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house-greg-md.livejournal.com) wrote in
wooedforyears2009-03-28 02:11 am
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November 24, 2007 -- Late Afternoon
For the past week, all during their case, Foreman had been trying to rein House in, demand he pick fellows, try to tell him how to conduct the case, look for a diagnosis, as if he'd respect his Cuddy-given-powers and listen. House had brushed him off (well, until he'd actually been right and his advice actually made sense), thinking that if this was Foreman's idea of retaliation--boss him around in front of his team--then it was pathetic. House wasn't even going to acknowledge it. He intentionally avoided Foreman any other time. After the car ride, and the forced avoidance that followed once they got to work, House realized that it was a tactic he could use. He felt smug about it, imagining Foreman brooding, fuming with possessive jealousy because he'd jerked off to memories of an ex-boyfriend that he didn't even know anymore, hadn't seen since his residency had ended decades ago. But apparently it was enough to get to Foreman; he already felt that possessive over him to get pissed off over something like that, as if people didn't fantasize about ex-partners, or even strangers.
Secretly pleased with himself--it helped that he conned Cuddy into getting the fellows he wanted, too--he'd made Foreman sweat it out. He'd resisted the temptation to knock on Foreman's door and get him so turned on he wouldn't be able to turn him away. He'd masturbated instead, certain that Foreman had jerked off to images of what he'd done in the car. Foreman had gotten so hard then, so horny that he hadn't been able to control himself, and House doubted he'd exercised much control when he was alone. It was all too good.
He sat around for most of Saturday, passing most of the afternoon, considering dropping by Foreman's place just out of curiosity, just to see what the hell Foreman would do. Why not, he thought. He had nothing better to do for the next day and a half and he hadn't had a chance to rub this in Foreman's face at work. He still had a grin on his face when he arrived at Foreman's door, sneaking in with a building resident--the cripple card really came in handy sometimes--and knocked on the door, waiting for Foreman to swing it open.
Secretly pleased with himself--it helped that he conned Cuddy into getting the fellows he wanted, too--he'd made Foreman sweat it out. He'd resisted the temptation to knock on Foreman's door and get him so turned on he wouldn't be able to turn him away. He'd masturbated instead, certain that Foreman had jerked off to images of what he'd done in the car. Foreman had gotten so hard then, so horny that he hadn't been able to control himself, and House doubted he'd exercised much control when he was alone. It was all too good.
He sat around for most of Saturday, passing most of the afternoon, considering dropping by Foreman's place just out of curiosity, just to see what the hell Foreman would do. Why not, he thought. He had nothing better to do for the next day and a half and he hadn't had a chance to rub this in Foreman's face at work. He still had a grin on his face when he arrived at Foreman's door, sneaking in with a building resident--the cripple card really came in handy sometimes--and knocked on the door, waiting for Foreman to swing it open.
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He barged inside, trying to keep himself casual enough that his walk and his expression wouldn't scream 'jealous boyfriend' as he blew past the hostess and into the dining room. "Foreman!" House was tempted to shout out 'Eric' for the shock, but decided against it. He'd use it when Foreman had more of his attention. House reached the booth, ignoring the stares at he arrived and slid into the booth next to Marty, putting Marty between him and Foreman. Maximum discomfort for both Marty and Foreman. "Is this the new boyfriend you wanted me to meet? Oh, wait," House said, turning his head to stare at Marty, "I met you already. The last time you came to try to steal my employee."
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Marty glanced between the two of them, and if he noticed Foreman's anger, it only made his smile that much more strained. "Hi, Greg," he said, still trying to hold onto the shreds of his affability. He looked like he hoped Foreman was going to save him; Foreman was too infuriated to tell him that he couldn't even save himself. "This isn't about a job. I thought Eric would have told you--"
"What the hell are you doing here?" Foreman interrupted. He barely bit back the words I thought you were too damn busy to think of me, and instead, he shook his head in disgust. "As if I couldn't figure that out."
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House tried to hide the way he wanted to burn holes straight through Marty's God damn prick-face, but he turned his anger on Foreman as soon as he spoke. "I was hungry," House said, smiling tightly, as if hunger was the most obvious and only possible reason he could have for being here, at the table--not their, Marty and Foreman's, table. He reached across Marty and scooped up Foreman's wine glass. "And thirsty." House held Foreman's gaze, refusing to look away as he leaned over Marty and threw back a mouthful of Foreman's wine.
"Why else would I be here?" he asked, setting down the glass, but keeping his fingers hooked around the stem. Maybe if he got buzzed, he wouldn't feel all this jealousy creeping up on him. He might also fail to realize if he was revealing too much. On the upside, the latter might make Marty uncomfortable enough to get the hell out of here. House just wasn't sure yet if he wanted to stay clear-headed for this or not. He raised the glass for another sip, decided to test the waters.
