Gibbs sat there for a
moment, just gazing at Tony. He had been
pretty certain that the kid in the photo
was Tony when he'd come here, but
hearing Tony confirm it still hurt. He
felt as if someone had ripped out his
insides and stamped all over them. Tony
was looking straight at him, his eyes a
mirror of the scared eyes of the boy in
the photograph – the boy he'd once been.
"Thank you, Tony," Gibbs said softly. "I
know that can't have been easy."
Tony glanced at the photo and then at a
spot over Gibbs's shoulder.
"I thought I could make it go away," he
said quietly. "If I played it right
today. Thing is, when it all blew up I
wasn't expecting…" He trailed off, still
glancing absently over Gibbs's shoulder.
"There's no way you could have known
what we'd find on that laptop today,
Tony," Gibbs told him gently.
"At first, I thought it'd be okay -
although I knew I wasn't getting things
right, but as the day went on, it got
harder."
"At what point did you think there might
be photographs of you on Parrish's
laptop, Tony?"
Tony frowned and wrapped his arms around
his body. "Uh…" He looked as if he was
concentrating really hard just to stay
in the moment and answer the question.
"I'm not sure. The day just kept going
from bad to worse, and I couldn't keep
things under control. In my head. It all
kept slipping away from me."
Gibbs gazed at him thoughtfully. The
Tony sitting in front of him right now
wasn't the same Tony he had worked with
every day for the past eight years. He
looked as if he was having trouble
concentrating, and he had lost his usual
defence mechanism of making jokes and
pulling faces. None of that disturbed
Gibbs as much as what had happened in
the parking lot earlier, when Tony had
seemed to go into some kind of fugue
state. He'd had to call his name several
times before he'd come out of it.
"Go on," Gibbs prompted. Tony nodded.
"When McGee first showed us the
photographs of Justin, I felt sorry for
the kid, but I also knew I had to
protect myself, in case people started
to suspect – about me. I tried to act
the way people would expect me to act in
that situation, but I know I screwed
that up because I couldn't get a feel
for what was right. I hadn't figured out
that there might be photos of me on the
laptop at that point – I just didn't
want to give away any clues that this
was something that might mean something
to me."
"You didn't want us to find out what
happened to you?" Gibbs asked. Tony
nodded.
"I didn't want any of you to find out,"
he replied, and then he frowned. "But I
really didn't want *you* to find out,
Boss."
"Tony, you were just a kid in these
photos. It's like I said to Justin
earlier, none of this is your fault…"
Gibbs began.
"When Shannon and Kelly died," Tony
interrupted, and then he paused, looking
apprehensive. Gibbs felt his jaw
tighten. Nobody *ever* talked to him
about Shannon and Kelly – they knew it
was off-limits - but right now he was
asking Tony to talk about something just
as personal, so what the hell right did
he have to get angry with him?
"When they died," Tony continued, when
Gibbs made no move to stop him, "If
someone had taken photos of them at that
exact moment…if you had found out that
they kept those photographs of your
worst nightmare in their 'favourites'
file…"
Gibbs clenched his hands into fists as
he looked into Tony's troubled green
eyes.
"Would you want anyone to see those
photos?" Tony finished. "Even your
closest friends? Especially your closest
friends. Would you?"
"No." Gibbs shook his head,
understanding Tony's analogy all too
well. "Tony, I can't begin to imagine
what kind of an ordeal today must have
been for you."
"It got worse after I took a look at the
admiral's photo – a good look," Tony
said. "You came back and saw me, and I
made some crack about trying to see what
someone is capable of by looking at
them, but that wasn't what I was doing."
"You were trying to see if you
recognised him," Gibbs said quietly.
"Yes." Tony nodded.
"How many men abused you, Tony?" Gibbs
asked. Tony reached up and rubbed the
back of his head again, staring into
space. Gibbs saw his eyes glaze over.
"Tony!" he rapped out sharply, and
Tony's look of concentration returned.
"How many?"
"Three," he replied.
That wasn't unexpected after what they'd
heard from Justin earlier, but Gibbs
still felt like he'd been punched in the
gut.
"Over what time period?" he asked.
"I think it was about a year."
Gibbs paused, not wanting to know the
answer to the next question but having
to ask it anyway.
"How old were you when the abuse
started, Tony?"
Tony looked uncomfortable. "You won't
like it," he warned.
"Don't worry about me," Gibbs said
firmly.
"You'll get angry."
"Maybe – but not with you. How old were
you, Tony?"
"Twelve," Tony said quietly.
Tony was right; he didn't like it. It
was all he could do not to react, but he
didn't want his anger – no, his
stone-cold fury - to make Tony wary
about confiding in him. There might be a
37 year old man sitting opposite him,
but he was aware that on some level he
was also talking to a twelve year old
boy. He had to bear that in mind while
questioning Tony.
"Was the admiral one of the men who
abused you?" Gibbs prompted gently. Tony
gazed at him for a long moment. Gibbs
felt a ball of anger form in the pit of
his stomach. "Tony? Did Admiral Parrish
abuse you when you were a kid?" he
pressed.
"Yes," Tony said quietly.
That ball of anger exploded, and Gibbs
had to work hard not to lash out, or
yell, or leave and go over to the
admiral's house and bury his fist in the
man's face over and over again. He
fought the feelings back down and nodded
at Tony to continue.
"Once I figured that out, I knew I had
to find out if there were any
photographs of me in those files on his
laptop," Tony said. "I couldn't risk
coming face to face with him at that
point because I wasn't sure what I'd do.
I thought maybe I wouldn't do anything,
because I couldn't *feel* anything, but
I didn't know for sure because I
can't…I'm not…things are fuzzy for me
right now."
"I understand." Gibbs nodded. "So you
asked me if you could stay behind,
instead of coming with me to search the
admiral's house and arrest him."
"Yes. When you'd gone, I went down to
Abby's lab to see if I could find out
just what I was dealing with. McGee
showed me the admiral's 'favourites'
file…" Tony broke off again, a flicker
of some unreadable expression on his
face. "And how flattering is that?" he
asked bitterly. He glanced at the photo
still on display on the laptop. "I make
it into some pervert's porn top ten.
Anyway, I saw some photos of me…but I
was just a kid then, and the context was
wrong, so McGee and Abby hadn't
recognised me. I knew I probably
wouldn't be so lucky if you ever got to
see them though. I know how observant
you are, Boss."
Gibbs grunted. His brain hadn't made the
connection either, initially. It was
only when McGee had mentioned the word
'familiar', and he'd taken a closer
look, that something had snapped into
place for him.
"I thought about deleting them. It would
have been easy enough to create a
diversion and get rid of Abby and McGee
for long enough to do that on the
computers in the lab, but I knew it
would be harder to gain access to the
admiral's laptop in the evidence garage.
Harder – but not impossible. Not for me
anyway." Tony gave a little grin. "I had
to weigh up the risks of being caught
doing that though – and therefore
drawing attention to the very evidence I
was trying to hide. So I thought, on
balance, it was better to take my chance
with the possibility that you might
never take a good look at those
particular photos."
"It was just by chance that I did.”
"That just left Justin. You're right; I
boxed myself into a corner there. I
thought I could spare him the ordeal of
a court case and handle the admiral
myself, privately. I wasn't thinking
straight. I wanted it to go away. I
thought I could *make* it go away, Boss.
I didn't think anyone would find out. I
didn't want anyone to find out."
"Why, Tony? Parrish hurt you when you
were just a kid. Now is your chance to
bring him to justice.”
"I like my life, Gibbs," Tony told him
quietly. "I like it how it is right now.
This gets out and people will look at me
differently. You're already looking at
me differently, Boss. And just think
about how McGee will look at me…" He
shuddered. "And Ziva, Abby – all of
them. I want to be who I've chosen to
be. I'm not a victim. I am not that kid
in those photos. I've moved on, made a
success of my life. I've…" He struggled
for the words.
"Put those memories in a box and shut
them away in some corner of your mind?"
Gibbs asked. "Like you told Justin to do
earlier?"
"Yes. I don't think about it. If it
comes into my mind, then I've found
tricks to make it disappear again. I'm
really good at that," Tony grinned.
"There's just one problem with that,
Tony," Gibbs said, leaning forward. Tony
frowned.
"What?"
"You *are* the kid in the photographs,"
Gibbs told him. Tony's eyes flickered.
"And I think that today, faced with the
all too clear evidence of that, your
mind has been playing tricks back at ya,"
Gibbs said softly. "Maybe those
mechanisms for keeping it all locked
away don't work when it's staring you
right in the face. Maybe it wasn't
something that could ever work
long-term. Maybe you need to face up to
what happened to you."
"I don't want to," Tony told him
bluntly. "I don't want to think about
it. I don't want to *remember* it."
"You want to leave Parrish and the
others out there, walking around, free
to abuse more kids?" Gibbs asked him.
Tony glared at him. “Or do you want to
help me make a case against him for what
he did to you, and God knows how many
other young boys?”
“You’re forgetting about the statute of
limitations,” Tony said, folding his
arms across his chest. “This all
happened twenty-five years ago.”
Gibbs made a little motion with his
head. “You and I both know that
exceptions have been made in cases like
this, especially where there are
repressed memories.”
“My memory wasn’t repressed. It was
just…contained.”
"Okay – but the abuse against Justin was
recent. You were right about Justin not
being a very good witness," Gibbs said.
"But if we could get him to testify, and
if his testimony was backed up by a
really reliable witness, like, say, a
federal agent…"
"No!" Tony snapped. "No. Don't do this
to me, Gibbs. Don't guilt-trip me into
this."
"Tony, anything you do will be your own
decision," Gibbs told him. "But it's out
now. You can't put it away in that box
again. *I* know, and I can't forget it –
I don't have a convenient box in my
brain where I can file those photos
away."
“No,” Tony repeated, in an agonised
voice.
“Okay.” Gibbs nodded. “But we’re clearly
dealing with a pedophile ring here from
all you’ve said. Whether or not you
testify, any information you can give us
about these men might help us crack this
ring.”
Tony was gazing at him, a look of mute
pleading in his eyes. Gibbs paused. He
didn't have to do this. He could spare
Tony this. He could protect this man
sitting in front of him, a man he cared
about more than he wanted to admit, and
make all this go away for him. He could
do that. Except that he knew he
couldn't. If Tony could give them
information that would bring down a
whole pedophile ring, then he had to
pursue it. He hated himself for it, but
he did it anyway.
"We have more work to do on those
photographs," Gibbs said quietly. "And
at some point McGee or Abby might figure
it out. Do you want to be walking around
on eggshells waiting for that to happen?
Or do you want to confront it? You said
you didn't want to be a victim, and you
don't have to be. You can take the
initiative; you can sit in the driver’s
seat and bring these men to justice."
Tony's hand shot out, and he closed the
laptop with a hard crash.
"I said no!"
"I'll be with you, every step of the
way. I promise," Gibbs told him, leaning
forward, every single fibre of his being
radiating his sincerity, needing Tony to
believe him. "I mean it, Tony. I will
walk this with you - every single moment
of it. We can find these men, and we can
make them pay for what they did to you,
and to Justin, and to all those other
kids. We can stop them hurting any other
boys – we can bring them down, but you
have to trust me, Tony. You have to
believe in me. I promise you I will not
let you down."
Tony gazed at him from doubtful eyes.
"I think this is the only way that this
will ever be resolved for you, Tony,"
Gibbs told him softly. "I don't think
you'll ever be able to stuff it back
into that box of yours again – do you?"
"I don't know," Tony muttered. "It has
been hard. Today. The things I used to
do, the tricks I used to use in my head
– they don't seem to be working."
"In the short term it'll be tough. I
can't tell you that it won't, and you
wouldn't believe me if I did. I know it
won't be easy for you to re-live any of
it. But, in the long term, I think it'll
be easier for you to lay it to rest if
you face up to it."
"With all due respect, Boss, you're not
anyone's idea of a shrink," Tony said,
with a ghost of a grin.
"Nope." Gibbs grinned back at him.
"Hell, you know my opinion of shrinks,
but most of this stuff is common sense.
What do you say, Tony? Will you do it?"
"When?" Tony asked.
"Right now. We could go back to NCIS,
use an interrogation room, and conduct
an interview. If we tape it, then you'll
only have to go through it once. Any
information you give us will be very
helpful, Tony."
"Did you mean what you said about being
with me…uh…only…I don't know how I'll
be. I might lose it," Tony confessed,
and Gibbs noticed his hand shaking as he
said that.
Gibbs looked into Tony's eyes and saw an
expression in them that he'd never seen
before: sheer, stark terror. Gibbs felt
chilled to the bone. What Tony had told
him already was bad enough, but that was
just the bare bones of it. The details
would clearly be far worse. Gibbs didn't
want to put either of them through it,
but he knew it had to be done.
"Tony – you be any way you have to be –
you just let this out, and I promise you
I will be there," Gibbs told him firmly.
He got to his feet. "Yes?" he asked,
holding out his hand. Tony gazed at it.
"Someone will have to be in the
observation room doing the taping," Tony
said, his hand still shaking. "I don't
want it to be McGee or Ziva."
"You prefer it to be Mike?" Gibbs asked.
Tony shook his head. "It has to be
someone," Gibbs pointed out reasonably.
"And people are going to find out, Tony.
This is a case – you're a witness.
You're making a statement. We'll need to
gather more evidence. I'll need to bring
McGee and Ziva and probably Abby in on
it at some point. They're your friends,
Tony."
"I don't want to do this," Tony told
him.
"I know." Gibbs nodded, keeping his hand
outstretched. "But you will."
"How do you know that?"
"I know you." Gibbs shrugged. "Tony, you
threw yourself into the river last year
to rescue me, and you've put yourself in
the line of fire for every single member
of the team at some point. I know I can
always trust you have to my six. You –
above everyone else."
"So? This isn't about that kind of
stuff," Tony said with a dismissive
shrug.
"The point is that you're *brave*,
Tony," Gibbs said forcefully. "Whatever
else you are, however you view yourself
and your own failings, and whatever
doubts you have, that's one thing that
can't be denied. You're brave."
"Maybe not this brave," Tony told him
doubtfully. Gibbs moved his head
impatiently – he didn't believe that for
a second.
"Trust me?" he said, looking straight
into Tony's eyes, willing him to do just
that. He moved his hand forward
insistently. Tony looked at it and then
slowly, very slowly, he reached out his
own shaking hand towards it. Gibbs
grasped it, firmly, holding on tight,
and pulled Tony to his feet.
"Come on – let's go," he said softly.
"McGee," Tony told him as they walked
towards the door. Gibbs raised an
eyebrow at him. "In the observation room
– let it be McGee," Tony said. "I can't
face the others just yet."
~*~
McGee sat in bed, reading. It had been a
long, gruelling day, and he was tired,
but he wasn’t ready to go to sleep just
yet. Every time he closed his eyes, he
saw those damn photos. Maybe he'd just
get so tired that he'd fall asleep by
accident and hopefully have a dreamless
night. He sure as hell didn't want to
re-live any of the day's events in his
sleep; they'd been disturbing enough as
it was.
He was surprised when his cell phone
rang. It was nearly ten-thirty, and
nobody ever called him this late; well,
nobody except…he looked at the caller
display with a sense of dread: Gibbs.
"Hey, Boss," he said, his heart sinking.
