiety over the magical phone. Dream chuckled, "I coach baseball
for little kids. I love baseball. What about you?" "Do I love baseball?
Or what I do for a living?"
"Hm why not answer both, I've got time."
George lied down on his bed and stared up at the ceiling, "I'm not that
into sports. Also, I program video games for computers for a living."
"What kind of job is that?"
George smiled, "I forgot you probably don't know what those are
yet."
"Yeah. Hello?! I'm in the past!" Dream joked, letting out a hearty
laugh that warmed George's heart .
George smiled before glancing at his digital alarm clock, "Well I have
to go, I should sleep." "Boo." Dream groaned into the phone.
As fun as it was to talk to Dream, it was getting late into the night and
he had projects to finish, he was letting these phone calls get in the
way of his work, which was the last thing he had going for him in his
life.
"Goodbye, wrong number." Dream bid him goodbye.
"Goodbye old man."
"Hey! I'm not old yet." Dream laughed before hanging up.
---
It had been a week since Dream and George had first started talking,
and needless to say they had become good friends.
George had started eating lunch up in his room, awaiting a phone call
around the same time everyday, and again with dinner in the night.
They talked about anything and everything, including their
childhoods and favorite things from their time.
Dream had made George promise not to look for him in 2020, or try
to google him ("Whatever that was.")
So George kept his promise, and they continued to speak as if the
only distance between them was miles, and not time.
"It's weird, we can't physically communicate. I mean we can but I'm
assuming you're old." George laughed.
"I have an idea." Dream after a while. He left the phone on his dresser
and told George he'd be back.
George waited patiently, counting the many flowers on his wall, when
he heard the faint voice come from the phone again.
"What's your idea?" George asked, turning to his side on the pillow.
"Go to the wall next to the window." Dream urged George.
George groaned, indicating his tiredness, but Dream insisted he go.
Grudgingly, he got up and walked to the wall next to the window as
Dream told him to. "Now what?"
——
Dream stood by the window. The walls where he was (in time) were
much newer and in tact than George's.
He had come from the shed with a bucket of lime green paint. He
pinned the phone between his cheek and shoulder and opened the
paint can.
"Dream? What are you doing?" He heard George ask.
"Just look at the wall." Dream said, as he took a brush and applied a
thin coat of paint on his entire hand.
"Ready?" Dream said into the phone.
George sighed, "Yes. Though I don't exactly know what I'm ready
for."
———
George waited at the wall, whistling. Suddenly lime paint started
appearing on the wall. It was
appearing slowly and a bit chipped and worn out, but there
nonetheless.
"George? Are you there? I hope you see it and no one erased it after I
moved out." Dream talked into the phone.
It was a handprint. A seemingly former lime green handprint, (it was
darker and faint now).
George stayed silent and absentmindedly put his own hand over the
handprint. Dream's hand seemed bigger than his, with slightly longer
fingers.
"George?" Dream called out, and George pulled his hand away
quickly.
"I- yeah I see it." George chuckled.
"Did you hold my hand?" Dream asked.
"Wh- I- ho-" George choked out but Dream started laughing.
"Calm down, I'm kidding." George could hear his smile, "I wonder
what else we could try out."
George sat down on his bed,
still looking at the paint handprint. "I wonder why you've never
visited."
"What?" Dream questioned.
"Why future you hasn't visited me yet since we started talking. Like
why you never came on July 29 to tell me you're who I'm talking to."
George pondered curiously.
"Maybe I'm dead." Dream said, half-jokingly.
George hated that thought. It was possible, and he fought back his
urge to google him and find out everything he could about Dream, but
the only information he had was that he lived here before, and Dream
didn't want George to go looking for him.
They bid each other goodnight, and George fell asleep on his side,
staring at the green handprint on the wall.
Time Capsule
Chapter Text
Dream and George found other ways to communicate, with George
having the brilliant idea of Dream leaving a time capsule buried
somewhere in the backyard for George to find.
George uploaded his work project onto his computer, and walked
outside with a shovel he had recently purchased. Dream had told him
it was put in the corner near the fence, and had hoped no one had
taken it out since it was put in.
With that information, George started to dig. He wasn't the strongest
physically, but he persisted with each stab of the shovel into the cold
dirt.
Out of the corner of his eye he saw someone looking at him. It must
have looked weird, to be digging a hole in your backyard. He must
have looked like he was digging a grave to dump a body in. George
shrugged at the man, which prompted him to walk away.
The man looked quickly into a pocket notebook while he was walking
away, and wrote something down. George was scared it was notes
about him being suspicious that he was going to report to the police.
It had been over 15 minutes, and George sighed. He took a look at the
pile of dirt on the ground and shook his head. Someone must have
found the capsule before him.
He was about to shovel the dirt he worked so hard on digging out
back into the hole when a glimmer of light reached his eyes. There,
buried into the ground was a hint of metal.
George's eyes widened as he ran for the shovel again, picking at the
ground until he found a pill shaped metal container. It had masking
tape on it with the word "George" written.
He did not even bother shoveling the dirt back in, he ran back home to
rinse off the outside of the container and shuffled into his room.
Right on time, the phone started ringing. George picked up, "Dream!
I've got your capsule." Dream chuckled, "So you do. Well open it, I'm
curious how long the things in there survived."
It took George a while, as the rust created a sort of lock in between
the seams, but eventually it popped open with such a force that
George was thrown back a little with a groan.
"You alright?" Dream asked worriedly into the phone.
George got back up, "Yes. Just fine."
A couple of things inside the capsule scattered around the floor due to
how it opened. George grabbed the first thing he saw.
He squinted at it, "Pow-Chew?" He tried to read on the wrapper.
"Yes!" Dream said excitedly, "I love those."
"What is this?" He held it up to his nose and sniffed it, it smelled like
rotten candy. "It's gum. Check the expiration date." Dream ordered.
The wrapper had a barely visible blob of ink that represented the
expiration date. "August 22, 1971." George read out loud. "I can't
believe this never attracted ants."
George put the candy on his desk and reached for something else he
found on the floor. It was a rock.
"Is this quartz?" George asked.
"Yeah. It's my favorite one I own." Dream admitted.
George held it tightly in his hand, "Why give it to me, then?"
---
Dream lay on his bed, letting his records play in the background and
staring at the wallpaper. "Why give it to me, then?"
How was Dream to answer that? He gave it to George because he
wanted his favorite person to have his favorite thing, but all of it was
so wrong. He cared about someone who didn't even exist yet.
He cared about his best friend Sapnap too, but not in the way he did
for George, someone he had never even met.
"Dream?" George mumbled into the phone.
"Oh- uh yeah, I guess I just don't think I'll need it in the future." He
answered untruthfully. "Hm, alright." George sounded like he was
scrambling to pick up more items.
In the capsule were other little things such as an old music cassette
and baseball cards. After a while, George saw a little canister and held
it up to his eyes. He then opened it, it was dry, cracking, and expired
(formerly) lime paint that was now a dark foresty green.
"What did you open?" Dream asked quietly.
"Green paint." George dipped his finger in, and what he saw surprised
him. His finger broke into the hard cracked layer and into a watery,
preserved lime paint that he was sure was the original color.
"I'm sure it's ugly now, right?" Dream joked, but George looked at his
finger covered in paint. "No. It's perfect."
George had an idea. He spilled a good portion of the can onto his
hand and spread it around with a finger.
"Are you there? What are you doing?" Dream asked, but George
walked over to his bedroom wall.
He glanced at Dream's handprint, and with one movement, placed his
paint-covered hand right next to it. The difference in sizes of their
hands was interesting, along with the detail that Dream's handprint
was old and cracking, while George's was clean and fresh and still a
bright color.
George grabbed the phone with his clean hand, "Yeah, I'm here."
"What did you do?"
George stared at the two handprints, "Nothing." He mumbled.
"Oh." Dream murmured, "Well there's one more thing in there. Taped
to the inside of the capsule. You can look at it but I'll have to hang
up."
"Why?" George asked.
"Bye, George. Have a good night." Dream bid and before George
could ask for an explanation once again, their connection cut.
