Benton Fraser (
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thelockbox2014-07-06 10:57 pm
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Benton Fraser | Due South
![]() BENTON FRASER。 | |
"You know, Fraser, when they offered me this assignment, they made it sound kind of normal. They say, 'Hey, Ray, here's a chance to start over, ditch the past.' 'What's the catch?' I say. 'Oh, your partner's Canadian.' Canadian? I got nothing against Canadians, except for the time when they won the World Series, which I'm willing to overlook. But at no time did they say, 'you'll be working with a Mountie who's got a wolf that's a florist'" |
NEW READ JOURNAL CREDIT |
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You're driving [ He repeated, nodding sagely. ] I'm shutting up.
[ As though by repetition he could convince himself to do it. He untensed his muscles, gingerly releasing the handle, though he didn't look anything more comfortable in the passenger seat because of it. Off duty he wore black; black shirt, blue jeans, black jacket. But his hair was as preened and under control as ever, and even in laid back clothes there was no smoothing out the rigidity just under the surface. Maybe it was the buffed boots. His outfit for the wedding was hanging in the back seat with Ray's.
He kept his eyes on the road; they turned off the freeway, slinking west again toward the glimmering inland sea that was The Lake they called Lake Michigan. All he had to do was stay quiet for the rest of the trip, right? ]
You realize of course-- [ This was it. He was either going to get the words out or Ray was going to pull over on the side of the road and smash his jaw. ] --That out of the two of us, I am the only one under any obligation to attend. You, on the other hand, are well within your rights to withhold your blessings from the happy couple.
[ Maybe he could just stay at arm's length from Ray for the rest of the day? Of course it wouldn't help when they had to share a room in the lodge together that night, but they'd slept in hateful silence of each other before, in much more cramped spaces. A shared hotel room with actual twin beds was nothing. ]
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As Benton starts, Ray only bothers to send him a warning glance, sharp and glaring but not lingering.
It was a fair point. One that Ray had reminded himself of numerous times. He didn't have to go. He'd even decided not to go numerous times since the invitation before changing his mind the next day. Back and forth to the point of sleepless nights the closer the wedding got. But he had to go. He's not sure why, but he had to.]
Someone needed to drive you out here, Fraser. Who else is gonna want a Mountie and wolf in their car with all their luggage, huh?
[It's an excuse he's settled with for the moment. There's plenty of other cops from the station that could've taken Fraser, sure, but not all were staying at the lodge and Ray didn't trust Fraser with any of them. And if Ray didn't go he'd be alone. Fraser was all he had left now and after spending so many months literally depending on Benton for every single part of his life, he'd admit it was hard to be away from that. Their first night back in Chicago had been an odd one, Ray barely able to sleep with all the noise outside his apartment and the empty space in the bed beside him.
Part of him wondered if maybe, just maybe, leaving Fraser with Vecchio at that wedding might somehow have Fraser never coming back.]
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[ Fraser had felt it too. Their time in the wilderness had changed everything he thought he knew about home. It could be a place, as it had been for his father, a wild emptiness and a heartfelt yearning for a life into which he could never fit, or it could be a person. The city was a wilderness no different than the great white emptiness of the Yukon, and while Fraser still missed the whip of snow against his face, the scent of freshly chopped firewood and the ringing silence of the Territories--home he'd come to realize, could very well be the man sitting beside him.
He'd come to realize it over time, when his frustrations began to gradually give way to sentiment, that Ray had superseded his childhood home in his longings. Reading by lamplight - sometimes aloud - he'd dwelled in particularly on the stories in his father's journals about his mother. Seeing her had brought on a longing to reread them, thus his choice to pack several of them despite the extra weight and the peril of losing them, but in reality they served a different purpose. Fraser listened to his father's warmth and passion, read of the nights shared sleeping in that igloo and the dark days of winter lit only by the romance of the Northern Lights, and he reflected on loneliness--his father's and his own, and how the Yukon was somehow more hospitable when there was a warm body laying flush against your own.
