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alwaysright2010-01-05 05:33 pm
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November 5, 2007 - Morning
Lonely: that was Amber's first drowsy feeling to waking up alone. It was still dark and her alarm hadn't gone off. She'd woken up this way countless times, perhaps most of her life, and yet it felt wrong not having someone in here with her. Someone to make muffled but satisfied sounds as she climbed onto them, kissing and being held back. She missed Eric and it hadn't even been more than half a day since they'd parted.
Despite how keenly she felt his absence, Amber couldn't help smiling into her pillow. She'd become conditioned to having him in her bed. The space seemed pointlessly immense without him hogging half of it. Well, there was an easy solution: get him in here soon. Luring him back shouldn't be a problem; Amber could think of half a dozen ways to convince him and that was without trying.
The only reason he wasn't there as she stretched, working out the lasting soreness from their basketball game, was because they both had lives to get back to; Amber had house chores, as probably did Eric, and her reading wouldn't get done through sheer wishing. If it weren't for that, Amber would've been happy to spend another weekend afternoon with him, even after all the ups-and-downs on Saturday.
Still, she'd see him today at work. That was reason enough to make her spring out of bed earlier, so as to pretty herself up all the more. Eric would notice and appreciate her effort; it'd make up for how disgustingly casual she'd been around him this weekend.
The fact that she'd worn his Colombia hoodie to bed... what he didn't know wouldn't hurt her.
Her mom had called Sunday, pointedly asking if she should expect only Amber or plus one for Thanksgiving. "Just me, mom."
"Hmmm?" she'd intoned, judgment and curiosity rolled into a single package. Amber just hoped there wasn't a dash of hope mixed in there. "Broke up already?"
"No," Amber replied with more vehemence than necessary, thinking back on how instantly tense Eric had become at the mere mention of the visit. With his mother's disease, his brother's imprisonment, and his dad's who-knew-what, it might actually be because it was too hard for him to face anyone's family and not because he was scared to meet hers specifically. "It's barely been a week. We're still getting to know each other."
"A few days ago it sounded like you were about to marry him, has it cooled off already? Are you bored with the sex?"
It was the bit about marriage that made Amber sputter softly. Yeah, keeping Eric away was the wisest course of action. "Everything is fine, mom. We're still together and, no, not bored with the sex." There definitely was nothing wrong with their sex life-- in fact, the very opposite. For all that Amber fretted that they were drying up into a drought, Saturday night had been sweetly intimate, in an orgasm-filled way, and Sunday morning they'd tried out the lazy morning sex she'd been anticipating so much. Turned out it was every bit as delicious as she'd imagined.
Aside from that and having to hear her mom describe in minute detail her Thanksgiving plans (arranging rides to pick up her brothers at the airport, finding accommodation for non-immediate family members, shopping for the cheapest yet best food, and on and on and on), Amber's Sunday had been pretty quiet. Just her, her journals, and an endless supply of coffee.
Monday Amber took the time to blow-dry her hair and apply a more careful, if still absolutely professional, layer of makeup than she usually bothered to for work. It made her feel good all morning long, through breakfast and the drive. But as she stepped into the parking lot, the same way she'd started so many other days at PPTH, reluctance overcame her. Things were different here. It'd been so easy to forget once Friday rolled around and they'd fled the hospital, but she had bigger things to think about than "them." She had a career, a purpose. He had his. His partially consisted of keeping her under control; hers, stomping all over him as the occasion called.
It'd keep their sex lives interesting, Amber mused as she shut her car door.
It wasn't just how different their relationship had to be, though. There were other people to consider as well. House, who needed to keep his nose in his own business; her pathetic colleagues, who already looked at her askew for sleeping with the pseudo-boss; and who knew who else decided they had the right to an opinion about her personal life. Ignoring them all would have to do as a policy, Amber decided; that and hunt down anyone who dared try to make her miserable.
