One Sort of Resolution: Late Nights, Tea and Videotape The House Fan Fiction Archive Home Quicksearch Search Engine Random Story Upload Story   One Sort of Resolution: Late Nights, Tea and Videotape by Wayland The corridors of the hospital were quiet in the small hours. Dim lights showed here and there; the low hum of equipment leaked through ventilator grilles and from time to time hushed voices with an urgent undercurrent cut through the general stillness. A door closure snapped open and shut again; heels squeaked against the polished flooring. Inside the sterile walls of the clean room a young boy's life teetered on the edge. A wildly improbable diagnosis had been confirmed; treatment commenced; all that was needed now was that indefinable determination on the part of the patient to cling to life against the odds. That, and maybe the obstinacy of the medical team whose refusal to give up on him was responsible for his survival so far and was still keeping them here when their minds and bodies cried out for rest. The rigours of medical training and long years of inadequate sleep accustomed them to cope but neither Chase nor Foreman demurred when House nodded his dismissal. A two am departure, following three solid days with little but snatched naps in the conference room and reheated coffee for fuel, seemed little enough to be grateful for, but Cameron was still toiling in the lab and House obviously was going nowhere until the Fates decided: life or death. Had she been asked, Cameron would have pointed out that this was exactly why House was more than just `about the puzzle'. The puzzle was solved but the outcome was not yet clear. He did care about his patients; you might just need to spit roast him over a slow fire before he would admit it. Careful observation revealed his `tells' far more than anything he said. However, House's reputation as a brilliant but best-avoided (even slightly crazy) s.o.b. meant that no-one canvassed her opinion. She finished re-checking her results, not bothering to stifle her yawns as she gathered up the scattered printouts to place them in the patient file. Whatever happened to the boy in the next few hours, she was satisfied that her work was above even House's reproach. Cameron used the elevator to whisk her to the Diagnostics floor. Alone, she generally took the stairs. Not at this ungodly hour; she was beyond exhaustion. The office and conference room were in darkness. Cameron poked her head around House's door in case he had fallen asleep but the room was empty. At that moment her pager went off and she immediately retraced her steps to the elevators. Tiredness and thirst seemed to burn a hole in her chest and throat; her legs and feet moved, she felt, as though she were an automaton. Resentment at House for calling her away just as she was within reach of the conference room refrigerator died as she saw the man propping himself up against the wall of the clean room. If she was in dire need of sleep, then he, an insomniac at the best of times, was close to collapse. Exhaustion stripped away what little he used in the way of good manners; without meeting her glance he simply held out his hand for the file, skimming over the carefully-prepared results with eyes as keen as ever despite their reddened rims. "Hmm". He rubbed his hand across his jaw. "Increase the dosage and risk liver failure or...?" "It might buy him a few more hours. He should be dead already. What choice is there?" "Tiredness suits you. Makes you cut to the chase." He grinned tiredly at the pun and the way she reacted to the extra meaning behind his words. Although he had never explicitly condemned that brief ill-conceived liaison, Cameron knew that in some way it irked him. She and Chase had long ago put it behind them. Why didn't he? House directed the intensive care staff to increase the drug and announced his intention to wait around to see if there was any improvement in the boy's condition. "I need a drink. God knows when I last had one, but first I must sit down before my damn leg makes me fall down." Leaning heavily on his cane, he limped slowly and with evident discomfort to the area used during the daytime by patients' relatives. It had recently been refurbished by Cuddy with comfortable couches and low tables. "The Boss's sucking up has its uses", said House, carefully lowering his tall frame into the angle provided by two long couches placed together, and gripping his right leg with both hands, he swivelled around to position it , with a barely audible sigh, along the length of the couch. He dry -swallowed two vicodin, tilted back his head and closed his eyes as if to sleep; then, with some irritation, said, "Why are you hovering? Surely you have a home to go to? Even I am not unreasonable enough to keep you here any longer. I can take things from here. It's not worth my going back to the apartment now." Unspoken was the knowledge that after the way he had punished it over the last few days, his leg would not tolerate the trip home right now. Cameron was fully aware of this and also that he would resent any sign from her that she understood, so she ignored the last part of his speech and merely said she needed a drink, had been on her way to get one when he paged her and would he like her to get one for him while she was about it? "Not that sludge from the Nurses' station. Otherwise, yes. Please," he added as an afterthought. Cameron returned from Diagnostics a few minutes later with her own and House's red mug, brim full of mint tea. Coffee had seemed like a bad idea, neither thirst quenching nor needed for its stimulant effect right now. Besides, the entire team seemed likely to suffer from caffeine poisoning after the hours they had worked on this case. It seemed that House was already asleep when Cameron stopped in front of him. She gingerly perched herself on the edge of the couch away from his outstretched limb and quietly placed the red mug on the glass- topped table nearest to him. She sipped at the steaming hot liquid in her own mug, her thirst making her prepared to risk scalding her mouth in the effort to quench it. "So where's mine, then?" demanded her boss, "and what's that smell? I hope it's not that stuff you gave me when I had a cold; walnut and whatever." "Ginger" said Cameron, "and you said it was nice." "I lied", he said, struggling to sit upright among the deep cushions of the couch without disturbing his leg from its vicodin-induced somnolence. Cameron huffed with as much energy as she could muster, which was very little by this stage and without further comment handed the mint tea to her apparently ungrateful superior. While he drank the tea in slow gulps, barely awake, Cameron took stock of the man beside her. Lack of rest as well as the ever-present pain had etched the fine lines around his eyes and across his forehead more deeply than usual and his pallor showed even through the heavily stubbled jaw. The eyes through which he seemed to see everything were almost shut, allowing her to examine him in a way she would not normally attempt, knowing that a blast of sarcasm would push her back to a safe distance, his defensive perimeter intact and the `keep off' signs freshly painted. Now his trademark fidgeting was stilled for the moment, his cane tucked alongside his bad leg on the wide couch. His tension, which fizzed around him at all times like some kind of electric field (and which, thought Cameron wryly, accounted in no small measure for his ability to mesmerise those around him into doing things against their better judgement) was lowered sufficiently to count him as `relaxed'. Not a word one usually associated with House. The red mug wavered. Cameron leaned forward and removed it from his grasp before the remaining liquid emptied itself down his T-shirt. Sitting back more comfortably on the couch and tucking her legs underneath her, she decided to wait one more hour to see if their patient's crisis passed before going home. Meanwhile, House could have his nap. The faint squeak of a cart's wheels along the corridor brought Cameron back to consciousness some hours later. The great hospital was stirring for another day. Two