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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He looks up now. He can feel the hope ready to explode in his chest, but it's tethered as well. Mostly by disbelief, and not a small measure of confusion. Because her saying that really doesn't make sense to him at all.
Plus the fact that there's a nagging voice telling him this is really just like the time she was drunk, and offered herself to him. Not drunk now, but just as vulnerable.
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The corner of her mouth lifts, and maybe he can catch the way she's breathing a bit faster. He certainly can't miss the way she's not looking away from his face.
'I know it's different now, for both of us. But I told Nelson, I couldn't stay. Not yet. It didn't feel right being there without you.'
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'Y'know, there's a...there's this thing, but I don' know what it's called. When something happens, whether you want it to or not. And after, things are different and-'
This isn't coming out right.
'-what I mean is - well, look, when I used to walk aroun' Manchester, people would look at me, an' say hello, and come an' talk and it was good. And then there was this case that got splashed all over the papers, an' Jackie Queen made me out to be some kind of monster. And for bloody months after, people looked at me like I was shit they'd jus' stepped in.'
And wow, it still stings, even now. He has to actively remind himself that it wasn't real. Real for him, but not anywhere that counts.
'It got better, right. But even a couple of years after, sometimes I'd run into people and the first thing out of their mouths was, 'you're the bloke who shot that lad', and they hated me. See?'
He's not sure that made sense even to himself, but he wants to get it out before the hope disappears for good.
'What I mean is - sometimes things happen, and you look at someone an' they're different, no matter what. You can't go back to seein' them the way they were, even if you want to.'
And he can't understand how that isn't the case here. After what she saw rolling on the floor of CID, after the things she found out - how can she be sitting here, thinking he's the same bloke she nearly slept with one night? That's what he doesn't get.
If it were him, he doesn't think he could do it. It would have destroyed too much.
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'You're not different, though, are you? You're still the same Gene Hunt who grabbed my breast the first day we met. I just know more about you, now. I know why you're the most immature, stubborn, misogynistic, reckless,' she's starting to grin proper by now, 'and the bravest man I've ever known.'
'You died for us, Gene, in a very literal way.'
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Yuk.
He lights a fag, pulls on is and discards it in the ashtray. He just needs something to do with his hands.
'An' I didn't choose to. It just happened.'
Which sort of negates the bravery angle, in his opinion. But still. Her words do make his chest swell, just a tiny bit. Even if he can see the negative in them just as easily.
Eventually, he shrugs a shoulder and meets her eye.
'Alright.'
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'All right?'
One eyebrow goes up, and her eyes narrow.
'Care to -- elaborate?'
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'Well, you're here. I'm here. We can...see how it goes, yeah?'
He's pretty sure it'll be difficult to get...anywhere. But if they have time, and she still fancies him, then how can he say no?
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She dips a finger in her ice water and flicks it at him.
'Yeah, we can see how it goes.'
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Just like upstairs, it's still pretty chaste. But it is warm, and soft, and it lingers. He'd touch her if his hands weren't braced on the table, so maybe it's a poor attempt to show that he's happy with the turn of events. But it wouldn't feel right to not to do it, and Gene Hunt always runs with his instincts.
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'People will talk...' Her voice is warm velvet, and for the first time, she smiles at him with real hope in her eyes.
Maybe he can find it in him to forgive her. Maybe.
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He sits back down, and can't deny the way things seem a bit better, now. Maybe it's just having something to look forward to, or maybe it's because something's sorted out. Maybe it's just because it's her, and he's wanted this for three years.
The food comes. Result.
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She sits back as the food is presented, still smiling, but painfully aware of how far they still need to go to be anywhere near 'okay'.
'After we eat, I'd like to stop by the infirmary.' She picks up knife and fork, and slices through the thick slabs of cheese and tomato.
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'Why? What's wrong?'
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She's giving him the serious Look. The Look that says she's concerned, and if he has any sense, he should be concerned, too.
'I know, you'd rather crawl into a bottle of Scotch. But I'm worried, about both of us. The stress alone...'
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'If you wanna talk about your stuff, that's up t'you. But I'm not...'
He sighs, and attacks his steak.
'Guppy's always in the infirmary. He's a mate, an' I told him...well, he saw me the other day. I'm not bloody goin' back in there, like a bloody nonce. And you don't tell 'em anythin' about me an' sleep.'
If there was ever a nancy problem to have, that's got to be number one.
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She eats as well, finding a certain familiarity in this dance of advance and retreat. Getting information out of him has always been a challenge.
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'I told him what happened. Back then.'
He looks uncomfortable about it.
'He's a mate. Didn't seem right not to.'
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'How much did you tell him?'
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'I told him I got killed, Alex.'
His tone is hard again.
'Why?'
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'I've spent the last three years, off and on, remembering -- my final moments. The first year, I couldn't close my eyes without seeing that bullet hovering in front of my eyes. The last year, well... I can honestly say that last night was the first time in months I have slept in a bed. Usually I fell asleep on the couch in front of the television. It's a wonder I didn't experience a full on psychotic break, considering how sleep deprived I was. But I was managing to sleep, even if it was catching cat naps in the front seat of your car, or at my desk.'
'My point, Gene, is that sleep is important for the health of the brain. Lack of sleep is indicative of a serious problem. The same way that lack of appetite, for food or sex, is an indicator of a serious problem. Now, sometimes it can work itself out on its own. But if it goes on for any longer than a few days, I'm going to insist that you get checked out.'
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His tone is deadpan.
'Because I'm just the stupid boy who doesn' know how t'look after himself, yeah? Because I need you to do it for me, like you're me mam.'
Yeah. Not impressed.
'I've had one bad night. I reckon I'm bloody entitled to that. So, leave it.'
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'Yes, you're entitled to one bad night, but passing out from exhaustion does not equal a even a bad night's sleep. And much as you'd like to believe otherwise, there is a vast difference between being a stupid boy who needs a mother to look after him, and a grown man who's so blind to his own injuries that he's lashing out at the people who care about him.'
Her jaw is set by the end of it, but there's a softness around her eyes. She's really worried about him.
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Not physically, hardly ever. And other kinds of injury - he doesn't understand them, despite three years in her company. A strong bloke turns in for work, or life, or whatever, and puts a brave face on. That's just what happens. And now isn't really the best time for him to try and embrace the notion that he's not as strong as he thought. Or isn't currently, at least.
'I said, leave it.'
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'Fine.'
He'll see, one way or the other. It's not like she's not used to watching him run full force into brick walls.
'Pig-headed git.'
Despite her mood, it comes out as an term of affection, somehow.
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He chews a bit of his steak, but he's lost the desire for it. This is so typical of them. One minute, they're talking about seeing where the two of them can go; the next, there's this.
'I'm goin' outside for a smoke,' he mutters, and stands up.
'Back in a minute.'
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