And when they'd found The Hand, when the adventure was over, he'd sought in desperation for the words he needed to make Ray stay. If he'd asked, he knew, Ray would have done just that - he had nothing to come back to - but Fraser had come up short at the crucial moment. Heartsick, he'd wasted no time in transferring back to Chicago, only to find that it wasn't the city itself but the warm body that he invariably missed.
But just getting to work with Ray again was enough. If Fraser was good at anything, it was getting deep and fulfilling satisfaction from simply having someone he cared about in his life. There didn't have to be more to it than that. Sitting in the Pontiac bickering with Ray was all the physical contact he needed. But that was Fraser, and it had been well remarked on that Mounties were invariably hewn from the ice on which they were birthed. Ray had the firey passion and joie de vivre of a man who had grown up in the city, and the impatience to suit it. In all probability he wouldn't wait for Fraser to find out what he wanted.
His pensiveness kept him remarkably quiet, but it had done so since they left, and they would soon be running out of road. A gentle segue into discussing the wedding was to approach it through the relatively neutral topic of man's best friend. Of course since Dief was a traitor too, it was hard to tell how safe the efforts would prove to be. ]
Diefenbaker has been rehearsing all week. You know, he's never been a ringbearer before, but he's been taking the responsibility very seriously.
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Chicago was nostalgic though, in good ways and bad. He and Fraser had done so much in the city, from first meets to falling outs, to near death experiences and everything in between. But it also provided Ray plenty of memories of Stella, of their childhood romance and their attachment as they grew older. They shared plenty of their life together and now all that was being thrown away for some Italian cop who wasn't even that classy.
Benton did well not to push the matter further for the moment, the distraction of Diefenbaker proving to draw Ray out of his sulk to glance briefly over his shoulder at the wolf.]
Make sure you forget the rings, Dief. Gotta have at least one thing go wrong with the wedding. They ain't real weddings without a few disasters.
[And as much as Ray would love every bit of the wedding to be ruined, he would never actually do that to Vecchio of Stella. Especially considering Fraser's disapproving stares.]
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Less of that. This situation is already sensitive enough without you encouraging him, and you have a duty to perform. [ Diefenbaker moved over to the left hand side of the car, stuck his nose through the space behind Ray's seat and licked at his cheek and ear. ] Oh, I see. So this is a question of loyalty, and has absolutely nothing to do with baseballs and doughnuts? I can't believe you.
Woof! Rar-raoooo-ra-woof!
[ A normal person might have worried about Ray's ability to drive despite the distraction of a wolf making out with his ear, but Fraser wasn't a normal person with normal person concerns. Instead he sat back in his seat with an unnaturally human huff, and folded his arms defensively across his chest. ]
Well I mean--that's entirely unreasonable. I refuse to be spoken to like that. [ He added, under his breath: ] Disloyal, as though he's one to talk.
[ It was always a pantomime with them. That Diefenbaker was in many ways representative of a part of himself he otherwise refused to allow to surface - emotional, selfish, prone to excess - was neither here nor there. While Fraser had to be the one who supported and loved both his friends equally, Diefenbaker could prank and pick sides, and he had clearly chosen Ray Kowalski.
So perhaps Fraser had, too. ]
It's the next left.
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He doesn't even mind the constant licking, merely lifting his shoulder slightly and tucking his neck into it like he's being tickled. He's driven with much worse distractions before.]
Dief just knows what he likes. Can't blame a wolf for good taste, huh, buddy? [Apparently addressing the canine again, especially as he adds a faux-whisper;] Maybe show up with the rings, keep everyone happy. But pee in at least one of the flower arrangements. I know I will.
[He glances to Fraser, all folded arms and sulking, and there's the first semblance of a smile in hours. Days. Maybe even weeks. But it's far too full of mischief and amusement to mean anything good. It's the first glimmer of hope that he's had for something amusing to happen at the wedding of doom.
He takes the turn he's told then lifts a hand off the wheel, shoving Dief's head away with the briefest scritches of fingers. He loves the wolf and all but he doesn't appreciate his ear and neck dripping with drool.]
Cheer up, Fraser, we're goin' to a wedding.