sensations struck her simultaneously: one, that her neck was stiff from the awkward posture she had assumed while asleep and two, that she was more or less pinned in position by a large heavy object lying in her lap and dangling across her bent knees- a large, warm and breathing object; in fact, the head and shoulders of her prickly boss. Cameron stared down at him, furiously trying to collect her thoughts....how to wake him...the awkwardness, at least for her, of him finding himself burrowed face down in her lap, with his right arm around her knees. She shifted slightly to ease the circulation in her cramped legs, feeling the onset of pins and needles. This was enough. House stirred a little, snuggling further into her slight frame, so that she could feel the rasp of his stubble through the thin fabric of her suit pants. She could feel a small damp patch where his mouth, half open in sleep, had dribbled slightly. Suddenly her burden tensed and froze. After a pause which seemed interminable to Cameron but was probably no more than five seconds, House said in his usual tone "This is one hell of a bony, rumbling cushion. I must complain to Cuddy" and hauled himself upright. Cameron attempted to match his manner. "Cushions lose their stuffing if unfed. I need my breakfast." She switched topics. "I'll look in on Guy. He must be stable at least or they would have woken me-us." She looked a little self- conscious at this last, never able to conceal her feelings as well as this man of masks. However, she was not deceived. She knew how carefully he crafted his persona of indifference and invulnerability but even he could not completely quash the faint tinge of colour visible above the neck of his T shirt. He was quite definitely embarrassed. As she had assumed, Guy, the young patient, was finally responding to treatment and Cameron had the pleasure of telling his parents on their arrival that he would eventually make a full recovery. Her somewhat untidy appearance at this early hour told them that she had been up all night. They were full of praise for her and for the team. They enquired after Dr House. She had explained in layman's terms the great intuitive leap which had enabled the diagnosis to be reached at the eleventh hour (two minutes to midnight really) and they wanted to thank him personally. Unfortunately, Allison said, that would not be possible. He had an urgent appointment (with a shower, in fact, as soon as he saw them approaching) but she would be sure to pass on their thanks. House entered his still darkened office and grabbed the bag in which he kept shower stuff and a spare set of clothes for occasions such as these. It wasn't just the overnighters; clinic patients could puke on you, or if you were really lucky you could be baptized in a patient's piss. Cuddy would no doubt point out that this was what a white coat helped to avoid but for him the lack of a traditional doctor's garb marked him out as different; `one of the awkward squad' as his father would have put it. Leaving the office without a further glance, House was oblivious to certain small changes that had been made to an everyday but essential tool. He made his way to the locker room, hoping that a long hot shower would in some way restore his mental acuity and wash away the awkwardness he felt (he had to admit it to himself) waking up to find himself drooling into his young assistant's crotch. Thank God Wilson would never find out! Alas for certainty. At that moment, every computer in the hospital had a new screensaver. Gone was the tasteful, reassuring motif of leaves, together with the legend Princeton Plainsboro' Teaching Hospital. Instead, stretched out on an equally tastefully chosen couch, lay the Head of Diagnostic Medicine, to all appearances dead to the world, clasping his very attractive immunologist, also clearly fast asleep. The on screen text read: Beauty and the Beast: or When the Lion lay down with the Lamb. From the mortuary to the top floor, early birds had a nice juicy worm of gossip to chew on. Hospitals lived on talk, and a chuckle at someone else's expense to start the day-especially a sarcastic bastard like House, who had pissed off most people at one time or another- was a great moment. Fewer people knew Cameron. Those who did first wondered at her ability to withstand the constant barrage of wit, sniping and sometimes downright nastiness coming her way from her boss, then realised that her slender person concealed an inner strength that was belied by her apparent navet and her tendency to wear her heart on her sleeve. Those who did not know her well, the majority, assumed that she must be hard as nails to work with that team. Her quiet, rather prim manner with other members of the medical staff got her the label of stuck-up with some. She had learned early in her career that with her looks, she had to work hard to be taken seriously, so if she had to appear stuck-up, so be it. House's "Nice piece of art in the lobby" remark still made her grind her teeth, four years on, and he hadn't meant it. Walking past the Clinic nurses' station to her office, Cuddy was aware of a slight buzz in the air, a change to the usual early morning atmosphere of her great Ship of Fools. Her high heels clicked with her usual determination and efficiency. Something was afoot and she would know it before her first coffee arrived, or else. Twenty minutes later, House stood in front of her desk, yelling. He was absolutely enraged to the point, for him, of incoherence. "Unprofessional....bringing disrepute to the hospital...doctors couldn't do their jobs...surveillance...embarrassment to a junior colleague" and a whole lot more. Cuddy swept away his intemperate words with a wave of her hand. "Quit yelling at me. I'm already on to it, House", she said. "In half an hour it will be rectified and the culprit punished." "Chase, was it Chase?" demanded House. "It would fit that sly wombat." "No, I rather think it was the temporary janitor you insulted the other day. He's the son of Bob Jamieson, the paediatrician we recently appointed and he is doing a summer job here before college." "Was doing" stated House in steely tones. "He will certainly be unpopular with his father when the news gets out" Cuddy replied calmly." Look House, if this had not been you, you would have been the first to mock. No real harm has been done. See the funny side. Cameron did." "Cameron has seen this?" House groaned inwardly. "I thought she had gone home." "Not only has she seen it, she suggested that your little spat with the Jamieson boy was the motivation for this. Apparently he went into the lab yesterday on some errand and showed an interest in the equipment she was using." "I'll bet" growled House. "That's how she knew he would be capable of tinkering with the hospital's computer system, and how ticked off he was with you" she continued, ignoring his interruption "And yes, Cameron has gone home-to change-and I suggest that you go away now and let me do my job." She shuffled the papers in her hand and turned her chair towards the monitor. "If young Jamieson was able to get such a shot of you while simply walking past the relatives' room, what will the c.c.t.v. footage show?" An unmistakeable look of panic crossed House's features for a fleeting moment; then he turned and walked away, as fast as his bum leg would carry him, in the direction of Security. Everyone in Security knew House, or rather, knew of him. He was the guy that got shot twice, in his own office, too, while the guards on duty played poker in their cramped cubbyhole. That had been the rumour, anyway. How could a guy tell if someone was carrying a concealed weapon? It was not as if there had been metal detectors at the hospital entrance. There still weren't, but there were, as a consequence of the shooting, an increased number of state of the art security cameras in strategic locations. One had been intended for outside House's office but he had protested vigorously at the idea that more than one of his supposed former patients or their loved ones would want to off him. His co-workers may have suspected that he did not want a record of exactly what