(no subject)
Mar. 29th, 2007 09:42 amIt was a rule of nature that disasters occurred when you least expected them. It was, in essence, what made them disasters in the first place. It was being blindsided by Fate; smacked upside the head by Destiny; or thrown beneath the bus of Bad Luck that made a manageable event into a category five disaster. It was also a rule of nature -- albeit one slightly lesser known -- that most palpable disasters happened on Thursday afternoons, just when the providence of the weekend had begun to descend. Just when you thought that you might squeak by to the end of the week without bloodshed, discord, or the roof caving in.
The unthinkable rang through on Cuddy's personal line at 3:47 pm.
She had been occupied for most of the morning and through lunch with fundraising meetings, transplant committee decisions, an hour of her budgeted clinic rotation, and a quick cup of unflavoured yogurt over the steering column of her car. She was buzzing on productivity, fired up by progress and perked by the fact that House hadn't unnecessarily amputated a patient's anything in over a week. She was as pleased as she could be and expected nothing of malice to come out of her cellphone, which buzzed an incoming call at 3:47.
"This is Lisa Cuddy."
"Lisa? This is your mother."
Cold, dripped-down-stomach feeling that stayed until well after she hung up. The walk back to the hospital buzzed, but put cold patches beneath her chin and under her arms. She plunged into a meeting and washed her hands of the phone call for a solid hour, but it returned when she dismissed the shirts and ties and went back to the quietude of her office. The sun was too warm on her back. She took off her jacket and hung it on the back of the chair. Sat, palms pressed to the top of her desk, while sorting out mental pabulum. It was another hour before she wrestled herself from her chair and down the hall to the elevators. The fourth floor was dappled in sun: House had thrown the blinds to his office wide open and the entirety of the Diagnostics suite was blazing with late afternoon light. His team was in the lounge, poring over a stack of files with their noses to paper. House himself was in his office. Cuddy saw his back throw a long, wolfish shadow on the carpet. She tapped two knuckles to the back of his door, steeled herself, and went in.
"Need to talk to you --" a glance to the glass partition, then back "-- privately."
The unthinkable rang through on Cuddy's personal line at 3:47 pm.
She had been occupied for most of the morning and through lunch with fundraising meetings, transplant committee decisions, an hour of her budgeted clinic rotation, and a quick cup of unflavoured yogurt over the steering column of her car. She was buzzing on productivity, fired up by progress and perked by the fact that House hadn't unnecessarily amputated a patient's anything in over a week. She was as pleased as she could be and expected nothing of malice to come out of her cellphone, which buzzed an incoming call at 3:47.
"This is Lisa Cuddy."
"Lisa? This is your mother."
Cold, dripped-down-stomach feeling that stayed until well after she hung up. The walk back to the hospital buzzed, but put cold patches beneath her chin and under her arms. She plunged into a meeting and washed her hands of the phone call for a solid hour, but it returned when she dismissed the shirts and ties and went back to the quietude of her office. The sun was too warm on her back. She took off her jacket and hung it on the back of the chair. Sat, palms pressed to the top of her desk, while sorting out mental pabulum. It was another hour before she wrestled herself from her chair and down the hall to the elevators. The fourth floor was dappled in sun: House had thrown the blinds to his office wide open and the entirety of the Diagnostics suite was blazing with late afternoon light. His team was in the lounge, poring over a stack of files with their noses to paper. House himself was in his office. Cuddy saw his back throw a long, wolfish shadow on the carpet. She tapped two knuckles to the back of his door, steeled herself, and went in.
"Need to talk to you --" a glance to the glass partition, then back "-- privately."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-30 03:32 pm (UTC)Intrigued as he was, he couldn't quite whip around and study her for it, so he merely turned and lifted his brows. "You mean other than just pretending it's opposite day and all the implied nos in that speech actually meaning yes, right?" She was testy and potentially murderous, so after an instant of considering her, he relaxed the needling in favor of stating. "..No, I didn't misconstrue it." Close as she would get to a concession and promise to do as requested.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-30 03:44 pm (UTC)It really wasn't a big deal; she was more taken by nerves than anything else and was mentally castigating herself for this show of hesitation and uncertainness. She pushed her toes into the tips of her shoes and found some resolve in the hardness of the floor. Trepidation passed over her like a wave, then was gone. She would be honest. She wouldn't be vulnerable.
"My parents are coming into town tonight." This, by itself, no real ordeal. Then: "They want to meet you."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-30 05:15 pm (UTC)They want to meet you.
House shuffled, adjusting his grasp on his cane to support himself as he rolled back on his heels, keeping his expression controlled. "They want to meet me, the diagnostician whom you've worked with for the past ten years or they want to meet me, the guy you've been sleeping with for the past few months?"
no subject
Date: 2007-03-30 05:44 pm (UTC)She drew in a short breath. "Neither. Both." An upward lift of her eyebrows; fingers repositioning themselves on her hip. "I didn't use either of those exact descriptions when I talked to them. They know you by reputation -- you were the 'thing that finally got me out of the office for more than two hours' when we went to Stockholm." Her parents had been thrilled at that and had clipped the newspaper article detailing the event (complete with a grainy photograph of House in black tie, looking baleful over his award, Cuddy in the background) and mailed her a copy.
"They know I've been involved with you professionally; they've only recently been told that I'm involved with you personally."
no subject
Date: 2007-03-30 08:16 pm (UTC)"..Maybe you should rent out Wilson for the night? I'm really not the 'take home to meet the parents' kind of guy. I think it's the baggy clothes and blackeyeliner." Or just a toxic personality. Take your pick.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-31 12:19 am (UTC)A slight wag of her head. "It's really a non-issue." She was pressed things into order within her brain; knowing that he was right: there was no telling what House was capable of when goaded into being civil. "I just wanted you to be aware."