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Welsh had explained the perils of an open bar to him with the slow steady understanding of a man who had seen this kind of thing before, sweetly assuring in his usual way that Fraser - whose idea of a wedding disaster involved a musk-ox, a barrel of oak whiskey and a canoe - clearly had no idea what he was letting himself in for.
In short, he was prepared to allow Ray to get away with everything short of actual criminal damage, and even then he was flexible.
Fraser glanced up once they'd circled the corner, smiled hesitantly at Ray. How could he help himself when his partner's mood seemed to have lifted at last? Ray had been positively stormy for weeks, even intolerable at times. At first he'd put it down to the usual push and pull of their relationship, but of course it was Stella. How could it be anything else? But Ray was smiling--maybe it was the light at the end of the tunnel finally reaching him, the fact that in the hours that followed, he might finally be released from the facsimile of hope. Maybe. But he doubted Ray was thinking even remotely along those lines.
He ducked his chin briefly toward his chest. ]
I've been hoping to ask a favor of you, Ray. At these events, I tend to be ah--well ah, swamped. And the Vecchio family in particular is...prodigious. Lots of sisters and daughters and aunts and...
[ Fraser rubbed at his eyebrow in discomfort. He sighed. ]
Would you consider...that is--could you, if it seems like I might be out of my depth--? [ Help me, Ray Kowalski, you're my only hope. ]
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Fraser might keep him in check, though. Might at least make sure Ray's not approaching the new couple to shout obscenities or try punching the groom in the face. It's all very tempting to do, and with the help of alcohol breaking down his inhibitions, he might just be at risk of following through if neither he nor Benton are careful. Sadly the Mountie had some babysitting on his hands, but he's undoubtedly used to that after being partnered with both Dief and Kowalski.
The smile fades quickly though, exceptionally short lived but it appears to have broken down some of the previous frostiness that might freeze straight back over once they arrive. Fraser's asking for aid though, so for now the annoyance stays away and Ray, the great friend that he is, takes the request very seriously.
He knows the Vecchios. Had to for his cover. They're certainly a handful, much more so when Fraser got involved. Must be something about the Vecchio name when it comes to obsessions with the Mountie, Ray Vecchio included.]
You want me to bail you if mamma Veccio starts trying to force feed you cake? Sure, Frase. What are friends for?
[But not before he's watched Fraser get increasingly more uncomfortable first.]
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In the Yukon, things had been inverse. Women didn't corner men on the dancefloor and make it so they couldn't refuse, because the ratio of men to women in the Territories was stilted five-to-one, and if you wanted to dance you had to be somewhat more proactive. The same had still been true of the Academy. In the eighties, when Fraser had studied there, men had vastly outnumbered women, and Fraser had essentially gotten off Scott free. That was, he'd been free to dance with whomsoever he wished.
But American women (and as it turned out the occasional Canadian fish out of water) were persistent, and exhausting. He tried - he really did try - not to let being flustered run him down, but Fraser was only human. He had limits just like everyone else, and this wedding was going to push him beyond them. Francesca, for example, would never let him slip by without insisting on a dance, and Fraser could already predict how that was going to turn out. The woman was like a hound on a scent, she never let up. She'd have bribed the band or something to play slow music, and she'd nag him to hold her closer and--oh dear.
He pinched his brow in consternation. ]
Cake is the least of my problems. [ Stated with the certainty and gravity of a man facing the hangman's noose. ] Perhaps I should... [ He shook his head abruptly. ] Nevermind.
[ There were going to be at least two dozen long lost Vecchios to contend with, judging by the glance he'd caught of Ray's guestlist. It would be a work of supererogation if he was still alive at the end of the night let alone upright. This was why he needed a date, or a chaperone. Perhaps if he inflected on the word 'partner' just right when introducing Ray... No solution was too outrageous.
And if all else failed he could always fake his death again. ]
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Even with the few brief glances he spared over to Fraser between driving, he could tell his partner was already worrying over the finer details of a stalking Frannie, and God knows how bad she'd be with a few drinks inside her.]
