Father of Mine (Danny)
Feb 21, 2014 14:58:45 GMT -5
Post by Cee Cohen on Feb 21, 2014 14:58:45 GMT -5
Cee still didn’t know what to do with a kid.
It wasn’t that he hadn’t ever thought of having them. He had. Most of the time he disregarded the notion as a foolish flight of fancy but he HAD considered it. He’d been good with his siblings. He’d probably be good with children of his own. But there was the issue that, between the vision and the paranoia and the intelligence with little common sense, Cee doubted very much that any offspring he had would be able to…survive.
Well, so far, Danny had proved him wrong.
Cee had assumed custody. Apparently the grandmother hadn’t wanted it—Cee had found her number and was just waiting for his temper to simmer down before he called it to yell at her for a multitude of reasons—and Cee…did not want his son living in a dorm by himself.
Well, unless he wanted to, of course, but Danny had seemed to like the idea of living with Cee and he’d been on the path before he’d had a chance to think about it.
Cee had needed to find a new apartment first but had accelerated the process along marvelously with some money from his savings and a complete—almost—purge of anything explosive. The new place was near Ferris and Devon, which he was grateful for. He could get the two to help him out if it came down to it. He’d purchased more furniture, shut his eyes and held the phone far from his ear after he’d told his parents to ignore the squealing of his mother, and, finally, had had a place for Danny to move in. He walked the boy there—it wasn’t that far and Cee still wasn’t allowed to drive—and stood outside the door, clearing his throat.
“Well. This is the apartment. Would you like to take a look inside?” He offered him a smile. “I didn’t have a chance to decorate your room extensively, but I saw you liked dinosaurs and so I purchased a few posters for you. You can decide where you want them to go.”
He could totally handle this, right? Right?
It wasn’t that he hadn’t ever thought of having them. He had. Most of the time he disregarded the notion as a foolish flight of fancy but he HAD considered it. He’d been good with his siblings. He’d probably be good with children of his own. But there was the issue that, between the vision and the paranoia and the intelligence with little common sense, Cee doubted very much that any offspring he had would be able to…survive.
Well, so far, Danny had proved him wrong.
Cee had assumed custody. Apparently the grandmother hadn’t wanted it—Cee had found her number and was just waiting for his temper to simmer down before he called it to yell at her for a multitude of reasons—and Cee…did not want his son living in a dorm by himself.
Well, unless he wanted to, of course, but Danny had seemed to like the idea of living with Cee and he’d been on the path before he’d had a chance to think about it.
Cee had needed to find a new apartment first but had accelerated the process along marvelously with some money from his savings and a complete—almost—purge of anything explosive. The new place was near Ferris and Devon, which he was grateful for. He could get the two to help him out if it came down to it. He’d purchased more furniture, shut his eyes and held the phone far from his ear after he’d told his parents to ignore the squealing of his mother, and, finally, had had a place for Danny to move in. He walked the boy there—it wasn’t that far and Cee still wasn’t allowed to drive—and stood outside the door, clearing his throat.
“Well. This is the apartment. Would you like to take a look inside?” He offered him a smile. “I didn’t have a chance to decorate your room extensively, but I saw you liked dinosaurs and so I purchased a few posters for you. You can decide where you want them to go.”
He could totally handle this, right? Right?