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Different Paths
Different Paths | Games | South of Sunset | Los Angeles, California | Venice Beach | Oakwood | The Willow & Waffle House

 
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Old 11-19-2025, 03:23 PM   #1
Midnights's Avatar
Nestled on a quiet, tree-lined corner near Oakwood’s lake path, The Willow & Waffle House is the kind of neighborhood café that feels like it’s been here forever. The outside is cozy and whimsical—soft brick, climbing ivy, a pale green door, and a hand-painted sign featuring a willow tree bending over a stack of syrup-drizzled waffles. On weekend mornings, bubbles drift across the patio from a tiny bubble machine tucked beside the hostess stand.

Inside, the café glows warm with honey-colored lighting, soft music, and the scent of vanilla and maple syrup. Every wall is dotted with framed children’s drawings (the staff swaps them out monthly). There’s a low reading nook in the back filled with beanbags, a shelf of picture books, and a basket of plush animals that’s allegedly for kids, but Lennon has maybe borrowed one once. Maybe.

Tables are mismatched but charming—vintage wood, small round café tables, and window booths perfect for families. A narrow window looks into the kitchen, where waffle irons hiss and the owner hums while flipping heart-shaped waffles.

The café is known for being fiercely family-friendly: crayons at every table, forgiving staff, and a “no shame, only syrup” motto printed on all napkins. Wren is unofficial royalty here; the staff saves her frog-themed cup for her visits.



🥞 MENU

✨ Waffle Creations (Build-Your-Own or House Specials)

Base waffles are vanilla, whole wheat, or gluten-free.

BUILD-YOUR-OWN WAFFLE BAR
Toppings:
• Fresh strawberries
• Blueberries
• Banana slices
• Chocolate chips
• Rainbow sprinkles
• Crushed Oreos
• Whipped cream
• Maple butter
• Peanut butter drizzle
• Marshmallow fluff
• “Magic dust” (colored sugar sprinkles)
• Little plastic frog ring (Wren always adds this)

HOUSE SPECIALS
• The Willow Waffle – vanilla waffle with maple whipped cream, toasted pecans, and warm cinnamon syrup
• Sunbeam Stack – waffle topped with lemon curd, blueberries, and powdered sugar
• Campfire Crunch – chocolate waffle, marshmallow fluff, graham crumble
• The Lenny Special – half fruit, half chocolate, because she can never decide
• The Wren Wiggle – strawberries, rainbow sprinkles, extra whipped cream, served with a frog ring; staff only sells it to her



🍳 BREAKFAST PLATES

• Oakwood Classic – eggs any style, potatoes, toast, bacon or veggie sausage
• Sunrise Sandwich – egg, cheddar, arugula, tomato jam on brioche
• Garden Hash – sweet potato, peppers, kale, onions, poached egg
• Kai’s Go-To – scrambled eggs, avocado slices, side of fruit, coffee the size of his problems
• Cinnamon Roll French Toast – thick-cut, glazed, ridiculous in every way



☕ COFFEE & DRINKS

• Drip coffee (dark, medium, or maple roast)
• Matcha latte
• Vanilla cold brew
• Caramel oat-milk latte
• Hot chocolate with whipped cream
• Fresh lemonade
• Strawberry milk (Wren-approved)
• Iced hibiscus tea



🧒 LITTLE LEGENDS MENU (for Kids)

Printed like a storybook with illustrations.

• Mini Maple Waffles
• Scrambled Egg Stars
• Fruit Rainbow Bowl
• Grilled Cheese Bites
• Froggy Pancake (shaped like a frog; chocolate chip eyes)
• Apple juice, chocolate milk, or strawberry milk



⭐ WEEKEND EVENTS

Pancakes & Pages (Saturdays at 10 AM)
Local volunteers read storybooks to kids in the nook.

Sticker Swap Sunday
Kids bring stickers to trade—Wren thrives here.
Played By: Monica | Posts: 345 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-19-2025, 03:46 PM   #2
Lennon Rae
Lennon Rae's Avatar
don’t forget
The late-morning sun glazed the parking lot in a soft golden haze, warming the cracked pavement beneath their feet. Lennon pushed her sunglasses up onto her head as she stepped out of the car, the breeze immediately carrying the smell of sugar and vanilla from the café across the lot.

Wren was already halfway out before her seatbelt was even off, vibrating with tiny-girl purpose. Lennon barely managed to take her hand before the child launched herself straight into the path of a moving shopping cart.

“LENNY LOOK!” Wren chirped, pointing wildly at the wooden sign that hung over the entrance like an oversized storybook illustration. “It’s waffles… but in a HOUSE. A HOUSE of WAFFLES.”

