Norman Jayden (
leanonstuff) wrote2011-01-01 01:38 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
PSL Post for lieutenantantichrist
[The killer was dead.
Norman had watched him fall after nearly swapping fates, a gruesome end for a truly deranged man. The following days found him swamped with attention, from media to the local cops and his fellow FBI agents, his head was swimming every time he had a moment alone. It was really a blessing when he was granted a few days off both to recover from his injuries and as a 'congratulations' for quickly solving a case that had become serious national news.
For the first time in awhile, as Norman lay on his DC apartment bed surrounded by a rare quiet, he felt pretty damn good about himself.
That was, until he took his next hit of Tripto.
He tried to get rid of the stuff, he really did. Flushed it down the toilet, hid it around the apartment, threw it out the window (not one of his better ideas), but somehow he always ended up with another vial in hand shortly after. Norman knew that the drug wasn't the sole problem too, maybe not even the most serious, but he couldn't part with ARI. He needed it for his job- how else would he have found Shaun in time?
Bleeding eyes haunted his dreams, more so since he knew such a thing could happen in reality again if he wasn't careful. As it turned out, all that time alone with his thoughts wasn't as nice as he'd hoped, and as such it was actually a relief when he returned to work. Norman knew that working for the FBI wasn't all glamorous; in fact, sitting behind a desk doing paperwork was more common for his job as a profiler than it was for most. He was well aware that he'd have to return to Philadelphia in order to officially close the case, as much as he loathed the thought of having to interact with Blake again. Maybe they wouldn't have to see each other, if he was lucky.
A few days later he found himself back in the precinct, only to be greeted by cheers, hugs and hearty pats on the back. Unexpected as this much praise was, Norman couldn't help but smile and make a couple silly quips to those who congratulated him. The first night there a big group of them went out to a local bar, apparently it had already been rented out for them that day, and brought the agent along to buy him drinks and continue lavishing him with praise. It seemed that they all wanted to be his friend now, something that admittedly felt pretty good for awhile but quickly became tiring. When the officers who had been chatting with him became distracted, Norman took his drink and retreated to a darker corner of the bar for a little break from the spotlight.]
Norman had watched him fall after nearly swapping fates, a gruesome end for a truly deranged man. The following days found him swamped with attention, from media to the local cops and his fellow FBI agents, his head was swimming every time he had a moment alone. It was really a blessing when he was granted a few days off both to recover from his injuries and as a 'congratulations' for quickly solving a case that had become serious national news.
For the first time in awhile, as Norman lay on his DC apartment bed surrounded by a rare quiet, he felt pretty damn good about himself.
That was, until he took his next hit of Tripto.
He tried to get rid of the stuff, he really did. Flushed it down the toilet, hid it around the apartment, threw it out the window (not one of his better ideas), but somehow he always ended up with another vial in hand shortly after. Norman knew that the drug wasn't the sole problem too, maybe not even the most serious, but he couldn't part with ARI. He needed it for his job- how else would he have found Shaun in time?
Bleeding eyes haunted his dreams, more so since he knew such a thing could happen in reality again if he wasn't careful. As it turned out, all that time alone with his thoughts wasn't as nice as he'd hoped, and as such it was actually a relief when he returned to work. Norman knew that working for the FBI wasn't all glamorous; in fact, sitting behind a desk doing paperwork was more common for his job as a profiler than it was for most. He was well aware that he'd have to return to Philadelphia in order to officially close the case, as much as he loathed the thought of having to interact with Blake again. Maybe they wouldn't have to see each other, if he was lucky.
A few days later he found himself back in the precinct, only to be greeted by cheers, hugs and hearty pats on the back. Unexpected as this much praise was, Norman couldn't help but smile and make a couple silly quips to those who congratulated him. The first night there a big group of them went out to a local bar, apparently it had already been rented out for them that day, and brought the agent along to buy him drinks and continue lavishing him with praise. It seemed that they all wanted to be his friend now, something that admittedly felt pretty good for awhile but quickly became tiring. When the officers who had been chatting with him became distracted, Norman took his drink and retreated to a darker corner of the bar for a little break from the spotlight.]
no subject
Headlines. TV news. Goddamn internet. They were all pawing through anything and everything that could be dug up about the killer and waved around for the vultures. You couldn't open a goddamn newspaper without the front page blaring at you how how could this have happened? Details on page 4, psychoanalysis on page 6, interview with the killer's dementia-ridden mother on page 17. Fucking jackals.
