DCI Gene Hunt (
the_gene_genie) wrote2012-06-25 10:18 am
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Hours later, he couldn't honestly say if he's had any sleep or not. It's like hovering on the edge of consciousness, one foot in the land of the awake and lucid, the other firmly planted in the realm of nightmares. He jerks from images of blood and that gun, and his family, to Alex lying on his chest, comfortingly warm in the crook of his arm. Never awake, never asleep, and it gets to a point he can't stand anymore. During one of the more aware stretches, he jabs himself with a fingernail to make it stop, using the pain to bring himself back. He extracts himself from her, and heads to the bathroom. It's probably a good thing he destroyed the mirror. He doesn't want to see what he looks like at the moment.
The idea of lying down again is unbearable. He needs to move, but he's still too tired. Should go for a walk or something, but he can't contemplate dragging himself all the way downstairs and outside. He pulls his dressing gown from the wardrobe and lights a fag instead, pacing around the other end of the room a bit. Eventually, he sits down and sticks the TV on, flicking through endless channels (one of which, he notes vaguely, seems to be aimed at squid) until he finds football. England even. Euro 2012.
It'll do. He mutes the sound so she isn't disturbed, folds himself up in one corner of the sofa, and stares blankly at the screen. By the time the game's up, the night should be over. It feels like the first step on a long road, getting through this endless night. If he can do that, everything else should be a doddle.
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She hears him moving around and waits for him to return. When he doesn't, the distance takes on a weight, making it hard for her to draw air into her lungs. She closes her eyes and tries to still the chaos in her head. He's just there, in front of the telly, not lost, not somewhere she can't lay eyes on him.
He looks like hell. Like a man who's visited his own shallow, unmarked grave and is now coming to grips with it. His eyes aren't focused on anything in the room.
After a long while of just watching him, the pragmatist in her can't take it anymore. She hauls herself up, and disappears into the bath. A cool cloth on her face helps most of the puffiness around her eyes, though the redness isn't going anywhere it seems. She brushes out her hair, leaving it down and simply tucking the length behind her ears. Close enough for government work.
When she emerges, she eyes the room for the house phone, or some other way to contact the front desk. What she finds is the pneumatic tube system, and the tiny handbook with it. She scribbles a note, and sends it down, and then joins him, taking up a place on the other end of the sofa.
'Who's winning?'
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Her movement had brought no more acknowledgement than a blink and a return to the present. That was a few minutes ago, so by the time she emerges from the bathroom, he can actually answer her question.
'Nil-nil.'
He's turned sideways, head resting on the back of the sofa. Facing her, now she's sitting down. His gaze runs over her face for a long time, then he pulls it away. Like maybe he's been thinking of something to say, but isn't sure whether to say it or not.
'We won't win.'
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She settles for small talk, giving him a weak smile.
'Why not?'
She's ignoring the logo on the screen. (2012. Molly is sixteen this year.)
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'They're playin' better than us.'
Usually a decent indication. And it's a deadpan delivery, but with the barest hint of amusement too.
It dies away, and he looks down, examining the sofa cushion between them for a moment, a moment that stretches on and on.
'He was right, y'know.'
It's a soft admission.
'I did want you to stay with me.'
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'I know.'
He'd forgotten, she reminds herself. As cruel as it seems, he never meant to keep her from Molly. She knows that now.
Slowly, she extends one hand across the back of the couch to him, palm up.
'I'm sorry.'
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'For what?'
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'That I couldn't stay.'
She wanted to, at the end. She begged him, and she still remembers what he told her. Can't have you putting me off my stride, can I? The words still smart, but it's hard to hold onto the anger in the face of everything else. It's hard to feel discarded when he just spent the night holding her through her tears.
'Did you think I was -- bargaining for my life?'
Maybe she was. Maybe the voice of fear was the loudest in the chorus of those last few moments. But there was more. He should know that.
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He's not sure what she means, and it probably shows in the frown and confused shake of his head.
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'I know what I did, I mean...'
Words don't seem adequate. She chews on her lips, her brow furrowed as it's her turn to stare at the upholstery.
'I could never undo the damage I did. But when I asked to stay, it wasn't because I was afraid to move on. I didn't want to leave you behind.'
There. Not entirely the truth, but then, neither of them are strangers to convenient fictions.
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'You didn' know what you were doing.'
Though it doesn't change the fact that he asked her to stop, over and over, and she wouldn't trust him.
...but that doesn't matter, does it? She had reason not to, in the end. And it was...himself, helping her. So he must have wanted- -
He scrubs his hands over his face.
'I'm gonna get dressed.'
He pulls himself up without looking at her. He doesn't look angry. Just like he doesn't want to get into it. There can be no winners in this conversation.
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It's no use.
She did know what she was doing. And in the end, she was doing it for him. He was the young copper with half a face, pushing her on.
'He needed a name. You needed a name.'
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'Yeah. Yeah.'
Now his head swivels, his eyes hard when they find her face.
'At all costs, right? Doesn' matter if that's what I wanted.'
He shouldn't say it, he knows it, but it comes out anyway.
'Don' try an' pretend you did it for me, Alex.'
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'No, I did for my daughter.'
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There are no suits in here. Fine. He grabs the nearest thing, and disappears.
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A knock at the door stirs her from the sofa, and she opens it to admit the rat with the waiter's trolley. She signs for it, and sends the creature along its way before he emerges again.
And then she pours herself a mug of tea, and pours him one as well. Hers gets doctored with milk and sugar, his with -- she counts them out carefully -- seven sugars. It's a seven sugar day.
When he emerges from the bath, she's waiting outside the door, patiently holding it for him.
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He emerges in a cloud of steam, and is pulled up a bit short to see her there, holding tea.
'That mine?'
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'Can we please try again?'
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He looks at her suspiciously, but he does take the drink.
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But it has. So, OK, things are different now.
'What're we practicing for?'
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'Why do we practice anything, Gene? So we get better at it.'
He hasn't always been honest with her. He lied when he told her she was a 'hindrance', at his own admission.
She rests one hip on the back of the sofa, fatigue drawing dark circles under her eyes, and etching deep lines around her mouth.
'After I was shot, I left your world... I went back, and I sent Molly to live with her father. And, I don't know what happened -- whether you pulled me back, or whether I came when you called. But I do know, I came back.'
That should count for something, shouldn't it?
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'I didn' pull you back.'
He came to meet her.
'I came because you were-'
He stops, because he hasn't thought this through. But he knows the answer anyway. And he remembers being pulled back from Spain because of it.
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Her head tilts to one side, and if she hadn't cried all night, her eyes would sheen. But she's too tired for that. The sadness is there, but it's a pebble in the ocean.
'It makes sense now, in as much as any of this makes sense.'
She idly makes her way over to the table, figuring that's safe territory for the two of them.
'So yesterday wasn't the first time I was late.' Nor the first time he'd waited for her.
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Very few set rules, either. But when he knows, he knows.
He follows her to the table. Why not? He slumps into a chair, and concentrates on his tea.
'It jus' happens.'
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'And you know...'
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