Disclaimer: All Gilmore Girls content belongs to Amy Sherman-Palladino.

Chapter Thirty-Nine: Not Joyce or Monet

Flopping face-first down onto the bed, Ella breathed a sigh of relief. It would have felt strange not to have a little champagne at Jess's book launch party. But, she was a lightweight. She was floating somewhere between tipsy, buzzed, and drunk. At least she was still capable of slipping off her shoes before making her way to the bedroom. She'd even managed to change into pajamas, brush her teeth, and wash her face. A far cry from the screwdriver incident at Liz's baby shower. A heavy winter snow fell outside the windows and a touch of cold air seeped into the draughty apartment. Goosebumps rose lightly on her skin. In her state, they felt nice instead of uncomfortable. She was already dozing when Jess came in, having taken a quick shower. His hair was still damp as he climbed into bed next to her, the movement shaking her from her haze.

"Did you like your party?" she murmured, watching as he shut off the lamp and rolled over to face her.

His face was aglow with the bluish light of the snowy Saturday evening. "Mhm."

She snickered a bit at his nonchalance. "I know you hate parties, but Chris insisted it was the best way to drum up business. And you do like surprises, Mr. Spontaneity. Matthew and I made it as lowkey as we could."

"It wasn't so bad, Eleanor. Really," he said, shrugging. "You're remembering that you whispered lines from Catch-22 in my ear all night, right?"

"I figured you'd need some Joseph Heller to make it through," she explained, slightly sheepish.

Jess smiled. "Of course. And watching Chris and Leo get so drunk they do their acapella version of 'Under Pressure' could never be bad."

"Leo does do a damn good Freddie Mercury," Ella agreed, chuckling. "I didn't realize the publishing agents would all go blackout level, too."

"Oh, yeah. You should've seen what Chris did for the Subsect launch. It was like that scene where E.T. gets drunk. But if there were fifty aliens in the movie instead of just one," Jess said flatly, begrudgingly.

"You must be a little drunk if you're letting a cheesy eighties movie slip. Or have I finally converted you?" she teased, snuggling deeper into the pillow.

Jess smirked. "Not yet. Chris made me try his Manhattans to see if they 'tasted too much like gasoline.'"

"I have a sneaking suspicion that they did," Ella said.

"Someone give the lady a prize," Jess shot back tiredly. "Good thing we walked there."

"Yeah. And good thing I got to watch you catch a snowflake with your tongue on the way back."

"Shut up."

"Hey, don't be embarrassed, cutie," she said, forcing her laughter down. "I'll be eating my words when you watch me fall on my ass while we're ice-skating with April."

She knew if he'd been entirely sober, he wouldn't have gotten so caught up in his wonderment at the storm. But Ella had also seen him sticking out his tongue awaiting a snowflake in an old, yellowing photo album Liz had shown off during her baby shower. In it, Jess had been no more than three. Dressed in a raggedy winter jacket on some grimy corner of New York City. He and Liz were sticking their tongues out together. Seeing the photo had given Ella's mouth a bittersweet taste. It was hard to imagine Jess ever feeling so relaxed around his mother. She saw the same rare awe from him on the walk home. Most of the time, he was so weighed down by the world he could barely come up for air. She thought she had never seen him look so young at heart before.

"Can't wait," Jess hummed, mocking. It was nearly time for April's winter break, and Anna had somehow agreed to let her spend it with Luke, Lorelai, and Rory. Ella and Jess had opted to return to Stars Hollow for Christmas, after the bumps in the road on Thanksgiving. Two more days, and they'd be braving the icy roads on their way up to Connecticut. April had already called them to schedule a time for ice-skating. The proper, analytical way the little girl spoke never failed to amuse Ella.

"Me neither," Ella quipped as her eyelids began to droop again. She could smell the minty scent of Jess's shampoo.

