history.}
1984 (Birth)
On June 16th, a baby was born with a shriek of protest on the pool table at his aunt's house. It was at a family reunion, which everyone found unendingly amusing, and would bring up on that date for years and years afterward. . The birth was shockingly easy, and over before the paramedics that the family called showed up. And he was given the tradional name of the first-born male in the Behrman family -- William.
1985 - 1991 (Childhood)
Little William was a ball of neverending, sunshiney energy. He had been a happy baby, but as a boy it seemed his good cheer knew no bounds. If he fell off his bike and scraped his knee, he would get up almost immediately and shrug it off, smiling because he would get a Ninja Turtles bandage. When his older sister Amy picked on him, he would make a joke rather than fight back, which would often diffuse the entire situation. The boy sang constantly, drawing attention from their neighbours on summer afternoons when he would make up songs about his toy dinosaurs. He did well in school, but there was something that bugged him. Just a little something, but it was a big deal. Finally, when he was seven, he declared his apparent dislike for his first name, and asked if he could go by the second half of it, rather than the first. From that day on, he was called almost exclusively Liam.
1992 - 1996 (Tween)
While most kids his age became gloomy and emo in the delicate pre-teen years, Liam remained almost obnoxiously cheerful. His friends were grouchy? He had pie! The girl he had a massive crush on told him he was a freak with weird thumbs? Yeah, well those thumbs were great for playing video games! He had feelings for his male best friend, and got punched in the nose when he professed them? ...Okay, that one admittedly hurt. But rather than spending the next week devastated, he moped for a day or so before deciding he didn't need people who were going to punch him in the face for admitting that he was less than straight. And it wasn't that he wasn't sad, because he was. It was, perhaps, his first big hurt. But he got over it quickly, the way he got over everything quickly, and he got through it with a smile on his face.
In the end, middle school was very much like elementary school. He went, he did well enough to keep his parents happy, and friends clustered around him like little kids around an offering of candy. He was the candy, and that was just fine with him. His family was large enough that sometimes he felt like he got lost amongst his brothers and his sister, and so having a wide social circle made him feel... noticed. And at that age, even the most cheerful person needed positivity thrown their way, rather than always being the one throwing it out.
1998 - 2003 (Teen)
As a teenager, Liam sometimes felt like he was living in an Archie comic. Surely, life couldn't be this simplistic and... well. Not boring. Not exactly. Life couldn't be boring with three siblings and a wide circle of friends. There was always some kind of drama going on. Jenny was dating Michelle's ex who she was totally still in love with. Robbie's boyfriend broke up with him, so he started dating the other Rob. Liam really loved that, because he couldn't think of anything more hilarious than getting to scream out own name out during sex. Not that he'd had sex, but from what he'd heard it was pretty awesome. And the idea of screaming your own name out? Hilarious. But that was really all there was to his life. The drama of high school, and his music - he'd started playing the guitar in ninth grade, and picked up the bass in the high school band - and that was really... it. It wasn't bad, but he always craved a little more. When he was grown-up, he decided, he was going to have adventures.
2005 - 2010 ( Young Adult )
And adventures he had. Nothing too wild. He wasn't that brave, nor that reckless. But he did take his ancient Jeep on a few cross country trips - stopping here and there to fix whatever on her broke down that time - and he met people in karaoke bars and arcades that became lifelong friends. Or, at least lifelong facebook friends. He met family he'd never known about and crashed on the couches of distant cousins, and he offered to give guitar lessons in tiny towns to earn enough money to keep himself afloat. He didn't visit every single state, but he managed to hit a lot of them. And when he'd talk to his parents, and they would ask him when he was going to settle down, start school, become an actual functioning member of society? He would scoff at them, and tell them not to worry about him, that he would be fine, and change the subject. He had a hint of a Peter Pan complex, truth be told.
Nothing good lasts forever though, and soon his adventures came to an end. When he was back in Seattle, and things began to normalize again, Liam was faced with a decision; what was he going to do now? And life, his always-kinda-perfect life, answered that question for him before he really had to ask it. He was at work one day, a mind-numbing job at an ice cream booth in the mall, and he was having a really shit day. Just, really terrible. The sort of day where everything went wrong, where all you wanted to do was put on some disgustingly emo music, curl up, and cry. So you can imagine his surprise when a cluster of girls, bubbly and ponytailed and giggling to each other, came up to the counter to order ice cream cones. And one by one, all of them - all five of them - started to cry. And when Liam panicked a little, and handed them napkins while asking if he should call someone, or get help, they all proclaimed that they didn't know why they were crying. That they just all of a sudden felt so sad that crying felt like the only option. Which had been a trip, because that was exactly how Liam had felt himself. And, come to think of it, he'd noticed that his customers had been a little... moody that day. Quiet, subdued, as if there had been something heavy weighing on all of them. And that was strange. Right? It sure felt strange to Liam. Strange enough that, when he got home that night, he told the story over dinner. And his aunt, who happened to be visiting that evening, suddenly found her nephew far more interesting than the meal in front of her. Later on that evening, she pulled him aside and asked him if that sort of thing happened often. If he noticed that people would pick up on his moods, sometimes even if he didn't tell anyone how he was feeling at the moment. Which... he had. It had happened a few times, but only recently. Only since he'd gone on his cross-country adventure. He'd noticed that if he laughed, people around him laughed harder. If he was feeling a little down, the people he was hanging around would be more subdued than normal. He'd brushed it off as just a coincidence, but the more his aunt talked to him, the stranger it seemed.
Turned out, his aunt was what you might call gifted - she had an ability that most people did not. The ability to read minds. And, after a long discussion filled with a bit of skepticism, and then a whole lot of 'holy shit' realization, Liam came to the conclusion that he, too, was 'gifted'. Especially after his excitement at the prospect blossomed and his aunt, laughing, told him that she felt as if she was a kid at Disneyland. Which was exactly how Liam felt himself. She told him that he should probably work on harnessing his ability, so that it would overwhelm everyone around him. He wasn't a fan of making random girls at the ice cream counter cry, and the only way to stop himself from doing that again was to learn how to control himself. And, lucky for him, she had an idea on just how he could do that. She left his room to make a phone call, and came back ten minutes later and told him to start packing. That there was a place, not so far from the Behrman family home, that could help him. A place where he could learn to hone his ability. Someplace she called The Institute
The Institute was not as forboding as he'd thought initially. While he'd pictured a hospital-like setting, with bars on the windows and orderlies walking the halls with a mean look in their eyes, what he'd found was much warmer. Impressive houses on sprawling grounds, a barn that looked like it should house parties in some teen romance flick, and an atmosphere that was so warm and welcoming Liam immediately decided that this had the potential to become his forever home.
2011 - Present ( Old Man Liam )
To say that Liam's life was better than it had ever been would be an almost gross understatement. The Institute provided him with things that he had known had been missing from his life, but he'd never thought too much on. Stability, without losing a sense of adventure. A community of people that he loved desperately, and he felt connected to in a way that was almost sacred. A kind of secret that made him feel like a superhero. He quit his job at the ice cream counter, and took over ownership of a little music store that was a mishmash of records, instruments, and band merch. He formed a band that was actually kind of successful. It was all... good. Just really, really good.
He still struggles to fully control his ability, which is why he's still there after... several years. But he's doing better now than he was when he got there, and that's something. There are hard days, sure, but why let a few clouds ruin the sunny sky?