Episode 900

Previously…
– Helen overheard Tori offer to pick up some items from Spencer’s house for him, and she invited herself along in hopes of finding something to bolster her suspicions about his fall down the stairs.
– Danielle performed a song she wrote for her late husband, Ryan, at the grand opening of the new restaurant, Bill’s on the Pier.
– Bree told Christian, Caleb, and Marcus about her upcoming Sectional competition.
– Travis observed Rosie in close conversation with Jesse, a busboy at the restaurant, even though she had insisted she didn’t know him.

 

“Oh, I just love this color!” Helen Chase declares.

She sits in the passenger seat of Tori Gray’s sedan, admiring the bubblegum pink polish on her newly manicured nails.

“It’s fun,” Tori says as she steers the car through the streets. She holds up her own right hand; the nails are a matching shade. “The weather is so gloomy now. You need a little bit of fun, right?”

“Right. I know Don will say it’s too girly…”

“No such thing.” Tori laughs. “Here, it’s only a few more blocks.” She turns her attention to her iPhone, which is propped up in one of the cupholders, displaying directions to Spencer Ragan’s house.  “I think there’s a left coming up soon…” She squints at the map on the phone. “Dammit.”

“Patience, darling. I can navigate for you,” Helen offers, a tinge of nervousness in her voice as she watches the young woman’s attention move back and forth between the road and the phone.

“Oh, thanks, but I’ve got it.” Tori refocuses on the turn ahead, and Helen grits her teeth and holds onto the sides of her seat. It isn’t often that she thinks back on her late daughter’s life with anything but love and nostalgia these days, but right now, she is reminded of the panic-inducing process of teaching a 16-year-old Courtney to drive, and she thinks that is one thing she’ll be happy to let Jason handle once Sophie is of age to learn.

Helen finally lets out a breath when Tori pulls up to the house. It is strikingly modern, all 90-degree angles and white, with large panes of glass throughout that make it seem more like a showroom than a residence.

“This is Spencer’s house?” Helen asks. “It’s stunning.”

“Yeah, it’s wild.”

They step out of the car, and it beeps as Tori uses the remote to lock the doors.

“You really didn’t have to come with me,” Tori says as they walk up the driveway. “I mean, it’s really nice of you…”

“I’m only along for moral support. I know it probably isn’t easy for you to come here and see the place where Spencer had his accident — especially after what you went through with Philip–”

Tori’s eyes drop for a moment. “It’s a little weird, yeah.”

“Then I don’t want to hear another word about it,” Helen says, adding a more chipper tone to her voice. “I’m happy to help. If there’s anything I can do…”

As she uses a spare key to unlock the imposing front door, Tori hesitates in responding.

“The thing is,” she finally says, “Spencer asked me to pick up a few things for him that are… private stuff. Nothing crazy, but he didn’t feel like asking his dad to get them, so I’m not sure…”

“I’ll keep my nose out of it. Just know that I’m here, dear.”

“Thanks.”

helen-2017They step inside the foyer, which opens to the main living area. Helen marvels at the sleek design. She scans the space, wondering where she could even begin searching for what she is trying to find — which, she realizes, could be anything at all. Or nothing.

“This is really something,” she says. “It isn’t really my taste, but it’s lovely. I can’t believe someone as young as Spencer was living here all on his own.”

“I know. He has a lot of money from his mom, and then what he inherited from Philip. I’m almost scared to know how much.”

Helen observes the staircase up to the second floor. Each step is pressed into the wall, looking almost more like an art installation than a functional part of the house.

“And I can see how he got hurt on those stairs! There’s no railing at all. They’re an absolute death trap.”

“Yeah,” Tori agrees. “It’s bad.”

“Well, it’s fortunate that he’s recovering. Now why don’t you go on and do what you have to do? I’ll keep myself busy. Holler if you need me.”

“Thanks.”

Tori ascends the stairs, and Helen waits in the living area, idly looking at the art on the wall until she is certain that she is out of Tori’s sightline. She strolls through a pristine dining area that appears to have come directly from the pages of a magazine, and then she enters a kitchen that shows much more evidence of a life being lived. She recalls Tim and Claire saying that they cleaned things up when they initially came to pick up clothes for Spencer, but even without dirty dishes or open containers of food lying around, the kitchen has the distinct appearance of a space where a life was abruptly interrupted: a phone charger sticking out of one of the sockets on the island; a stray dish towel beside the sink; a stack of unopened mail on the countertop.