George put down the phone with a sigh and checked the inside of the
capsule container. Inside was a piece of paper. A polaroid.
It was of Dream. Seemingly candid taken by another person. He was
smiling, with beautiful dirty blonde hair and a tall stature. He was
holding a pet cat and was in the very bedroom George was in at that
moment.
George thought he was quite handsome. He was getting sleepy, and
his eyes fell closed with the photo held close to him.
Concepts
Chapter Text
The reason George bought the house he lived in was because he was
young and did not have money for a newer, furnished house.
The fact that it was never repainted or even cleaned showed that
Dream or any of his family were the people that lived in the house
last. Most of the furniture was taken except for an old sofa, some junk
in the attic, and, of course, the telephone held in his hand, waiting for
a call.
---
Dream was crouching against the wall, his hands digging into his hair.
Drunk.
He did not normally drink, but tonight was an exception. He clutched
a bottle in his hand, and the phone in the other, contemplating
whether to call George despite his faltering mental state, or not to call,
leaving George lonely for the night.
Sapnap had been at his house earlier, doing his best to send words of
comfort. Dream had put on a brave face to assure him, then broke
down as soon as Sapnap closed the door behind him.
Alcohol was never a problem for him, it was more of a problem for
his father. He had promised never to go down that same path but here
he was, bottle in hand and mental state out of control.
He knew who he wanted and needed to talk to, but he was terrified.
The situation would induce anxiety in everyone, talking to somebody
from the future.
But when he spoke to George, it was easy to ignore the absurdity of it
all. He loved to hear him talk about things almost as though he had
never been asked about them before.
He loved to hear his voice in general.
And so, he put the bottle down on the drawer next to the wall with
such a force that it shattered, splattering the few of the contents inside
onto the floor and walls, leaving only the telephone in his hands as he
dialed a number.
---
George sat on his floor holding the phone and scrolling through his
Twitter news feed, looking at what was trending when he sighed and
put the phone down.
He glanced for a second at the wall, which housed an unfamiliar stain.
It was dark and absolutely stood out against the vintage, flowery
wallpaper.
It was definitely made by Dream.
His initial thought was that it was blood, which scared him. He
wanted so badly to ask Dream if he was okay but dialing from his end
never worked. Only Dream had the power to call George.
Right on time, the phone rang and he answered in an instant.
"Dream, are you alright?" He asked frantically.
"Yes, why do you ask?" Dream's words slurred a bit but he still had
the confident straight speech he usually had.
George ran his hands on the wallpaper, "The wall stained, I thought
you'd gotten hurt or something."
Dream looked at the wall and broken glass scattered around the desk
and floor and understood, "I spilled my drink."
"On the walls?" George asked skeptically.
"I can be clumsy." Dream laughed slowly, "Oh, I can be quite
clumsy." He let out a bigger laugh. "Dream," George raised a brow,
"are you drunk? Was the drink alcoholic?" Dream sighed in surrender,
"Yeah."
"But you told me you don't drink."
"I don't." Dream said truthfully, "It's just-"
"Just?" George crossed his legs and waited for a response.
"I've just had a bad day." Dream sounded defeated, "I have better
ways of dealing with bad days but I wanted to see what it felt like to
suppress it with a drink like my father did. If it worked."
George had never heard Dream talk about his father. He had gone on
and on about his mother and sisters but George had never bothered to
ask about his father, as he took the hint not to from Dream's refusal to
speak about him.
"Maybe it does," George told him, "but you sober up and you start
feeling it again. The most it does it numbs you. I don't drink so I can't
speak from experience, and I'm not against drinking, but if you can't
use it to solve your problems."
"I know." Dream said, and he did know. He had seen the lasting effect
it had on his family when his father took another bottle from the
fridge.
"It's like putting a band aid on a wound that needs stitches." George
hit him truthfully. "There's better ways that work long term."
"Like?"
"Like talking to someone. You said you have your friend Sapnap.
You can write a diary, let it all out, or you can talk to-"
"You."
George let out a breath, "Me."
"I'm sorry I don't really feel ready to talk about it yet, but I know I
have you, and that soothes me." Dream did not mean to say that
much, but his drunken self didn't know better.
"You should get some sleep, Dream." George said in a comforting
way.
"George?" Dream whispered.
"Yes, Dream?"
"I-" Dream began but he sighed, he was sober enough to fight off
anything impulsive he wanted to say.
"You..?"
"I- should get some sleep. You're right." Dream saved himself.
"Goodnight, old man." George chuckled.
"Goodnight, wrong number." Dream whispered so close to the phone
George swore he felt a breath tickle his ear. He waited a while before
putting the phone down.
Who could hate flowers
Chapter Text
It had been a week, and since then Dream's inner demons had
subsided.
He continued to speak to George, and Sapnap (if he wasn't busy with
work), and since then he had been feeling better. Not perfect, but
better.
At that moment he had been on the phone with George, talking about
their favorite thing of certain categories.
"Hmmm," George mumbled, "favourite animal?"
Dream got up and walked over to the small pet bed on the floor and
picked up his cat Patches, "Cats. Say hi, Patches." He put the phone
up to Patches' nose but obviously she was in no mood to say hi to
anyone. "She's moody."
George smiled, "Did you wake her up forcefully?"
Dream put Patches back on her bed, "No comment."
George shook his head with a laugh, "I like cats too." He told him, "I
used to have one named Luca."
"Cat people are the best." Dream said and George hummed in
agreement.
"What haven't we asked?" George wondered out loud after a few
moments of silence.
Dream was looking outside his window when he saw a man pull up in
his neighbor's driveway. His neighbor came out and she smiled at the
man, who presented her with brightest and fullest of red roses.
She happily took them from him and gave him a hug, and he picked
her up and spun her.
Dream immediately assumed these were people who had not seen
each other for a while meeting for the first time again.
These kinds of moments made Dream slightly jealous. He had never
had serious romantic connections other than the occasional one time
date that usually ended in disaster.
He would have loved to be the one to bring someone flowers.
"Dream? You're quiet but I feel like I can hear your thoughts." George
said after a while, snapping Dream out of his head.
"Sorry." Dream apologized, "But, I thought of a question."
George hummed, "Alright, what is it?"
"What's your favourite flower?" Dream could not handle watching the
happy couple any longer, so he shut his blinds and covered his
windows with his white curtain.
"I don't know much about flowers," George began, "but I do admire
orchids or calendulas."
Dream knew exactly what those flowers were, as he had helped his
mother in her flower shop for years. He knew his flowers and he
knew how to take care of them, and he loved them very much,
He thought about George's answer, "Any particular reason?"
"Well orchids were my mother's wedding flowers, they were
everywhere apparently." George explained, "As for calendulas,
they're just quite beautiful."
"Cool. Now I know what flowers to send to you." Dream half joked.
"How would that work?" George was genuinely curious.
"I've given you items before." Dream suggested.
"Flowers from 1970 couldn't survive 50 years in a time capsule,
Dream."
Dream sighed, "Well I know that." He sat down against the wall, "I'll
figure it out."
Dream would be in his near 70's if he was still alive during George's
time. That fact physically hurt him to think about, but still he
brainstormed ways to get flowers to 2020.
He then came up with an idea, "George, I have to go get some stuff
from the store, but I'll call you again tonight."
There was a small scuffle from George's end before he responded
with a "talk to you later", and they both hung up.
----
Dream drove his car to the nearest flower shop. It was near his house
and was squished between a night club and a bookstore.
He walked in and the smell of fresh flowers overwhelmed him, but
felt clean and new. The door also rang a few bells when he opened it,
which he found cool.
"Welcome." The man running the store greeted him, wearing an apron
and tending to some plants hanging up from the ceiling, "Need
anything specific, sir?"
Dream walked over to him, "Yes actually. Do you sell seeds by any
chance?"
The man stepped down from his small staircase ladder and gave him a
goofy smile, "As a matter of fact we do. Follow me."
Dream followed the young man over to the back where seeds and
other various gardening supplies were kept.