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Because you think you're the center of the fucking universe, he thought viciously, half-wishing House could read his thoughts. Foreman wasn't going to say it out loud--he wasn't going to let loose half of what he was thinking. They didn't need to make a scene, certainly not in front of Marty. "I'm sorry," Foreman told him tightly. And pointedly, for House's sake, "I didn't think I'd be needed tonight."
"If you two need to work something out--" Marty looked like he'd take any reason as an excuse to flee.
Foreman shook his head sharply. "It's not a problem." He glared at House. He wasn't going to abandon Marty now just because House showed up, probably expecting exactly that. "I'm sure House wasn't going to stay."
Foreman wanted to know how the fuck House had found him. He'd been more than careful this time. Nothing on his computer, which was password protected anyway. No messages saved on his cellphone--he'd even considered deleting Marty's contact information. He certainly hadn't written anything down, not the restaurant name, not the date, not the time, not the directions.
Foreman's gaze snapped to Marty. He'd called Foreman at home to leave new directions. Left a message. That was the only fucking way House could have found out--he'd been at Foreman's place. "You broke in to my apartment?" he demanded, forgetting to keep his voice low. Marty's eyes widened, but Foreman ignored him, keeping his glare trained on House.
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House held Foreman's glare, not showing one hint that it had ruffled him. He gave Foreman another tight grin, thinking about his response--no way he was going to clue Foreman into the fact that he had a key now. "You should really think about added security. Anyone could have broken in. Someone, oh, I don't know, looking for a new plasma screen TV," House said, as if he'd just done Foreman a favor by proving how lax his locks were. "Hell, I did it, and I'm not even black."
House drained the rest of the wine, finishing it off with a loud lip-smack and satisfied, "Aah." He set the glass down and slid it across the table toward Foreman, a little to his right, leaving it up to him to catch it before it flew off the table and broke on the floor. Distraction launched like a torpedo, House turned to Marty, a false-friendly grin on his face. House wasn't sure he'd ever seen Marty so frazzled; the man was almost always composed to the point of driving House up a damn wall, but now he looked as though he were calculating a run for the door like it was a prison break. "So Marty," he said, "what brings you so far from L.A., if it's not to poach on other people's territory?"
Marty pressed himself a little harder against the seat, and House wondered how far he'd have to push before Marty ended up in Foreman's fucking lap, and if Foreman would even push him away. "My wife's in-laws invited us over for the holidays and--"
"In-laws, right," House said, not keeping the disbelief out of his voice. "Need time away? A reprieve from the same-old-same-old?" The question wasn't without its implications, and House didn't try to hide them. Marty's uncomfortable, nervous laugh made House move in even closer, force Marty into Foreman's space even more. "Torturous small talk with your in-laws isn't worth the same piece of ass"--House's eyes flickered to Foreman--"right? Why not go for something--"
"Excuse me, gentlemen. Are you ready to order?" A damn waiter cut House off, and House slid back into his part of the booth and straightened up.
House shot the waiter a glare, hoping the idiot would take the hint and make this as quick as possible. "New York strip," House said, blurting out the first common menu item that came to mind before Foreman could jump in and stop him. "Medium-rare. And some more of this wine." The waiter nodded, which House took to mean that he'd made a good stab, and offered Foreman a stare as if to say, You're not fucking getting rid of me, you spiteful, sneaky asshole.
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Before Foreman could wave away Marty's protective urge, House shot his wine glass across the table, trying to shatter it and make a bigger commotion than he'd already started. Foreman reached for the glass, practically having to lunge out of the booth to catch it in both hands. He set it back down on the table with a loud clink, but by then, House had already cornered Marty. Foreman snorted at poaching on his territory. House considered Foreman his, which in any other circumstances would have been absurdly romantic. As it was, House only wanted him because he thought Foreman was wandering farther than House's fucking leash would allow. He considered Foreman his like he considered all his fellows as his. A plaything. A toy. Something he could play with when he wanted and dump right back on the shelf when he was tired of it.
Marty was backing away from House as best he could, his shoulder nearly pressing against Foreman's. The longer House interrogated him, though, Marty's expression changed. He started to get pissed off when House implied that he cheated, or wanted to cheat, but then, when House glanced at Foreman and called him a piece of ass, it was like the light switch had been flipped. Marty's mouth opened, he let out a disbelieving scoff, and then his amused, relaxed smile came back. House didn't notice, his attention distracted by the waiter.
"It's complicated?" Marty asked Foreman sardonically.
"Don't," Foreman warned him. God, this couldn't possibly get worse.
"I'll have the salmon," Marty told the waiter smoothly. "Eric?"
Foreman met House's glare. Apparently it could get worse. Marty had figured them out and now he wanted to get his rocks off by poking at House. Fuck. Foreman couldn't walk out; he didn't want to leave either of them with the other. "Prime rib," he said shortly. "Rare."