Despite the extra time she'd spent in the bathroom and her unhurried breakfast, Amber still arrived before anyone else. A nice change of pace, compared to the previous week. Content, Amber chose an aisle seat in one of the middle rows and settled down with a more recent edition of JNEN.
Despite how keenly she felt his absence, Amber couldn't help smiling into her pillow. She'd become conditioned to having him in her bed. The space seemed pointlessly immense without him hogging half of it. Well, there was an easy solution: get him in here soon. Luring him back shouldn't be a problem; Amber could think of half a dozen ways to convince him and that was without trying.
The only reason he wasn't there as she stretched, working out the lasting soreness from their basketball game, was because they both had lives to get back to; Amber had house chores, as probably did Eric, and her reading wouldn't get done through sheer wishing. If it weren't for that, Amber would've been happy to spend another weekend afternoon with him, even after all the ups-and-downs on Saturday.
Still, she'd see him today at work. That was reason enough to make her spring out of bed earlier, so as to pretty herself up all the more. Eric would notice and appreciate her effort; it'd make up for how disgustingly casual she'd been around him this weekend.
The fact that she'd worn his Colombia hoodie to bed... what he didn't know wouldn't hurt her.
Her mom had called Sunday, pointedly asking if she should expect only Amber or plus one for Thanksgiving. "Just me, mom."
"Hmmm?" she'd intoned, judgment and curiosity rolled into a single package. Amber just hoped there wasn't a dash of hope mixed in there. "Broke up already?"
"No," Amber replied with more vehemence than necessary, thinking back on how instantly tense Eric had become at the mere mention of the visit. With his mother's disease, his brother's imprisonment, and his dad's who-knew-what, it might actually be because it was too hard for him to face anyone's family and not because he was scared to meet hers specifically. "It's barely been a week. We're still getting to know each other."
"A few days ago it sounded like you were about to marry him, has it cooled off already? Are you bored with the sex?"
It was the bit about marriage that made Amber sputter softly. Yeah, keeping Eric away was the wisest course of action. "Everything is fine, mom. We're still together and, no, not bored with the sex." There definitely was nothing wrong with their sex life-- in fact, the very opposite. For all that Amber fretted that they were drying up into a drought, Saturday night had been sweetly intimate, in an orgasm-filled way, and Sunday morning they'd tried out the lazy morning sex she'd been anticipating so much. Turned out it was every bit as delicious as she'd imagined.
Aside from that and having to hear her mom describe in minute detail her Thanksgiving plans (arranging rides to pick up her brothers at the airport, finding accommodation for non-immediate family members, shopping for the cheapest yet best food, and on and on and on), Amber's Sunday had been pretty quiet. Just her, her journals, and an endless supply of coffee.
Monday Amber took the time to blow-dry her hair and apply a more careful, if still absolutely professional, layer of makeup than she usually bothered to for work. It made her feel good all morning long, through breakfast and the drive. But as she stepped into the parking lot, the same way she'd started so many other days at PPTH, reluctance overcame her. Things were different here. It'd been so easy to forget once Friday rolled around and they'd fled the hospital, but she had bigger things to think about than "them." She had a career, a purpose. He had his. His partially consisted of keeping her under control; hers, stomping all over him as the occasion called.
It'd keep their sex lives interesting, Amber mused as she shut her car door.
It wasn't just how different their relationship had to be, though. There were other people to consider as well. House, who needed to keep his nose in his own business; her pathetic colleagues, who already looked at her askew for sleeping with the pseudo-boss; and who knew who else decided they had the right to an opinion about her personal life. Ignoring them all would have to do as a policy, Amber decided; that and hunt down anyone who dared try to make her miserable.
Despite the extra time she'd spent in the bathroom and her unhurried breakfast, Amber still arrived before anyone else. A nice change of pace, compared to the previous week. Content, Amber chose an aisle seat in one of the middle rows and settled down with a more recent edition of JNEN.
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She couldn't just walk into that festering pit of rabid beasts and probably-ex without some kind of defense. Or, if it really was her fault, Amber wanted to know, so that she could start apologizing and damage control.