"They're organized alphabetically in these little drawers." The
shopkeeper explained, "I'll be tending to those plants outside, but if
you need any help finding something in particular just give a shout or
come find me." He grinned again before walking back to where he
was working earlier.
Dream laughed and shook his head as he walked away, amused by the
young man's energy. He then walked to the drawers and looked for
orchid seeds, but could not find any.
Dream was too shy to call the man over so quickly after he had just
walked away, so in the
meantime he went over to find calendula seeds.
To his luck, he opened the drawer and found one last packet of
calendula seeds. He took them and walked over to where the
shopkeeper was.
"Excuse me." Dream looked up because the man was high up on the
ladder snipping little leaves of plants.
The man looked down, "Oh hello! Find what you need?"
Dream nodded, "Yes, but, do you keep orchid seeds by any chance?"
The man frowned, "No, actually. They take years to grow properly
from a seed and we just can't get our hands on them to stock."
Dream gestured his understanding, "That's alright," he smiled, "I'll
just be taking these then." He shook the seeds to show him.
"Calendulas. Pot marigolds. Very pretty when they grow." He stepped
down from his staircase ladder once again and led him to the counter.
"They also mean 'little clock' or 'little canlendar.'"
The man informed.
"Yes," Dream agreed, "the person I'm getting them for thinks so too."
"Oh, so you got a girl that loves to garden then?"
Dream chuckled at the innocent question, "It's a bit complicated."
"It always is." The shopkeeper agreed, "My little lady hates flowers,
so it's complicated for me, too."
"Who could hate flowers?"
"Her apparently since she's allergic." He grinned nonchalantly before
handing Dream the seed packet and taking the money.
Dream smiled back, "Well thank you uh-," he squinted at the nametag
on the man's apron, "Karl." "You're welcome sir!" He waved goodbye
happily before going back to taking care of his plants. ---
Dream came home and packed the seeds into a time capsule and
burying it in the usual spot he'd put it in, then called George, notifying
him that he indeed had figured out a way to get him flowers from
1970
her, since she's allergic
Chapter Text
George held the fifty year old seed packet in one hand, and the phone
in another, "Dream, I've got no idea how to grow flowers, and don't
have any supplies"
"You don't have to grow them, you can keep the seeds and say they're
flowers because technically they are."
George shook his head, "No. You went through the trouble, the least I
could do is grow them. Plus i needed a new hobby again anyway and
gardening seems like a fun thing to try."
"I left a little list of things you need and some tips in the container."
Dream reminded him, and George picked up the capsule and indeed
there was a small paper with chicken scratch-like handwriting.
"Nice handwriting."
"Oh shush," Dream chuckled, "I never was one for good
penmanship."
George read over the paper, "If you don't mind, I'll be off now to get
supplies before it gets too dark."
--
Dream sighed in defeat, he felt a little selfish for always wanting to be
the person George spent his time with, but understood he had a life.
"Alright," He said, "can I call later?"
---
"I'm not sure but definitely try." George said as he put on a jacket and
grabbed his car keys. "Goodbye for now then, George." Dream said
over the phone.
"Bye, Dream." George responded before putting the phone down and
walking out of his house into his car.
He sat on the driver's seat and put his cellphone on his phone holder,
"Hey Siri," the phone beeped, "directions to nearest gardening store."
The phone took a moment before it spoke, "Alright, I found gardening
stores near you."
The first store was only 0.5 miles away, which was awful close, so he
chose it then pulled out of his driveway.
---
George got to the gardening store, which was a bit run down from the
outside but when he walked in it was very clean and nice and a
beautiful place.
He looked around, unsure where to begin to look, when an old man
who was watering a row of soil turned to him, "Why hello!" He
smiled happily, "Anything I can do for you, sir?"
George made to took out the piece of paper with Dream's list of
supplies, but realized he left it at home.
"You alright, sir?"
"Do you know how to help me get what I need to grow a certain type
of flower?" George asked politely.
"Do I?" The old man put his fists on his hips like a superhero, and
George was surprised at how he could still be so energetic even in his
old age. "Why I'm probably the best in town to help you with that,
young lad. What are you growing?"
"Calendulas." George showed him the seed packet.
The old man looked at the brand and label closely, "Why this here is
one of our seed packets! We haven't had these flowers in stock since
good old '70. How did you get your hands on these?"
"Er-" George scratched the back of his head, "found them in an old
drawer."
The man looked at him skeptically, "Well, I can go get what you need
myself and you can wait here, look around if you'd like."
George raised his eyebrows, "Oh I can help you if you'd like." He
offered but the shopkeeper shook his head furiously.
"No no, I haven't helped a customer like you in months. Maybe years.
Let me feel like I am doing my job again." He assured.
George became sad at how the man's business was seemingly slow
and dry, and agreed to letting the man get the supplies for him.
After a (surprisingly fast) few minutes, the man came back with a
garden of basic supplied he needed to grow the flowers.
George followed him over the counter, "Thank you."
"No problem. So why the interest in beginning gardening?" The old
man asked while placing his items in a tote.
George thought about it for a while, "Just wanted to see if these old
flowers have any hope in growing."
"You'll need a lot of love and patience if you want to see even a leaf
come out of the dirt of flowers from 1970-something." He told
George before telling him the total price of his items, which was
cheap.
George took out a one hundred dollar bill, "Keep the change." He
smiled.
The man's eyes widened, "Why thank you! You're lucky to be able to
grow flowers at home. I can't."
"Why is that?" George asked as he took his tote of items.
"My wife hates most flowers" He answered plainly.
"Hates them? Who could hate flowers, though?" George wondered
aloud.
The man smiled, "Her, since she's allergic."
George was taken aback. A flower store owner who's wife is allergic
to flowers? "Wow, that must be complicated then."
"It always is." The man said, with a big smile, "But we've lasted over
fifty years so I guess it hasn't been that complicated." He assured
happily, then he suddenly shivered.
"Are you alright sir?" George asked.
"Oh why yes." He smiled goofily, "I just got a weird sense of deja vu.
Anyway, my name is Karl, and if you need anything else you're
welcome whenever you'd like!"
George chuckled, "I'll be sure to turn to you, Karl. Thank you."
---
George got home and placed his stuff on his bedroom floor. He
looked through the items and grabbed the piece of paper with Dream's
instructions he had left on his desk.
The phone then rang and George rushed to answer it, "Hello Dream, I
just got supplies." "That's good, will you start growing the flowers
soon?" He asked.
George organized his new items, "I should be, I'm not busy anytime
soon." "Good." Dream audibly smiled.
"It was a funny story, I met the cheeriest old man I could ever meet."
"Was it me?" Dream joked.
George rolled his eyes, "No. It was the man who owned the flower
shop."
"Bummer it wasn't me." He said lightheartedly, "Anyway, why was
he funny?"
George sat down on the edge of his bed, taking his jacket off, "He
owns a flower shop but his wife's allergic to flowers."
There was silence on the phone.
"Dream?"
"No way!" He shouted suddenly.
"What is it?"
"Was his name Karl?" Dream asked excitedly.
George's eyes widened, "Y-yeah! You know him?"
"He's who I bought the seeds from, George!" He laughed, "That
means we've officially been connected through one person."
"That makes sense. He said he hasn't sold Calendula seeds since 1970.
Oh goodness this is so weird." George shook his head.
"Weird? It's absolutely awesome!" Dream exclaimed. "Also it's great
and surprising he's still with the lady allergic to flowers."
George thought for a second, "Wait so," he thought some more, "isn't
it interesting how we both talked to Karl these last two days, but in
reality us meeting him is fifty years apart."
Dream sighed when he heard "fifty years apart", but he hummed in
agreement. "Anyways, I'll get on to sleep, so I can spend the morning
trying to grow these flowers." Dream smiled, "Alright then.
Goodnight wrong number."
"Sleep well, old man who's technically not old yet."
Dream smiled before hanging up the phone and laying in his bed,
staring at the ceiling until he eventually drifted off to sleep.
a happy family
Chapter Text
George was thankful for living in 2020. The age of the internet where,
if you had no idea how to do something, with one click of a button
you could after ten minutes.
Though George had this advantage, he himself was the problem. He
had watched different tutorials but he was still confused.