As he watched her begin to drift off, he leaned in to press a kiss to her forehead. From what Matthew had said, Ella had essentially been put in charge of the party when Chris's trademark irresponsibility made an appearance. Matthew had jury duty and couldn't assume his usual role of organizer in the wake of Chris's chaotic decision-making. What she'd managed to throw together, though, was one of the better parties Jess had ever been to. The publishers they knew usually sent younger employees to the underground press launches, and Chris had ended up making friends with most of the usual suspects at the launch for Jess's first book. Ella had made sure the guest list only included familiar faces. If they just had to throw him a surprise party, which Chris demanded (normally, she wouldn't have listened, but if it was a matter of getting his book better exposure, she was willing to risk it), she'd try to make it as comfortable for him as possible. Or, at the very least, bearable.

And she'd just gotten done with finals two days earlier. He could see how tired she was. Her nerves over the possibility of seeing her father during the winter holidays hadn't helped her sleeping recently either. Though Jess wasn't sure how it would actually pan out, she claimed she wanted an attempt at apologizing for what she'd said at Adam's graduation. She was sick of family nonsense, she said. Maybe if she levelled the playing field, they could begin to understand each other again. Ella herself wasn't sure exactly what had sparked her desire to try again with her family, but suspected it might have been Thanksgiving. Jess, simply put, was someone she admired. Seeing him trying to mend his relationships (even though he didn't have to, even though it was difficult), made her feel just a little more confident. Maybe not everything turned out bad, after all.

Shutting his own eyes, Jess slipped his hand beneath Ella's shirt, his fingertips ghosting over her back. She smiled softly at his touch, feather-light. A pleasant shiver rolled through her.

"Thank you for the party," he said, barely above a whisper.

"Well, thanks for writing my new favorite book," she answered instantly, sleepy and sincere. "I'm so fucking proud of you."

. . .

There were still a couple hours left until lunchtime when Ella slipped through the door at Truncheon, but it wasn't entirely uncommon for her to show up and work a little. Especially when she was on break from school and got antsy. Jess had debated giving her the easel he'd bought her for Christmas early, so she would have something new to focus on while he tied up the odds and ends at the book press. But, ultimately, he wanted to wait until the morning after they returned to Philadelphia. It would be far more surprising to wake up and find a Christmas present wrapped up in the living room on the morning of New Year's Day than on the actual gift-giving holiday.

When he'd left for his last day of work prior to their trip to Connecticut, she'd still been half asleep. Her sketchbook was open on her bedside table, a pencil drawing of a child with hollow eyes having yet to be shaded. She'd been up late working on it the night before, on a roll. He hadn't even shut the door to the apartment before she was out cold again. He'd been anxious to get back home, to pack and prepare for the trip. In his opinion, there was no use in only opening for a Monday and then closing for the holidays the rest of the week, but Matthew's stickler spirit won out. Jess wasn't going to be skipping around the store in merriment as the rest of the world took a vacation, but he also wasn't moping around like Chris. He was in the midst of diffusing an argument between his two coworkers when Ella arrived.

He wanted to smile when he saw her, and almost did. But then he got a good look at her hazel eyes, and immediately he could tell something was wrong. It wasn't that she was sleepy, though she looked a bit haggard in with her peacoat tied around her haphazardly and her hair wild, dotted with the snowflakes falling steadily outside. Instead, she looked almost unreachable. His Eleanor who was always so present and vivid and alive, even in the midst of drudgery. And she wasn't daydreaming, either. She wasn't off in her own thoughts, thinking of Emily Dickinson or James Joyce or Claude Monet. No; she was simply not there. Not really.

"Hey, honey. You're early," he began as she approached him, where he stood in between Matthew and Chris. The two of them didn't even notice she'd come in until Jess addressed her, still too caught up in their argument over where to place the new books of free-form poetry.

Swallowing harshly, Ella gave a weak smile and raked her fingers through her hair. She walked up to them, wringing her hands together. Jess didn't need to see her hands to know she had already bitten her nails down to the quick. At the interruption, Chris gave a frustrated huff and turned to Ella.

