
Nominated for
Best Angst
and Best Romance in the
Tony/Gibbs category of the
NCIS Awards, 2009
Title:
"Andy"
Author: Xanthe
Fandom: NCIS
Pairing: Gibbs/DiNozzo
Rating: NC17
Keywords: Wall to wall angst, a dollop
of hurt/comfort, and a massive side
order of daddy issues.
Spoilers: Specifically “Requiem” and
“Heartland”.
Timeline and canon: In this story I’ve
based Tony’s age being 36 in 2008 on the
fact that it’s explicitly stated by both
him and Kate that he’s 32 in the episode
“Split Decision” which aired in 2004,
and he mentions playing college
basketball in 1992 in “Swak” which ties
in with this dating. Other canon facts
are not entirely consistent on this
subject (surprise!) but that’s what I’ve
used for this story.
I found Gibbs’s timeline and canon
inconsistent and confusing so I’ve put
my own spin on it here – trying to stay
as accurate a possible while steering a
middle path. If this bothers you, then
you might want to consider it an AU –
which it pretty much is really anyway
*g*.
Wordcount: Around 47,000.
Thanks to Bluespirit for being so
supportive, encouraging and all-round
fabulous; also, and very importantly,
for beta-reading and for the stunningly
beautiful graphic.
Thanks also to Rachelle, for helping out
with the US beta and the many cool
details. Any mistakes are, of course,
mine.
Summary: When Tony receives some bad
news, it forces him and Gibbs to face
the consequences of a time long past.
Extract: Gibbs had been waiting for a
dead body to turn up, and it seemed one
just had - only not the way he'd
expected. This was one of those bodies
that had been hidden for seventeen
years, and those kinds of corpses always
stank to high heaven when they finally
rose to the surface.
"Andy"
By Xanthe
2008
Gibbs knew. He knew the minute he woke
up and felt an old, achingly familiar
sense of foreboding in his gut. It had
been a long time since his gut instinct
had made its presence so strongly felt
but today it was pretty much waving a
bright red flag at him. Something was
going to happen today, and, if past
experience was anything to go by, it
wasn't going to be good.
A glance out of the window revealed
several inches of snow covering the
world; Gibbs hated snow. Then he had to
take a cold shower because his heating
wasn't working for some mysterious
reason so he was already feeling pretty
pissed off before he even left the
house. He shovelled enough snow from the
drive to get his car out, only to find
the damn thing had a dead battery and
wouldn't start, and by the time he got
it moving he was half an hour late. He
stopped off for his usual coffee and was
halfway down the road before he took a
sip, only to find they'd given him chai
by mistake. By now in a really ferocious
mood, he opened the car window and threw
the drink onto the sidewalk where it
spilled out, staining the snow brown. He
ignored the startled curse of an irate
passer-by and stamped his foot down hard
on the accelerator. Yeah - today was
going to be a really bad day.
He stormed into the NCIS building,
stamping the snow off his feet and
trampling it into the elevator, leaving
a wet trail all the way to his desk.
"Uh…" McGee said, the minute he got into
the squad room. Gibbs looked at him, his
body language warning anyone within
sight that he was not to be messed with
this morning. "It's, uh…just that the
director was here – you're having a
meeting with him this morning…and…uh…"
Gibbs raised an eyebrow. "You're late?"
McGee offered, looking as if he’d just
thrown a grenade and was waiting for it
to blow up in his face.
"I know I'm late, McGee!" Gibbs roared,
taking a perverse delight in seeing
McGee duck behind his computer screen in
alarm. Agent Shay, who had been walking
over, turned smoothly and walked back
the way she'd come, without missing a
beat. "Someone get me some damn coffee!"
Gibbs ordered as he stalked off towards
the director's office.
His mood had only improved fractionally
by the time he returned to his desk an
hour later. It was covered in bits of
paper. Gibbs hated bits of paper. He
gathered them all together in a pile and
dumped them on McGee's desk. The probie
could sort through it when he returned
from Abby's lab and make sure that only
the really important stuff was returned
for him to deal with.
He had just sat down at his desk for the
first time all morning when he caught
movement out of the corner of his eye.
He glanced up to see Tony standing
there.
"Well?" he demanded.
"Uh…I just wanted to know if you'd
signed my vacation request," Tony asked,
with an apologetic wince.
"I don't know. When did you give it to
me?"
"This morning - when I got in." Tony
glanced at Gibbs's pristine desk. "I
left it on your desk. It should be here
somewhere."
"McGee has it," Gibbs told him tersely.
"Why would McGee have it?" Tony asked
blankly.
Gibbs was in no mood to explain. He just
had a feeling that at some point in the
next hour someone was going to bring him
a dead body and his gut was churning
accordingly. He hadn't felt this bad in
a long time. It was like there was a
dark cloud looming nearby and he was
just waiting for the storm to start.
When it did he had a feeling it was
going to be a bad one, complete with
lightning, thunder and pouring rain. He
could almost hear it, pounding in his
head.
"Okay…I'll just…go fish it out," Tony
said.
Gibbs nodded curtly that he should do
just that, and turned to his computer
and clicked on his email. Maybe that
dead body he was expecting would show up
in one of his messages. He was dimly
aware of Tony silently sliding a piece
of paper onto his desk, which he
ignored.
He went through his email messages but
they were all pretty much routine. He
deleted a ton of spam and then glanced
up - to find Tony still hovering in
front of his desk.
"What?"
"It's just…I was wondering if you could
sign it," Tony said, pushing the
vacation request form towards him.
"Can't it wait?" Gibbs pulled the piece
of paper over and then held it up, at
arm's length, trying to decipher it
without putting on his glasses. "Why the
urgency?" Gibbs demanded.
"Just it's for…I want to leave well…kind
of now," Tony replied. Gibbs glared at
him.
"You're giving me a request for a
vacation starting *now*?" he demanded.
He hated it when any of his team was ill
or away for whatever reason, and he
especially hated it when it was Tony who
was absent. Besides, now was not a good
time for his second to be away – not
with this sense of foreboding gnawing
away at his gut, heralding, as it very
likely did, the possibility of a dead
body turning up soon.
"Yeah," Tony said quietly. "So…will you
sign it?"
Something about his tone of voice
alerted Gibbs and he looked up at him
sharply. Tony gazed back, and there was
something subdued about the way he was
standing and the expression in his eyes.
Usually he was playing around, making an
idiot of himself…but not right now.
Gibbs frowned and glanced back at the
vacation request form.
"You didn't fill in your return date,"
he said, handing the paper back to Tony.
Tony hesitated, and then pushed it back
towards him.
"That's because I don't know when I'll
be back," he said.
Gibbs felt that sensation in his gut
again, and he picked up the piece of
paper, irritably, scrunched it into a
ball, and threw it into the trash.
"No," he said tersely. "You can't make
an open-ended vacation request. What
happens if we get a case? The dead
bodies won't just hang around until you
decide to get back from sunning yourself
in Cancun, DiNozzo! What the hell
happened? Did you wake up this morning,
see the snow, and decide to head
somewhere hot?"
"I never take my full vacation
allowance, Gibbs," Tony said, in that
same quiet tone of voice. "I've got
weeks built up. I'm entitled to it."
"I said no," Gibbs growled, getting up
and striding down the hallway to get
himself a cup of coffee from the vending
machine in the staff area. It was a poor
substitute for the real thing but it
would do.
He got his coffee and was about to take
a sip when he became aware that Tony had
followed him there.
"I have to go," Tony said quietly,
leaning back against the wall, arms
folded across his chest.
Gibbs took a gulp of his coffee and was
grateful for the immediate caffeine hit.
That sense of foreboding in his gut was
now worse than ever – and suddenly he
knew where that storm was coming from.
For the first time that morning he took
a real look at Tony and saw the
expression in his eyes – an expression
he hadn't seen in many years. It took
him back so far that he felt like he'd
been punched in the gut, and he was
momentarily winded.
"It's my father," Tony said softly, and
Gibbs felt the storm rising around them;
darkness, rain, a howling gale of a wind
- the full works, just the way it had
been that night they first met. "He's
dying."
Gibbs studied Tony's face, waiting.
"He's had cancer for six months but
apparently now he's near the end. My
cousin called me last night. I’m going
to take the shuttle to New York in a
couple of hours. I don't know when I'll
be back. It depends on how long it takes
him to die," Tony said, his voice
completely flat, without any kind of
emotion. "I thought I'd stay for the
funeral and then come home straight
after."
Gibbs continued to gaze at him.
"Hopefully it won't be too long," Tony
added, with a shrug of his shoulders.
"Although, knowing him, he'll drag it
out just to inconvenience everyone.
I'm…uh, not asking if I can go - I have
to go," he muttered, glancing up at
Gibbs with eyes that were as serious as
Gibbs had ever seen them.
"Yeah. You do." Gibbs nodded. Tony
nodded back, and then turned. Gibbs
followed him back to the squad room. He
grabbed his gun and badge from his desk
drawer, and then stopped by Tony's desk.
"I'm going home to pick up some stuff,"
he said, tersely. "You go to National
and buy the tickets. I’ll meet you there
in a couple of hours."
"Tickets? Uh…for my shuttle? My shuttle
home?" Tony looked startled.
"Yes, DiNozzo, for your shuttle home.”
"You're coming with me?"
"It looks that way."
"But…uh…I mean - why?" Tony frowned.
He gazed up at Gibbs and Gibbs gazed
back at him, and the past was standing
right there, in front of them, the giant
proverbial elephant in the room, and he
knew that neither one of them was going
to mention it. Did Tony even *know*, he
wondered? Did he even know it had been
him, all those years ago? If he didn't,
Gibbs wasn't going to tell him. Maybe he
did know but thought that Gibbs didn't –
and, ditto, Gibbs sure as hell wasn't
going to let on that he knew exactly who
he'd met in that bar seventeen years
ago.
"Just a feeling in my gut," Gibbs
replied, turning on his heel and
striding towards the elevator. "Wait for
me at National, Tony," he threw over his
shoulder as he went.
Gibbs got into the elevator and thumped
his hand on the button for the parking
garage. He'd been waiting for a dead
body to turn up and it seemed that one
just had - only not the way he'd
expected. This was one of those bodies
that had been hidden for seventeen
years, and those kinds of corpses always
stank to high heaven when they finally
rose to the surface.
~*~
1991
At first, everything had been a blur. It
was all mixed up in his head - the
funerals, Kuwait, the explosion, the
coma, the hospital bed in Bethesda, and
killing that bastard who’d murdered his
family – it was all just a jumble.
Slowly clarity returned, piece by piece,
and then…then he'd had to decide what to
do next. He knew he couldn't stay in the
Corps. That part of his life was over.
He wasn't sure how he knew that, but he
did. His CO tried to talk him out of it
but he just knew he had to get out. He
couldn't face the discipline of life in
the Corps right now in any case. He'd
fuck up again if he didn't get out, the
way he’d fucked up when he got blown up
– only next time around he might take
some of his unit with him and he didn't
want that on his conscience.
So he got out, and woke up one day in an
empty house with nothing to do. To begin
with people were kind, but soon his
drinking and the morose savagery of his
moods frightened them away. Even his
closest friends disappeared, one by one,
and he didn't care. He barely noticed.
Mike Franks took him out to a bar one
night and offered him a job at NIS. He
turned it down. He was a Marine – he
didn't belong behind a desk.
"Suit yourself," Franks said, taking a
long drag on his cigarette, leaning
against the bar, other hand wrapped
around a glass of bourbon. "Offer's
still open if you change your mind."
"I won't," Gibbs told him.
"You might." Franks gave a little shrug.
"Why me?" Gibbs asked.
Franks gazed at him from unsympathetic
dark eyes. "You can shoot a gun and you
won't piss your pants when things get
tough. You should see the wussy little
kids they give to me – and then they
complain when I give 'em back broken.
You won't break."
"Yeah?" Gibbs knocked back the drink
that Franks placed in front of him.
"Yeah. If you were gonna break, this
would have broken you." Franks beckoned
the bartender over and ordered a refill
for Gibbs's glass.
"You think I'm not broken?" Gibbs poured
the bourbon down his throat like he was
dying of thirst, enjoying the way his
belly warmed up as it went down.
"Yeah." Franks shrugged. "You're all
beat up and bruised maybe but not
broken."
Gibbs finished the drink and waited for
another refill. He *felt* broken. He
felt shattered into a thousand tiny
pieces, shards of himself scattered
everywhere. Franks stayed with him while
he got drunk, then took him home and
slung him onto the couch to sleep it
off.
"You think about it," he said, before he
left.
Gibbs woke up the next day with a
pounding headache. His tongue felt like
it was covered in fur and his body
protested every move he made. He walked,
unsteadily, to the bathroom. The house
was cold and empty, the way it had been
every single day since they'd been
killed. He hated it here. He held onto
the basin and puked his guts up into it.
Outside he could hear kids playing and
he puked again.
If he looked out of the window, maybe
he'd find it hadn't happened. Maybe he'd
see Kelly out there in the back yard,
playing with little Maddie Tyler,
Kelly's dark head pressed against
Maddie's blonde one as they plotted some
mischief together. Maybe downstairs
Shannon would be singing as she brewed
some coffee; she was tone deaf but she
more than made up for that with the
sheer gusto with which she belted out a
tune. He opened his eyes to find the
room empty and silent, only the sounds
of his own stupid thoughts reverberating
around.
He took a shower and got dressed,
knocked back a few painkillers, and then
walked back down the stairs again. He
picked up the mail, and leafed through
it. Most of it was junk and he dumped it
straight in the trash without opening
it. He tore open a bank statement and
then screwed it into a ball and threw it
after the junk.
"I don't want your fucking blood money,"
he growled to the empty room. He hadn’t
even touched the money to pay for their
funerals – he’d taken care of that
himself. Something about the payout
almost offended him. Not that it was
much but he didn't intend to spend it.
He had his savings – he'd go through
them first before he touched that money.
Hell, he'd starve before he touched that
money.
The house seemed claustrophobic; just
another day without them, another day
without the Corps, without a job, and
without any reason to get up in the
morning. He had no idea what the hell to
do with himself. The past few weeks he'd
just drunk himself into oblivion so he
wouldn't have to feel anything but he
needed to make a decision sometime soon.
He just didn't know what the decision
was. Whether to take that job at NIS?
Whether to get up in the morning?
Whether to carry on living?
He went into the kitchen and pulled his
gun out of the drawer where he kept it.
He could swallow it, right now, pull the
trigger and end this. He'd never thought
he was the suicidal type but everyone
had a breaking point. Was there anything
left in the world for him now? Anywhere
to go? Anything to do? Everything seemed
grey and meaningless without them.
Everything he'd done these past few
years had been for them. He couldn't
make sense of the shape of his life
without them. How was it possible that
he was still here and they were gone? He
just couldn't get his head around that.