work he did or did not do inside the glass walls of his office but they kept their mouths firmly shut on the matter and he had had his way, as usual. The now spare camera was mounted high on the wall of the relatives' lounge area, presumably to monitor the bickering of families under stress. It was this camera, or more accurately its tape, House was anxious to neutralise. With his wallet $50 dollars lighter, House emerged from the stuffy room clasping the tape in his free hand. The lazy sons-of -bitches had not gone over the night's tapes yet, he felt sure. On the day shift they were supposed to monitor the cameras in real time. This wasn't possible at night, with fewer guards on duty. Back in his office, he threw the tape into a drawer and turned to enter the conference room. His neurologist and intensivist were obviously sharing a joke at his expense. He heard Chase say "I don't know about the lion bit, but she's certainly no lamb". Foreman raised a quizzical eyebrow at his boss but said nothing. Chase's grin fled before a glacial stare. He muttered his excuses and left for the Clinic. House returned to his office, plugged his ipod into his ears and settled down to all appearances to doze. By midday the mischief maker, offered a choice between a personal apology to House and Cameron or quitting, had chosen the latter. Normality returned and Wilson, with a shrewd understanding of his friend's highly contradictory attitude towards his immunologist, (indeed to most things) and more sympathy towards him over the morning's events than he was prepared to show, dropped into the Diagnostics office and offered to buy him lunch. Initially House refused, then on thinking about it obviously decided to get it over with. "Lunch is always crap on Thursdays", he grumbled. "Well it's Friday and as nine times out of ten you have a Reuben, what the hell does it matter?" rejoined Wilson. He was eager to see which way House would play it in the bustling dining room when his entrance was noticed; a leer and a joke, or the death stare. The death stare it was. "Ouch" thought Wilson; he is too bothered by this to throw it off with humour. He must have a word with Cameron. At this precise moment Cameron was in House's office, sorting the mail as she always did. With similar reasoning to her boss, she had decided to be seen around the hospital that afternoon. Any comments would be made, endured and then quickly forgotten. She lacked House's weapons of mass destruction in the form of his eyes and his wicked tongue but she had been the object of comment once before and had survived. She knew who she had to thank for that; Stacy Warner, or rather House via Stacy. Reaching into the desk drawer for a new pack of envelopes to send out what House called his "Go away, boring" consult response letters, Cameron's hand came across unfamiliar contents in the shape of the tape earlier tossed in by House. She drew it out, her momentary puzzlement erased by the label which stated clearly, in an unsophisticated hand, `Footage 3rd floor lounge 8/24/07 1.00-9.00 am. Realisation struck her. House must have got hold of this, but why? Back in ICU that afternoon, Cameron was talking to her young patient while overseeing his removal to one of the non-critical rooms. It was remarkable how ten year olds bounce right back, she thought. No-one, seeing him now would have believed just how critically ill he had been a few short hours ago. Sure, he still had a long way to go to full recovery but he was able to smile weakly at her and respond to her questions about his family and his dog which he missed. She told him he would not be going home for a week or so. "You really had us worried for a while there." She smiled reassuringly. "I guess I did. You were here last night weren't you, with some guy? When I woke up? You were over there." He indicated with his head where the glass walls of the clean room showed quite clearly the couches in the open area across the corridor. "I thought you were asleep .Is he your boyfriend?" The word "No!" was on the tip of her tongue when he said "Only he was sort of stroking your hair." Misunderstanding Cameron's expression, he added hastily, "It wasn't gross or anything". Pulling herself together, Cameron was for once grateful that House's passion for solving puzzles didn't often require his actually stepping into the room to meet their originators. She teased Guy that he must have been dreaming and he let it go at that, asking if he would be allowed to watch the football game on TV. As soon as she was free to leave her patient, Cameron hurried back to Diagnostics, a woman with a mission. Cuddy, meanwhile, having noted and been intrigued by House's reaction to her throwaway comment about c.c.t.v., had ploughed with even greater than usual concentration through her piled in-tray and numerous e-mails. Busy as she was, she was determined to have a little chat with Wilson, who was bound to have some insight into his friend's behaviour. It was the kind of day where mini-crisis followed impending major crisis, followed lawsuit- in -the -offing and it was well into the afternoon before Lisa checked that Wilson was free of patients and went up to Oncology on the pretext of some urgent business or other. Ever since their disastrous if well-meant scheme to curb House's wilder flights following his shooting and the ketamine experiment, Cuddy and Wilson always felt a little self-conscious discussing him, as if they were guilty all over again of some plot against him. The fall-out from that time had lasted many months and Wilson in particular wondered if their relationship would ever again be on quite that footing of trust which it had been before. House had not spelled it out, but then he did not need to; it had been in every line of his body, in every flicker of expression, that unspoken hurt, as of betrayal. "I would not have thought it of you." In House's eyes, Cuddy had been partly complicit in Stacy's overriding his expressed will over his leg and consequently saw her more recent behaviour as part of the same pattern. For that reason, it stung less. "House", began Cuddy, before Wilson could do more than look an enquiry. "He's annoying enough when he's bent on doing something that will land this hospital in its biggest ever lawsuit or when he's destroying million dollar items of equipment to prove a point but when he starts to lecture me, me! about bringing the hospital into disrepute and his professional dignity (or maybe it was Cameron's but I stopped listening at that point), I felt I was losing my grip on reality and that he had finally driven me out of my senses." "Ah, the screensaver. I was sure he was more bothered by it than he let on. His demeanour in the cafeteria was that of Darth Vader with toothache. We had no trouble in finding a table." "He only shut up when I mentioned the c.c.t.v. footage. He stomped out of my office like a man possessed." Cuddy paused, as enlightenment dawned on them both. "I wonder if that tape is good for getting some more clinic hours out of our boy Gregory?" "Leave it with me", said Wilson. "If I know anything, that tape will no longer be with Security. House has his rituals. I'll be able to find it." So it was that when Cameron re-entered House's office, fighting the feeling that she was about to do something oddly voyeuristic, the desk drawer no longer held the (presumably incriminating) tape. Thwarted, she went through to the conference room and tried, not very successfully, to continue working up a recent case for publication. The trying work- load of the past few days and the surreal quality of the hours spent last night with House, combined to give her a thumping headache. It was no good, she thought, surely the tape must be there. Perhaps it had got lodged at the back of the drawer if House (a great rummager) had been looking in there for something while she was with Guy. Thankful that Foreman was down in the clinic and that Chase had taken the afternoon off while things were slack, Cameron slipped into the next room and reached out her hand to open the drawer. "It's not in there. Damn, and I was sure you had it." Cameron jumped guiltily at