"Ella, please tell Matthew it makes zero sense to put the free-form poetry anywhere near the sonnets! They should be on opposite ends of the store, as far as I'm concerned," he exclaimed in exasperation.

Matthew rolled his eyes, crossing his arms over his chest as his jaw clenched. "I'm glad you're here, Ella. Please tell Chris that we don't only sell poetry, and free-form or not, it has no business anywhere near science fiction!"

Furrowing her brows, distracted, Ella shook her head. "Um...I don't know...but I…."

"What?" Jess asked as she gestured slightly with her hands. Her face was pale, and she almost seemed confused, at a loss for words. It didn't happen to her often, to say the least.

Blowing out a breath, she tried again, jerking her thumb back over her shoulder. "Back at the apartment...I just got a call from my brother. My dad's dead."

Jess's heart dropped into his stomach. "What?"

"Yeah," Ella said, nodding. As she continued, she took a hair elastic from her wrist and began pulling her locks into a ponytail. "Adam said he was in a car accident this morning. Driving home from some bar in Maryland. If I had to guess, he was still a little drunk from last night. No one else got hurt, which is good. He hit a patch of black ice, and he was going too fast, and I guess he just went right off the road. Into a tree. And he wasn't wearing his seatbelt."

Her speech became more urgent with every word, as they heard it sink in for her in real time. But she was never frantic, only determined and stern. The spacey fog was fading from her demeanor, though it remained in her eyes. Only in her eyes. She didn't give them time to respond, just kept thinking out loud.

"Noah's already on a plane from Oregon, but I don't think he's gonna be any help. And Adam said Fiona's freaking out, so I'm almost definitely going to have to make the arrangements. I know you guys have work and stuff, but we need to pack up and get there before the rest of the family does, or everything will probably just explode on principle. Fuck! This is just like him. To die a week before Christmas!"

"Whoa, hey, Eleanor, just slow down for a second, okay?" Jess began, taking a hesitant step towards her and grabbing her hand. He squeezed once, hard, hoping to calm her down at least a little.

"Jesus, Ella-" Chris began.

"I'm so sorry," Matthew said.

Ella shook her head, her face stoic. "Don't, okay? Don't be sorry. No one needs to be sorry. He was a fucking drunk, and it finally caught up with him. I just need to get back to Stars Hollow to take care of this, and then maybe Christmas won't be completely ruined. Sound good?"

"Elle, just hold on. You should sit down and-" Jess said, but she cut him off.

"No, Jess. Seriously, I'm fine. Let's just go and get it over with, and then it'll be done," she said, her hand never leaving his though she didn't squeeze back. Her tone was tight, clipped, but she didn't sound angry. He recognized it from the night on the bridge when she'd told him about the days following her mother's death. The way she held it all together, and blocked it all out. Numb and headstrong.

"Do you want us to come with?" Matthew asked, watching with uncertainty as Ella began to tug Jess towards the door, grabbing his bag for him and handing him his coat.

"What? Of course not," Ella said, insistent, as though it were obvious. "All I need to do is steal Jess for a few days. You need to do whatever it is you're gonna do with Mabel. And Chris needs to do whatever it is he's gonna do with Leo, and you need to tell me about it when we get back. I can pretty much guarantee your stories will be more fun than mine."

"Are you sure?" Chris chimed in, brow heavy with worry. Her iciness surprised him. He had never heard someone react to a parent's death quite so flippantly before.

"Yes. Jesus, Chris, keep up," she replied, in a way which would have spurred a playful argument on a normal day. Again, her nonchalance unnerved all three of them.

Jess interlocked their fingers again instantly once he had his bag and his coat, almost heading out the door already. She was moving too fast for him to process much of anything, only reacting. He hadn't seen her in such a frenzy in a very long time. "Eleanor, wait. Stop."