He couldn't stay here though. He knew
that, suddenly, and without doubt. Not
in this house where Kelly had laughed
and played, and Shannon had sung and
smiled. Where he had been someone else,
and not this shadow he now was –
insubstantial and formless. He didn't
have a damn clue who he was any more.
Not a Marine since he'd quit the Corps.
Not a husband any more, or a father.
He threw the gun down on the kitchen
worktop and ran upstairs. He found a bag
and slung some clothes into it, then ran
back down again. He grabbed his gun and
keys and then left the house, without
looking back.
He got into the car and started driving.
He wasn't sure where he was going, just
that he needed to get away from that
house, where he'd lived with them. He'd
keep the gun close, keep that option
open, because maybe there wasn't
anything for him in this world now, but
he needed to know that for sure before
he took that final step.
His car seemed to know where he was
going even if he didn't, and he found
himself heading out towards Stillwater.
He tried not to think of other journeys
he'd taken in this car; trips where
Kelly had been playing "I spy" in the
back, and Shannon had been by his side,
laughing and being totally useless at
navigating.
He wasn’t sure what he was going to do
when he reached Stillwater. As he got
closer, he felt something inside him
protest. Stillwater would be the same as
always. Nothing there would have changed
– but everything had changed for *him*.
He felt that frozen nugget of resentment
inside turn into a roaring, towering
rage at his father for turning up at
their funeral with a date on his arm,
like it was some kind of social
occasion. Maybe he'd found it easy to
get on with his life after his own
wife's death but Gibbs couldn’t
understand that. He wasn't like his dad
– he never had been. Jackson Gibbs was
easygoing and sociable – he didn't
*feel* things with the same dark
intensity that his son did.
The junction for Stillwater came and
went but he didn’t take it. Stillwater
wasn't the answer he was looking for.
Then again, it never had been.
He drove aimlessly, stopping when he was
hungry, taking a room at whatever motel
he ended up at when he was tired,
finding the nearest bar and drinking
himself quietly into numbness before
heading back to his motel room.
Sometimes he'd stay for a couple of
nights, and sometimes he'd move on
straight away. He didn't count the days.
He was a shadow…he just followed the
sun, heading West, going wherever his
car took him.
The inside of bars, wherever they were,
tended to be pretty much the same. He
nursed his drink in yet another one, his
dark mood radiating out, keeping people
at bay. They seemed to know not to talk
to him and that was just the way he
wanted it. It was about him and the
liquor, about getting drunk and
staggering back to a motel room to sleep
it off before heading out again in his
car the next day.
He gazed into the distance, watching as
people entered and left the bar. Early
on it had been busy but as it got later
and later the place got quieter. He saw
everything, and registered nothing. The
next day he wouldn't remember these
people at all, but now they were just
part of the furniture, moving wallpaper,
something that flitted by in front of
him. He saw the old man at the bar,
telling a long, involved story to the
bartender. Then there was the woman in
her forties, lonely, hoping she'd meet
someone. She'd tried to meet his eye
earlier but he hadn't responded. Over
there was a man in a suit was making
notes on a pad – maybe a travelling
businessman, on the road. A kid, about
college age, went and sat next to him.
"This seat taken?" the kid grinned, all
white teeth, and wide, hopeful eyes.
Gibbs found himself staring. Something
about the youth rang some kind of alarm
bell. The businessman barely spared him
a glance – he just moved his pad a
little to give the kid space to sit down
and then kept on writing. "What you
doing?" the kid asked.
"Working," the man said, and then he
looked up. "You want something?"
"Depends? Do you?" The kid moved
forward, licking his lips a little.
"Just thought you might be on the road,
a long way from home. Might need some
company?"
The kid was a hustler. Gibbs grunted and
took another sip of his drink, then
glanced around. This was a risky kind of
a place for the kid to trawl for trade.
"I don't need company," the businessman
said. The kid grinned at him, widely,
then picked up the businessman's bottle
of beer and took an obscene gulp, his
mobile mouth making it clear what kind
of service he could offer if the price
was right. The businessman gazed at him,
transfixed.
"I need to piss," the kid said, putting
the beer bottle down, and then he got up
and walked over to the restroom. He
didn't look like a hustler, Gibbs
thought. He was wearing a pair of faded
jeans and a red plaid shirt. He was a
little on the skinny side but he looked
more like a college student than a young
punk working the streets. Gibbs counted
slowly to ten, and, sure enough, the
businessman got up and followed the kid
into the restroom. Gibbs grunted again
and took another sip of his drink. He'd
seen many encounters like this over the
past few days; women picking up men, men
picking up women, men picking up men.
Nobody had been stupid enough to try and
pick him up.
He glanced at his watch, giving it about
five minutes, and sure enough five
minutes later the businessman exited,
folding his wallet and returning it to
his pants pocket as he walked. He looked
like a satisfied customer. He returned
to his table, collected his belongings,
and left.
The kid returned to the bar a few
seconds later, rubbing the back of his
hand over his mouth as if trying to get
rid of a bad taste. He shoved some money
into his back pocket and glanced around.
Gibbs took a deep gulp of his drink,
waiting for the familiar sense of
oblivion to wash over him. He wasn't
there yet and he needed to get there, to
where he felt that click in his head and
nothing mattered any more.
"Hey…mind if I sit here?" a voice asked.
Gibbs glanced up. "Oh you have got to be
kidding me," he growled, looking into a
pair of hopeful green eyes.
"I'll take that as an invitation then,"
the kid said, sitting down opposite him.
He was the first person in days, maybe
even weeks – Gibbs wasn't counting – to
approach him. Everyone else had the good
sense to give him a wide berth.
"I'm not buying whatever it is you're
offering," Gibbs said abruptly. "And you
are taking one hell of a risk doing that
here. Shouldn't you be…someplace else?"
"Don't know what you mean." The kid
shrugged. "You drinking that?" he asked,
looking at Gibbs's drink.
"Yeah." Gibbs lifted his glass and
downed the rest of it in one go, then
held up his hand and got the bartender's
attention, pointing at his glass for a
refill.
"Buy one for me?" the kid asked, white
teeth gleaming as he grinned, hopefully.
He had a certain kind of puppyish charm,
Gibbs decided. He was tall – about 6
feet, almost as tall as he was and maybe
in a few years when he stopped growing
he'd be taller. His hair was streaked
blond, darker underneath, and he was
undeniably pretty.
"No," Gibbs replied tersely. The
bartender came over, and refilled his
glass.
"He bothering you?" he asked, glancing
at the kid. Gibbs shook his head.
"No. He'll be leaving soon," he
predicted. The bartender shrugged and
left, with a glare in the kid's
direction.
"You gonna be leaving soon too?" the kid
asked. "I could leave with you."
Gibbs shot him a look that would have
had the men in his old unit quivering in
their boots. The kid chewed on his lip,
his green eyes anxious.
"Didn't mean anything," he muttered.
"And I told you – this isn't a good
place for you to be doing…what you do,"
Gibbs growled. This place had to be full
of straight men who'd beat the crap out
of a hustler like this just for
suggesting they might be interested in
what he had to offer.
"I know." The kid shrugged. "I usually
work the Trojan – nightclub down the
street," he explained, when Gibbs raised
an eyebrow. "But I got thrown out and I
need to make some money so I thought it
was worth a try."
"Why don't you get yourself a job?"
Gibbs said. "A real job," he added,
before the kid got a chance to speak.
"I've got one," the kid shrugged. "But I
need more money than that pays."
"For drugs?" Gibbs asked, gazing at the
kid distastefully, suddenly wanting to
be rid of him.
"No. For college," the boy snapped back
at him, looking momentarily angry. Now
Gibbs figured out what was bothering him
about the kid. He had a preppy feel to
him – he wasn't like the rough kids he'd
come across before, the ones who usually
hung out on the street. This boy had
bucket loads of charm and an easygoing
manner, and was clearly intelligent and
educated – although Gibbs suspected he
could be quick with his fists in a fight
if he needed to be.
"College? You're kidding me." Gibbs
gulped down half his drink.
"Sure you want the rest of that?" the
kid asked, pointing at the other half
still in the glass.
"Damn sure," Gibbs replied.
The boy stared at him, licking his lips.
"You always know what you want?" he
asked.
"Usually." Gibbs shrugged.
"You want me?" the kid asked softly.
"You're staying in the motel opposite,
right? I could come back with you."
"How do you know I'm staying in the
motel?" Gibbs demanded.
"I watch. I see things." The kid
shrugged. He leaned across the table,
and his warm breath wafted across
Gibbs's cheek. "No need for you to be
alone tonight," he said. "I'm good," he
added, his tongue drifting over his
lower lip invitingly.
"I'll bet you are," Gibbs growled. "And
the answer is still no."
He finished his drink and got up. The
room swam around him and the boy reached
out a hand and grabbed his elbow,
steadying him. His hand was surprisingly
strong. Gibbs blinked, and his vision
cleared.
"Here." He reached into his wallet and
got out a twenty. "Go home," he said,
slapping the money down on the table,
wondering if he was going soft in his
old age.
The kid pocketed the money in double
quick time. Gibbs rolled his eyes and
walked, in a swerving line, towards the
door. His vision was hazy and he berated
himself momentarily for being an idiot.
The kid could come up behind him and try
and steal his wallet from him while he
walked back to the motel, blind drunk
like this. The kid hadn't seemed like a
thief but he was desperate, and Gibbs
had seen what desperation could do to
people.
He paused in the doorway, and held onto
it for a moment, then stumbled through
it. He staggered across the road to his
motel directly opposite, and then
fumbled for his key. He got inside, shut
the door behind him, and fell down on
the bed. The room swam around him and he
blinked, gazing at the ceiling, and then
passed out.
He wasn't sure how long he lay there but
he came to awhile later and realised he
needed to piss. He got up, slowly, and
made his way to the bathroom, holding
onto the walls and furniture as he went.
He took care of his full bladder and
then washed his hands. There was a thin
blind covering the window, but it only
just took the glare off the flashing
motel sign outside. It was starting to
rain. Gibbs flicked the blind aside and
gazed out as a streak of lightning
flashed through the air, competing with
the motel sign for brightness.
He frowned as something caught his eye,
and he saw the kid climbing into a
dumpster outside the bar opposite. The
bartender was closing up and a few
seconds later he turned off the lights
leaving the place in darkness. Gibbs
gazed at the dumpster for a moment, then
turned and went back to his room. The
kid wasn't his responsibility. They all
had their problems in life, and he had
enough of his own. He wasn't taking on
any more.
He lay down on the bed and gazed at the
ceiling again. Sometimes the drink made
him fall straight to sleep, but
sometimes, like now, it kept him awake.
He hated it when this happened. He
longed for the oblivion. Being a gunnery
sergeant in the Corps it had been his
job to whip kids like that one out there
into shape and he'd done a good job of
it too over the years. Gibbs grunted;
somehow he didn't think that kid out
there would do well in the Corps. There
was something too glib and easygoing
about him, something both charming and
knowing at the same time. He wasn't
Corps material. All the same…Gibbs
remembered the expression in those green
eyes; hope mingled with anxiety. That
kid was damaged, and Gibbs realised he
only knew that because he was too.
A clap of thunder was followed a second
later by the sound of hard rain pounding
on the motel roof. Gibbs sighed. He got
up, grabbed his keys, and walked out
into the storm. He crossed the street,
reached under a half-dozen cardboard
boxes in the dumpster, and then hauled
the kid out by the collar of his shirt.
The boy looked at him, wide-eyed.
"I thought I told you to go home," Gibbs
said.
"I did," the kid replied, raising his
chin defiantly. "I am." Those green eyes
defied Gibbs to comment on that.
"With me," Gibbs ordered curtly. "Now."
He turned on his heel and marched back
across the road, feeling suddenly stone
cold sober. This was a bad idea on so
many levels. The kid could steal his
wallet in his sleep – or worse. Gibbs
grunted – drunk or sober, there was no
way that kid would get out of the room
alive if he tried to steal from him. His
instincts were too finely honed from too
many war zones.
He walked into his motel room without
looking back, and heard the door close
quietly behind him.
"You can sleep on the floor. There's a
spare blanket in the closet," he said,
turning. The boy stood there looking
like a drowned rat, his blond hair stuck
down on his head from the rain, his
shirt sticking to his slender body.
"The bed would be nicer," the kid said,
with a beguiling little smile.
"Floor," Gibbs repeated, taking a pillow
from the bed and flinging it at him. The
kid caught it easily, his face breaking
into a grin, and that was when Gibbs
noticed he had a large bag over his
shoulder. The kid saw where he was
looking and grabbed the bag and held it
close to his body. "You got any drugs in
there and you can turn around and walk
straight out again," Gibbs said.
"No drugs," the kid said, still holding
onto the bag like it was a precious
object. Water trickled out of his wet
hair and down the side of his face.
Gibbs strode into the bathroom, got a
towel, and returned to the bedroom. He
flung the towel at the kid, who dropped
the bag in order to catch it. Gibbs
picked up the bag, opened it, and dumped
the contents out onto the bed.
"Hey!" the kid protested. "That's my
stuff!"
"And this is my room and I don't have
anything in my room that I don't know
about," Gibbs told him.
The bag contained a change of clothes,
some toiletries, some sport sweats and a
pair of expensive sneakers. There were a
couple of books and a pile of letters,
held together with string. There was
also, inevitably, a tube of lubricant
and a stash of condoms. It was an odd
combination but the kid hadn't been
lying – there were no drugs and no
weapons either. Gibbs put the stuff back
into the bag and handed it back to the
kid, who was rubbing his hair with the
towel.
"Okay – you can stay," Gibbs said. "On
the floor," he repeated, pointing. He
went over to the closet, found a
blanket, and threw it at the boy. "How
old are you?" Gibbs asked curiously.
"Nineteen. How old are you?" the kid
asked cheekily.
Gibbs found a spare tee shirt and pair
of boxer shorts in his own luggage and
gave them to the boy, ignoring his
question.
"Go get changed. In the bathroom," he
said, pointing the boy in the right
direction.
"I usually sleep naked," the kid said,
eyes gleaming suggestively.
"You got a room for the night. Don't
push your luck."
"Just saying – if you wanted paying…"
"I don't." Gibbs pushed the kid in the
direction of the bathroom.
He spread the blanket out on the floor
and then placed his wallet and gun
beneath his pillow – it wasn't worth
taking any chances. Then he took of his
outer clothes and lay down on the bed
again. Christ, this was madness. What
would Shannon say if she could see him
right now? Or his CO? Or even Mike
Franks? They'd all think he was being a
total idiot – and he was. It was
just…there was something about that kid,
something that made it impossible for
him to just turn his back on him. Maybe
it was the obvious desperation in his
eyes, or maybe it was the mystery. How
did a boy like that end up on the
streets?
