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Fic: Decameron, Cam/H one-sided, H/W

Fic:  Decameron, part 1/10
Author:  Nakanna Lee
Pairing:  Cam/H, one-sided; H/W
Rating:  PG-13 as of now
A/N:  This is what happens when I'm in the middle of a Gothic novel and a course on the Renaissance.  The title--as well as the basic layout--are borrowed from Boccaccio, a 14th century writer.  Um, trust me, it's not as haughty as it sounds.
2A/N:  It's a bit different than what I usually write, so I'd really appreciate concrit!  Much thanks.

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It’s called a bloodstone. You had to look it up on the internet, because even House didn’t have a book lying around the differential room that could provide an explanation.

A mineral stone, it says. A form of something else, called chalcedony. You hold the smooth, oval rock up to the light and peer through, and suddenly the world is made of envious greens intermittently slashed with reds. In your palm, it’s like liquid glass.

It’s not quite perfect. Age has cracked parts of it, leaving subtle, battered holes across the otherwise level surface. But considering you know very little about minerals, it’s interesting for its ambiguity alone.

You wonder where it came from, as it was on your desk with no note to accompany it.

An understated smolder nurtures your chest into an impulsive pile of embers as you continue reading. Specifically, the stone is known as a heliotrope. According to medieval legend, it provides invisibility to the wearer.

*   *   * 

DAY ONE

Even if you didn’t love him, even if the impulse to fix what’s broken has passed, you can’t let go. It would be surrendering, and he’d never you live that down. So you keep on loving him, more so for him than for yourself.

You’re such a brave, good person if people would just give you a chance.

Arms overflowing with charts and patients’ histories, you move briskly down the artificially lit hallway. Your slender, black heels announce your presence. House turns around and stares reproachfully at you, like a creature disappointed in the quality of its hunter.

Before you can speak, he orders a myriad of medical tests for a patient he’s only heard bits and pieces about, then sends you on your way. You might as well be invisible.

Dr. Wilson meets him at the end of the corridor. A few moments earlier, he had walked a bouncy, young girl and her parents all the way from his office to the front of Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. They’d already discussed treatment options for their six-year-old; this was his march of self-aggrandizing support, his walk of perceptive, emotional counseling.

You wonder how House can stand him, because after a little over three years working your fellowship, you certainly can’t.

You’d like to think of yourself as a pillar, standing there in the middle of the hallway and providing stability for something, anything. It doesn’t help watching them both. The ceiling might as well cave in.

Anyone’s first glance would assume that the two would clash raucously, not merge so troublingly well. Some men shake hands, offer a nod, give a bit of an elbow. But House annoys those he cares about.

For years, he’d gotten into the habit of casually poking Wilson with his cane. In the leg. Jutting the curved handle lightly in his side. Tapping his shoe. He tests Wilson constantly, as if that shields both sides from expecting too much from the other.

Even with the leg pain steadily returning, House has cast off the cane and walks best he can under his own power. No one has dared to guess how much longer that will last. But House seems intent on dragging it out.

Wilson grins boyishly at him, and your stomach mixes itself up in your chest somewhere before splattering down near your feet. With the cane gone, that mode of their connection has frazzled, like a bad conduction. Instead, House directly brushes Wilson’s sleeve in acknowledgment; the younger man runs a light hand down his back, lingering at his waist for one too many suspicious seconds.

Then again, you see what you want to see. This would be much easier if they just couldn’t see you.
 
*   *   *

You’re sitting in House’s office, with one leg elegantly crossed over the other, as the night drags darkness into the near-empty hospital. His desk light is the only one on, creating a pool of blinding white that spills across his papers and sends shadows jostling from its current.

The stone is frigid upon your chest. Tied within a string around your neck, the heliotrope feels inordinately heavy, like a clammy hand pressed close to claim your heartbeat.

Finally, House’s pager shrieks. He glances at it once, stalls for another ten minutes, then gingerly rises to his feet. Unseen and unsuspected, you follow right behind. You carry your heels so not a remnant of sound escapes you.