"I can't stop, Jess. I told you, we've gotta get there before my uncle has time to hit on Fiona and before Noah has time to piss off Adam. It's fine. I promise. I'm fine."

He opened his mouth to respond, but she pulled him out the front door instead. As they went, she shouted over her shoulder to Matthew and Chris: "Happy holidays! Don't do anything I wouldn't do!"

And then, she and Jess were gone. Chris and Matthew exchanged concerned, flabbergasted glances.

. . .

Flashback was the word that came to the forefront of her mind, as she stared up at the ceiling in the Gilmore living room. Luke and Lorelai were trying, and she appreciated it. They could both tell she didn't want to talk about it, only wanted a bit of normalcy after the long day. And they'd obliged. After all, they'd had practice. Lorelai knew exactly what to do. She'd had Luke bring dinner home from the diner: turkey sandwiches and sodas. She'd suggested they watch a movie after dinner, something campy horror. Finally, they had settled on The Lost Boys. Ella knew how much Jess hated the movie, especially Kiefer Sutherland's mullet, but he never complained once. A large part of her wished he would. She wanted it to be the way it was supposed to be. She wanted to have Christmas in Stars Hollow with the people who felt more like her family than her father did. Adam celebrating with one of his school friends in Boston, Fiona with her sister, Noah with his finacée in Oregon. But, of course, things never went as planned. Not in Ella's experience at least.

At some point during the movie, she'd fallen asleep on the couch. No matter how much she wanted to stay awake until the end, she couldn't keep her eyes open. Dealing with Fiona's blubbering and Adam's silence and Noah's anger had pretty well exhausted her. Not to mention the business setting up the funeral at the church. She'd spent nearly two hours with the pastor, but the service was only halfway planned. She wished Aunt Julie could arrive sooner, but the girls were in school until Tuesday. Erin had some big recital she was pitching a fit about missing. Ella couldn't blame her. She wouldn't want to be there if she didn't have to be. No, they would arrive on Wednesday morning. Two hours before the funeral, set for noon. At some point before then, Ella would have to sort out the flower arrangements and the music and the programs. At least Luke was providing the food. She assumed he would before he even offered. And she would have to write the eulogy. But she wasn't even thinking about it yet. Every time the idea of writing it entered her mind, she would start humming a Stevie Nicks song and pointedly ignore it.

It was all too familiar. The planning, the writing, the consoling. Since they'd arrived in Stars Hollow that afternoon, it had been a non stop barrage of tasks and tears. None of it was surprising. And it almost made her want to laugh. The minute she heard that her mother was dead, she had burst out laughing, a nervous reaction she couldn't control. Granted, the laughter came from deep inside her, and probably resembled a pained shriek more than an actual giggle. But it was laughter nonetheless, and her father had recognized it as such. He'd yelled at her until his voice became hoarse. She knew it wouldn't happen again. He was the dead one now, after all. But still, she didn't let the anxious laughter escape. She didn't let anything escape. After the punishment she'd received for letting go last time, she knew not to do it again. No one was there to smack her, to scream, but she just couldn't bring herself to forget how it had felt. Like she couldn't even grieve right. And the best way to grieve became to not grieve at all.

She laid with one hand on her stomach and the other behind her head, analyzing the popcorn ceiling. She'd awoken with the room dim and the TV shut off. A quilt which she hadn't fallen asleep under was draped over her, and there were hushed whispers in the direction of the kitchen. She hadn't planned to wake up until morning, but she hadn't planned to fall asleep there either. They were supposed to be sleeping in the apartment above the diner for the vacation, while Rory and April took the spare beds in the Gilmore house. But neither girl had yet to arrive, and Lorelai insisted Ella and Jess stay over after dinner. It was no use driving over in the snow, even if Luke's was only about a minute away. Ella couldn't believe how similar it all was to before. Sleeping alone on the Gilmore couch as others worried over her a few feet away.