Helen moves toward the mail. She flips through it quickly but with laser focus. However, nothing in the pile of standard bills and catalogs leaps out at her as having anything to do with Spencer’s fall — or, more importantly, whatever Sabrina Gage might be hiding.

Setting the mail aside, she looks around for her next target. She opens a few drawers and finds cutlery and other kitchen items. But when she opens one on the side of the island, she sees potential in the assortment of random things inside — the junk drawer, as she and Don have always called it. And one item near the front of the drawer immediately jumps out at her: an appointment card for a lab at the hospital, headed by a Dr. Edgar Liu.

At first, it only catches her attention because she wonders if it might have something to do with his current care, and why an appointment reminder would be in this house if Spencer hasn’t been back since his hospitalization. But then she notices the date. The appointment was months ago — just before Spencer’s fall.

Her interest piqued, Helen lifts the card from the drawer.

—-

In the lobby of the ice arena in Spokane, Washington, Natalie Bishop is uncharacteristically fidgety. She stands with her ex-husband, who has turned around his walker so that he can use it as a seat.

“Those judges had better give her full credit for the triple loop,” Natalie says through gritted teeth. “She held onto it.”

“Fingers crossed,” Conrad Halston says, sounding much more even-keeled than his ex. “All she needs is to be top four, and she makes Nationals.”

“She deserves a medal, dammit.”

Natalie stares suspiciously at the other skaters and their families swirling all around. As happens at all competitions, the skaters below Senior level do not have their results read aloud at the conclusion of their programs; once an event has been skated in full, the judges and referee compile the scores and then post the event results in a designated spot in the arena. Now that Bree’s Novice Ladies free skate has finished, most of the competitors have already made their way up to the lobby to watch the results board like hawks.

“There she is,” Conrad says. Natalie’s attention goes to the doors that separate the comfortable lobby from the frigid main section of the arena, where the stands overlook the ice. Jason Fisher is holding open the door as Bree, still in the yellow dress from her La La Land program, walks through it. She spots her parents and hurries over with surprising grace, considering that she is still wearing her skates with plastic guards to protect the blades.

“You were amazing,” Natalie says as she sweeps her daughter into a hug. “That final combo spin was perfect — and the way you nailed that ending.”

“It was a really solid program,” Jason agrees before giving his fiancé a kiss.

“It felt pretty good,” the teenager says nervously. She still sports her performance makeup, which looks garish up close, and her blonde hair is pulled incredibly tight to form a playful ponytail. “The triple loop was a little funny.”

“Oh, you had it,” Natalie says.

“There might be a deduction there,” Jason says calmly, “but like I said, you should feel great about that skate.”

Bree gives Conrad a hug as he tells her, “I’m so proud of you. You looked so in-command out there.”

“I’m glad you could come,” Bree says.

“Me, too. Good thing they decided to have Sectionals someplace I could drive rather than making me get on a plane.”

Bree laughs. “I bet they did that all for you, Dad.”

Suddenly Natalie elbows Jason. “Referee. Inbound.”

They all turn to watch the tall woman, with her short, jet-black hair and black parka, crossing the lobby with a printed sheet in her hand. Her presence triggers a buzz through the rest of the waiting Novice Ladies and their entourages, as if someone has sprinkled magical dust over the entire lobby.

Bree draws a deep, nervous breath.

“Come on,” Natalie says as she grasps her daughter’s hand and pulls her toward the results board. Jason moves behind them as a crowd converges upon the target.

Conrad watches anxiously from a distance as Natalie, still holding onto Bree, pushes her way through the fray. They both scan the sheet frantically and then turn back.

“What does it say?” Jason calls, his heart rate soaring. “Where’d you finish?”

—–

“I hate these things,” Rosie Jimenez mutters as she pushes down on the sides of the wine opener. With excruciating slowness, the cork rises up until it slips out of the bottle with a pop.

travis-2017Travis Fisher looks up from the oven, where he is checking on dinner. “You just have to practice.”

