No Body Knows (The Secrets That We Keep)
theworldwhispers
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No Body Knows (The Secrets That We Keep): Chapter 8


E - Words: 1,738 - Last Updated: Mar 30, 2012
Story: Complete - Chapters: 12/12 - Created: Feb 17, 2012 - Updated: Mar 30, 2012
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Much to Blaine’s credit, he stays quiet.� His forehead creases and his eyes look lost, and Kurt can tell he has a million questions.� But at the same time, he knows Kurt needs to speak.� He needs to speak, and he needs to do it now, before he completely loses the little bit of nerve he has.

“My mom,” he begins, his voice cracking on the word, “was still alive, and I was… I was so much closer to her when I was little than I was with my father.� I had the relationship with her that I have with my dad now, except even more.� I just… I worshipped her.� From the moment I could walk, I would just toddle around behind her all day.� She taught me so much.� She – she was a stay at home mom, so I was around her all day for years…”

“Mama, Mama!”� Kurt giggled.� He ran into his parents room and flung himself on the bed, landing on top of his mother’s legs with an ‘oof.’� “Look, Mama!”

“Why if it isn’t my little sweet pea,” Elizabeth Hummel cooed.� She wrapped her arms around Kurt, pulling him up into her lap.� “Someone’s supposed to be napping, and it’s not Mama.”

Kurt, a small three years old, bit his lip nervously.� “Not tired.”

His mother ran her finger lightly down the bridge of his nose, smiling softly.� “You need to sleep, baby.� Don’t you want to be all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed when Daddy gets home?”

“I would do anything she asked me to do.� She would let me ‘help’ her in the kitchen and with the housework and everything.� She was so beautiful, and I swear, I thought she was a princess…”

He pouted and shook his head stubbornly.� “Not tired!� No nap!”

Elizabeth sighed.� “Well, since you’re awake, why don’t you show me what you made?” she asked, gesturing to a piece of paper clutched tightly in the toddler’s fist.

Kurt beamed and thrust the paper at her, quickly crawling to sit beside her.� “I drawed a piture.”

“You drew a picture?” she asked, placing emphasis on the correct pronunciations.� “What did you draw a picture of?”

“Yeah!� I drawed it!” he said, practically bouncing up and down in his skin.� “Look, see, me and you.”

“You drew us?” she asked again.� “That’s very good, baby!� Are you going to be an artist when you grow up?� You could paint Mama and Daddy a million pictures to fill every single wall.”

Kurt’s eyes widened in wonderment.� “You can draw for a job?”

Elizabeth nodded, stroking his hair gently.� “You sure can.� If that’s what you want to do.”� She laughed as Kurt nodded so hard he nearly knocked the top of his head against her chin.� “Maybe we’ll buy you some new crayons next time we go to the store.� Would you like that, sweet pea?”

“Yeah!”

“Well, we’ll see what we can do, okay?” she said.� She glanced back down at the picture.� “Where’s Daddy?� There’s Mama, and there’s my Kurt, but where’s Daddy?”

Kurt pouted.� “Daddy working.”

Elizabeth pressed a kiss to his forehead before pulling back, looking down at her son with a devilish gleam in her eyes.� “You know what we should do before Daddy gets home?”

“What, Mama?”

“We should make cookies.”

He gasped and scooted back on the bed to look up at his mother.� “Can we?!” he cried.

“Only if you can stay awake.� Only big boys who don’t need naps can help their Mamas in the kitchen.”

“Not tired!� No nap!” he repeated, pounding his little fists into the blanket for emphasis.

“Well let’s go, then!� We don’t have much time!”

“She was perfect in my eyes.� But I think – I think maybe my dad was a bit sad that he didn’t get to see me much… that my mom and I had such a wonderful relationship.� He wasn’t sad for us, but I think just – he wanted that too, you know?� And I really only got to see him for a few minutes in the morning and then at dinner.� He worked even longer hours back then, because the shop was new and he needed to get it off the ground.� So when I was six, she came up with an idea…”

“But Mama, why aren’t you coming?” Kurt asked, his lower lip sticking out far.

Elizabeth finished zipping up his jacket before patting him solidly against his tummy.� “Because you and Daddy are going to have some time together, sweet pea.� You’re going to have so much fun camping with Daddy.� You’ll get to make a big, big fire, and go fishing…”

Kurt pulled a face, his little nose scrunching up in disgust.� “Gross.� Fish are gross and smelly and dirty.”

His mother slid his backpack onto him, tutting softly under her breath.� “You’re going to have so much fun you won’t even care that the fish are a bit smelly.”� She brought her hand up to his hair, smoothing it back out of his face.� “And you know what?”