The café really did look like something out of a cozy animated film — white clapboard exterior, pastel-painted window frames, a porch lined with flower boxes overflowing with trailing green vines. Twinkle lights were still glowing even in daylight, stubbornly cheerful. A hand-painted chalkboard sign leaned outside the door, declaring:

TODAY’S SPECIAL: Strawberries & Clouds Waffles
(Clouds = whipped cream, Wren would absolutely lose it.)

Lennon squeezed the little girl’s hand before she could sprint again.
“I see it, bug. You’re about to take flight.”

Wren spun to face her, ponytail swishing. “Do they have sprinkles? Good sprinkles? Not the tiny crunchy ones that taste like disappointment?”

Lennon crouched down, leveling her expression into grave seriousness.
“I would never take you somewhere that serves disappointment sprinkles.”

Wren gasped — almost scandalized with relief. “THANK YOU. Sad sprinkles should be ILLEGAL.”

“They are,” Lennon whispered, leaning closer. “In my heart.”

Wren nodded, deeply satisfied.

Behind them, Kai closed the car door with his hip, hands in the pockets of his weathered jacket. He didn’t say a word, but the faint smile on his face — that slow, private, melted-around-the-edges look — told Lennon he was enjoying every second of this. Of them. Together.

The closer they got, the more the air changed — warm batter, maple syrup, melted butter, powdered sugar. Lennon felt her stomach rumble, and Wren inhaled so dramatically she nearly tipped backward.

“LENNY,” she whispered, clutching Lennon’s arm as if the moment was holy. “I can smell the waffles from outside.”

Lennon grinned. “That’s how you know this place is legit.”

Wren froze on the spot. “Wait. Is there a special way we have to walk in? Because, like… this is a waffles house. I don’t wanna mess it up.”

Lennon’s heart tugged painfully in her chest — the good kind of tug, the one that warmed from the inside out. She bent down again, lowering her voice to a whisper.

“Oh, absolutely. There’s a rule.”

Wren leaned in instantly. “Tell me. I’m ready.”

“You walk in like you’re the Queen of Breakfast.”

Wren’s eyes went huge.
“I CAN BE A QUEEN.”

Lennon smoothed the little girl’s collar, straightened her tiny backpack strap, and brushed a bit of glitter from her cheek — leftover from their last chaotic adventure, no doubt.

“You already are, sweetheart.”

And with that, Wren transformed — chin high, shoulders back, hands delicately arranged like she was about to greet her subjects. She strutted across the parking lot with all the regal confidence of a six-year-old who took her title very seriously.

Lennon watched her go, cheeks warming with soft affection.
Then she felt Kai come up beside her — not touching her, but close enough that she could feel his warmth in the breeze. Close enough that the proximity alone made her pulse kick just a little.

She looked over her shoulder at him.

He didn’t speak.
He didn’t smile big.

He just gave her that quiet, knowing look — the one that said you’re doing amazing, and somehow also I love watching you with her, and maybe even thank you for being here.

Lennon’s breath caught for a moment, soft and fluttering, before she let a gentle smile pull across her lips.

“Come on,” she murmured, nodding toward the door where Wren was already pretending to hold an invisible scepter. “Our queen awaits.”

Together, they followed her — toward waffles, toward sunlight, toward something that felt suspiciously like a small piece of home.
Posts: 181 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-19-2025, 05:19 PM   #3
Kai Mercer
Kai Mercer's Avatar
Kai didn’t need to pretend anymore.

Not with these two.

Not with mornings like this.

Not with the way Wren latched onto Lennon’s hand like it was second nature, or the way Lennon brushed glitter off Wren’s cheek like she’d been doing it for years.

The part that used to surprise him —
that warm, steady pull in his chest —
didn’t surprise him now.

It felt familiar.
It felt lived-in.
It felt like home in a way he’d quietly accepted days ago, maybe weeks ago, maybe longer than he cared to admit out loud.

He closed the car door and took a slow breath, letting the smell of waffles and sun-warmed pavement settle around him. Lennon was crouched beside Wren, solemnly discussing the politics of sprinkles. Wren was vibrating with royal purpose.

Yeah.
This?
He’d already settled right into it.

And he didn’t want to be anywhere else.

He walked up behind them, hands tucked in his jacket pockets, catching Lennon’s eye exactly when she lifted her head to find him.

Her sunglasses were perched on her hair, her cheeks flushed from the breeze, and the smile she gave him—small, knowing, warm all the way through—hit him exactly where it always did.

But now?
He didn’t flinch away from that feeling.
He leaned into it.

“Come on,” she murmured, nodding toward Wren, who was already practicing her royal wave at a startled jogger. “Our queen awaits.”