"McGee – I need you back at NCIS," Gibbs
said, as straight to the point as ever.
"Uh. Okay. I'll get dressed and meet you
there. Is there an emergency?"
"No – but I need you to tape an
interview."
McGee frowned. "Uh, Boss, the technician
guys, Mike or Steve, they usually do
that," he pointed out.
"I know that, McGee, but I'm asking you
to do it," Gibbs snapped. McGee jumped
at his tone of voice and held the phone
away from his ear with a grimace.
"Okay. No problem, Boss," he replied,
wondering what the hell that was about.
"And, McGee – this interview is
confidential. You don't tell anyone
about what's discussed in that room
tonight – okay?" Gibbs said. This was
all getting more and more mysterious.
"Okay, Boss," McGee replied, and then
the phone went dead. Typical Gibbs;
never a hello, never a goodbye. Just
terse and direct.
He got dressed wearily and returned to
NCIS. He could do without this tonight
after the day he'd had, but then again,
it wasn't as if he'd been going to get
to sleep anyway, so he might as well be
working.
The squad room was in darkness when he
walked in, so he turned on the light and
went over to his desk to grab some
chocolate from the drawer. This might be
a long night, and he needed something to
keep himself alert.
The elevator pinged open behind him,
sounding unnaturally loud in the
silence, and he turned to see Gibbs and
Tony walk into the squad room. McGee was
about to say something, but then he
stopped. Gibbs had one hand on Tony's
shoulder, and Tony looked, well, as
unlike Tony as he'd ever seen him. It
took McGee a moment to place what was
wrong, and then he realised what it was:
fear. Tony was terrified, and he'd never
seen that particular expression on his
face before.
"Boss…who are we questioning?" McGee
asked.
"Nobody. It's an interview – we’re
taking a statement," Gibbs said.
"Okay. So…are we waiting for someone to
come in and give the statement?" McGee
asked, puzzled. He glanced at Tony, but
the other agent didn't even look at him.
McGee had a bad feeling about this. Tony
must have done something – something
terrible judging by the look on Gibbs's
face.
"No. It's just us," Gibbs said quietly.
McGee realised with a jolt that it must
be Tony giving the statement – so he
*had* done something. Gibbs reached out,
opened his desk drawer, and pulled out a
badge. He took hold of Tony's hand and
pressed the badge into it.
"Here – I want you to have this back,
Tony," he said, and McGee didn't think
he'd ever heard Gibbs use that tone of
voice with any of them before. It was
firm but very gentle – almost soothing.
"I'm not going to give you the gun back
just yet, Tony. You understand why,
don't you?" Gibbs asked.
Tony nodded, and McGee watched,
startled, wondering what the hell was
going on. When had Gibbs taken Tony's
badge and gun off him in the first
place, and why? And why was he now
giving back the badge and not the gun?
"Okay. Then let's go to the
interrogation room," Gibbs said, in that
same calm but authoritative voice.
"McGee – Tony asked specifically that
you do this and nobody else, but it
isn't going to be an easy night for any
of us. Do you understand that?"
McGee was wide-eyed as he nodded. "Yes,
Boss," he said quietly, shooting a
furtive glance at Tony, who was gazing
blankly into space, an absent look in
his eyes, as if he was somewhere else
entirely.
"Like I said on the phone, this
interview is confidential. You don't
tell anyone what happens in that room
unless I say you can," Gibbs warned him
again.
"Yes, Boss." McGee was starting to feel
really freaked out by this.
"Okay – then go set up."
McGee scuttled off to the observation
room and checked over the equipment,
ensuring there was enough tape in the
machines. Then he turned off the light,
put on the headphones, and sat down. He
opened up his bar of chocolate, snapped
off a square, and put it in his mouth.
Tony and Gibbs entered the interrogation
room a few seconds later, and Tony
hesitated, glancing at the chairs, as if
uncertain where to sit. Gibbs gestured
with his head at the chair opposite the
mirror. That was where the suspects
usually sat, so McGee shifted
uncomfortably. Gibbs had said this was
an interview, not an interrogation, but
just what crime was Tony going to admit
to?
McGee set the tape running and glanced
sideways into the room. Gibbs saw the
light go on, signalling that recording
had begun, and he started speaking.
"This is Special Agent Leroy Jethro
Gibbs, talking to Anthony DiNozzo," he
said. McGee didn't miss the fact that he
hadn't addressed Tony by his title, so
he couldn't be here on official NCIS
business. That made him either a suspect
or a witness.
"Shit, Tony, what the hell have you
done?" McGee muttered under his breath.
He broke off another piece of chocolate
and stuck it in his mouth.
"Any time you want to start, just go
ahead, Tony," Gibbs said.
Tony glanced up and caught sight of
himself in the mirror. His eyes
flickered, and he reached up to smooth
down the hair on the back of his head.
Gibbs cleared his throat.
"Don't do that right now, Tony," he
said. "I think it distracts you."
"Right. Yes." Tony nodded. "Where do you
want me to start?" he asked.
"Wherever feels best for you. This is
your show, Tony. Any time you want to
take a break, just tell me. You’ve got
water there, but if you need anything to
eat or drink, we can get McGee to go get
us something. Okay?"
"Yes." Tony nodded again but still
didn't say anything. McGee wondered why
Gibbs was spelling all this out – Tony
knew the procedure. There was a long
silence.
"Have you ever told anyone any of the
things you spoke to me about earlier?"
Gibbs asked eventually.
"Just once. A long time ago."
"Who did you tell?"
"My dad." Tony shrugged.
"Did he believe you?"
Tony looked straight at Gibbs. "No."
"So I can understand why it would be
hard to talk about it now. Last time you
tried you weren't believed, so you've
had to shove it down and bottle it up
ever since. But you know I'll believe
you, don't you?"
"Yeah." Tony nodded. "I guess." He took
a deep breath and seemed to visibly pull
himself back into the moment. "Okay. My
dad was a marine," he said.
It seemed like an unexpected beginning.
McGee glanced at Gibbs – or at least
what he could see of the man from behind
– and thought Gibbs looked a little
startled by that information too.
"He fought in Vietnam," Tony added.
McGee hadn't known that about Tony's
father. He wondered if it had anything
to do with the way Tony so obviously
revered Gibbs, also a former marine.
"While he was in the Corps, he made
friends with this guy – Roy Quinn. Roy
was more than just his buddy though. It
was how you talk sometimes, Boss, about
being in the Corps, about how those
people become like family to you."
"You have to rely on them to have your
six," Gibbs agreed. "In a combat
situation. Your life literally rests in
their hands. That brings you really
close."
"Yeah. Well, that's how it was with my
dad and Roy. They fought together, side
by side, and then one day my dad was
wounded, and they got separated from
their unit. It looked pretty bad for my
dad, but Roy wouldn't leave him. He
could have run off and got himself to
safety, but he didn’t. He stayed with my
dad and gave him his water when Dad’s
ran out. He dressed his wound as best he
could, and he took care of him, and
eventually Roy got them both back to
safety."
"So he saved your father's life?"
"Yeah." Tony nodded. "My dad left the
Corps, came home, got married to my mom,
had me, and started up his own business.
He stayed friends with Uncle Roy though,
and when Roy got out of the Corps, he
came and asked Dad for a job. Dad was
only too happy to give him one. They
worked well together too – they built up
the company from scratch. My dad was an
entrepreneur – he had a great vision for
the company, but he wasn’t so good at
the small details. Roy, on the other
hand, loved that kind of stuff. He took
care of the backroom work, and my dad
pushed the business forward. They’re a
great team."
Tony paused and took a sip of water from
one of the two bottles on the table.
"Everyone loved Uncle Roy. I adored him.
He was one of those people…he was just
so nice, so much fun. I used to love it
when he came around to visit. He wasn't
like other adults – he sure as hell
wasn't like my dad. He used to talk to
me like I wasn't just a kid, like he
really cared what I thought. He showed
me card tricks and stuff like that. Dad
was kind of strict, and Roy was the
opposite of that. I sometimes used to
wish he was my dad."
Tony broke off and gazed at himself in
the mirror again, and then he started to
hum. McGee frowned. He had no idea where
this was heading, but Tony was behaving
really strangely.
"Tony – you need to concentrate," Gibbs
said firmly. Tony stopped humming and
nodded.
"Yeah. Where was I? Okay…my mom died
when I was eleven, and my dad – he
wasn't good at expressing his emotions,
but I guess he was pretty upset. He
started drinking more – he'd always been
a drinker, but it got worse. He threw
himself into his work, and he was away a
lot more, always going off on business
trips. We had a live-in housekeeper, so
it was easy enough for him to leave me –
and Uncle Roy used to keep an eye on
me."
"Okay." Gibbs nodded, and he sounded as
if he could see where this was going
although McGee remained mystified.
"So…Roy used to visit, and he'd take me
out to a movie or a ball game when my
dad was away. Or he'd just take me out
for a burger. He was really nice. I
could talk to him in a way I couldn't
talk to my dad. I always used to be able
to talk to my mom but…I guess I'd been
lonely since she died. I wanted to talk
about her, but my dad wouldn't – he got
angry and upset if I even mentioned her.
Roy would let me talk about her though.”
McGee thought he'd learned more about
Tony's past in ten minutes than in all
of the previous six years they’d worked
together.
"One day Roy came to the house, and we
watched some TV together, and the
housekeeper had gone to bed, and Roy…he
uh…" Tony paused.
"What did Roy do, Tony?" Gibbs prompted
gently. McGee stiffened, suddenly really
not liking the way this was heading.
"He…well...he asked me if I loved him,"
Tony said. "I said – sure I did, you
know, the way a kid would. I mean, he
had to be the coolest uncle anyone ever
had, and he was always buying me stuff,
and taking me places, and spending time
with me, and my dad never did any of
that shit." He fell silent again.
"What happened next, Tony?" Gibbs asked,
after several minutes had passed.
"I…how much do you need to know?" Tony
looked up at Gibbs with troubled eyes.
"However much you're comfortable
telling.”
"Well…he said there was stuff people did
when they loved each other, and…I'm not
sure how exactly, but he made it seem
like if I didn't do it, it meant I
didn't love him, and he'd be really
upset. That's how it seemed to me at the
time. I mean, looking back I can see
that was all bullshit, but at the time I
felt like I'd really hurt his feelings
if I said I didn't love him."
"Did he touch you?" Gibbs asked.
"Yeah." Tony shrugged. "At first, that's
all it was. He'd make me kiss him on the
lips, which I hated as he smoked these
really strong cigars. Then he'd make me
sit on his lap, which I thought was
weird because I wasn’t six, and he'd
open my pants and…"
McGee gazed into the next door room,
horrified. He noticed that one of Tony's
hands was shaking where it was resting
on the table. Tony moved his other hand
on top of it to keep it still.
"He'd play around," Tony finished.
"How old were you?" Gibbs asked.
"Twelve," Tony replied.
McGee felt the retch forming in the back
of his throat and swallowed down the
burning sensation, wishing he hadn't
eaten that chocolate now. It was hard to
believe that Tony DiNozzo – Tony, who
had been like a teasing, tormenting big
brother to him for all these years –
that *Tony*, of all people, was saying
this stuff. He could almost believe it
was a lie, an elaborate hoax set up for
his benefit, if it wasn't for the
expression on Tony's face and the fact
that Gibbs was sitting there, coaxing
this whole thing out of him. Even Tony
wouldn't joke about something like this
– and there was no way on this earth
that Gibbs would.
"My dad was away a lot at this point,
and Roy was always buying me stuff and
taking me places. Then, after a few
months, he said that he was always doing
things for me, and it was time for me to
do something for him. So he took me to
this hotel…"
Tony broke off again. Gibbs waited,
patiently.
"What happened at the hotel, Tony?" he
asked, after another pause of several
minutes.
"That's where he had sex with me the
first time," Tony said. Tim stared
through the window in stunned silence.
"He raped you?" Gibbs asked.
"He was nice about it. I mean, he was
gentle, and he kept stroking me and
telling me he loved me and shit…" Tony
said, in a confused tone.
"It was still rape, Tony," Gibbs told
him. "You were too young to give
informed consent."
"Yeah. I know," Tony replied. "But I
really liked him, Boss," he said
pathetically. "It was…kind of confusing.
I loved him, but I didn't like what he
was doing to me. He said it was our
special secret, and if I wanted him to
keep taking me to the movies and ball
games then I had to let him do this to
me. I knew it felt wrong, but he got it
all twisted up in my mind so I didn't
know what to think. I didn't want him to
stop loving me – my dad never paid me
any attention, and I didn't want Roy to
stop doing that – but I did want him to
stop fucking me."
"Did you tell your father what Roy had
done?" Gibbs asked. Tony shook his head.
"Not then. My dad – he's not a very
approachable man, and Roy was his best
friend. I think he actually loves Roy
more than he loves me. Roy saved his
life, and Roy helped him build up his
business. Roy was always everyone's
favourite person – when he came into the
room it lit up, and everyone wanted to
be his friend. I think maybe I even felt
like I was special because Roy liked me
so much.”
McGee tried to reconcile this Tony,
talking in that room, with the man he
sat next to at work every day. They
seemed like two completely different
people.
“There’s more,” Tony said, in a shaky
voice, after another long pause.
“I know.” Gibbs nodded. “When you’re
ready, Tony.”
“I don’t like this bit,” Tony said.
“Okay – take your time. Do you want some
more water?” Gibbs gestured at the
bottle on the table, and Tony took
another sip. He put the bottle down and
replaced the cap and then started again,
quickly, as if he wasn’t sure he’d be
able to do it if he waited.
“So, one day he took me to the hotel, as
usual, and after we'd been there a few
minutes this guy showed up at the door.
Roy let him in and told me this was a
friend of his. Some guy called Marco –
maybe he was Italian although he didn't
speak with an accent, and I think even
then I knew that wasn't his real name.
He was quite swarthy and really hairy.
He had this tattoo on his arm of a knife
dripping blood. Roy told me that Marco
wanted to spend some time alone with me,
and then he just left the room."
McGee gazed through the window,
transfixed. He felt like he was going to
throw up at any moment. He'd had no
idea, all these years, that Tony was
hiding something like *this*.
"Marco was an animal," Tony said
bluntly. "He hardly said a word to me,
but Christ, he was rough. It wasn't like
with Roy. When he fucked me, it hurt
like hell. Roy came back after an hour
or so, and I remember thinking that Roy
would be really mad when he found out
what Marco had done to me. I told Roy
about it but…” Tony shrugged. “He told
me that I had to grow up and stop being
such a little whiner. He said it was
good for me, and that I was lucky I had
them to spend time with me when nobody
else would. Then Marco said he wanted
some pictures – so he'd remember our
time together." Tony gave an ironic
grin. “Nice, huh? Like we’d shared some
great romantic moment or something.”
McGee could see the tautness of every
single muscle in Gibbs’s body through
his shirt, and he wondered how the hell
their boss was taking all this. Everyone
knew Gibbs hated anyone hurting kids,
and God knows he couldn’t tolerate
anyone hurting a member of his team.
This had to be killing him, but he
remained calm throughout, his voice
gentle but firm, keeping Tony on track.
"So he fucked me all over again while
Roy took pictures,” Tony said, leaning
back in his chair. “I was so shocked
that Roy was letting this other guy do
this to me when he'd said it was some
special shit that he and I did together.