He was visible to the cars passing by and must have looked absolutely
stupid. He groaned and put his hand through his hair, planting flowers
could not possibly be that hard.
"How does Karl do this?" George whispered aggressively to himself
before crumbling onto the hard dirt.
The man who had watched him dig up the time capsule was once
again writing furiously in his pocket notebook, before spotting
George and walking towards him.
George started to panic. Why was this stranger walking toward him?
Who was he?
He did not have time to think before the stranger appeared in front of
him and pulled down his hoodie to reveal a young man in a beanie
and circular, gold rimmed glasses. "You look like you're struggling.
May I help?"
George watched him suspiciously, wondering why a passerby would
help someone like him with such a seemingly easy talk like planting
flowers, "Er- I just don't know how to do this."
The man knelt down in front of the plant pot, "I'm Wilbur. Wilbur
Soot. I live a couple houses down with my young son."
George was a bit more relieved when he learned the man was a father,
"George Davidson." They shook hands, "How old is your son?"
Wilbur gestured over to a line of trees in which a boy and his friend
were sword-fighting, "The blonde one's mine. He's 6."
George watched the two young boys play. "You took my video game
disc and broke it! That disc was so important to me!" One of them
said as he slashed his foam sword toward his smaller, brunette friend.
His poor friend cowered slightly but swung his sword nonetheless,
"It's just a disc, Tommy!" He said in a high pitched voice, but Tommy
was not giving in, he kept going at it, which highly amused George.
"Tommy!" A blonde woman with a soft voice called to him, "Play
nice, please!" She seemed used to yelling at him for that reason.
"But he took my-" Tommy began to sputter but was interrupted
immediately. "It's a disc, Tommy," The woman told him, "we can get
another one easily."
Tommy shook his head angrily, "It won't be the same." He
complained, and his brunette friend
rolled his eyes before dodging another sword hit.
"They seem close." George told Wilbur, and Wilbur nodded with a
smile.
"Practically been friends since birth."
Wilbur seemed experienced with planting flowers, expertly burying
the seed and watering as if he's done so many times in the past.
"Thank you." George sent a small smile to Wilbur, "I assume it's not
that hard and I'm just extremely dense."
"No pro-" Wilbur began but his son ran toward him suddenly, tears in
his eyes. "Daddy! He's here again!" The boy sobbed, collapsing into
his father's arms.
"Who's here, Tommy?" Wilbur comforted the young boy.
"Uncle!" Tommy cried into Wilbur's chest, pointing to his far left.
Wilbur looked at George apologetically, "He's afraid of his uncle."
George was about to ask why when suddenly a man with a tall stature,
boots, and hair with pink highlights shouted, "WHERE IS
THESEUS?"
George understood why Tommy found him intimidating. He was
terrifying and his voice boomed across the neighborhood.
"I heard a little someone is fighting people for a disc. If that's you,
come here and fight me to the death!" The uncle shouted, before
spotting Tommy, "Was it you?"
"N-no" Tommy whimpered but Techno moved closer, not believing
his lie, "Okay yes. I'm sorry Uncle Techno."
Wilbur looked to the blonde woman, "Did you call him, Niki?"
Niki gave an apologetic look, "He was being mean to Tubbo, and this
is the only way to stop him."
Uncle "Techno" grabbed the sword from Tubbo and marched toward
Tommy, "I'll show you what fighting for possessions looks like."
"AAAAAAH" Tommy ran past Techno, who attempted to grab him
but he was too slippery. He made a beeline to Tubbo, "I'm sorry,
Tubbo."
"Is Tubbo his real name?" George asked Wilbur.
"No," Wilbur explained, "His name is Toby, but we nickname him
Tubbo because he admires the historical figure so much. You know,
Schlatt's assistant."
Tubbo smiled, "It's alright Tommy." He said before giving his friend a
hug. All was well.
"That was easier than I thought." Techno shrugged as he watched the
boys embrace, "Bummer, I thought I'd actually get to fight a child."
He threw the sword down before walking away.
George laughed during the whole situation, they seemed like such a
happy family. A sting of jealousy filled up inside him. From seeing
Tommy play with a friend, to Wilbur and Niki's hilarious parenting
style, he wish he had grown up like that.
"Well I should go." Wilbur told George, "My father's coming in
tonight for dinner, and he hasn't done that in a while so it's quite a big
deal."
George grinned, "Nice meeting you and your family, Wilbur." He got
up and brushed the dirt off his jeans, "I hope we'll get to talk again."
Wilbur yelled for Tommy, "So do I. Have a nice day!" He walked
toward his son, picking him up and urging Tubbo to follow so he
could get back home to his family safe and sound.
the sketch
Chapter Text
Usually, when George waited for Dream to call him, he'd occupy
himself with his work. He had finished early though so he had
nothing to do, and no call to expect since Dream was going to go over
to his sister's for a while and leaving the phone at home.
He sat in silence in his room for a while before deciding he'd spend
the time outside. He had not gone on a walk for a while so he decided
it would be best, and also because he knew Dream would get mad at
him for not using his free day wisely.
He put on a hoodie, pocketed his phone, and trudged downstairs,
walking outside onto his porch.
He checked the flowers, and as expected nothing had grown yet. It
was the scary part about growing flowers, in the beginning you don't
know if anything was happening at all yet.
He decided he would go to the park. He brought a small notebook and
pencil to sketch his surroundings as he used to do with his mother
when he was young.
He caught sight of the swingset and found a bench close by. He sat
down, sighed, and started scratching lines on his notebook.
"No Tommy, I told you not to be mean, and you didn't listen." George
heard a woman say. He turned around and saw Niki, scolding Tommy
who looked grumpy.
"But I want ice cream like Tubbo! It's not fair." He cried, but his mom
wasn't letting up.
Niki pointed a finger at him, "I told you a million times. Don't be
mean to girls! What do you do? You call Cara 'Puffy' until she cried."
Tommy's mouth gaped open, "SHE LIKES TO BE CALLED THAT.
IT'S HER NICKNAME, MUM!"
"Fine then," Niki said, "if that didn't make her cry. What did?"
Tommy put his head down in defeat, "I chased her around with a stick
and told her if I got close enough I'd poke her."
Niki groaned, "Tommy, you can't go around doing that."
"She de-deserv-"
"Deserves?" Niki finished.
"Yes. That word," Tommy pleaded.
"Why does she deserve it?" Niki tried to understand her son.
Tommy waved his hands, "She's a girl!"
Niki sighed and turned away. She caught sight of George on the
bench and waved, "Oh, hello! You talked to my husband the other day
I believe?"
George nodded, "Wilbur. Yes." He smiled at her and then gestures
toward Tommy, who had his arms crossed and flared his nose up
when he looked at him, "So that little man is still being trouble, I
see."
Wilbur was walking with Tubbo toward them now. Tubbo looked at
Tommy, "Here Tommy, we can split it!"
Tommy was trying to stay pretend mad, but eventually gave in as
Tubbo gave him some of his ice cream.
Wilbur's eyes glanced at Niki and George talking, "George!" He
exclaimed, "Pleasure to see you here."
"Hello Wilbur," he greeted, "how was the meet up with your father?"
Wilbur thought for a second, "Quite odd. He's constantly refused to
come home here but suddenly we get a call saying he's on a flight to
Florida and to get the guest room ready."
George chuckled, "Dinner go well, though?"
Wilbur nodded, "I'd say so. Tommy was a bit shy and weary of him at
first, but he warmed up to him when he protected Tommy from uncle
Techno."
George smiled, "Seemed like a good time."
Wilbur shook his head with a grin, "We don't even have a guest
room." He rolled his eyes, "He took Niki and I's room and made us
sleep with Tommy."
"Sounds like a very 'old person' thing to do." George told him, and
they both shared a laugh.
Wilbur watched George closely, almost as if he was waiting for a
certain reaction, but found nothing there.
"Oh," Wilbur saw George's book and pencil, "may I borrow your
pencil for a moment?"
George nodded and handed him the pencil. Wilbur took out his pocket
notebook and scratched a few lines on before returning it, "Thank
you."