The phone number was filed under "Immunologist." It didn't ring more than once before a half-sleepy voice answered, "Hello."
"Hi, Dr. Cameron?" Amber asked.
"Yeah?"
"This is Dr. Volakis, one of the new doctors working for House." It felt almost absurd, introducing herself to someone she'd spoken to just this morning, but Amber couldn't be sure just how much of her fame was labeled as "CTB."
"I know who you are." Cameron's tone was sharper, more alert. "How did you get my personal phone number?"
"House gave it to all of us." Cameron muttered something, but Amber couldn't make it out. "Listen, I'm very sorry to call, but--" She went on to summarize the situation. It was a risk: she knew Cameron was all about putting the patient first. Amber played up that angle, explaining how she'd been worried about Eric-- Foreman-- ignoring some of Casey's symptoms. It must've worked, since Cameron sighed in what sounded like a sympathetic way.
"So, what do you think? Could’ve the steroids and interferon destroyed her immune system?"
"You'd have to confirm, of course," Cameron said, "but that wouldn’t have been the likeliest outcome. I wouldn't rule out the paralysis as a new symptom."
Amber's load lightened slightly. "Thank you."
Just in case, she also called House again. Still no answer.
By the time she returned to the conference room, everyone was there. The candidates all turned to look up at her, but they must've already worked out their incredulity because they didn't question her actions. That and Eric was a magnet for serious business, frowning in what probably had been a focused differential. It wasn't the time to ask 'what the fuck were you thinking.'
Amber slipped into a seat quietly, figuring out what she'd missed as the conversation resumed. 'Paralysis' wasn't on the board yet; did Eric assume it wasn't a symptom?
"Can we be sure it's an infection?" Cole asked. "Shouldn't we check before we pump her with antitoxins?" Ah, testing first. That was the recommendation Amber would've made. She nodded in agreement.
At some point Brennan had risen, pacing and staring at the whiteboard. "It's not botulism," he suddenly declared. His expression was wondrous, as if he'd been infused light and now saw with startling clarity. "It's polio, I’m sure of it!"
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"We'll test," he said heavily. "But we can't put off treatment for a day while we run the cultures. Not when her airway might be compromised--" He stopped short when Brennan stalked to the whiteboard, staring at it like it had given him a religious experience. "What?"
Foreman's first thought was that Brennan was making fun of him. Or of all of them--what the hell did he think he was accomplishing, suggesting something so obviously ridiculous?
"Right," Taub said, drawing the word out. "And I think she probably also has small pox. And maybe some diptheria. Because you never can tell what people picked up in their last trip to 1879."
"I know what polio looks like," Brennan insisted.
"Then that's why you're seeing it," Foreman said. It was preposterous, and he wasn't the only one in the room rolling his eyes. "There hasn't been a case of wild polio here for thirty years! Stop wasting our time--"
Brennan turned on him, half-angry and half-smirking. "Oh, like you haven't wasted our time with your brilliant heatstroke idea? And did we really all need to hang around while you and your girlfriend played duelling diagnoses?"
Foreman snapped his mouth shut. Brennan was right in his face, trying to loom over him. For what? Foreman wasn't going to make a fool of himself by rising to the bait, but if he could have cut Brennan down with his stare alone, he would have. His anger surged up again--felt like he'd spent most of the day with his heart pounding and his fists clenched, looking for some direction he could lash out. "It's not polio. She's been vaccinated. There's no damn way." Face set, back rigid, Foreman kept up his glare. He was so fucking sick of Brennan's patronizing superiority over one symptom. Insinuating Foreman and Amber had acted unprofessionally at any point was going too far. Neither of them had done anything because of their relationship, and if Brennan was going to twist their actions around to that, then Foreman wasn't interested in putting up with him one second longer. "You think so, you can get the hell out of here. Seriously. I don't want you here."
