[identity profile] foreman-eric-md.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] wooedforyears
Foreman didn't wake up to the sound of an alarm clock. He roused slowly, his mind becoming aware of sensations before he opened his eyes. The heat of House's body pressed against him, the languid comfort of having slept himself out, the accommodating softness of the bed and pillows, and the slow, even rate of his own breathing. His body hummed with unhurried arousal, leftover from a dream he couldn't remember. Foreman rolled his shoulders, stretching lazily, not wanting to move more than he had to. When he extended his legs to work out a kink in his calf, his hips moved forward almost involuntarily, rubbing his dick against the material of his boxers and nudging House's leg. The undertone of pleasure coiled low in his stomach, warmer and slightly more insistent. Foreman wasn't hard--not more than halfway, anyhow--but it wouldn't take much, and it made him even less willing to open his eyes. He'd rather enjoy it for now, as long as he didn't have to wake up.

The only reason he could think that he hadn't been jerked out of sleep too early by the blare of the alarm was that it was Saturday. Had to be. He always set the alarm. The night before came back slowly. Taking House home. Being jolted awake when House's pain got bad. Arguing until he was exhausted, and finally forcing House to accept that he wasn't leaving when he didn't feel like walking out at two in the morning. But those memories brought back others, like finishing their lupus case the night before and learning about Thirteen's diagnosis, and Foreman finally opened his eyes when he remembered that yesterday had been Thursday, which meant it was Friday, which meant the last thing he should be doing was lying around in bed debating whether to do something about his hard-on now or in the shower, as if it was the weekend.

He was in House's bed. He'd known that, but he'd forgotten the corollary--House was always, always late to work. Foreman lifted his head, blinking. House was lying beside him, looking the worse for wear after the night he'd had, hair tangled with dried sweat, exhaustion darkening the bags under his eyes, his stubble looking even more unkempt than usual. Foreman firmly ignored the twinge of concern and tenderness at seeing House not in any immediate pain, and even more firmly told off his dick for still being interested. The light was strong enough in the room that it had to be well into the morning. Christ, it was probably ten or eleven, and they were both disastrously late, even by House's dismal standards.

Foreman scrubbed one hand across his face, stared at the nightstand, trying to figure out why the hell he hadn't set the alarm, even if it was House's. But he and House had been fighting most of the night, first over checking his biopsies and then over his pain, and Foreman hadn't thought of it. He hadn't even realized House had books and journals and pill bottles all over his bedside table, but no alarm clock. "You don't have a clock?" Foreman said, loud and incredulous, pushing away from House even though part of him definitely didn't want to go.

Date: 2009-03-19 03:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
Foreman's outburst, his glare, was enough to make House grin--it helped that the grin would probably do more to piss Foreman off. Despite the highway-speeds and semi-reckless driving, House knew he'd been in control of the car and wouldn't run off the road on his own, like Foreman seemed to believe. Hilarious as hell to make Foreman believe it, though, and God, it always felt so good to let loose on a road--way better on a motorcycle--and feel that adrenaline. House threw the car into park and revved the engine, just for fun, to burn Foreman's fuel, and said, "Technically it's your fault for staying in the first place. If Wilson found me alone in bed, it wouldn't have been any different from any other morning I decided not to answer my damn phone."

House was about to throw the car back into drive--the light had just changed--and drive slightly less recklessly to Foreman's place. The long way. But Foreman reached over before he could stop him, turned off the car, and took his keys. Now it was his turn to glare. "Keep away? In a car? This would have been much more fun back at the apartment," he said, and lunged across the seat to try to reach for the keys. He wasn't budging. If Foreman thought he was going to give up the driver's seat just because he'd taken the keys, he was in for a surprise.

Date: 2009-03-19 06:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
House ignored Foreman's words--no burning ears this time, either--and refused to let Foreman deter him from reaching for the keys. He gritted his teeth when Foreman chuckled, aware that he must look like an idiot. "I'd have more fun with the car in 'drive'. Gimme." He stopped reaching, flexing his hand, not fully believing that Foreman would actually fork over the keys. This wasn't a case, a differential, a superior ordering a subordinate, and he had no doubt that Foreman would remind him of the equal ground they were walking here.

A few hand-flexes later, House threw himself back into his seat, glaring at Foreman for a moment before settling back, glancing from window to window. He tapped out a rhythm on the steering wheel, switching tactics to drive Foreman's annoyance level through the roof, maybe get the keys back that way. "Fine, we'll sit." He started expanding his spontaneous drum-set to the dashboard, the door. "We can play 'name that tune'."