She listened, in spite of herself. It was too tempting not to eavesdrop when she'd already heard her name so many times. Luke was concerned about her forgetting to eat. Lorelai was concerned about her shutting everyone out and being overwhelmed by the funeral preparations. And both of them were concerned about her coming to blows with Fiona at some point in the next few days.

Sighing, Ella ran her tongue over her teeth and remembered she hadn't brushed them. She debated not doing so, but decided to just bite the bullet. With everything else on her mind, she thought it best to eliminate all the outward elements which might impede her from getting back to sleep. She rolled over on her side, preparing to sit up, when she saw Jess. She thought he'd be in the kitchen, talking with Luke and Lorelai. Instead, he sat on the floor with his back against the sofa. His head was near hers, leaned back. His eyes were closed, but he wasn't snoring. She doubted he was fully asleep, but nonetheless attempted to get past him and rummage through the bag on the armchair to find her toothbrush. Her stealth proved lacking, however, when he began to stir as soon as she reached the bag.

"Hey," he said quietly, rubbing at his eyes with the heels of his hands and doing his best to seem lively. "What's wrong?"

"Nothing," she replied, fishing her toothbrush out from the sea of clothes she'd thrown into the duffel before they sped away from the apartment in Philadelphia. "I just forgot to brush my teeth."

"Oh," he said, nodding and hoisting himself up. His neck was already sore from the position he'd dozed off in, unwilling to follow Luke and Lorelai into the kitchen with Ella asleep on the couch. "Me too. I'll come with."

She nodded back, grabbing his toothbrush as well. The whispers didn't cease until they made their way into the kitchen, Luke and Lorelai looking up at their entrance. Ella debated using the upstairs bathroom, not disturbing the two of them. But she didn't have the energy to climb the stairs, and it would be the first time she could get a good look at the new half-bathroom they added next to Rory's room. The smell of the diner food lingered, and it made Ella's chest feel just a touch less tight. Lorelai broke out into a small smile at the sight of the two of them.

"You need anything, sweetie?" she asked, speaking only to Ella.

Though she felt a bit uncomfortable under everyone's gaze, Ella smiled back. There was a warmth in her stomach at Lorelai's voice. She focused on that feeling, and only that feeling. "No, we're fine. Just brushing our teeth. The dentist would be pissed at me if I broke the pattern after over twenty years."

"That's true. Always best to avoid the Sweeney Todd dentistry possibility," Lorelai agreed, nodding. Then, she yawned theatrically and looked at Luke, who only rolled his eyes at the dramatics. "I think we're gonna head upstairs. It's past our bedtime."

"Still got those four o'clock deliveries, huh?" Jess asked sullenly, eyeing Luke. Many a morning when he was a teenager, he'd been awoken at half past three by the sound of Luke's alarm.

Luke sighed. "For the business that housed and fed you for two years? Yeah, I do."

Ella snorted a laugh, and nudged Jess playfully in the ribs. "Like you're not always up before the sun, even on Saturday."

"Where do you think that started?" Jess shot back, pointing an accusatory finger at Luke. "He screwed with my internal clock for life!"

"I think that's enough fuel for future therapy sessions for tonight," Lorelai announced, rising from the table, Luke following.

"Agreed," Luke grumbled.

As they exchanged goodnights, Lorelai gave Ella a kiss on the cheek. Immediately after, she scrunched up her nose and smudged the lipstick from Ella's freckled skin with her thumb. To Ella's shock, Lorelai also gave Jess a short hug before making for the stairs. Luke hugged Jess, too. The two of them still had trouble showing physical affection for each other, as they probably always would. Ella had to stifle a laugh at the awkwardness between them.

When Luke hugged Ella, though, she felt tears prick at her eyes for the first time all day. She recognized his familiar smell, the soft feeling of his flannel, his strong arms around her. Somewhere in her mind, it occurred to her that the way it felt for Luke to hug her was what she had always wanted it to feel like when her own father hugged her. And she knew for sure she would never get it from him. She could finally be certain there was nothing left to do to repair her relationship with him. There was no time left for Jake to make her feel as safe as Luke made her feel. As he never had, even in her childhood. But by the time she and Luke broke apart, she had gathered herself enough. She cleared her throat and blinked away the glassy sheen in her eyes.

