Dr. Rob Chase (
dr_robchase) wrote2012-06-01 07:46 pm
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There were some moments when Chase felt like he existed as nothing more than an annotated mark in one of his father's books. The definitive book of rheumatology doesn't even mention that Rowan Chase had a family. There was no hint of the wife he abandoned, nor the son that he thought inconvenient or the too-late daughter who followed in her mother's footsteps. He was hired by House because of a phone call that his father made out of some delayed guilt and didn't even bother to call and congratulate him.
(Is congratulations merited when the job's been secured for you through bribery? He wasn't sure about that)
And then, and then Rowan Chase swooped back into his life for all of a measly few days under the excuse that Chase was suddenly worth seeing, but only for so long and never with the truth. At the time, he'd been grateful deep down beneath the loathing and the anger. Three months later, he forgot how to be anything but lost.
Cancer.
His father had been dying when he'd visited. He'd been dying and he hadn't told Chase. House had figured it out and he hadn't told Chase. He'd come to see him off and he hadn't told Chase and the only thing that he did manage to do was marry a woman who knew well-enough to call her stepson the moment that his estranged father passed away. Chase would never forget that phone call. He didn't think he had it in him to forget, but not just for the numbness that pervaded, but the moment after.
This moment.
"Dr. Chase?"
It was a ghost's voice. It was a ghost and instead of being in his nightmares, she was standing right behind him and there was a phone in his hand and he could swear that he'd gone to bed. Vision blurry with tears over a man who had died so long ago and who had given him nothing, he turned around and stared at Kayla, unable to manage any semblance of the English language.
"Hi," she said, without a single hint of awareness of what was coming -- of what she was about to lose.
And so, here Chase was, on the cusp of making the biggest mistake of his career because of his father.
Or maybe he had it all wrong. Maybe even this wouldn't have made it into one of his father's books. Maybe even this, this last ignorance wouldn't even rate.
(Is congratulations merited when the job's been secured for you through bribery? He wasn't sure about that)
And then, and then Rowan Chase swooped back into his life for all of a measly few days under the excuse that Chase was suddenly worth seeing, but only for so long and never with the truth. At the time, he'd been grateful deep down beneath the loathing and the anger. Three months later, he forgot how to be anything but lost.
Cancer.
His father had been dying when he'd visited. He'd been dying and he hadn't told Chase. House had figured it out and he hadn't told Chase. He'd come to see him off and he hadn't told Chase and the only thing that he did manage to do was marry a woman who knew well-enough to call her stepson the moment that his estranged father passed away. Chase would never forget that phone call. He didn't think he had it in him to forget, but not just for the numbness that pervaded, but the moment after.
This moment.
"Dr. Chase?"
It was a ghost's voice. It was a ghost and instead of being in his nightmares, she was standing right behind him and there was a phone in his hand and he could swear that he'd gone to bed. Vision blurry with tears over a man who had died so long ago and who had given him nothing, he turned around and stared at Kayla, unable to manage any semblance of the English language.
"Hi," she said, without a single hint of awareness of what was coming -- of what she was about to lose.
And so, here Chase was, on the cusp of making the biggest mistake of his career because of his father.
Or maybe he had it all wrong. Maybe even this wouldn't have made it into one of his father's books. Maybe even this, this last ignorance wouldn't even rate.
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Chase, meanwhile, was looking at this woman--a patient, maybe?--like he'd seen a ghost, and he was tempted to step on his husband's foot. The patient would probably notice, though...and hey, what was with Chase's hair?
Dr McCrimmon, he decided, of Glasgow University Medical School. On exchange. He cleared his throat at Chase, nodding at the woman.
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Chase had enough time to spin around, exhale, and lean forward as he rested his forehead against the cool counter, in sheer disbelief and sudden panic and regret about what he just did. "Shit," he muttered.