Date: 2009-03-19 08:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
When Foreman spoke, House paused his drumming and glanced back at Foreman. He couldn't remember saying that, but it sounded like him. It was true that Foreman was better when he argued. Well, not always, like now. House started drumming again, giving it some thought, but not intending to reply. Before he could get very far, Foreman suddenly reached across the shifter, stuck the key back in the ignition, and declared that House had won. Well, that was too easy.

House quirked an eyebrow at him, turning the key to turn on the car, and started looking around. The reason for Foreman's sudden change of heart was obvious when House glanced in the rear-view mirror. Another car had stopped behind them, and Foreman didn't want him to cause problems. Of course. This called for a change of plan. He'd been hoping to floor it again, squeal through the intersection, but now that seemed like he'd almost be giving Foreman what he wanted--a speedy drive to his place, then to work, no holding up traffic. The opposite, while it wouldn't give Foreman a heart attack, would still probably annoy him, and would be fun in other ways. So, shifting the car into 'drive', House responded with a wide closed-mouth grin, and started to crawl through the intersection when the light turned green. Foreman could probably get out and push the car faster.

Date: 2009-03-20 04:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
It didn't take long for several things to happen. In the span of a minute, the car behind them swerved around him, flipped him off, and continued on its not-so-merry way, and Foreman, whose reaction House was much more interested in, started to show signs of frustration. Sure, House had wanted to drive, but only because he knew that's what Foreman didn't want, and when Foreman had given in too easily, House knew he wouldn't feel victorious unless he succeeded in his goal despite what Foreman did. If Foreman wanted to hurry up, he'd go slow. If Foreman wanted to play nice with other drivers, he'd be a pain in the ass. Way more satisfying when he succeeded that way.

House eventually brought the car up to a normal speed, but started taking obscure roads to reach Foreman's apartment. "Nope," he said, finally answering Foreman's question. "Just need you to do what you always do." Foreman was, and always had been, challenging, and that kind of person--the kind that could push, be direct, and stand their ground--worked well with him. Professionally, in a relationship. And it was something about Foreman that made House think this wasn't such a terrible idea. Not that he was thinking about it.

Date: 2009-03-20 07:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
Foreman's words made it clear that he didn't quite understand what made House interested in him, but introspection wasn't really necessary. Foreman would be who he was, would fight him and argue with him, and not let him walk all over him--same as always--and House didn't need to specify that those qualities were what pulled him toward Foreman in the first place, even before this ridiculous, convoluted mess of a relationship. So Foreman was partly right, at least he was right when it came to this; he didn't want Foreman to change. He wasn't about to spill all that, though, especially not when Foreman seemed to get most of the picture. Silence would be confirmation enough, and he kept driving. He glanced at the dashboard clock; he wondered if there was much use going in at all. Foreman seemed to grab that thought out of his brain and say it out loud, and House turned his head quickly to look at him.

"You? Play hooky?" House flapped his lips with a fast exhale of disbelief, but he was already giving it some thought. The fellows probably would figure this out--especially Taub, the observant and dry little Jewish bastard--but they would definitely figure it out if they didn't show up at all. Wilson and Cuddy would, too. House had never missed a day of work, even when the pain was bad, and if he tried to use that as an excuse, he knew he'd sound off alarm bells in their heads. Wilson was already suspicious, and it wouldn't take him long to put together the strange briefcase with the fact that Foreman was also missing. They'd know something was up. He wasn't sure if he was ready for that. House turned the car onto a main street, heading for Foreman's apartment again as he shook his head, tsk-ing. "I can't believe you're making me be the responsible one."

Date: 2009-03-21 12:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
House continued driving as Foreman reached for his phone; his was in his pocket--turned off--and he wasn't about to check. He already knew the possibilities, and, at this point, anything any of them had to say didn't matter. After Wilson had left, they'd all probably given up anyway. House reached for the radio, flipping through the stations, when Foreman spoke again. "Excuse me for not enjoying it when my personal life is spread all over the hospital," he said, settling on a radio station. As much as House liked to pry into everyone else's personal lives, he didn't make their lives the talk of the hospital. He did it to learn. Learn valuable things about his potential team members. The important things. He already knew they were decent enough doctors. The medical chops really weren't what he was interested in; if it was, he would have been able to choose three based on resumes. But he was interested in things that could only be found through prying. When other people pried into his life, the goal seemed to be embarrassment, some kind of nosy harassment. In Wilson and Cuddy's case, it seemed to go along the lines of "doing what was best for him", as if he couldn't decide for himself. He didn't owe any of these people anything, especially his fellows. He wasn't the one trying to impress anyone, or land a job. So, no, nobody needed to find out about this. It wasn't for them to know.