“Or buy screw-top wine.” She pours two glasses of pinot noir and hands him one.

They stand in the small kitchen of the apartment that Travis shares with Landon Esco. A pot of mashed potatoes simmers on the stovetop beside a pan of gravy.

“Thanks for doing this,” Rosie says as they clink glasses. “Happy early Thanksgiving.”

“Happy early Thanksgiving.”

She breathes in deeply, inhaling the delicious holiday smells. “You really didn’t have to do all this. You spend all day busting your ass in a kitchen as it is.”

“Because I love doing it. Especially for you.” He leans forward and kisses her on the lips; what begins as a peck steadily intensifies into something deeper, until Rosie puts a hand on his chest.

“If we don’t stop, all this food is going to be forgotten and go to waste,” she says with a devilish grin.

“Might be worth it. Although I do want to make sure I get a Thanksgiving meal with you…”

Rosie lets out a groan. “I can’t believe I have to work on the actual day.”

“When do you stop getting the rookie shifts?” As he says it, an all-too-familiar anxiety rises in Travis’s stomach.

“I wish I knew. Are you sure you don’t want to spend your Thanksgiving doing a ride-along with me? I got to see you do your job during the grand opening…”

As if catching a gust of wind, the embers burning inside him roar suddenly into a full-out flame. He remembers peeking down the back hallway of the restaurant and seeing her engaged in tense, intimate conversation with that busboy, Jesse, even though she had claimed earlier simply to be asking him for a water refill. Travis hasn’t shared many shifts with Jesse since that night, and they don’t really have to interact when they are both on the clock, but he has had to bite his tongue several times.

“Hey, question,” he says, before taking a gulp of his wine for courage to plow ahead.

She looks up from sniffing the mashed potatoes. “Yeah?”

“That guy at the grand opening — the busboy. Jesse. You said you were just asking him for water…”

He swears that he sees her stiffen as she takes in the statement.

“Okay… I was.”

“Then why were you talking to him later? Like, secretly?”

Her eyebrows yank up, and her head pulls back. “Secretly?”

“I saw you guys in the hallway by the bathrooms, talking again.”

“Huh?” She shrugs, and he gets the distinct sense that she is stalling for time. “We passed each other. I made a joke about the water or something. It was just a second. You were watching me?”

“I work there! I walked by and saw you. It seemed weird.” He throws back another swig of the wine. “It didn’t look like you were joking.”

“Are you jealous of me talking to your coworker?”

“No. This isn’t jealousy. It’s…” With thoughts and words shooting through his mind like bullets in a gun fight, he has to take a few seconds to figure out how to continue. When he does, it just bursts out: “Do you even have to work on Thanksgiving?”

Rosie recoils. “What the hell are you talking about? Why would I lie about that?”

“The other times,” he says, growing breathless. “You left brunch that time because you said you got called in, but Uncle Brent told me you never showed up. And then I saw you downtown one day when you had told me you were working.”

“What?” Again, however, the reaction between her verbal response is unmistakable. She seems shaken.

“I just want to know why. What is this? Why are you doing this?” He sets down his wine glass. “Rosie, just be honest: do you even want to be with me, or are you playing me?”

—–

Natalie and Bree trade a look before they finally face Jason. Then, in unison, they shout out, “Third place!”

“Oh my god.” Jason’s lungs expel more air than he knew was possible to hold in; the wild emotions of the moment take him back to his own competition days, when he, Courtney, and Sandy were in the exact same position. He always wondered what it would be like to be in the coach’s shoes — or skates — in the equation, and now he knows: not one iota less stressful.

“You’re going to Nationals!” Natalie exclaims as she helps Bree back through the melee. The teen shares an excited hug with her coach and almost-stepfather.

“Third place? That’s incredible,” Conrad says as the trio rejoins him. “You deserve it, Bree. You’ve worked so hard.”

“And now we get to work on kicking ass at Nationals,” Natalie says.

“One thing at a time,” Jason tells them. “We can all relax for a night.”

Natalie quickly appraises her daughter. “Why don’t I take you back to fix up your hair and make-up before the medal ceremony?”

“We’ll wait here,” Jason says. Mother and daughter disappear back into the recesses of the arena, as various shrieks, groans, and sobs continue to fill the lobby.

jason-2017Conrad quickly types something on his phone and then looks up. “I texted Molly to let her know.”

