(no subject)
Mar. 7th, 2007 11:23 amTo say that the last week had been a rollercoaster ride would be, at the very minimum, an extreme kindness. Even the most sadistic of rollercoaster engineers on his very worst day couldn't have formulated the kinds of stomach-wrenching turns and heart-palpitating loops that Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital had had to endure in the CDC (and post-CDC) malarkey. House's eighth and ninth biopsies had come back with positive markers for ebola and Cuddy had received an abrupt e-mail a few hours later with a subject line that read
I was right
and a body message of Hold all my calls.
And then he had submerged beneath the hospital's amorphous surface and Cuddy had done what Cuddy did best -- in several nationally-televised press conferences and reports to government figureheads -- and the CDC had taken the boot to the gut (but not politely.) A majority hearing to assess the CDC's role in the crisis was scheduled to begin in the Fall. In the meantime, patients who were being treated for a rogue strand of bird flu were now being treated for a rogue strand of the ebola virus, which had subsequently been traced back to -- uncannily enough -- a Wall Street investor with a flying mammal fascination and a pet store that carried bats without proper vaccinations. Most of the damage to patients had been readily controlled, and Cuddy handled the transition of those patients to several neighboring hospitals. The under-the-radar biopsies were not mentioned. Neither was House's name, though his sudden non-presence in the hospital was enough to send the wiser heads wagging around her door after the press conference broke.
It had taken a few more days before Cuddy could see the top of her desk again, and she was settling into the middle of a Thursday afternoon by clearing her office of the remains of a governmental body. Her desk had been tossed about and there were smudge marks on the spines of her books. Her picture frames had been handled and then tossed back onto the credenza without regard. But, with minor adjustments, Cuddy had begun to tune the instrument of her office back to its proper chord and the hospital was falling in step to the beat.
Which left the matter of House's step -- specifically where it was -- in question. He had ducked all manner of radar since making his brash diagnosis and between dealing with the government, the press, and a worried phalanx of doctors and patients, she hadn't had time to seek him out. Her motivations were not entirely personal. There was a stack of paperwork about a foot and a half high parked on the seat of one of her chairs. Cameron usually ran point on House's mail and House's signature, but there were no cut corners for Cuddy, especially when it could have permanent echoes of impact on the way she did things. She liked how she did things. 'Wanted to avoid more government interaction if at all possible.
By two-thirty she'd had him paged on four separate occasions. She'd rung through to his personal pager. Called his cell phone. Left several messages on his office phone (only one of which she gave her voice to, the other ones recorded her fierce expression as readily as any speech she could make) and even sent a runner up to his lounge and Wilson's office to suss him out. The runner had come back, hedged around the doorframe, and had sullenly reported that House had not been in any of the predescribed locations. Cuddy, in the middle of a last-minute phone call with the CDC, had pushed a 'one minute' finger in the air, then waved him away. She ended the call with an abrupt "No" and hung up.
With a slab of paperwork slung across her hip, Cuddy set out on the trail of one of the most elusive men it had been in her reputation to know. She had encountered Wilson, who looked refreshed by the departure of the CDC but pale when he saw her approach, and he had been characteristically evasive before giving up that House was sitting in on a gall bladder surgery in OR 4.
"He told me to 'hold his calls'," Wilson had said.
Cuddy climbed the sort stairs to the suite above the OR and shouldered into the door, marked irritation in the high lines of her face and in her cheeks. She got a glimpse of a pair of sneakers stuffed up onto the window sill overlooking the surgical suite. A glossy gossip magazine was slung across his stomach. She crossed the distance in short, greedy strides. The chunk of files on her hip was readjusted.
"Gall bladder surgery, House?" she queried from under speculative brows "Did the cable in your office go out?"
I was right
and a body message of Hold all my calls.
And then he had submerged beneath the hospital's amorphous surface and Cuddy had done what Cuddy did best -- in several nationally-televised press conferences and reports to government figureheads -- and the CDC had taken the boot to the gut (but not politely.) A majority hearing to assess the CDC's role in the crisis was scheduled to begin in the Fall. In the meantime, patients who were being treated for a rogue strand of bird flu were now being treated for a rogue strand of the ebola virus, which had subsequently been traced back to -- uncannily enough -- a Wall Street investor with a flying mammal fascination and a pet store that carried bats without proper vaccinations. Most of the damage to patients had been readily controlled, and Cuddy handled the transition of those patients to several neighboring hospitals. The under-the-radar biopsies were not mentioned. Neither was House's name, though his sudden non-presence in the hospital was enough to send the wiser heads wagging around her door after the press conference broke.
It had taken a few more days before Cuddy could see the top of her desk again, and she was settling into the middle of a Thursday afternoon by clearing her office of the remains of a governmental body. Her desk had been tossed about and there were smudge marks on the spines of her books. Her picture frames had been handled and then tossed back onto the credenza without regard. But, with minor adjustments, Cuddy had begun to tune the instrument of her office back to its proper chord and the hospital was falling in step to the beat.