I couldn't believe Roy was letting it
happen. I think that hurt more than what
Marco was doing to me, and God knows
that hurt even worse second time around.
I was dying for it to be over, I was
desperate for it to be over, and Roy had
to see how much it was hurting me, how
scared I was, and how much I was hating
it. Anyone looking at those photos could
see it."
Tony motioned with his head to the bag
that Gibbs had brought in with him.
Gibbs picked it up and pulled out a
laptop, and McGee recognised it as the
one he'd been working on in the lab all
day. Gibbs opened it, waited for it to
power up, and then pointed at the
screen.
"Was this one of the photographs taken
on that day, Tony?" he asked. "Is the
man in this photo Marco?"
Tony glanced at the picture and then
nodded. "Yeah," he replied. "That's him.
I recognise the dark skin and the hairy
hands – and you can just see the tattoo
– there."
Realisation hit McGee. He'd *seen* that
photograph. He'd looked at it several
times today. He'd looked into that
child's scared eyes without realising it
was Tony. Now he knew, he felt ill to
the pit of his stomach. He reached for
the waste basket and threw up into it, a
spew of dark chocolate and bile.
~*~
Tony sat back in his chair. This was
hard, but he thought he was handling it
pretty well. If he let the trained
federal agent take over, and kept the
kid inside down, then he could view the
whole thing with a degree of dispassion.
Remembering the details was easier than
remembering the feelings – but keeping
it purely factual wasn't always
possible. Gibbs was helping though. His
boss seemed to know the right things to
say to keep him in the moment and stop
him disappearing off into the memories.
He felt like there was a minefield
inside his own head, places he didn't
dare tread too heavily in case they blew
up in his face; but tip-toeing over and
around them wasn't easy.
"Do you want to take a break?" Gibbs
asked.
Tony shook his head. "If I leave this
room now, I'll never come back."
"Okay." Gibbs nodded. "Is Roy Quinn
still alive, Tony?"
That was one of those mines he'd been
trying really hard not to step on. He
reached his hand up absently to touch
his hair.
"Tony," Gibbs interrupted him. He
blinked.
"Yeah. He is."
"Any idea where he lives?" Gibbs asked.
This was all going to get serious. He'd
known that when he first agreed to do
this, but knowing it and facing it were
two different things.
"Yeah," he said, after a long pause. "He
still works with my dad. Why do you
think I never go home?"
He saw Gibbs's jaw tighten. He knew what
every single nuance of Gibbs's body
language meant – hell, he'd been
studying the man for years now and had a
better handle on him than just about
anyone else, except maybe Ducky. Gibbs
didn't give a lot away – you had to
learn to read the really tiny shadows
that sometimes crossed his eyes, or the
way his shoulders got all stiff and
knotted looking. Right now, he was in
what Tony would usually classify as the
“red zone”. That meant his temper was on
a hair trigger and might explode at any
moment. However, his body language was
at odds with his tone of voice, which
was calm, gentle even, keeping Tony
anchored. Tony knew for certain that
however angry Gibbs was, however angry
Tony's statement made him, he wouldn't
express it here, in this room.
"I think Roy felt bad about what
happened with Marco," Tony continued. "I
don't think he liked it – Marco was
rough and that wasn't Roy's style. I
think he was also annoyed – he'd spent a
lot of time grooming me and Marco came
along and tore me up - that made it
harder for Roy to keep abusing me. After
we left the hotel, Roy took me out for a
big meal, and he bought me some cool new
sneakers, and then we went to see a
movie together. I think he was trying to
make it up to me, but I couldn't stop
thinking about the fact that he'd let
Marco hurt me. When I got home…"
Tony broke off again. There was another
one of those unexploded bombs underfoot,
and he had to tread carefully.
Gibbs was gazing at him intently. Tony
gazed back, needing to find some courage
from somewhere. He could feel that noise
buzzing in his head again and reached up
to smooth his hair.
"When I got home I found I was bleeding.
I was terrified – I thought it meant
that I was going to die." He could
barely hear himself talk over all the
buzzing. “I didn’t know what to do. That
night, I curled up in bed and lay awake
all night, waiting to die.”
Gibbs reached out a jerky hand for a
bottle of water and unscrewed the cap
with terse movements of his fingers. He
threw his head back and swallowed down
half the contents in one go. Then he put
the bottle down, abruptly, and his eyes
met Tony's again. They were bright,
sharp, and unreadable.
"Did you tell anyone?" he asked quietly.
"Yes. I told Roy. He looked kind of
annoyed, but he said it would be okay –
and that he'd tell Marco to be more
careful next time."
Tony gazed at himself blankly in the
mirror.
"Next time," he repeated. "There was
gonna be a next time. I freaked out for
a couple of weeks, wondering what to do,
but my dad was back home, and I knew I
was safe while he was there so that
bought me some time. Then the time came
for him to go away again. He was due to
go at the weekend, so I plucked up my
courage all week, and then, on the
Friday night, I knocked on his study
door."
Tony reached for his bottle of water and
tried unscrewing the cap, but his damn
hand was shaking again. It irritated
him. He could do without the melodrama.
He just wanted to get this whole thing
over with, so he could leave this room,
get away from Gibbs's laser-sharp gaze,
go home, go to bed, and fall asleep.
Then tomorrow he could shove all this
back into its box and forget about it
again.
Gibbs took the bottle out of his shaking
hand, unscrewed the top, and handed it
to him. Tony took a sip, trying to
gather his thoughts, to find the facts
without unleashing any of the emotions
that went with them. This bit was harder
than the rest. He wasn't sure why that
should be, but it was. It was harder
even than talking about that first time
with Roy or what happened with that
bastard Marco.
"He'd been drinking – it was early, so
not too much, but a little. My dad's a
big man, kind of formal, a bit distant.
He's a hard person to talk to. He's a
good man, but he's very…definite. There
are things he believes, and things he
doesn't, and that's pretty much it. He
could talk to my mom – everyone could
talk to my mom – and he could talk to
Roy, but not to me. He never could talk
to me."
Tony rubbed his cheek absently. His mind
was a jumble. He could see a mahogany
door and a big desk with a green lamp on
it. His father was staring at him over
the top of his glasses, looking annoyed
at the interruption. There was a tumbler
of amber liquid on the desk in front of
him and a fire burning in the grate.
He could hear his own voice, reedy and a
bit nasal. "Don't go away this weekend,
Dad."
His father's voice was deep and
rumbling. There were lots of words like
'work', 'business', and 'keeping a roof
over your head'.
"Please don't go away, Dad," Tony said,
and he couldn't keep the begging tone
out of his voice. "Stay here with me.
Please."
Then there was a glimmer of something in
his father's eyes; some kind of guilt
mingled with fondness. Tony felt a
little burst of hope; maybe his father
wouldn't go. Maybe it was all going to
be okay after all. His father beckoned
him over and patted his shoulder
awkwardly.
"When I come back, we'll do something,"
he said vaguely, and Tony's heart sank.
That feeling of hope disappeared
abruptly. "But Roy will take you out
while I'm gone. I'll give him some money
and ask him to take you somewhere really
nice," his father told him.
Tony looked at his shoes and then over
to the fire burning in the grate. "I
don't want Roy to take me out," he
whispered. "Roy does stuff I don't
like."
"What – you mean he won't buy you those
stupid videos you keep going on about?"
his father grinned.
"No. Sometimes he undresses me and
touches me."
The slap took him by surprise. He
thought maybe it took his father by
surprise as well. He put up a hand to
his stinging cheek and looked at his
father, shocked.
"That's a wicked lie, Tony," his father
said, looking just as shocked. "Did you
make up that lie to try and stop me
going away? Do you have any idea how
wicked that is? Roy saved my life, and
he's always been so good to you. I know
you have a vivid imagination, but you've
gone too far this time. You can't go
around saying things like that."
Tony didn't know what to say. He just
kept rubbing his stinging cheek. His
father looked upset.
"I'm sorry – I know you miss your mom,
and I know I'm not around much…but you
can't tell lies to get your own way,
Tony. We've talked about this!"
Tony continued to rub his cheek
absently. He could still feel the sting,
all these years later.
"Tony, you need to stop doing that now."
A hand fastened gently around his wrist
and pulled it away from his face.
Looking up, into the mirror, he saw that
he'd rubbed a red mark on his cheek. How
long had he been rubbing before Gibbs
had stopped him?
"See, thing is, I had been telling a lot
of lies," Tony said. "Ever since Mom
died. Stupid lies, obvious lies. Dad had
spoken to me about it a few times. So I
can see why he'd think that was a lie
too. And I didn't have a way of saying
it wasn't. I didn't have the words for
it back then. Now, sitting here, it's
hard for me to figure out why I didn't
just keep going, convince him, make him
believe me, but I didn't. I just
scuttled out of the room and went to
bed." He looked down at the table for
awhile and then looked up to meet
Gibbs’s gaze.
"We never mentioned it again. Next day,
Roy took me back to the hotel and that's
when I first met Matthew Parrish."
~*~
Gibbs watched Tony
intently. Sometimes Tony talked lucidly,
without any hesitation, even while
recounting events that Gibbs found hard
to stomach, and other times Tony
drifted, and did that weird stroking
thing, and his eyes went blank. Gibbs
couldn't get a handle on what would set
him off, or what aspect of his account
upset him most.
Sometimes he sounded just like *Tony*,
and Gibbs would catch a glimmer of Tony
humour in his eyes, but other times it
was like he was someone else – someone
Gibbs had never met or even knew
existed. His body language and his
speech patterns changed, and his face
twisted into expressions Gibbs had never
seen on it before. It was like being
with a total stranger.
Gibbs had known this wouldn't be easy to
hear, but he hadn't realised it would be
this hard, either. The federal agent in
him wanted to get to the details, so he
could pursue these men and get justice
for Tony, and for Justin, and for all
those kids in the photographs. But there
was another part of him that wanted to
go out and pound the shit out of anyone
who so much as crossed his path, and
allow the rage coursing through him to
have expression. Then there was the part
of him that just wanted to wrap Tony up
and hold him, to keep him safe and
protect him for the rest of his life. He
wasn't sure about that part, or what
motivated it – although he had a
suspicion - but he couldn't deny it
existed.
"You mentioned Admiral Parrish earlier,"
Gibbs said, when Tony had been quiet for
a few minutes. "You said you spent a
long time looking at his photograph in
the squad room this afternoon."
"Yeah."
"You're sure it was him?" Gibbs asked.
Tony looked up at him, his eyes
flashing. "I'm not saying I don't
believe you," Gibbs told him quickly.
"I'm just asking if you're sure it was
him and not some other guy."
"It was him," Tony said firmly.
"Can you tell me why you're so sure?"
"Well, he wasn't introduced to me as
Matthew, of course, but as Luke." Tony
gave a half-shrug, and his mouth twisted
into a bitter grin. "Roy wasn't exactly
big on imagination – that's why he ran
the office while my father did the
entrepreneur stuff. Luke had this air of
authority about him, even back then. You
could see he liked being obeyed. He
wasn't rough like Marco, and he wasn't
everyone's best friend like Roy. He was
military – I could sense that about him,
even though he wasn't wearing a uniform
when I met him."
"Did he know Quinn from the military do
you think?" Gibbs asked, making a note
on the file in front of him to check up
on that later. “I know Quinn was a
Marine, and Parrish is Navy, but they
both served in Vietnam – do you think
they met there?”
"It's possible." Tony shrugged. "They
seemed to be friends – more so than Roy
was with Marco. I think Roy might even
have been a bit scared of Marco, but he
and Luke were tight. There was a lot of
hugging and slapping each other on the
back, and then they ordered up some room
service, and we sat there, the three of
us, in that room, like it was the most
normal thing in the world. Luke had
brought me a present." Tony hunched his
shoulders and made a face.
"What was it?" Gibbs asked.
"One of those viewfinder things they had
back then. Man, I haven't seen one of
those in a long time. I don't think they
exist any more. Any kid today would
laugh if he got one as a present, but
back then it seemed really cool. It was
this red plastic thing, and when you put
a disk in it, and held it up to your
eyes, you saw scenes from a movie. You
clicked, and the disk rolled around so
you could see another scene. The disk
that came with this one was "The Sword
in the Stone" – the Disney movie about
the kid who pulled the sword out of the
stone and became King Arthur. I didn't
eat anything. I spent the entire time
just looking through that thing and
clicking – must have gone through the
whole story about a dozen times. Roy and
Luke talked – I can't remember what they
talked about. I had this knot in my
stomach because I knew what was coming,
and I was worried that Luke would be
like Marco. The movie helped – I think
that was when I figured out that
distraction really worked. I just lost
myself in that stupid story and was able
to forget the stuff I didn't want to
think about."
Gibbs thought it was a good defence
mechanism for a twelve year old boy to
get him through a terrifying ordeal, but
he wasn't sure it was something that
could work long-term.
He remembered Tony coming back to work
early after contracting the plague; he'd
said he was going crazy at home, and
Gibbs had sensed a kind of panic about
him. Tony didn't like too much time
alone – he needed constant mental
stimulation. Then there had been his
time as an agent afloat – it was obvious
how challenging he'd found that, and how
pathetically desperate he'd been to be
recalled. Hell, even these past few
weeks, when things had been slow, Gibbs
had ordered extra close combat training
just to help Tony burn off some steam
and keep him from driving the rest of
his team insane. Tony needed distraction
– whether it was investigating a case,
thinking up elaborate practical jokes to
play on McGee, or nosing into Ziva's
personal life - and now Gibbs knew the
reason why.
"After lunch, Roy left. I asked him not
to go, but he told me Luke would take
good care of me. When we were alone,
Luke told me he'd seen the photos of me
with Marco, and he had really been
looking forward to meeting me. He said
if I did everything he told me to then
we'd get along just fine. He was
menacing but in a quiet kind of way. He
was one of those people who can turn in
a second. He’d seem really nice and
then, without warning, he'd get this
mean look in his eyes that would make
your blood run cold. He told me he'd
been in combat and had killed men, and
that it was much easier to kill a kid.
He didn't say it like it was a threat,
but I knew it was all the same."
Gibbs had met many brave men in the
military, men who had given their lives
for their country and men who had
suffered appalling injuries in the line
of duty, and he hated hearing how one
man had twisted that to suit his own
evil ends. He remembered that fleeting
moment he'd experienced earlier, when
he'd got a real sense of the kind of man
Matthew Parrish was. It had just been a
flash, but he'd known, instinctively,
that the man had a mean, ruthless
streak.
"So you asked how I know it was Parrish.
It was a long time ago, and he's
obviously a lot older now and looks
different, but I just had this feeling
when I saw the picture on his service
record that he was Luke. There was one
thing I knew would clinch it though –
Luke had this long, jagged scar on his
inner thigh. He told me some bullshit
story about being on a black ops mission
and taking out a bunch of Viet Cong
single-handedly, but even back then I
don't think I bought that. So today,
while you were out searching his house,
I looked in Admiral Parrish's file."
"He was injured in Vietnam – shrapnel
wound to his thigh when his patrol boat
was ambushed," Gibbs said. Tony looked
up at him, surprised. "I know that
bastard's file backwards," Gibbs told
him. "I must have read it a dozen times
today, looking for something, because I
knew there *was* something. I had a
really bad feeling about that guy in my
gut. I knew he was guilty of abusing
Justin – had no idea how far back it
went though. Christ, how do men like him
get away with stuff like this for so
long?"