“Oh, good. Thanks.” A thought occurs to Jason, and it comes to perch indecisively on his tongue.

“What is it?” Conrad asks.

“What?”

“You looked concerned.”

“Concerned? No.” Jason stuffs his hands into the pockets of his khaki pants. “I hope I’m not overstepping here, but you and Molly… what’s going on there?”

“She’s been a great friend to me,” Conrad says in his usual, lawyerly manner. “Her generosity in letting me stay at her home while I recover–”

“I know. But you guys have gotten close, right? I saw you dancing at the wedding…”

Conrad responds with a genteel smile. “Your sister and I aren’t involved.”

“Do you want to be? I mean–” Jason cuts himself off. “Sorry. I know that sounds a little high school. But Molly has been through a hell of a time the past few years.”

“I’m very aware of that, and very conscious of how that will affect her going forward. We’ve gotten to know each other very well, through her trial and now my recovery. I consider her a close friend.” Conrad pauses in thought before adding, “And, yes, I’d be lucky if she were interested in more. But I don’t think it’s appropriate to broach that while I’m staying rent-free in her house.”

Jason nods as he processes this. “I know you and I haven’t always seen eye-to-eye on things–”

“Natalie is a very specific topic,” Conrad says. “I’m nothing but grateful for how good you’ve been to Bree, both on and off the ice. She adores you, and that means a lot to me.”

“You know I adore her, too. And my whole family appreciates all the hard work you put into Molly’s trial and to making things as comfortable as possible for my mom this year.”

“That was all my job. As for Molly, I promise you that whatever happens, I have the utmost respect for her. But I’d appreciate if you didn’t go back home and tell her that I might be interested. If things are going to go in that direction, I’d like it to come from the two of us.”

“I won’t tell her anything,” Jason says. “But I’ll be honest: I was a little nervous about her opening up her house to someone she didn’t know that well, especially after what happened with Philip.”

“I’m not Philip Ragan.”

“I didn’t say you were. Molly can be too trusting, though. She has a warm feeling, and she lets people in, and then she gets hurt. If you care about her, you’ll keep that in mind before this goes anywhere. And if it does: I’ve got my eye on you.”

“I’m not going to hurt her,” Conrad says. “If your sister is open to it, I’d want to be with her. End of story. If not, I’ll go back to my old life, and that’s that.”

“Good. I just thought we should get some of that out in the open.”

“I don’t blame you. You’re a good brother.”

“I try.” Jason folds his arms and looks around. “Now why don’t we go stake out a spot for you guys to watch the medal ceremony before it gets too crazy?”

—–

“This is nuts!” Christian Taylor declares as he stares at his iPad. He sits on the deep, cushy sofa in his mother’s living room, his feet propped up on the coffee table. “You have over a million views.”

“No way,” his aunt says as she hurries over to the sofa. “How?”

“It got retweeted a bunch of times,” Christian explains.

“Let me see.”

Christian scoots over to allow Danielle to have a seat beside him.

“Wow!” she says. “That’s incredible. All from singing at a restaurant opening? Molly, did you hear that?”

Molly pokes her head out of the kitchen, where she is preparing dinner. “Hear what?”

“My video is going viral. The performance from the grand opening!”

“Really?” Molly quickly wipes her hands on a dishtowel and comes into the family room. “What are people saying?”

Christian scrolls through the comments. “That it’s so emotional… Look, this one says, ‘Sarah McLachlan is shook!’”

“What’s shook?” Danielle asks.

“It’s another way of saying she’s shaken,” Molly says. “Like you were so good that she feels like you’re going to take her place.”

christian-2017Christian looks at her with confusion. “How did you know that?”

Molly shrugs. “I hear people talking at the office. I don’t spend all day in a nursing home, you know.”

“I’m impressed.” Christian uses his finger to flick through the page and reads: “‘Danielle Taylor did THAT!’”

“Did what?” Molly asks.

“See, you don’t know all the vocab,” Danielle says teasingly.

“Did something good,” Christian says, “or something cool.” He continues scanning the comments. “There’s this group that calls themselves the Fanielles.”