the sound of House at his driest, coming from the floor beyond his desk. In the subdued light cast by the drawn blinds, she had not seen him stretched out there, his right leg propped on a cushion. It was a sure sign that either he or his leg felt bad. It was entirely typical of House that while completely ignoring the subject of their mutual embarrassment he nevertheless expected her to understand precisely what he meant. Cameron decided to pretend ignorance, explaining to an openly sceptical House that she had merely been startled to be spoken to in an apparently empty room. "Does it matter, anyway? "she asked with entirely false unconcern. "After all, what can the tape show that hasn't already been broadcast across the entire hospital?" House eyed her narrowly. "You seem to be taking this very calmly" he said. "Gossip soon dies down where there's no substance to it, otherwise you and Dr Cuddy would be second only to Ayersman and Nurse Cutler in the extra curricular activities log." With this, Cameron shot House a sideways look to gauge his reaction. His expression was now unreadable; all the walls in place, yet she was convinced he would not be satisfied until that record of the previous night was back within his grasp. She was as intrigued to see it as he was obviously determined to discover its whereabouts. She did not for a minute think that it would reveal any thing "gross", to use Guy's word. Weird might work for House but she could no more imagine him pawing her while she slept than his declaring undying love for her in front of the throng of patients in the Clinic waiting room. "It's five o'clock. I'm going home, House". Cameron interrupted his pondering. "And I'm going to see Wilson". House recalled his hasty departure from Cuddy's office that morning. There was no way Lisa, smart girl that she was, would have missed a big clue like that, and who would she have shared that with-why, Wilson! Dr James Wilson, the `Boy Wonder Oncologist' as House sometimes taunted him, was no longer such a boy that he could work a long week, call his ex-wives to see that they were ok, date his latest needy girlfriend and respond to his misanthropic friend's frequent and often unreasonable calls for support, that he could sit down in the late afternoon after a heavy lunch, with the latest medical journal, or even, in this case, a rather blurry videotape, without occasionally nodding off. The tape had proved tedious in the extreme. If he had ever thought about it before, which was doubtful, he could now understand why the security people looked so disengaged, sitting in front of their screens. The camera panned from the empty corridor to the empty couches on one side of the rest area and back again to the couches later occupied by Cameron and his friend. He fast-forwarded an hour or so, saw the two of them move from outside the clean room to the couch, saw Cameron disappear and then return carrying drinks of some kind. Fast forwarding again, he saw House's awkwardly positioned body slide sideways along the cushions and come to rest closer to Cameron, who was sitting bolt upright, her head tilted backwards. The sleeping pair slept on and very soon so too did Wilson., so he did not hear the side door to the balcony he shared with House open stealthily, as House limp-crept inside. House fixed his eyes on the TV screen just as the moment he feared might have been captured by the camera was clearly displayed to justify his anxiety. It was nothing, and yet for him it was something, and anyone who knew him would know it too. He stopped the tape, once again marvelling at the oncologist's obliviousness , remembering the adolescent prank-one of many -he had played on Wilson during their last home-sharing bout, and having removed the incriminating evidence from the machine, went back out the way he had come, unobserved. Did House really believe that Cameron was so uninterested in the tape he had been at such pains to recover that he made no serious attempt to hide it, or for goodness' sake, destroy it-a simple enough task? The sort of psychologist of whom House was particularly scornful would probably have had an answer. Whatever one may speculate about the state of that erratic genius's subconscious, it was certainly the case that when Cameron arrived at her accustomed early hour the following morning, and began to sort her boss's mail, she spotted a familiar shape half buried beneath a welter of journals, medical files and the toys with which House kept boredom at bay. Despite the curiosity gnawing at her, Cameron did not dare to touch the tape until her two colleagues had arrived and had their morning ritual of coffee and carping about House. By 8.30 they had teased her a little about yesterday's events , and, getting bored with her tolerant if fixed smile, had left the Department; Foreman to an inter-departmental meeting dumped on him by his boss and Chase to the Clinic. House would be ages yet; Cameron made her move. Slipping the video into the player beneath House's ancient TV, she sat down in his chair to see what he had been trying to conceal. A few minutes later Cameron was still absorbing the image frozen on the screen, when House appeared at her elbow. She cringed inwardly, as much for him as for herself. He would really hate this exposure of his feelings. It might raise her spirits sky-high to see the man who never initiated physical contact outside his professional role, who actively spurned even a handshake, trace the outline of her cheek with his finger and gently move the strands of hair which had fallen in front of her eyes, but then she had been sure once before. That had ended in humiliation for her, deserved humiliation and she was determined not to make the same mistake again. Chase had said at the time that if she wanted House, she should jump him and that was what she had done; not physically but emotionally, mugged him. This time, he had to make the first move, however tiny. She would not crowd him and if he was unwilling to give her even the smallest signal that he wanted more than the sometimes uneasy working relationship they had, then she would have to settle for that. "Touching, isn't it?" jeered House as she rose from his chair to face him. Cameron did not answer. She was trying to formulate some innocuous reply which would at the same time let them both off the hook, looking for clues in his defiant eyes. Suddenly his gaze shifted downwards, while his cane, always an indicator of his mood, jerked restlessly in his hand as he muttered "You're not stupid. I guess I've blown my cover." Not the most dramatic of declarations, but then House was only comfortable with drama when he was playing all the parts himself. Cameron, much cannier now than three years ago, merely smiled at him. "Idiot", she said, without emphasis, and planting a light kiss on the most conveniently reached part of his tall person, the `v' of his open necked shirt, she grabbed a completely unneeded folder from the desk and made a completely unnecessary journey all the way down to the lab. Inwardly overwhelmed, she knew that the moment she made any assumptions about House's intentions, he would take fright or at least come up with a thousand reasons why this was doomed to failure and it would be better not to begin. She would need the patience of a horse whisperer to overcome his mistrust.. The awful pun came to her mind and she began to giggle. Left alone in his office, House having removed the tell-tale evidence from the player and tossed it into the trash, uncharacteristically tidied his desk, fidgeted with the various items collecting dust on his shelves and finally stretched out on his favourite chair where he brooded over the events of the morning. He diagnosed in himself both relief and anticipation. Relief and some surprise that Cameron had spared him the kind of scene he had been dreading. After maintaining the lie that he had no interest in her for the best part of four years, he'd supposed he had that coming. Still, time for that yet, he thought. Anticipation; well, what heterosexual male wouldn't indulge himself with that? What she saw in him only the God he did not believe in