Which left the matter of House's step -- specifically where it was -- in question. He had ducked all manner of radar since making his brash diagnosis and between dealing with the government, the press, and a worried phalanx of doctors and patients, she hadn't had time to seek him out. Her motivations were not entirely personal. There was a stack of paperwork about a foot and a half high parked on the seat of one of her chairs. Cameron usually ran point on House's mail and House's signature, but there were no cut corners for Cuddy, especially when it could have permanent echoes of impact on the way she did things. She liked how she did things. 'Wanted to avoid more government interaction if at all possible.
By two-thirty she'd had him paged on four separate occasions. She'd rung through to his personal pager. Called his cell phone. Left several messages on his office phone (only one of which she gave her voice to, the other ones recorded her fierce expression as readily as any speech she could make) and even sent a runner up to his lounge and Wilson's office to suss him out. The runner had come back, hedged around the doorframe, and had sullenly reported that House had not been in any of the predescribed locations. Cuddy, in the middle of a last-minute phone call with the CDC, had pushed a 'one minute' finger in the air, then waved him away. She ended the call with an abrupt "No" and hung up.
With a slab of paperwork slung across her hip, Cuddy set out on the trail of one of the most elusive men it had been in her reputation to know. She had encountered Wilson, who looked refreshed by the departure of the CDC but pale when he saw her approach, and he had been characteristically evasive before giving up that House was sitting in on a gall bladder surgery in OR 4.
"He told me to 'hold his calls'," Wilson had said.
Cuddy climbed the sort stairs to the suite above the OR and shouldered into the door, marked irritation in the high lines of her face and in her cheeks. She got a glimpse of a pair of sneakers stuffed up onto the window sill overlooking the surgical suite. A glossy gossip magazine was slung across his stomach. She crossed the distance in short, greedy strides. The chunk of files on her hip was readjusted.
"Gall bladder surgery, House?" she queried from under speculative brows "Did the cable in your office go out?"
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 06:06 pm (UTC)Cuddy was annoying like that.
Unsurprised when the overseeing room's door was brushed open, House's sprawl tensed none, even when gaze flicked aside to take note of the intruder and her.. particularly irritated (joy) poise in her approach to him. To demonstrate his lack of concern, he flipped another page in his magazine and resumed rubbing fingertips through the newly-cropped (but still scruffy) lining on his chin.
"..Better lighting in here to read." A minor indication was granted towards the blinding reflection of OR lights through the glass paneling that seperated the rooms.
The lighting was better.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 07:14 pm (UTC)"-- And for purposely avoiding the paperwork you know I have for you," she said, turning her attention back to the slump-backed creature in the chair. She shifted the pile to drive his focus home. "Signatures, House. It'll take you twenty minutes, max." Both hands folded around the clump of papers and hovered them -- in a perfect magazine-obstructing manner -- for his taking. "And don't try and cut corners by having Cameron sign them. These are government docs. I'll compare and contrast if I have to. And you won't like me when I have to come find you again and make you do them over."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 07:22 pm (UTC)House refused to reach and take them from her. He was curious to see how defined her upper body strength was to hold an awkward weight like that out over a surface (this surface being his lap) without the support of tucking her elbow. Mentally, he gave it 20 seconds before her forearm started to burn.
..he started to count, and stalled as he did so, eyes checking their way back up toward her.
"If you knew I was just going to hand them to Cameron and tell her to sign them, why didn't you just take them to her in the first place? Get her to sign the first round, do your compare and contrast, then come and bother me for round two." She could have just cut out the leg work they were -both- going to have to perform (her coming to him, him going to Cameron) and saved her energy for when she brought the files to him to be officially signed after Cameron failed to scrape by.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 07:34 pm (UTC)Uncomfortable arcs of heat began pooling from her shoulderblades and into her upper arm.
"You want to continue being childish and deny a half-dozen leukemia patients their right to a new set of Legos? Then start signing."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 07:44 pm (UTC)"..I think I can afford a few Legos." That sort of threat wasn't going to work on him, especially considering the amusement value of making Cuddy use her time in a day to chase him around and try to bully him into doing things he didn't want to do. You'd think by now she'd set aside a certain amount of time every day for dealing with him.
She already set aside money, time was just the next progression.
Eyes sank to her arm briefly -- notably, not to the paperwork.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 08:15 pm (UTC)Wrangled stack away from her chest and placed it, mindful of corners, in his lap. Her arms were bouyant from the release and prickled with resumed bloodflow.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 08:31 pm (UTC)Just for this, he was going to have Cameron sign 5 of the sheets and he was going to stash them at random intervals throughout the stack of papers just to see if she actually checked them or not.