The waiter picked up their menus and left quickly. Marty stayed on Foreman's side of the booth, his composure completely back in place. "Eric and I just wanted to catch up," he said. "Talk about old times." There was nothing in his voice to suggest anything untoward, but Foreman knew from the look in his eyes that Marty was laughing at both their expenses. House for being jealous, and Foreman for being insane enough to be with him.
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House glared at both of them, itching to know how much Foreman had discussed with Marty before he'd arrived. Enough for Marty to know that 'it's complicated'. House snapped his jaw shut, breathing a soft scoff through his nose at Marty's comment. Old times. More like new times. From the looks of it, Marty was interested in every juicy bit of the new times that he could get. Foreman didn't seem as interested in sharing, but he wondered if that was only because House was sitting there, and he wanted to keep House out of it. A part of him wanting to lash out at Marty, give him the show he wanted, but another part didn't want to give him any more material to taunt him with than he already had.
He glanced down at the table as the waiter returned with more wine and another glass, which he set in front of House. He downed the glass before the waiter refilled the other glasses, already feeling a sudden lightheaded rush, and leaned out of the booth to catch the waiter's apron. "Hey," he said, tapping his glass on the table. "Leave the bottle." The waiter raised his eyebrows but did as he was told before leaving them with the news that their entrees would be ready shortly. House poured himself another glass, keeping silent and glaring at Marty over the rim of his glass, then Foreman, who seemed pretty pissed off himself, but he wasn't sure if that was all directed at him anymore.
"What's the matter, Greg?" Marty asked, pretending to soothe him. The bastard laid a hand over his wrist, and House tried to freeze it with a frosty glare. Easier to saw it off with a fucking butter knife that way. He felt too proud, didn't want to give Marty the satisfaction of physically backing down, to shrug the touch away himself. "I don't think I've ever seen you speechless before."
When Marty turned his head to share a laugh with Foreman, House entertained the fantasy of driving that knife through Marty's smug little eyeball, but he used his free hand to tip his wine glass to his mouth. "Just giving you and Eric time to catch up, Marty," House answered, letting his hand fall beside him under the table when Marty leaned away, matching his falsely cheery grin. "Don't let me get in your way."
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"No, no, this is interesting," Marty said. "How long have you two been together? Was this why you came back to Princeton-Plainsboro?"
"No," Foreman barked. He glared at House, as if he might believe that. Foreman had never wanted to come back to Princeton, certainly not for House's sake. Just because he'd rediscovered his enjoyment of diagnostics did not mean he'd been fucking pining for House. Their relationship had been as much a surprise to him as it apparently had been to House. Christ, he fucking hated having to defend it, even obliquely. Foreman rolled his eyes when House filled his glass for the third time, and grabbed the bottle, setting it on his side of the table.
Marty's grin widened at House's invitation for them to catch up. "Nathan was at the hospital benefit last month," he said to Foreman, his eyes twinkling. "He was asking about you." Marty raised his eyebrows, as if inviting Foreman to comment on his relationship, or hoping that House would pick up on it. Foreman retreated to stony silence, hating that House would pick up on it, no matter how much he'd been drinking. "Eric and Nathan were very close," Marty confided in House, the if you know what I mean practically dripping off his words.
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House pressed his lips together, meeting Foreman's glare and wondering what the fuck Foreman was glaring at him for. He wasn't the one who agreed to meet this prick for dinner. This wasn't his fault. Christ. An instant later, House regretted his choice of words, tensed even more, nearly swallowed his wine down the wrong pipe when Marty practically burst with news about a guy called Nathan. It didn't take very long to figure out who this Nathan was, or had been, even without Marty's help. Very close. What a fucker.
"Not anymore." House let the words fly with as much confidence as he could, working to convince himself that he was right about this. Had to be. He knew he was speaking for Foreman, but in all the time that Foreman had been a fellow and within the last couple weeks, House had never run across the name 'Nathan'. House didn't doubt that this Nathan was real--Foreman looked angry, not confused, which served as confirmation enough--but the simple fact that Marty knew more about Foreman than he did gnawed at him, especially since he put so much effort into rooting through the pasts of practically everyone he knew. He wouldn't put it past Marty to drag an old name into the conversation--the old name of a 'very close' boyfriend--just to rile House up, so he could kick back and watch the explosion. Marty was probably contriving a story from nothing. No hospital benefit. No Nathan. Just a situation that would fan House's jealousy for Marty's amusement.
"Nathan gave me his business card," Marty said, turning back to Foreman and assuming a friendly smile, as if he was a sort of benevolent messenger. "He asked me to pass it along so you two could touch base. Reconnect."
House forced himself to keep his face still, non-reactive, as Marty reached into the inside pocket of his suit and withdrew a white card. So, fine, the bastard wasn't making it up, only capitalizing on the opportunity to make House squirm. Make him want to dive across the table and rip that business card, and Marty, to itty-bitty, indistinguishable shreds. House curled his hands into fists under the table instead, his gaze flitting from Foreman's face to the card as Marty slid it across the table to set it directly in front of Foreman.