"Ruthless. Smart." Tony shrugged. "Well
organised. Lucky." He hesitated. "And
good," he muttered. Gibbs looked at him
sharply. "Well they are. Roy played me
like a maestro, and Parrish had Justin
eating out of his hand. They were good
at fucking with our minds, Boss, making
us too scared or too in love with them
to tell – or a mixture of both."
"No wonder you didn't want to be in the
room when I questioned Parrish," Gibbs
commented. "I thought it wasn't like you
to have your cell phone turned off."
"I couldn't face him," Tony replied. "I
wasn't sure how I'd react. Also – I
think there's a part of me that's still
scared of him, Boss. Marco was an animal
who took what he wanted – he was rough,
but he hardly spoke a word to me.
Parrish was different - he said a lot,
most of it designed to scare me. I think
he got off on that."
"Oh, he did," Gibbs said grimly,
remembering that file of Parrish’s
‘favourites’, and what they all had in
common.
"I stood in the observation room,
watching when you questioned him. I
wanted to be sure it was him," Tony
said. "I already knew I intended to go
around to his house and beat the crap
out of him. I just had to be sure – and
I was."
"We'll get him, Tony, but another way,"
Gibbs told him firmly.
"Next time you question him, I'd like to
be in the room."
Gibbs hesitated. "I don't think that's a
good idea, Tony."
Tony's eyes narrowed. "Gibbs, I have
done everything you asked of me tonight,
and you know how hard it's been. This is
the only damn thing I'm asking of you in
return – you'll be here, with me, so
what the hell can happen? I just want to
look into that bastard's eyes when you
question him. I want him to be scared,
the way I was scared back then. I want
to *see* that on his face."
Gibbs nodded. "Okay. Tomorrow," he said.
"I'll bring him in tomorrow for more
questioning."
"Good." Tony nodded firmly.
"Was it just the once, or were there
other times?" Gibbs asked. Tony frowned.
"There were several times with Luke, but
only a couple more with Marco, thank
God. Mainly it was Roy.”
"There were no other men? Just those
three?"
Tony shook his head. "Just those three,"
he confirmed.
"How did it end?" Gibbs asked.
Tony was looking and sounding better as
he reached the conclusion of his
statement, as if a weight had been
lifted from his shoulders. He sounded
more like Tony now and hadn't had any
lapses in concentration for some time.
Gibbs thought maybe it had been a relief
for him to finally be able to let all
this out, and tell someone, after all
this time.
"I became quiet and withdrawn," Tony
said.
"That's quite a personality change –
your dad must have noticed," Gibbs said.
Tony frowned.
"Well…I might not have been the kind of
kid you'd expect," he muttered. Gibbs
glanced at him, with a raised eyebrow.
Tony shrugged and didn't elucidate.
Gibbs filed the comment away to think
about later.
"I'd been reading all these books about
boarding schools. They sounded
fantastic, so I scoped some out. I
thought it'd be a good way of getting
out of Roy's clutches – I couldn't face
speaking to my dad about the abuse
again. Me and Dad didn’t really talk
much about anything anyway. So, one day
I went to his study, and I told him that
I wanted to go away to boarding school.
He was surprised - maybe even a little
hurt - but I had to get away, and I
couldn't tell him why. I think maybe he
was relieved as well – he never did
really connect with me. I know he loved
me, but we just couldn't seem to
communicate. He agreed that maybe it was
a good idea and so that was it. I went
away."
"What about vacation time? Did Roy ever
try to abuse you again?" Gibbs asked.
"No. I didn't go back very often. I made
a lot of friends at boarding school and
always tried to get invited back to stay
with them during vacations. Dad and I
grew more and more apart, and I don't
think he really understands why."
Gibbs nodded. He had inferred a long
time ago that relations between Tony and
his father weren't great, although it
wasn't always easy sifting out the truth
behind the many exaggerated stories Tony
told. One thing he was sure about was
that Tony hadn't exaggerated anything
tonight. If anything, he'd glossed over
and underplayed.
"That's pretty much it." Tony leaned
back in his chair. "Do you believe me,
Boss?"
Gibbs was startled. "What the hell kind
of question is that? Of course I damn
well believe you, Tony!"
"I still tell lies, Boss," Tony said
quietly. "I tell lies all the time – the
same kind I told to my Dad. Stupid lies
– pointless lies. Stuff about my
childhood, or my girlfriends, or my
social life that I've made up. Dates
I've changed, half-truths I've
embellished. You know that. You can
always see right through me. I catch you
looking at me sometimes when I'm making
something up, and I can tell you know
I'm lying."
"Well, I never exactly viewed them as
lies – more like entertaining stories. I
thought you were just trying to amuse
us, but now I see you were building a
fantasy to deflect us from the truth,
and you did a damn good job. None of us
got a glimpse of what you were hiding."
"So how do you know I'm not lying now?"
Tony asked.
"Like you said, I always know when
you're lying."
Tony leaned forward in his chair. "So,
you really do believe me?"
Gibbs gazed at him, puzzled, and then he
saw the look in Tony's eyes and
understood. Tony had carried this secret
around for twenty-five years, and the
only person he'd told had
comprehensively rejected his version of
events. Logically, as an adult, he
expected Gibbs to believe him, but there
was an anxious twelve year old boy
inside him who had no such expectations,
and Gibbs was looking at him right now.
Gibbs leaned forward, so that they were
face to face, gazed straight into those
apprehensive eyes, and spoke
emphatically, so there could be no room
for doubt.
"Tony – I believe every single word
you've said here tonight."
Tony swallowed hard, and Gibbs saw just
how important it had been for him to
hear that.
"Thank you," he said quietly.
"Was there anything else you wanted to
add?" Gibbs asked. He thought they had
more than enough to take a crowbar to
this case and lever it wide open, but he
also suspected Tony might be able to
supply more details if he needed them at
a later date. It was late now though,
and they'd all had a rough day.
"No." Tony shook his head. "Was that
okay?" he asked anxiously a second
later. "Did I…was there anything else
you wanted to know?"
"Not right now, Tony," Gibbs reassured
him. "We might need to come back to some
of it, but right now I think we're
done."
Tony nodded, looking relieved and
strangely euphoric, his green eyes
glowing.
"Thank God for that."
"Look – I need to make a couple of phone
calls, and then I'll take you home."
Gibbs paused. "Are you okay to be on
your own tonight?" he asked, looking at
Tony searchingly. Tony was looking more
like his old self than he had all
evening, but Gibbs remembered that
moment in the parking lot earlier and
felt uneasy.
"I'm fine, Boss. You were right, I
needed to get this out – I'm feeling a
hell of a lot better now," Tony said
brightly. Gibbs gazed at him,
unconvinced. Tony grinned and spread his
arms. "C'mon – I'm thirty-seven, not
twelve. I'm a big boy – I can take care
of myself."
Gibbs winced inwardly at Tony's
reference to the younger age – he
wondered if Tony even knew he'd said it.
It seemed to him that Tony had been
taking care of himself even back when he
was just a kid of twelve.
"Okay," he nodded.
He could hardly insist on taking Tony
back to his place or on staying over at
Tony's. Right now, he was wary about
insisting on anything where Tony was
concerned. He was mindful of what Tony
had said earlier about him bullying and
manipulating Justin, and he had a sense
that any abuse victim might need to feel
in control, so he didn’t want to
railroad Tony or order him around too
much. It felt wrong though. Gibbs was
used to trusting his gut and giving
orders to his team, and Tony had always
responded well to that in the past.
Gibbs was aware he was holding back
right now and treading carefully.
Instinctively, his gut told he shouldn’t
just drop Tony home and say goodnight,
but he couldn't see a way around it.
"Wait here – I'll come back and get you
in a few minutes," he said. Tony grinned
at him brightly, and Gibbs got up,
taking his pad full of notes with him.
His first stop was the observation room
next door. McGee looked up when he came
in, and Gibbs winced. The probie was as
white as a sheet, and he looked
horrified. There was clear evidence of
vomit in the waste basket next to him.
"You okay, McGee?" Gibbs asked quietly,
closing the door behind him. He glanced
into the next door room to make sure
Tony was okay, but he was just sitting
at the table, tapping on it impatiently
with his fingers, looking every inch the
Tony DiNozzo they all knew so well.
"No," McGee answered honestly. "Boss, I
had no idea. I mean, if you'd asked me
who, out of all of us, had something
like this in their past, Tony would be
at the very bottom of my list."
"I know." Gibbs nodded. "But he's made a
conscious decision not to be a victim,
and he's constructed a lot of ways to
make sure people never view him as one.
He's the person you'd least suspect
precisely because he's been working hard
to make sure nobody ever does."
"But to hide something like that for all
these years…" McGee shook his head. "He
must be one hell of a good actor."
Gibbs glanced into the next door room,
where Tony was now drumming out a little
dysphonic rhythm on the table with the
palms of his hands.
"Yeah. I think he is," he said. "But
this is who he's chosen to be, and he
doesn't want any of us looking at him
differently, so we have to respect
that."
"Uh…how?" McGee asked, gazing up at him
with puzzled eyes. "I mean, how can I
look at Tony and not see that kid from
the photograph and not remember all the
stuff he said in there tonight?"
"Hell, McGee – if you find a way, you be
sure to tell me," Gibbs snapped. "In the
meantime, let's just try and handle this
– and him - the best way we can. Now, I
need to go make a couple of calls. I
want you to go in there and sit with him
while I do that."
"Do I have to?" McGee asked. "I don't
know what to say to him."
"Well get over it – I don't want him out
of sight until I drop him off safely at
his apartment," Gibbs told him, walking
over to the door. "I also don't want him
left on his own in the NCIS offices at
any point during this investigation in
case he prejudices something – we can't
be sure what his emotional state is
right now. He made some questionable
choices earlier today – understandable
given the circumstances - but he could
have screwed up our chances of a
conviction, and I don't want a repeat of
that."
He opened the door and then glanced
back. "And McGee – first thing tomorrow
I want a file with everything we have on
Roy Quinn on my desk."
"Yes, Boss." McGee nodded. "Uh, Boss?"
Gibbs glanced back. "What do I tell the
others? Ziva? Abby? Ducky?"
"Nothing."
"But, Boss…!" McGee protested.
"Nothing!" Gibbs snapped. "Nothing until
I've spoken to Tony about how we handle
that. We'll have to bring them in at
some point if we're going to investigate
this properly, but he's been through
enough tonight. It was hard enough for
him to choose you to do the taping – I
don't want him fretting about how we
tell the rest of the team. I'll deal
with that in the morning."
"Yes, Boss," McGee sighed.
"Good." Gibbs turned on his heel and
left.
He went straight to the restroom, leaned
over the sink, turned on the faucet,
filled his hands with water, and
splashed his face with it. He glanced up
into the mirror, caught sight of
himself, and then went ballistic. He
slammed his fist into the wall
repeatedly, cursing the entire time,
shouting it out, roaring out his rage at
what he'd heard tonight.
This case was so personal, so close to
home, and the details so horrific that
he wasn't sure he could contain his
revulsion. He shouted, and roared, and
crashed his fist against the wall,
riding the wave of his own fury and
impotence until the pain kicked in.
Then he leaned his arms against the
wall, rested his forehead on his bloody
knuckles, and panted for several
minutes, calming himself down. Tony
couldn't see him like this. Hell, none
of his team could see him like this, but
he had to let it out somehow. He had
remained calm and focussed through every
single detail of that sickening story,
while every nerve in his body was
straining to scream out his fury.
He didn't want to think about a twelve
year old boy being repeatedly raped by a
man he trusted. He didn't want to think
about him being passed around to other
bastards for them to rape. He didn't
want to think about that kid being
ripped up so badly that he bled and was
terrified that he might die. He didn't
want to think about that child screwing
up every last ounce of his courage to
tell his father what was happening, only
to be knocked back, disbelieved, and
*hit* for God's sake. He didn't want to
think about that. He didn't want to
think about the abuse continuing, and a
lonely child becoming more and more
withdrawn until he was forced to
manufacture his own escape because no
adult came to help him. He didn't want
to think about any of that happening to
any child in the whole damn world.
But, most of all, he didn't want to
think about it happening to Tony.
~*~
McGee squared his
shoulders and opened the door to the
interrogation room. Tony glanced up and
gave him a bright grin.
"Hey, Probie. Sorry if I screwed up your
evening. I expect you had a hot date –
no, wait, what I am I saying?" Tony
laughed. "This is the probie I'm talking
to! Your last hot date was last
century."
In other circumstances, McGee would have
thrown back a retort at him - possibly
even thrown Jeanne at him, just to score
a hit and keep Tony off his back, but
not right now.
He sat down in the seat Gibbs had
vacated. "Tony, I don't know what to
say," he murmured.
"Then don't say anything, Probie," Tony
told him sharply.
McGee shook his head. "I at least have
to say I'm sorry. I'm sorry that you
went through that, Tony. I can't imagine
what that must have been like."
Tony shrugged, looking completely
unconcerned. If McGee hadn't seen him
stumbling through his statement these
past couple of hours, he could almost
believe it hadn't happened.
"It was a long time ago, Probie. I
haven't thought about it in years, and I
wouldn't have started thinking about it
today if it hadn't been for those photos
showing up."
"Did you tell Gibbs?"
"Hell no! He figured it out."
"How?" McGee frowned. He'd looked at the
photos of Boy 43 – of Tony – several
times during the course of the day, and
he hadn't figured it out.
"How do I know?" Tony shrugged. "He's
*Gibbs*, Probie. I do know that if I'd
had my way I wouldn't have told a damn
person, but he showed up at my apartment
and made me spill. One thing led to
another, and that's why you and me both
ended up here tonight."
"I won't tell anyone," McGee said.
"I know," Tony replied. He looked
straight at McGee, his eyes suddenly
deadly serious. "You're pretty much my
best friend, Tim. Why else do you think
I asked Gibbs to call you instead of one
of the others? Talking of Gibbs…" He
glanced at the door. "He's been gone
some time. Are you sure he's okay?"
"What do you mean?" McGee frowned
anxiously. Tony sat back and crossed his
arms over his chest.
"Just that you know how much he hates
this kind of stuff. Are you sure he
didn't go off after Parrish, or isn't
pounding some innocent passer-by into a
pulp right now?"
"Uh…" McGee looked at the door
uncertainly.
"I think you should go and check on him,
McGee."
"He asked me to stay with you," McGee
said, unsure what to do.
"I'm fine. Look at me, Probie - I'm
fine," Tony grinned, opening his arms
wide and looking just as fine as he said
he was. "Go check on him. I'll wait
here."
"You promise?" McGee asked, getting up
and going to the door and then
hesitating, agonised. Gibbs had told him
to stay here with Tony, but Tony seemed
okay, and Gibbs did have an almighty
temper when it was roused.
"Cross my heart, hope to die," Tony
said, motioning his hand across his
chest.
Reassured, McGee opened the door and
left.
~*~
Gibbs spent a few minutes
pulling himself back together, and then
he took out his cell phone and dialled.