Kai huffed a soft laugh, stepping close enough that their arms brushed.

“Wouldn’t dream of keeping her waiting.”

Wren twirled to face them on the porch, chin high, backpack bouncing. “WELCOME TO MY CASTLE,” she declared. “I HAVE DECIDED WE SHALL EAT WITH HONOR.”

Kai dropped to a half-bow out of habit. Not to show off, not to impress Lennon — just because making Wren squeal was one of life’s purest joys.

“Your Majesty,” he said, “we are humbled.”

The squeal echoed across the parking lot exactly as expected.

Lennon covered her mouth to hide a laugh, failing instantly.

Inside, the café smelled like warm batter and powdered sugar. Kai held the door open, letting Wren strut inside, then paused just long enough to look at Lennon again.

Not with surprise.

Just with the quiet, settled warmth of someone who already knows where he belongs.

“You’re good with her,” he said softly, his voice dropping into the place that was only for her. “Better than you think.”

Lennon blinked once, just enough glitter catching the light to make his chest tighten — not because he was shocked, but because this was exactly what he’d grown used to loving about mornings like this.

“And I like us like this,” he added, no hesitation, no overthinking — just truth, steady and sure. “Feels right.”

Wren’s yell cut across the moment:

“DADDY! THE CLOUDS ARE SO BIG THEY LOOK LIKE MY DREAMS!”

Kai snorted, nudging Lennon’s hand with his knuckles — easy, familiar, affectionate without having to declare anything.

“Time to feed the queen,” he said.

They walked inside together, side by side, like they’d done it a hundred times before.

And Kai felt it settle into him again — not surprising, not new, but something he’d already claimed as his:

Yeah.
This is home.
And he’s already living in it.
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Old 11-19-2025, 08:45 PM   #4
Lennon Rae
Lennon Rae's Avatar
don’t forget
Lennon felt the words land before she even fully processed them — soft, steady, warm in a way that curled right into the center of her chest.

She didn’t look away this time.
Didn’t flinch or deflect or pretend she hadn’t heard him.

Instead, she let the moment settle, let herself feel it, let the edges of her smile soften into something she wasn’t hiding anymore.

Wren was already inside the café, halfway through announcing her noble lineage to a very confused barista, but Lennon stayed where she was for a beat — arms brushing Kai’s, the warm autumn breeze tugging at her hair, glitter still clinging stubbornly to the corner of her cheekbone.

She tucked a strand behind her ear, more to steady herself than anything else.

“Feels right to me too,” she said quietly, letting it sit in the space between them. Not dramatic. Not loaded. Just honest.

Her fingers brushed his — not by accident, not this time — a small, deliberate point of contact that felt like grounding.

“And for the record,” she added, her voice lower now, almost shy despite the smile playing at her mouth, “I like seeing you like this. When she’s happy. When you’re… just you.”

She glanced through the window, watching Wren climb onto a booth seat like she owned the place.

“You’re a good dad,” she said, softer than before. “A really good one.”

She didn’t say the rest — and I love being here for it — but it hung there anyway, warm and unspoken.

Kai looked at her like he knew it.

She nudged his arm lightly, playful but tender. “Come on. If we don’t get in there soon, she’s going to knight the syrup bottle.”

And as they stepped inside — shoulder to shoulder, their steps unconsciously matching — Lennon let the truth settle quietly beneath her ribs:

This wasn’t complicated anymore.

It wasn’t scary.

It was good.
It was real.
And she wanted it — in ways she didn’t have to hide from herself anymore.

She slid into the booth beside Wren, feeling Kai settle opposite them, and when Wren grabbed her hand under the table without looking, Lennon squeezed back.

This was home.

Or something close enough that she didn’t feel the need to run from it.
Posts: 181 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-19-2025, 09:41 PM   #5
Kai Mercer
Kai Mercer's Avatar
Kai slid into the booth across from them, the vinyl squeaking under him in the most aggressively wholesome way imaginable. Wren immediately launched into a monologue about the menu (“THE CLOUDS ARE BIGGER THAN MY FACE, DADDY, LOOK”), and Lennon nodded along, patient and delighted, as if she were being briefed on a national emergency instead of whipped cream.

Kai propped his forearms on the table, leaned forward a little, and let himself grin.

God, he loved this.
Loved them.
Loved seeing Lennon sitting there in the morning light, sunglasses perched on her head, still wearing that expression she thought she hid well — the one that said I’m trying not to get attached but it might be too late.

And she’d said it. Straight up said this feels right.

He’d replay that later, probably while brushing his teeth like an idiot.

“Okay,” Kai said, tapping the menu. “Before the Queen of Breakfast declares war on the toppings bar, we should strategize. This place… takes waffles seriously.”