The bathroom door opened and the kid
stood there, framed for a moment in the
doorway. He looked about ten years
younger in Gibbs's tee shirt and boxers,
his damp hair sticking up in spikes,
those green eyes of his still glowing
with a cheeky kind of charm.
"What's your name?" the boy asked.
Gibbs pointed at the blanket. "You don't
need to know. This is just for tonight,
because of the storm. Tomorrow you're on
your own again."
"My name's Andy," the kid said.
Gibbs glanced up at him. "No it isn't,"
he said. "But it'll do. Good night,
Andy." He grabbed his pillow and turned
his back on the kid, closing his eyes.
"G'night," Andy said.
Gibbs heard him settle down under the
blanket beside the bed and a few seconds
later he heard his breathing change, and
the slight snuffle of a snore. He turned
over, berating himself in his head. Andy
had drawn the blanket up to almost cover
him completely, so all that Gibbs could
see were the spikes of his hair. He was
lying on his side, knees drawn up
against his chest, sleeping in a foetal
position.
"Oh Christ. What the hell are you doing,
Jethro?" Gibbs whispered to himself.
~*~
2008
Gibbs watched while Tony flirted with
the pretty brunette at the ticket desk
at the airport, and then flirted with
the petite blonde at the gate. They
boarded the plane and Tony slung his
luggage into the overhead, and then
slung Gibbs's bag in after it. They took
their seats, Tony by the window, Gibbs
beside him.
A flight attendant – very tall, very
handsome and very gay - served them
drinks and handed them each a
plastic-wrapped sandwich. Tony flirted
with him too, although more discreetly.
Gibbs was all too familiar with it and
let it wash over him. Tony flirted like
other people breathed – although usually
he was careful not to let people notice
him flirting too obviously with men. The
over-active flirting with women was a
cover for that but it was a cover Gibbs
had seen through years ago – besides, he
knew precisely how practised Tony was in
the bedroom, with women *and* men. His
senior agent didn't advertise his
bisexuality - in fact he did a standard
DiNozzo misdirect where his sexuality
was concerned - so Gibbs doubted that
anyone else at NCIS was aware of it, but
Gibbs had known Tony DiNozzo before he
became an NCIS agent – long before.
Tony kept up a running commentary as the
plane took off, telling him the latest
sport scores, describing a movie he’d
seen a couple of nights ago and why
Gibbs would have hated it, and then
moving on to an overly detailed
appreciation of the female flight
attendant's shapely legs. Gibbs sat
there and listened. Tony always talked
too much when he was anxious, and right
now he was clearly very anxious indeed.
Gibbs wondered when he'd last seen his
father, and whether it was as long ago
as he suspected.
"How long have you known he had cancer?"
he asked, breaking into Tony's monologue
on Jack Nicholson's career to date,
including some pretty good
impersonations of the catch phrases from
his best roles. Tony flinched, and Gibbs
had an old, familiar sensation of having
kicked an annoyingly overactive puppy.
Tony's shoulders hunched and he gazed
out of the window, all his earlier
exuberance gone.
"My cousin called me when he was
diagnosed," he said. "Liver cancer. Not
a surprise – I'm just amazed his liver
held out this long to be honest. The way
he drinks I thought he'd get cirrhosis
years ago."
"You go and visit him when you found
out?" Gibbs asked.
Tony's shoulders hunched even more but
he turned to face Gibbs. "I called," he
muttered. "He said there was no need to
visit. So I didn't." He gave a bright,
false smile. Gibbs stared at him, and
the smile faltered, and then faded
completely. "Look," Tony said, in that
serious tone Gibbs rarely ever heard him
use. "It's not that I don't appreciate
you being here, boss – it's just that I
don't know why you are – here I mean.
Doing this. With me. This doesn't
concern you. It's family. I can do it
alone."
"I know." Gibbs shrugged.
Tony gazed at him, clearly expecting –
or hoping – for more. Gibbs raised an
eyebrow. Tony sighed. "You seemed pretty
curious about *my* family a few weeks
ago, DiNozzo," Gibbs added, which wasn't
an answer but might do for now. Tony had
sniffed around his hometown like a
bloodhound when they'd gone to
Stillwater on a case recently. That was
Tony though; his insatiable curiosity –
some would say nosiness - made him an
excellent agent and a really annoying
co-worker.
"What – and this is payback?" Tony
looked incredulous. "He's *dying*,
Gibbs."
"I know – and no, this isn't payback."
Gibbs wondered if Tony really thought he
was that crass and insensitive. "When
did you last see him, Tony?" he asked
quietly.
"I don't remember," Tony said, although
Gibbs was certain that was a lie. "A
long time ago. Eighteen years maybe."
"Eighteen?" Gibbs felt mildly relieved
about that.
"Yeah – what the hell is wrong with
that? I call him every Christmas," Tony
snapped, mistaking Gibbs's question. "At
least it wasn't
nineteen-fucking-seventy-six when I last
visited," he muttered.
Gibbs slapped the back of his head, and
that seemed to snap Tony out of it.
"Sorry. I didn't meant that," Tony said
sheepishly. "It's just…I'm not looking
forward to this, Gibbs. I'm not sure how
it'll be, or whether he'll even want to
see me."
"He's your dad, Tony, and he's dying. Of
course he'll want to see you," Gibbs
said softly.
"You think?" Tony shook his head. "Trust
me, Gibbs – my father is nothing at all
like yours," He turned back to look out
of the window again, those hunched
shoulders making it clear he didn't have
anything more to say on that subject.
Gibbs leaned back in his chair and
folded his hands across his seat belt.
"Yeah, I sure as hell know that, DiNozzo,"
he muttered under his breath.
~*~
1991
Gibbs woke to find himself pinned down
by a warm, heavy weight.
“Shannon?” he muttered, moving his arm
down to find a body curled up almost on
top of him, about as close as it was
possible to get without suffocating. He
hugged the body for a moment, relishing
the warmth, and it moved sleepily
against him. A head was resting on his
shoulder, an arm was slung over his
chest, and a leg was entangled in his.
He could feel soft hair under his chin,
and smell the warm scent of…not Shannon.
The memory of losing her hit him again,
making his gut clench.
He looked down and saw Andy, hanging
onto him like a limpet, and felt a
savage surge of anger. He shoved the boy
aside, roughly unpicking arms and legs
from around his body, ignoring the kid’s
hazy squawk of protest, rolled out of
the bed and strode into the bathroom. He
looked at himself in the mirror and
grimaced. He had a few days growth of
beard on his chin and he looked like
he’d aged ten years in the past few
months. His hair, which had once been
brown, was now peppered with grey
streaks. His breath stank so he cleaned
his teeth, and then returned to the
bedroom.
Andy was sitting up in the bed, looking
confused, hair sticking out in a dozen
different directions, eyes half-closed.
“Who the hell said you could get in the
bed with me?” Gibbs demanded.
“I was cold,” Andy said.
“Not as cold as you’d have been if I’d
left you in that damn dumpster!”
“And lonely,” Andy added and there was
something about the way he said it that
dampened Gibbs’s anger immediately. He
glanced up at Gibbs from sleepy eyes.
“Come back to bed. I can make it up to
you.”
“Christ, you never stop trying, do you?”
Gibbs sighed. “Get it into that thick
skull of yours that I’m not interested.
D’you think that if I fuck you that
you’ll have some kind of hold over me?
Or do you think that if I fuck you then
I’ll have to give you more money – that
it?”
“I’d let you fuck me for free,” Andy
said unexpectedly. Gibbs blinked. “I
like you.” Andy shrugged. “You smell
like my dad.”
“I smell of fucking liquor!” Gibbs
growled, lowering his face to sniff the
tee shirt he’d slept in.
“Yeah. Like my dad.”
“Where the hell is your dad? Does he
know you’re living rough, whoring
yourself out like this?” Gibbs demanded.
Andy’s eyes darkened. “No,” he said,
with a terse shake of his head.
He slid out of the bed, keeping his
distance from Gibbs, eyeing him warily.
He edged past him into the bathroom and
shut the door behind him. Gibbs heard
the sound of the toilet flushing, then
the shower being turned on, and then a
few minutes later the kid returned to
the bedroom, damp and completely naked.
He slung Gibbs’s boxers and tee shirt on
the bed.
“Thanks,” he muttered.
He turned to his bag and bent over it,
searching for his spare set of clothes.
Gibbs couldn’t help looking at the
youth. He had long, slim legs, strong,
broad shoulders, and a surprisingly
sturdy torso, even if his ribs were
sticking out a bit too much. There were
a couple of bruises on his thighs and
buttocks, which didn’t surprise Gibbs
considering his line of work. His body
was firmly muscled, as if he worked out
a lot, or ran, or played a lot of sport,
or a combination of all three.
Andy stood up, and looked at Gibbs
looking at him. He stood there, naked
and unashamed. His cock was long and
loose, hanging down over his firm balls.
He knew he looked good, and he wanted
Gibbs to know it too.
“Last chance; I have to get to work.
It’s free,” he said. “And you look like
you know how to give a good fuck.”
“Oh just get dressed and go,” Gibbs
growled, but he couldn’t help grinning
slightly, despite himself. There was
something infectious about the kid’s
charm, energy, and sheer damn
persistence.
“I don’t have to be there for an hour.
There’s a diner down the street. You
could buy me breakfast first,” Andy
suggested, with a broad grin.
Somehow, fifteen minutes later, Gibbs
found himself washed and dressed and
sitting in the diner opposite Andy.
“So what work is it you do in the
daytime?” Gibbs found himself asking. He
didn’t want to be interested but somehow
he couldn’t help himself.
“I caddy – at the country club,” Andy
replied. He took a brief look at the
menu and then his head swivelled as a
pretty girl in tight, ass-hugging jeans
passed the table. Andy’s gaze remained
fixed on her ass until she disappeared
into the restroom and then he turned
back to the menu.
The waitress came over, and smiled at
them both.
“I’ll have the scrambled eggs with
sausage and toast,” Gibbs said, handing
back the menu.
“And what would your son like?” she
asked, glancing at Andy.
“Oh he’s not…” Gibbs began, and then he
saw the wide grin on Andy’s face and he
stopped. It wasn’t worth it. He was
sixteen years older than the boy – only
*just* old enough to be his father, but
he supposed the newly greying hair, the
bags under his eyes from all his recent
drinking, and his years in the Marine
Corps gave him an air of authority and
made him seem older.
Andy ordered three different kinds of
donut. Gibbs shook his head, and grabbed
the menu away from him.
“He’ll have the same as me,” he told the
waitress, who nodded approvingly at the
fact he wasn’t allowing his “son” to opt
for the empty calorie choice for
breakfast.
“I like donuts,” Andy pouted.
“I don’t care,” Gibbs shrugged. “So –
don’t you make enough from caddying at
the country club to afford somewhere to
sleep at night?”
“No.” Andy’s shoulders hunched miserably
under his shirt, and Gibbs felt like
he’d kicked a puppy. Clearly the kid
didn’t want to talk about this. Gibbs
wasn’t even sure why he wanted to know;
it was none of his business.
Their meal arrived and they ate in
silence. Gibbs had never seen anyone eat
the way Andy ate – he wolfed the food
down in seconds, and then eyed the food
on Gibbs’s plate. “Oh go on – have it,”
Gibbs sighed, pushing his plate across
the table. He wasn’t hungry anyway – he
still had the last vestiges of a
hangover.
“So what about you?” Andy asked, around
a mouthful of sausage. “You’re not from
around here, are you?”
“What makes you say that?” Gibbs
frowned. Andy grinned.
“Your car number plates,” he said. “I
told you – I watch – I see stuff,” he
added. “What are you doing in Columbus?”
“That’s where we are?” Gibbs glanced
around. “Columbus, Ohio?”
“Well…yeah.” Andy raised an eyebrow.
“You don’t know where you are? Hah –
you’re even more fucked up than me,
man.”
“Yeah. I probably am, Andy,” Gibbs said
softly.
“You want to talk about it?” Andy seemed
suddenly older than his nineteen years,
those green eyes curious.
“No,” Gibbs replied shortly. He hadn’t
wanted to talk about it to his friends,
to Mike Franks, to his old CO, even to
his father. He sure as hell didn’t want
to talk about it to a hustler he’d met
in a bar.
“You just drive? I’ve always liked that
idea; just head out in a car, going
wherever you feel like.” Andy’s eyes
glowed a bit as he said that.
“You like cars?”
“I love cars. I’m going to own a bright
red Ferrari one day. Like my dad. I
always used to think he’d give me his
when I turned eighteen but…well…” Andy
broke off and shrugged.
“You want to talk about it?” Gibbs
mimicked. Andy grinned.
“Nah. I’ll buy my own one day,” he said.
“So – what are you running from? Wait!
Did you kill someone? Are you a fugitive
on the run from the cops?” His eyes lit
up expressively, and Gibbs thought he’d
make the kid’s day if he said yes.
“Do I look like a killer?” Gibbs asked,
grinning all the same because there was
something infectious about Andy’s glee.
“Well…yeah,” Andy said, as if that was a
really stupid question. ”And you keep a
gun under your pillow so I figured you
were on the run.”
Gibbs didn’t even want to think about
how he knew about the gun under his
pillow. “Maybe I am,” Gibbs sighed.
“Just not the way you think”.
“Is it a girl?” Andy quirked a
sympathetic eyebrow. “I can totally see
why you’d be on the run from a girl –
guys are easy, but girls want stuff;
emotional stuff.”
“You like girls, Andy?” Gibbs asked,
curious about the young man’s sexuality,
wondering where his natural inclination
lay, leaving aside the issue of money.
“I like sex,” Andy told him cheerfully.
“I don’t really mind who it’s with as
long as they’re hot. You’re hot,” he
added. “I’d fuck you.”
“I think we’ve established that – many
times,” Gibbs said dryly.
“I like how hard your body is,” Andy
said, leaning forward, his tongue
wetting his lower lip again. “You work
out?”
“I used to,” Gibbs muttered.
“So – how does this work for you? You
drive until you feel like stopping, you
check into a motel, you get drunk, and
then you wake up and start driving
again?” Andy asked. Gibbs had a sudden
flash of insight that this kid was far
sharper than he appeared on the surface.
“Maybe,” he said, glancing at his watch.
“And it’s getting late. I need to head
out.”
“Out of town? Now? You’re moving on?
Already?” Andy’s eyes looked suddenly
sullen.
“Yeah. Like you said – that’s what I do.
You need a lift to the country club?”
“Yeah. Thanks. Just…let me use the
restroom – I’ll be right back.” Andy
slid away and disappeared. Gibbs called
the waitress over and paid the bill.
“Oh – and give me those donuts he asked
for earlier – to go,” he told her. She
rolled her eyes at him in a
conspiratorial way and filled up a bag
for him. Andy was a long time in the
restroom and Gibbs was about to go in
there and find him when the kid suddenly
reappeared.