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Foreman stared at the card without picking it up. If he picked it up, he'd be ending whatever the hell he was doing with House. House was insecure enough, jealous enough, that for Foreman to even look like he was willing to talk with Nathan, that would mean in House's eyes that Foreman was hoping to revive a relationship that had been dead for five years. Foreman could call Nathan, or email him, any time he wanted. It wasn't like he'd lost the ability to use a phonebook, and as far as he knew, Nathan hadn't left his firm; his email would be the same. Marty should know he didn't want to call Nathan. Their breakup had been icy and civilized. Both of them had agreed that they were moving on to different things. If, five years later, Nathan was interested in hearing from him, Foreman could only imagine that it was because they had enough distance that they knew they'd never be getting back together.
No, Marty had no interest in playing matchmaker, and Foreman wouldn't be surprised if he was holding back the fact that Nathan had gone and gotten married, or something just as momentous, and wanted to share the news. Marty wanted to sabotage his relationship with House. He might think it was amusing to watch House explode, but he didn't seem to notice, or care, that Foreman had made a choice, whether Marty approved or not, and Marty was doing his best to ruin it. Some fucking friend. On the other hand, Foreman didn't want House to think that Foreman wouldn't talk to people from his past, would cut them entirely out of his life, just because House couldn't handle it. He wanted House to fucking trust him. But since that was too much to ask at work, it seemed even less likely now.
Before Foreman had made the decision--still staring at the card like it would poison him if he touched it--their waiter arrived and started setting plates in front of them. House's steak was still sizzling; the waiter asked Marty if he wanted ground pepper on his salmon, and Marty nodded enthusiastically, so that the waiter leaned between Foreman and House to twist the peppermill over Marty's plate. Foreman let his head slump back against the booth, turning to face away from House's stare. When the waiter was finally gone, Foreman met House's eyes and picked up the card. "I don't need this," he said, and dropped it back in front of Marty.
Marty looked more amused than ever, smirking as he picked up his wine and took a sip. "You're a lucky man, Greg."
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House didn't look at Marty, lifting his eyes back up to meet Foreman's when Marty spoke again, sounding giddy. House dropped his gaze again and eyed the card, itching to take it. He wanted to know. Know about this Nathan. Who he was, and what he did, and where he worked, and if he really was interested in reconnecting with Foreman. House couldn't help himself from imagining a very literal reconnection; Foreman with a faceless, young, able-bodied guy who could take it standing up or any fucking way Foreman wanted it. Jesus, this was fucking ridiculous, he thought, downing another gulp of wine as he shook the thought away. His head was getting fuzzier, and all he wanted to do was take his steak and smash it into Marty's face, down what House would bet was a designer suit, and get the fuck back home. He didn't have much of an appetite, and words weren't coming very easily. He was floundering, scrambling for ground, and he was sure he already looked like a moron. The card still sat there on the table, mocking him like Marty. House let it sit there; he couldn't take it. It would give Marty even more ammunition to mock him, poke at him, and House could probably just find out more information for himself.
Too many questions were still rattling in his brain as he stared over at Marty. Marty, who was fucking smiling as he gleefully chewed a piece of his salmon. House took hold of his steak knife, just for something to grip, and couldn't help entertaining the thought of pulling Marty's tie, jerking the bastard's head forward, and driving the knife straight through the tie, maybe pin it to the baked potato on his plate. With any luck, Marty would choke on his food for a while, and House could wear the smile as he pulled Foreman to the door and listened for shouts of, 'Is anyone here a doctor?' He wished he could think of something good to say, something that would knock Marty on his ass, but the alcohol and all the unanswered questions was making him lose his edge. Even though most of his anger was directed at Marty, House still hadn't forgotten that Foreman had agreed to this. Foreman had probably done it to spite him. House wondered for a second if Wilson was busy; at least if Wilson found out about this, he wouldn't try to sabotage it. Wilson would nose around, and pry, and ask a ridiculously interminable number of questions or impart his relationship 'wisdom' to a point that would make House want to smother him with a pillow, but he wouldn't try to ruin it.
That really sounded like the better fucking option, and House dropped his knife back on the table, and glared hard at Foreman before turning to Marty. "You're a son of a bitch," he said, and pushed himself out of the booth. As he moved, he swept his arm across the table, sliding Marty's half-empty wine glass towards Marty and knocking it casually over the edge. When he stood up, he turned to find a beautiful maroon stain spreading over Marty's shirt. Shrugging on his coat and finding his cane, House shrugged, smiling as sweetly as he could. "Aw, you should be more careful, Marty," he said, and headed for the door.
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Foreman didn't know what he expected next. House might have dug into his meal or decapitated Marty with his steak knife, and either one wouldn't have surprised Foreman. What he did do, though, tipping Marty's wine into his lap and walking away, left Foreman staring after him in shock.