knew. He was by far the cleverest person he had ever met. Why deny it? That was a plus. He had an international reputation for his diagnostic wizardry and almost as widespread a reputation as a misanthropic bastard. A plus and a minus. He did not suffer fools gladly, hell he didn't suffer the merely intelligent gladly. He had a caustic and witty tongue. Some women found that a turn-on. Stacy said he made her laugh and annoyed her in equal measure. She could give as good as she got. Cameron could now hole him below the water line occasionally but he felt her heart wasn't in it. Then there was his leg. Minus, minus, minus. And his vicodin habit. Another minus. And then he was too old for her....damnation, he had been through all this before. He knew the numbers would come out the same. He fingered the spot on his chest where Cameron's lips had so briefly touched him. It had tickled slightly. Very few people knew that he was ticklish; Stacy had clocked it in about five minutes but then she was a very hands-on kind of woman. Self-confident , assertive, not afraid to grab what she wanted, their relationship had been an intensely physical one. In hindsight he had not understood her at all. He could comprehend if not forgive her going against his absolute will over the debridement of his leg; he long ago accepted his culpability in the break up of their affair. What had hit him in the belly with the force of a truck was the realisation of her essential selfishness. Faced with a choice between husband and former lover, she chose-both. At least Cameron's husband was dead. That was a point in his favour. Although, maybe , by being dead this tragic youth had acquired a standard of perfection which no living man could match, leave alone a middle-aged cripple.( In this, House was way off base, as even a short conversation with Cameron or indeed Wilson at some point over the last four years would have ascertained.) Given the way his thoughts were veering it was just as well that James Wilson put his head around the door at that moment. Meeting his friend's unresponsive stare, Wilson said cheerily "Your mood seems somewhat out of sync with Cameron's. She passed me on the stairs with a positively beatific smile. I 'd assumed it was a done deal." "What do you know" glowered House. "All you do is poke your nose in where it isn't wanted." "Cold feet already? She's perfect for you, haven't I always said that? She can stand you for a start; she even likes you for Heaven' sake. She understands how you live. How you hate change-" "Yada, yada, yada," said House . "That doesn't begin to cover the fact that I am too old for her, am her boss...it's an inappropriate relationship." "Look around you, House. How many of your contemporaries on the staff are on to their second or third marriage? How many of them are hitched to pretty airheads half their age? I'm not saying they should be; I'm just stating the facts. And Cameron is not only not an airhead but she is not half your age. Okay, fourteen, fifteen years is a gap, there's no denying it and she looks younger than her years but you can't expect any woman over twenty-five to regret that. As far as the boss part goes, so what, if you can make it work? I'm sure Cuddy will fall on Allison's neck if your being together means she can wring another half hour's attendance out of you each day." "In twenty years I shall be an old man and Cameron..." "will be no spring chicken ." finished Wilson. "If you fall off the perch before she loses interest , she can find herself a toy-boy to even things up." Silence fell. House's long fingers squeezed the life out of his grey and red ball. "So let me get this straight," said Wilson, screwing up his eyes and pinching the bridge of his nose with the index finger and thumb of one hand in a familiar gesture of exasperation and disbelief, "you are prepared to turn down the prospect of twenty or thirty years of sex with the lovely Dr Allison Cameron on the grounds that it's unlikely to be forty or fifty? How very you." "Put that way," said House with a faint grin, "it does seem rather unreasonable. Even perverse." He tried one last throw. "I'll show up badly against the sainted dead husband. Her family will hate me and that's always bad news." "Sainted husband ?" scoffed Wilson. "Shows how little you know. Our Cameron likes bad boys, hadn't you realised?" Leaving House to chew on this, Wilson set off to report the latest state of affairs to Cuddy. He met Allison by the elevators. She had no doubt as to where he had been. Was nothing private?. There may as well have been news updates in the hospital entrance. She sighed resignedly. "On your way to see House?" asked the oncologist. She nodded. "Good. He's feeling a bit jittery. Needs careful handling .Make an excuse to get him out of here is my advice." Moments later Cameron stood in front of House asking if he could drop her at her apartment on his way home. Her car was in the shop (true) and the cab fare in to work extortionate (not quite so true-but then House never paid for one). "I suppose this is another dig at your allegedly piss-poor wages. You're in a poor position to be asking favours",he said. "I clearly remember you calling me an idiot earlier." "But I did soften the blow", said Cameron. They collected their things together and made their way to the elevators. As they waited, House said abruptly "I'm too old for you, you know. Chase would be a more suitable choice." Cameron put down her laptop in order to take up her characteristic hands-on -hips stance. "First you are not that ancient-I have a brother your age- and second I had to be high on crystal meth and the fear of HIV to jump Chase. There was never any chance it would happen again. He's just not my type." As the elevator doors opened on to a conveniently empty car, House was asking , although he was pretty sure he knew the answer, "Who is?" Their hands met as they simultaneously reached for the red `stop' button on the control panel. Down in the lobby Nurse Brenda saw the elevator alarm flash and called maintenance. It was the third time that week that particular one had developed a fault. Within a few minutes though, the elevator began to move once more. The doors opened and out stepped House and Cameron. It was noticeable to a discerning eye that both were slightly dishevelled. It was more difficult to tell with House, of course, but the tail of his shirt was rucked up underneath his jacket. He looked positively cheerful. Cameron wore a small smile. Those who disliked her would have described it as smug. Cuddy's sixth sense had her in the lobby at this moment. She saw the elevator apparently repair itself and she was not deceived. "I'll make sure Maintenance bills this callout against the Diagnostics budget" she threatened, as the pair crossed her path. House came to an exaggerated halt. "We have a budget? Nine years in this job and you've been holding out on me all this time?" "You do realise that I'm going to mess this up" said House, making this a statement rather than a question, as he crossed the parking lot with uneven gait, Cameron in his wake. "Forgive me if I try not to co-operate with you on that one" she said, briefly raising her eyes to the heavens, "Especially before I've even had a chance to part you from that tatty pair of jeans." "See", wailed House in mock despondent tones, "out of the building less than two minutes and already you're trying to change my wardrobe. My mother always warned me against bottle brunettes." Privately he found this sexually confident Cameron a big turn on. She had made a few comments over the time they had worked together which suggested she was less prim than the neat rather androgynous pants suits and little-girl blouses would indicate. And then there had been the fundraiser about eighteen months ago. That red dress really blew his socks off. Luckily he had turned his genuine reaction into an overblown theatrical `Wowww' before anyone spotted it. "How did you know...?" Cameron was about to finish her question when she realised that of all people House would notice a little detail like that. She had begun to subtly darken her reddish blonde hair