“Here.” Gibbs gave him the bag of
donuts.
“Cool!” Andy grabbed one out of the bag
and began eating it immediately.
“I thought you could eat them later but
clearly you’re still hungry,” Gibbs
muttered as they walked out to the car.
“Although how that can be physically
possible god only knows.”
They got into the car and Gibbs stuck
his key in the ignition. Andy was
keeping up a running commentary on how
good the donuts were, complete with
orgasmic noises, and didn’t pay any
attention when the car failed to start.
“Oh shit,” Gibbs sighed. He turned the
key again and the engine made a
wrenching sound and then crunched into
silence. Andy winced.
“Sounds bad. You’ll need to get it
fixed,” he said. “I know a good garage
down the road – just over there.” He
pointed. “You could walk there and get
them to come and tow it. Shit – I’m
late. I’d better head off. Thanks for
the donuts. And, you know – good luck
with the running away thing.” He leaned
over and pressed a warm, sloppy kiss to
Gibbs’s cheek. “See you then.”
And then he was gone. Gibbs felt a
sudden pang of loneliness, which was
absurd. He’d only known the boy a few
hours, and while he was amusing company
he wasn’t exactly the kind of person
he’d choose to be around right now.
The mechanic in the garage wasn’t
helpful. Gibbs knew he could have fixed
the damn car himself if he had the tools
and parts but he had no choice but to
hand it over to the mechanic with a
vague agreement that he’d get it back
someday soon but no promises as to when.
It wasn’t like he had anywhere to be,
but it chafed all the same. He didn’t
want to spend long in any one place, and
he hated the idea of just sitting around
waiting.
In the end, he remembered what Andy had
said about working out and found a
boxing gym in the area. He paid for a
few sessions and lost himself in the old
routines of stretching, skipping,
punching and sparring that he’d always
enjoyed back in the Corps. Despite all
the recent drinking, he wasn’t as out of
shape as he had expected – years of
vigorous Marine Corps exercise had
clearly paid off - and he was soon
almost back up to his old fighting
speed.
The endorphins helped his mood, and he
spent the best part of the day there
before heading back to the motel for a
shower. He realised he’d gone through
all his clothes so he did some laundry
and then went back to the bar across the
road for his usual date with alcoholic
oblivion.
Maybe he’d started drinking earlier than
usual, or maybe the exercise had
affected him, but he got drunk quicker
than usual. He missed his car, and the
knowledge that he could just get up and
run away tomorrow, and that made him
feel belligerent. He got into a couple
of arguments, and finally the bartender
refused his request for another drink.
Gibbs slurred out a protest but left,
grumbling under his breath as he
staggered back to the motel.
He nearly fell down in the road, and a
car blared at him as it swerved to avoid
him. A second later he felt a strong arm
go around his waist, and someone
dragging his arm across their shoulder.
He turned to see a pair of bright eyes
grinning at him.
“Could have got yourself killed there,
Leroy,” Andy said. “Good thing I was
passing.”
“How do you know…? Oh fuck it, I don’t
care,” he said, glad of Andy’s strong
body holding him up because he couldn’t
seem to put one foot in front of the
other right now. Andy helped him over to
the motel and propped him against the
wall, then frisked through his pockets
for his key. He hauled Gibbs into the
room, dumped him on the bed, and then
began unlacing his boots. Gibbs sat
there, gazing stupidly at the boy’s
hair. It was brown at the roots and
streaked blond on top.
“How’d those get there?” he muttered,
suddenly acutely interested in the blond
streaks. He ran his hand through Andy’s
hair. Andy grinned up at him.
“Lemon juice,” he said. “Sun bleaches
through where I’ve squeezed it on.”
“Why the fuck bother?” Gibbs slurred.
Andy shrugged, and pulled his boots off.
“I like it, Leroy,” he said.
“Jethro,” Gibbs muttered, annoyed. “Not
Leroy. Jethro. You look in my wallet,
Andy? That how you know my name?”
“Yeah.” Andy grinned proudly, as if he’d
done nothing wrong. “One day I’m going
to be a Private Investigator – like
Magnum.”
“Who the hell is Magnum?” Gibbs asked,
frowning.
“You know – Magnum PI.” Andy hummed a
few bars of what might have been a TV
theme tune. Gibbs shook his head. He had
a sudden flash of worry that cut through
his current drunken state and he slid
his hand under the pillow.
“I didn’t take your gun,” Andy said
quickly. “I just looked in your wallet
this morning – while you were in the
shower. I didn’t take any of your money
either.”
Gibbs pulled out the gun, and held it
loosely in his hand. Andy bit on his
lip, looking worried. He reached out and
tried to take the gun from him. Gibbs
shoved him away.
“Don’t touch it. I might need it. I
haven’t decided yet,” he muttered.
“You thinking of killing someone, Jethro?”
Andy asked quietly.
“Yeah. Me.” Gibbs slid the gun back
under the pillow.
“I hope you don’t,” Andy said, a
pleading look in his eyes.
“What the hell does it matter to you?”
Gibbs snapped at him.
“I like you.” Andy shrugged. “I told you
that already.”
He undid Gibbs’s pants and pulled his
shirt out from the waistband, holding
him up as he lolled against him. Gibbs
was suddenly very sure the kid had done
this before – many times.
“Your old man get drunk a lot?” he
asked. Andy grinned.
“Yeah. All the time.” He pulled Gibbs
out of his clothes, leaving him in his
boxers and tee shirt, then pushed him
back onto the bed and pulled the sheets
up around him. Then he stretched, and
yawned. “I’d better stay the night…make
sure you’re okay,” he said. He shucked
off his own clothes, leaving them in an
untidy heap on the floor, and then
slipped into the bed beside Gibbs.
Gibbs had one sudden moment of total
clarity before unconsciousness claimed
him.
“Oh fuck it – it was you, wasn’t it? You
screwed around with my car; that’s why
it wouldn’t start.”
Andy stiffened guiltily beside him and
then it was too late – Gibbs was out
cold.
~*~
2008
They picked up a rental car at
LaGuardia. Tony took the wheel, and
Gibbs gazed out of the window, watching
as the high-rise apartments of Queens
gave way to the leafy, well-heeled
suburbs of Long Island’s north shore.
They drove through affluent areas, large
houses with long, elegant driveways
protected by gates and expensive
security systems. Tony got quieter and
quieter the further they drove, until
finally he shut up completely. A silent
Tony was an un-nerving thing – usually
he talked more, not less, when he was
anxious - and Gibbs didn’t like the way
this was headed.
They pulled up at the Holiday Inn near
Tony's family home in Old Westbury where
Tony had booked two rooms for them.
Gibbs dumped his bag in his room, and
then went back downstairs to find Tony
standing in the lobby looking...kind of
lost. He didn’t even notice the
attractive young blonde who passed him
by wearing a short, tight skirt – and
that wasn’t like Tony.
Tony saw him, and Gibbs went over to
where he was standing.
“So…I’m going to head over to the
house,” Tony said. He stared absently
over Gibbs’s shoulder for a moment.
Gibbs gazed at him, waiting for his cue.
“I…uh…”
“You want me to come with you?” Gibbs
asked. “Or stay here?”
Tony looked relieved – as if he hadn’t
been aware he was actually going to be
given a choice in the matter. Gibbs bit
back a growl of annoyance. Being in the
vicinity was enough – he didn’t need to
actually accompany Tony to his father’s
deathbed – although he would if Tony
wanted that. He had to be nearby though,
because he had a feeling that when this
seventeen year old corpse was finally
opened up and autopsied, and the remains
pored over and analysed, it might get
very ugly. At the very least there would
be fallout, and as it was fallout he’d
partially created the least he could do
was be here to take his fair share of
it. He couldn’t tell Tony that though;
Tony still didn’t have a clue why he was
here.
“Tony?” Gibbs asked softly. Tony’s
shoulders hunched, and he morphed in
seconds from the capable if fairly
annoying senior agent he’d want on his
six in a shoot-out, to the nineteen year
old kid he’d met in a bar a long time
ago. Gibbs found the whole thing a
little freaky. In all the years Tony had
worked for him at NCIS he’d only seen
glimpses of Andy in him. Now though…it
was as if the years had been turned
back, and they were lying in a bed in a
motel room in Ohio. It was only
momentary though, and then Tony was back
with him.
“Yeah…come with me,” Tony said, and then
he looked surprised, as if he hadn’t
been expecting to say that. Gibbs
nodded.
“Okay.”
The DiNozzo family house was grand and
imposing, set at the end of a long,
sweeping driveway. They pulled up
outside, and a man around Tony’s age
came out to greet them.
“Hey – you made it,” he said, grabbing
Tony and pulling him into a hug. Gibbs
got out of the car and leaned on the
open door, watching.
“Pete! You’re looking old – when did you
lose all your hair?”
“Must have been around the same time you
got so fat!” Pete grinned. Insults duly
exchanged, they gazed at each other
happily for a few seconds, and then
Pete’s grin faded, and he cleared his
throat. “I’m sorry about…you know, I
wanted you to stay here,” Pete said. He
was a tall, broad-shouldered man, with
only slightly receding dark hair despite
Tony’s comment, and looked enough like
Tony for Gibbs to guess he had to be his
cousin. “It’s not like there aren’t
enough bedrooms,” Pete added, with an
apologetic wince. “I just thought…you
know – he’s dying. I didn’t want to
stress him out by asking him and I
wasn’t sure how it’d go with you two
so…”
“It’s okay. I understand. And quit
lying, Pete – it wasn’t that you didn’t
want to stress him out – you *did* ask
him and he said no.” Tony’s hunched
shoulders were a giveaway to Gibbs that
he while he might say he understood, it
still hurt that his father didn’t want
him staying in his house.
Pete winced again. “At least he’s said
he’ll see you.”
“Old man must be mellowing then,” Tony
said, with a bright grin, slapping his
cousin’s arm. Gibbs didn’t think the
bright grin was fooling anyone. “What
happened to the whole ‘never darken my
doorstep again’ thing, huh?”
“Well, that was years ago. I thought the
two of you had…not exactly patched
things up but…that you’re talking
again?”
“Once a year. Christmas day.” Tony
shrugged. “I tell him what I’m earning
now and he tells me about his latest tax
avoidance scheme. Then we, you know,
argue. I think that phone call kind of
makes his Christmas – it sure as hell
makes mine.”
“Better than nothing,” Pete offered.
Gibbs closed the car door, and Pete
looked up, surprised.
“Uh…this is…” Tony hesitated, clearly
unsure how to introduce Gibbs. Gibbs saw
the shock in Pete’s eyes and knew
immediately that he suspected Tony had
brought a boyfriend home with him. So,
it seemed that Tony’s misdirection in
respect of his sexuality hadn’t been
entirely successful where his close
family was concerned. That might explain
a lot.
“Gibbs.” He stepped forward and held out
his hand to Pete. “Leroy Jethro Gibbs –
I’m Tony’s boss at NCIS.”
“Oh. Right.” Pete looked relieved but
still a little puzzled as he shook his
hand.
“And his friend,” Gibbs added, to help
explain away his presence a little more
easily. He almost wished he hadn’t said
that when he saw the little spike of
happiness in Tony’s eyes at being called
a “friend”. It was always the little
stuff with Tony – a tiny word of praise
or expression of satisfaction at his
performance at work would make his eyes
light up and stay that way for days.
Gibbs wondered how he’d feel if he
finally got a chance to meet the bastard
who had made Tony this way. Maybe he
would soon. Very soon.
They went into the house and Gibbs
looked around discreetly. He didn’t
think he’d ever seen such a grand place
– at least not somewhere people lived
in, as a home. He’d seen hotels that
came close. Pete led them into the
enormous kitchen, where several people
were milling around, drinking coffee.
This must be what happened when you were
rich and died in your own home, Gibbs
thought to himself, feeling a sudden
wave of gratitude that his own family
origins were so humble. If you were rich
like Tony’s dad, people just gathered
around and waited, like vultures, hoping
to pick over the corpse and see what
they could carry away with them.
Tony was enveloped into hugs by various
aunts and cousins while Pete explained
away Gibbs’s presence to anyone who was
interested. He felt a hand on his arm
and turned…to come face to face with a
bespectacled man, a few years older than
Tony.
“Uh, Mr Gibbs – this is Daniel Weston –
the DiNozzo family lawyer,” Pete said.
Gibbs held out his hand,
expressionlessly, looking into the face
of a man he’d met once before, seventeen
years ago. He’d lost that air of young
earnestness that he’d had back then; now
he radiated a kind of quiet, experienced
capability. If he remembered Gibbs, and
Gibbs was pretty sure he did, he gave no
sign of it. He just shook Gibbs’s hand
and gazed at him thoughtfully.
“It was nice of you to come up here with
Tony,” he said, and Gibbs remembered
from before how deceptively sharp those
blue eyes behind the spectacles were.
Gibbs gave a non-committal grunt in
reply. Weston moved away as Tony was
released by a large, overly enthusiastic
aunt who had been kissing his cheeks for
the past several minutes. Weston took
hold of Tony’s arm and guided him into a
private corner, murmuring to him. They
were close enough for Gibbs to overhear
the conversation.
“I just didn’t want you to get your
hopes up,” Weston was saying to Tony.
“His will remains pretty much as it has
been for the past few years – he’s made
no secret of it so I’m at liberty to
tell you.”
“No death-bed changes of heart, huh?”
Tony rubbed his hand over his chin.
“Not unless you can work a miracle in
the next day or so,” Weston told him.
“Oh I don’t care about his damn money,”
Tony snapped, with an uncharacteristic
display of temper. “I never did.
Well…maybe once,” he grinned, smoothing
over his lapse in temperament with his
usual charm. “When I was younger; I
always did want that red Ferrari of
his.”
Weston’s eyes were sympathetic behind
his glasses and he shook Tony’s hand,
holding it tightly between his own, then
he released him and moved away. Tony
came over to where Gibbs was standing.
“Sorry about this, boss. I had no idea
all these relatives would crawl out of
the woodwork. It’s like something out of
The Godfather – and I really
don’t want to give you the impression
that we’re one of *those* types of
Italian families.”
Gibbs gave a little chuckle and was
about to reply when Pete butted in.
“So – you ready to see him?” he asked
Tony.
“Now?” Tony’s voice was tight and
anxious.
Pete grabbed his arm. “Tony – I can’t
promise you he’ll still be here
tomorrow. Now might be all you have,” he
said urgently. Tony gazed at him, then
took a deep breath and nodded.
“Okay then.” He put down his coffee and
followed Pete towards the door, and then
turned. He glanced back at Gibbs, and,
once again, that expression was there -
the pleading one, the one that took him
back seventeen years to when he’d been
drop dead drunk in a motel room, staring
at his gun and trying to decide whether
to kill himself. Tony had been a
lifeline for him then – the least he
could do was be there for him now.