"Jesus Christ!" Marty exclaimed, half-standing up as the stain spread, grabbing his napkin to blot at his shirt. "You've got yourself a real catch, Eric."
Foreman glowered at him, not making a move to help. He hadn't taken a bite, and he didn't think he could swallow one if he did. He stood up and threw his napkin down on his plate. Marty hadn't taken one second to think about how Foreman felt. Had expected him to mock House right along with him. And House had been right; Marty's work was the same way. If Marty's words on the surface could pass as polite, then he didn't think it mattered what he was really saying. "You really are an asshole," he said, and left Marty behind, with the mess, the insults, and the bill.
He barely looked over his shoulder as he left the restaurant. He had no idea what to say to House when he caught up with him, but he wasn't going to let him just drive away. When he got outside, he saw House heading across the street. Foreman glanced at his own car, thinking how fucking easy this would be if he could trust that it wouldn't matter tomorrow, that House would be back to his usual offensive self. The way he dished out the mockery, Foreman thought, it would make more sense if he could take it, but House's last insult had been quiet and to the point, without any of the usual glee he took in creatively cutting someone down to size. As if it mattered. As if he'd given up. Foreman hated seeing that, and knowing that House could get hurt. Even worse was knowing that he'd been part of it. "House!" he called, jogging across the street after him, and hoping like hell House would stop for him.
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House made it out the door without anyone stopping him, made it to his car. He fumbled in his pocket for his keys, having some trouble finding the key to open his car. Fuck, he probably shouldn't be driving home, but he sure as hell wasn't going to ask Foreman to give him a ride. His fingers lost their grip on his keys, and he groaned to himself as they fall onto the ground at his feet. He braced himself against the car, trying to lean down, but a rush to his head made him stop and prop himself against the car. He just wanted to go the hell home. It wasn't often that he crumbled under the task of getting the best of someone, mocking and bringing fault after fault to the other person's attention. But he hadn't been able to deflect this or regain his footing. Marty had taken the one fucking decent thing that had happened to him for the last--God, too fucking long--and sliced at it, belittled it, and him, and wouldn't fucking stop. If House had any dirt on him--next time, he'd be sure to come more prepared--it might have been easier to turn it around, but he hadn't been able to do much beyond try to block the damn blows. Foreman was too busy covering his ass, like always. House wondered if Foreman had taken the card after he left anyway, if Foreman would look up his very close ex-boyfriend Nathan and catch up when he wasn't around. Who the fuck knew.
House fished in his pocket for his phone, flipping it open to find Wilson's name. He looked up when he heard Foreman's voice, the slap of his shoes on the street. Great. Just fucking great. God, Foreman was probably running after him to bitch about what he'd done to Marty. Or berate him for acting like a twelve-year-old, shove his concern into his face even more. He wasn't fucking interested in hearing it.
"Yeah, I did it on purpose," House said as Foreman closed in on him, sneering before looking down at his phone. "No, I'm not sorry, but if I say I'll pay for the God damn dry cleaning, would it make you go away?" House pressed 'call' when he managed to highlight Wilson's name and held the phone to his ear.
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Before he could get more than that out, House snapped at him, and Foreman stared. "What the hell are you talking about?" he asked. Of course House had done it on purpose. If Foreman hadn't seen him do it himself, he still would have assumed House had dumped the wine on Marty with every bit of deliberateness he could muster. Foreman shook his head, wanting to grab the phone out of House's hand, snap it shut, and force House to talk to him. The words I'm sorry were lurking at the back of his throat but Foreman swallowed them down. He wasn't sorry for making plans or going out, no matter how disastrously it had turned out. He was sorry that House had to hear that shit from Marty. One word like that, though, and he doubted House would listen to him for the rest of the night. "Christ, I hope the shirt is ruined," he said instead. He glared back at the restaurant, taking a step back from House. Probably House was calling Wilson. Who the hell else could he call? Foreman knew better than to think House would drive if he was feeling the alcohol, and he didn't know if he should offer. He stood there, feeling useless. If Wilson was going to play the rescuer, then there wasn't any reason for Foreman to hang around. He could imagine that House wasn't interested in hearing from him, but he couldn't force himself to walk away.
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Foreman's remark didn't do much to make his anger fade away. House turned towards his car instead, scoffing to himself, as Foreman stepped backwards. He wouldn't be surprised if Foreman bought Marty a new shirt just to keep them on good terms, save his precious reputation. The only person Foreman hadn't seemed to care about keeping in his good graces was House. No, Foreman planned dinners and went out just to spite him. Shut his mouth and let Marty lay into him. Not that he needed Foreman to jump in and save him, but it would have been nice if Foreman hadn't left him hanging. Maybe refusing the card really had been for show, maybe--
"What do you want, House?" Wilson's voice finally cut through the ringing on the other end.