years before, in med school, when it began to dawn on her that even in this so called enlightened age blondes might have more fun but were taken less seriously in class and on the wards. She worked towards being less physically obtrusive. It had succeeded, up to a point, but up until her appointment on House's team, she sometimes felt that she had disappeared altogether. Her naturally gentle personality, subdued for a long time by the loss of her lively, irreverent young husband, was tempered on the anvil of House's abrasive wit. Either you were re-formed or you shattered. Amazingly, she had withstood all that he could throw at her. Her gentleness concealed both considerable obstinacy and a degree of self-righteousness of which she was partly aware, even before Foreman and Chase had taken her to task about it, as they did frequently in the early days of their fellowship. House had once called her moral compass "insane". Pots and kettles, thought Cameron. He was frequently an unblushing liar and could be equally as passionate scamming a free meal from the cafeteria as scamming the transplant team over the suitability of his patient for a new heart or liver. "I seem to know everything, except where I left my car. This is obviously your fault; distracting me from the Clinic, running up repair bills, causing me to bribe Security..." "Your devotion to the Clinic is well known throughout the hospital" agreed Cameron, "and I did help you stop the elevator, but bribery?" "Fifty dollars" grimaced House. "For the tape." "To protect my reputation or yours?" asked Cameron, impressed. "Mine," said House. "Yours is not worth that much." He dodged adroitly as Cameron aimed a blow at his ear. "Practice" he intoned, much in his manner of chiding the Fellows for not getting the diagnosis (his diagnosis) correct. It felt very odd to Cameron for a minute Here they were, still mentor and student in their professional relationship and yet suddenly that awkward distancing, always both more and less than a mere employer-employee formality (House couldn't care less about that) had lifted. It was as though there had been a kind of silent war going on and he had decided not only to concede defeat but dismantle the barricades without delay. She had not expected this, thinking she would have to inch her way into acceptance. Yet Stacy, she remembered, had told her of her one disastrous date with House and then moving in with him within a week. This of course was long before the infarction. Cameron knew very little about what followed until she showed up with Mark and had no intention of asking. She just devoutly hoped he had finally got her out of his system. House unsurprisingly found his car where he had left it that morning and with Cameron and her laptop and his knapsack, was soon speeding in the direction of her apartment. Once there he seemed to take it for granted that he could come in and possess himself of her couch and her remote. If he was still occupying that same spot twenty four hours later, it was nobody's business but their own. They had after all, worked together for almost four years; it was hardly a first date. There had been awkward moments, of course, and Cameron had for the first time realised just how morbidly self-conscious he was of his damaged leg but the clumsiness of their first union had not discouraged further, much more satisfactory attempts. It seemed, in that at least, they were compatible. Cameron kept to her decision not to crowd House with personal questions. He seemed to have no such inhibitions and in a few hours was educating himself on her history as if to satisfy himself that the assumptions he had made about her from day one of his hiring her were correct. What about this brother she had mentioned; was he really the same age as himself? Cameron said "Yes". She had denied being an only child, but House had a point since she was the youngest by ten years. A change of life baby, her two older brothers had protected and spoiled her. Her parents were older than House's. Her father had been fifty at the time of her birth. House could not resist the subject of her dead husband, whose youthful image smiled down at them both from the wedding photo on a nearby shelf. "Puppy", thought House. "Wilson told me you liked bad boys," he said. Cameron's gaze tracked up to the photograph and back to a quizzical House. "He wasn't really bad. He was clever, self-confident and reckless. His parents were very strict religious people and after he was caught with drugs a couple of times they effectively threw him out. My parents said he would either make millions of dollars or end in jail." "So no parental blessing then?" "Mom and Dad went along with my marriage because they knew it couldn't last. Six months, we were told and six months it was. Dr Wilson couldn't have been more accurate." "You must have known he was ill long before that." "He knew. Yes," said Cameron. "He didn't tell me until he couldn't hide it any longer." Seeing the expression on House's face, she said "It wasn't selfishness-he just could not accept that he was going to die." House kept his thoughts to himself for once as Cameron sighed and said "Make no mistake, I was crazy about him. It was like sitting next to the bad boy in class: all the fun but none of the blame." "Hmm. I believe you are the patron saint of lost causes." "Saint wasn't the word you used back there" Cameron jerked her head in the direction of the bedroom. "And the only lost cause I can think of is keeping this a secret. What do you think?" She sensed a slight withdrawal on the part of House. OK she thought, so this is his boundary at the moment. What's between us stays between us. She looked at him squarely and gave his knee a reassuring squeeze. "Understood. Monday morning-business as usual." And so it was. House bribed or threatened Wilson to keep his mouth shut and for once the oncologist's desire to see his best friend if not happy then a bit less miserable overcame his love of gossip. Inevitably there were times when the pair said or did something that would have roused suspicion in an observant colleague. Chase was certainly that, but his main concern was that House did not ride him unnecessarily; if Cameron and his boss were screwing, he didn't care. Foreman took too little interest in House other than in a professional capacity to notice any subtle changes. Part Two It was entirely predictable that House suspected that Cameron was pregnant even before she did. His uncanny sensitivity to the fluctuations in appearance and behaviour of the women with whom he worked and his consequent knowledge of their menstrual cycles had freaked out even as prosaic an individual as Lisa Cuddy. So when Cameron said worriedly to him one morning as they set off for the hospital, "House, I'm late," he merely said "Seems the old House DNA wants another shot at immortality." Climbing on to the back of the bike, Cameron was at a loss for words. In the eighteen months they had been together, the subject had never been mentioned. She took her contraceptive pills; House saw her take them. She was as careful about this as everything else in her life-except- House would say-her choice of men. "Ninety-nine percent effectiveness is just that. We got the one percent. I expect I'll get used to the idea .Hold on." The bike sped away, along its usual route with its usual riders but everything else in flux, it seemed to Cameron. You could argue that it was absurd to assume at this stage she was even pregnant but he had a habit of being right. She also remembered the bout of sickness she had picked up some weeks ago from a child in the Clinic. That could do it, she thought. What really surprised her was House's apparent calm acceptance. Was this just shock? Would resentment flood in as soon as the full realisation of the choice struck him? He knew that if she proved to be expecting a child there was no way she would terminate the pregnancy. If he was unwilling to accept her decision then it was an end to their relationship. Cameron clung on to House as if hoping she could read his thoughts through the thick jacket he wore. House, if asked before this situation