Don't worry about it. I'll think of somethin'. Even if it means I gotta dance with her. [If he can distract her long enough to let Fraser escape then it's worth it.]
Free bar though, huh? That's gonna make for a fun night. Last time I was at a weddin' with one of those, I woke up naked in the bath tub of the bridal suite, covered in confetti. Fun times, huh? Fun times.
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But it made him jealous, and that was a bad sign. Like the next 24 hours were going to be hell to get through, whether he was spending time with other people or simply in his own company.
His mood stirred slightly at Ray's story, and he glanced up at him. ] You never told me about that.
[ It couldn't have been his wedding, after all Ray was a cop, and he had to have been to dozens of these sorts of events. They were unavoidable in social circles. Which means that the bridal suite he'd woken up with also wasn't his own, and leant something risque to the entire affair. They were arriving, though; when they turned right into the arching driveway in front of the ostentatious wedding venue, the gravel crunched under the Firestone tyres of the Pontiac. Fraser could feel Ray slowing down to a crawl to protect the paintjob, but gravel was gravel, and even he flinched with every ding and audible flick of stones flung out of the treads.
But they were here, and parking beside the dozens of other cars, and a porter in conspicuous red was already on the way over to fetch their luggage, though he froze halfway across the concourse when Diefenbaker jumped out of the front of the car after Fraser. Having closed the door, he leaned down to peer into the still open window. ]
Ray? Shall we?
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Nothin' to tell. Was just a drunken thing.
[If he told Fraser all the weird shit that's happened when he's been drunk, they'd be talking for a looong time.
As they turn into the drive way, Ray slows right down, careful of the abuse the gravel would do to his poor Pontiac. He supposes a few nicks would give him and his father something to refine when he got back, but he'd really rather keep the paint job free from too much abuse. When he does finally crawl the car up to the entrance, he stills, switching the engine off but staying right where he is.
Just being there was making it all too real, the tell-tale white and cream decorations bringing home the memories of weddings gone by. Of his. With Stella. The woman now getting married to another.
Maybe this was a bad idea. Maybe he shouldn't have come after all. Maybe...]
Uh?
[It's only the voice of Fraser that draws him out of his thoughts, jerking his head towards the passenger side and staring blankly for a moment.]
Sure. Sure. I uh. I'll just. Yeah.
[Slowly, ever so slowly, he opens up the door and drags himself out with what looks like far too much effort, his body as reluctant as his mind.
Come on Kowalski, just think of the free bar.]
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He could see the moment the car door opened that Ray was back in zombie mode, probably wondering why he was here, and how he'd gotten here in the first place. He looked shell shocked. If Fraser didn't intercede, Ray would be gone the next time he blinked, and so he reached in through the window and hooked the Pontiac's keys out of the console, tossing them to the still nervous looking porter. ]
Treat her like you would your own mother. Room 217, Kowalski-Fraser. [ His voice held an unusual authority. ] When you're done, leave the keys courtesy of the Vecchio party. Thank you kindly, George. [ And he tipped a twenty out of his hat and wrapped an arm around Ray's back, expecting that that would be it.
Unexpectedly the man - British - babbled: Thank you, Sir. Mr. Kowalski-Fraser, Sir. Fraser bit his lip, tried to keep his eyes straight ahead, but ended up darting a look in Ray's direction after all. George thought they were a couple. Sure. As if that was even remotely legal in the state of Illinois.
He leaned up into Ray's ear and hissed, none the less, something very intimate and warm about the gesture. Maybe he wanted the guy to get ideas. He could spread it around the staff, and maybe from there it would blossom... ]
I hear the minibar in our room is unreasonably expensive, but for once perhaps frugality is overrated. And it is almost lunchtime...
[ Fraser would insist on paying the new Vecchios back eventually rather than eat and drink on their tab, but that was only so that he could humor Ray with the promise of guilt free revenge in the meantime, and play along without feeling bad himself. Dief, who had been ignoring the conversation until the word 'lunchtime', suddenly barked eagerly and bounded ahead of them. Apparently the idea of oven baked Chicago style pizza with pineapple on top appealed to him too. Comfort food. ]
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Still, as tempting as it is to start up the car again and wheel spin his way to freedom, he decides to man it up and see it through, if only thanks to the reminder of how damn lonely he'll feel if he sulks back at home without any of the usual friends and colleagues around.
