I'm slow, but I'm doing it! *g* This one is for
foxcat74, who requested Bodie and Doyle making up on Christmas morning after an argument
On Christmas Day in the Morning
by Slantedlight
There was no alarm this morning, not on Christmas morning when they weren’t even on stand-by. Instead they woke slowly, heavy with sleep and the warmth of the bed and each other. There was rain against the window, a soft patter that spoke of a day indoors, of doing nothing but eating Doyle’s roast chicken, opening tins of cold lager, and making acerbic comments at the high-pitched chatter that was The Sound of Music. Bodie’s world began slipping back to its daytime place, one memory after another, stretching along his veins with his blood, pounding into his heart…
He stilled suddenly, didn’t move to sling an arm over Doyle as he had meant to, as he normally did. Something…
…bastard.
And if he thought that Bodie was going to forget about it…
The blankets erupted beside him, bedspread suddenly heavy across his legs and a waft of air cold on his back, so that he turned over to tug them back into place - the place he wanted them to be - and caught Doyle glaring at him. No point giving him the satisfaction… He closed his eyes dismissively, because he couldn’t be bothered with the sight of the man, with any of it.
Not that he could quite… well, not that he could actually remember what the hell they’d fought about last night, but they’d had a few drinks, so he couldn’t be expected to recall the details… He frowned slightly, listening to the sounds of Doyle stomping down the hall to the bathroom, using up all the hot water, no doubt, and…
Something about… It slipped away again. He remembered watching The Quiet Man - with Val Doonican as the only real alternative, there hadn’t been any fight there… They’d both seen it before though, so they’d talked…
More stomping and slamming of doors as Doyle finished what he was doing and… another slam.
Left.
The bastard had left.
Fine. Bodie thumped himself over to lie on his back again, blankets firmly in place, where they belonged. Somewhere in the distance church bells started to ring, ponderous and cheerful at the same time. Bloody Christmas. And he had a headache, he realised – bloody Doyle, making him drink all that… What had they been drinking, anyway? He sniffed, winced.
Must have been whisky, with a head like this, because they were out of brandy… ah.
They’d run out of brandy and the offie on the corner had been shut, but Doyle’s flat was less than a mile from HQ, so… He winced again, memory slipping a bit further in, with nippy little fingers. So they’d liberated the Cow’s Glenfiddich from the cupboard, in the glorious drunk certainty of being able to replace it before Alpha One got back from Edinburgh on… Sunday.
And yet… He remembered Doyle pulling him into the comparative shelter of someone’s front garden, into the shadows of some oak or chestnut or other venerable giant, remembered being kissed, and remembered cold hands and giggles, and…
So whatever they’d fought about, it had been after that. He turned onto his stomach, tucked his head into the pillow, and closed his eyes determinedly. He didn’t care. It was Christmas sodding morning and he was going to sleep in if it killed him, going to sleep if…
…and then the door was being kicked open, rebounding off the wall, and he was halfway out of bed, heart pounding, before he realised he was awake again.
Bloody Doyle.
Bloody Doyle, hands full carrying a tray with… with toast, and bacon and butter, and his battered old teapot in its cosy, mugs and… a bottle of milk.
Bodie stared at it.
“…all the way down to bloody Patel’s, so you’d better be awake you lazy bugger, and…”
Bodie let himself sit back down on the bed, listening to Doyle warbling on about the queue at the only corner shop open on a Christmas morning, just around the corner from HQ, and staring at the bottle of milk.
He took the mug he was given, paused a minute, and then reached to put it on the bedside table, to lift the tray off the bed, ignoring Doyle’s Oy!, and risked life, limb, and spilt tea, to lean in and kiss him. When Doyle began kissing him back properly he pulled away again, smiled, and took Doyle’s tea to put beside his own.
“Happy Christmas, Ray,” he said, tugging him back into place - the place he wanted him to be, where he belonged, beside him in bed. And Doyle didn’t argue, and they let the toast get cold.
Title: On Christmas Day in the Morning
Author: Slantedlight
Slash or Gen: Slash
Archive at ProsLib/Circuit: Certainly
Disclaimer: Neither the lads nor the CI5 universe belong to me...