"Tyrant. You know, the CDC didn't make me sign papers."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 08:56 pm (UTC)It had been out of courtesy to him that Cuddy had refused any and all courtship offers from the media. And there had been plenty. House, one of the youngest and fastest-turnover nominees in decades, had an entourage of scientific, academic, public and private interest groups all scrabbling for a soundbyte. Cuddy had spared him that, but she was not beneath reconsidering if it meant furthering the smooth operation of her hospital.
At the moment, House and his two-hundred signatures were contingent on maintaining that.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 09:15 pm (UTC)She wouldn't pull her finger out of the P.R. dam because the notion of House himself handling it was most likely terrifying -- especially if he was irritated with Cuddy when he did it. He'd go out of his way to make things worse.
Even so, he didn't want even that sort of interaction with the press and now turned narrowed eyes up on her with skeptical annoyance; the sort of skepticallity he held when he was really tempted to call her bluff but fearful enough to not do it.... yet.
Carefully, he curled digits around the god-awful-ugly pen and twisted it into his palm, as much of a mark of concession as he'd allow.
"This is the last time I ever save -you- from a CDC take-over. I'll just sit on my diagnosis next time."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 09:37 pm (UTC)"No," she said, "you won't. Because you've got the instinctive urge to meddle and second-guess. Just like I," with inward fingers of possession, "have an instinctive urge to second-guess your second-guessing."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 09:54 pm (UTC)Perhaps it was a little juvenile to be lashing out at her more obvious quirks when he had a closet full of his own, but it was what she had to expect, coming to him and peddling a day's and arm cramp's worth of signatures despite the fact that he'd just saved her hospital from another week or so (or however long it took the CDC to figure out it wasn't the bird flu) of governmental control.
"I bet I wouldn't have to sign 200 pieces of paper if I took that Infectuous Disease job Mark Portillo has been trying to fill up at Yale, either." He frowned down at the stack before finally reaching to shift it in his lap so that it didn't fall out. Cameron would undoubtedly be seeing part of the stack, no matter what Cuddy said. She'd all but challenged him to do so.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 10:05 pm (UTC)'Shifted a half glance across her shoulder at him. He'd rearranged the pile. She could now see the outline of the cane tucked behind him. The slant of mouth and brow made idle theory of his comment about switching positions. "Mark wouldn't hire you," she said, and rolled amusement around in her mouth like small stones, "aside from a reputation the size of a small principality that precedes you -- that includes ethics breaches, law suits, subpoenas, publicized drug addiction, enough speeding and parking violations to shut down the traffic bureau -- you're overqualified for Yale."
With her eyes on the surgery: "-- And I told him not to."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-07 10:40 pm (UTC)Cuddy apparently was playing the glutton-for-punishment card today. She wanted to get a rise out of him, and she pushed all the right buttons in suggesting that someone wouldn't hire him strictly because she had said not to.
House blinked, staring at her, then immediately frowned. "What do you mean, you 'told him not to'? Do you call around every time you hear abotu a job I might actually be interested in getting and sabotage it? Little territorial aren't you?" Now he was severely considering contacting the man about the job despite not even wanting it, just because she had overstepped her bounds in attempting to prevent him from taking it in the first place.
Reaching behind him to where he'd set the cane to the wall, he snagged it and forced himself to his feet, shouldering the weight of the files into a tuck against his left side as he did so. He was about to go start making phone calls.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-08 01:17 am (UTC)"You're not interested in the job," she said. Her tone was decisive. "Even if you were, you have to admit that you've got it good here. You wouldn't last a week under Mark --" she leaned forward, dropping her tone to an arch musing "-- he's not as creative as I am."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-08 01:49 am (UTC)Bracing his cane against his leg a bit more tightly, eyes pinned down on her, curious as much as he was wary. She was standing closer to him than she typically did at work, as well.
Pursing his lips thoughtfully for a moment, he adjusted his posture to emulate her lean, closing the distance further until his head, hung forward as if on a hinge, had to hitch closer to his chest at the chin so he could continue meeting her gaze.
"Is that what you call it? 'Creative'? I'll admit I've got it good here if you admit you called him for your own selfish reasons -- nothing to do with what I wanted or what's good for the hospital. You don't want me going anywhere."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-08 02:38 am (UTC)She kept her ground, dropped and rolled her shoulders back to confident stations. She had meant at first to temper the level of her smile, but it spread, unwieldy and of its own volition, and she nearly lost her hold on his eyes because of it.
"I want those signatures, House."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-08 02:47 am (UTC)Suddenly, his expression wiped from its studious turn, contouring out easily into indifference and he rolled shoulders back into a shrug of emphasis. "Fine. I'll call him after I've signed your papers." Turning just as promptly from her as the facial change, he balanced himself and faltered into a hastened limp for the door.
The gall bladder surgery had been very, very boring anyway. At least in his office he could crank up his iPod while he signed.
And if he got bored, the ducklings and Wilson alike were close. He could take a break and bother them.