George took the pencil, "No problem. What brings you to the park?"
Wilbur turned to Niki and then back to George and whispered, "In all
honesty, to escape my father."
"He that bad?" George said.
"Not necessarily." Wilbur explained, "He lives in England. Obviously
I'm a Brit and I was born there, but he wasn't. Anyway that's too long
of a story, basically he's moody because he's old and because of
jetlag."
"I've actually thought about how funny it was that us Brits ended up
in a neighborhood a couple houses from each other in Florida."
George joked.
Wilbur nodded, "Yeah, well," he ate a spoon of ice cream, "dad
bought us a house here, said Florida was fun. I mean who'd say no to
a house."
George was giving what Wilbur said some thought when suddenly,
out of nowhere, Techno was
walking towards them, pulling at his hair.
"You come here to escape him too, Techno?" Wilbur grinned.
Techno rolled his eyes, "He keeps wanting me to fight him." He
complained, "An old man wanting to fight me."
Wilbur turned to George, "Dad and his old friend used to come over
and teach us how to fight. We'd fence, kick-box, you name it."
George let out a breath of laughter, "Sounds like quite the man."
"That he is." Techno said plainly as he picked up an ice cream cup
from the table.
"Oh Techno," Niki said, and Techno turned toward her, "that's
Tubbo's ice cream, he left it there to go play with Tommy."
"So I'm stealing from a child?" Techno questioned, "That makes it so
much better."
George thought he actually was going to steal the ice cream, but he
put it down and sat on the table part of the bench.
"So Techno, you're American but I presume you and Wilbur are
brothers?" George asked. Techno nodded, "Got used to this country, I
guess."
"It's an impressive American accent." George complimented
"Yeah well, I do it because it sounds better than my British one."
Techno admitted with a shrug. "Niki are you sure Tubbo doesn't want
this ice cream?"
"Let it alone, Techno." Niki scolded, and Techno sighed in defeat, he
couldn't win against her.
There was a vibration coming from the bench, George checked his
phone but it wasn't his, "It's not mine that's ringing, I reckon it's
yours."
Wilbur checked his back pocket and indeed his phone was ringing,
"Oh, it's dad." Techno glanced over, "What does the old man want
this time." He said plainly.
Wilbur answered, and George could hear faint mumbling. "Mhm."
Wilbur said, "Yes, I have, dad. No that's tomorrow, not today. How
do I know? Dad you were the one that wrote that date down, how do
you not know? Alright that's fine. Bye dad."
Techno raised his eyebrows.
"He was just uh- checking in on where we went. Said it was a mistake
leaving him alone in the house."
"Oh no, what did he do to the house." Niki said.
"We'll have to see." Wilbur sighed, "We're going to head home now,
George. I'm a bit scared as to what he's done to the house, but maybe
if we get there earlier enough we can prevent more damage."
George laughed, "Alright then. It's getting late and I should probably
head home as well."
Wilbur smiled, "Sounds good. Have a nice evening, George!"
"You and your family as well." George waved them goodbye.
the first domino
Chapter Text
George woke up the next morning to the sunlight shining through his
curtain.
It was almost the end of August, but the weather seemed to have been
colder than usual in contrast to the bright sunlight.
He planned to stay in his room for a bit in case Dream called, but after
a while he got hungry and walked outside to make himself some toast
and butter with tea.
He then went back to his room to eat there, and the phone rang as he
walked through the door. He shuffled quickly, putting down the mug
with tea and toast on his work desk to answer the phone.
"George!" Dream greeted, "I just got home. How are you?"
George took a bite of his toast, "Fine. I went to the park yesterday and
that was pretty fun. I met up with Wilbur and his family again, and his
brother Techno, but they call him Techno."
"Techno?" Dream repeated, "I have a close friend nicknamed
Techno."
George drank some of his tea, "That's a cool coincidence, but I don't
know if your Techno is as outlandish as the Techno here."
Dream laughed, "Oh yes he is." He said, "Not lately though. He's had
cancer for a while but he's fighting."
George frowned, "I'm sorry. I'm sure he'll do okay."
"I am too." Dream smiled, "Anyway I interrupted a bit there, how was
the park?"
George thought for a moment, "Well I didn't stay for long, but I do
think they're a fun bunch of people I'd consider friends."
Dream smiled, "I'm glad you're making friends, I know you said you
hardly had any." "Well you're my friend." George reminded him.
Dream was silent, "Well, I mean a friend from your time, you
know?"
George sighed, "You're right."
"I didn't mean it like that," Dream softened, "you're one of my most
important friends. The only other friend I feel a connection with other
than Sapnap."
"You said you went to the park yesterday?" Dream asked after a while
to break any tension. "Yeah."
"The 29th?" Dream asked to make sure.
"Yes." George replied, "Why do you ask?"
Dream was silent, "Uh- I don't know. Just to make sure that we ares
still in the same month and day."
"Yeah but," George let out a breath of a laugh, "we're a bit off on the
year." Dream shook his head with a smile "'A bit.'"
George heard scribbling from Dream's end of the phone. "Are you
drawing?" Dream hesitated, "N-no. I'm writing."
"What are you writing?" George asked, intrigued.
"Just some stuff." Was all Dream could say, and George just hummed
in response.
"So how was helping your sister?" George wanted to hear all about
Dream's day. Especially since they didn't get a chance to talk the night
before.
"It was pretty fun," he admitted, "she gets quite annoying but she's
like a mini-me, so I can't blame her."
"Wow. A girl Dream." George pondered, "Scary."
"She can be scary." Dream said gleefully, "She was going to punch
me in the face for holding her diary and asking what it was. She does
karate, too."
"Well then, you shouldn't touch diaries." George said sassily.
"Ha ha." Dream went quiet, "I missed you. It was only a day but I
missed talking to you, if that doesn't sound weird."
George's eyes widened a bit, unsure how to respond. He thought it
best to just be honest, "I missed you too."
"Yeah well me being gone got you out of the house right?" Dream
brought up with a smile. He noticed how much more open George
was to be less isolated lately. He knew how much he was committed
to work more than the simple things in life, so it was a nice change.
George leaned against the wall, finishing his last piece of toast,
"Yeah. I haven't done that in a while."
"Are you saying I should disappear more often?" Dream joked, in a
trying voice.
"No!" George answered loudly, then cleared his throat, "I just meant
it's good to get a bit of sunlight every few days, and I only went
outside because I didn't have any more work to do."
"Mhm, you just want me gone." Dream was pushing jokingly, "I'm an
old man anyway, what can I do for you life."
"Stop joking." George said seriously, "You've done much for my life.
More in one month than most people have in years."
Dream was taken aback at the serious and heartfelt response to his
stupid joke. "So have you, George. You don't even know."
fact from fiction
Chapter Text
George had his eyes closed, headphones on, laying on his bed.
He was listening to Flightless Bird, American Mouth by Iron and
Wine, and though he normally listened to songs of a completely
different genre than this, he continued to put the song on repeat. He
felt emotions he had never felt before be suddenly reeled in by the
careful construction of melodious sounds. For a boy who's life was
run by focus and set goals, he had not been used to being so driven off
course by turns of events he could not explain.
He believed there was a science to everything. He knew that if he
tried hard enough, everything he had ever known could be solved
with numbers and quiet genius. He had been a firm believer in the
construct of everything he knew being just another number. Life was
data. Everything he had ever
committed himself to had been data. His job, daily routines, and his
whole life were just another algorithm he knew was solvable on pen
and paper.
So why had a phone call suddenly thrown all his beliefs down a
waterfall of madness?
He could have just been clinging to the one person in his life that had
ever given a damn about him, but he felt something more. Amidst the
impossibility and outlandish circumstances was an emotion that was
formed simply by exchanging words on a device connected by a rip in
the timeline. He wasn't going to run to a scientist to get an
explanation, or post about the miracle that was this old telephone and
show the world that he had discovered some sort of magic. It was
almost like he wanted Dream to himself. That this bond was made
strictly for them, and that the world wasn't meant to know.