Of course they'd come after Blake before the corpse was cold. For a second punching the bastard in the gut felt like it'd be worth the Lieutenant Involved in Origami Killer Case Assaults Reporter headlines, but he settled for slamming the door in his face.
He couldn't punch any of the people he'd really like to. There just happened to be a whole lot of heroin dealers and pimps getting their noses broken lately.
Blake spent a lot of time on the streets, especially on days when rumors were going around that one of those punchable faces was going to be showing up in the flesh. He spent the day tracking down a lead that ended in cornering the guy with a, Come on. Go ahead, do me a big favor and resist arrest.
Something of how he was feeling must have come across. The lousy jackass came along quietly.
So instead he came to his favorite bar after work to hunch over a beer for a while, and who should be there but the whole goddamn crew and the asshole they can't quit fawning over him. Blake refused to give in and leave. He was here first, damn it.
Then what did the asshole do but invade his territory.
For a while, Blake just looked at him.
Finally he grated out,]
Go ahead. Do it.
no subject
Yeah, Blake was probably taking his mistake in the Origami case hard. If Ethan hadn't taken legal action against him, he'd have to deal with the disapproval of the higher ups, as well as the general public. There definitely was a difference between having a microphone shoved in your face for a positive interview and a negative one.
Nonetheless, Norman heard that little invitation and many thoughts of getting in a hurtful jab passed through his mind. After all the crap he'd dealt with when partnering with the guy, it'd be nice to really rub his failures into his face when no one's life was on the line. The asshole deserved everything he got.
And yet... he already looked pretty damn defeated sitting there alone with his drink while the rest of the crew celebrated. Almost defensive. Norman wasn't one to take pleasure in kicking someone while they were down, however tempting it was in this instance. Instead he decided to play ignorant about Blake's meaning.]
Do what?
no subject
The asshole looked clean and tidy, like always. Just like he had on that damn interview. Blake had taken about half a second of the interviewer slobbering over him before flinging the remote at the screen. It made him suddenly aware of the wrinkles in his shirt and the five o'clock shadow blurring his beard, and he felt a jab of fresh resentment at the bastard.
The asshole had to play dumb, too.]
Gloat. Have your fun saying 'I told you so,' and then get out of my face.
no subject
I don't really think it's fair to say I'm "in your face" right now.
[No, he was a good few feet away. Really, he should have just walked away at that point, but something kept him in place. Maybe it was the drinks, or the desire to gloat really was stronger than his attempts to hide it.]
...But I did tell you so.
[The words came out clumsily, as if escaping his mouth without his permission. Well, shit.]
no subject
Blake grunted in response, then a second later froze, body taut. He went from looking like a bear huddled in its cave to looking like a bear that had just been poked with a stick in a sore spot.
His voice crackled with loathing.]
Fuck you.
[His hand tightened around the empty glass until his knuckles were white. He got a sweet vision of smashing it over the bastard's skull.]
Fine. You're done. Now go back to getting your dick sucked by those idiots.
no subject
Hey, look. I swear I'm not trying to pick a fight or anything.
[Not this time. He'd already won as they both realized; there was nothing left to prove in what little remained of their professional relationship.]
But I'm gonna be around the precinct for awhile longer, so it'd probably be best if we weren't at each other's throats all the time.
[An attempt to extend the hand of peace was more than Norman had actually planned in regard to Blake. Still, he'd feel a lot better if the guy wasn't glaring at him half the time, practically seething with rage.]
no subject
And the bastard was going to be around for a while. Just his luck.
It needled him that Jayden didn't even have the decency to rise to the fight. Like Blake wasn't worth it. He must have been above that now.
Blake picked up his glass and remembered the damn thing was already empty.]
All right. You want to do some high-and-mighty 'bigger man' shit? Prove it.
[He jabbed his glass at him.]
Get me another drink.
no subject
Sure thing.
[He turned and headed back over to the bar. From the looks of it the lieutenant really didn't need too much more alcohol in his system- who knew how long he'd already been here drinking? So Norman did the responsible thing and ordered him a Sangria. A little alcohol, but nothing that'd really affect his level of intoxication.
For himself? Same thing, actually. Alone he'd be more likely to take something stronger, but in public he'd rather not do anything embarrassing.