He sulked.� “What?”

“I bet if you’re really good for Daddy, he might let you make s’mores over the fire after dinner,” she whispered.

Kurt perked up at the prospect.� “Really?”

Elizabeth just shrugged, whistling innocently, as Burt walked back inside.

“Okay, that’s the last of it.� You ready to go, bud?”

Kurt glanced back up at his mother one last time, and she gave him a sneaky wink.� “Yeah, Daddy.� Let’s go.”

“So we went camping for a weekend on the edge of this lake.� For the first day or so, everything was good.� It wasn’t really my thing, but I could tell my dad was excited, so I tried really hard for him.� We did all the typical camping things.� We slept in sleeping bags, we hiked through the woods, we fished, we made campfires – Dad even let us make s’mores, like my mom had promised, and I remember singing little songs around the fire, being horribly sticky from the dessert.”

Blaine chuckles softly.� “That sounds adorable.� I can’t remotely imagine you camping, though.”

“I know, right?� I’m not – I’m not an outdoorsy person.� But I tried, because I love my dad and I missed spending time with him.� And because my mom had been the one to come up with the idea.”� Kurt swipes a hand under his eyes, wiping away a few tears that had started to slide down his face.� Blaine frowns at the sight.� “I’m fine.� I just – I don’t talk about her much.� I’m sorry.”

“No, no, no,” he says, wrapping his free hand over their already linked hands, surrounding Kurt’s entirely in his.� “You don’t have to apologize, love.� It’s okay, I understand.� We – we can stop, if you need.� I shouldn’t have pushed.”

Kurt shakes his head.� “I need to keep going.� I’m afraid I won’t if you give me time to stop.”

So Blaine nods, falling silent again.

“The… the second morning, after we had breakfast, we decided to go out canoeing.� I have pretty good balance now, but as you can imagine, it wasn’t so great as a six-year-old.� But we managed to both get into the boat and push off from the shore.� Dad was trying to teach me how to row, and I couldn’t get the hang of it.� I just kept paddling us in circles.

“After about thirty minutes or so out on the water, my paddle accidentally snagged in some weeds or something, and it jerked out of my hand when the boat turned.� We weren’t too far away from it, but we floated far enough away that my little arm couldn’t grab it again.� So Dad stood up carefully and said we should switch places, because he should be able to reach it.� But I – I lost my balance.”

Blaine’s breath hitches.� “What-“

“I fell in.”

“You – you fell-“

Kurt nods.� “I – the boat started shaking just enough and I tumbled over the edge.� I remember falling face-first into the water, and just… sinking.� Really quickly.� I started panicking and flailing, and I’m sure that didn’t help things any, but it didn’t make any sense that I couldn’t seem to kick myself any closer to the surface.� I knew how to swim – I was a pretty good swimmer, actually.� But I – it was like something was pulling me down.

“My dad jumped in after me, but the water was murky.� He couldn’t see where I was, so he just started swimming down and pushing his arms out, hoping that he’d brush up against some part of me eventually.”

Blaine’s grip on his hand tightens.� His eyes seem impossibly wide, but he doesn’t speak.� He just listens in rapt attention.

“It took him a long time to find me.� It felt like – God, it felt like I was under for forever.� I know he resurfaced once for air before he found me.”� He pauses, swallowing hard as Blaine’s thumb brushes tenderly beneath his eyes, wiping away tears he wasn’t aware had fallen.� “I was all the way at the bottom, he told me.� I was practically blue when he brought me up.� I certainly wasn’t breathing.� He – he resuscitated me, but I had been under for so long.� He carried me back to camp and wrapped me up in a blanket, then immediately put me into the car and drove me to the hospital.� We just – he, he left everything else we had brought with us at camp.� It took us a while to get out of the woods and to the nearest hospital.� By then, I think he said I had fallen asleep.”

Finally, Blaine speaks up.� “You – you keep saying he told you most of this stuff.� Do you not – remember this?”

Kurt shakes his head.� “That’s the weird part.� Well, one of the weird parts.� I was six.� I should remember it, right?”� He looks over to Blaine.� “I should remember.”

“I’m… sure it’s normal to not remember something traumatic like that.”

“That’s what the doctor told me when I woke up again.� And then there were a lot of… questions to answer.”

“About why you had sunk?”

Kurt gives him a rueful smile.� “About why I was a girl.”


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<3Oh wow. Jeeeaz I need more >.<

Just posted a new chapter! Thanks for reading. I'm really glad you enjoy the story so far! :D