Molly lets out a laugh. “Fanielles!”

“I’ve heard of them,” Danielle says. “On Twitter. I had no idea anyone would even notice this, though.”

“You made good music,” Molly says. “You should be proud of it. And of course people are noticing.”

An electronic beep sounds from the kitchen. As Christian and Danielle continue reviewing the reactions to her performance, Molly returns with her phone in hand.

“Bree got third place,” she says.

“That means she’s going to Nationals, right?” Christian asks excitedly.

“Yep.”

“That’s great,” Danielle says. “Jason must be elated.”

Molly finishes typing out a response on her phone. “I’m sure he is. That was actually Conrad, though. I need to text Jason.”

“Ah.”

“Christian, would you go get your brother for dinner? It’ll be ready in a minute,” Molly says.

The teenager sets his iPad on the coffee table. “Sure. But then you have to make him set the table.”

“We can negotiate when you produce a body.”

Christian laughs and dashes out of the room.

“That’s really exciting about your video,” Molly tells her former sister-in-law. “It’s a great album. I’m glad people are hearing it.”

“Thanks.” Danielle stands from the sofa. “So… Conrad texted you the results even before Jason could, huh?”

“Yeah. He’s excited.”

Danielle gives her a knowing look.

“What?” Molly asks.

“I’ve noticed how close you guys are getting. That’s all. Staying up chatting… dancing at the wedding…”

A rush of pink fills Molly’s cheeks. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“You know how exactly what I’m talking about. And I think it’s great. If you and Conrad have feelings for one another, I’d be really happy for you guys. You deserve someone like him.”

Molly stammers for a few seconds. “I– Honestly, I have no idea what it is. He might just see it as a friendship. And I don’t want to make it seem like I expect anything just because I’ve let him stay here. It’s so complicated.”

“Take it one step at a time,” Danielle says. “But if you do have feelings, I think you should let him know sooner rather than later. Don’t let a good thing slip away.”

“Mom!” Caleb shouts as two sets of feet come rumbling down the stairs. “Christian says I have to set the table alone.”

Molly widens her eyes at Danielle. “And now we return to our regularly scheduled programming.”

—–

Helen stares at the appointment card from the hospital, trying to figure out her next move. It could very well be a dead-end, but something about it seems strange, especially since Spencer’s family keeps saying that he was perfectly healthy before his fall.

“Mrs. Chase?”

Tori’s voice snaps Helen out of her contemplative state. She hears footsteps hurrying through the house and stuffs the card into her pocket.

“Yes, dear?”

“Spencer said that one of the things he wanted were these magnesium supplements,” Tori says. “They’re in one of the kitchen cabinets. Could you look around and find those while I pack up some stuff in his room?”

Helen affixes a too-wide smile on her face. “Of course! Anything to help out. Magnesium, you said?”

“Yeah. Thank you. I’ll be done in a few minutes.”

“Oh, take your time!” Helen calls after Tori as the young woman scurries back to her task. “And be careful on those stairs!”

After waiting several seconds, Helen fishes her cell phone from her purse and finds a powder room off the kitchen. She pulls out the card and mentally rehearses her plan before dialing the number for the lab.

“Hi,” she says when the receptionist greets her. “My son was recently hospitalized after an accident, and I’m trying to sort out some issues pertaining to his records. I know that he had an appointment with your office a few months ago. His name is Spencer Ragan.”

She hears typing on the other end, followed by a frustrating silence.

“Your son is a legal adult?”

“Yes,” Helen says. “But he’s living at home while he recovers, and he isn’t able–”

“I’m sorry, but we need authorization from Mr. Ragan before we release any information relating to his medical care.”

“He’s my son! All I want to know is what he was being treated for-”

“It’s the law. We’re only authorized to give out test results to the patient himself.”

“Test results?” Helen’s brain goes into overdrive. “See, this is information I need. It’s crucial to his care–”

“Then his doctor can request records,” the receptionist says curtly.

“You are very rude! And probably incompetent at your job!” Helen declares before ending the call. Her heart thumps rapidly.

She is still catching her breath as she opens the door to the powder room and returns to the empty kitchen.

“Test results,” she says under her breath. “What in the world was Spencer being tested for?”

She freezes as a thought strikes her. “That nasty hussy!”