Fraser takes control enough to get the Pontiac cared for and Ray lets it happen, barely even reacting like a shell-shocked victim, easily led by the arm wrapping around him. He didn't mind the contact, not from Fraser, they'd known each other long enough to comfortably be close, and right now Ray could use all the guidance he could get. He barely even hears the porter's response, although spares the briefest glance over at the guy as if he's not entirely sure what he heard. Mr. Kowalski-Fraser? What even was that? He'd almost be tempted to question it where it not for the words close to his ear, bringing him back to the reality at hand.
Minibar. Yes. Now Fraser was talking his language.]
Heh. I could run up a pretty high bill.
[And Vecchio could pay for every single penny of it, the bastard.]
C'mon then, buddy, I gotta lot of drink to get through before the day is out. [The bark from Dief is enough of a prompt for Ray to add;] And food too. Hey, y'think we can get pizza out here? Must be some place who delivers.
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They had to climb up the stairs to the second floor to find their room, and Fraser went ahead to unlock it, finding their luggage already inside and the twenty he'd given to George laid down on the key tray by the door. It was odd how he inspired that in otherwise weathered Chicago residents, but somehow--there it was. He shook his head, put the twenty back in his hat, propped the hat on the coat hook on the back of the door, and then turned on into the room.
It was a double.
Maybe Vecchio hadn't known. It could be a simple mistake, and Fraser could certainly head down and speak to the staff about the mistake, but since when had he needed a plush hotel bed to sleep on anyway? He could sleep standing up if he absolutely needed to, and there was a plush faux fur rug that would make a far more comfortable bed than any expensive featherdown mattress. He'd be fine. ]
Well, you'll have to share with Diefenbaker, but I'm sure you'll come to some kind of arrangement.
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When they got access to the room, Ray doesn't even think about the bed, instead moving towards the fridge and observing it's insides with a heavy level of interest. There should be enough to tide him over, all those various miniatures and plenty of chocolate too. He'd make sure the newly weds had to pay through the teeth for this.
It's only when Fraser speaks that Ray finally straightens up, peering over at the bed with furrowed brows.
Who the hell orders a one bed room for two guys?]
I'm not sleepin' with the wolf, Fraser. He snores. [And even after Dief's protest, Ray's shrugging a shoulder at the canine.] Sorry, buddy, you do.
We'll just go ask for a switch. I don't care how much you enjoy sleepin' on the floor.
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I prefer the double, Ray. We've slept in more cramped quarters than this. Besides, you'll prefer to have the room to sprawl. You'd stick your legs out the side of a single bed when you lay in it sideways.
[ Get your legs in, Ray.
Fraser decided to make a point by crossing to the closet and fetching down the extra bedding. He hadn't brought his bedroll despite a suspicion that Ray might keep driving and they'd end up camping in the middle of nowhere rather than go to the wedding. Maybe he'd been overconfident in his abilities to convince him at the time--maybe not, he had gotten Ray to come.
But if Ray was already kicking up a stink about changing rooms, who knew where he'd be by the time the ceremony actually got started.
He tried something else. ]
Please?
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Still, the Mountie has a point. The two of them have spent plenty of time stuck in snow shelters, tents, cabins and whatever else, huddled up in close quarters trying to keep warm, and wasn't it Ray who'd admitted to himself he missed that company now that they were back in Chicago? He'd barely had a good nights sleep since they'd got back, maybe this is what he needed, especially with the aid of booze.]
Fine. We can make it work. You don't gotta sleep on the floor, but Dief has to stay on the end of the bed. [Because snoring.
The problem seems to be short lived either way as Ray turns his attention back to the fridge and rifles through it, withdrawing several tiny bottles of bourbon.]
So how many drinks y'think I can fit in before this thing starts? I wanna beat some records.