Wren gasped. “Do they have STARS?!”

Kai pointed solemnly. “Top right corner. Shooting star sprinkles. Very powerful. Only bestowed upon worthy heroes.”

Wren pressed a hand to her chest. “I AM WORTHY.”

Lennon bit back a laugh, eyes warm as she watched him. It hit Kai in that domestic-soft spot again — the one he never saw coming until it was already happening. Every time she looked at him like that, he had to resist the urge to reach across the table and pull her closer, glitter and all.

He cleared his throat, flipping the menu dramatically like it contained classified intel.
“Now, if you two want to build the Ultimate Waffle Tower, I’m just saying… I’ve had my carb-handling license for years.”

Wren nodded gravely. “Daddy is good at stacking things. One time he stacked seven pancakes and only dropped one.”

Kai held up a finger. “That pancake jumped. Gravity betrayed me.”

Lennon’s smile softened — not big, not loud, but the kind that made the space between them feel warmer.

The waitress came by with water, leaving behind crayons and a kid’s menu that Wren immediately attacked with the intensity of an artist in crisis.

Lennon shifted her leg, her knee bumping his beneath the table in a way she absolutely noticed and absolutely didn’t apologize for.

Kai leaned back slightly, watching her in the glow of soft café light, and let the affection settle across his face — obvious, unhurried.

“You know,” he said quietly, picking up on the thread she’d left him outside, “you seeing me like this? That’s not some special-occasion version of me. This is just… life. Our life.”

Lennon’s breath hitched — tiny, barely there — but he caught it.

“And you fit in it,” he added, voice warm, not shy. “So damn easily it kinda scares me sometimes.”

Wren popped up suddenly, holding out her menu like she’d solved world hunger.
“LENNY LOOK! I circled the waffle that looks like a cloud and a mountain and a dog.”

Kai nodded, dead serious. “Excellent choice. Bold flavor profile.”

Wren beamed.

Lennon gave him a look — soft, overwhelmed in the prettiest way — like he’d somehow managed to say the exact right thing in the middle of a syrup-themed negotiation.

“So what are we ordering?” Kai asked, glancing between them. “We going classic? Wild? Full chaos?”

Wren slapped her palms onto the table. “CHAOS.”

Kai grinned slowly. “Chaos it is.”

He caught Lennon’s eyes again.

And with his voice dropping just enough for her alone, he added:

“Don’t worry. I’ve got us.”

Under the table, her foot brushed his — this time on purpose.

Yeah.
This wasn’t complicated anymore.

It was breakfast.
It was them.
It was home.
Posts: 176 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-20-2025, 11:58 PM   #6
Lennon Rae
Lennon Rae's Avatar
don’t forget
Lennon felt the warmth settle into her chest like sunlight when Kai’s last words drifted across the table — soft, certain, aimed right at her. And even though he didn’t say anything else after that, she could feel the weight of his eyes on her, steady and sure, like he’d meant every syllable.

Wren was the first to break the moment — of course she was — launching into her next masterpiece with a dramatic flourish.

“LENNY LOOK!” she beamed, shoving a purple crayon into Lennon’s hand. “YOU DRAW THE TAIL. I’LL DRAW THE DRAGON’S BUTT.”

Lennon laughed, the sound slipping out before she could stop it. “Highly ambitious division of responsibilities,” she murmured, rearranging the paper so they could both reach. “Butt away, my love.”

Wren snorted so hard she almost fell into the syrup bottle.

With her dominant hand, Lennon started sketching the world’s wobblest dragon tail. With her other hand — the one resting between her and Kai — she reached across the table, palm up in a wordless invitation.

Kai slid his hand into hers instantly.

Wren didn’t miss it.
Not even for a second.

She gasped loudly, smacking the table with excitement. “LENNY. LOOK!”

Lennon glanced up, startled — and Wren held up a fresh drawing she’d somehow completed in thirty seconds flat.

Three stick figures.
One small. Two tall.
All holding hands.

A heart over the smallest one.

And under it, in giant capital letters:

MY FAMILY

Lennon’s breath caught.

“Oh, sweetheart…” she whispered. “That’s beautiful.”

Wren swung her legs under the booth, proud enough to glow. “I drawed it ‘cause it’s TRUE. You hold Daddy’s hand and Daddy loves you and YOU love HIM and I love BOTH OF YOU AND THAT MEANS WE’RE A FAMILY.”

Lennon felt Kai go still across from her — not tense, not startled, just… absorbing it. Letting the words settle.

She squeezed his hand gently.

Wren scooted closer until her head landed on Lennon’s shoulder, curls tickling her cheek.