"You can't fire me. If anything it's the two of you--it's her--"
"Stop embarrassing yourself," Foreman said. "Go on. Get out of here. You're off this case. You want to beg House to keep you? You can do that on his time, not mine."
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She only half-listened to Taub's jokes and Eric's disbelief: useless information. Brennan defended his opinion, as any of them would've. Amber thought he had too much polio on the brain, but she wasn't in a position to criticize for getting too attached to a pet idea. She just hoped it wasn't the steroids' fault, for Casey's and her own sake-- it had to be something else. Encephalitis, maybe? The symptoms fit. Then she wouldn't be wrong, Casey wouldn't have a ruined immune system, and Amber's job and malpractice insurance wouldn't be at risk.
Then it got personal. Amber looked up sharply at Brennan's accusation that she and Eric had been playing around-- though he wasn't wrong. They had gotten shamefully personal. (Part of her bristled. 'Girlfriend'? Leaving aside the question of whether or not they'd still be together by the end of the day, they hadn't yet made the girlfriend-boyfriend thing official. Amber didn't let herself think of them that way; it'd be getting ahead of herself.)
Brennan was making an idiot of himself, yeah. But Amber stilled with a second's shock when Eric ordered him out. There'd been other stupid ideas, in all the differentials so far, and if anyone had gone too far, it'd been herself, secretly mixing treatments. An uncomfortable silence settled over the room. What are you thinking, Amber wanted to demand. You're making us both look worse. Expelling Brennan only accentuated his protest that Eric cared more about the professional than the personal.
She'd wait to ask. She couldn't agree with Eric's medical opinions just to make him feel good, but she could support him by giving him her critiques in a private setting.
The discharge did not sit well with Brennan. From excited he'd gone to quietly furious, expression stormy. He turned to Kutner and the other guys, probably for support, but they just shrugged and returned an awkward look. 'Sorry, man,' they seemed to be saying. His shoulders finally slumped in defeat and he walked out fast.
Subdued-- at least for the moment-- they all looked at Eric, silently asking what to do next.
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He glanced around the room. So far it seemed like they were listening to him, which was more proof that he'd been right to get rid of Brennan. "We'll rerun the other tests to double check. I don't want her dying from organ failure while we look for something else. If you have any brilliant ideas, let the rest of us know before you decide to treat." He knew that Amber wouldn't miss his censure in that last sentence, but he thought she might pick up on what he'd implied about organ failure, too. Aggressive lupus might kill Casey too fast for them to act; MS was slower and long-term. He'd acknowledged her idea might have had merit. He just hoped that would be enough until they could get through the case and find out what was really going on.
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Working in diagnostics, House-style, gave the opportunity for great glory; it also meant greater fuck-ups.
They'd been assigned three basic assignments. Kutner volunteered immediately to go out for confirmation (and though he tried to hide it, Amber caught the glint in his eye; probably ecstatic about hitting the racetrack) and Thirteen quickly said she'd go with.
"I'll run the blood cultures," Amber got in before anyone else could snap up that task. She wouldn't have to see Casey for more than a few minutes, as opposed to spending hours with her, waiting for her paralysis to progress.
"Sure, leave us with all the fun," Taub muttered, but his opinion didn't matter. He left with Cole, and Kutner and Thirteen had long since exited.
Only she and Eric remained. The room was startlingly quiet. Messy, too, coffee mugs strewn across the table together with open reference books and pages of annotations. The room felt like an incomplete thought. The whiteboard loomed over the table, casting a long shadow from the day's last light.
She had to work. She knew that. But it was just the two of them-- Amber drew in a long breath, rubbing her face. Getting up should be easy; she never hesitated when there was something to be done. But defeat wasn't usually this clear before her, more than just a theoretical possibility. The tests might confirm botulism. And then—but she'd deal when and if that happened.
"Why did you kick Brennan out?" Amber asked, voice reflecting just how drained was. "He didn't step out of line any more than I did."