They were close to the apartment when Foreman began spouting a potential cover story. Would have been great if it wasn't a reminder of the incident surrounding Marty's phone call, which House still hadn't forgotten about, and was still wary about. As a story, it worked. Well, he'd have to twist it if Wilson asked, which he would, House was sure, but he could work out the details later. "Yeah, because you sure as hell wouldn't tell me if you actually did have a job interview." With Marty. For a job in L.A., he wanted to add, but he figured Foreman could fill in the blanks himself. Outside the apartment, House stopped the car and got out. He hated that he still felt pissed off about that, that there were lingering questions that were still unanswered. He hated even more that he found himself going along with the idea of participating in Foreman's excuse. Of course, there was no reason why he wouldn't be able to embellish on a few details, make Foreman's interview seem less than stellar on his part. He stopped beside the main door of the building, waiting for Foreman and said loud enough for him to hear, almost disappointed that he knew he was right. "She'd probably buy it, though."

Date: 2009-03-21 05:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
When Foreman made a grab for his keys, House tried to keep them away, just for a second, for fun, but Foreman got hold of them too fast. House frowned, pouting slightly, and watched Foreman unlock the door. The frown deepened, and he added a defiant squint, when Foreman tried to tell him that he kicked ass at his make-believe interview. Lately it didn't seem like Foreman was kicking ass at any interview, including the one he'd had--if it had even been an interview, maybe more like a negotiation--with Cuddy.

"Oh, no," House said, following Foreman inside and toward the elevator. He jabbed at the call button with his cane before leaning against the wall. "If you're going to make this story believable, you have to make it clear that yet another employer hated you because you worked for me. Worked like me. You got your ass kicked out the door as soon as I clued them in on your more shining moments."

Date: 2009-03-21 08:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
"That's the best you've got? Wishful thinking? Too bad it's true. Or at least it has been lately," he said, refusing to think about Marty and L.A. and whatever the hell was waiting for Foreman there, if he chose to take it. "Well, not too bad for me--" House stopped himself, about to let on that Foreman was actually better to have around than he even originally thought. He'd admitted to Foreman, right before he'd left, that he'd wanted him to stay, only to have it shoved back in his face. The old team was disbanded now, sure, but Foreman was still as helpful in differentials as he'd always been. He was helpful, challenging, helped him think. But he didn't need to actually tell Foreman that and stroke his ego. "And not too bad for you either, since I'm betting that you've gotten laid more in the past couple weeks than you have, well, since you've been here anyway. Unless Chase wasn't the only one Cameron was banging in the closet."

The elevator stopped and opened, depositing them at Foreman's floor, and House stepped into the hallway. His own remark made him grin, and he let his musings tumble out of his mouth. "What is it with you three and closets? Though, I have to admit, your case was way funnier. Irony like that wins every time." Now that the incident was past them, House let himself feel smug about it, that he'd actually gotten Foreman to hide in his damn closet in the first place. That Foreman had stayed in it at all. Even easier to be smug when he and Foreman had already planned an excuse to cover it all.

Date: 2009-03-22 01:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
House sneered at Foreman's remark. Yeah, he figured that he hadn't 'broken any records', since Foreman was good looking and sharp enough to get a relationship if he wanted one, but, as far as House knew, he hadn't wanted one. Not seriously enough to pursue one that lasted more than a couple weeks. Foreman would probably be able to keep it a secret if he had--it seemed theirs was a case in point--but Foreman hadn't been good at keeping secrets from him, and if House had a reason to think something was up in Foreman's personal life--which it rarely was--he would have found out. He might not have broken records, but he might if things kept going the way they were. But it wasn't something he really wanted to mull over. All he knew was that, whether Foreman wanted to admit it or not, they were both having some great sex, and getting into arguments like this was old hat. Which, in a way, it was.

House tilted his head, refused to be ruffled by Foreman's burst of anger, and chose to use it for his own amusement instead. "It seemed like the most appropriate place to put you," House said, smirking, half-preparing for a stronger outburst, or an eye-roll. Either would be typical. Instead, he got Foreman, shirtless, shoving his shirt against his chest. His eyes dropped down to Foreman's chest before he could stop himself, then rose back to Foreman's face. Despite what Foreman actually said, it seemed like there was something else bothering him despite the fact that he'd been shoved into a closet. House watched him for a second, trying to read Foreman's tone better. "Do you not want to hide it?"