He checked in with the security detail
he had posted to trail Admiral Parrish
when he left NCIS custody, but they
advised him that the admiral hadn't
contacted anyone all evening and was
still in the house. Gibbs then called
the agents he'd posted to keep an eye on
Justin in case Parrish tried to threaten
him. They reported that he also hadn't
left his house.
Satisfied that he had those two
situations under control, Gibbs knew he
had to turn his attention back to Tony.
He was about to leave the restroom when
McGee poked his head around the door.
"Uh...oh, you're in here. Good," McGee
said, and then his eyes widened as he
saw Gibbs's bloody knuckles. Gibbs
glared at him.
"What the hell are you doing here,
McGee? I told you to watch Tony!" he
roared.
"I did – I mean, I was, but then he said
I should go look for you in case…" McGee
trailed off.
"He played you, McGee!" Gibbs growled,
leaving the restroom and sweeping past
McGee on his way back to Interrogation.
"Oh shit," McGee muttered, following
along on his heels like a puppy.
Gibbs sprinted along the hallway to
interrogation room one, pushed open the
door, and burst inside.
The room was empty.
~*~
Tony took the elevator down to Autopsy,
humming to himself. He didn't bother
turning on the light – he just went over
to Ducky's desk and began rifling
through the drawers. Hell, he needed a
drink – a real drink - not more damn
water.
He pulled out a bottle and opened it.
"Ah, finest Scottish malt – thanks,
Duck," he said, taking a swig – only to
find that all he got was a tiny sip.
"Aw, hell, Ducky – you shouldn't let
this happen!" he sighed, holding up the
bottle and finding it completely empty.
He frowned as he saw the little note
attached to the side. He squinted at it
in the faint light from the outside
hallway.
"Anthony/Jethro – buy your own!"
it said.
"Damn it – busted," Tony muttered,
replacing the bottle in the desk.
He moved over to the cupboard where
Palmer stowed his stuff, felt around
beneath the spare lab coat, and pulled
out the little packet he was looking
for. He poked his nose cautiously inside
and then grinned.
"Ah, Jimmy, you have yet to become old
and cynical like the Duckster," he said,
pulling out a cigarette from the packet.
He found a box of matches in the same
place, lit the cigarette, and took a
long draw on it. He glanced around
Autopsy and gave a shiver. "Man this
place is creepy at night."
He went over to one of the steel tables,
put his head on one side, and looked at
it for a moment, exhaling a plume of
smoke as he did so. He took another drag
on the cigarette and then coughed and
made a face; man he hated smoking. Then,
with a grin, he climbed onto the table,
stuck the cigarette between his lips,
put his hands under his head, and gazed
up at the ceiling.
"So this is what it's like to be dead,"
he muttered, gazing up, imagining Ducky
looming over him wearing his protective
goggles and wielding a scalpel. "Wonder
what he'd say to my corpse? Bitch about
the state of my plague-scarred lungs and
lament my lack of good sense in getting
myself killed probably."
"If he didn't, I would," a dry voice
said from over by the door. Tony didn't
even look around. He just took another
drag on the cigarette and blew out the
smoke from around the side of it.
"Hey, Boss," he muttered.
"You gave McGee the slip." Gibbs walked
over to stand beside him.
"Yeah. Couldn't stand the way he was
looking at me." Tony gave another little
cough as the smoke irritated the lining
of his lungs, which had never exactly
been robust since that bout with the
plague a few years back. Gibbs plucked
the cigarette out from between his lips,
threw it on the floor, and trod on it.
"You don't smoke," he said. Tony glared
at him and sat up.
"I know. I was just, you know…"
"Ducky left the empty bottle again,
didn't he?" Gibbs grinned.
"Yeah – with a note on it for us both,
telling us to get our own. How did he
even know it was us?"
"Because it was?" Gibbs perched on the
side of the table next to him, his arm
touching Tony's arm. It felt warm. Nice.
"Yeah. Didn't know you snuck down here
to take a swig too though, Boss."
"Not often. Just sometimes, when I'm
working late." Gibbs shrugged.
"Yeah." Tony shrugged too. "Has McGee
gone? I can't face seeing him again
tonight."
"I figured that was it. I sent him home.
You okay?"
"Me? Sure. You were right – just needed
to tell someone, get it all out, and now
I can forget about it again."
"You think it's that easy?" Gibbs
glanced at him sideways.
"Well it will be if McGee doesn't pull
those big, tragic eyes on me every time
he looks at me," Tony growled. "You
going to arrest Quinn, Boss?"
"What do you think?" Gibbs asked, his
blue eyes glittering dangerously in the
dark room. "God knows how many kids he's
abused since you, Tony. He could be out
there right now, doing to some other kid
what he did to you. He could have been
one of the men who abused Justin."
"Yeah. I know. You think I should have
done something about this earlier." Tony
looked at his shoes. All these years he
could have done something but hadn't.
"I’m sorry. I screwed up there, Boss."
"The hell you did," Gibbs snapped. "You
protected yourself, Tony, the best way
you knew how, when nobody else would,
when you were just a kid and shouldn't
have had to. You've been protecting
yourself ever since. I don't blame you
for that. Nobody would."
"This is all going to come out." Tony
hunched his shoulders and wished he had
that cigarette back. "My dad is going to
find out."
"Maybe it's time he knew, Tony."
"It'll hurt him. I don't want to hurt
him."
"You can't keep protecting him – and he
sure as hell didn't protect you."
Gibbs's voice was taut and angry, and
Tony turned his head sharply to look at
him. Gibbs had some firm ideas about
fatherhood, so Tony wasn’t entirely
surprised by his tone of voice, but he
hadn’t expected him to sound quite so
furious.
Then Tony saw the torn skin on Gibbs's
knuckles, and he suddenly sensed the
tightly leashed fury in Gibbs's body. He
knew Gibbs's dark side; had seen it,
feared it, and also admired it in a way,
ever since he'd first met the man. Gibbs
knew how to channel his rage, keeping it
tightly reined until he could unleash
it, with full force and deadly accuracy,
straight at the intended target. That
side of Gibbs had always scared and
thrilled him in equal measure.
Now Tony realised that his boss’s
legendary protective instincts were
roused in his defence, and he wasn’t
sure how he felt about that. He had
always wanted proof that Gibbs cared
about him; he just wished it hadn't had
to happen like this. He'd never wanted
the man's pity – he'd always wanted
something else entirely.
"What happens next?" Tony asked, pushing
that thought away and filing it back in
the 'unobtainable fantasies' section of
his brain. "You gave me back my badge,
but you and I both know I can't be an
investigator and a possible witness on
the same case."
"No, you can't," Gibbs agreed.
"Boss, don't make me stay at home." Tony
tried to keep the desperation out of his
voice, but he wasn't sure he succeeded.
The thought of having all that time on
his hands and nothing to do but think…
"I have to stay busy."
"I know." Gibbs nodded. "I've been
meaning to have someone go through that
cold case backlog for years now and…"
"Aw hell," Tony groaned. "Not the
goddamn cold case backlog. I hate
working those files."
"I know – better than staying home
though," Gibbs pointed out with a grin.
"I suppose," Tony agreed reluctantly.
"What about Abby, Ziva and Ducky? You're
going to tell them, aren't you?"
Gibbs hesitated. "At some point they'll
have to know. I can tell them, or you
can."
"Whatever." Tony hunched up again. "But
if they look at me like McGee looked at
me, or if they start treating me
differently, then I'm going to have to
take up smoking for real."
"The hell you will," Gibbs growled,
slapping the back of his head.
"Ow!" Tony reached up to rub the sore
spot.
"Well, you said you didn't want anyone
treating you any differently."
Gibbs grinned at him, and Tony grinned
back, feeling absurdly happy. With that
one gesture Gibbs had managed to allay
at least one of his fears.
"Where the hell did you find those
cigarettes anyway?" Gibbs asked. "Ducky
doesn't smoke."
"Nah – but Jimmy does. He has to hide
them in case Ducky finds them – or else
suffer one of Ducky's three hour
lectures on the effects of smoking on
your lungs, complete with pictures of
all the lungs Ducky's ever plucked out
of the bodies of the long-term smokers
he's had on his table."
"Sounds like Ducky!" Gibbs slid off the
table and began walking towards the
door. "Come on, Tony. Let's get you
home."
~*~
Gibbs drove Tony home in silence. Every
so often he glanced sideways at the man
sitting next to him, but Tony's eyes
were closed, and he seemed to be asleep,
so Gibbs didn't say anything. He felt
better after their chat in Autopsy –
Tony had seemed more like himself and
there hadn't been any of that weird
hair-stroking behaviour or zoning out.
All the same, he still couldn’t shake
off his concern that Tony shouldn't be
left alone right now.
They reached Tony's apartment building,
and Gibbs pulled up in the parking lot
and got out of the car. Tony got out the
other side and raised an eyebrow at him.
"Just want to see you actually go into
your apartment," Gibbs said, with a
shrug. He felt a surge of protectiveness
towards Tony. Usually his senior field
agent didn't need any protecting - he
was more than capable of protecting
himself - only right now Gibbs wasn't so
sure. He didn't know if Tony's methods
of protecting himself were still
working; he had a nagging worry that
they might be starting to break down.
"Aw, like a date or something," Tony
grinned, making a joke of it – typical
DiNozzo. Gibbs followed him into the
building and up the stairs to his
apartment. Tony opened the door, and
Gibbs stepped in after him.
"Tony – you've been through a lot
today," he said. "Are you sure you're
okay to be alone?"
"Sure? I can't damn well wait," Tony
griped. "I *want* some time alone, Boss.
I’m gonna watch some TV in bed and then
get some sleep."
Gibbs stood there, uncertainly. He had
no reason to stay, and he couldn't foist
his company on Tony, so why did he feel
so uneasy about this?
"Okay – but if you need anything, you
call me – right?" he insisted.
"Well, I'm down to my last can of beer,"
Tony said. "How pissed off would you be
if I called and asked you to bring over
a new six pack?"
Gibbs slapped the back of his head.
"Very," he growled.
"I thought so." Tony grinned at him
stupidly. "Seriously, Boss, I'm fine. Go
home."
"Okay." Gibbs gave him a curt nod. "I'll
see you tomorrow."
He left the apartment and returned to
his car. He sat there for a few minutes,
until he saw the light go on in Tony's
bedroom window and then off again a few
minutes later, plunging the apartment
into darkness, and only then, finally,
did he drive away.
~*~
Tony threw himself onto his bed, fully
clothed, then turned off the light and
sat there in the dark. He didn’t feel
like sleeping – he wasn’t sure he’d be
able to sleep. He felt an odd sense of
euphoria. It was over; twenty-five years
of keeping this secret was behind him,
and now he could move on, once and for
all.
He grabbed the remote, pointed it at the
TV, and then lay there, slumped,
flicking through the channels aimlessly,
waiting for something to grab his
attention.
“Tonio,” a voice whispered, and
he shivered and glanced at the door. He
began humming, and he flicked through
the TV channels more urgently, skipping
from one to another, searching
desperately for something to drown out
the sound of that voice. It was no use;
there was a box stowed away in a corner
of his mind, and a chorus of whispers
called to him from it, insistently,
demanding his attention.
“Tonio, be a good boy for Marco, the
way you are for me. Hmm?”
“Where are you going?”
“I’ll be back soon. Marco will take good
care of you. Ssh, Tonio – everything’s
fine.”
A gentle hand cupped his cheek, and Roy
kissed him on the forehead and then
turned and left. Tony looked up at the
wiry, swarthy stranger he had been left
alone with. Marco reached for him; his
breathing was fast and excited as he
undressed him.
“Stop…please…Roy won’t like it,” Tony
protested. He tried to wriggle away as
Marco held him up, and pushed him
forwards, bending him over.
“Please…stop…”
“Shut up.”
A rough hand slid over his mouth.
Marco’s other hand was pressing onto his
stomach, pulling him back onto him. It
hurt, but, worse that that, he couldn’t
breathe, and he thought he might
suffocate. He struggled frantically.
Marco removed his hand from his mouth,
but only so he could grab his hip
instead and keep him steady.
He could smell Marco’s sweat, and hear
his breathing, loud and guttural behind
him.
It hurt so much. He felt like he was
being ripped in two. It never hurt like
this with Roy. Where was Roy? When he
came back he’d be mad at Marco for doing
this. This was just something he did
with Roy. Roy had said it was special,
just between them, their secret – their
beautiful little secret.
Tony blinked. He glanced at his watch –
it was late, 2 a.m. Damn it, he had to
stop losing time like this.
He stroked his hair anxiously. What he
needed was a distraction - a better
distraction than watching old movies on
TV, and Tony knew from experience that
there was one distraction that worked
better than the TV, better than alcohol,
better than anything else.
He got up, grabbed his keys, and ran out
of his apartment. He got in his car and
drove towards the only bars that would
be open at this time of night and
offering him a chance of finding a warm,
willing body for a few hours of
pleasurable distraction. He paused when
he got near, trying to decide which way
to go.
"Left for girls, right for guys," he
mused. He decided it didn't matter. He
just wanted to lose himself – it didn’t
matter what he lost himself in.
"In that case – right," he said out
loud, making the turn. He parked the car
across the street from a gay bar. Guys
were easier to lure into bed for a one
night stand than women. Women wanted you
to buy them a drink and flirt with them
first. Guys just looked you up and down,
and if you were fit enough they'd go
home with you. That was another thing
Tony knew from experience – years of it.
~*~
Terry Dyer looked up from
his drink to see the tall, good-looking
guy walk into the bar. There were only a
handful of people here so late, and he'd
more or less given up on the hope of
picking anyone up tonight – until now.
The guy glanced around the nearly empty
room, looking disappointed. Terry smiled
at him, and the guy's handsome face
split into a wide grin, and he walked
over. He was a big guy,
broad-shouldered, and dressed all in
black. Terry was surprised he'd come
over – he'd seen this guy around before,
and he only ever picked up
straight-acting, older men – tough guys.
Terry was none of those things, so he
was pretty sure he wasn't this man's
type.
"Well hello, man in black," Terry said
when the guy got close. The stranger
grinned – he knew a cheesy pick-up line
when he heard it – Terry had a suspicion
he'd probably handed out a few in his
time.
"Hey. I'm Tony." The guy didn't sit
down. He just leaned against the table,
looking at Terry like he wanted to eat
him.
"And I'm Terry. That's a sexy look
you're working there, Tony. I like it."
Tony's grin widened. "If you like me
dressed, you'll like me even better
undressed," he said.
Cheesy – but to the point. Terry
laughed. "I'm sure I would. That a
proposition?"
"Yeah. It's late. I don't have the time
or energy to sweet talk you into bed. I
just want sex and my place is nearby.
You up for that?"
Terry looked him up and down, taking in
the long legs, the toned chest, and the
beautiful green eyes.
"Soon will be, handsome," he joked,
finishing his drink in one gulp and
getting to his feet. "I knew if I waited
around here long enough my prince would
come," he flirted.
It was an old line, and he had a feeling
this guy didn't really respond to twinky
little queens like himself, but what the
hell. Tony laughed and slung an arm
around his shoulder, making him feel
like a dwarf beside him.
"Oh, your prince definitely wants to
come," he whispered loudly into Terry's
ear as they left the bar.
Tony didn't say a word as he drove them
back to his place; he just kept humming
to himself. Terry didn't mind. He was a
slender five foot eight; bright, witty
and cute. He knew he wasn't anything
special to look at, but he also knew he
had a big heart and a lot to give to the
right guy – and that wasn't the man
sitting next to him.