“Lenny? Are you staying with us forever?” she asked, voice soft and hopeful.

Lennon set the crayon down. Turned toward her fully. Smoothed a strand of hair behind the little girl’s ear.

“I’m not going anywhere,” she whispered. “I promise.”

Wren grinned so hard she almost toppled sideways. “GOOD! Because we need you for IMPORTANT THINGS.”

“Oh yeah?” Lennon smiled. “Like what?”

“For dragon butts,” Wren said seriously. “And waffles. And making Daddy smile like THAT.”

Lennon felt heat rush to her cheeks — because she knew exactly what “that” meant — but she just nudged Wren gently.

“Well,” she murmured, turning her gaze back toward the man across from her, “I think I can handle all of that.”

Kai’s fingers tightened around hers — warm, grounding, a silent me too.

Lennon lifted their joined hands a little, brushing her thumb across his knuckles. Her voice lowered, soft but certain, just for him even though Wren was right there.

“And for the record…” she whispered, “I love you. And I love her. More than I can explain.”

Wren perked up. “YOU LOVE US BOTH?”

Lennon pulled her closer, kissing the top of her head. “Yes, baby. I do.”

Wren sighed happily, laying her cheek on Lennon’s arm like she’d always belonged there.

“That’s good,” she decided. “Because I drawed us a family. And if you draw it, it has to be real.”

Lennon felt her heart stutter.

She looked at Kai again — the softness in his eyes, the quiet pride, the way he didn’t hide a single thing he felt anymore — and her smile grew, steady and sure.

“It is real,” she said gently, her voice warm enough to melt the syrup bottle between them.

Wren squealed, kicking her feet.
“GOOD! NOW CAN WE GET THE CHAOS WAFFLE?!”

Lennon laughed, linking her fingers tighter with Kai’s.

“Yeah, sweetheart,” she whispered. “We can get whatever you want.”

And for the first time in a long time — maybe ever — it felt like Lennon meant those words in every direction.

Whatever Wren wanted.
Whatever this was becoming.
Whatever future was slowly unfolding between the three of them.

She’d take all of it.
Posts: 181 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-21-2025, 10:07 AM   #7
Kai Mercer
Kai Mercer's Avatar
Kai felt that whole moment hit him like a warm, slow-moving wave — not knocking him over, just wrapping around him in a way that made his chest tighten and loosen at the same time.

Wren’s drawing.
Lennon’s whispered I love you.
The way both of their hands fit easily with his on opposite sides of the table.

If there was a version of nineteen-year-old him who ever imagined what happiness might look like when he finally got his shit together… yeah. This was better.

A lot better.

He squeezed Lennon’s hand again, thumb brushing her knuckles — not a dramatic gesture, not a declaration, just a quiet I heard you. I’m right here.

Wren was still humming with excitement, her eyes flicking between the drawing and the menu like she couldn’t decide which was more important. To her, the leap between “family stick figures” and “CHAOS WAFFLE” was no leap at all. Both held equal weight in her little universe.

Kai looked down at the drawing again — three lopsided stick figures in bold marker, all holding hands. His stick-self was comically tall with an enormous smile. Lennon’s stick-self had hair that filled half the page. Wren had drawn her own figure with a crown the size of a toaster.

He swallowed, throat tightening in a way he’d never admit out loud.

“Hey, bug,” he murmured, leaning forward with a grin he couldn’t stop, “you forgot a very important detail.”

Wren whipped around, scandalized. “WHAT?!”

Kai tapped the heart floating above the stick-family’s heads.
“You didn’t draw waffles.”

Wren gasped like this was a catastrophic oversight. “OH NO.”

She immediately snatched the paper back, grabbed two crayons at once, and furiously added three foot-tall waffles in the background. “THERE,” she said proudly. “NOW WE LOOK EVEN HAPPIER.”

Kai laughed — low, warm, the kind he saved only for these two — and shook his head. “Perfect. That’s exactly what I meant.”

He looked across the table again, meeting Lennon’s eyes. She was still a little flushed, still blinking softly like her own heart was trying to catch up with her mouth. And God, the way she was holding Wren against her side — careful, gentle, like she already knew the exact weight of her — yeah, Kai didn’t stand a chance.

He didn’t try to hide it, either.

“You know…” he said quietly, just for Lennon, his voice dipping with that half-smile he used when he was being honest without making a big deal out of it, “you telling her you’re not going anywhere? That might’ve been the best thing she’s heard all week.”

He nudged her foot under the table — soft, playful, grounding.
“And for what it’s worth,” he added, “it was one of the best things I’ve heard too.”

Wren thrust the menu straight up between them like a flag. “I WANT THE ONE WITH THE WHIPPED CREAM MOUNTAIN.”