“I’ve got your six, Tony,” he said
softly, walking on behind. Tony gave him
a look of relief and Gibbs followed him
out of the kitchen and up a massive
flight of stairs. They walked along a
long hallway, passing several doors as
they went. Gibbs wondered how any
father, deathbed or not, would make his
son stay in a hotel when he had this
much space in his house, but then again,
what kind of father disowned his own son
when he was just a kid? He’d always
wondered, and now, it seemed, he was
about to find out.
~*~
1991
Gibbs awoke to a warm, entirely pleasant
sensation in his groin. The pounding
headache and savage pain behind the eyes
caused by his hangover were offset a
little by the waves of pleasure
currently coursing through his body. He
lay there for a moment, trying blearily
to figure out why he felt so good. He
could hear sucking noises, and his cock
was rock hard, and…oh shit. He moaned,
and moved his hand down, groping blindly
until he found Andy’s head nestled
against his groin. The sucking noise
stopped, and he bit back a curse because
it had felt so good having Andy’s mouth
wrapped around his morning hard-on.
He glanced down to see Andy looking up
at him warily, his lips sinfully swollen
from his recent activity.
“Well don’t damn well stop now,” Gibbs
growled, his balls aching. “Finish what
you started.”
Andy grinned at him happily, and then
bent his head again and enveloped
Gibbs’s cock between those wide, mobile
lips, an expression of intense
concentration on his face as he slowly
drew back, then dipped his head forward
again. Gibbs bit back a moan. Christ,
the kid was good at this. He carded his
fingers through Andy’s hair, stroking
softly as the kid sucked him; it felt so
good…too good.
Gibbs didn’t even want to think about
insane this was. Being in the Corps had
hardly been a sheltered existence, and
he’d had a handful of homosexual
encounters – although they’d all been
before he met Shannon. He’d allowed
other men to jerk him off, and back when
he was no more than Andy’s age, and his
raging hormones had made him open to all
kinds of offers, he’d embarked on an
entirely sexual relationship with one of
the men in his unit of his own age, Joe
Ellis. He could remember stroking Joe’s
buzz cut hair while Joe knelt in front
of him, sucking him off; or meeting Joe
in the head, both of them crowding into
the stall, Joe bracing himself over the
toilet while Gibbs fucked him hard from
behind.
At the time he hadn’t viewed their
clandestine encounters as anything more
than a way to blow off some sexual
steam, to get it out of his system so he
could concentrate on his job and avoid
pissing off his CO who thought he was a
hot-headed troublemaker. However,
looking back he wondered whether it
hadn’t meant a whole lot more to Joe
than it had to him. Gibbs had enjoyed
the sex far more than he’d wanted to
admit and keeping Joe at arm’s length
had been his way of handling what they
were doing. Falling in love with Shannon
on his first leave home after joining up
had been a huge relief – he hadn’t gone
near another man since then. Until now.
Andy’s hair didn’t feel anything like
Joe’s. Andy’s hair was longer and
softer, but his mouth felt just as good
on Gibbs’s cock. He stroked Andy’s hair
the way he had once stroked Joe’s, and,
when he came, he thrust his hips up with
a hoarse shout, and wrapped his fist in
that thick hair, holding on tight as he
spurted out into Andy’s mouth. Joe had
always spat out his come, but Andy
swallowed it, a satisfied, almost smug
grin on his face, then he swiped his
tongue over the head of Gibbs’s cock a
couple of times to clean it.
“See, I told you I was good,” he said.
Gibbs released his hold on the kid’s
hair and Andy snaked his way up towards
him. He snuggled up against Gibbs’s
right side, rested his head on Gibbs’s
shoulder, and wrapped an arm around
Gibbs’s midriff. Gibbs lay there, gazing
up at the ceiling. When Gibbs didn’t
move, Andy reached out, took hold of
Gibbs’s left arm, and pulled it across
his own body, so that Gibbs was now
holding him. Then he pressed a kiss to
the side of Gibbs’s face.
“I haven’t forgotten about the car,”
Gibbs said, glancing at him, although he
didn’t move the arm that Andy had
carefully positioned into a semblance of
a hug. Andy winced, theatrically. “What
the hell were you thinking?” Gibbs
demanded.
“That if I gave you a really good
blowjob you might not remember?” Andy
admitted, that cheeky glint back in his
eyes.
“Not that! What were you thinking
sneaking out from the diner while I
thought you were in the restroom and
messing with my car yesterday?”
Andy chewed on his lower lip. “You told
me you weren’t going anywhere special so
I thought it’d be nice if you hung
around here some more. With me,” he
added.
“You mean you wanted a room to sleep in
at night,” Gibbs muttered.
“No. I told you – I like you. And I
figured if you kept on driving, and kept
on drinking, that one of these days
you’d get yourself killed – or you’d
turn that gun under the pillow on
yourself,” Andy said. “And that’s just a
waste.”
“When I could be your meal ticket
instead?” Gibbs raised an eyebrow.
“Why are you so damn suspicious?” Andy
asked, his eyes sullen again, the way
they had been at the diner yesterday
when Gibbs had told him that he was
going to leave.
“Because you’re a hustler, Andy, and a
devious little shit – you screwed with
my car and you’ve been lying to me.”
“Okay – I admit that I messed with your
car and I’m sorry about that but I
haven’t lied to you,” Andy said, with a
frown.
Gibbs shoved him away, got out of the
bed, and strode over to where Andy’s bag
was lying in the corner of the room. He
opened it, found the sneakers, and held
them up.
“Where did you get these from?” he
demanded. “They’re expensive, Andy. You
steal them?”
“No.” Andy sat up in bed, hair sticking
up at all angles from where Gibbs had
had his fist in it, looking pissed off
now.
“Then how the hell did you afford stuff
like this? And what’s this?” Gibbs
reached into the bag and found a
different set of clothes to the ones
Andy had been wearing yesterday, shirt
and pants nicely laundered. “These are
expensive as well. Where did these come
from? You steal these too?”
“I haven’t stolen a damn thing,” Andy
said sullenly. “They’re mine.”
“How can you afford this kind of stuff
when you can’t even afford a room for
the night?” Gibbs snapped. “Who are you,
Andy? You aren’t like any hustler I’ve
ever seen. You don’t do drugs, you’re
educated, you have way too much
self-confidence, you’ve got all this
expensive shit and yet you whore
yourself out and sleep in dumpsters.
What’s your story?”
“My mom bought me the clothes,” Andy
told him. “Happy now?”
“Happy? I’m not even close to happy,
Andy,” Gibbs growled. “Where are you
stashing this stuff anyhow?”
“At the country club,” Andy replied,
glaring at him. “I get the use of a
locker. I might have, uh, appropriated
more than one locker – several in fact.
When I got thrown out of my apartment a
few weeks ago because I couldn’t pay the
rent any more I moved my stuff in there.
If I make nice with the girls there they
wash my clothes. I can use the showers.
I can’t sleep there though – I got
caught doing that once and I’d lose my
job if it happened again.”
“If your mom can afford to buy you these
clothes then couldn’t she help you with
the rent?” Gibbs demanded.
Andy’s eyes darkened to a dull shade of
grey-green. “My mom died a few months
ago,” he said quietly. “And before you
ask, she didn’t leave me any money. She
didn’t have any damn money. She was an
alcoholic – oh, not the drunk in gutters
type like you – no, she was the genteel
kind – she’d dress up nice every day and
go and sit in places like the country
club down the road, where she’d sip on
martinis all day and all night long. Any
money she had she spent on drink apart
from the stuff she sent me. She paid for
me to go to college by selling off the
jewellery my dad gave her when they were
married, but there wasn’t a whole lot of
that left when she died and she was up
to her eyeballs in debt. I didn’t find
that out until after she was gone
though.”
Gibbs stared at him but he had a gut
feeling for when people were telling him
the truth, and he was sure the kid
wasn’t lying.
“What about your dad?” he asked. “Can’t
he help you through college?”
A mixture of emotions so complicated
Gibbs couldn’t even begin to unravel
them passed over Andy’s expressive face,
and then he shut down, and shook his
head, firmly.
“Listen – you got the stuff about my mom
for free but we’re done now,” Andy said.
“I’m sorry I messed with your car –
here…” He scooted down the bed until he
got to the side nearest to Gibbs,
reached out, grabbed his bag from
Gibbs’s hand, and felt around inside it.
He pulled out a fistful of money. “Maybe
this will cover it,” he said, thrusting
the notes into Gibbs’s hand and closing
his fist around them. “If not, let me
know and I’ll go blow a few guys in the
bar tonight to make up the rest.”
He unravelled himself from the sheets,
got off the bed, and walked towards the
bathroom. It was hard to maintain an air
of wounded dignity while walking stark
naked across a motel room, and, faced
with Andy’s disappearing butt, Gibbs did
the only thing he could in the
circumstances – he laughed.
Andy stopped in the bathroom doorway and
turned to look at him, anger and
curiosity warring in his eyes. Gibbs
shrugged.
“Just thinking – gotta be the first time
the hustler ever gave the john money,”
he said.
Andy was one of those people who
couldn’t hold a bad mood for long, and
his face broke into a grin.
“Yeah. I may not be the world’s best at
this,” he said, with a rueful shrug. “I
haven’t been doing it that long.”
“How long?” Gibbs asked.
“Just a few weeks. That’s when the money
ran out,” Andy sighed.
“Talking of which – I don’t want your
money.” Gibbs thrust the handful of
dollar bills back into Andy’s bag. “I
shouldn’t have accused you of stealing,
Andy. I just couldn’t figure you out. I
still can’t.”
“Well, I can’t figure you out, either,”
Andy replied, shaking his head.
“Whatever you’re on the run from, it
must be bad.”
“It is, Andy – it is,” Gibbs told him.
“And I’m not an alcoholic.” Andy raised
an eyebrow.
“You said that I was earlier – the drunk
in the gutter kind? I’m not.”
“If you say so,” Andy muttered
dubiously. “But I’ve been around
alcoholics all my life and you don’t
seem any different.”
That brought Gibbs up short. He’d always
enjoyed a drink but he’d never had a
liquor problem before. Still, Andy had
seen him get blind drunk twice in the
two nights he’d known him; it was hardly
surprising he thought he was an
alcoholic. Was he, he wondered? Could he
go an evening without drinking himself
into the ground? Did he want to?
“I am sorry about your car,” Andy said.
“I can see why that would piss you off.
I didn’t mean anything by it. I just
wanted you to hang around a bit longer.”
“Well, you got what you wanted,” Gibbs
said. “And look, I’ll prove to you I’m
not a drunk. If you want, we can do
something this evening after you finish
work - something other than getting
drunk in a bar,” he clarified.
Andy’s face broke into a ridiculously
pathetic grin. “It’s my day off today so
you can prove it to me all day,” he
said. “If you want?” he added
uncertainly. Gibbs thought he really was
the strangest mixture of total
confidence and complete insecurity.
“Well, I don’t have any place else to
be,” he sighed.
It was a surreal day. They ate in the
diner, then Andy showed him around town,
and in the afternoon he took Andy to the
boxing gym.
“This is so cool!” Andy said as they got
changed. “This is like something a dad
would do with his son. Do you have any
kids, Jethro?”
Gibbs stood there for a moment, gutted
by the question. If he closed his eyes
he could still remember what her face
looked like, but it was becoming so hard
to hang onto that memory. It felt like
she was fading a little bit every day.
He struggled all over again with the
finality of losing her.
How was it possible that just a few
short months ago he’d been playing with
her in the yard, swinging her around and
around and then setting her down and
watching her walk in dizzy circles,
giggling away the whole time? How could
she have been so real and alive then,
and now be gone forever? How could she
not be here any more? And what did that
make him? Was he still a father, or, if
you lost your child did that mean you
weren’t allowed to call yourself that
any more? Did being a father once mean
you were always a dad? Or did you lose
that status when your only child died?
“No,” he said shortly, in answer to
Andy’s question, still seeing her in his
mind’s eye, pigtails swinging over her
shoulders as she ran towards him. “Do
you know how to fight, Andy?” he asked,
changing the subject.
“Sure.” Andy grinned. “I’m good. I’ll
beat you easily, old man.”
Five minutes sparring with ex-Gunnery
Sergeant Gibbs soon disabused him of
that notion. The kid had a smart mouth
on him, and he pulled faces and made
stupid jokes as he danced around
opposite Gibbs, goofing around, full of
exuberant energy. Gibbs stepped in and
landed him on the floor in seconds. Andy
didn’t seem to mind. He just bounced
back up again. Gibbs wondered how many
times you could knock this kid down and
he’d keep coming back for more. He
suspected, if you played him right, that
this was a game that could go on
indefinitely.
The time went more quickly than he’d
have thought possible when every single
dull grey second since he’d lost his
family had hung on him like a heavy
weight. They walked back to the motel
and Gibbs claimed the first shower but
he’d only been in there a couple of
seconds when he felt a warm, hard, naked
body behind him, and Andy’s hands began
sliding soapy lather over his chest and
down to his groin. His cock hardened
almost immediately and he growled, and
batted Andy’s hands away. Andy grinned
at him, and pressed a kiss to his
collarbone, then moved up higher, lips
searching for Gibbs’s mouth. Gibbs
turned his head away – that wasn’t
somewhere he was ready to go to yet. He
saw the flash of disappointment in
Andy’s eyes and then the kid started
sinking to his knees. Gibbs grabbed him
before he got to his destination.
“Not that,” he said, his voice a low,
guttural growl. He was surprised by how
much he wanted to bury himself in this
boy, and fuck him hard. He remembered
Joe Ellis and how good it had felt
pounding into his strong body all those
years ago. Sex with women was different
– gentler, softer, more loving and
tender – and he didn’t want any of those
things right now. He knew he couldn’t go
with another woman so soon after losing
his wife in any case. He didn’t want
curves, long hair and the familiar
comfort of plump, yielding flesh. He
didn’t want anything that would remind
him of making love to Shannon – and
fucking Andy was as far away from that
as it was possible to get.
He was filled with a sudden, strong
sense of need. He grabbed Andy’s arm,
pulled him out of the shower and shoved
him into the bedroom. He threw the boy
down on the bed and then landed on top
of him. Andy grinned up at him.
“Fuck me, Jethro,” he said, moistening
his lower lip with his tongue, making
Gibbs’s cock ache. “I want to feel that
big cock of yours inside me.”
That was enough to tip Gibbs over the
edge. He ran his hands over the boy’s
hard body, grinding his hips against
Andy’s straining erection. Andy gasped
and reached out to grab Gibbs’s
buttocks. Gibbs lowered his head and bit
down on the little area of skin where
Andy’s neck and shoulder met, sinking
his teeth into the inviting flesh. Andy
yelled something, his nails digging hard
into Gibbs’s buttocks. Gibbs pinned him
down beneath him, sucking and biting at
his neck, then licking along his
collarbone, before finally moving
further down, and swirling his tongue
around a hard, flat nipple.