On Christmas Day in the Morning
by Slantedlight
There was no alarm this morning, not on Christmas morning when they weren’t even on stand-by. Instead they woke slowly, heavy with sleep and the warmth of the bed and each other. There was rain against the window, a soft patter that spoke of a day indoors, of doing nothing but eating Doyle’s roast chicken, opening tins of cold lager, and making acerbic comments at the high-pitched chatter that was The Sound of Music. Bodie’s world began slipping back to its daytime place, one memory after another, stretching along his veins with his blood, pounding into his heart…
He stilled suddenly, didn’t move to sling an arm over Doyle as he had meant to, as he normally did. Something…
…bastard.
And if he thought that Bodie was going to forget about it…
The blankets erupted beside him, bedspread suddenly heavy across his legs and a waft of air cold on his back, so that he turned over to tug them back into place - the place he wanted them to be - and caught Doyle glaring at him. No point giving him the satisfaction… He closed his eyes dismissively, because he couldn’t be bothered with the sight of the man, with any of it.
Not that he could quite… well, not that he could actually remember what the hell they’d fought about last night, but they’d had a few drinks, so he couldn’t be expected to recall the details… He frowned slightly, listening to the sounds of Doyle stomping down the hall to the bathroom, using up all the hot water, no doubt, and…
Something about… It slipped away again. He remembered watching The Quiet Man - with Val Doonican as the only real alternative, there hadn’t been any fight there… They’d both seen it before though, so they’d talked…
More stomping and slamming of doors as Doyle finished what he was doing and… another slam.
Left.
The bastard had left.
Fine. Bodie thumped himself over to lie on his back again, blankets firmly in place, where they belonged. Somewhere in the distance church bells started to ring, ponderous and cheerful at the same time. Bloody Christmas. And he had a headache, he realised – bloody Doyle, making him drink all that… What had they been drinking, anyway? He sniffed, winced.
Must have been whisky, with a head like this, because they were out of brandy… ah.
They’d run out of brandy and the offie on the corner had been shut, but Doyle’s flat was less than a mile from HQ, so… He winced again, memory slipping a bit further in, with nippy little fingers. So they’d liberated the Cow’s Glenfiddich from the cupboard, in the glorious drunk certainty of being able to replace it before Alpha One got back from Edinburgh on… Sunday.
And yet… He remembered Doyle pulling him into the comparative shelter of someone’s front garden, into the shadows of some oak or chestnut or other venerable giant, remembered being kissed, and remembered cold hands and giggles, and…
So whatever they’d fought about, it had been after that. He turned onto his stomach, tucked his head into the pillow, and closed his eyes determinedly. He didn’t care. It was Christmas sodding morning and he was going to sleep in if it killed him, going to sleep if…
…and then the door was being kicked open, rebounding off the wall, and he was halfway out of bed, heart pounding, before he realised he was awake again.
Bloody Doyle.
Bloody Doyle, hands full carrying a tray with… with toast, and bacon and butter, and his battered old teapot in its cosy, mugs and… a bottle of milk.
Bodie stared at it.
“…all the way down to bloody Patel’s, so you’d better be awake you lazy bugger, and…”
Bodie let himself sit back down on the bed, listening to Doyle warbling on about the queue at the only corner shop open on a Christmas morning, just around the corner from HQ, and staring at the bottle of milk.
He took the mug he was given, paused a minute, and then reached to put it on the bedside table, to lift the tray off the bed, ignoring Doyle’s Oy!, and risked life, limb, and spilt tea, to lean in and kiss him. When Doyle began kissing him back properly he pulled away again, smiled, and took Doyle’s tea to put beside his own.
“Happy Christmas, Ray,” he said, tugging him back into place - the place he wanted him to be, where he belonged, beside him in bed. And Doyle didn’t argue, and they let the toast get cold.
Title: On Christmas Day in the Morning
Author: Slantedlight
Slash or Gen: Slash
Archive at ProsLib/Circuit: Certainly
Disclaimer: Neither the lads nor the CI5 universe belong to me...
no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 01:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 01:55 pm (UTC)Or breakfast. IT WAS THE BREAKFAST! :shocked:
Thanks for this! It's got a light touch, and it tells alot without giving everything away. And I like your idea of doing a day of short fics (although I'm too sleep-deprived to think up anything). :D
no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 02:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 03:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 04:40 pm (UTC)Adorable - and so married too *g*
no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 04:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 05:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 05:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 10:06 pm (UTC)Just lovely and yummy.
no subject
Date: 2011-12-21 11:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-22 08:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-23 09:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-24 11:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-26 06:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-30 03:37 am (UTC)