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He lifted his head when Amber spoke. She sounded tired--well, why not? Foreman felt like he'd been pushing a boulder uphill all day, only to watch it roll back down. Her question twisted his gut, anxiety burning like acid through his stomach lining. Would she like it better if he kicked her out too? Brennan had been publicly defiant from the moment Foreman had taken charge. He'd exacerbated House's little cut-throat world, made everyone think they could go off in whatever direction they wanted. Gotten in their way with Casey and her father. As soon as Brennan had left the conference room, the others had fallen into line. But Amber had been just as insubordinate, and worse, sneaky. "I trusted you," Foreman said, which was no answer. His throat tried to close up on him, but Foreman pressed his lips together and stared out the windows, not meeting Amber's eyes, forcing down the helpless feeling that he was fucking up. Cuddy might keep House on no matter how many patients he killed. She'd already made it more than clear that she wouldn't do the same for him.
"Rerun the ANA and the sed rate, and get a lumbar puncture to run her CSF for MS markers," he said. "Get Taub to help if you want." Amber wanted them to keep it professional. Foreman damn well agreed. Even if they weren't in front of any patients or nurses, he wasn't going to get into an argument he couldn't solve here.
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Trusted. Amber's exhaustion grew heavier, threatening to bury her. Of course. It wasn't just his choice of tense, but the clipped, brisk tone, cutting off all conversation. He didn't want to talk to her, not after the way she'd gone off on her own. The weight settled over her throat; maybe it was a good thing he wasn't interested in conversation, because she wouldn't have been able to manage it. Amber had known the consequences. If she were to regret her actions, it'd be only if she'd truly hurt Casey—but as far as Eric went, she stood by her choice. If he couldn't see beyond himself, then Amber simply wasn't interested. But, oh god, she'd miss him; miss the hopes she'd been quietly nurturing.
To confirm just how much he wanted her out of the room, Eric told her to go run the tests. Silently Amber nodded. Professional. Fair enough. If that was how it was going to be from now on, at least he'd avoid dragging negative sentiments into it. And how appropriate, too, getting her to check what could be the definitive confirmation of either lupus or MS.
Rising and ignoring the ache radiating from her ankles, Amber wiped her hair away from her face-- when was the last time she'd had even a bathroom break?-- and walked out, taking a copy of Casey's file with her.
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Foreman pressed the heels of his hands into his eyes as if he could physically push away the headache that was threatening to split his skull open alone the coronal suture. He should be good to go for as long as Casey wasn't in stable condition. He'd pulled twenty-four, even forty-eight hour shifts, but right now he knew if he didn't get some sleep, he wouldn't be able to think well enough to stay on top of the case. He reached out and grabbed the file. In a while. Food, coffee, maybe snatch a few hours' nap. He'd take care of that. First he wanted to go through every last second since Casey had been admitted. Try to put the pieces together.
There was nothing easy about it. It was like trying to force three different jigsaw puzzles into one picture. Sometimes when he worked this hard, the words started to mix on the page, and his heart started to pound, cold sweat breaking out in his armpits and down his back. What if he couldn't read? Couldn't do any damn procedures or even remember what the hell he was supposed to be doing? Foreman pushed the file away sharply. He was just tired. That was all it was. He knew what the hell he was doing, it was just this damn headache.
Standing up took more effort than it should. Foreman tugged his tie loose and pulled it over his head, then fumbled his suit jacket off and left it hanging over the back of the chair. He could still work the goddamn coffee machine. No spatial issues. No processing problems. He waited for the coffee to drip through and made up two cups, one the way Amber liked. He couldn't do anything else, but maybe this would be enough to tell Amber that once they were out of here--once the case was done--they could talk. He put lids on the cups and headed down to the lab where the diagnostics fellows usually worked.
Amber was there, bent over a microscope. Foreman pushed the door open and silently headed across to her bench, setting the coffee at her elbow before sitting down on a stool. "You need food?"