had arisen, would have disavowed any interest whatsoever in fatherhood. His own experience as a child was discouraging. He was a card-carrying misanthropist. There were already too many children in the world and too many useless parents. With Stacy, there had been no question of the subject even arising. She had as much maternal instinct as Medea. Cameron now; well she was different. He'd once suspected her of losing a child when she'd been so upset over a patient but he'd been mistaken. He knew full well that she would suppress any desire to have a child for his sake. They never made plans, talked about the future. He felt comfortable the way things were. They had their moments, of course, when things niggled but they read each other too well to let it get to the explosive stage very often. Now though, everything could be, would be, turned upside down. Wilson's visits, poker nights, the occasional over- indulgence in good whisky and better cigars, all this would be curtailed if not cease altogether for the benefit of a yowling bundle. He couldn't even make the usual male excuse of sleeping through the night-time feeds since Cameron knew he slept like a cat. The least disturbance would wake him And he was just about to not-celebrate his fiftieth birthday. It was hardly surprising that with these thoughts circulating in his head it was a sombre looking House who removed his helmet in the PPTH parking lot and stared down at his passenger. She had been prepared, he knew, as he met her returning gaze, for him to say that he could not accept a child. She would not have argued with him; she would merely have moved out. She was hoping that his need for her was greater than his reluctance to take on this commitment. Without ever articulating it, he knew it was. The pregnancy confirmed and a few congratulatory back-slaps later from the bolder of his male colleagues (Wilson was particularly annoying), House settled into the final phase of his extended freedom from family responsibilities. He left Cameron speechless by saying that they should tie the knot. She wasn't at all sure about his motives.. As far as she was concerned a piece of paper would not alter how she felt or how she would behave and House didn't care about convention. "As we're going through with this we're pretty much stuck with one another for the next twenty years one way or another, right?" She nodded her assent. "So why make my child a legal bastard when it doesn't have to be? Genetic inheritance will probably make him or her the other kind "he added with a smirk. In truth House had been contemplating this step before Cameron's pregnancy. The idea had certainly not been planted in his mind by his old-fashioned father's gruff comment about "making an honest woman of her" but more by his mother's gentle observation that "Allison is so good for you dear. I hope you don't let her slip through your fingers." There was always in him, beneath the outrageous speech and superb self-confidence, the fear that she would wake up one morning, see him as the ageing, crippled, jerk that he was and wonder what the hell she was doing there. Cameron imagined that the two of them would marry in the quietest possible fashion, even with a couple of strangers off the street as witnesses, but no, House wanted the ceremony, though small- (how many friends did he have after all and how many relatives could he tolerate) -to be no surreptitious affair. Wilson would be best man; he had plenty of experience, and Cameron could choose a maid of honour from among her friends. Both immediate families made it to the wedding and House was relieved to see that Cameron's parents were indeed as elderly as she had claimed. Her father addressed him as "My boy", so at least he didn't confuse him with House senior. Blythe had taken to Cameron immediately on their one previous get-together as someone with her only child's best interests at heart and she did not underestimate the stamina needed to keep up with her difficult son. She was thrilled about the baby. House's father on the other hand, much preferred Stacy. She was smart, no-nonsense, could stand up for herself. He blamed his son entirely for the break-up of their relationship. He was a damned fool to make that leg of his such an issue. This girl was certainly a looker and at least was going to make him a grandfather. He thought his son had left it rather too late to embark on fatherhood. The pregnancy went smoothly, as did the birth, which was rather protracted and gave House the opportunity to be impressed by the fluency and range of his partner's curse-words. The child was a girl with the trademark blue eyes and a few wisps of red-gold hair. An exhausted Cameron watched House intently as he held the bundle competently in his long fingers. She saw it at once. He was absolutely smitten. She had always suspected, if truth be told, that she took second place to Stacy in the not very capacious organ that served House for a heart. Now, in an instant, Stacy had been squeezed out and she didn't mind coming second at all. They called the baby Blythe after his mother and Emily after hers. After some wrangling, both with House (whose infatuation with his daughter did not translate readily into practical assistance) and the hospital authorities, Cameron was able to return to her job in Immunology on a part-time basis. She had transferred there a year previously, after even Cuddy's administrative creativity had failed to stretch the three year Fellowships any further. House now had three new underlings "Even more useless than you, Foreman and Chase were", he told Cameron. She had to agree that they appeared more callow than she remembered the old team being at the beginning but then she recalled how terrified she and Chase had been of fouling up before House's barbs. Even Foreman was not quite as confident as he appeared. In four years, Cameron looked set to take over her department, and her daughter, the hospital. Its corridors and clinics were as familiar to Blythe as her own home. She spent much of her time there between day care and her parents' departments, not to mention unannounced visits to Drs Cuddy and Wilson. She was utterly fearless, irrepressible and self-possessed beyond her years. She was, in short, her father's daughter. With all his curiosity gleaming in her eyes and a head of unruly copper curls, she got away with murder; part hospital mascot, part holy terror. How had House taken to parenthood? There was much speculation and some amusement among his peers when the news had got out. His relationship with Cameron had long since filtered through into the general consciousness but this was a bigger deal. Would his eternal childishness and often juvenile behaviour be neutered by having to deal with the real thing himself? Cameron could have answered this at once. "No". Those behaviours were all part and parcel of the man's genius; his never- stale take on what ever his eyes fell on and his brain fed on. Instead of sobering him up, Blythe's arrival if anything refreshed House's immature streak. His disability meant that he could not run with her in the park or play some games very easily but his facility with languages and her sharp brain meant that by the time she was three and a half she could lisp some delightful insults in several foreign tongues, to her mother's consternation and his unconcealed glee. Cameron was the main disciplinarian but even House had some boundaries. He did not want her running wild. One morning Blythe was down in the Clinic holding court amongst the nurses on duty in the moments before it opened for the day. Seeing her father approaching, she announced to the assembled patients; "My daddy has a cross leg". Seeing a thunderous scowl on the face of the tall, rather grizzled man limping heavily down the hall towards the Nurses' station, some of those waiting began reconsidering the urgency of their visit. "I told them" she said, looking up at him "it was a cross leg day". This was a kind of shorthand the three of them had developed to explain the times when the pain from House's leg was particularly hellish and his patience consequently short. "Great. Now go