House cleared his throat, trying to keep the anger out of his voice when he answered, "I'm drunk. Pick me up."
Wilson sighed. House forced himself not to turn and glance at Foreman as he leaned against the car. "Where are you?"
Now House had to turn, and he looked over the top of Foreman's head at the name of the restaurant. "Ma Cabane," he said and spun back around quickly. A little too quickly, stumbling into his car and grunting into the phone. "You know, that place that has the--"
"Yeah, I know it," Wilson said. House could hear a door closing in the background, then the soft sound of a car engine. "I'll be there soon. Just try not to...punch anyone before I get there."
"Can I punch anyone after you get here?"
House pulled the phone away from his ear as Wilson hung up, then closed it, and slipped it back into his pocket. He peeked over his shoulder and gestured back toward the restaurant. "Don't you have any more catching up to do? I doubt you came here just to talk about your old boyfriend. Or your new boyfriend. Or your new old boyfriend," he said to Foreman, considering getting into the car to wait for Wilson. He couldn't fucking stand here until he arrived, and he didn't want to have a damn argument in the middle of the street.
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"I didn't come here to talk about Nathan!" Foreman burst out. He couldn't even form the question of why House thought he wanted to spend more time with Marty. Yeah, he'd been there for that 'friendly conversation', and it was the last thing he wanted to go back to. "I didn't come here to talk about you, either. Marty asked if I was seeing anyone and I blew him off!" For fuck's sake, that's what they'd agreed last week, that they didn't want anyone to know. With a very strong hint of "not yet" attached to the sentiment, but it didn't matter. House didn't want people to know, neither did Foreman, so he hadn't fucking said anything. Not that Foreman would know if House had changed his mind on all the goddamn minutiae in his life since then, since they hadn't had a fucking conversation in a week. And apparently House had changed his mind, since he'd come storming in as if he had the right to drag Foreman away. "I have more than one friend, and they don't all work within fifty feet of my department, so yeah, I actually have more to talk about than who I'm seeing!" Not that Foreman considered Marty a friend. Not now. He'd always put up with Marty's occasional pomposity, his condescending attitude, because Foreman had shared that condescension. Marty's program had been the best in L.A. and Foreman had been the best in the program; why the fuck shouldn't he be proud? But he'd managed not to see how that arrogance had followed Marty--maybe both of them--into his personal life. Marty couldn't stand to be insulted once, and took it out on House the minute he was back in town. Maybe that's why he'd been so derisive when Foreman had said he was back at Princeton-Plainsboro.
Foreman scoffed to himself, still furious with Marty. "I guess I can scratch one off the list now," he muttered. He hated what Marty had done, but it was still a friendship he'd invested a lot of years in, a relationship that meant something to him. He set his jaw and stared at House, wondering if he'd end up like him, running friends off as easily as House did. Not that he cared, in this case. Good fucking riddance. Whatever Marty had done for him before didn't make up for him acting like a complete prick. "Asshole," he said, under his breath, glancing back at the restaurant's lights.
When he turned back, House was leaning against his car, and Foreman felt the half-reluctant urge to do something about it. As if he could. If House was in pain, he wasn't going to let Foreman know. Wilson, maybe. The urge to step forward, though, to press House against the car, either to give House some support or just to distract him, was hard to suppress. Foreman tried to calculate how long it would take Wilson to get here, if he'd left yet, whether House would want Foreman to make himself scarce before he did. If he offered to leave, House would probably snap at him, demanding why he hadn't yet. If he stayed, Wilson would find him here and have even more questions. Foreman stared at House, waiting for some sign, some fucking clue that House got that Foreman wasn't going to just leave him to go trade jokes with Marty.
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"And at least my one friend doesn't try to break up my relationships. He wouldn't fucking humiliate you like it was a God damn sport. He'd be happy that I had--" House had to step forward to take hold of Foreman's tie to jerk him forward. The momentum of Foreman's body pushed House backward until he collided with his car with a grunt, and if Foreman hadn't ended up pinning him, pressed hard against him, House would have lost his balance and collapsed onto the pavement. He was able to keep hold of the tie, his other hand abandoning his cane on the hood of his car to pull Foreman's head down to kiss him. He didn't give a damn who was watching--he almost hoped that Marty was watching, but he couldn't tell. House kissed hard, sloppily. Biting on Foreman's lip. Sweeping his tongue along Foreman's. Breath coming out hard through his nose as he angled his head for one last wet swipe of his tongue. He pulled back, letting his hands drop as he finished, "Somebody to do that with."