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Speaking of sleep and Casey, it seemed like it was all she wanted. Amber watched from outside as Taub and Cole talked to her, each sitting on a stool. Casey yawned and rubbed her eyes and nodded along; she must be so tired by now she didn't care to hear their explanations. Once they'd passed on the antibiotics, Amber slipped in. "Hi," she said, but by now, her years of training or no, the greeting was plastic, not genuine.
Casey's father watched on anxiously as Amber took yet another blood sample from his daughter. Casey herself was compliant, only turning her head away. Probably wanted it to be over as soon as possible. Her skin was so white, so clammy; Amber did not let herself feel more than a pang. They'd fix this. This wasn't her fault.
Pulling Taub and Cole to the side and holding a murmured conversation, they divvied up the tasks once more. Cole would take care of the enema and bring the samples to Amber; Taub would do the lumbar puncture; and she'd run the tests. Eric had told her to do the lumbar puncture, but as long as the job got done, Amber doubted he'd mind who performed the procedure-- whereas she herself would mind very much spending more time with Casey and her guilt.
Before turning and leaving, Amber noticed Cole checking his watch. Worried about his kid, maybe? Tough. This job wasn't easy on any of them.
The good thing about starting up the blood tests, and later the cultures, was that it occupied her mind. Hardly complicated work, it still required focus. For a while Amber lost herself. She was just about finished when a voice startled her out of her reverie.
Glancing up, Amber blinked before her vision regained the capacity to see the world life-sized and not through a lens. Her heart strummed in instant recognition of Eric's voice, but she needed to see to be sure: it really was him, with coffee as a bonus. She looked at him, at the cup, and then at him again. God, he looked as tired as she, clothes rumpled, face so long, and shadows under his eyes; if she could she'd wrap her around him and just hold on, like they could anchor one another, letting their breaths match one another’s-- but she was part of the reason for his exhaustion.
Amber did the next best thing, picking up the coffee and sipping. It was slightly sweet; he must've remembered. Geez, he made it so complicated. She didn't know what to feel or, rather, she felt it all: anger and confusion and affection and why did she have to like him so damn much?
The coffee, at least, gave her a boost. "I thought you wouldn't want to see me again," Amber said, trying to keep her voice casual. "I mean, outside of work."
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No, he didn't want to go that far. Not tonight. But he wasn't going to throw everything they had away just because he was angry tonight. It wouldn't happen again. House would come back and any tricks Amber pulled would be on him, not Foreman. After the two fellow slots were filled, either they'd be on the same team instead of competing, or she'd be looking for another job. Either way, Amber wouldn't have the opportunity to stab him in the back again.
But that didn't mean that she hadn't. That she wouldn't. House, of all people, had tried to warn him, and Foreman had been so arrogant as to say I don't think she will. Whether or not he'd pegged Casey's diagnosis, he'd been wrong about that. It hurt, somewhere down deep, like he'd been cut and no one had caught the internal bleeding. Foreman glanced up, studying her. Amber hadn't apologized. She didn't even seem to feel guilty about slowing down the diagnosis by obscuring Casey's condition. "I care about you," he said. He slipped of his stool and put the coffee on the lab bench. Suddenly, he didn't want it. Didn't even want to think about food. You hurt me--easy to feel, impossible to say. Maybe she didn't care. Maybe it didn't matter to her. He shrugged and turned back to the door. Another fishbowl. Anyone could walk in on them. He cleared his throat. "You need to eat. I'm going to the cafeteria if you want something."
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She wish he'd talk. It'd be nice to hear some confirmation that he did want to see her again, since he was here and all-- why else would he have come with coffee, offering food? But the silence felt right, too. Today's events couldn't be so cast aside with just a coffee and a smile, especially without knowing the end to this case; without Casey walking out here healthier than when she'd come in.
The lab stools were so uncomfortable, digging into her ass and giving no back support; she was done, anyway. Amber stood up and cleaned up, leaving the cultures to develop. They wouldn't produce any answers until tomorrow.