Terry was under no illusions that this
was the start of something beautiful –
it was just sex, and as far as Terry was
concerned there was nothing wrong with
that. Tony was way out of his league for
a start, and in any case guys like him
always turned out to be heartbreakers.
Terry had had his heart broken enough
times not to want to give it away to the
wrong kind of guy again – and Tony was
definitely the wrong kind of guy. He was
the kind of guy your mom warned you
about.
He glanced at Tony as they drove. He
seemed so big and sure of himself. There
was a confidence to him, a kind of
swagger. Tony was a player – Terry had
seen him work a bar before, so he knew
exactly what kind of guy he was going to
be getting into bed with. All the same,
there was something about Tony that he
hadn't expected; a kind of vulnerability
and loneliness.
They reached Tony's apartment and went
inside. Tony didn't waste a second. The
minute they got through the door he
grabbed Terry, pushed him against the
wall, and kissed him.
He tasted of cigarette smoke, but his
lips were soft and agile. Terry slid his
arms around Tony's big body and cupped
his ass. Tony kissed him like he was
drowning, putting everything into it,
urgent and needy. Terry drew back.
"This is great, Tony, but I need to
breathe, honey," he said. "And you're a
big guy."
"Sorry." Tony pulled back, an apologetic
grin on his face. "Bedroom's this way."
He grabbed Terry's wrist and led him
towards a room at the back of the
apartment. Terry wondered for a moment
if he should be worried – he didn't know
this guy, and Tony seemed kind of zoned
out and weird. Yet, even so, Terry
didn't get a bad vibe off him. He knew,
instinctively, that Tony wasn't the kind
of guy who would hurt him. If anything,
Tony seemed like something of a lost
soul. They went into the bedroom and
Terry surveyed the black satin sheets
and red velvet blanket on the bed with a
roll of his eyes; Tony was *such* a
player.
Tony began undressing him the minute
they got into the bedroom. Terry was
flattered by Tony's urgency but troubled
by the look in Tony's eyes. It was as if
he wasn't really there – his eyes were
completely blank, and he kept humming.
It was starting to freak him out.
Tony got him naked and then pushed him
onto the bed and began undressing
himself. That was when Terry forgot his
misgivings – this guy was fucking hot!
Tony stripped off his sweater to reveal
acres of taut, toned, golden flesh,
covered in a nice amount of chest hair,
and then shucked off his pants and
underwear to reveal a smooth, curving
cock – nice size, cut…and
disappointingly flaccid.
"I guess I'm not your usual type," Terry
murmured, glancing pointedly at Tony's
cock. His own was hard and aching just
from looking at Tony's beautiful body.
"Hmmm?" Tony joined him on the bed, took
him in his arms, and began kissing him
all over.
Terry gasped – Tony sure as hell knew
his stuff. He was passionate, urgent,
and commanding, covering every inch of
Terry's body with gentle caresses that
made him sigh and moan. He didn't seem
to want much back in return – in fact he
wouldn’t let Terry do much to him at
all. He seemed to prefer to be in
control, so Terry gave up trying and
just allowed Tony to kiss, and suck, and
stroke him all over.
"I need you in me, Tony," Terry
whispered after awhile, opening his legs
wide.
Tony grinned down at him, those perfect
white teeth gleaming in the darkness. He
reached over, opened his nightstand
drawer, and pulled out a condom and some
lube. Terry lay back and abandoned
himself to the pleasure of having Tony's
fingers slide in and out of him. Then he
grew impatient for more – he wasn't some
tight little virgin who needed a whole
lot of stretching. He reached down and
pulled Tony's hand away.
"Come on, handsome. Let's feel you
inside me," he crooned, rubbing up
against Tony. "Hey…what's the problem
here, big guy?" he asked, surprised to
find Tony still soft. "Am I not doing it
for you? Is there something you'd like
me to do differently? I give great
head."
"No…I…" Tony looked down, puzzled, at
his flaccid cock. "This has never
happened to me before," he said lamely.
Terry laughed out loud.
"Oh honey! That's what they all say!"
"I mean it. Uh…let's just…keep going."
Tony ground his hips against Terry's
groin. He looked adorably confused.
"Won't be long," Tony promised.
Terry grabbed Tony's head and looked
into those strangely glowing green eyes.
"You know, honey, I'm not sure that this
is what you need tonight. It's late, and
you're probably tired. Why don't we just
lie here and…"
"No!" Tony said forcefully, and he
returned to caressing Terry's body with
renewed gusto, kissing, and sucking, and
biting…God it was good, but still Tony’s
cock remained resolutely soft, and Terry
was starting to feel more and more
uncomfortable. This was all wrong.
"Look, I just don't think it's going to
happen tonight, Tony," he said
eventually, pushing Tony away. "It's
okay – there's nothing wrong with that.
It happens to us all at some point." He
rolled his eyes. "Look at me – I drink
too much and nothing happens in that
department at all."
"I haven't been drinking," Tony told
him, getting up and pulling on his boxer
shorts. He sat down on the side of the
bed, forlornly, looking like a kid who'd
lost his favourite toy.
"Well, you're tired, like I said."
Tony reached up a hand and rubbed the
back of his head, absently.
"You okay?" Terry knelt down behind him,
and started massaging his shoulders as
best he could while Tony kept rubbing
his head like that. "Boy, you're tense,
Tony!"
Tony didn't reply – he just kept on
rubbing.
"Tony?" Terry asked.
When there was no response, Terry got up
off the bed and went to kneel down in
front of him.
"Tony?" he said again, softly.
Tony's eyes were blank, glazed over and
unfocussed.
"Oh, Tony," Terry said sadly. "You
really are a little lost boy aren't
you?" He kissed Tony gently on the lips.
"Hey, handsome prince – wake up," he
teased. There was still no reply, and he
was starting to get really freaked out
now. "TONY!" he yelled, slapping Tony's
face gently, trying to shock him. Still
nothing.
Terry took a step back. “Come on, snap
out of it!” he ordered. Tony just
continued to stare absently into space,
humming under his breath.
“Oh fuck…this is just…why the hell do
these things have to happen to me?”
Terry hissed.
He grabbed his clothes, pulled them on
quickly, and ran out of the bedroom. He
got as far as the front door of the
apartment and then paused and looked
back with a sigh.
“Oh shit…fuck you and your big damn
bleeding heart, Terry,” he sighed.
He returned slowly to the bedroom, to
find Tony where he’d left him, still
sitting on the side of the bed in his
boxer shorts, still rubbing the back of
his head.
“Do I call 911? What do I tell them? Are
you an epileptic, Tony? Do you have any
medicine around here?” He glanced around
and then shook his head. “What the hell
difference would it make? I wouldn’t
know how to give it to you. Okay…you
must have some friends, Tony…let me
think…”
He caught sight of Tony’s black leather
jacket, abandoned on a nearby chair.
“Look, if you wake up and find me doing
this, it’s not because I’m stealing from
you – okay?” Terry said, picking up the
jacket and searching through the
pockets.
He found Tony’s wallet, and then his
keys, and then he pulled out some kind
of badge. He turned it over in his hand,
examining it.
“NCIS? I have no idea what that is, but
are you some kind of cop, Tony? Figures.
All that swagger and confidence, and
that hint of danger, although you’re not
very dangerous now, are you, big guy?”
Terry dipped his fingers back into
Tony’s jacket pocket again and finally
found what he was looking for – a cell
phone. He turned it on with shaking
fingers.
“Okay – who do I call? Speed dial number
one, yes? That has to be the person to
call. Yes, Tony?” he asked.
Tony didn’t even look around. He just
continued to stare, and stroke, and hum.
Terry shivered – this was beyond creepy.
“Okay…okay…here goes…” Terry pressed the
speed dial and then waited, shivering
anxiously. A few seconds later a man’s
voice answered; deep, curt, and kind of
grumpy.
“Gibbs,” the man said.
~*~
Gibbs dropped Tony home
and then went straight to his basement
and spent a couple of hours working on
his boat. He knew it was pointless going
to bed – he was too angry and hyped up
to sleep in any case, and he needed to
bring himself down. There was no way
he’d be in any shape to interrogate
Admiral Parrish tomorrow if he didn’t
get a grip on himself first, and when he
did question that bastard, he had to do
it *right* - for Tony’s sake.
Working on the boat was the only way he
knew of calming himself. The smell of
the sawdust and the rhythm of moving
back and forwards as he sanded down the
wood helped. He bored some holes into
the boat and then slammed in some wooden
pegs, allowing his pent-up rage to flow
into the motion.
He was just about to call it a night
when his cell phone rang. He reached for
it quickly and felt a little spike of
anxiety as he saw the name on the caller
display: DiNozzo.
“Gibbs,” he answered. “You okay, Tony?”
“Uh…this is Terry Dyer,” an unfamiliar,
slightly squeaky voice replied. “Um…are
you a friend of Tony’s?”
Gibbs threw down his hammer and began
walking towards the stairs – fast. “Who
the hell is this?” he demanded, running
up the stairs and out of the door. He
grabbed his keys from the hall table and
reached for his jacket. He had a bad
feeling about this.
“It’s Terry – like I said. Look, I’m at
Tony’s place, and he’s…well he’s gone
kind of weird on me. It’s like he’s
zoned out or something. I don’t think he
can even hear me.”
“I’m on my way. I’ll be there in ten.
Stay there. Do not leave him,” Gibbs
ordered tersely, hanging up.
He probably broke every speed limit in
the book, but he pulled up at Tony’s
apartment building nine minutes later,
ran up the stairs, and knocked
impatiently on the door. It was opened,
and he found himself looking at a
diminutive guy with wide, almond-shaped
brown eyes and a scared expression on
his face.
Gibbs looked the man up and down. He was
about twenty-five, with peroxide blond
hair, wearing a tight tee shirt,
impossibly tight jeans and…Gibbs thought
he detected a hint of eyeliner. This
must be Terry Dyer – but who the hell
was he, and what was he doing in Tony’s
apartment?
“Are you Gibbs?” Terry asked, in a
drawly, camp tone of voice. “And do you
have a first name, honey?”
“Where’s Tony?” Gibbs asked brusquely,
brushing past him.
“Oh yeah, you’re Gibbs,” Terry muttered.
“He’s in the bedroom. I’ll show you…”
“I know where the damn bedroom is,”
Gibbs growled, heading towards it.
He strode through the bedroom door and
then stopped dead in his tracks. Tony
was sitting on the side of the bed,
dressed only in a pair of boxer shorts,
and he was staring into space. There was
a vacant expression on his face, and he
was humming to himself and stroking his
hair absently, the way Gibbs had noticed
him doing a few times earlier this
evening.
“Hey, Tony,” he said softly, crouching
down in front of his agent. “You okay?”
Tony made no reply. He just continued
staring into space, his eyes blank and
empty. Gibbs waved his hand in front of
Tony’s face, but there was no reaction.
“How long has he been like this?” Gibbs
asked, glancing up at Terry who had
followed him into the bedroom.
“About half an hour,” Terry replied. “I
didn’t know what to do. I was going to
leave but that’s not me, you know? I
wouldn’t leave someone in trouble.
Besides, he’s a nice guy – and I wasn’t
sure what would happen to him if I just
left. Is he an epileptic?”
“No,” Gibbs answered shortly. He got up
and glared at the diminutive man
standing in the doorway. “Now, explain
to me – who the hell are you, and what
are you doing here?”
~*~
Terry took a step back.
While he’d sensed that Tony was
dangerous in his own way, this guy here
took danger to a new level. Also, what
was it with these guys being so tall? He
knew he was short, but this man in front
of him was almost as tall as Tony. He
felt like he’d stumbled into a land of
giants. There was one sexy,
little-boy-lost giant sitting on the
bed, and one grim-faced giant, just as
sexy but scary as all hell, looming over
him and looking at him like he was a
criminal.
Terry wondered if he’d done the right
thing calling this stranger. He was so
curt and terse. Would Tony thank him for
it, he wondered? On the other hand, who
the hell did this guy think he was,
coming in here and treating Terry like
*he’d* done something wrong when all
he’d been trying to do was help?
“I told you on the phone, I’m Terry
Dyer, I’m a friend of Tony’s and…oh,
okay, ‘friend’ might be overstating the
case as we only just met tonight but…oh
shit, you’re not Tony’s boyfriend, are
you?”
Terry knew he was babbling, but he
always talked too much when he got
nervous, and he was definitely nervous
right now. Gibbs gave him a glare so
baleful he took a step backwards in
alarm.
“No, I’m not Tony’s…boyfriend,” Gibbs
growled. Terry relaxed slightly.
“Oh thank GOD,” he said, mock-fanning
himself in relief. “Only you’re exactly
his type, and I thought if you were his
boyfriend, and you found me and him in
here together, then you might go crazy.
And you’re tall, and, if you don’t mind
me saying, pretty damn scary. And I just
noticed that you have bruised knuckles,
so I’m guessing you’re the kind of guy
who likes to solve disputes with his
fists, and I’m really…not. That kind of
guy. So if you were going to hit me I’d
just go straight down. No resistance!
So, uh, don’t hit me,” he added, with a
nervous laugh.
“His type?” Gibbs interrupted, his
forehead wrinkled up into a frown.
“Yeah – you’re the kind of guy he
usually picks up in bars; you know -
straight-acting tough guys. Older guys.
I was surprised when he went for me, but
it was late and there weren’t many other
guys around, so I guess…well, I’m not
selling myself short here, because I
happen to think I’m pretty cute, but I
guess he had to settle for what he could
get at that time of night.”
“Bars?” Gibbs growled. “Gay bars?”
“Well, duh.” Terry rolled his eyes.
“Tony isn’t gay,” Gibbs said blankly.
Terry laughed out loud.
“Oh honey!” he giggled, and then he
caught the expression in Gibbs’s eyes
and the laughter died in his throat.
“Well, maybe he isn’t,” he said
hurriedly, “But I’ve seen him trawl the
bars often enough to know he isn’t 100%
straight either. Maybe he’s bi?”
Gibbs turned back to Tony, a puzzled
expression on his face. Terry watched as
he reached out and gently touched Tony’s
shoulder.
“Tony – it’s Gibbs,” he said. “Wake up.”
There was still no response. Tony just
kept on staring, and stroking, and
humming.
“DiNozzo!” Gibbs rapped out, in a harder
tone of voice, making Terry jump. Tony's
eyes remained blank. Gibbs rested his
hand on Tony’s bare shoulder and then
frowned.
“Tony, you’re cold. I’m going to put a
blanket around you.”
He grabbed the red velvet blanket from
the bed and drew it towards him, and, as
he did so, the tube of lubricant and the
condom Tony had got out of his
night-stand fell onto the floor. Terry
winced, and swooped down to pick them
up. He flushed, feeling embarrassed,
because Gibbs had seen them. Terry
doubted there was anything Gibbs didn’t
see; the man had eyes like a hawk.
Gibbs wrapped the blanket carefully
around Tony’s shoulders – he was much
gentler than Terry would have expected
of such a terse, grim-faced man. That
eased his mind a little about phoning
him – whoever this guy was, he obviously
genuinely cared about Tony.
“Do you know what’s wrong with him?”