Luke ruffled her hair as he stepped back from her. If he saw that she was upset, he didn't acknowledge it. "Don't worry, kid. We'll get everything figured out tomorrow."

"I know, boss," she replied.

. . .

The cigarette smoke made her a bit nauseous, but it was also comforting in a way she was slightly ashamed of. The winter air was crisp and biting, and her cheeks were frosted roses. Embers glowed orange in the darkness as she took a long drag, burning her lungs. She was already regretting it, but she simply felt too tired to think out the actual consequences of what she was doing. She had tried. She really had. But falling asleep, with Jess snoring softly beneath her as they lay on the couch, was absolutely impossible. Fatigue was weighing down her bones, and there was a perpetual ache throbbing behind her eyes. But each time she got close to sleep, the thought of her father would flash across her mind, and she would be wide awake once more.

Once she gave up, she had managed to sneak outside unnoticed. The wind whispered past her, hollow and haunting. But maybe everything was feeling spookier because death was at the forefront of her mind. Then again, when wasn't it? Though the shock had certainly hit her with full force when she heard the news, she couldn't bring herself to be surprised. The other shoe had dropped. She knew it would, just when she let her guard down. The moment she forgot to worry, the universe had knocked her down again. She flicked her cigarette and watched the excess ash melt a small spot in the snow below the steps.

At the sound of the front door creaking open, she startled only a little. For a wild moment, she wanted to put her cigarette out and hide it behind her back, pretending to be innocent. Especially if it was Luke. But she had to remember she was a grown up. And the feeling disappeared entirely when she saw only a disheveled Jess wrapping himself up in his jacket as he came out onto the porch and sat down next to her.

"You're gonna catch a cold out here," he remarked, holding her peacoat out to her.

She took it with a trembling hand.

"Thank you," she said solemnly, breathing out a long stream of smoke as she spoke. The coat was old and cheap, and did little to help a Connecticut winter, but she shrugged it on anyway.

He nodded, chewing on his bottom lip. "Don't mention it."

They sat in silence, an owl hooting somewhere in the trees beyond the house. Ella didn't put the cigarette out until it got so small it began to burn her fingers. After she'd discarded it, her breath still puffed out, along with Jess's, in frigid white clouds. Flurries of snow fell in scattered sprays, but the night was mostly quiet and overcast. Jess crossed his arms over his chest, waiting.

She spoke, as he knew she eventually would, after a few more minutes. Gesturing down to the crushed cigarette, her tired eyes met his. "Do you want one?"

"No, thanks," he said, shaking his head. "Where'd you get those in the middle of the night in Stars Hollow, anyway?"

A thin smirk ghosted over her lips. "Snatched 'em off Bootsy's newsstand."

"Really?" he asked, laughing slightly, with eyebrows raised.

She snorted and rolled her eyes. "Don't act so surprised, Mariano. I was sneaking out of my bedroom window long before you got here."

"Touché." His eyes lingered on her, hair glistening golden in the soft light and eyes still far off somewhere miles away. He hesitated before he continued. "Did you walk all the way to Bootsy's without a coat?"

She shrugged, glancing down at the Doc Martens on her feet. "I'm fine. I had my good shoes on. Besides, it's only like a minute away."

"Alright."

"Seriously, Jess. I'm fine," she snapped after a moment.

"Okay. I get it," he said instantly. "You're fine. You're not cold."

Ella ran her hands through her hair. Her body shook as she yawned.

"You wanna go back to bed?" he asked.

"No," she said with a heavy sigh.

"Are you sure?"