Eric was tired and aching; she may not have known him for long, but she knew him well, and his exhaustion was radiating from him in waves. He looked-- ragged, even. Unkempt. Her Eric, disheveled. That was just wrong.
"We could go home," Amber said, looking down at her hands as she washed her hands. The odor of disinfectant would wear off before long. "Order in, relax a bit--" She wanted nothing more, to be with him and forget their disagreements. They could put their fight aside for a few hours, right? If he still cared about her. He might want to return to the hospital quickly, but for the meanwhile there was nothing they could do. And back home, she could kiss him and it'd be them again, and he could press her up against the wall as she slid her hands down his pants, their anger erased by desire and pleasure-- she needed this release. Amber looked up and away from the sink to meet his gaze and raise a wry eyebrow. "I think we could both use some unwinding."
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Foreman wasn't prepared for her offer. He stared at her, not taking it in for a second, before the tilt of her head and her arched eyebrow finally registered. God, sex was the last thing that was going to solve this. He'd done it again, walked in expecting a damn apology, given her another opening, and all she wanted was to ignore it or subsume it somehow. He didn't even have the energy to be angry. He'd thought she couldn't hurt him worse than by doubting his medical opinion and sneaking behind his back to sabotage his case, but this was the last straw.
"I can't," he said, drawing back in on himself. "Not tonight." He'd be staying here, sleeping in the on-call room if he could, showering in the change room. He couldn't remember if he had a spare shirt in his locker; he might end up wearing OR scrubs if he got vomited on. Par for the course. He didn't even know how to tell her what the hell she'd done to him. If anyone else had screwed up, he might be tired, he might still be chained here overnight, but he wouldn't be this exhausted. He felt like he'd been beaten up, bruised so deep that simply moving enough to keep awake and keep thinking hurt. Fine. Fine. She hadn't let him alone before, but he also hadn't told her off. When she'd chased him, he'd let her in. Too deep, he saw that now. Too fast. This time he'd keep her at a better distance, so that she couldn't do this to him. Put those walls back up that he'd trusted her enough to let down. He cleared his throat and picked up his untouched coffee again, heading for the door. "I'll see you tomorrow."
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She was too damn tired for this-- all she'd wanted was a bit of down time with him and now he'd come in here and deliberately thrown that in her face, making her feel like shit. Despite having soothed herself through the simple process of cleaning up, her fingers twitched, her temple pulsed. "If you're angry, just say so!" Amber shot at his retreating, cowardly back. How dare he not tell her, just bottling it up and punishing her by keeping her guessing. "It's not as if you were perfect today!" God, she was so angry at him; just thinking about it made her feel hot. His arrogance, his refusal to contemplate any idea that hadn't been borne from his own damn skull-- she wouldn't have had to treat Casey her way if he'd just listened.
"Whatever," she spat out. Now she was the one who didn't want to have anything to do with him. It’d been stupid to wave aside all the ways he'd infuriated her today just so she could make herself feel better by simpering in his arms and getting laid. For orgasms Amber could bring herself off, use a vibrator, or even find herself a more convenient partner-- there was that spineless boy, the doctor she'd used to get her coffee and breakfast last week, he'd jump at the chance-- if Eric was going to shut her out. Amber picked up the almost-full coffee he'd gotten her and chucked it into the trash bin on top of used gloves and empty plastic cups. "Go off, do what you want."
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He stopped short, with his hand on the door, and turned back to her. Angry? He'd been fucking furious. On some level, he still was, but that had nothing to do with why he was staying at the hospital. He'd been going to work through it, on his own, away from her, until he could lock it away--whatever hurt and anger he felt--so that he wouldn't take it out on her. But if she wanted to hear it, then fine. Fucking fine. "You undermined me as a doctor," he said. "You had no respect for my decisions. You know this is the only job I could get after I was fired from Mercy, but you did your best to make me look like an idiot in front of the patient and the people I'm supposed to oversee." He shook his head, glaring at her. "I don't have the luxury to go off and I do what I want. I know no one else's career matters to you, but I thought I did."