—–

rosie-2017Rosie stares back at Travis in disbelief. “Playing you?”

“It’s not like we’ve been dating for three months or something,” he says. “This feels serious — or I thought it was. But it’s like you’re living this whole life apart from me.”

“Excuse me for my own life.”

“That’s now what I mean, and you know it.” Travis wraps his hand around the wine glass sitting on the counter. “It’s like you have this entire life I know nothing about.”

“That isn’t true,” she says, stone-faced. “I’m sorry it’s come across that way. I like you, Travis. A lot. I don’t want you to think otherwise.”

“Then tell me what’s going on.”

Rosie is silent, though he can see the movement behind her eyes, like she is trying to sort something out.

“Come on, Rosie.” He moves toward her. “I want to be here for you, if you’d let me. But the lying about Jesse, and working, and your dad’s grave–”

“What?”

Her tone changes so abruptly, so harshly, that it is as if someone fired a cannon in the middle of the kitchen.

Travis scrambles, knowing that he has said too much. “The day we saw you downtown — Landon decided to see where you were going. You went to the cemetery–”

“You’re having me followed?!”

“No! He decided to go on his own. I wasn’t with him. I didn’t even know–”

“But he reported back to you like a good lackey,” Rosie spits. “This is unbelievable. What about my privacy?”

“Privacy is one thing. Keeping secrets and telling lies is another.”

“Newsflash: you don’t have a right to know every single thing about my life. Especially not when it concerns my family.”

“But I want to know,” he says, his tone pleading. “I want you to feel like you can open up. I know there’s something going on.”

She throws up her hands. “You know what? I’m not doing this. That was such a violation, Travis.”

She pushes past him and grabs her purse from the small dining table.

“Rosie. Wait.”

“No.” She storms toward the front door. “Happy Thanksgiving. I hope you enjoy your dinner.”

“Rosie!” He sprints toward the door, but she closes it in his face as she darts out of the apartment.

“What the hell?” he says aloud, even though there is no one there to hear him. His anger and sadness melt together as he tries to figure out what in the world just happened, the smells of his now-pointless Thanksgiving meal a cruel reminder of how badly that went.

END OF EPISODE 900

What is Rosie hiding from Travis?
Will Helen’s investigation turn up anything solid?
Should Molly and Conrad give it a shot?
Talk about all this and more in the comments below!

Next Episode

 

10 thoughts on “Episode 900

  1. Hey Michael !!!

    A treat of getting Episode 900 the eve before Thanksgiving.

    My thoughts on Episode 900

    Tori/Helen : I adore the relationship between the two of them despite them being in a different age bracket. It is great to see Tori having a second mother/grandmother figure and Helen to have a second daughter/granddaughter since she lost Courtney and Sophie is still quite young. With that said Helen doesn’t miss a beat as she stumbles upon that card. As she was on the phone I like how she wasn’t going to let that receptionist get the better of her. Now she knows Spencer got some test results. I’m wondering is she adding two and two.

    Natalie/Jason/Conrad/Bree : I’m glad that you have reinvigorated the skating aspect of Footprints by having Bree being a budding figure skater. Natalie of course is a typical stage mother and Jason now as a coach knows what it is like for both Bree as a skater and now Sandy as a coach. Despite Conrad and Molly getting closer I still don’t see an sparks just yet. Personally I believe they’re better off as good friends.

    Travis/Rosie : Travis’s issues with Rosie finally risen to the surface with him confronting her. Rosie however kept protesting that she has her own life. Yet she knows that she is being secretive and how everything seemed normal for her with him making her a pre-thanksgiving dinner now ruined with her leaving. I’m glad this story is getting a little more focus.

    Molly/Christian/Danielle : Christian needs to be in marketing with him yelping to get Dani a million views on YouTube. I like how close he is to his Aunt and how humble Danielle is about the whole thing. I love these slice of life scenes in soaps with Molly trying to be hip it reminds me of when Claire calling Photoshop something else to Travis and Tempest years ago. It is obvious that Christian has a thing for Bree with him being all excited for her.

    Congrats on getting to 900 and Happy Thanksgiving Michael !!!

    Great Episode

    Bre

    1. Thank you, Bre, and I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving! Mine was very low-key, in a nice way. Just spent time with my parents and relaxed.