After exchanging a few more words with the officers at the bar, he took the drinks and headed back to the corner table. The one he placed in front of Blake had two little blue umbrellas in it. Sharing was caring and all that.]
You're welcome.
no subject
Blake grunted acknowledgement. He took a drink, and despite himself, despite the black mood he was grabbing onto tight as a security blanket, it was kind of funny.]
Should've known you'd go for the girly drink.
[If Norman thought that would slow him down, he was sorely mistaken.
As Blake wiped his lips with his forearm, he found his mood improved to 'suspicious and sullen', a significant step up from the previous 'actively murderous.' He eyes Norman in the low light and the flicker of the game on TV.]
You must be having the time of your life back in DC. National fuckin' hero. You got groupies yet?
no subject
[The change in mood didn't go unnoticed, not when he was observing Blake so closely. Norman's own posture relaxed every so slightly in response, though there still remained most of the usual stiffness to his posture present when he was among groups of people.]
Groupies? [He shook his head with a crooked smile, choosing to ignore the rest of Blake's statements. Time of his life? Not quite. Being the center of attention when he knew he could be hit with withdrawal symptoms at any moment was anxiety producing enough without his ever present aversion to being forced into social situations.
Being praised was a nice change of pace, but after awhile he just wanted things to go back to normal. Ideally, people would respect him but also leave him in peace to do his work and hide his demons.]
Nah. I had some time off and I used most of it to catch up on sleep. Or try to anyway. [Beyond the physical issues, there were plenty of horrific memories to keep him awake at night. The people who had died because of him, whether or not they deserved it, coupled with too many near-death situations to count did not make for a calm mind.] I'm just grateful that Shaun made it out of there okay.
no subject
He didn't get any of the bragging he expected. Probably Norman was doing the humble version, where you pretend to be tired and down-to-earth right until you can slip in some mention of camera crews following you around and people trying to shake your hand.]
Sure you did.
[The mention of Shaun Mars made his face darken and close up. The boy Norman saved. The one on all the magazine covers ducking shyly behind his dad, the guy with the relieved smile on his face to go with the fading bruises.]
Yeah.
[He turned the glass around and around, eyes on the table.]
Kid's safe. Dad's exonerated. Everything's great. Happily ever fuckin' after.
no subject
It was too bad, he mused, that an apparent passion for bringing killers to justice had to be expressed in such a manner when it could be better applied to doing things the right way. He could only hope that the inevitable scrutiny Blake received for his bad practices after Ethan's experiences and the notes Norman himself wrote about the case were enough to make him change tactics before he lost his career forever.]
I couldn't think of a better ending myself.
[His own bright demeanor stood in stark contrast to Blake's; he was having a good time, no withdrawal symptoms since earlier in the afternoon and a pleasant buzz from the drinks he'd had up till that point.]
But life goes on, right? By next month we'll all have new piles of cases on our desks. Can't wait to see where I'll get shipped off to next. [The last bit was tinged with sarcasm. Though he lived alone and had no obligations in DC other than work, Norman didn't much enjoy the process of time and again butting heads with the local police forces.]
no subject
Blake could think of plenty of better outcomes. Like that the killer wasn't...
He took a long drink. That was a hole he'd been down plenty of times.
Funny enough, it was Norman who redirected his attention. Asshole couldn't even let him wallow in peace.]
Yeah, the rest of us have work to do. [Filling out drunk driver paperwork, acting like everything was as sane and normal as it ever was.] I thought you'd get a while of sitting around being a hero and going on Oprah first.
no subject
Might be pointless to spend time trying to psychoanalyze Blake, though. Something told him the guy wouldn't appreciate the effort.]
I almost exclusively work homicide and kidnappings. Can't afford to take too much time off just because I did my job and solved one.
[But it was true that, even with the FBI's superior resources, many of the worst crimes went unsolved. Serial killers roamed America's streets all the time, and people went missing constantly. Worst was when the crimes were committed at random, like Shelby's case, when investigating family members and friends yielded no results.]
This is kinda like a vacation, anyway. Paperwork for a solved case. Free drinks. Maybe I'll even get a date. [A tapering chuckle at that. Yeah, right.]
no subject
He shot a glare, taking that comment as a jab at him. Snotty asshole. 'I did my job, Carter, unlike SOME people.'
But hell. Back to the grindstone, fighting the piles of ugliness that never went down. That was almost something they had in common.]