Andy was squealing now, making little
gasping sounds of pleasure, his cock
hard and leaking beneath Gibbs’s belly,
pressed between their two bodies. Gibbs
found himself turned on by Andy’s
obvious enjoyment, and his balls
tightened. He needed to be inside this
boy, needed to bury himself in all this
young hard flesh and fuck Andy into the
mattress.
“Stuff…in my bag…” Andy gasped.
Gibbs tore himself away for long enough
to grab Andy’s bag, throw the contents
onto the floor and locate the pack of
condoms and tube of lubricant. He tore
open a condom with his teeth and slid it
over his hard cock, then grabbed hold of
Andy and turned him onto his stomach.
“Hands and knees,” he hissed into Andy’s
ear.
Andy complied, getting into position,
ass in the air, the dark hole between
his buttocks inviting, promising him
exactly what he needed. Gibbs knelt on
the bed behind him. He squeezed some
lube onto his hand and finger fucked
Andy cursorily, wanting to push his hard
cock into the boy but holding back just
long enough to prepare him for it. Andy
made the same orgasmic noises of
pleasure as he finger fucked him as he’d
made while eating those donuts the
previous day and Gibbs couldn’t hold on
another second. He removed his fingers,
took hold of Andy’s hips, and slid his
hard cock between Andy’s ass cheeks.
Andy pressed back against him eagerly,
head back, sweat starting to trickle
enticingly down his throat.
Gibbs paused for a moment to get into
position, then tightened his grip on
Andy’s hips and thrust into him with one
hard, smooth motion. He didn’t go
slowly, and once he was inside that
warm, tight channel he couldn’t stop. He
moved his hands up higher on Andy’s
flanks, holding the kid tight, trying to
get more purchase, and then he began
thrusting. He closed his eyes, threw his
head back, and abandoned himself to the
sheer enjoyment of how damn *good* this
felt. He didn’t have to worry about
breaking Andy – he was young and strong,
and Gibbs could fuck him into oblivion,
the way he’d been drinking himself into
oblivion these past few weeks. Maybe he
was exchanging one drug for another but
right now he didn’t really care.
Andy seemed to be enjoying himself well
enough in any case. He was still making
those damn noises, the ones that turned
Gibbs on and irritated him in equal
measure. His eyes were closed, his hair,
still damp from the shower, was sticking
up every which way, and his body was
open and willing, his ass rocking back
to meet each hard, strong thrust as
Gibbs fucked him mercilessly.
Gibbs was as close to brutal as he’d
ever been with any sexual partner, not
caring about anything save the sensation
in his cock and the way Andy’s skin felt
beneath his hands, hard muscles moving
smoothly beneath the warm, taut surface.
He could hear Andy’s breathing hitching,
could hear Andy gasping in pleasure, and
then Gibbs was coming, spurting out into
the condom, buried deep inside Andy's
body. Gibbs hung there for a moment,
feeling the sweat start to cool on his
body, his cock still balls deep within
Andy. Andy was moaning, still rocking
back, trying to impale himself on
Gibbs’s softening cock, and Gibbs
realised he hadn’t come.
He reached his hand down and took Andy’s
hard cock in it, then brought him off
with a few expert strokes. Andy came
with series of happy little gasps, and
then he pulled free of Gibbs and flung
himself forwards onto the bed, turning
as he went so he was lying on his back,
gazing up at Gibbs from heavy-lidded
eyes.
“I knew you’d be a good, hard fuck,” he
muttered lazily.
Gibbs grinned and removed the condom
from his spent cock, tying off the end
and disposing of it in the trash next to
the bed. Then he threw himself down next
to the kid, and lay there, gazing up at
the ceiling. Andy scooted over and
rested his head on Gibbs’s shoulder, the
way he always did, then placed his arm
across Gibbs’s midriff and tangled his
legs in between Gibbs’s legs. It was
like having a big, heavy puppy lying
half on top of him, and Gibbs thought
about pushing him off, but, in the end,
he just wrapped an arm around Andy’s
body and held him close instead. He felt
Andy relax against him, and then the kid
began tracing little patterns on Gibbs’s
chest with his fingers, idly playing.
It felt good. Gibbs closed his eyes and
felt himself floating away on a happy,
post-coital haze. Andy started talking
but Gibbs wasn’t really listening. Andy
talked a lot and it wasn’t always
necessary to listen to every word he
said; he did talk a lot of crap.
“…and then we could do this again…”
“Hmmm.”
“…playing the…phys ed…basketball…you
could watch…”
“Hmmm.”
“Country club…Did you see that movie?…If
I had a car that’s the kind of car I’d
have…”
“Hmmm.”
“Where did you get the gun anyway…listen
to it on the radio…I’m good…”
“Yeah. I know.”
“Military judging by the weird
hair…better movie…Sean Connery…”
“Uh-huh.”
“Thinking…would you let me…dad?”
“Hmmm.”
“You’d let me? I’d blow you. We could
pretend…what do you say? Could I?”
“Let you what?” Gibbs was suddenly aware
that he was being asked a question.
“Call you ‘Dad’?”
Andy’s green eyes were too close,
looking up at him hopefully, and Gibbs
suddenly felt ill.
“What?” he said, raising his head and
looking down at the kid.
“It’s not a big deal. It’s just…that
waitress in the diner thought I was your
son, and the guys down the gym thought
so too. I just thought…if I could call
you dad…” Andy’s voice trailed off. “I
want to call you dad,” he whispered,
suddenly looking scared.
Gibbs’s gut clenched so violently he
thought he was going to throw up.
“You don’t have that fucking right,” he
found himself saying, in a hoarse,
growling voice he barely recognised as
his own, taut with pain. “You don’t
fucking have the right to call me that,”
he said, shoving Andy off him, wanting
to be rid of him. Only one person had
called him that and she was gone, and
for this stupid kid to suggest that,
after what they’d just done…after the
way they’d just fucked like animals in
this bed; it made him feel physically
ill.
“Get out,” he hissed. “Get the fuck
out.”
He got a glimpse of Andy’s shocked eyes
and then his gut roiled and he staggered
off the bed and into the bathroom and
threw up into the toilet. He heaved his
guts up, feeling angry, guilty and full
of a savage, bitter grief. Shit, what
kind of a man must he be? His wife and
daughter were barely cold in their
graves and he was fucking a stranger in
a motel room, burying himself in a warm,
willing body the way he’d buried himself
in the burning comfort of glass after
glass of Jack for god knew how many
weeks now.
He finished throwing up and then sat
back on his heels, gasping for breath.
Kelly was gone; he might not be a father
any more but he sure as hell wasn’t
going to sully the title by allowing
that kid he had just fucked to use it.
He wiped the back of his hand over his
mouth and then got up and walked back
into the bedroom. It was empty. The
kid’s bag had gone, along with his
clothes, and the door was hanging open.
Gibbs took a run at it and kicked it
shut, roaring out his anger and grief as
it slammed.
His mouth felt dry and he could taste
the acrid foulness of vomit in it and
smell it on his breath. He got dressed,
grabbed his wallet, and then went across
the road to the bar. He sure as hell
knew one good way to get rid of that
taste.
~*~
2008
Pete took them into a dimly lit room. It
was decorated too grandly for Gibbs's
personal taste – there were several dark
old paintings on the walls, hung over
thick, heavy wallpaper that was probably
expensive but just felt oppressive to
Gibbs. The room smelled as if nobody had
opened a window in months, which was
probably the case, and the stench of
illness and imminent death hung all
around them.
There was a massive bed in the centre of
the room, and, next to it, an array of
shiny new medical equipment that was at
odds with the musty feel of the room.
There was also an oxygen tank, an IV,
and a whole load of other stuff that
Gibbs presumed served some purpose. A
nurse was sitting by the bed but she got
up and left the room silently when they
came in.
Tony stood in the doorway for a moment,
and Gibbs resisted an urge to prod him
over to the bed. Instead he waited –
he'd told Tony he had his six and he
intended to keep that promise. If Tony
asked him to leave then he would, but
until then Gibbs would be here.
He glanced over Tony's shoulder to catch
a glimpse of the man in the bed. He had
Tony's broad build, and his hair was a
luxuriant silver, thick and abundant
even despite his age and ill health. The
cancer had eaten away at him, and while
he had once clearly been a big man,
probably even fat, now he looked as if
he'd collapsed in on himself, his cheeks
sunken and hollow. The skin on his face
had crumpled into a series of papery
folds, yellowy in hue, and his long
fingers rested on the blanket, their
constant jitters the only sign that this
might once have been a man who lived
life at an impatient pace.
Gibbs suddenly realised why Tony wasn't
moving; the last time Tony had seen his
father he'd been eighteen years younger,
in the full prime of his life. It must
be hard for Tony to reconcile the
strong, vigorous man his father had once
been with this shell of a man in front
of him. He heard Tony make a little
sound in the back of his throat, so soft
that nobody but Gibbs could have caught
it, and he rested his hand on Tony's
shoulder and squeezed, hoping that would
help.
It seemed to. Tony pulled himself up
tall, and then walked slowly over to the
bed. Gibbs took up position in the
corner of the room, beside a window
covered by thick, dark green, silk
drapes. Now he was closer, he could make
out the features on the old man's face
more easily, and he was startled to see
just how much Tony resembled his father.
The likeness was unmistakeable, from the
wide mouth to the freckle on the side of
his nose, and, most particularly, a pair
of green eyes, greyer and darker in tone
than his son's, but still familiar.
"Hey Dad," Tony said softly, reaching
the side of the bed. The old man exhaled
a sigh, his lungs rattling in his chest.
"Tony?" he muttered, and his grey-green
eyes flashed with some emotion Gibbs
couldn't quite place.
"Yeah." Tony stood there, looking
uncertain. He hesitated for a moment,
and then leaned down and pressed a kiss
to his father's cheek. The old man
accepted the kiss with a dour kind of
look at his son.
"Pete said you were on your way. I guess
that means they don't expect me to hang
around for much longer. I told him the
only way you'd make the journey was if
they promised you a funeral at the end
of it," the old man said.
"You know me – I'll go anywhere for free
food," Tony replied, but the attempt at
humour didn't fool Gibbs.
"Yeah," the old man grunted, in a tone
so low and gravelly it sounded almost
like he was clearing his throat. "Let's
see you then," he said, moving his hand
in a feeble gesture that Tony should
move into the lamplight. Gibbs bit back
an urge to turn on the overhead lights –
he had no idea why it had to be so damn
dark in here.
Tony did as his father requested, and
moved to one side. The old man examined
him critically for a moment; he might be
dying, but his eyes were as sharp as a
hawk's as he stared at his son. Tony
shifted uncomfortably, clearly ill at
ease with the scrutiny.
"Hmmm. You still look like a DiNozzo,"
the old man said. "Shame you never
carried on the family line, like Pete."
He glanced over to where Pete was
leaning against the wall. "How many kids
you got now, Pete?" he called, a
querulous whine in his voice.
"Five," Pete answered quietly.
"Five," the old man repeated. "And how
long you been married, Pete?"
"Ten years," Pete replied.
"Ten," the old man told Tony pointedly.
"Yeah. I know," Tony said sullenly.
"Credit to his dad," the old man said.
"Shame my brother didn't live to see
those kids – he'd have been so proud."
"You hated him," Tony muttered.
"What?" The old man glared at Tony.
"Uncle Nico. You hated him your entire
life. You never did one thing that
wasn't motivated by that insane
competitive shit you felt towards him."
Gibbs winced. It seemed that these two
just couldn't help themselves; they were
never going to let old wounds heal –
they'd rather rip off the scabs and
watch them bleed. He didn't blame Tony
though – even on his deathbed, it seemed
that Anthony DiNozzo Senior's
disapproval of his son was as strong as
ever, and Tony turned into a petulant
teenager around him. He could empathise
– his own father was a much kinder
personality than this man but it was
easy to fall back into old patterns with
him all the same.
"You've still got a smart mouth on you,
I see," DiNozzo grunted. "Always got you
in trouble."
"Still does," Tony said, a faint glimmer
of a smile on his lips as he glanced at
Gibbs.
"Who's that over there?" the old man
wheezed. "Standing over there? Who is
it?"
Gibbs stepped over to the bed, into the
lamplight. "I'm Leroy Jethro Gibbs, a
friend of Tony's," he said quietly.
"A friend?" DiNozzo glared at him, and
then glared at Tony.
"I'm his boss – at NCIS," Gibbs
clarified, not liking the suspicion he
saw in the old man's eyes, or the
accusatory way he was glaring at his
son.
"A cop," DiNozzo sighed. "I always told
him he wouldn't make any money being a
damn cop."
"Not a cop exactly – a federal agent,"
Tony said. "But I've explained that to
you many times, Dad – you just never
want to understand."
"What I don't understand is why you
didn't take a degree in business or law,
like Pete over there, and come and work
with me, like a son should. Why couldn't
you have been like him? Pete knows about
the value of hard work. What did you
ever do except get thrown out of all
those expensive schools I paid for – how
many was it?"
"Three," Tony said quietly.
"Three. First couple of times you got
thrown out just for being the damn idiot
you are, but the third time…" Gibbs
glanced at Tony to see that he'd gone
pale, his shoulders hunched, his eyes
dark. "You have any idea what that was
like? Getting a call from the principal
to say that my son - *my* son…"
"You got any idea what it was like when
Mom left to be the one who had to put
your stinking carcass to bed when you
got drunk every night? Or when you left
me in a hotel suite because you forgot I
even existed?" Tony shot back at him.
"Your memory is one-sided, Dad – always
was."
"You shouldn't have come," DiNozzo said,
with a tired wave of his hand. "I know
why you're here though – you've come
sniffing after my money, the way you
always did."
"You think that's why I'm here?" Tony
rocked back on his heels, looking
winded. "Seriously? You're dying and you
think that's why I came here?"
"You like money. You always did,"
DiNozzo chuckled. "Always knew you could
be bribed with a new pair of those fancy
shoes you like, or some other shit like
that."
"You're right. I do like money," Tony
said quietly. "And yes, I do have
expensive tastes. I'm like my father in
that."
"You're nothing like me," DiNozzo said
flatly. "I had nothing when I started
out, Tony – and you - you had everything
I could give you, and never appreciated
a dime because you never had to work for
it."
Gibbs watched them go at it, back and
forth, and he suspected this was a very
old argument that had been rehashed many
times over the years, and the only
reason Tony was allowing the old man to
land this many punches was because he
was dying. Tony was slugging it out with
both hands tied behind his back and it
was hard to see how he could win in that
position.