      The Helen/Tori bond was not something I planned at all, but I love it. Since Sophie is still a few years away from being a teen/adult character, even in soap time, it makes sense for her to take on a ‘surrogate daughter,’ and she and Tori have some things in common attitude-wise. I just keep finding interesting ways to use them together, and it delights me that Helen is in the midst of this whole Spencer/Natalie thing.

      I love having skating back in the series, so I’m glad you enjoy it! It’s so near and dear to my heart, and it adds a very distinctive dimension. I hear your reservations about Molly and Conrad — truthfully, I think the characters might share those same feelings. It’s something I hope to explore in upcoming episodes, which is why I’m making a point of all the trauma Molly has been through with men.

      Travis and Rosie are really ramping up to be one of the more prominent stories of 2018. Finally! It’s been a while since I got to write a ‘secret past’ like this, so I find it fun to dole out clues before things explode.

      Great recall about Claire calling it ‘Photocrop,’ which is how Travis and Tempest began to bond years ago! I hadn’t thought of that, but it’s a great comparison for how Molly and Danielle were with Christian. I always think it’s important to include more ‘normal’ scenes amidst the high drama.

      Thanks again! I’ve said it a lot recently, but I’m so grateful that you found FP and continue to offer your support. Your commentary adds a fun element to my writing process!!

  2. I have been enjoying these longer episodes you’ve been posting lately! They feel so fleshed out and robust.

    Anyway, my favorite scenes were Tori and Helen. Who knew they could have such grandmother/granddaughter/friend whatever vibes? She seems to have taken Tori under her wing like a second Courtney. Helen is so focuses on mothering and protecting ever since she lost Courtney. Psychologically it makes sense as a character. Of course it helps that she’s like a dog once she has a scent. Gotta love detective Helen Chase! Nothing is going to stop her until she realizes her actual suspect is Natalie and not Sabrina! Now who’s the hussy?! Can’t wait till she discovers what Natalie is hiding. I picture Natalie being pushed down something after that all explodes. Can’t wait to see all this come to fruition!

    I am still neutral on Molly and Conrad. I guess it makes sense that they like each other since they’ve been around one another so much. However, like Bre said, I don’t see any sparks as anything but good friends. They’d make a dull couple. However, you are great writer so I am sure you can make something intriguing work out. Not all couples have to be thrilling and at this stage of her life perhaps Molly needs something safe and predictable!

    I really enjoy the integrating you’ve done with aged characters such as Bree and Christian. I love that they’ve been on a lot recently because we can truly see their personalities develop. There are so many possibilities of storylines when you age up characters. This isn’t jarring aging like Days of Our Lives does but generally sensible. Time to have the next generation of FP characters get their own high stakes drama!

    As for drama, the Travis and Rosie drama finally got a big push! I am surprised a character like Travis was able to keep his doubts bottled up for so long. Typical Travis they come spilling out in a more heated up fashion. I actually like this about his character. I agree that Rosie should be allowed SOME privacy in her life but I don’t agree with her blatantly lying to Travis. Once she lied to him if became his business. That is disrespecting Travis. Now he doesn’t necessarily have the right to know every last detail of her past but she really shouldn’t have expected that could be deceitful and not have to at least have some hard truths about things in her life with Travis. After all he is only caring for her and hasn’t committed a crime. I really want to know the specifics of her and Jesse’s shenanigans or whatever they’ll end up being!

    Anyway, congrats on episode 900!!! Have a great day and I am sure to talk to you again soon! 🙂

    1. “So fleshed-out and robust”… just like me after Thanksgiving dinner! 😉 Thanks for your post, Alan, and all your support over the many years. You’re one of my absolute longest-standing readers, and I greatly appreciate it. I also really like the way these longer episodes tend to play out, though it’s always a balance of whether to publish more frequently or publish longer installments. For a few of the recent ones, it made sense to do one long one rather than split it for the sake of pacing. Guess it keeps me on my toes, too.

      I love that people are digging Helen/Tori. It’s a very random dynamic, but I love it because it came about organically. Helen is such a useful catalyst for stuff like this, too. A more… sensible person might not go to these lengths, but she has no problem doing so! This thing is becoming a bit of a runaway train, and it’s one of the major focal points of the first half of 2018. I love that feeling when I wait and wait to get to a story and then finally get to unfold it!

