| a cramp in the mouth from grinning ( @ 2007-07-05 20:10:00 |
| Entry tags: | fic 2006/2007 |
I was BULLIED into posting these by
callistosh65 , so blame her for any and everything that follows. :D
Title: Five Times Bodie Waited and One He Didn't
Author:
ailcia
Rating: Swearing
Circuit/Pros Lib: Yes, please!
Pairing: Bodie/Doyle
Spoilers None
1.
"You're a tosser."
Doyle runs after him, tries to grab his shoulder, and is shook firmly off for his trouble. He sighs and follows him, contented for the moment to talk to Bodie's back.
"Oh, come on, mate, you can't blame this one on me, can you?" He chuckles, even though there's a little warning siren going off in the back of his head. "I mean, it's not my fault you were-"
Bodie whirls abruptly, making Doyle stop up short so as not to crash into his nose, and fixes him with a glare that could probably freeze hell right over. "I was what?"
Doyle - never a coward, but not really in the mood for having his face rearranged, either - keeps his smile in check. Pushing his hands innocently into his back pockets, he takes a casual step back, out of range.
"Well... It's not my fault your were... an hour early."
"I was not an hour early." Bodie very rarely gets hot under the collar - Doyle suspects this is probably part of the blessing that comes with having absolutely no shame. Either way, to see him... blushing, is quite an sight.
Doyle tilts his head. "Then why're you cross?"
"My watch was an hour early, all right. Now, shut up because... Look, just shut it, Ray."
And with that, he storms off. Doyle lets the smile go and follows him... Bodie doesn't really look him in the eye until, a week later, he finds a brand new watch - plastic, emblazoned with a cartoon, and clearly for someone 20-odd years younger than him - in the pocket of his jacket.
2.
He's already cleaned his entire flat from top to bottom. He's washed all his bedding, and every single item of clothing he posesses (which was less than he thought, now he thought about it). He's restocked his cupboards - a very quick trip, just in case - and he has even (though he'll never admit it to no one) finished all his paperwork... Some of it went back months, and he'll tell himself in the future it just needed doing.
Now Bodie sits in the chair, staring blankly at whatever war film is on - these film folk really don't know what they're talking about, but that's okay because he's not really watching anyway. He sighs, and stretches his back, wondering vaguely at how much it's tensed up.
There's a knock at the door and he nearly seperates his shoulders jumping out of his chair and running to answer it. Manly running, mind. He flings the door over and is met with that glorious half-smile.
"Bit keen, aren't we?"
Bodie shrugs and, letting the door close, saunters back into the living room, ignoring him.
"Whatever, mate. Whatever."
3.
"Come on, mate. Don't piss me about, alright?"
His mumbled words echo across the quiet, clean little room, ripping through the still air. The room he is sick of the sight of, the smell of it making the skin across his back crawl across his front. He shivers, and then looks around to make sure no one saw.
But he's alone. Still. Just as he's been for days, now. Because he just won't wake up, will he?
"Open those big eyes, you stupid sod. You hear me?"
Bodie fiddles awkwardly with the itchy hospital sheets, glaring at the spotless fabric, taking his time to smooth the wrinkles across the nearest leg. He doesn't look up at the face he knows will still be as bruised as it was the last time he looked. Stupid bastard: maybe a house falling on his head'll teach him to be so fucking... stupid.
"Hurry up, will you? I'm bored stiff here, Sunshine. You're no more interesting asleep than you were awake."
It shouldn't matter, because he's been alone before: for years on end, without needing anyone... But this is different. Because now he's alone and waiting until he doesn't have to be anymore. Waiting until this one person - this stupid prick of a person - wakes up so he doesn't have to be anymore.
"You bastard, Ray."
4.
It was all just a waiting game, really. A game of chance and skill, entirely unreliable with rules that were never the same... But it was a game that Bodie had gotten really rather good at over the past few months.
The trick was to get Doyle drunk. Easy, one might think: a few too many of his beloved gin, but it wasn't as simple as all that, and Bodie had discovered this to his peril more than once. Doyle was a difficult drunk, either obnoxiously ambivalent or dangerously sad, and Bodie needed to gauge his mood before the game began. He needed him not so drunk that he started talking about his father - moody at the best of times, Doyle had a tendency to get loose-lipped and maudlin when he had a certain amount of drink in him, and Bodie needed to avoid this at all costs. He hated hearing about Doyle's childhood more than anything. All that misery and hatred that came gushing out of his partner almost at will. Bodie knows from experience that there's a reason the past is kept behind a person; that's why you'll never catch him recounting events of his life. It's not worth the pain.