"I work hard too," Tony said, and Gibbs
didn't think he'd ever seen him look
like this, in all the years he'd known
him. Tony was a big, robust man but
right now he looked as fragile as Gibbs
had ever seen him. Being around his
father had stripped away all those
defences of his, laying the man bare.
"Running around with guns, flashing that
badge of yours at people?" DiNozzo
snorted. "You never did want to grow
up."
"Yeah, well, you could be right there,"
Tony said, with a grin. "Look I didn't
come here to argue, Dad…"
"Oh I know why you came here," DiNozzo
interrupted. "You thought I'd be weak
because I'm dying. You thought you'd
just come along, flash that grin, and
throw your mother’s charm at me and that
I’d change my mind and leave everything
to you. Well it won't happen. I'm
leaving it all to Pete; the business,
the house, the money, the cars – all of
it, Tony."
"Good. I don't want it," Tony said
abruptly.
"Pete's been more of a son to me than
you ever were," DiNozzo said. Gibbs
knew, even as the words were being
spoken, that they'd be a body blow to
Tony. He saw Tony flinch, visibly, and
then nod.
"Yeah – he has, Dad, he has," he said.
"And god knows he deserves the money,
after putting up with you for all these
years. Now, I need the bathroom. Try not
to die before I get back."
He turned on his heel, and left, almost
at a run. Pete glanced at Gibbs, and
Gibbs glanced back at Pete, and then
Pete turned and ran after him.
Gibbs moved back into the lamplight
again, so that DiNozzo could see him
clearly, and then he bent down and spoke
directly into his ear.
"You are lucky, old man, that you are
dying," he said, in a low, clear voice.
"Because if you weren't, I'd put a
bullet through your head myself."
~*~
1991
The next couple of days passed in a blur
of drinking. Gibbs didn’t even wait
until evening. He headed for the bar as
soon as it opened, stayed there all day,
and staggered back to his room to sleep
it off. Whenever he closed his eyes he
saw Kelly, staring at him reproachfully,
somehow judging him for the way he was
behaving – and sometimes, just as he
fell into a drunken stupor, he imagined
he saw Andy, looking at him just as
reproachfully, and that made him damn
angry because he didn’t owe the kid
anything.
He lay on his bed staring at the
ceiling, missing Andy’s warm, lean body
curled up beside him. He remembered what
Andy had said about his mom dying, and
thought about how the kid was living
right now, out of a few lockers at the
country club, carrying that bag of his
around with him the whole time, blowing
strangers in the restrooms of bars.
Gibbs couldn’t help but feel some
empathy – yes, he’d lost his family, but
Andy had lost someone too, and Gibbs
didn’t have a monopoly on grief.
On the third day he was woken by a knock
on the door, and he found the mechanic
standing outside dangling his car keys
between his fingers.
“Fixed,” the man said morosely. “I left
her over there.” He jerked his head over
to the parking lot.
“About damn time,” Gibbs growled. He got
out his wallet and paid the man, and
then got washed and dressed and went out
to check on the car. It started fine.
Gibbs sat there for a moment. Now what?
The car was fixed so he could just head
out, start driving again…or maybe he
could find this country club Andy worked
at, and drop by and give the kid some
money before leaving. That might ease
his conscience a little if nothing else.
Then he could just leave and never come
back, put this whole sorry incident
behind him, chalk it up to the drink,
the grief, and his current fucked-up
state of mind.
The country club wasn’t hard to find –
it was a big, plush place, and the
parking lot was full of fancy cars.
Gibbs parked and went inside to find
himself in a mahogany palace, dark brown
wooden panelling lining the walls,
massive vases of flowers everywhere in
reception.
“Can I help you, sir?” a pretty girl in
a uniform asked.
“Yeah…I’m looking for a kid who works
here – as a caddy,” Gibbs said. “Andy…”
He paused, realising he didn’t have a
clue what Andy’s second name was.
She gazed at him blankly. “We don’t have
any caddies called Andy, sir,” she said.
“I can go and check with Moira but I’m
pretty sure about that.”
Gibbs could have kicked himself. He knew
that Andy hadn’t given him his real
name.
He turned and left, annoyed with
himself. He hung out around the place
for a few hours, watching, hoping to
catch a glimpse of Andy. He saw some
other caddies – they were all young men
like Andy, all clearly college students,
frat boys earning some extra cash to see
them through the semester. He wondered
if any of them knew about the life Andy
was leading. He could see Andy fitting
right in here, completely at ease in
this affluent environment, and once
again he found himself wondering how a
kid like Andy ended up on the streets.
He clearly came from a wealthy
background and had just as clearly
received an expensive education. It
didn’t make any sense.
He didn’t catch a glimpse of Andy all
day but when the final set of golfers
left the range he made one last ditch
attempt to find him. He wasn’t sure why
he was making the effort, he just felt a
little nugget of guilt eating away at
him inside, goading him on. Besides, he
didn’t have anyplace else to be – he
could start driving again tomorrow.
He saw one of the caddies run back to
pick up a sweater he’d dropped, and he
followed him, wanting to catch him
alone.
“Hey…can you help me? I’m looking for
one of the caddies who works here.
He’s…about 6 feet tall, green eyes,
brown hair with light streaks in it,
talks about movies the whole time. Kind
of annoying.”
“You mean Tony?” the young man said. He
was a tall kid, with sleek dark hair.
“That sounds like Tony.”
“Tony? Yeah. I mean Tony.” Gibbs nodded.
“Where is he?”
“Didn’t show up for work today – called
in sick,” the kid said, with a shrug,
and then he frowned. “That’s not like
him – usually he takes all the work he
can get so he must be really ill. Of
course, he could just be on the trail of
some hot girl,” he grinned. “One thing
that could make Tony fake a sick day
it’s a hot girl. He’s a legend, man!” He
patted Gibbs’s arm with a conspiratorial
smile.
“Yeah, I can believe that,” Gibbs
muttered, wondering where the hell Andy
– Tony? – could be.
“A few weeks ago he hooked up with this
older chick and he hasn’t been around as
much since then. He says she’s loaded,
got a fancy place out in Bexley and
takes him everywhere - shows him a
really good time he says. So he moved
out of his apartment and moved all his
stuff in with her. ‘Course that might
all be over by now knowing Tony and
there might be some new hot chick
around!”
He grinned gleefully, clearly impressed
by Tony’s prowess with the opposite sex.
He was a real motormouth – but then
presumably he didn’t think Tony had
anything to hide and this was harmless
enough stuff. The lie about the older
woman was kind of sad – Tony clearly
didn’t want his friends knowing he’d had
to move out because he couldn’t pay the
rent. The kid suddenly grimaced, and
slapped a hand over his mouth.
“Oh shit! Are you his old man? He said
his old man was in town but to be honest
I didn’t believe him ‘cause he’s always
talking about you and most of it sounded
like made up shit. Look, I shouldn’t
have said all that stuff – I hope it
won’t get Tony into any trouble.”
Gibbs shook his head. “Don’t worry,” he
said. “Tony’s not in any trouble. And
thanks.” He gave the kid a generous
handful of dollars for his help and then
strode back to his car. He wasn’t sure
why, but something about this whole
situation felt wrong to him. He could
feel it in his gut.
It was starting to get dark now, and he
wondered what he should do. The thought
of spending another night in the bar
getting drunk suddenly didn’t seem so
appealing any more. He realised that
he’d actually enjoyed doing something
today, even if he hadn’t found what he
was looking for. He liked hanging out,
asking questions, trying to get to the
bottom of the mystery that was Andy.
Maybe he’d enjoy that job Franks had
offered him more than he thought. He
pushed that thought aside and headed
back to the motel room, still trying to
figure out what he should do next.
It was completely dark by the time he
got back and he was so lost in thought
that he almost tripped over the body
sitting hunched up on his doorstep, bag
clutched to his chest as usual.
“Andy?” He felt a little spike of relief
that he’d found the kid, which was
immediately replaced by a sense of
foreboding when he looked at him. “You
okay?” he asked softly.
Andy’s shoulders were hunched, the way
they always were when he was miserable,
but it was the way his eyes were glowing
with unnatural brightness that worried
Gibbs. His skin was flushed and his face
shone with a light sheen of sweat. He
remembered what the young man at the
country club had said about Andy – Tony
– calling in sick.
“Andy.” Gibbs crouched down beside the
kid, and touched his shoulder. The kid
pulled away from him.
“I need somewhere to stay tonight,” Andy
said quietly, without any of his usual
attempts to charm and wheedle. “I
thought you'd gone. I’m sorry I made you
mad. I didn’t mean to. Please let me
stay here tonight. I’ll go in the
morning. I just need to sleep.”
“You can stay here, Andy.”
Gibbs got up and opened the door to the
room. He noticed that Andy was moving
slowly, as if he was in pain, and he
wondered again about that feverish look
in the boy’s eyes. Andy dumped his bag
on the floor, as he always did, and then
stood there, looking around him as if he
wasn’t sure where he was.
“How long have you been sitting out
there?” Gibbs asked quietly.
“A few hours. I went down to the garage
and they said you had your car back.
There was no sign of you. I was sure
you’d moved on. I didn’t know what to
do.” Andy bit on his lip. “So I just sat
there.”
“Are you sick, Andy?” Gibbs moved his
hand up to touch the kid’s forehead and
check his temperature and Andy flinched
away from him. “Easy. I’m not going to
hurt you,” Gibbs said with a frown. This
wasn’t the Andy he’d come to know these
past few days, the Andy who leaned into
every touch like a puppy wanting to be
petted.
“I just need somewhere to sleep
tonight,” Andy said tiredly. “I thought
about paying for a room – I have the
money but I don’t want to waste it. I've
been trying to figure it out in my head
but I can’t…I’m not feeling so good,” he
admitted. “I can’t think straight.”
Gibbs took hold of the kid’s arm and
then slowly, very slowly, moved his hand
up to Andy’s forehead. “Christ, you’re
burning up,” he said. “What the hell
happened to you?”
“Nothing.” Andy pulled away, and Gibbs
noticed the wince that crossed his face.
“I just need to sleep it off and then
I’ll be fine,” he muttered.
“Sleep what off?” Gibbs asked.
Andy ignored him. Moving slowly, biting
on his lip, he sat down on the edge of
the bed and leaned forward to try and
undo his boots. He took a sharp intake
of breath as he bent forward, clearly in
pain, so Gibbs knelt down in front of
him and undid them for him, then pulled
them off and slung them away to one
side. Then he reached out and started to
unbutton Andy’s shirt.
“No.” Andy slapped his hand away.
“Yes. I want to see what you’re trying
to hide,” Gibbs told him firmly. Andy
gazed at him, an expression of mute
pleading in those feverish eyes. Gibbs
wondered what the hell was going on. “Is
this something to do with your father?”
he asked. Andy’s eyes flashed. “Did you
go and see him? Did you ask him for
money? Did he hurt you?” He felt a
savage surge of anger inside.
“No.” Andy shook his head. “I haven’t
seen him since Mom’s funeral. He doesn’t
live around here – he lives on Long
Island.”
Gibbs rocked back on his heels. “So
what’s going on, Andy? You might as well
tell me because I’m going to find out
anyway.”
“You’re different.” Andy stared at him.
“You're more…together. What happened to
you?”
“I pulled my head out of my ass for long
enough to realise I’m not the only one
with problems,” Gibbs told him.
He stood up and unbuttoned Andy’s shirt,
and Andy just looked at him the entire
time, his eyes confused, as if he wasn’t
sure what to do around a Gibbs who
wasn’t either drunk on his ass or
stewing in self-pity. Gibbs eased the
shirt off Andy’s back and winced as it
stuck in places. He peeled it off
slowly, revealing several ugly bruises
and a number of deep welts, seeping
blood. Andy stared at him, looking
guilty, angry and scared all at the same
time.
“Who did this to you?” Gibbs asked
quietly.
“Nobody did anything to me,” Andy
replied.
“Don’t lie to me!” Gibbs roared. Andy
flinched. Gibbs got control of himself
and reached out gentle fingers to
examine the wounds on Andy’s body in
more detail. The many large, purple
bruises looked like fist marks, and then
there were the welts – Gibbs wasn’t sure
what those had been made by. His jaw
tightened as he found a couple of burn
marks, clearly made by the butt of a
cigarette.
“Nobody did anything to me that I didn’t
agree to,” Andy clarified, sullenly. “I
went there. He pays well. I knew what I
was doing.”
“You’ve done this before?” Gibbs was
incredulous. “You go to someone and let
him beat you up?”
“Like I said, he pays well. I met him
down the country club. He asked me if I
was interested in making more money, on
the side. I said yes. I thought he
wanted to fuck me and that was okay –
he’s not hot like you but he’s not
repulsive either. He never has fucked me
though. He explained it to me that first
time and I agreed. The first couple of
times weren’t so bad. He just kicked me
around then jacked off over me but he
gave me enough money to pay the rent for
a few weeks. Then last time I went to
him he got out this stick and wanted to
use it. It hurt like hell so I told him
to fuck off and left. Then I couldn’t
pay the rent and ended up on the
street.”
“And you went back there?” Gibbs asked,
his gut clenching at the story.
“Yeah, a couple of days ago. He
said…what he likes about me is that I’ve
got a smart mouth. He likes that I’m so
cocky – that’s what he says. He likes
shutting me up. When I went back this
time he paid in advance, but he locked
the door and said I wasn’t walking out
on him again until he was done. He had
me mouth off at him – that was the easy
part.” Andy gave a bright grin that
never went anywhere near reaching his
eyes. “Then he punched me a few times,
and then he got out that stick. Christ
that hurts.” He shivered. “If he hadn’t
locked the door I’d have been out of
there but he’d given me the money and I
told him he could do it so I thought I
should hold up my end of the bargain. He
called me an arrogant son of a bitch who
needs to learn a lesson. I think I
remind him of some preppy rich kids who
beat up on him years ago or something.”
“Why, Andy? I know you need the money
but it can’t be worth going through this
to get it. Why did you go back there?”
“You threw me out, and I am trying to
keep this together without anyone
finding out,” Andy said through gritted
teeth. “I admit I might not be doing it
very well, but I can do this. I can
figure out a way to get through college,
and pay my way, and show him…” He broke
off with a shrug and then winced as that
small movement pained him.
“Show who?” Gibbs demanded.
“He doesn’t think I can do this but I
can,” Andy murmured, his eyes glassy.
“He thinks I’m a spoiled brat and he’s
not throwing good money after bad.”
Gibbs noticed the beads of sweat on
Andy’s forehead, soaking into his hair,
turning it dark, and he cursed. Some of
the cuts on his body must have become
infected and he was starting to sound
delirious.
“Come on. Let’s get you into bed,” he
said.
He gently removed the rest of Andy’s
clothing and got him under the sheets.