      Like I mentioned to Bre up above, I hear you on Molly/Conrad. The “do we make better lovers or friends?” is going to become an element of their upcoming arc, and it factors into some larger stuff. No matter how much I plan, I always like to pay attention to fan reaction, my own reaction, and general chemistry, so I won’t try and force anything. I promise!

      I’m really glad the new batch of SORASes are working for you. I think it helps a ton to do two things: a) wait until it’s plausible for that kid to be a teen — i.e., parents are old enough so it isn’t jarring, mentions of their birth won’t seem completely off, etc., and b) give them personalities as kids that you can carry through to their teen and adult selves. I did this with Travis, Sam, and Tori, so I tried to do the same with Caleb, Christian, and Bree. Fifteen-year-old Christian is the same as 11-year-old Christian was, just older and has more of a grown-up mentality. I think the TV soaps too often tend to treat the kids as completely generic and then just make them new characters when they age them. And the ties into your comments about Travis: he’s had this impulsive streak for as long as I can remember, so it’s just manifesting again in his inability to keep his mouth shut about what’s bugging him regarding Rosie. And you’re right about there being two sides to the story. Travis doesn’t have a right to know every single thing about her life, especially not a year into a relationship, but he also deserves the truth, versus lies and cover-ups, about how she’s spending her time. It’s a really rich debate for a couple to have, so I hope the story bears that out!

      Thanks again. Very thankful for your support over the years!

  3. Michael – goodness, congratulations on 900 episodes. Together with the 20th anniversary, this has been an amazing fall for you and the series!

    With the 20th anniversary just happening, I can appreciate why you decided to do something more low-key with this episode instead a huge twist or gimmick. The episode was a really good read, and was Footprints at it’s best, playing family moments and moving the storyline forward.

    I love Helen – she has become one of my favorite characters. I love that you are using her in this storyline because it would be so fitting if she is the one that exposes Natalie and Spencer’s affair; after all, she has never wanted Jason to be with Natalie because of Courtney, so this is so perfect. I love that she’s set out to find out something about Sabrina, but THIS is what she could be uncovering. It should be interesting.

    Poor Travis! All he wants to do is find out what is going on with Rosie and she isn’t having any of it. Not that I blame her; from her POV, he did go behind her back and sort of stalk her to try to find out what is going on instead of just talking with her about it. I’m still curious to know, exactly, what Rosie did in the past and how that will play out. But for right now, this was a good scene.

    Congratulations again on this milestone – you should be so proud that you’ve been able to last so long at this when so many series come and go quickly. Here’s to many more for you!

    D

    1. Thank you, Dallas! I hope you know how much I appreciate your readership, commentary, and friendship over the years — and how much I admire your consistent production on your own series. It’s inspirational! And yes, on the heels of the 20th, I really just wanted to write Footprints as it’s been for most of its run — character drama, pushing stories forward one step at a time. The big parties and events can be stressful because you spend so much time on the trappings that you don’t get to write the meat of the story.

      I’m digging all the Helen love lately. I know she’s best in moderate doses, but it makes so much sense to plug her into that story, and she’s a wonderful catalyst for things to HAPPEN. Plus writing scenes for her is often hilarious.

      More about Rosie’s past will come out very soon. As I said above, I kind of like doing a ‘secret past’ like this and dropping breadcrumbs as we go, because we know so much about so many of the characters that it’s fun to be able to peel back the layers on someone slowly. And we’re really along on this journey with Travis.

      Thanks again!

  4. I tell you.. you should have Helen try pot.. a new bonding experience with her and the younger characters. Now I see where Courtney got some of her personality traits from 🙂 I love that while she’s on a mission to unmask Sabrina, she might end up unmasking Natalie instead. So it’ll be a win win for her.

    Conrad/Molly.. maybe have them be friends that date. You know.. be one another’s plus ones for events without actually being in a relationship.

    1. Ha! I have some really fun/wacky plans for Helen… so never say never.

      You might be onto something with Molly and Conrad. Who says it has to take the shape of a conventional romance?

      Thanks for your post!

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