Kai straightened, tapping the laminated picture. “Right. Very important. The Mountain of Cream. Classic choice. Strong emotional subtext.”

Wren nodded solemnly. “It says LOVE.”

Kai bit back a smile. “Sure does.”

He let his eyes flick to Lennon again — slower this time, letting every warm, quiet thing he felt sit right there on the surface.

This wasn’t complicated.
Wasn’t a surprise.
Wasn’t something he was still adjusting to.

It was simply theirs.

“Alright, team,” he said, picking up the menu and flipping it open like he was about to deliver a mission briefing. “Let’s get this chaos waffle situation locked in before the Queen of Breakfast over here starts a rebellion.”

Wren pumped a tiny fist in triumph.

Lennon’s hand stayed in his.
Warm. Steady.
Right where he wanted it.

And Kai let the moment settle — the crayon smell, the laughter, the clatter of dishes in the background, Wren’s dramatic monologue about proper syrup technique — all of it weaving together into something so quietly good he didn’t even have the urge to joke it away.

Family.
Drawn in crayon.
Real in every way that mattered.

Yeah, he thought as he tipped his head toward Lennon with a soft smile.

He’d take all of it, too.
Posts: 176 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-21-2025, 09:12 PM   #8
Lennon Rae
Lennon Rae's Avatar
don’t forget
Lennon felt his smile before she even lifted her eyes to meet it.
It settled into her, low and warm, the way sunlight sinks into skin.

Her thumb brushed gently across the back of his hand — once, slow, almost reverent — and her heart kicked up in her chest at the look he was giving her. Soft. Open. Certain.

She wasn’t used to being looked at like that.
She wasn’t sure she’d ever fully be used to it.
But she loved it all the same.

Wren leaned fully into her side again, still narrating the entire menu like it was breaking news, and Lennon tucked an arm around her instinctively — protective, grounded, hers without needing any kind of label to make it real.

She looked from Wren’s tiny hand smudged with crayon dust
to Kai’s fingers laced with hers on the tabletop
to the drawing sitting between them like proof of something she’d been quietly hoping for longer than she’d admit.

Three stick figures holding hands.
Three oversized waffles in the background.
A crown. A heart.
A future she could actually see.

Lennon let out a quiet breath — full, content, sure in a way she hadn’t felt in years.

“You know…” she said, her voice soft but steady as she leaned in a little closer to him, “when you told me you’ve got us? I felt that.”

Her fingers tightened around his, slow and certain.

“I trust you, Kai. Completely. More than I’ve trusted anyone in a long time.”

His eyes softened even further, if that was possible.

“And I love this,” she continued, glancing at Wren’s drawing, then at Wren herself who was trying to draw syrup shoes on every stick figure. “I love what we’re building here. This… version of life that feels messy and loud and sweet and so completely worth it.”

Wren suddenly pressed a star sticker onto Lennon’s arm.
“THAT MEANS YOU’RE IN THE FAMILY CLUB,” she announced.

Lennon laughed, her chest tightening in the best way.
“Is that so?”

Wren nodded vigorously. “YES. DADDY IS THE PRESIDENT. I AM THE QUEEN. YOU ARE THE… THE… UM… THE SPARKLE WARRIOR.”

Lennon smiled so big it actually surprised her.

“Well then,” she murmured, looking back at Kai with that same soft certainty, “I’m honored.”

Her voice lowered, private, just for him.

“And I meant what I said before. I love you.”
A beat.
“And I love her. I love her with my whole heart.”

She squeezed his hand again.

“I’ll always treat her like she’s mine. Because she should feel that loved every day. And because… honestly?”
Her smile tilted, tender and a little shy.
“She feels like mine already.”

Wren slammed a crayon down again.
“OKAY CAN WE ORDER CHAOS NOW?!”

Lennon snorted a laugh, lifting their joined hands and brushing her cheek against his knuckles just briefly — a tiny piece of affection she no longer needed to hide.

“Yes, sweetheart,” she said to Wren, still looking at Kai as warmth filled her chest. “We can order chaos.”

And with her hand in his, Wren tucked against her, and the smell of syrup hanging sweet in the air — Lennon felt it settle into her fully.

The moment the three of them fell into a quiet, syrup-scented rhythm, the waitress appeared beside their booth — a cheerful woman with a notepad tucked into her apron and a look that said she’d absolutely seen children declare themselves queens before breakfast.

“Good morning, folks,” she greeted, eyes flicking between Wren’s crown of stickers, Lennon’s hand still tangled with Kai’s on full display, and the crayon masterpiece sprawled across the table. “Looks like you’ve already got quite the party going.”