Dream's voice threw his logic down the drain, along with all his crap
about scientific proof and algorithmic nonsense. He had been the
magnetic pull that he needed to realize how much he had messed up
his life, his relationships, and everything decision he had ever made,
all to help himself.
So he lay there, wondering why the one entity in his life that had
seemed to fix him was someone he couldn't have.
What he wanted Dream as? He wasn't sure.
He had never had a friendship in which he'd find it safe to spill his
inner demons in exchange for words of comfort and honest criticism.
George and Dream had made a schedule in which Dream would call.
8 PM every night, and even earlier on weekends. George glanced at
the clock, squinting to see he thankfully had two more long minutes
to wait before he'd hear the saving grace that was the phone ringing.
Three minutes had gone by, and though George knew that not every
call was going to be on the dot, he felt a little lonely and worried.
Ten minutes went on, then thirty, then an hour and a half.
He had heard a knock on his door just as he was about to give up
waiting and make dinner. He placed a small figurine on the phone, so
if it rang the phone would shake and the figure would
fall, and if George came back and the figure was on the floor he'd
know if Dream had called while he was gone.
He forced himself downstairs quickly, not wanting to miss the call in
case one ever came. He opened the door to see Wilbur, with his usual
pocket notebook in hand, and Niki holding a bottle of apple cider.
"Wilbur, Niki," George greeted, "what brings you here at 8 in the
night." He gestured to their presence and the bottle of cider.
Wilbur wrote in his notebook and stuffed it into his pocket, "Well it's
been a while since we had friends to have a chat and a drink with, so
we figured to knock on the door of our fellow Brit to see if he's
available."
George hesitated a bit, a little weary of leaving the phone in the event
of Dream calling, but Wilbur and his family had been so kind and
hard to say no to. "I'd love to."
"That's lovely!" Niki smiled before the couple were gestured inside, "I
adore your house, it has such a vintage feel."
George looked around, if only she knew, "It is sort of vintage.
Nothing's changed in this place since the 60s or 70s I assume."
Wilbur nodded, "It seems so." He was looking around before spotting
a painting, "The Birth of Venus," he said, "I didn't know you were a
fan of art."
"That isn't something I bought," George corrected, "it came with the
house actually, but it's quite cool that you know the name of it."
Wilbur turned toward him, "We used to have one in our old family
house. My parents admire the artist."
They had sat down on the couch, and George had played a movie for
them to watch. "So who's taking care of little Tommy?" George
asked.
"My father and Techno initially, but Techno wanted to come with us
here." Wilbur explained.
"He's welcome here, if he'd like." George suggested, "You can give
him a call and invite him, the more the merrier."
George felt like he was getting carried away, but he had liked the idea
of having friends. Even enough that his worries about the lack of a
phone call from Dream for the night had subsided.
Niki opened the cider and pulled coasters and glasses out her purse
she had brought herself, "Are you sure? I do hope we didn't interrupt
you in anything."
George shook his head, "No worries." He assured her, "My plans got
cancelled for the night so this is actually a good substitute."
Wilbur tilted his head, "What were your plans initially?" He
questioned, accepting a glass of cider from Niki and taking a sip,
being sure to put the coaster under his chin so he didn't spill anything
in George's house.
George scratched the back of his head awkwardly, "I was going to
talk to an old friend, but he turned out to have last minute plans." He
tried his best to be truthful but not entirely.
Wilbur nodded slowly. He took another sip of cider and started
clicking his pen frantically, patting his jackets for something.
"Dear," Niki touched his shoulder, "I saw you put it in your jeans
pocket." Wilbur checked his jean pocket and pulled out his notebook,
"Whew, thought I had lost it."
George finally had the courage to ask, "What's in that notebook? You
don't have to tell me, I just see you with it all the time."
Wilbur seemed to think about his answer for a second, "It's a planner.
I think that's the best way to describe it."
George understood, "That makes sense. Sorry if it was an intrusive
question." "No no," Wilbur waved his hands, "I'd be curious as well. I
never let it out of my sight."
Wilbur had seemed like a simple man. A father with a stable family
and a seemingly good job, but deeper inside was a mysterious man
that he felt hid something deeper. Everyone had that, of course, but
Wilbur seemed to harness that energy the most out of everyone
George knew. Then again he didn't know many people.
There was a knock on the door, "That must be Techno." Wilbur
assumed, and George made his way to the door to open it. Techno
stood there, with a trench coast and his usual boots and rings. He
really was an intimidating person, and if he were Tommy he'd be
scared of him as well.
He walked in, "Wil, Tommy's asleep. He fell asleep to dad telling him
a story of his adventures, remember those?"
Wilbur looked reminiscently, "Yeah. We'd beg him for more stories
and he'd tell us he wouldn't continue if we didn't sleep, then the next
night he'd have the next part."
"Alright but some of them obviously weren't true." Techno said as he
sat down, "Hello by the way, George."
"What's up Techno." George greeted, watching as Techno waved to
Niki.
Wilbur scoffed, "Of course they were all true. He's not a very good
actor or liar, and with the way he told those stories, I knew he lived
through them."
Techno rolled his eyes, "Wilbur you believe those stories and you're
an adult man." He shook his head, visibly disappointed, "I knew those
were fiction when I was 6."
Wilbur looked to George, "He's just a big non-believer, you know."
He whispered.
"I heard that, Harry Potter." He scolded Wilbur, and Niki and the rest
of them laughed while Wilbur gave him a death stare and pushed his
glasses up his face.
"What kind of stories were they?" George asked, not specifically to
one of the two brothers, but to whoever would answer.
Techno held his hand up, counting his fingers, "There was one
jumping a fence at the city zoo and petting the leopard, the one of him
wrestling a gator he found in the sewers, and Wilbur you couldn't
possibly believe the one about him c-"
Wilbur stopped him suddenly, "Alright," he laughed awkwardly,
"Techno, we get it."
"I'm serious." Techno put his hands up, "Just saying it's absurd how
you can be 36 and believe that story is true. Even Tommy could go to
dad's face and tell him it's a fake, and he's 6."
George didn't want to ask too many questions, so he didn't ask about
what the story was. Instead he tried to break the tension between the
two brothers, "So Tommy is getting pretty close to him now, isn't
he."
Wilbur nodded while giving a thumbs up, "Tommy loves him." He
answered then he suddenly remembered something, "Oh Techno,
imagine if he met dad's best friend, they would have all gotten along
so well."
Techno looked down, an unfamiliar look of sadness on his face as he
turned to George, "That friend our Dad used to teach us to fight with,
he passed away a couple months ago. Dad called us absolutely
devastated, they were really close. Tommy would have loved to
bicker with him."
George took everything in. They seemed to have grown up so happily,
around friends and family that made life fun enough to have stories to
share around. George's fear was that they'd ask about his childhood,
and he'd have nothing to respond with.
They had finished the movie, sharing a few more stories before
Wilbur thought it would be a good idea for them all to go home. "It
was a good night, George. Thank you for having us over when we
basically came to your house uninvited."
"Oh no please don't start with that," George smiled, "it's nice to have
some company after a while."
"Anytime." Wilbur grinned, before writing on a piece of his notebook
and ripping it out, "Here's our phone number, if you ever want to all
hang out again, just give us a call and we'll be here."
Techno walked toward George, his boots heavy against the hard floor,
"Stay safe and cool, brother." He patted him on the shoulder before
walking out.
Niki had kindly taken to cleaning up all the glasses and coasters
(which didn't even make much of a mess, thanks to her), and bid
George goodbye.
When George shut the door, he ran upstairs and checked the phone,
but the small toy sitting atop the phone was still perfectly balanced
atop it. It had been nearly midnight and thought it best to go to sleep
and hope Dream would call the next day.
The absence of a distraction in the form of Wilbur and his family
opened his mind to his endless thoughts he had been thinking earlier.
He had once again played Flightless Bird, American Mouth on his
headphones and fell asleep, occupied only with "what ifs" and
"imagines" in his full head.
time can do so much
Chapter Text
Time's torture
Chapter Text
Wilbur Soot had texted George at six in the morning, asking for his
help.