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Foreman rolled his eyes at House defending Wilson. He didn't have quite as much faith--he figured Wilson would laugh his head off when he finally found out about them. Probably he'd accept it eventually, but there was bound to be some humiliation involved, even if it was only Wilson gaping at Foreman--and, for all he knew, at House too--after finding out he liked men. Foreman wasn't going to point that out, though. He didn't know if House had said the word relationship out loud before, but even if he had, it hadn't been like this. The way House was talking about it made it real in a way it hadn't been. House was telling him how he'd felt back in the restaurant. Telling him it mattered. Foreman mattered to him. This time the I'm sorry nearly made it out of Foreman's mouth, but before he could say it, House stalked forward one jerky step and yanked Foreman forward by his tie. Foreman hadn't been expecting it, and House pulled him off-balance, crashing them both into House's car. Foreman grabbed for House's hips, only partly to make sure House stayed upright. The kiss, after the way House had grabbed him, wasn't a surprise, and Foreman leaned into it. He grunted at the pain when House bit his lip, but he didn't ease up, meeting House's tongue and trying to pour some of his own frustration into the kiss, breathing harder. This was more than someone to do that with. For the first time, Foreman knew that House thought it was more, too. He still didn't know why House had been jerking him around for the last week, but in all probability, he'd never understand House.
Neither of them had done up their coats after leaving the restaurant, and Foreman pushed his hands deeper inside House's, tightening his grip on House's hips. Pressing their bodies together, sharing enough heat so that the cold air didn't matter. Foreman pushed forward another half-step, so that House could take some weight off his leg if he wanted, and lean on him. House was pinned against the car, his body slumped enough that Foreman had the height advantage for once. "In case you didn't notice," Foreman said, keeping his tone impatient, knowing otherwise he wouldn't be able to say this at all, "Marty didn't break up your relationship." He tipped his head forward and brushed his mouth across House's. Almost too lightly to feel, except that House had bitten him, and Foreman could feel the light throb of his pulse in his lip each time he kissed House. He slowly let his arms circle from House's hips to his lower back, and just as slowly, ran his tongue along House's bottom lip, before slipping inside his mouth.
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"No, but Nathan whoever-the-fuck-he-is might," House said, shoving at Foreman's chest. He made sure he had his left foot securely under him, weight shifted before pushing Foreman away entirely. Leaning back against the car, he gestured toward the restaurant. "That card still on the table? Or did you slip it into your pocket after I left? Or are you just going to look him up when you get home?" Christ, he sounded like a moron. He tried to convince himself he was just shooting his mouth off, that none of it was anything that really mattered. He just wanted to make Foreman as angry as he felt. He tried to suffocate the thought that Foreman really was going to go home and call Nathan. He'd be willing to bet that Foreman would wait until House could hear him, just to make his revenge that much more direct.
He wondered if Marty was seeing this--and loving it, the bastard--but he couldn't give much thought to it. A series of beeps caught his attention, and House steered his gaze away from Foreman to face the sound--Wilson's car horn. Wilson's car was parked several cars down, Wilson's head sticking out of the window as the beeps died and Wilson shouted, "House! You're dragging your own ass in here, let's go!"
House pulled his cane off the hood of the car and, sneaking one last look at Foreman out of the corners of his eyes, lumbered toward Wilson's car.
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Foreman turned to look over his shoulder when a car started honking at them. Fuck, it would be nice if people learned to mind their own goddamn business. He didn't register at first that it was Wilson, calling for House. Looking right at them, with his headlights still on. There was no fucking way he'd missed seeing them, unless he was blind and considerably less curious than Foreman knew he was. Jesus, the man must drive like a NASCAR racer or live three blocks away. Or else he had some sixth sense when it came to interrupting them. At least this time Foreman wasn't naked, but there was no chance of hiding it this time, either. Foreman let House go, staring at the ground, humiliation and anger heating his body and welding him to the spot. House at least had a sympathetic ear. Wasn't it just so goddamn amazing that his friend was so fucking supportive. If Wilson was on House's side, though, he'd probably be telling House that he was right, that Foreman couldn't be trusted, that there was no point to being with him because Foreman wasn't worth the risk.
There was a glint on the ground, and Foreman saw House's keyring lying next to his car tire. Foreman snorted, but he bent down and grabbed the keys, then stomped over to Wilson's car. "Here," he said, shoving the keys through the rolled-down driver's side window. "I wouldn't suggest giving them back any time soon."
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Holy shit.
It took all the control Wilson had not to slam his foot down on the brake pedal, skid the car to a stop, and stare once he'd pulled onto the street. He could feel his eyes automatically widen, as if he needed to take in as much detail as possible to confirm it was all real. House and Foreman--House and Foreman?--were standing--well, House was pinned to his own car. Pressed there. Kissing--kissing--Foreman. Foreman. Kissing Foreman. Kissing Foreman. Jesus, it looked like House was attacking him. This couldn't--it didn't look like--a first kiss. He'd never really studied House kiss, but he'd seen it--happened to, by accident. Years ago, when House was with Stacy, and Wilson would catch them stealing kisses when they thought he wasn't looking. But this--he'd never seen something like this, was sure he'd never had the opportunity. This was...private. Involved. Foreman's hands were under House's coat. Touching. He could see House pushing from here, body pushing into Foreman's, definitely not surprised, or trying to get away. Somehow, Wilson managed to parallel park, creep into the space, without shifting his eyes away. If he looked away, he was almost certain that the sight would vanish, and House would be leaning against the car, pointing and laughing at Wilson for falling for such a wild, seemingly impossible but complicated practical joke.
