DCI Gene Hunt (
the_gene_genie) wrote2012-07-30 01:12 am
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OOM: Room 6620, #4
He hadn't dozed for long yesterday. And it had been another restless night, although not as bad as before - he still gave up in the end though, and slipped out of bed before Alex woke up. He thought she'd be awake by the time he got out of the shower, but no.
He went downstairs for a pint. Ridiculous really, at that time of morning, but he always recommended the pub after long operations that finished in the morning, so why should now be any different?
Of course, he got a bit more than he bargained for.
Which is why he's not trying to be quiet when he comes back into the room. If she wakes up, good. She needs to hear this.
He went downstairs for a pint. Ridiculous really, at that time of morning, but he always recommended the pub after long operations that finished in the morning, so why should now be any different?
Of course, he got a bit more than he bargained for.
Which is why he's not trying to be quiet when he comes back into the room. If she wakes up, good. She needs to hear this.
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Youch. He pulls a face.
'How long were you plannin' on keeping it? Still five years before she'd learn to drive.'
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'They last for years, Gene. And if you give a teenager a brand new vehicle, the insurance rates are staggering. I may be well off enough to live in the city, but I'm not -- I mean I wasn't made of money. And besides, I only drove it to and from the office.'
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He reckons that would've probably been worth a bit. Of course, he doesn't know just how much London house prices will have risen to by the 21st century.
Ugh, Volvos. Practical. Safe. Beloved of bespectacled academics everywhere. No fun whatsoever.
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She feels like she's rambling again.
'I guess we're doing all right, by most people's standards.'
Molly will be well taken care of, for the rest of her life. She knows Evan will make sure of that, just like he did for her.
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'So your daughter will be all right. That's somethin'.'
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'She'll be fine. I was.'
It's repeated more as a mantra to still her own mind, more than as an observation of fact.
'And anyway, a Volvo is not a bad car. It's practical. The only people I know of in my time who drive like you are in the movies.' Her shoulder bumps his as she walks, a quiet touch of affection.
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He lights another cigarette.
'And yeah. Me too.'
More or less how he learnt to drive, watching movies. He never seems to crash, anyway.
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The path turns, and they're out of sight of the bar, the lake still in the distance, a broad meadow spreading out in front of them. She can see the stables in the distance, and the shooting range. There's something of a garden over there too, but she takes the path that leads up into the trees.
'You know, I never heard much about where you went after school. I know you were in the service for awhile.'
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'Didn't go anywhere. Left school at fifteen, worked in the mill, did National Service, became a copper.'
And she knows what happened after that.
His life prior to...what it became; well, he's starting to realise what it is about the whole thing that made him so furious. Or maybe he's just starting to remember, very much against his will. But he lays the basics out for her there in the hope that'll be enough to settle the question. It's all the truth, and there's very little practical information to add.
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She really has no clue.
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He looks out towards the lake.
'It was a cotton mill. I spent most of the time cursing the Jerrys for not dropping a bomb on it.'
He had a Saturday job in a garage as well, but he's not mentioning that in case she brings up the Quattro again.
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'And in the Army? Did you serve overseas?'
She's genuinely interested in hearing about his life, now that they can talk like this.
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He'd enjoyed the Army, until they left the UK.
'Food were shit.'
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'Really. I've always wanted to see Asia. Never got the chance.'
She imagines her version of traveling and his are vastly different, but it'd still be fun to see the Great Wall with him, or take tea in a tea house in the Japanese countryside.
Hmm, on second thought, maybe not.
'I'm beginning to wish we'd filled out those dating forms a bit more thoroughly, now,' she says, her tone telling him she's teasing. 'Were you infantry? Or something else?' She has no clue what his military career would have looked like.
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He had not loved it.
'Germany were alright. Apart from bein' full of Germans, straight after a war with the bastards.'
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She cuts a glance at him as they cross the treeline.
'I imagine you found a fraulein or two who weren't so bad.'
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''Course.'
Goes without saying, doesn't it?
'Some spat at us in the street, some used us to piss off their boyfriends, some just wanted a good time. Same as anywhere. Less complicated in Singapore, but same general idea.'
He's not ashamed to admit it. He was eighteen, and in the company of a large number of young men. Of course they were going to go looking for women.
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'How old were you when you married?'
Her tone gentles a bit at that. She's not sure if Barbara was left behind after his murder, or if she was another construct of his world.
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He's looking far away, half wondering where she's going with this, and mostly not wanting to think about it.
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'You don't remember your wedding?'
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He's bitter, and sounds it.
'None of it were real though, was it?'
He won't look at her either, because he's furious about this but it's not her fault. It's all on him.
'One morning I had a girlfriend. By teatime, I'd been married more than twenty years.'
How is that fair? How!?
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'But you have -- memories of the interim time. As far as you knew, you'd lived that life right up to the day you met me.'
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'Yeah. But they're not real.'
He thought she was asking how old he was when he actually got married. But he never did.
'If you want my fake age for my fake marriage, I was twenty.'
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She may be trying to make a point.
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'If there's something you're trying to say, just say it.'
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