Date: 2009-03-22 03:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
"We're fucking in the sleep lab?" House asked, calling after Foreman as he started heading for his bedroom. "Snippy," he mumbled to himself once Foreman was out of earshot, still standing in Foreman's living room. Foreman hadn't really answered his question. All he could tell was that Foreman had a problem with getting caught with his pants down. He couldn't know from Foreman's answer whether or not he actually had a problem with hiding all of this. House sure as hell wasn't prepared to spread it around. He wouldn't want to spread any relationship around, but he couldn't help but wonder if Foreman cared as much as he seemed to let on. He hadn't been all that frazzled by the fact that he'd outed him in front of a roomful of fellows. There was only one factor that Foreman would actually be ashamed of, one thing about this that he'd want to keep hidden.

Gripping his shirt in one hand, House made his way into the bathroom, finding Foreman already in the shower, and leaned against the door once he'd closed it. "It's because it's me, isn't it?" he asked, speaking loud enough that Foreman would hear him over the sound of the shower. "It's bad enough that your reputation's been damaged because you worked for me. If people found out that you're sleeping with me, well, you could just kiss the rest of your career goodbye."

Date: 2009-03-22 06:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
Cornering Foreman while he was in the shower was convenient, even if Foreman could--and would, if he felt like it--brush him off. Foreman seemed angry enough to spout the truth, though, and even though House always preferred it--reality over a soothing lie--Foreman's reply still jolted him enough to make him stare hard at Foreman through the frosted shower doors. He felt the furrow of his brow as he thought about that response. Foreman wanted hide this solely because House was involved, and House was certain that it had everything to do with his professional reputation. Foreman barely had any friends to worry about, if he had any at all, and his family never seemed high on his list of priorities. A guy who doesn't return home for that long wouldn't care about curbing his behavior to parental expectations. His career was all that was left. Respect. Foreman wouldn't get respect if people heard about this particular personal relationship, no matter how good of a doctor he was, and House, personally, didn't give a damn.

He did, however, care about the fact that Foreman knew all of this, but was taking the risk. It was more flattering than House would admit to Foreman, and it was a risk he probably didn't deserve. Foreman wouldn't risk his career for somebody he thought was a worthless asshole and a decent lay. He met Foreman's eyes when Foreman got out of the shower, reaching for a towel. He still leaned against the door, making no move to hand Foreman his towel or get out of the way. Foreman's question was stupid; House was sure he already knew the answer, or maybe he already forgot about being shoved inside his closet.

House rolled his eyes. "I was thinking a Mexican fiesta in the lobby. Think Cuddy would foot the bill for a mariachi band?" House knew that, at some point, people would find out. Hound him. Both of them. Not leave it alone. He could wait for that day; he wasn't about to help it arrive any faster. He was still trying to work through this himself. The entire situation, what he wanted, what Foreman wanted. It was still intriguing that Foreman seemed to want him enough to risk his reputation, and House couldn't quite get that implied confession out of his head. He studied Foreman, waiting until he was mostly dried off, just before he'd probably want to leave the room, and said, "You know I'm a danger to your reputation, but you're with me anyway."

Date: 2009-03-22 06:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] house-greg-md.livejournal.com
House stayed silent, dropping his gaze to the floor when Foreman asked if he should start analyzing this. The fact that Foreman wasn't was interesting. Foreman, who always covered his ass and looked before he leaped. House either was, in fact, that charming or sex made Foreman a moron. It made House wonder, but not ask--never ask--what Foreman's brain would tell him once it kicked in, after the sex stopped being new. When Foreman spoke again, House snapped his eyes back up to Foreman's face. The thought of Foreman ending this made his stomach twist, and, God, he hated that. Hated that he even gave a damn about it. "Nope," House said, shaking his head once.

He wouldn't ask Foreman what had changed, what had made Foreman decide that House was suddenly a worthwhile risk to his reputation; it was a pathetic, needy question. It was bad enough that the question was nagging at him, and it would be even worse if he actually spoke it. There were times when pushing Foreman would get him what he was after, but House had a feeling that this time, if he pushed, it would encourage Foreman to dump him for his own good, pursue more job interviews, end up in L.A., and leave House in the Princeton dust. Again. No, he'd dig for answers another way, keep it in the back of his mind for later. He was interested, but he could wait.

Without any explanation, House turned and left the room, returning to Foreman's living room to stretch across the couch. He turned on the TV to make his brain shut up while he absently reached for his Vicodin in his pocket and threw one back.

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