Allison Cameron (
as_damaged) wrote2010-07-11 07:14 pm
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☤ forty-five
It doesn't prove anything either way.
I always try to talk myself out of saying anything when this happens, but the truth is I think it's kind of nice. Horrifying, more often than not, but-- there's always a chance of seeing someone familiar.
[ooc; as always~ Cam is season 3, I would prefer to minimize explicit spoilers on recent canon but she can forget whatever she needs to ;) Please no duplicates of housecast unless approved by the concerned muns. etc etc. backdating-friendly forever.]
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[Perplexing, though; it seems like a surprising length to go to for Foreman, more personal attention than House is wont to lavish on any of them. It's not unusual enough to make her question the story, just an odd little reminder that things change. Whether precipitously or in slow and subtle ways makes no difference, regarding it from a vantage like hers.]
And Foreman's brother is okay with this? I mean, he must realize House is using him...
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[And got Foreman and his brother acknowledging each other again. Chase has always picked up a few of the nuances behind House's games, but reading what might be a softer side into them is usually her domain. He wonders if she'd care that he's picked it up, even a little.
Of course, there are still enough times when his motives lack anything Chase can make out as reason, let alone compassion.]
The rest of us got a laugh.
[Of course he doesn't say she's not under that umbrella anymore. He looks around, still parts of the layout here that have slipped from his mind.]
Where do you keep your music? Can I put something on?
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
On the shelf, over by the television. The stereo's there too. I could put on tea or something, if you'd like..?
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
He starts towards the television, kneeling next to the stereo shelf and running his thumb along the pile of her CDs. Missing the names with the turn of his head back toward her.]
Too warm for tea. How about a glass of something...?
[The lilt at the end turning statement to question isn't that he doubts she'd have wine in the house. He's just not sure, after last time, she'd give it to him.]
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
I wasn't sure you'd want...
[She trails off, with a wry little curl of her lip.]
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[There's a CD he must have left here, an Australian band, and he slips it into the CD cradle, pressing play and standing as the first few bars (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9j71ulwSDk) start to play.]
I'd get found out soon enough. The department can't run with two doctors with shaky hands.
[It's half a joke, and as he sits and takes the glass he's forgotten she won't get it.]
Thank you, for worrying about it.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
It isn't that I don't trust you, you know.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
Wouldn't blame you if you didn't.
[He's certain at least that trust is hard for her. That things won't slip away or otherwise let her down. And he's fairly certain, now, that for all the times she's tried to trust him she never quite made it past the belief something would eventually break down. All he's done is the last thing he ever wanted: proved her right.
Even here, where he could assume she just means the drink, he wouldn't blame her for adding up the one plus one of his last visits and letting them equal two.]
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
She can infer certain things. They still make very little sense. Funny, that she worries about him and them more than she worries about herself, on her own as she suspects she must be; not because she's strong, but because she's intimately familiar with her own weakness, whereas Chase's is... foreign, unsettling. She's never known what to make of him wanting her without needing her.]
Hey. No leaving me sad this time, remember?
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
He smiles, as suddenly and brightly as sunlight cracking stormclouds, and clinks his glass with her.] Sorry. I could go back to the office gossip, if you like.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[She tilts her head, an odd note of sympathy in her voice. As hard as these visits have been on her, they can't be easy for Chase, either. She doesn't want him to lie and put on a brave face-- he's not as good at it as he used to be, or maybe he's just not used to doing it for her anymore-- but... if he's doing better, she can feel a little less awful about what awaits her when the City finally sends her home. She doesn't want to think she's broken him.]
I'd gossip about what goes on here but... most of it's unpleasant, as usual.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
I've lived it, Allison. That's not gossip, it's nostalgia. [He teases her, sets down his glass and half turns to better face her.] What would you prefer?
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[She laughs a little, sipping her wine and meeting his eyes.] Gossip's likelier to be pleasant conversation, but sometimes I feel like I know too much. That I'm going to let something slip-- to you, to House and Wilson. [Cameron tilts her head and sets her glass aside too, going a bit quieter.] You don't remember while you're at home, do you?-- you can't, it would create a paradox.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
He rests his hands, clasped, in his lap, sighing softly.]
I don't remember everything right now, either. I don't... remember leaving. I can remember being pretty sure I never would.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
Would I sound completely paranoid if I guessed that it's because the City doesn't want you to be able to tell me?
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
While you're here, I'd say it's smart to be paranoid. There I was thinking it probably had something to do with me.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[Still, she smiles back.]
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[Teasing her means he doesn't have to tell her about his own paranoiac leanings. The memory-fogged suspicion that he never left at all. But who'd dream up such a god-awful future for themselves, really? Assume they deserve it?
...Well, point made and taken.]
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[She can vouch for his presence, twice over; but as for his eventual absence... Time means so little here, there's no way to prove he isn't just coming back from the City's future. What an unpleasant thought; but Cameron doesn't entertain it for long, if only because she's convinced that here, forewarned would be forearmed.]
Rudy Miller-- if you remember him? Claims to know when he'll leave, but he won't tell.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[There's someone else that could apply to, at least as he was three years ago. Chase nods.]
If he knows when he's leaving, he won't need to try again before he's sure to succeed. Watch for failed attempts before you believe anything he feeds you.
it seems that all my bridges have been burned, you say that's just how this grace thing works
[A grin breaks out, sudden and unexpected, and she casts a sly glance at him.] Since I'm pretty sure I've never studied undersea medicine.