No, Bodie didn't want that. But he does need Doyle at least a little drunk... Actually, not a little: enough that he forgets himself. Enough that he lets Bodie kiss him. And it's finding that balance that's the key to this whole twisted dance: that pivotal moment in an evening when Doyle is bleary enough that he might not punch Bodie for loving him.
5.
His hands are everywhere, and he knows that's not appreciated but he actually physically cannot help himself.
He's always been bad for taking what he wants - food, birds, fame, money... No matter what the cost, if Bodie wants, Bodie gets. And he's not going to let some stupid thing like mental or physical exhaustion one finds at the end of a 72 hour shift get in the way of the thing he wants the most.
"Gerroff me!"
Doyle sounds a bit like a wet cat when he yowls like that, lashing out and clawing Bodie's hands away from his person.
Bodie grins evilly, and wraps his arms firmly around his partner's denim-clad waist, crushing Doyle's arse against his chest and powering them both up the rest of the stairs.
"Not a sodding chance, sunshine."
Title: Three Things Bodie Survived and One He Didn't
Author:
Rating: Swearing
Pros Lib/Circuit: Yes, please!
Pairing: Bodie/Doyle
Spoilers: None
A/N: I'm impatient and I couldn't think of a fourth one Bodie survived. Well, I could, but it wasn't working and I was lazy. Sorry! :D
1.
He survived the third IRA bomb.
Not many others did, mind. In the maelstrom of shattered glass and thick, black dust, many of the faceless hundreds had lost their lives, had been blown to all corners of the pub. He remembered their screams and their horrible choking coughs, suffocating in the fire-hot air. He shuddered in his wheelchair, enough to make the metal rattle. Luckily, no one saw.
But he was lucky… So they said, anyway. He, himself, didn’t reckon on a severely broken leg being at all lucky. It would take him months to get back to work, months of sweat and blood and enough pummelling from Macklin to knock him off both feet. Not that he was scared of hard work - never had been - just… what if he never got back to it all?
No. He wasn’t lucky. And in his frustration he said so. Repeatedly, and at a high volume.
“Look.”
Doyle filled his whole vision all of a sudden, all bright red plaid and bright green eyes, crouching in front of the wheelchair and glaring up at him dangerously, as if he was about to pounce and beat Bodie’s bandaged head off the chair’s armrest.
“Look. I know you’re banged up, mate, but I swear-” Doyle raised a finger and pointed it aggressively in his face, deathly serious as he shouted. “I swear, if I hear you saying you’re not lucky again, I will make sure you’ll never get lucky again, alright?”
Before he could open his mouth to defend himself - to ask Doyle how he’d like it if every time he needed a wazz he had to ask for help - Doyle leaned in closer, and his voice got that yawning, trembling timbre to it that only ever happened when Doyle was at his very limit.
“I had to fetch a young lad’s head back in a bag yesterday, so don’t you fucking dare tell me we’re not lucky, Bodie.” A quick, jolted swallow, a furiously clenching throat. Then, quieter. “Don’t you dare.”
And just as suddenly as it had begun, the tirade was over. Bodie was being pushed along the peaceful, suburban street in the sunshine once more, heading for home, mortified into silence for probably the first time in his life.
2.
He survived being trapped with Doyle for three whole weeks.
“… Oi, that’s mine.”
“No, it isn’t, it’s mine.”
“Don’t be so bloody stupid. How could it be yours when you nicked it out of my case?”
“I didn’t nick it out of your case, though.”
“You sodding well did.”
“I didn’t!”
“There’s no use lying, old son, because you don’t have a very good poker face.”
“You joking? I’m a better liar than you, any day of the week.”
“Oh, really? Why can’t you do undercover work, then?”
“I can do undercover work!”
“Yeah, I suppose, but Cowley doesn’t like giving you those jobs, does he? Gives them all to me… You only get them if no one else is available. Last resort, like.”
“I am no one’s fucking last resort!”
“That’s not the impression I got... Macklin, neither.”
“What about Macklin?”
“Oh, nothing.”
“What about Macklin?”
“No, really, don’t worry about it, mate. I’m sure he meant nothing by it, you know.”
“Doyle!”
“Alright! Jesus christ, calm your passions, mate!”
“I would do if you’d just clam up and tell me!”
“Clam up and tell you?”
“I swear, I’m going to clobber that fucking mouth off you if you don’t tell me in the next five seconds-”
“Oh, it’ll take more than five seconds.”
“Eh?”
“What I have to tell you. It’ll take more than five seconds… Had a lot to say about you, Macklin did.”
“Tell me… Tell me right now or- Actually, you know what?”
“What?”
“I don’t care. Whatever you want, Doyle.”
“Eh?”
“I don’t care what he said.”
“… Y-you do.”
“No, I’m fine, really.”
“No, but, you’re bothered that we were talking about you, right?”
“Not especially.”