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You want me to produce a number based on how much I think can be drunk leveled against how long we have before we need to be changed and ready, just so that you can attempt to beat it. Do I have that about right?
[ He wasn't really asking. Of course Ray did. ]
It depends on the units of alcohol you attempt to imbibe, but I believe your limit would be... [ Thoughtful pause. ] Two beers, and seven of the tiny bottles. And your chances of beating such a record depend on how many slices of pizza you eat, although I won't tell you if you would be required therefore to eat more or less pizza.
And speaking of--
[ There was a knock on the door, and Fraser head over to open it at once, thanking the porter for delivering the pizza and once again offering to tip him. No thank you, Mr and Mr. Kowalski-Fraser, the pleasure is all mine.
And then look: there was pizza, and Fraser trying to act naturally, and Dief trying to jump up and get it while he carried the boxes over to the bed and climbed up onto it. They'd scatter crumbs no doubt, but since the room lacked a table, the bed was the best place to share a meal ]
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[He doesn't even bother to get those tiny cans of coke out. There's no point masking the already cheap booze with it all, and it's much quicker to down it straight than it is to start swilling soda with it all. And so he does down it, unscrewing one of the small bottles and knocking it back like it's a shot.
There's only one taken before the knock at the door comes, Ray heading to perch on the bed as Fraser goes to collect. There's that porter again with his weird naming system.]
Mr and Mr. Kowalski-Fraser? That kid must be dumber than Turnbull. Heh.
[Even if Kowalski-Fraser didn't sound so bad... Better than Vecchio anyway. Why would Stella ever want that as a-- Nope. No. He had pizza, now wasn't the time to be brooding on Stella.
As Fraser settles with the boxes, Ray's immediately snatching for his, opening it up with a satisfied sniff and passing Dief the first slice.] It's gonna be hot...
[And considering he's got two hands, he's perfectly capable of feeding the wolf and himself at the same time. And talking. With his mouth full. Such a gent.]
You got your speech all set?
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Ah--
[ He ducked his head slightly, chewing, and then lowered the pizza half an inch. To be fair he preferred to eat his food cold anyway, so it did little harm that he usually talked through his meals.
But this time he prefaced the conversation with something simple--all that needed to be said, given the circumstances. ]
Inuit story.
[ Ray Vecchio would be expecting an Inuit story, and though Fraser did expect that he'd see his friend around, his former partner had been flagged for early retirement, and idle comments about going to Florida and opening a bowling alley hadn't been wholly rebuked by his soon to be wife. Fraser, knowing Vecchio the way he did, was probably the only one who knew that his mentions of this dream were hints rather than offhand remarks. Ray had family in Florida, after all. And if those dreams became reality... Well, they'd drift apart. Florida was further south than anywhere Fraser had ever been. There were no mountains, and it didn't even snow.
Like Ray, whether he cared to admit it or not, Fraser was losing something too; something he'd never be able to get back. So somehow it mattered that he'd tell an Inuit story at his friend's wedding. It was the nature of things--people drifted, moved on with their lives, and probably noone would ever call him 'Benny' again.
He felt his mood register on his face, misery painted in a way that was impossible to miss, in that it took him several seconds to flatten it back out of his expression. He bit into his pizza again, letting the hot cheese scald the roof of his mouth. One day Ray Kowalski would leave him too. A beautiful, patient woman would take one look at him and know what a wonderful man he was--and Fraser would be alone. What was it about weddings? ]
I gave great consideration to the tradition of finishing on a joke, or quote, but it seemed to me that an excerpt from The Godfather might be seen to be in bad taste.
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The second Fraser ducks his head, ray knows what's coming. Inuit story. Of course it fucking is, what else would it be? It'd be blasphemy for Fraser not to recite some ridiculous tale of Canadian antics. In fact, Ray would be pissed if Fraser didn't do it. Everyone should have to suffer through the same shit that he has to on a daily basis.