"Jesus, Jess! Stop trying to take care of me! Stop asking me questions! Just let me fucking sit here!" Ella exclaimed, huffing in frustration.

Jess recoiled slightly, and he nodded at her again. He ran a hand over his mouth and swallowed down the million other questions which were rising in his throat. The ones she'd refused to ask on the drive up, and the ones she apparently still wanted to avoid. "Sorry."

She rolled her eyes, mostly at herself. "No, I'm...I'm sorry. I'm just tired. I couldn't fall asleep."

"We don't have to sleep if you don't want to. We could watch one of Lorelai's cassettes in there," Jess suggested, fighting hard to keep his tone light, bracing for whatever reaction she was going to have.

"I love that she still has cassettes," Ella said wistfully, though not smiling. Her voice was low and raspy as she stared out ahead of her into the darkness and the lightly falling snow.

He nodded a little. "I know you do."

Ella's hands were itching to hold another cigarette, but she fought the urge. The pack which sat on the porch steps next to her would almost certainly be crumpled up and thrown in the trash the moment she reentered the house. Along with the lighter. But it was nice to have them there. If she wanted. They sat wordlessly, listening to the rustle of the wind in the evergreen trees. Jess didn't make a sound. He was just far away enough not to touch her, almost in silent askance of whether she wanted space. She did. And she didn't want to talk. She didn't want to talk almost as much as she didn't want to write the eulogy. She wanted to be able to push down the sorrow and the rage until they just dissolved and she was as happy as she had been just a day earlier. Yesterday, she may have even been hopeful. She couldn't remember the last time she'd felt hopeful about her family. But, now, she had to stop herself from reaching for a cigarette yet again. And she felt herself wanting a drink. A drink stronger than champagne at a book launch. And then the words started flowing before she could overthink them, before she could lock them away in her heart forever.

She swallowed thickly, looking down into her lap at her nail-bitten hands. "This is just like it was the last time."

"Oh yeah?" he whispered, shifting a bit closer to her.

"Yeah," she echoed, so quiet he almost couldn't hear. She sniffed. "I mean, last time my dad was the devastated one instead of Fiona. But Adam still got pissed at Noah, and Noah only got more pissed because Adam was mad at him."

Noah had only made it to town an hour before Ella left to go back to the Gilmore residence for the night, but he and Adam were at each other's throats pretty much as soon as they saw each other. Upset that his Christmas vacation was being disrupted, Noah had insisted on staying at a motel instead of at the little blue house in which they had grown up. Adam wasn't happy about it, accusing Noah of acting as though he was too good for them. In turn, Noah asked Adam why he wasn't mad at Ella for staying with Lorelai. Adam had shot back immediately, saying Noah had abandoned the entire family the minute he could, while Ella stayed behind. At that point, Ella knew there was no way to diffuse the situation. She'd only offered to walk back with Noah to the motel, leaving Adam to sleep in his old room. Luckily, Fiona's sister was already in town for the holiday. So, it didn't wholly fall to any of the three of them to console her.

Jess and Luke had both offered to go over to the house with her after helping with the arrangements, but she'd insisted on meeting her brothers there alone. The surreality of the moment didn't dawn on her until she saw Adam's teary eyes and Noah's flushed face. It was like she had stepped into the past. She'd come back to the Gilmore house to find Jess sitting in the living room, halfway through the Russian novel he'd brought with. In the face of his questions, she'd only given him the liner notes and then fallen mostly silent for the rest of the evening.

"And Lorelai and Luke won't let me brush my teeth without asking me if I need anything," Ella continued, with a scoff in her words. "And, I love them. I do. And I'm so fucking grateful that it hurts. But, I'm fine. I'm totally fucking fine."

"So I've heard," he quipped.

"You're hilarious."

"I've heard that, too," he said.

She laughed breathily, lifting her head to look up at the sky. "Shut up."

"Will do."

Then, after a moment: "I just wish...I wish it wasn't like this. I mean, he was a shitty dad. But he was still my dad."