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Foreman. Or Foreman's briefcase. Wow. It had to have been Foreman's. It sure as hell hadn't been House's, or House's pathetic attempt at a gift for him. Wilson almost laughed out loud. Foreman had probably been there. No wonder House had been trying to kick him back out as quickly as possible. Jesus. He really hadn't expected this, of all the things that could have possibly happened. Of all the things he could have possibly seen. He'd had his suspicions for a while now that House was bisexual. Wilson had never said anything, but he'd wondered. Raised an eyebrow and filed away times when House would make a comment that seemed to reveal that House knew about...certain things, or when Wilson would catch House leering at a man's ass almost the same way he leered at Cuddy's. House had never said anything one way or the other, and Wilson never brought it up, but he hadn't really put it out of his mind. You couldn't put anything out of your mind, when it came to House, or you'd end up being blindsided and knocked on your ass. But as much as he'd suspected about House--and nothing against Foreman--he'd never really suspected this. Wilson leaned forward, holding on to the steering wheel, squinting to try to get a better look, nearly throwing himself back in an irrational attempt to hide when House abruptly shoved Foreman away.
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When Foreman started charging toward Wilson's car, though, Wilson nearly shrank back, wondering if he was going to have to break up a fight. Foreman looked angry enough to clock House in the face, but somehow Wilson doubted Foreman would create that kind of a scene in public. He never thought he'd see Foreman kissing anyone--House, kissing House--either, but kissing wasn't exactly the same as assault. Wilson nodded when Foreman spoke, taking the keys, congratulating himself for not staring, for managing to wipe the surprise off his face by the time Foreman had gotten close. "You, uh," Wilson started, glancing away from Foreman briefly when House knocked on the passenger window to be let in--Wilson hadn't unlocked the doors yet. "You're sure you don't want to take him home yourself?"
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He was a fucking idiot. Only a moron would think that House could sustain an adult relationship. He'd seen no evidence of that over the last four years. Foreman gritted his teeth when Wilson tried to help, if that was even what he thought he was doing. A minute ago, Foreman had thought that if House was kissing him, that meant they'd still be able to talk, or at least communicate. He'd drag House home and prove he meant what he said. He knew better now.
Foreman stared over the roof of Wilson's car, attempting to meet House's eyes. "He doesn't need me," he said flatly. House probably wouldn't answer, and it was even less likely that he cared about what Foreman had to say. Without another word, Foreman turned around and crossed the street, heading for his car.
He unlocked the door and threw himself into the driver's seat, slamming the door shut viciously, and leaned forward, crossing his arms over the steering wheel and glaring out the windshield at nothing at all. He had no idea where he'd go. It was still early, and there wouldn't be a single distraction at home that would stop him from running the whole conversation through his mind over and over again. Getting more furious at Marty with each insult, more pissed off with House each time he watched Foreman push away Nathan's card and still refused to believe him. Well, fuck him. Fuck him. Foreman turned the key in the ignition and pulled out, foot heavy on the accelerator, with no real destination in mind.
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He didn't want to need Foreman. He tried to convince himself he didn't need him. Didn't need him and his ex-boyfriend and Marty and Foreman's damn plans for revenge. It had been in the back of his mind that Foreman wouldn't stick around long. Couldn't possibly, once the novelty wore off. Once he saw there wasn't much to fucking stick around for. He was just a moron for not closing himself off sooner, for not pushing Foreman away before he'd gotten to a point where any of it mattered. A part of him felt the pull to stop Foreman, walk back around the car--it wouldn't matter if it was in front of Wilson; he'd already seen more than enough to catch on--and pull answers out of Foreman. Does this matter to you? Doesn't it fucking matter that I've told you things, and shown you things, and kept this secret to protect your God damn reputation because it's so fucking shameful to be with me, and let you fuck me, and touch me, and done so much shit to show you that it matters? You're the one who doesn't need me, you fucking bastard. You said it! You fucking told me to my face, calm as a fucking prick-shaped cucumber. It didn't matter then, and it doesn't matter now, does it? He wanted to get back in Foreman's face, but it wouldn't matter. It was easier and safer to let Foreman walk and shut himself off. It would be harder to feel how much it hurt when Foreman came back into work, the phone to his ear, cooing a greeting to Nathan.
He looked down at the handle of the door, not interested in watching Foreman any more. He didn't want to see his face in case he looked back, though he doubted he would. And he didn't want to see him drive off. Bad enough he'd probably hear the damn peel-out, Foreman speeding away like he couldn't get far enough from him fast enough. Fuck it. Let him go. It never meant anything anyway.
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