Wilson has almost every light on in his office, which House quickly rectifies by a flick of a switch. You squint through the dark, eyes already accustomed, and just make it inside before the door falls shut behind you and House.

“I thought maybe you’d gone home.” Wilson rises from his seat, smooth and together, as if greeting a diplomat. “What took you?”

“The stairs.”

“There’s an elevator, House.”

The smirk ripples caverns of wrinkles around his mouth. “What exactly do you have in mind, Dr.Wilson?”

House’s low, prodding tone sharply drains confidence from your limbs, like a syringe stealing your nerve. You watch carefully, favoring the door behind you. You just need to hear something, not see everything.

You glance to House’s face. He’s oblivious to you, and yet you have a lurking feeling that his mind is constantly turning you over, unraveling you for further thought. How could it not be?

He moves to meet Wilson, who has leaned back against the front of his oak desk. Wilson’s right hand is curled around his nameplate for support; the left is posed at just the right height to slip around House’s narrow waist.

Very slowly, House rubs his fingers at something on the front of Wilson’s shirt, as if he were trying to remove a stain. When he leans in and kisses his neck, you stifle your quick intake of breath and glance away. Momentarily. Wilson’s slight moan pulls you back. It demands House to stop.

“Who have you told?”

The lustrous gleam of Wilson’s eyes is interrupted by a hesitating blink. “Nobody.”

“Who’s asked?”

“House…” The tone is exasperated. “Nobody.”

You can’t make out expressions, dimness owning them and refusing to divulge. They’ve leaned so close to one another that it’s impossible to segregate where House’s blazer starts and Wilson’s shirt and tie end. It’s so cliché, and you hate Dr. Wilson for it.

“What would it matter,” Wilson starts trying again, “if it did get out? Why should that—”

“Because I am not just another pathetic case for you,” House growls back. A shudder snaps through you as House thrusts Wilson back against the desk, so hard it reverberates. Something falls. Heavy. It might be Wilson’s resolve.

“Okay.” Wilson barely whispers it. But it’s not weak, and you can’t tolerate that.

You slip away like a refugee out into the sanctuary of the hallway. Neither House nor Wilson notice, or at least they didn’t pause to question the sudden movement of the door. You rub your cold fingers over your lips, wandering senselessly for a few moments. The stone calms you. Maybe you left too soon. Maybe there was more to see, to hear.

Maybe it’s all a lie, and like anything else, House will realize it soon enough.

You trace a protective design over the heliotrope and decide there’s no harm in keeping it for a few more days.

tbc...
http://nakannalee.livejournal.com/10038.html
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Comments

What a fantastic story idea! The title is an incredible pun. The invisibility motif "rocks": not just the power of the bloodstone itself, but that fact that House really doesn't see Cameron the way she wishes he would, even when visible ;-) I also loved Cameron's bias in describing her own actions (one leg elegantly crossed over the other) compared to Wilson's (march of self-aggrandizing support). The way the cane no longer limits physical contact between H and W is a brilliant touch as well. And don't forget the lovely similes (like a syringe stealing your nerve)...
Thanks! The title is practically what spurred the idea (10 days--of Cameron, I thought, hmm...). lol. I usually don't do a lot of supernatural or mystical stuff, but it's nice to stretch yourself as a writer and see what happens. I've written some drabbles (experimental, not really posting-worthy) from Cam's point of view. I'm starting to like her only because I DISlike her so intensely. If that makes any sense. ;) But I think she's incredibly naive about her definition of sincerity and justification, so this really gives me a new, fresh POV chance--especially in second-person.
Usually I see authors using the second person POV to try to make the reader involved in the story, which doesn't really work for me personally.