Yeah. You get one big headline case down today, three new less flashy ones show up tomorrow. People don't got the decency to stop killing each other for five damn minutes so you can catch a nap.
[He flicked ones of the umbrellas in his drink with his nail, and for once, when his eyes came up, he forgot himself and talked to Jayden like a brother in arms.]
Buddy, if you can't leverage stopping a serial killer into some attention from women, you don't deserve to get laid.
no subject
Yeah, tell me about it.
[The next comment nearly had him choking on his drink. So maybe being blunt wasn't always so great... how often would a simple joke about a date immediately turn into a discussion about sex?]
Who says I don't get attention from women?
[But now that the topic has come up, his attention turned toward the other cops walking around the bar. Probably a bit too notably, his eyes seemed to be tracking a few of the more attractive, gruffer looking men as they passed by. Yeah, women. Sure.]
no subject
A grin slipped through for a second when Norman choked. Blake could take Mr. Magic Detective by surprise. Blake wasn't real delicate at the best of times, and the chance to make this prissy bastard squirm was too good to pass up. It was a lot better to think about than that case, the fresh wound that had settled in to gnaw at Blake's guts. There would be plenty of time for that later.
Blake had figured Jayden would go straight for the woman at the far end of the bar in a slinky dress, the fancy you're-not-good-enough-for-me type, but when he looked, that wasn't where Jayden's eyes were. Not even close.
A hint of a frown appeared on Blake's face. It must have been his imagination. He decided to give him a push.]
Who're you looking at? Did you come over here to try to get up the balls to go for it?
no subject
Nah, I'm shit at the whole small talk part. Or having any idea who might be interested.
[Actually, that wasn't entirely true. There were always places to go where he could be fairly confident he wouldn't make a complete fool of himself, but actually getting up the nerve to go? Really, really unlikely.]
Not that it's any of your business. [If anyone was likely to give him hell for his personal life, it would be Blake, he was sure of it.]
no subject
Jesus, Norman. You've got a goddamn red carpet in front of you, and you're gonna waste it?
[He made a point of ignoring the fact it wasn't any of his business. If Jayden didn't like that, he could leave. Nobody was forcing him to stay chit-chatting with a broken down old cop who'd blown everything.]
If I had half your luck, I'd already be on my way home with-
[The handsome, sophisticated-looking guy talking to the bartender. But Norman didn't need to know that.
Blake covered his lapse by jabbing his finger at him.]
Listen, you're buying a drink for somebody, and your choice is either one of them or me.
no subject
That also meant he was a bit stuck when Blake offered him two choices. Sure, he could decline both, but he might end up fucked over by doing so.
His eyes flickered down at Blake, then over to the bar. He sighed that time, placing his current glass down on the table across from the lieutenant.]
I'll get you a drink, then.
[He scurried off before anything else could be said and got the bartender's attention. Norman ordered something with more of a kick this time, whiskey, one for himself as well. He brought the glasses back to the table and sat down, a clearer commitment to his use of time over here than before.]
no subject
You can't even give me the fun of watching you get shot down.
[Not that he would. Blake wasn't kidding about how everybody was fawning over this bastard. All he'd have to do is nod, and that- well. That needled Blake deep.
He swirled his drink around, regarding Jayden. The real thing wasn't living up to the cocky, swaggering jackass he'd told off a hundred times in his head. The aftermath of the case had cut him off from all his old comrades in arms. Now they barely looked at him. He didn't have room for the word loneliness. What he felt was spoiling for a fight.]
Look. If what you're waiting for is for me to grovel and kiss your ass like the rest of them, you're gonna be waiting a long time.
no subject
No one's done that yet, thought I made it clear.
[He could take the mature route here and say something intelligent, meaningful. Instead he decided to be an asshole, because Blake always seemed to bring out the worst in him.]
But if you wanna do that in the privacy of my hotel room, I'd be all for it. [It was a joke, a jab, and yet... not entirely untrue. As much as he'd dislike to admit it, Blake fit his type pretty well. A bit too well.]
no subject
Blake was halfway through a sip when Jayden surprised him by showing some teeth. His swallow went wrong, and the whiskey burned right down to his fingertips.
There was only one reason he'd go there: Norman knew. It wasn't exactly a big secret, but Blake had thought his buddies would have the common damn decency not to share anything personal about him with this asshole.
He leaned forward over the table.]
Who told you?