He watched as she chose her words, carefully. Her voice had more emotion than he'd heard all day. Bringing his arm around her shoulders, he hoped to lessen the trembling of her hands just a little. She leaned into him, letting herself feel his warmth but fighting the wateriness in her voice. Of all the things she didn't want to do, crying was at the top of the list.

"And now...I don't have parents. I don't even have a dad who hates me and never calls," she continued.

"He didn't hate you," Jess interjected.

She shook her head. "Yeah, he did, Jess. He fucking hated me. Because I looked like my mom and I didn't like Fiona and I wouldn't quit talking back at the dinner table. But it doesn't bother me. I hated him most of the time, too."

He hummed in response, listening.

Her face crumpled for only a moment. But, again, she regained her composure. A couple silent tears threatened to slip over. "But at least I had someone to hate, y'know? Now, it's just...no one."

She took in a shaky breath, and Jess began to rub circles over her back. He recognized that her shivering was no longer due to the cold but from the sobs she wouldn't let loose. Ella's stomach did a flip, as she clenched her hands into fists. But she just couldn't hold it in any longer. She let a single wimper pass her lips. And then, the levee broke. She put her head in her hands and finally began to weep, cries from deep within her escaping at last.

"I just...I don't have p-parents anymore," she spoke through sobs, trying to get her voice under control but failing miserably. "I'm not anyone's daughter anymore. I don't belong to anyone anymore."

Jess shut his eyes for a moment, feeling a crack in his heart as he heard her anguish. But a part of him was relieved she was finally letting it out. He knew not all of her tears were for her father, but for her mother as well. He'd never seen her cry so hard before, so hard she couldn't catch her breath and she was beginning to feel sick to her stomach. She stopped being able to talk after a while, only crying, folding in on herself.

"I...I don't...belong to anyone anymore," she repeated.

Gnawing on his bottom lip again, Jess smoothed an affectionate hand over her hair. He pressed a kiss to the crown of her head. Though he couldn't see her face, Ella felt her cheeks heat up at his seeing her sob so openly. Jess spoke in a clear, strong tone.

"Listen, Eleanor, I know it feels like you're alone without them, but that's not true, okay?" he said.

She let out a tearful scoff.

"Hey, hey, hey, I'm serious," Jess continued, placing a hand on her damp cheek and turning her face gently so she would look at him.

She wanted to avoid his eyes, embarrassed, but simply couldn't bring herself to look anywhere else. The sight of him almost made her physically relax.

An earnest crease stood out between his eyebrows when he spoke again. "You belong to me, and I belong to you. That's how it's always been, hasn't it?"

She stared at him for a moment, stunned at his words, as tears kept rolling steadily down her cheeks. But then, her lip began to quiver and she closed her eyes. Jess was worried she was about to get angry again. But instead, she slumped weakly against him. He could feel her tears begin to wet the neckline of his t-shirt as she rested her head on his chest. Breathing out long and slow, Jess wrapped his arms around her. He didn't know whether his words had helped, but he was doubtful. No amount of talking was going to make her feel any better. He couldn't crack a joke or start a playful argument or do a magic trick. He could only be there. He simply sat and held her against the wind.

Author's Note: Thank you for reading! Please let me know what you thought! Feedback nourishes my soul!

aldupotterbing: So glad you enjoyed! It was fun to write Jess's nurturing side! Also, yes, it is common to discharge 8-12 hours after appendicitis surgery in the USA. I've never had appendicitis, but one of my closest friends did, and they let her out the next day. Maybe it's because we have a bit of a complicated healthcare system here, but usually it's a very short hospital stay for surgeries that are considered "minor." As always, thank you so much for reading and commenting! I hope you liked this chapter as well, even though it is very heavy!

Esyra: I took a bit of a break because I moved and started a new semester, but I am back now! I'm going to continue with the story for at least a few more chapters. Thank you for reading and I'm glad you're enjoying! :)