away". Hardly the words one would have expected to hear from a devoted father. He was scarcely more demonstrative with her than with the world at large. They understood one another well. An exchange of blue glances, a brief tug at the knee of his pants and she was gone, skipping up the hallway to annoy, with any luck, Cuddy. As he had foreseen, Blythe's comment meant that every one of the patients he saw that morning gave his right leg a pitying look, while one woman, bolder than the rest, began to enquire after it until she saw his expression and changed her mind. "Keep the brat out of the Clinic can't you -at least on my mornings" grumbled House at lunchtime, as he told Cameron what she had done. "She was trying to protect you -or maybe it was the patients" said Cameron, amused. "You were more than usually cantankerous this morning." "With reason," he groaned, downing another vicodin. "Steve McQueen was a lot less trouble." "House!" she protested. "Comparing your firstborn unfavourably to a rat!" "Firstborn?" queried House nervously. Am I missing something here?" "No, No", laughed Cameron. "We'd better find a decent school for her-another six months and she'll be trying out medical procedures. She gutted all her soft toys long ago." "Another year and I'd swap her for one of my Fellows. That reminds me, I really need you in on this case...any chance of a consult?" A little later, Lisa Cuddy settled herself back comfortably in her chair. A small figure, obviously protesting, was being walked away from her office hand in hand with one of House's newer acolytes, a bright but rather ineffectual floppy- haired young man called Edwards. Another Chase clone, thought Cuddy. How that man hates change! The Great Man had been too busy mastering the latest bit of games wizardry to fetch his daughter himself. He had pleaded urgent medical business but she knew better. Cuddy looked at the corner of her impressive desk, where a pot plant stood in for the photographs of nearest and dearest usually positioned there by the possessors of such high-achiever furniture. She sighed a little. She thought back to the time when she and Wilson had been desperate to re-engage House with life, not only so that he would actually be earning his not inconsiderable salary but also to stop him going further down the road of isolation and addiction. As far as he was concerned she just told him she wanted him to do his job. He had quoted `the philosopher Jagger' to her and told her "You can't always get what you want". She had found the remainder of that lyric and responded "But if you try sometimes you may find you get what you need." Well, he had tried, reluctantly, and others had tried for him. He had not got what he wanted; his leg restored and freedom from pain, or even, perhaps, Stacy, but he seemed to have got what he needed in Cameron and Blythe. She shook herself out of her reverie. If she had asked what she had been intending to ask House in his office that day shortly before the shooting, a Blythe -type small person might be in second grade right now. She had made the right call. She had always found House a very attractive man, limp or no limp and he was still, rapidly thinning hair and all but she could never, unlike Cameron, have accepted all the baggage that came along with him. As for Blythe; Cuddy made a quick calculation and came to the conclusion that she would just about be out of PPTH and sunning herself on some exotic beach by the time that young lady began wreaking Housian havoc as the med student she was genetically destined to be! Postscript So, what of the other characters in this drama, you may ask, if you are still with me at this late stage? Chase briefly thought of returning to Australia at the end of his Fellowship but he had no real family there. His step-mother sent him a card at Christmas and on his birthday when she remembered it and that was that. His friends from med school were pretty much scattered across the globe by now. He finally settled on a post in California where the climate was much more to his liking than New Jersey. It was a good position. House had given him a surprisingly generous recommendation, though not of course to his face. With him went Pat, a paediatric nurse of Irish Catholic descent he had met and worked with at PPTH. Before too long they had blonde floppy-haired twin boys. House snorted rudely when Cameron showed him the pictures of the toddlers in diminutive cricket outfits but secretly he was rather pleased. He had always had a soft spot for Chase. Eric Foreman had set his sights high and his career path was keeping to its planned trajectory. He had been the first of the Fellows to leave despite being the last to arrive. He became more and more restless under House's regime and less and less patient with the latter's wayward approach to the diagnostic process. He was a man who liked structure and rules. As a teenager his rebellion against them had almost ended his prospect of a decent life let alone a career such as his. He had learnt from House, yes, but he had learnt enough. He was ready to move on. Knowledge of whose tutelage he had been under for three or more years was sufficient to interest several high profile institutions and his impressive academic achievement and professional demeanour did for the rest. House had put in a word for him too, but as this was at a certain establishment he had been kicked out of twenty years before it is uncertain whether this was a help or a hindrance. He was still unattached. He had a string of short-term relationships but had yet to meet the person who fitted in with his idea of himself. What of James Wilson, long-suffering (and didn't he love it) friend and counsellor of House? Shortly after House and Cameron got together, he was on marriage number four. The difference this time was; it looked as though this one might stick. His wife, a psychologist at the university, was not at all needy but her extensive family were all basket cases, as Wilson had explained in decidedly non-pc language to his friend. That probably explained her choice of academic discipline. They had met literally on the freeway after James had rammed the back of her car in a rainstorm. The pair of them seemed quite happy, trying to manage the crises of her various relatives, a task it seemed would take them through the foreseeable future together. Wilson and Sarah, for this was her name, saw a good deal of Cameron and House. She was immediately fascinated by James' many tales about House. "PTSD" she volunteered on one occasion. Wilson though, was not having his friend picked apart, even by her. "Must have been born traumatized then", he said and his tone and his look warned her off. Lisa Cuddy's desire for a child remained unfulfilled. One moment of madness in House's office could so nearly have changed everything. Luckily for her sanity and the good of PPTH (where would it be without her?) she changed her mind. "The hospital is her baby" said House, and so it was. Finally to young Jamieson, the temporary janitor whose act of revenge manoeuvred House into a situation he had never intended. Cameron heard through the hospital grapevine that in his fourth semester at Yale he had been involved in an accident which had severed his spinal cord and confined him to a wheelchair. He was contemplating a future in stem cell research. Cameron was saddened by this news and even House managed a slight facial twitch which the generous- minded could have interpreted as sympathy. END   Please post a comment on this story. Legal Disclaimer: The authors published here make no claims on the ownership of Dr. Gregory House and the other fictional residents of Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. Like the television show House (and quite possibly Dr. Wilson's pocket protector), they are the property of NBC/Universal, David Shore and undoubtedly other individuals of whom I am only peripherally aware. The fan fiction authors published here receive no monetary benefit from their work and intend no copyright infringement nor slight to the actual owners. We love the characters and we love the show, otherwise we wouldn't be here.