Wilbur: Hello, George. I do apologize that this text finds you so early
in the morning, but I would like to ask a favour.
Are you busy today?
George: It's no problem, I woke up early anyway but no I don't have
any plans as far as I know
George was curious as to what the favor was. He thought it might
have been an invitation to something at first but from how semi-
serious Wilbur's tone was, he knew that wasn't the case.
Wilbur: Are you good with kids?
George: I'm not horrible I guess
Why?
Wilbur: Would you be able to watch over Tommy?
I know he can be a handful but my family and I have found ourselves
in a sort of emergency and all the adults are needed.
George: Is everything ok?
Also yes, I reckon can watch Tommy
Wilbur: I'm going to be honest, I'm quite unsure
There's a lot going on right now, I've taken a work leave and Techno's
even closed his store for the rest of the week
We all just hope everything will be fine
Thank you for your concern, we appreciate it
George: No problem
I hope everything turns out ok, whatever it is
but anyway, would you like to bring Tommy here? or should I go to
yours?
Wilbur: Is it alright if you come to ours?
He's easier to take care of when he's entertained and out of your hair
All of the stuf he has to entertain him is here
George: Yeah sounds good
I can be there in an hour?
Wilbur: That works out
Thank you again, we definitely owe you one.
George plugged his phone in while he went to the kitchen to make
himself a bowl of cereal (as it was the fastest to make and eat). After
that he rushed to wash his face and change out of his pajamas.
Finishing faster than he expected, he asked Wilbur if he could come
earlier than he had planned. Wilbur said it was actually convenient,
since he, Niki, and Techno were leaving soon.
It took a couple turns and attempts to find their house in the
neighborhood, but after George spotted the number painted on the
curbside, he parked on the side of the road before locking his car and
knocking at the door.
The house was decorated beautifully on the outside, with the roof
lined in hanging flowers, a white archway on the path to the door, and
wind chimes that sang together as the last of the warm summer wind
blew on them.
The door in front of him opened, revealing Niki. "George!" She gave
him a hug, surprising him but he found himself hugging back, "I'm
sorry this was so last minute."
George dropped his keys on accident, and he leaned down to pick
them up before looking to Niki again, "No, no. You've been great
company to me lately and this is something I feel like I owe you."
"Oh don't be silly," Niki smiled, "you don't owe us anything for
friendship."
Wilbur walked up behind her, carrying a small backpack of things.
His eyes looked dreadful. They were baggy and dark, and the amount
of hours he had slept the previous night could be determined by his
face alone. "George, good to see you." He greeted, patting him on the
shoulder, "Thank you for coming by so early. Tommy is up in his
bedroom right now, still asleep. He wakes up in around
ten minutes."
Wilbur gave Niki the backpack to load into the car, where Techno
was already sitting at the steering wheel waiting for them. Wilbur led
George inside, showing him where everything was kept and also
where he had put Tommy's meals (which were pre-prepared for
George's convenience). He urged him to not hesitate to call if there
was emergency, and that he could eat whatever he wanted from their
kitchen if he should ever get hungry.
"That should be it," Wilbur told him as he led George into the living
room, "the TV and computer is all yours to use too. The TV has a
password lock on Youtube since we found out he was finding content
he shouldn't have been watching. It's written on the back of the cable
box."
George was amused, wondering what in the world Tommy had found
on Youtube that caused his family to restrict him from it permanently.
"Thank you, Wilbur. I think I can manage. When's his bedtime? Does
he ever nap?"
Wilbur's eyes widened as he shook his head, "We can never get him
to nap, so we just make him sleep early. Hopefully we'll be back
before he has to sleep for the night, though."
"Sounds good," George took note, "I hope wherever you guys are
heading off to is well for you, and that everything turns out fine."
Wilbur was getting teary-eyed, managing to grin, he said, "We hope
so too. I'll be off now, make sure to double lock the doors."
George nodded in understanding, and after Wilbur had walked out, he
had locked both locks on the door. He heard footsteps coming from
the stairs and found Tommy, rubbing his eyes with his nubby hands
and spotting George. "Mum and Dad left already?"
"Yes," George told him, "you just missed them, but they said goodbye
while you slept." Tommy nodded, "Can I play computer?" He asked
hopefully, but George had to sadly say no. "Your dad said you could
after breakfast, but only for an hour."
"He lets me after I finish my worksheets too." Tommy let him know,
and George nodded with a smile.
"He did mention that, yes." George then went to the kitchen to get
him his breakfast, "What do you want to eat?"
Tommy made a thinking face, "I want to mix every cereal we have in
the kitchen. Dad never lets me do that, but if you let me I won't tell
him." Tommy said cheerfully, hoping he'd get his way.
George contemplated it for a second before deciding it would be best
to get on the kid's good side, in case it might help later if he got fussy,
"Okay."
"Except the one with raisins." Tommy made a disgusted face, "That's
mom's cereal and it sucks." George chuckled, "I'll make sure to skip
that box, then."
Tommy had sat down finishing his last few bites of franken-cereal
before running up to his room, "Want to come? I can show you my
cool house in Minecraft!"
George followed after him, nearly slipping on the stairs because of his
socks. Tommy led him into a bedroom, where the door had a sign that
read "Boys only (Except for mum). George laughed before going
inside the boy's room.
He had many figurines and posters of various things he enjoyed.
There were lots of Zelda posters, Animal Crossing amiibos, and every
Minecraft mob figurine sitting on a little shelf above his bed.
"Wow you have every mob," George told him, impressed, "I don't see
a ghast though."
Tommy furrowed his brow, "I do have a ghast. Look." Tommy
flicked off the lights in his room and pressed a button on a small
remote, illuminating a lantern above his bed. The lantern was a Ghast,
and George had to admit it was quite awesome. Tommy turned on the
lights again before booting up his computer.
"Someone bought me a new computer. I don't know who it was but
Uncle Techno delivered it."
George remembered Techno mentioning he would have liked to get
Tommy a new computer after he spilled Coke on his old one, "Maybe
Uncle Techno got it."
"No," Tommy shook his head, "he wouldn't."
Tommy and George had played Minecraft, and Tommy had even
taught George how to call Tubbo so he could play with them. They
argued a lot but George could tell they were best friends, and no
amount of conflict could be unresolved between them.
Tubbo had to go because his parents told him he had to finish his
math practice, which reminded George of Tommy's computer limit.
"You have 5 more minutes." He reminded the boy, who surprisingly
nodded in agreement.
"Do you know where my Mum and Dad went?" Tommy asked.
George shook his head sadly, "No."
"Oh." Tommy said, "I do. They went to the doctors."
"Oh no," George said, concerned, "is everyone alright?"
"Can I tell you a secret?" Tommy asked, pausing his game and
turning around to face George. "Sure, kid."
"I get up at night to play computer when I'm supposed to be sleeping.
I lock my door and Mum and Dad never see me."
George laughed, "Better not get caught doing that."
"Don't worry I don't." The boy said confidently, "Anyway I was
playing Minecraft in the night when I heard everyone going crazy
outside. I thought people came, maybe my Aunt Alyssa had come to
visit us. I do like Aunt Alyssa. I peeked outside my room and saw my
Dad running downstairs and when I looked out the window he was
driving away."
George didn't want to be nosy and use the boy to get knowledge from,
but curiosity got the best of him, "Where did he go?"
"I think the doctors. But I tip-toed outside and mum was on the couch
sad and Dad and Grandpa were not there." Tommy said before turning
off his computer, "Do I have to do my worksheets now?"
George thought about what the boy had told him before nodding his
head, "Yes, then you can play again after."
"Okay." He looked disappointed but made to finish his work anyway.
He had helped Tommy sharpen his pencils when his phone had started
ringing. It was Wilbur, "Hey, Wilbur."
"Hello George." Wilbur greeted, "He being a good kid?"
"Yes," he answered honestly, "he's doing his worksheets now."
"Wow, it's hard for us to get him to do that. Good job." Wilbur
laughed.
"Is everything okay now?"
"It is for now," Wilbur sounded relieved, "I mean that the situation
has stabilized, but we're still unsure."