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The Doctor leaned back against the counter, crossing his arms, and for once decided not to bother spouting his mouth off. Maybe this Chase wasn't his Chase, was part of whatever construct he'd found himself in. The thought was dizzyingly lonely, and he shivered a little, trying to phrase his words right. "What the fuck?"
Well, that was...apt enough.
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He wanted to ask what the Doctor was doing there and how he could be there, but there was a fine sort of relief that filtered in, because if the Doctor was here, the chance that he'd gone back home for good wasn't highly likely. "That, right there, what I just did," he said, yanking the phone closer to him and trying to recall Kayla's number from memory (he couldn't) before swearing and searching for her chart. "I just sent that woman out the door to die," he said thickly.
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He paused, then caught a glimpse of the desk calendar behind the counter. "You've been here before," he guessed, from the date he saw there.
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Chase didn't particularly like May 11th anymore. "I need her chart so I can find her phone number before it's too late."
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Oh god, what if they were both dead and Chase had been right about Catholicism, and this was purgatory? The thought made him shudder.
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"Fine," he said simply, not adding and when the demons that live in the cracks of spacetime show up, don't say I didn't try.
Hell, he wasn't sure if this would even work like Chase wanted it to.
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...but ended up in the clinic again.
Chase stared around him with boggled awe, shaking his head as he tried to make sense of what had just happened. He didn't have to wait long. By the time the nurse informed him that he had a phone call, he had a fairly good idea of where he was.
Shit.
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He blinked, looked at Chase, looked where they were. "Now that's interesting," he murmured. Someone passing gave him a faintly confused look, which he shrugged off, mulling over the possibilities of what could be happening.
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"I'm not available right now," he said, and bolted for the changeroom as quickly as his feet would take him, unable to believe the solace he took in the sight of the ugly green tiles in front of him, even if he was staring at them while unable to catch a single breath.
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He sighed, then jogged after him, because that was what the Doctor did. "What's going on?" he asked, bursting into the changing room.
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He hated this. He hated staring at himself and seeing someone that he was a long, long time ago. "I can't do this again," he said, voice trembling.
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He sighed. "Tell me what I need to know and I'll talk to her, for fuck's sake."
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He stood up and perched on the counter instead. "Rob...what did your father do?"
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"You blame yourself, you blame your father, you blame House. Fine. Move the plot along."
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That was more than faintly terrifying, all things considered. Maybe this was some sort of island trick, which would be the least scary thing.
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He just didn't know what to expect of what would come from it.
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He closed his eyes, but when he opened them, he was still in the changeroom. It wasn't until he took the steps back towards the hall that he found himself suddenly thrust back into a moment, phone in hand.
"...Robert?" called his stepmother from so very far away.
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Back further in time, then. This was just getting strange, though not as bad as it might have been, the Doctor thought. At least they didn't have to run for their lives. Yet.
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'Passed away' and 'long battle'; one that Chase hadn't known about until the obituary.
This time, he is ready for it, and so the news rattled him, but when he heard Kayla's voice calling for him, Chase gently hung up the phone, recited her chart again in his mind (he would never forget it, never forget her kids, never forget her) and turned, offering the bedside manner smile that Foreman had always hated. "Kayla," he breathed out, pain lurking in his eyes, but not in his tone. "Hi. Would you like to head into an examination room? We can talk more privately there."
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When she left, she left with a smile on her face, prescriptions and appointments in hand. She left with the possibility that her life was going to be her own. Chase felt good about it at the same time as he felt the crushing fear that none of this was actually real. "If this is a dream," he murmured, aware the Doctor was nearby, close enough to hear, "I don't want to think about it being real. I'd rather delude myself into thinking this was it, that this was reality."
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He thought about giving Chase a hug, but settled for putting an arm around his shoulders. "Let's get some coffee."
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He wrapped Chase into a hug. "I mean that," he said, not sure still about the hug because if this was reality somehow, people would totally be weirded out by it. But whatever.