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He turned back to her, forehead creased and frown furious. And yet his voice was icy as if there’d never been any warmth between them. "Oh, wah," Amber snapped at his accusations. She stalked towards him, her hair brushing against her cheeks with her hard, firm steps. "You undermined yourself. You thought you knew better than any of us and instead of doing a bit more harmless testing, you had to have it your way." She jerked her chin at him. "What would've you done, if you thought House was being reckless? Stand back and wring your hands? No-- what have you done?" No way he'd never fought against House's decisions.
Everything out of his mouth sounded like a whining child who'd been refused a ridiculous and expensive toy, but his last sentence stung. "I care! I care too much!" Amber’s voice rose, angrier than ever. "When will you understand that this isn't about you?" They'd been over this, for fuck's sake. Her fists curled up uselessly; even if physical action were the answer, they'd already established, thoroughly humiliating her in the process, that he had the upper hand. If only there were something she could strike here that didn't cost thousands of dollars.
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She cared. Foreman swallowed down just how much that cut through him. She hadn't shown it. So much of who he was was wrapped up in his career. He couldn't just separate them out. Being a doctor was who he was, and if she had any ounce of feeling for him, then she'd accept that. Foreman knew Amber felt the same way, that her abilities mattered to her. "I've never disregarded your opinion as a doctor," he said, more quietly. "I disagreed. I made a decision. I was willing to be proved wrong. You didn't give me that chance." He snorted softly. "You didn't give me a chance at all."
He pressed his lips together and looked away. His knuckles ached where he was gripping the door handle. Thank God it was late enough that no one had come by. "If you think that wasn't about me..." Then you have no idea who I am. He was tired of this conversation. He didn't want to be here, he didn't want to be proved right. "If I'd dismissed you like that, behind your back..." He didn't even know how to say it. She would have been incensed, stricken just as much as he was now. Maybe it shouldn't matter, maybe he was making a big fucking deal out of it, but he'd never been in the position before where someone he cared about had cut him down like that. He shrugged, struggling to pull himself back. "Never mind," he said. It was pointless to try and explain. He pulled open the door and walked away.
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"I wasn't trying to be right!" Amber exclaimed. Now the hurt spread with the after-shock of her sudden and sharp jealousy, merging into the urge to scream. Why couldn't he believe her? She wasn't lying. "I was doing what I thought was best for her, how is that so wrong?!"
Wrong because now Casey couldn't move her legs. Wrong because it could be her fault. But it wasn't. The problem couldn't be with her immune system. Amber wouldn't believe otherwise until there were results declaring so. She might not have handled the treatment as picture-perfect as Eric liked, but Amber hadn't fucked up to that extent.
They were face to face now and never did Amber feel further away from him. Eric’s nostrils flared slightly, as if he took in such sharp breaths they couldn't stay still. "You did," Amber returned, quieter than her near-yells but so very bitter. "You ignored the test pointing to lupus."
You didn't give me a chance at all. Amber looked away, staring down at the floor. That much was true. She hadn't trusted him to try out his own idea, which had been (and was) just as likely as lupus. But she returned his gaze before long, eyes narrowing. Boohoo. Was she supposed to coddle him when she didn't agree? Would he have rather she sit back when she believed he was harming a patient? With all the cool strength of her determination, Amber repeated: "I was doing what I thought was best for her." If-- and very unlikely so-- she'd hurt Casey, then he could scream at her and her methods all he liked. But for her intentions? Amber wouldn't hear of it.
God, he was harping again about her work being all about him. "The patient comes first," Amber said. "Always." How could he gloat about being such a great doctor if he couldn't get that most basic notion down? "Look, do whatever you want-- ignore me, laugh in my face, stick gum on the sole of my shoes-- if you think that's what'll help best." Results. That was all that mattered. Why didn't he see that?
Eric went back to the door, turning to leave. Disgusted, Amber just crossed her arms. Let him. If he couldn't understand, or believe in, her words, then there was nothing else she could do.