"I'm glad it's fine for now."
"Can I speak with Tommy?" Wilbur asked, and George said yes,
handing Tommy the phone. He put down his pencil, "Hi Dad."
"Hello Tommy. What did you have for breakfast?"
Tommy's eyes widened as he looked to George, who had a smile on
his face, "I had.. cereal, dad." "Really? What kind?"
"T-the," Tommy stuttered, "the raisin ones."
"Oh, but you hate that cereal." Wilbur said skeptically.
"Sorry I can't talk, Dad. I'm doing work." He said before scrambling
to hand the phone back to George.
"Did he mix every cereal?" Wilbur asked George.
"..Yes." George told him honestly, and Wilbur started laughing.
"Don't worry, at least now he's done it and he won't ask again. I have
to go for now, but I think we should be back in an hour or two. That's
what it's looking like. I was just checking in."
"Alright, bye Wilbur." George ended the call, "Tommy, your dad's
gonna be back soon." "Okay." Tommy looked up from his paper,
"Will Grandpa be back too?"
"I don't know, he never mentioned if your Grandpa would. Sorry,
kid."
Tommy nodded his head slowly, "I like Grandpa. He shows me a lot
of things." "Such as?"
"He showed me how to kick-box, and he also showed me how to fight
Uncle Techno." Tommy said proudly, flexing his little arms.
"He seems like a very fun Grandpa." George said, highly amused by
the young child in front of him striking hero poses.
"He is," Tommy scribbled numbers onto his math worksheet, "he tells
me stories too."
"I heard he likes telling stories," George remembered Wilbur and
Techno mentioning it, "what did he tell?"
"I know they're fake, but Dad believes them. He said he had
'evidence'." Tommy did air quotes, "What does that word mean,
George?"
"It means proof."
"What's the word 'proof' mean, then?" Tommy raised a brow.
"Never mind." George smiled.
"I'm done with my worksheets, but I'm hungry." Tommy stacked his
papers and put them in a little folder, "Can I eat lunch early?"
George didn't see a problem with that, "I suppose so, come on."
They went down to the kitchen, and George heated up Tommy's
lunch. He also found another box of the same meal, with "George, if
you ever get hungry." written on a sticky note. He heated it up as well
and they both ate together.
"My dad plays music while we eat." Tommy gestured over to a shelf
with a bluetooth speaker, records, and cassette tapes. "Can you play
Bruno Mars?"
George agreed, trying to connect his cellphone to the speaker, and
after a few failed attempts managed to play Bruno Mars on it. Tommy
was drumming his hands on the table in between bites, which George
found amusing. He was some kid.
"Has it been an hour yet?"
"Not yet," George checked his phone for the time, "fifteen more
minutes."
"Time sucks. It goes so slowly." Tommy crossed his arms.
George had never agreed with a six year old child more.
"Do you miss your mum and dad that bad?"
"No." Tommy answered, and George almost spit his food out
laughing, "I mean I do miss them but I wanted to ask Dad for a new
game when he's back, that's all."
Tommy had finished eating, and George made to wash their spoons
and throw out the food boxes. Tommy told George he would play
Minecraft and call Tubbo again, and that George was allowed to
watch TV in the living room if he wanted.
George found the fact that Tommy bossed him around very amusing,
he was a very outlandish child. He had decided to go upstairs with
Tommy anyway, so when Wilbur and Niki came back he didn't look
like he was careless and left Tommy by himself.
A doorbell rang throughout the house, and Tommy told Tubbo he'd be
back, before muting himself and running down to the door. He
couldn't reach the second lock, so he gestured for George to hurry up
and open it for him. Wilbur and Niki stood at the door, with Techno
pulling out of the driveway. Niki gave Tommy a hug, "Did you have
fun?"
"Yes." Tommy told her, "I like George. He plays Minecraft."
Niki looked at George proudly, "I'm glad you had fun Tommy." She
sniffed the air in the house, "I assume you ate already then? That's
good."
"Yes I'm full, Mum," Tommy turned to his dad, "Where is Grandpa?
Is he still in the car?"
Wilbur knelt down beside his son, "Actually, Grandpa's going to be
staying at the doctors for now, Tom."
"Why? Did he forget to eat apples? Mum said they keep the doctor
away."
Niki gave a small smile toward her son, "No Tommy, he just has to be
with the doctor for now, but you know him, he's strong. He'll be back
home to play with you again soon."
"Oh okay!" Tommy exclaimed, "If he's going to be back, then that's
okay." He and his Mum walked toward his bedroom, as Niki wanted
to check on the work he had done. Wilbur walked over to George,
holding bills in his hand.
George waved the money away, "No, no. Please, you don't have to
pay me." Wilbur gave him the money anyway, "We owe it to you."
George hesitantly took the money and pocketed it. "Is your father
okay?"
Wilbur let a breath of air out of his mouth, blowing the hair on the top
of his head slightly, "We don't know. He's usually physically capable
and healthy but this came out of nowhere. He said he always saw it
coming, though. That time's running out."
George was a little saddened that his father could say such a thing, "I
can't promise anything, but I hope it passes and everything will be
okay with him."
"I know you do." Wilbur said quietly.
"I should head home." George told him, "I want to try and get some
work done early." Wilbur thanked him again for taking care of
Tommy and waved him goodbye as he drove out. ---
"Who knew you'd be good with kids." Dream chuckled. It was night
time and they had been on the phone together again.
"What's that supposed to mean? I have a little sister, you know."
"I know." Dream smiled, "Just didn't expect that, that's all."
"Well I guess I expected it coming from you, Mr. I coach baseball for
children." George mocked jokingly.
Dream collapsed on his bed, staring blankly at the ceiling, "Kids are
cool, I guess." "Some are, yeah." George responded, collapsing on his
bed as well, "So what did you do today?" "I drove out to my mom's
again, it's far but I drove back home anyway."
"What did you do there?" George asked.
"Helped her organize her books. She has so many, and she wants to
sell them soon." Dream explained, turning to lay on his side..
George played with his fingernails, "That's a good way to make
money."
"Yeah." Dream agreed, "I missed you, George."
"Again?" George asked, "It's been one day."
"Yes well still, it's nice having someone to talk to after a long day."
Dream admitted.
George agreed, he did miss Dream as well. He wished he could hang
out with him the way he hung out with Wilbur and his family, easily
accessible. He wished there was a way for them to be closer, but their
type of distance was different than the normal.
"Dream," he exhaled, "I completely missed you too."
Dream smiled, putting them in another round of silence.
"Clay." He said after a while.
"What?"
"My name," Dream said, "it's Clay."
George was surprised. He had forgotten he had never known Dream's
real name. He had gotten so used to the nickname. "Can I still call you
Dream?"
Dream laughed, "Of course you can," he permitted, "I like the way
you say it, anyways." George felt flattered, "Thank you, Dream."
Dream closed his eyes, imagining a world in where time had gave
them a chance. Dream finally came to accept that through these calls,
these talks, these little back and forths with George, he had fallen for
him. It was subtle but there. Inevitably when he'd finally get the
chance to meet George, it'd be too late. Time would already be
running out.
Dream knew how to accept his feelings. He never suppressed or
denied anything he had felt before. Accepting his feelings for George
had been easy, but accepting the fact that even if George reciprocated
his feelings, it would never work out was the most difficult thing he
had ever tried to do in his entire life. It was just, as people say, bad
timing.
He was angry at Time. He wanted to torture it as it had tortured him.
He wanted to ask the universe why it had given him the best thing he
had ever had just to take every chance of ever having it away from
him.
He had said goodnight to George, so he wouldn't have to hear the
voice he had fallen in love with while his thoughts were filled with
absolute and full ache. He wished one thing he wish he would never
have to long for: The relief of his feelings for George to dissipate.
George was confused at Dream's abrupt depart. He couldn't handle
not hearing his voice anymore.
They both lay in their own beds in their own time, in the same room
of the same house, but so far away.
All this while the wind blow the single stem blooming from George's
backyard, mockingly. This flower could survive young and beautiful
from 1970, but Time couldn't wait for Dream.
the vase
Chapter Text