Terry asked quietly, replacing the
condom and lube on the nightstand with
an apologetic smile.
“Yes,” Gibbs replied, and then he
frowned slightly. “Well, kind of,” he
added grimly.
“Does this happen to him often?”
“No.” Gibbs grabbed Tony’s ceaselessly
stroking hand. “Tony, I want you to stop
doing that now,” he ordered, in a firm
tone of voice. Tony’s hand stopped
immediately, in midair.
“Wow – he really responds to you,” Terry
said. “I tried doing that, and he just
kept on stroking.”
Gibbs took hold of Tony’s arm and moved
it down to his side. Tony started
rocking gently, back and forth.
“Well, I guess that’s a little better,”
Gibbs sighed. He turned back to Terry.
“Tell me exactly what happened,” he
ordered. “What were you doing right
before Tony zoned out?”
“Uh…” Terry flushed. “Well…we
were…obviously having sex. Or at least,
trying to have sex.”
“Trying?” Gibbs loomed over him, looking
angry. “In my experience sex is
something you’re either having, or
you’re not. Which is it?”
“Not. Tony uh…he couldn’t…” Terry
muttered, wondering if he looked as
embarrassed as he felt. There was
something about this tall, terrifying
man that made him feel like he was a
stupid, insignificant kid, and he didn’t
like that feeling or the kind of men who
made him feel this way. He was worth
more than this. Gibbs raised an eyebrow
at him.
“Had he been drinking?” he asked. Terry
shook his head.
“He said he hadn’t. He was upset – he
said this had never happened to him
before, and I know that’s something guys
say, but I believe him. He looked pretty
freaked out about it – l mean, he looked
really desperate rather than just a bit
pissed off. I told him it was okay, and
that he was probably just tired, but
then he just zoned out on me. He’s been
like this ever since.”
“Had he taken any drugs?” Gibbs asked,
glancing around the room.
“Not with me!” Terry bristled angrily.
“I don’t do that kind of shit. And I
didn’t get the vibe that he did, either.
I mean, his eyes were kind of glowing,
but I didn’t think at any point that he
was high. If he was, they were really
crap drugs. What’s with all the
questions anyway? Are you a cop?”
“I’m a federal agent,” Gibbs replied.
“Oh shit,” Terry hissed, glancing over
to the nightstand where he’d emptied out
the contents of Tony’s jacket pockets.
“You’re not just one of Tony’s friends,
are you?” he sighed, catching sight of
the NCIS badge he’d found.
“No,” Gibbs agreed. “I’m also his boss.”
“Oh Tony, honey, I’m sorry,” Terry said
miserably, kneeling down in front of
Tony and gazing at him. “I didn’t know.
I mean, who the hell has their *boss* as
number one on their speed dial? I don’t
even know my boss’s cell phone number,
let alone have her on speed dial.”
“You did the right thing,” Gibbs said
curtly from behind him.
“I wonder if Tony will think so when he
wakes up.”
“I need your name and contact details,
and then you can go.”
Terry leaned forward and deposited a
tender kiss on Tony’s forehead. He heard
Gibbs make a weird little sound in the
back of his throat, and got the distinct
impression that he didn’t like him
touching Tony.
“Good night, handsome prince,” he said
softly to Tony. “I hope you’ll be okay.
Maybe a kiss from your own Prince
Charming will wake you, huh?”
He glanced up at Gibbs who was looking
at him like he was a rattlesnake he
wanted to shoot. Terry got up, pulled
out his wallet, plucked out one of the
little personal cards he’d had made to
give to guys in bars who asked him for
his number, and handed it to Gibbs.
“That’s me,” he said, pointing at the
card. “Terry Dyer.”
Gibbs gave it a peremptory look and then
pocketed it. “Thank you, Mr. Dyer. I’ll
call you if I have any more questions
about this case.”
“Tony isn’t a case – he’s a person,”
Terry snapped, feeling angry. He’d had a
shit night, he was tired, and this guy
was really starting to piss him off. “I
don’t know what the hell you see in him,
Tony honey,” he said, in a flash of
anger, glancing at Tony - who continued
to gaze off creepily into the distance,
taking no notice of him whatsoever.
Gibbs did though – he took a step
towards Terry, eyebrows raised in
disbelief, looking at him as if he’d
gone insane.
“Oh what?” Terry said, with a defiant
toss of his head. “Like there’s any way
those guys he picks up in bars aren’t
all you in his head.”
“Good night, Mr. Dyer,” Gibbs growled.
He took hold of Terry’s arm and pushed
him unceremoniously towards the door.
Terry shook him off, irritably.
“I’d like to say it’s been a pleasure
meeting you, but that’d be a lie. You’re
not exactly a people person are you, Mr.
Gibbs?” Terry snapped.
Gibbs turned towards him, his entire
body stiff and intimidating, and shot
him a glare that would have had many a
grown man quaking in his boots. It cut
no ice with Terry. He wasn’t going to be
pushed around by anyone. Terry drew
himself up to his full height – which
admittedly wasn’t very tall – and shot
him a glare of his own in response.
“Thank you, Terry,” Terry said. “Thank
you for not running out on Tony, thank
you for calling me, thank you for
staying with Tony until I got here and
explaining what happened to him. Sorry
you had such a shit night and the hot
sex with the very hot guy didn’t happen,
but hey, you did the right thing. So
thanks.”
Gibbs stared at him for a moment and
then those stony blue eyes of his
suddenly softened, his body relaxed, and
his mouth quirked up into a little grin
- and that was when Terry saw it.
“Oh…now I get it,” he said softly. “Now
I get what he sees in you.”
Gibbs held out his hand. “Thank you,
Terry,” he said, quietly and sincerely.
“Thank you for helping Tony.”
Terry took the hand – it was warm,
extremely hard, and slightly calloused.
Gibbs shook his hand firmly, gazing at
Terry from those beautiful blue eyes,
and Terry felt himself going
ever-so-slightly weak at the knees.
“You’re welcome,” he muttered. “Take
good care of Tony – he really is a nice
guy. Personally I don’t think you’re
good enough for him but…”
A finger was placed over his mouth.
“Let’s both quit while we’re ahead shall
we?” Gibbs said pleasantly, grasping his
shoulder and ushering him firmly but
courteously out of the door.
~*~
Gibbs shut the door
behind the feisty little guy who had
seemed to want to pick a fight with him,
reached for his cell phone, and dialled.
He had to wait for several rings and
then, finally, a flustered voice
answered.
“You do know what time it is, Jethro,
don’t you? I thought we’d established
that you’d only call me at this time of
night in the case of a genuine
emergency.”
“It is. I need you, Ducky. Tony’s
apartment. Now,” Gibbs said, and then he
disconnected.
He returned to the bedroom but there was
no change in Tony’s condition. He just
sat there, staring blankly into space.
At least he wasn’t stroking his hair
again – but he was rocking back and
forth and humming to himself. Gibbs
knelt down in front of him again, rested
his hands on Tony’s knees, and gazed
into his eyes, looking for something –
anything – that would reassure him that
Tony was still in there.
“Where are you, Tony?” he asked, waving
his hand in front of Tony’s eyes. Tony
gave no reaction. “You are full of
surprises, DiNozzo. Christ, what a day.”
He hesitated, and then gently stroked
Tony’s cheek with the back of his hand.
“First, finding out what you’ve been
hiding all these years, and then finding
out what you like to do in your spare
time – or at least who you like to do it
with. I always had you down as straight,
Tony – but I guess that was just another
thing you wanted us all to believe. Damn
it – so much of your time and energy has
gone into all this hiding and lying.
Aren’t you tired of it?”
There was no reply. He got up and saw
the lubricant and condom on the
nightstand where Terry had left them. He
picked them up and stowed them away in a
drawer.
“I’m going to have to tell Ducky about
what happened to you when you were a
kid, Tony,” he said. “But I’m not going
to give away all your secrets.”
He sat down on the side of the bed
beside Tony. Then, awkwardly, he put his
arm around Tony’s shoulders and
squeezed.
“I will get you through this, DiNozzo,”
he said. “Just don’t go under – because
I don’t know how to reach you wherever
you are right now. I can’t follow you
there, and I don’t know how to bring you
back.”
~*~
Roy was smiling at
him, gently petting him all over. Tony
lay there unmoving, feeling angry and
resentful.
“Do we have to do this now?” he asked
petulantly. “You said you were going to
take me to the movies.”
“And I will, later. Tonio…do this for me
and after I take you to the movies, I’ll
buy you those roller skates you wanted -
hmm?”
Tony sighed and moved his legs, so Roy
could do what he wanted. "You mean it
about the skates?" he asked.
"Yes, Tonio…of course…my beautiful boy.
Just be good for me, and you can have
whatever you like."
Roy beamed at him and then leaned
forward and kissed his mouth. Tony hated
the taste of cigars, the feel of rough
stubble on his chin, and the way Roy's
tongue darted between his lips. It made
him want to wipe his hand over his
mouth, but he knew Roy didn't like it
when he did that.
He closed his eyes and thought about
what colour roller skates he'd get Roy
to buy him afterwards.
~*~
Ducky looked dishevelled
and more than a little peeved when Gibbs
opened the door to him half an hour
later.
“Well, what is it, Jethro?” he demanded,
walking in, carrying his medical bag
with him. “You said it was an
emergency?”
“It is, Duck.”
Gibbs led the ME into Tony’s bedroom,
and Ducky paused, glancing at Tony with
a quizzical expression on his face.
“Anthony?” he enquired. “Tony?” There
was no response. Ducky raised an eyebrow
at Gibbs.
“It’s a long story, Ducky,” Gibbs
sighed. “I didn’t know if there was
something we should be doing for him
right now, or if he needs to go to the
hospital.”
“How long has he been like this?”
“At least an hour,” Gibbs replied. “It’s
happened before but just for a few
minutes at a time – I’ve never seen it
last this long.”
“My God – are you saying this isn’t the
first time…?” Ducky broke off, shaking
his head in disbelief. He undid his coat
and threw it onto a nearby chair, along
with his hat. Then he bustled around,
doing various little tests – pulling up
Tony’s eyelids, taking his pulse, and
all the time muttering under his breath.
Finally, he turned back to Gibbs. “I
don’t see there’s any point sending him
to the hospital at this stage. He could
come around at any minute, and he’s not
in any physical danger. But I do think
we should make him more comfortable. The
boy will end up with a stiff back if he
stays like that for much longer. Well
don’t just stand there! Help me, Jethro.”
He beckoned Gibbs over, and between them
they managed to get Tony into the
recovery position, lying on his side on
the bed. He went easily enough – he
wasn’t stiff or unresponsive. His body
uncurled into the position they put it
in, and he lay there, still humming and
rocking. It was eerie.
Ducky pulled the blanket over him and
tucked it in under his chin. “Oh, my
poor dear boy,” he sighed. “What on
earth has happened to you?” He glanced
up at Gibbs. “I think it’s time you told
me everything,” he said firmly. “And
then we can decide what to do next.”
Gibbs gestured with his head for Ducky
to sit in the armchair next to the bed
while he sat down on the side of the
bed, next to Tony. Then he spent the
next fifteen minutes telling Ducky
exactly what had happened to Tony –
everything he knew, starting with the
existence of those photographs, and the
entire story of how he’d been sexually
abused when he was twelve.
Ducky remained uncharacteristically
silent throughout – but his face grew
paler and his eyes more watery behind
their spectacles as Gibbs continued.
When Gibbs finished, Ducky took off his
glasses, wiped his eyes, put the glasses
back on again, and then gave Gibbs his
finest glare.
“You will find these men who hurt
Anthony, and when you do you will not be
gentle with them, Jethro,” he
instructed.
“Oh trust me, Ducky, I have no intention
of it,” Gibbs growled. He put his hand
on the blanket covering Tony’s shoulder.
“Damn it, I shouldn’t have left him on
his own tonight. I knew it was a
mistake.”
“How did you find him?”
Gibbs hesitated. “He went out after I
dropped him off. Picked up someone
called Terry in a bar. Terry called me
and told me he’d zoned out.”
“Bless Terri,” Ducky said, with a little
smile. “That restores my faith in human
nature somewhat at least. There are good
people out there as well as bad.”
“What’s wrong with him, Ducky?” Gibbs
asked.
“I can only make a guess,” Ducky said,
glancing over at Tony’s humming, rocking
body. “But you said that Tony put these
memories into a box in his head and
refused to acknowledge them for all
these years?”
“That’s what he said to Justin, yes,”
Gibbs nodded. “He said he’d found ways
of distracting himself.”
“Ah yes…” Ducky gave a sad nod. “Our
Anthony is very good at providing
distractions, isn’t he? I always did
think it strange that such a fun-loving
young man spent almost as much time at
the office as yourself, Jethro. And then
there was all the mischief, and the
movies, and the generally frenetic level
of activity involved in just being
Anthony DiNozzo. And of course, sexual
intercourse clearly helped distract him,
strange though it may seem given the
nature of the abuse, but that’s not
uncommon in such cases. And, I would
suppose, given how stressful today was
for him, it was almost inevitable that
he’d go out looking for a young lady to
spend the night with tonight.”
Gibbs nodded. He saw no reason to
disabuse Ducky of the conclusion he’d
jumped to about Terry’s gender.
“But what happens when the distractions
don’t work any more?” Ducky mused.
“Knowing how determined our Anthony is,
I would imagine that he’d redouble his
efforts – try harder. Yet, today must
have been such a shock for him. It’s one
thing to suppress memories for all this
time, but quite another to confront
photographic evidence of the very
memories you’ve been keeping under lock
and key. His mind has probably been
struggling to cope with the intolerable
strain all day.”
“He knew the abuse happened, Duck,”
Gibbs said. “He was able to recount it
in a fair amount of detail, quite
lucidly. It clearly wasn’t easy for him,
but he did it. So it’s not like he’s
blocked it out.”
“No. I think it’s all rather more subtle
and complex than that,” Ducky sighed.
“Tony most definitely does know it
happened. After all, it’s likely that
his whole psyche is constructed on the
basis of keeping himself from ever being
that boy again – someone who could be
hurt, abused, and taken advantage of.
You say nobody ever found out about the
abuse?”
“No. He tried to tell his father, but he
wouldn’t listen. I’m only the second
person he’s ever told,” Gibbs said,
feeling his jaw tighten as he spoke.
“So it’s been his secret all this time,
and he’s been protecting that twelve
year old boy inside the best way he
knows how. It might not be perfect, but
it’s worked for him all these years. It
does require him to keep busy – which
explains a lot - I think we all know how
wearying a bored Anthony DiNozzo can
be,” Ducky said wryly. “But those are
his coping mechanisms. Then, today,
those mechanisms broke down –
spectacularly. Firstly he had to talk
about the abuse, which meant remembering
some of the details he’s been trying to
avoid, and then his various means of
distraction - such as sex - stopped
working for him.”
Gibbs winced, recalling what Terry had
said about Tony’s failure in the bedroom
and how distraught he’d been about it.
“I don’t understand what this is all
about though,” Gibbs said, his hand
still resting on Tony’s gently rocking
shoulder. “Where is he right now? Is he
conscious? Can he hear us? He's
definitely not asleep.”
“No, he isn’t,” Ducky sighed. “Oh,
Jethro – haven’t you figured it out?”
Gibbs raised an eyebrow.