Wren nodded so hard her ponytail bounced.
“WE ARE ORDERING CHAOS.”

The waitress grinned like this was the best thing she’d heard all week.
“Chaos, huh? I can work with that.”

Lennon shifted slightly, brushing her knee against Kai’s under the table — deliberate, grounding — before lifting her free hand in a small gesture toward the menu.

“We’re ready,” she said, warmth slipping through her voice whether she meant it to or not.

The waitress clicked her pen. “Alright, hit me.”

Wren slammed both hands onto the menu.
“THE BIG WHIPPED CREAM MOUNTAIN,” she declared. “PLEASE. FOR ME AND LENNY. BECAUSE WE ARE SPARKLE WARRIORS.”

Lennon laughed softly, smoothing a hand down Wren’s back.
“We’ll share it,” she added, giving the waitress an apologetic little smile. “And maybe… a side of fruit so we can pretend we’re being responsible?”

The waitress winked. “I’ll bring extra strawberries. Sparkle Warriors need their strength.”

Wren preened.

Lennon turned her head toward Kai then, her thumb lightly brushing the edge of his hand again — casual to anyone watching, but so intentional it sent heat curling low in her chest.

“And he,” she said, eyes soft on him, “is going with the classic. Bacon, eggs over medium, and whatever coffee is strongest.”

The waitress scribbled. “Got it. And for you?”

Lennon smiled — small, knowing, the kind she only ever wore in moments like this.
“I’ll take the cinnamon roll waffles,” she said, tapping the photo on the menu. “But, um… go light on the icing. After the mountain over here,” she nodded at Wren, “I think we’ll all need mercy.”

Kai’s thumb grazed the back of her hand — a quiet yes, I’m here — and Lennon felt it down to her ribs.

The waitress tore the page from her pad.
“Perfect. I’ll get this started. Shouldn’t be long.”

As she walked away, Wren immediately pulled Lennon close by the wrist.

“LENNY. WHEN THE MOUNTAIN COMES, WE HAVE TO MAKE A PLAN.”

Lennon bit back a smile.
“A plan?”

“YES,” Wren said seriously. “WE HAVE TO ATTACK THE WHIPPED CREAM FIRST.”

Lennon nodded solemnly.
“Absolutely. Strategy is everything.”

She looked back at Kai then — at the quiet amusement in his eyes, the softness that hadn’t left since he sat down, the way his fingers tightened just barely around hers like he couldn’t help it.

And for a moment, while Wren plotted whipped cream warfare beside her, Lennon let herself soak in the simplicity of it:

Breakfast.
A sloppy crayon drawing of their family.
Kai watching her like she hadn’t just said she loved him, but like she’d handed him something he’d been waiting for years to receive.
Posts: 181 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-21-2025, 11:04 PM   #9
Kai Mercer
Kai Mercer's Avatar
Kai hadn’t expected anything to hit him quite this way at ten-something in the morning over laminated menus and crayon shrapnel — but there it was.

That full, warm, slow-building pressure in his chest.

The kind that didn’t make him panic.
The kind that made him settle.

The kind that whispered, Yeah. This. Every day, if I could.

He didn’t say any of that out loud.
He didn’t need to.

He just held Lennon’s hand like it was the most natural thing in the world — thumb tracing the back of her fingers while Wren plotted dairy-based warfare beside her — and let the moment sink in.

God, he loved this little club of theirs.

The Sparkle Warrior, the Queen of Breakfast, and… apparently him. The president or treasurer or whatever role Wren had assigned him. He’d take any of them.

He watched the two of them bent over the menu — Lennon with that soft, careful smile she didn’t even realize she got around Wren, and Wren narrating their strategic whipped-cream attack plan like a general preparing troops for battle.

This was the stuff that got him.
Not the big televised milestones.
Not the wins, not the career nonsense.

This.

Sticky fingers.
Crayon crowns.
Waffles on the horizon.
His two favorite people folded together across a bright little booth.
Lennon telling him she loved him like she meant it with every steady breath.

And then—

“And he,” Lennon said, smirking, “is going with the classic. Bacon, eggs over medium, and whatever coffee is strongest.”

Kai pretended to examine the menu like this was a shock. “Wow. It’s like you know me or something.”

Under the table, her knee brushed his again — soft, deliberate — and he fought the urge to lean across the booth and kiss her right there between the condiments.

He didn’t.
But barely.

Wren jolted suddenly, poking Lennon’s arm with her crayon. “LENNY. You have to draw the battle plan!”

Kai snorted. “What, no job for me?”

Wren didn’t even look up. “Daddy, you get to drink coffee and watch us be amazing.”

He put a hand to his chest. “An honor. Truly.”