But here I get the sense that Cameron is trying to picture herself with House, and trying to convince herself that she should be in that picture. It seems sort of self-reflective to me, and very natural sounding in that situation.
I usually don't like fics with several parts, but I am definitely going to be following this one. I love your writing style, and the idea is fascinating and the characters are dead-on, everything is great. Please continue soon! :)
Thank you for reading! I'm usually pretty decent about getting parts out in a reasonable amount of time, roughly a day or so between posts. Stay tuned for updates! :)
I'm impressed by your use of the second person. I frequently find most stories written in it labored and distracting, but this was really effortless. Picking out Cameron's bias from the truth in this story really drew me in. Very nice.
Yeah, I thought I'd try a different narration style. Glad it's working for you so far!
You wonder how House can stand him, because after a little over three years working your fellowship, you certainly can’t.

Very nice. I can certainly see Cameron feeling this.
Glad you're enjoying it! She's really giving me a different angle to explore as far as H/W goes. I don't particularly like Cameron as a character, but that's not to say I don't find her interesting, which is grea for the storyline.
Ah yes. An unreliable narrator. It always makes for a more than interesting read. I also love the symbolism as someone mentioned earlier: the visibility vs. invisibility bit and whether they are one and the same, the lies vs. truth bit: Is cam lying to herself, lying to her audience (my biased self says yes)? I really like the way this has stared and I'm excited for updates!
Hopefully, updates will be coming reguarly, every day or every-other day. I try to stay on top of installment stories, only because if I don't, I feel I lose the cohesiveness of the plot. Second-person is something I don't use too often, but in this case I think it's appropriate. Thanks for reading; I'm sure I'll be posting again soon!
Hooray!

(Anonymous)

Compelling story, especially the use of the stone. I hadn't heard that bloodstone confers invisibility, but in the first century A.D. Damigeron wrote that bloodstone preserves an owner's health and protects her from deception.
Thanks for reading, and for the info. I know in "Decameron," one of the stories include men who go out in search of a heliotrophe, which can make the wearer invisible. Very interesting stuff from Damigeron, though. I'll definitely have to check that out...
I very much enjoyed the start to this! The style you're using, with the narration, language and the symbolism, it just all flows so effortlessly and makes this a pleasure to read thus far.

Looking forward to more!
Peace,
CS WhiteWolf
Thanks so much for reading! :) I will definitely be getting more out soon...

(Anonymous)

Well written and interesting, as always. I like the style that you write in, and I like the idea of writing Cameron in the second person. Interesting method of engaging the reader. Heart.
I'm sorry, but this story is extremely out of character, especially for Cameron. She is so stuck up and self-righteous and she thinks everything she does is great and oh poor her, if only someone would notice her!

Cameron is a grown ass woman. She had a crush on House, but she did NOT act like this. And I don't think she would spy on House and Wilson; the only thing that makes that idea even remotely acceptable was when she watched House with his parents. Even then, it was only because she wanted to know him better, not because she was nosy. Seeing House with his parents and seeing House with Wilson are two completely different things.

I hope this wasn't mean, but it just upsets me that you are raping Cameron's character. This is so far gone, you've raped her, aborted her, pissed on her, and poked her with a stick. Sorry.
IAWTC.


Though if I had the chance, I would've raped her too. Maybe not piss on her or poke her with a stick.
WOW I really like this!! You writ them all really well espically Wilson!! I hope Cameron gets what's coming to her!! Maybe you can have her die or the stone suck out her life? Just a suggestion!!

I can't wait to read more!

(Anonymous)

I thought this was amaaaaaaaaazing. You've really got Cameron's character down completely. Don't listen to i_heart_cameron and the rest. They're just jealous because you've shown to them that Cameron is not really who they want to see her as. She's human, like the rest of us, and she has faults. You're one of the few who has observed what the writers are really showing us about her, and everyone else. Which is something of a misfortune that it really is only a few. I think you're doing a wonderful job with this and I hope you continue.
HATER.
Thank you so much for the kind words. I honestly don't mind getting negative reviews--usually, they have a point or at least concrit that I can use to improve. Usually.

And of course, there are so many different interpretations a person can take with not just Cam, but all the characters. I'm just glad that most people have enjoyed what I've written; even if they don't always agree with the plot or character portrayal, I still strive for it to be worth reading from a literary point of view.

Much thanks again. You made my night! :)
rachel

July 2009

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