“By suppressing those memories, Tony has
given them enormous power,” Ducky said.
“If I may use an analogy…”
“You usually do,” Gibbs muttered. Ducky
shot him a wry gin.
“Imagine, if you will, that you are on a
diet…”
“I’ve never been on a diet, Duck,” Gibbs
interrupted irritably. Ducky glared at
him. “Okay…I’ll imagine it,” Gibbs
grunted.
“If I ask you, right now, NOT to think
about chocolate cake…tell me, what is
the first thing that you think about?”
“Chocolate cake,” Gibbs retorted
immediately.
“It’s a well known psychology
experiment,” Ducky said, with a wave of
his hands. “Ask someone not to think
about something, and usually that’s
*all* they can think about. Tony’s
coping mechanisms have broken down, his
distractions aren’t working because of
the shock of today’s events, and those
memories have come back with a
vengeance. And, because of the enormous
power they hold for him - the power he
has invested them with - and all the no
doubt turbulent emotions he has
associated with them, they are stronger
and more overwhelming than any normal
memory. Strong enough to disconnect him
from the present and plunge him back
into the past.”
“Ducky…” Gibbs gazed at the ME,
horrified. “Are you telling me that’s
what’s happening to Tony right now? That
he’s re-living those memories?”
Ducky glanced at Tony sadly. “Well, I
can’t say for certain, Jethro, but yes,
I’m very much afraid that he is.”
~*~
Tony wasn’t sure if he
hated Luke or Marco more. Marco hurt
him, but Luke scared him.
Luke undressed him while he stood there,
sullenly, eyes down. Then Luke pulled
him, naked, onto his lap and caressed
him firmly, hands sweeping over his
body. He talked as he touched him,
whispering straight into his ear.
“So Tony – I enjoyed our last little
meeting. Do you know what I liked most?
I liked it when I stuck it in you, and
you squealed like a little piglet. A
juicy little piglet. You can squeal
again this time if you like. Are you
afraid of me, Tony? You should be.”
He *was* afraid. Luke was a tall,
broad-shouldered man, with thick, dark
hair, and steely grey eyes. His hands
were always cold but not as cold as his
eyes. Luke placed him onto the bed, on
his hands and knees. Tony moaned, and
curled up into a tight ball. He hated
this. At least Roy stroked him, and told
him that he loved him, and that he was a
good boy.
Cold hands descended on him, roaming
over him, demanding and clinical. He
heard the mattress give as Luke knelt on
the bed behind him.
“Roy told me you were a good boy, but
I’m not seeing much evidence of that
right now, Tony. Open up for me…that’s
right… Come on - I saw those photos of
you, you little slut – I know you can do
better than this. That’s it…squeal,
little piglet, squeal.”
~*~
“Christ, Ducky.” Gibbs
got up and paced around the room. “We
have to do something to wake him up.”
“Jethro, you said he’s been in these
fugue-like states before and always came
out of them by himself.”
“Yeah, but he’s never been out of it for
this long before. I don’t pretend to
understand how this works, but you
didn’t hear his statement earlier,
Ducky. Those men raped him repeatedly –
one of them raped him so viciously he
bled and was scared that he was going to
die. It’s bad enough he went through
that once, but to re-live it over and
over again? While we damn well stand by
and watch?” Gibbs slammed his fist
against the wall, barely noticing the
flash of pain as the movement hurt the
self-inflicted wounds of a few hours
ago.
Ducky got up, came over to him, and
grabbed his right hand. “Do I even want
to know how this happened?” he asked,
glancing at the torn, bloody flesh and
the bruising across the knuckles. Gibbs
pulled his hand away. Ducky blinked at
him owlishly from behind his glasses.
“Jethro, I remember that case with Kyle
Boone many years ago; the one that cost
you your second marriage. Your fists
looked like this a lot then, too,” he
said softly. “You always do this when a
case gets to you, and of course Tony is
so much more to you than just a case.”
“Ducky, it’s not important. I’m fine.
I’m more worried about Tony, and how we
get him to wake up. Supposing he’s lost
inside his own mind and can’t find a way
out?”
“I think you should have more faith in
the boy, Jethro,” Duck told him gently,
glancing over at Tony. “He’s very
determined. He might be struggling right
now, but I don’t think there’s any way
our Anthony will give in without a
fight, do you?”
“It shouldn’t be a battle he has to
fight alone,” Gibbs growled. “Bad enough
that he didn’t have anyone to help him
when he was twelve, but I’ll be damned
if he has to do it by himself now.”
He went over to the bed and sat down
beside Tony. He hesitated for a moment
and then reached out and stroked Tony's
hair.
“Tony, it’s Gibbs. Listen to me - you’ve
been out for long enough. You need to
find a way back to us now.”
There was no reaction.
“I mean it, DiNozzo,” Gibbs said in a
firmer tone of voice. “Get your ass back
here.”
He glanced up at Ducky who was giving
him a sad look, as if he thought this
approach was very unlikely to work, but
Gibbs wasn’t about to give up yet. He
remembered a few years ago, when Tony
had been fighting for his life with the
plague, and how he’d ordered him not to
die. Even leaving aside the night’s
revelations, and the dubious character
insights provided by Terry Dyer, he had
always known that Tony worshipped the
ground he walked on and would do his
best to obey any order he threw at him.
“Tony!” he rapped out. “Come back now.
It’s safe here – just me and Ducky.”
He stroked Tony’s hair again and then
remembered something else about that
time with the plague. He leaned forward
and spoke directly into Tony’s ear.
“Tony, wherever you are right now, you
will *not* stay there. Understand me?
Come back. Now!” He combined the firm
crack of that last word with a sharp tap
to the back of Tony’s head.
Tony blinked.
~*~
Tony glanced around,
disoriented. Last thing he remembered,
he’d been sitting on the side of the
bed, and now he was lying down and Gibbs
was here. Where had his boss come from
and what the hell was he doing here?
“Boss?” he muttered, sitting up. He
groaned, his back and shoulders aching.
He felt stiff. Then he saw Ducky
standing by the wall. “Ducky? What the
hell is going on?”
“You had another one of your episodes,
my dear boy.”
“Episodes?” Tony frowned.
“You were out of it, DiNozzo. Like you
were in the parking lot earlier,” Gibbs
told him. “And like you were a couple of
times during your statement, although
just for a few seconds. This time it was
longer.”
“How long?” Tony asked quietly.
“A couple of hours,” Gibbs replied. Tony
bit on his lip. “You want to tell us
what’s going on?”
“Not really.” Tony swung his legs over
the side of the bed and then looked
down, flushing. He was at least wearing
a pair of boxer shorts, but apart from
that he was naked.
“You do know…?” Ducky began.
“That I’ve been losing time? Yes, Ducky.
I know,” Tony said curtly. “It hasn’t
happened in a long while. I thought it
was just a temporary blip, and it’d go
away again.”
“I don’t think the human brain works
quite like that, Anthony,” Ducky
murmured. Tony glanced at him sharply,
and then at Gibbs for confirmation.
“He knows,” Gibbs said.
Tony knew it had to happen sooner or
later, but even so, he felt a wave of
impotent fury at the news.
“I’m most terribly sorry, my dear boy,”
Ducky said quietly. “I’m also very
concerned about your mental state right
now.”
“I’ll be fine,” Tony snapped. “I just
need some time and space…and I’d really
like to be left alone for just a goddamn
minute.”
“Out of the question,” Gibbs told him
tersely. Tony glared at him.
“What Jethro means is that you were
lucky tonight, Anthony,” Ducky said, in
a placating tone. “Your lady friend,
Terri, had the good sense to call Jethro.
Another time you might zone out while
taking a bath, or while driving, or in
some other potentially hazardous
situation.”
“Terry? Oh shit.” Tony buried his head
in his hands, remembering. He glanced up
at Gibbs who was gazing at him steadily
from those steely eyes of his, giving
nothing away – as usual. Tony cleared
his throat. “What happened to Terry?”
“Gone,” Gibbs replied. “Nice person
though,” he added. “Thought the world of
you. Didn’t like me for some reason.
Told me I wasn’t a ‘people person’.”
“Yeah, I don’t know how to break this to
you, Boss, but you don’t always make a
great first impression.”
“Tony…” Gibbs gazed at him thoughtfully.
“Do you know where you go when you ‘lose
time’ as you put it?”
Tony gazed back at him blankly. “I need
a drink.”
“I’ll go and get you some water,” Ducky
said, disappearing out of the door.
“Lady friend?” Tony queried when he’d
gone, raising an eyebrow. Gibbs
shrugged.
“I just told him the name – and from
there Ducky jumped to his own
conclusion.”
“Fuck it!” Tony roared, slamming his
hand against the night stand. “Can’t I
have any kind of a fucking private life?
Does everyone have to know every last
damn thing about me?”
“I won’t tell anyone,” Gibbs said. “None
of my business.”
“It’s not what you think,” Tony
muttered, embarrassed by his outburst.
That wasn't like him – usually he
managed to keep everything buttoned up
and under control. He sure as hell never
lost it with Gibbs of all people. “Well,
it’s not exactly what you think anyway,”
he said quietly. “I’m not lying about
the women – there have been plenty of
them. I’ve just never mentioned the men
– there have been plenty of them too.”
“Okay.” Gibbs shrugged again. “You don’t
need to explain anything to me, Tony.”
“I need the sex,” Tony said quietly.
“And to be honest it’s never really
mattered who it’s with – men or women.”
“Distraction,” Gibbs said. “I
understand.”
Ducky returned with a glass of water and
Tony took it, his hand shaking slightly
as he reached out.
“You didn’t answer my question, Tony,”
Gibbs said to him. “Do you know where
you go when you lose time?”
Tony swallowed down the entire glass of
water in one gulp.
“Yes,” he said, in a tight, pinched
voice. “I know exactly where I go.”
~*~
Ducky looked from Tony to
Gibbs and back again. Gibbs looked both
furious and appalled at one and the same
time, and Tony – well Tony looked scared
and oddly defensive. Ducky's heart went
out to them both, and he decided it was
time that he took charge of the
situation.
“Look, it’s practically dawn, and you
look terrible – both of you,” he
admonished. “Anthony – you need some
sleep. I’d really prefer you not to
fugue again, so I’d like to administer a
sedative if that’s alright with you, my
boy? It would give your poor brain a
rest and allow you to recover.”
“Oblivion sounds just great to me right
now, Ducky,” Tony muttered, still gazing
wretchedly at Gibbs.
“And you, Jethro,” Ducky said firmly. “I
know you like to pretend you don’t need
any sleep, and yes, I also know that you
can keep going for days on end with just
the occasional catnap. Now, I’m sure
that’s a very special and vital sniper
skill and so forth, but everyone needs
sleep. Therefore, I suggest that you go
home and catch a couple of hours' rest,
while I stay here and watch over
Anthony.”
Gibbs didn’t look happy about that, but
Ducky managed to quell any incipient
rebellion with a glare.
“I really don’t intend to take no for an
answer,” he said. “From either of you.”
He turned to glare at Tony as well – he
didn’t seem too happy to hear that he’d
have company while he slept. “I will be
staying,” Ducky said in a tone that
brooked no argument. “You won’t hear a
peep out of me. I’ll sit on the chair
over there.” He gestured to the armchair
next to the bed.
Gibbs grunted and then got up. “Get some
sleep,” he said to Tony. He grasped
Ducky’s arm and led him out into the
hallway. “Do not leave him,” he said.
“At any point. For any reason.”
“I can assure you, Jethro, I’m quite
capable…” Ducky began. Gibbs cut him
off.
“He ditched McGee earlier. He might be
looking all pale and pathetic right now,
but he’s still *Tony*, which means…”
“That he has an inventive mind and the
ability to dissemble rather well. I
know, dear boy, I know. I have known our
dear Anthony for quite as long as you,
and I know all his admirable and also
less than admirable little traits and
foibles. Don’t worry about us, Jethro. I
will ensure that Anthony gets some sleep
– I simply ask that you go home and do
the same.”
“I will.” Gibbs glanced back at the
bedroom door again and then left. Ducky
went to get another glass of water from
the kitchen, and then he returned to the
bedroom.
He opened up his medical bag, got out
the sedatives, and handed them to Tony.
“I always come prepared,” he said,
giving Tony the glass of water.
“Whenever Jethro calls me in the middle
of the night, it’s either because he’s
found a dead body or there’s someone
requiring medical assistance. I’ve
therefore learned to come prepared for
the dead or the living.”
“Or someone who’s a bit of both,” Tony
muttered wryly, throwing the pills into
his mouth and gulping down the water.
Ducky gazed at him sadly. “Ah, my dear
boy, I very much want to keep you in the
land of the living,” he said softly. He
watched as Tony slid back into the bed
and pulled a sheet and blanket over
himself. “I’ll be here, Anthony,” he
said, turning off the light. He sat down
in the armchair beside the bed.
“Seems kind of weird – someone watching
me sleep, Duck,” Tony muttered.
“It won’t bother you for long, my dear
boy,” Ducky replied softly. “Those are
very good sedatives. Before long you
will be…”
He broke off as he heard Tony’s
breathing change, and a gentle snore
emerged from under the blanket.
“I really am most terribly sorry about
all this, Anthony,” Ducky said softly,
knowing his patient was asleep. “I fear
that I may have misjudged you. Of course
that was precisely what you wanted, I’m
sure. Far better that we all saw a clown
than that we caught a glimpse of that
vulnerable young boy you must still be
underneath. And yet I do blame myself –
you see, I often *did* see glimpses and
chose to ignore them, like pieces of a
puzzle that I discarded because they
didn’t fit the preconceived image of it
that I held in my head.”
He clasped his hands together in his lap
and gazed at Tony’s sleeping form.
“I’ve always been aware of your somewhat
complex personality, my dear boy,” he
continued. “I’m afraid I completely
misdiagnosed you when I told Jethro that
you were a narcissist not so long ago,
and I feel I absolutely must apologise
to you for that. In fact, I suspect you
might be the complete opposite. What you
are, what you *really* are, far from
being so obviously on display for all to
see and judge, is actually very well
hidden.”
Ducky reached into his pocket and pulled
out a packet of mints. He popped one
into his mouth. “I suppose we all
present a face to the world,” he mused,
as he sucked quietly on the mint. “We
all wear a mask that we want the world
to see to a certain extent, but I doubt
that many people’s masks are as
carefully constructed as yours, my dear
Anthony. Yours is really a work of art –
a thing of quite considerable beauty in
its own way. I do not mean to imply that
you have been deliberately deceiving us
all this time. I doubt that is the case
at all.” He shook his head in the
darkness, one ear listening for the deep
rise and fall of Tony’s chest as he
slumbered.
“You were simply forming a defence, lest
anyone get too close. You see, I really
do believe that adult Tony is doing his
best to protect that child who was so
cruelly used, and if he has to spin a
rather elaborate web of subterfuge to do
so then that is simply what he *has* to
do. There are some things one cannot
hide of course. Your sense of empathy
has always been well known to me, and
your courage and loyalty cannot be
faulted. These features shine through.
For the rest? I suspect we barely know
you – the real you – at all. And for
that, Anthony, I truly am very sorry.”
~*~
End of Damage - Part Two: Darkness
Damage - Part Three: Disintegration
Friendly feedback always adored at
xanthe@xanthe.org
|