It's tempting to voice that, but then he looks up from his pizza during that moment of reflective silence and sees Fraser's face, and fuck, the Mountie looks as depressed about all of this as Ray feels. Ray had been so focused on Stella that he'd never even thought about the other side of it, and just for a moment he reflects on how fucking selfish he's been about it all. He may be losing his ex-wife, but he'd lost her long ago. Fraser, though? Fraser was losing a long time good friend. It would be hos before bros after marriage, Vecchio would spend all his time with his wife (not like he wasn't already), and if the rumours were true, they'd be moving off to sunny Florida, away from the cold and the wind and the grimy streets of Chicago. And away from Fraser.
Of course, Benton would take it all with polite smiles and well wishes. Of course. But even that brief flicker of glumness is enough for Ray to realise how much of a cover that will all be.]
I bet it'll be good, no matter what. You always did know how to tell a story, Frase.
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[ But his mind wasn't on stories. He was still dwelling on separation and it's crushing inevitability. That was what his father had told him, after all, wasn't it? That nothing ever stayed the same. Everything, even partnerships, had to end. There was a bittersweet finality to this, as there had been to losing the ghost of his father, seeing his mother for the first and last time. Ray would soon be gone, as everyone would eventually be gone in time. That was true also of this Ray - the new Ray - maybe even of Fraser himself, and certainly of his posting to Chicago.
How long could he string it out? He'd been a police officer for seventeen years, a Constable for most of that. People who had gone to the Academy a decade after him were being promoted over him to jobs that appealed to their city aspirations in Toronto and Ottawa. How long would it be before, choice or not, they took him out of the field and put him behind a desk, far away from the snow, or real police work, where he couldn't embarrass any more Canadian officials?
And would retiring on full pay even be worth the way it would destroy his soul to have to suffer through it?
He ate quietly, distractedly, and then at last lowered the pizza just a few inches - still on his first slice - and looked sadly across at Ray again. ]
Perhaps it wouldn't hurt if... This once... If we shared a drink that was somewhat stronger than camomile tea.
[ He felt like he needed to excuse himself. ]
It is a wedding, after all. [ And nobody needed a miserable Mountie bringing down the mood before festivities had even gotten started. Just one drink--enough to dull the razor sharp edge of his mind and soften him up. What could go wrong? ]
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Maybe all this wouldn't be so bad after all. He's losing his wife, but he's regaining sole possession of his best friend. Not a bad trade off, even if Stella is his life long love interest. It's hard not to miss a woman you've been fawning over since you were a little kid.
So torn. And yet Fraser provides the perfect distraction when he reminds Ray of alcohol.]
Stronger than tea? You sure about that, Fraser? I mean, I'd be all over you stumblin' your way through the chapel like a klutzy toddler, but I dunno if that'd be appreciated by Vecchio.
[But even with the warning, Ray's stuffing the remainder of his current pizza slice into his mouth and sliding off the bed to go gather up those tiny bottles and, for Fraser's sake, a few tiny coke cans too.]
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He tries for levity. It doesn't work out so well. ]
I'd rather hoped you would be all over me, Ray.
[ He said it distractedly, as though it had an entirely different meaning--which to Fraser it of course did. He meant 'Catch me if I fall', obviously, and chewed his way around the thick Chicago style crust of his pizza. He'd once told Ray that there was enough food in just one thirteen inch pie to feed a whole family of Inuit people, and yet between them and Diefenbaker they tended to clear two boxes easily. Maybe living in Chicago just made him hungrier--or it was the lack of pemmican in his diet. Either way, he ate his fair share.
When Ray settled back down, Fraser squinted at some of the bottles, trying to remember from the incident with his grandfather's liquor cabinet what tasted like what. He'd used the information since - you could find a wealth of information licking shoes and tables and bar counters and... But which flavors did he actually like? That was much more debatable. He settled on the black rum, unscrewing the tiny lid and raising it up for an overpowering sniff. Even the smell of it might make him tipsy. His eyebrows flicked toward his hairline, and then, preparing himself with a fierce grimace, he drained the bottle.
And coughed. And choked. And then coughed again until tears pricked his blue eyes. His throat had closed up, he could barely speak, but he managed to get out: ]
That was just as awful as I remembered.
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