Lennon shook her head, laughing, and Kai felt something tug at him — that old instinct he used to get onstage in the middle of the best kind of song. That electric little zip under his ribs.

Except this wasn’t a stage.
And there was no crowd.
Just them.

Family.

Wren’s drawing — their drawing — sat between all three plates.
He kept glancing at it. Couldn’t help it.

Family club.

The three stick figures holding hands.
The crown.
The heart.

One day — not today, not even soon, but someday — he could imagine adding another little stick figure. Sitting between Wren and a version of Lennon who looked exactly like she did now: soft, steady, hand in his, part of something the three of them built together.

And for the first time in his life, the thought didn’t terrify him.
It warmed him.

Wren slammed two more crayons down. “LENNY. WE NEED A FORTIFICATION OF STRAWBERRIES.”

Kai nodded solemnly. “Strong strategic choice.”

Lennon was giggling now — actually giggling — and he swore he felt something inside him shift from I want this to I’m already living it.

The waitress returned with their drinks, casting a knowing smile at the scene. “You folks look like trouble.”

Wren gasped, delighted. “WE ARE.”

Lennon winked at Kai over the rim of her glass, lips curving slow and warm.
“Better than being boring.”

His heart did that stupid, teenage flip thing.
Again.

He leaned back, one arm draped along the booth, watching the two of them plot chaos like it was the most important military mission ever devised.

“Alright,” he said, voice low, amused, soft in all the ways he never used to be, “let’s do it. Let’s order chaos. Let’s destroy a whipped cream mountain. Let’s dominate breakfast.”

Wren whooped. Lennon hid a smile behind her hair.

And Kai?

He just sat there for a second longer, soaking it in — the warmth, the laughter, the effortless way they all fit together.

Because he could definitely get used to this.
Every morning, if life let him.
This booth.
This girl.
That kid.
This messy, bright, perfect club they’d become.

“Team Sparkle Warriors,” he murmured under his breath, lifting Lennon’s hand to his lips and brushing a soft kiss across her knuckles before Wren could notice.

“Let’s eat.”
Posts: 176 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
Old 11-22-2025, 11:18 PM   #10
Lennon Rae
Lennon Rae's Avatar
don’t forget
Lennon felt the soft brush of his lips against her knuckles — quick, warm, gone before Wren could catch it — and something fluttered in her chest, but she didn’t linger on it this time.

He said, Let’s eat.

So she breathed out slowly, let the moment settle, and squeezed his hand once before gently slipping her fingers free so she could straighten the drawing Wren had shoved between the syrup bottles.

“Okay, Team Sparkle Warriors,” she announced, leaning back with a grin that tried very hard not to show how warm she felt inside, “before we conquer whipped cream mountain, I actually need to tell you something.”

Wren gasped. “IS IT IMPORTANT?”

“It’s… breakfast-important,” Lennon said, which to Wren was clearly equivalent to national news.

Kai raised an eyebrow, amused, waiting.

Lennon tucked a piece of hair behind her ear and slid the menu aside. “So, uh… the label called me last night. All excited. Extra excited. Borderline manic.” She paused, making a little face. “They want to release the EP sooner than planned.”

Kai’s posture shifted — subtle, supportive — like he was ready to catch anything she dropped.

Wren squinted suspiciously. “Did they steal your songs?”

Lennon laughed. “No, sweet girl. Just… moved up the timeline.” She looked back at Kai, her smile softer. “Like, way up. Weeks, not months.”

Kai didn’t say anything yet — but the way his eyes softened told her she had his full attention.

She let her foot bump his under the table, not by accident.
“Which means I have meetings. And promo shoots. And probably a hundred emails I don’t want to answer.” She exhaled, rolling her shoulders out. “And it also means I’m gonna be on a schedule again. A real one. Which I wasn’t totally ready for.”

Wren leaned dramatically across the table and whispered, “We can fight them.”

Lennon grinned and tapped Wren’s nose. “I know you could.”

Then she looked to Kai again — really looked.
“Anyway… I didn’t want it to be a whole big emotional thing. Just…” She shrugged lightly. “Breakfast seemed like a good time to mention it.”

Kai’s hand moved just slightly on the table — a quiet gesture of grounding she knew was meant only for her.

She added quickly, “But I’m still here. Today’s still ours. And I want chaos waffles.”

Wren cheered.

Lennon nudged Kai’s foot again with a sideways smirk. “So? What do you think? EP drop sooner than expected… chaos waffles… me trying not to spiral before noon. You know. Normal Sunday.”

Her smile tilted teasingly.

“Feel free to distract me with carbs and charm.”
Posts: 181 | Rest Stopping (offline) Quote |
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