trigger_man (
trigger_man) wrote2009-11-10 10:03 pm
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Jack's been keeping an eye on Beckett, and he's starting to have to admit to himself that it's not just out of ordinary human concern. He's worried about her, particularly considering the hallucinations she'd had. Which means that he's started to see her as more than an acquaintance. Maybe not quite a friend, yet, but more than just someone whose name he knows.
He's not sure how he feels about this. He doesn't want to get close to anyone; getting close means getting hurt eventually. And it's not himself getting hurt that he's really worried about.
But even with those misgivings he can't not head up to Beckett's room, carrying a tray from Bar with the kinds of things she needs, or should have. Chicken soup, orange juice, ginger ale, kleenex; it might have been Bar's idea, but Jack had been intending to get a few things anyway.
He shifts the tray to one hand so he can knock on the door. He has her key, of course, but he can't be sure she isn't taking a bath to try and cool off or that she wants the company.
He's not sure how he feels about this. He doesn't want to get close to anyone; getting close means getting hurt eventually. And it's not himself getting hurt that he's really worried about.
But even with those misgivings he can't not head up to Beckett's room, carrying a tray from Bar with the kinds of things she needs, or should have. Chicken soup, orange juice, ginger ale, kleenex; it might have been Bar's idea, but Jack had been intending to get a few things anyway.
He shifts the tray to one hand so he can knock on the door. He has her key, of course, but he can't be sure she isn't taking a bath to try and cool off or that she wants the company.
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He closes his eyes for a moment, trying to push the memory away. That isn't Audrey anymore, and thinking about the way things used to be isn't going to help. He's not sure whether to be glad that those aren't the memories that keep forcing their way to the front of his mind or not.
"Well sit down, at least. Have you been sleeping all this time?" he says, trying to shake off his reverie.
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"Fine," she agrees, and since they're nearer to the living room anyway, she takes a seat on the couch, drawing her legs up underneath her.
"Pretty deeply. I mean, I still feel crappy, but the fever's gone."
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"It all looks fantastic," she admits, and then glances up at him.
"Thank you."
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She relaxes back against the couch cushions, taking a slow sip from the thermos. It soothes the rawness in her throat and warms her insides, and she sighs quietly.
"You would've asked?"
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"The flu still going around? Maybe you shouldn't be heading down either."
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She takes another sip of soup.
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She's not sure whether or not to be grateful for that.
"Is that a problem?"
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She sets down the thermos, reaching for the orange juice, but cradles it in her hand for a minute.
"But my head's tired, and right now, I can't force myself to be bothered."
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She takes a small sip of OJ.
"Jack, I don't want to pry."
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"You worked for CTU, right? Why did you leave?"
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He knows it's maybe not what she was asking about--why he hadn't worked with CTU after the day he'd met Collette--but it's not just because he's trying to avoid telling her, or just because he finds it difficult to talk about. It's a long story and so many pieces are interconnected that it's hard to give a short, simple answer.
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For safety reasons, obviously, but in all her time working for the 12th Precinct, she's never once had to go into hiding (though there was that case with the Russian mob family, after which Will had kindly suggested she lay low - she'd firmly insisted otherwise, of course).
It's something interesting to consider now, with him here, and she nods in thought.
"But you're not planning to work for them again, whether temporarily or not."
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He doubts CTU would be rushing to hire someone that they believed gave up information that ended in the death of an agent.
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For what, she's not sure. Maybe that he'd had to come to that realization in a way that appears to have been really difficult. Maybe that he'd had to come to that realization at all.
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"CTU takes a lot from your life. I tried starting over, having a real life again once before, but like I said, I ended up back there during a crisis."
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"Here's your chance, then," she tells him. "To get your life back."
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