“… I’ll tell you if you like.”
“Not interested.”
“But!”
“But what, mate?”
“… Nothing.”
“You sure?”
“Yeah.”
“Doyle? You sulking?”
“Nope.”
“… You sure?”
“Just fuck off and die, will you?!”
“Alright…. Look, there’s yours, you great big tit. You were sat on it all along!”
“I know.”
“What?”
Just.
3.
He survived the worst hangover in the world.
It was the New Year after they lost Jax, and they all took it a bit harder than they’d reckoned on. Three weeks after losing an agent, you were supposed to be back on track - close agents had a scheduled week off for grief, a second week of light duties, and then ideally back on the streets the second Monday after the event. Cowley said it kept the mind sharp and the heart lean.
But, for some reason, the full impact of Jax not being about the place didn’t hit any of them till three months after the event. They realised this somewhere in between all the agents standing on their desks at the stroke of midnight, saluting thin-air, and going up to the roof of the building to lie on their backs till the sun rose on the new year, telling stories about the man. Their brave lad, their Jax.
Doyle came to him that night, stricken and needing him, needing him to be strong, needing him to be the one who took him home when they all got down from the roof and shuffled off into the weak promise and shimmering sunlight of a new day. But Doyle didn’t want the sunlight, he wanted him, and he’d said so. And when he looked like - that ever-so slightly lost look that sometimes clung to him, the need darkening his eyes, his lips swollen in want - no one could have refused Doyle, even if they’d wanted to. And he hadn’t wanted to.
The next time he opened his eyes - morning or evening, he had no fucking clue which way was up anymore - he felt so sick he thought he was going to die himself. Every movement made his skin prickle and crawl in cold shudders across him, made his stomach clench and twist, and sweat tingle on his brow. Every breath hurt, every thought made him feel sick and, as he lay staring up at the ceiling - too nauseous to close his eyes - he wondered idly if he’d ever survive.
But he did. He survived it because Doyle had survived it with him.
Doyle had moaned continuously into his pillow, annoying the fuck out of him - he would have hit him had he been able to move his arm - swearing not to ever let another drop of alcohol pass his lips. Doyle had stayed in bed with him all day, occasionally mustering up the energy to press wonderfully groggy lips to his, wincing at his own breath, but otherwise content to just lie there and suffer with him.
Doyle had survived with him right up until the sun went down on that first day and they risked trying to stand up. They had stood, wobbling and clutching at one another, having survived the worst self-inflicted day of their lives. And when Doyle curled up next to him on the sofa, drifting into a deep and healing sleep at last, he had known he’d go through it all again, just for that.
4.
He didn’t survive Doyle not surviving.
Doyle not being there to survive it all with him. He didn’t survive that. He didn’t survive Doyle slipping away from him quietly, and with an unforgivable lack of fuss, one Saturday morning while the footie was on and he was out the room, making them both a cuppa.
He didn’t survive that at all.
He did, in everything but himself. He still lived and breathed and worked for Ci5 and went down to the pub with Murphy once in a while and even laughed sometimes, if he’d had a few. He paid his taxes, he went to the cinema, he was still top of his game, he was still a lady-killer with a smile that could dissolve knickers…
But there was nothing behind his eyes anymore. Nothing hidden away, nothing shining through, nothing glimmering beneath the ice. Nothing to be poked or prodded at, nothing to be chivvied out of him - lucky, really, as there was no longer anyone to do any of those things. There was nothing to those rare smiles, those precious snatched moments of happiness those who knew him had once hoped would signal a return to old form. They soon realised it wasn’t as simple as that.
Because he could never forgive Doyle for not making a fuss. For not crying out, for not warning him, for not letting him do anything, for not saying goodbye. Couldn’t forgive him for not going out with the bang, like he lived his life. Couldn’t even forgive him for the tea stain still on the living room carpet of the flat he refused to move out of.
Not having him there, that was it. Fuck partners - he could watch his own sodding back, he’d survived Africa all on his onesie, and more else besides. No, it was everything else, it was everything else he’d never even thought about before. The million and one things he missed, now, was just not having Doyle there.
Not having Doyle there to frown at him when he put four sugars in his tea; not having him there to wind him up when he was bored; not having him there to manhandle when he was feeling frisky; not having him there to nick half his chips and then lecture him on his eating; not having him there to pat on the back when he'd imbibed his own body-weight and was curled around a toilet bowl; not having him there to snort in derision whenever he wore new clothes for the first time; not having him there to wrap an arm round on gloomy nights; not having him there to ram his ice-cold feet under his thigh while they watched the footie-
It was his heart, they’d said. He hadn’t survived the damage done to his heart all those years ago, after all.
And, as he sits alone in the darkness on that self-same sofa, Bodie understands all too well.