Andy was shivering now, burning up and
freezing cold at the same time.
“I wanted you to come back,” Andy
slurred. “I waited because I wanted you
to come back. I really like you, Jethro.”
Gibbs smoothed Andy’s sweaty hair away
from his face.
“Yeah, I know, Andy. Look, I need to get
you some medicine. You stay here and
sleep – I’ll be right back. I promise.”
Andy’s eyes were so glassy that he
wasn’t even sure the kid had understood
him. Gibbs grabbed his wallet, then went
to the motel reception and asked them to
call for a doctor. This was more than he
could handle alone.
The doctor clearly thought he’d been the
one to hurt Andy, and he clucked around
disapprovingly. He prescribed drugs for
the infection and some kind of cream to
rub into the welts and then he left -
but not before charging Gibbs a small
fortune for his services.
Gibbs got the prescription filled and
the first dose of medication into the
kid and then sat down on the chair in
the corner of the room and ran his hand
through his hair.
How the hell had this happened? When had
his life become this fucked up and
complicated? This kid really wasn't his
responsibility and yet somehow it felt
like he was. There had to be someone
else though – someone else who would
care that he was whoring himself out and
allowing some bastard to slap him around
in exchange for money. His mom was dead
but wouldn't his father want to know
about this? Gibbs knew he'd want to
know, if this had been Kelly. What
father wouldn't care that his son was
lying beaten up in a motel room with
some guy he barely knew looking after
him? There had to be someone better than
him to take care of Andy right now.
Gibbs glanced at Andy's bag, lying on
the floor, and he got up, opened it, and
rifled through the contents, keeping one
eye on Andy the entire time to make sure
he remained asleep. He found what he was
looking for – the letters he'd seen the
other day – and held them for a moment,
wondering what gave him the right to
look through something so personal. He
shrugged that attack of conscience away,
and opened up the first letter.
It was from Andy's mom, and was dated
several months ago. It was full of long,
rambling sentences that went nowhere and
made little sense – Gibbs could well
believe the woman had been an alcoholic.
It was also painfully evident that she
adored her son and was doing her best
for him, such as it was. A quick check
revealed that all the letters were from
her and they were all pretty much along
the same lines – which was useless to
him. He tied the letters back together,
the way they had been when he'd found
them, and replaced them in Andy's bag.
He wondered about that dark-haired kid
he'd met at the country club earlier –
he seemed to be one of Andy's friends.
Maybe he should contact him? He thought
about it for a moment but something
about it felt wrong. What was it that
Andy had said earlier? He was "trying to
keep this together without anyone
finding out"? That kid at the club
earlier had spoken about Andy like he
was some kind of frat boy superhero, a
legend – there was no way that kid had
any idea that his friend Tony was
leading some kind of double life – and
Andy clearly wanted to keep it that way.
Gibbs silently worked his way through
the rest of the bag, looking for some
kind of clue that would help him unravel
the mystery that was Andy. He found a
porno magazine, full of explicit
pictures of naked women – exactly the
kind of magazine he'd expect a kid
Andy's age to have in his possession. He
gave it a cursory glance and slung it on
the floor…then looked at it again when
something fell out of it. He picked up
an envelope, hoping it wasn't another
long, rambling missive from Andy's
mother. It wasn't. It was a formal
letter from a firm of lawyers in New
York called Weston and Grant, and it was
addressed to an Anthony DiNozzo. He
opened it up and began to read.
Dear Anthony,
As you may know, my father retired a few
months ago, and I have taken over his
practice. I am therefore now your
father's chief legal adviser in respect
of his business and personal interests.
Your father has directed me to reply on
his behalf to your recent letter to him
in respect of your college tuition. As
he made clear after your expulsion from
Drewes Military Academy, and as he
reiterated at your mother’s funeral, he
is no longer prepared to fund your
education.
He would like to remind you that he
himself started out with nothing, and
built his business by dint of his own
hard work. He believes that it is
perfectly possible for you to do the
same and he looks forward to seeing you
make something of your life without the
cushion of his financial help.
He expresses his hope that this will be
the making of you. He has not entirely
given up on the possibility of you
joining him in the business, provided
that first you show an aptitude for hard
work, discipline and application – all
qualities that he feels have been sorely
lacking in your conduct to date.
If you can prove to his satisfaction
that you have changed, and if you can
demonstrate that you are ashamed of the
conduct that led to your expulsion from
Drewes, then he will be prepared to see
you again upon completion of your
college education. However, he does not,
at this stage, believe that any such
improvements in your attitude have taken
place.
He has therefore directed me to advise
you that he will not be offering any
financial assistance to you now or at
any point in the future, and asks that
you do not approach him in respect of
this matter again.
Yours sincerely,
Daniel Weston
Weston and Grant
Gibbs winced – that was a harsh letter –
not just in tone but in the fact that
Andy's father hadn't even bothered to
write it himself. There was a
handwritten note attached to the letter.
Gibbs glanced at it.
Dear Tony,
On a personal note, I would like you to
know that I recall those summers I spent
at your father's house when I was
younger with great affection and have
fond memories of that time. I am
enclosing a cheque - it's just a small
sum from my own money but I hope it will
be of some use to you in your current
predicament.
Kind regards,
Daniel
This Daniel Weston sounded like a decent
kind of man. Gibbs grabbed a pen and
paper and made a note of the man's
number; it was too late to call now but
maybe tomorrow. Then he glanced over at
Andy. The kid's face was flushed but he
was young and strong – hopefully he'd
bounce back from this. There was
something about his irrepressible spirit
that made Gibbs suspect that he was
pretty good at bouncing back.
Gibbs felt a surge of sympathy for the
boy - and also a glimmer of
understanding about where his desperate
need for a father figure came from. His
request the other day that he might call
Gibbs "Dad" suddenly made a hell of a
lot more sense. He might have the libido
of highly-sexed nineteen year old but
inside there was also a part of him that
was a ten year old boy who just wanted
to hang out with his father. It would
have been touching if it wasn't so
completely fucked up.
It was late. Gibbs got up, got undressed
down to his boxers and tee shirt, and
slipped silently into the bed beside
Andy. The kid muttered something and
shifted in his sleep, whimpering. Gibbs
looked at him for a moment, and then,
with a sigh, he put his arm around him
and pulled him over so that his head was
resting on his shoulder. Andy's arms
went automatically around Gibbs's
midriff and he wrapped himself around
him.
Gibbs looked down on him, wondering how
the hell he had come to feel so fond of
a kid he hadn't even known existed a few
days ago. The only emotion he'd been
feeling for months was a deep, savage,
angry grief – it was actually a relief
to feel something else. He hadn't
realised how weary he'd become of
feeling so raw and sad all the damn
time.
When Gibbs woke a few hours later it was
to the usual suffocating weight of Andy
lying almost on top of him, legs
entangled in his, arms wrapped around
him, the way he seemed to like sleeping.
Gibbs wasn't used to being smothered
quite so comprehensively and Andy was
heavy, but all the same there was
something appealing about Andy's
puppyish need to be in such close
proximity. Gibbs extricated himself
quietly, and then reached out a hand to
Andy's forehead. The kid was still
flushed but he wasn't burning up any
more, so hopefully he was on the mend.
Gibbs got dressed and slipped silently
out of the room. He found a phone booth
down the street and called the offices
of Weston and Grant. Hopefully, this
would soon be over, and Andy would soon
be his father's problem – which was the
way it should be. Then Gibbs could drive
away from all this and return to his own
problems, and the important decision of
whether he wanted to live or die. He
still didn't feel like he'd *made* that
decision, damn it. Andy had got in the
way and made everything more
complicated, when it should have been
simple.
"I need to speak to Daniel Weston," he
said to the girl who answered the phone.
"Oh, sir, I'm sorry, but he's away on
vacation this week. Is there anyone else
who can help?" she replied. Gibbs
sighed, wondering when he'd catch a
break with this.
"I need to get in touch with a Mr
DiNozzo," he said. "I believe he's a
client of yours? I have his son, Andy -
I mean, Tony - staying in my motel room.
He's not well. He's uh…been in a fight
and he's beat up pretty bad. He's going
to be okay but I thought Mr DiNozzo
might want to know that his son needs
help. Can you tell me how I can get in
touch with him?"
"We can't give out confidential client
details, sir," she told him. "However, I
will call Mr DiNozzo and tell him what
you've said."
"Do it now. And get him to call me
straight back," Gibbs commanded
impatiently, giving her the number.
She assured him that she would, so he
put the phone down and waited. Fifteen
minutes later, the phone in the booth
rang. Gibbs snatched it up.
"Mr DiNozzo?"
There was an apologetic silence, and
then the girl from Weston and Grant
spoke.
"I'm sorry, sir. It's me again. Mr
DiNozzo asked me to call you. He said…"
"What?" Gibbs frowned, wondering what
the hell kind of father didn't want to
talk to someone who had news that his
son needed help.
"He said that he can't help, sir."
"He can't help?" Gibbs repeated, in
disbelief. "That's what he said? He
can't help? Does he realise that his
son has been hurt?"
"Yes, sir. He…Mr DiNozzo is a man of
very strong views, sir, and he said to
say he's washed his hands of his son and
doesn't want to be involved in his
latest drama. He advises you not to get
involved, either. I'm sorry, sir."
She sounded extremely apologetic and it
wasn't her fault but Gibbs treated her
to a volley of expletives all the same.
Then he slammed the phone down and
struck his hand, hard, against the wall
of the booth. Christ, some men didn't
deserve to be fathers. He'd give his
right arm to have Kelly back for just
one second; to hold her, speak to her,
see those blue eyes of hers light up
when she saw him, and yet this man, this
bastard, didn't give a damn that his son
was in trouble. He didn't know how lucky
he was to have a living, breathing child
and it made him mad as hell.
He walked around the parking lot of the
motel for a few minutes to calm down,
pausing only to kick the kerb a few
times. He didn't want to go back into
that room while he was still this angry;
the last thing he wanted was for Andy to
find out that his father didn't give a
flying fuck about his welfare. He
wondered just what the boy had done to
make his father treat him this way. He
tried to think as a dad, as Kelly's dad,
wondering if there was anything she
could have done that would have made him
reject her in a similar situation but he
couldn't think of anything so bad that
he'd have turned his back on her if
she'd been hurt. He might have been
angry with her, and disappointed in her,
but he'd always have been there for her.
What had Andy done that was so bad? The
kid could be annoying; he had a smart
mouth on him and he was definitely
trouble but he was also funny and
completely without any kind of malice.
In that letter, Daniel Weston had spoken
of Andy being expelled from some kind of
a military academy – had it been that?
He'd also spoken of Andy's lack of
discipline and application – but surely
that couldn't be the whole story? If
Andy lacked those virtues, Gibbs thought
that was partly his father's fault for
raising him wrong. You couldn't raise a
kid and then turn your back on them if
they didn't turn out the way you wanted.
How they turned out was at least
partially your responsibility after all.
So now what? Gibbs turned it around in
his head but he couldn't see any answer
for it save the obvious. The kid didn't
have anyone except him, and, fucked up
though he was right now, that was as
good as it got. Gibbs had taken
responsibility for too many kids Andy's
age to turn his back on this one; he'd
trained hundreds of young men to fight
in the Marines, treating them with a
combination of gruff affection and
military discipline that he’d hoped
would help keep them alive in whatever
combat situation they encountered. So
Andy was stuck with him, and he with
Andy, for now at least.
He finally calmed down enough to return
to the room. Andy was awake and he sat
up in bed when he came in, his hair
sticking up on end as usual, eyes
anxious, but they’d lost that glassy
look they’d had the previous night, and
his face was no longer flushed.
"I wondered where you were," he said. "I
woke up and you'd gone. I thought maybe
you'd paid for the room and left."
"How are you feeling?" Gibbs asked,
ignoring that. Andy seemed to expect to
be abandoned or rejected and Gibbs
didn't want to deal with that right now.
"Fine," Andy said. "Much better. I'm
sorry I crashed out on you last night. I
felt like shit and wasn't thinking
clearly. I'll just grab my stuff and be
on my way."
"Not until you're better," Gibbs told
him firmly, crossing over to the bed and
sitting down. He reached out a hand and
stroked Andy's untidy hair, smoothing
down the messy spikes.
"I can stay here?" Andy asked, looking
surprised. "I thought you were pissed
with me?"
"Oh, I am," Gibbs chuckled. "I am, Andy,
but you're here now and you'll stay here
until you're well." He glanced down at
Andy. "Son," he added softly. Andy
didn't say anything but his eyes lit up,
glowing from within with a kind of
joyful luminosity, and Gibbs gave an
inward sigh, wondering what the hell
he'd started.
~*~
2008
Tony's father moved his hand, grabbed
hold of Gibbs's jacket, and pulled him
down, close, so he could get a good look
at him. Gibbs found himself subject to
the intense scrutiny of those grey-green
eyes. DiNozzo Senior might be dying but
his mind was still razor sharp. Gibbs
took hold of the man's thin wrist and
removed it from his jacket, but then, to
show this embittered old man that he
wasn't scared of him, he sat down on the
bed beside him, and moved the lamp so
the man could see him clearly.
DiNozzo gave a gurgling little laugh.
"Oh, I know you," he said.
"Never met you before today," Gibbs
replied.
"Yeah, but I know you – you're a
bastard," the old man said. "Just like
me."
Gibbs couldn't bite back the smile.
"Plenty of people have called me that,"
he said.
"So, you don't like the way I talk to my
son, huh?" he asked. Gibbs shrugged.
"Like you said – you're a bastard.
Tony's worked for me for seven years and
he's saved my life more than once – just
last year he threw himself into the
river and pulled me out from the car I
was trapped in down there. He’s risked
his life doing his job more times than I
can count. I wouldn't expect you to
understand, or care, because you judge a
man's worth by how much he earns, but
Tony is loyal, brave and a damn good
agent – the best I have. He's good at
his job, and he works damn hard at it
too."
DiNozzo lay back on his pillows,
wheezing, and gazed at Gibbs
speculatively.
"You ever been married?" he asked.
"Yeah, four times," Gibbs replied,
wondering what the hell that had to do
with anything. DiNozzo gave a little
laugh that turned into a cough.
"Three times," he gasped, pointing to
himself. "Never could figure women out."
"Me neither." Gibbs shrugged.
"You sleeping with my son?" DiNozzo
asked suddenly, taking him by surprise.
"Oh don't look at me like that – you
must know Tony likes to walk on the
queer side of the street every now and
then."
"No. I'm not sleeping with your son,"
Gibbs replied shortly. Not right now,
anyway, Gibbs thought to himself. Not
for seventeen years.
"Good. Wish my son was more like you,"
DiNozzo said. "You got any kids, Gibbs?"
"No," Gibbs replied shortly. He never
had figured out the right way to reply
to that question, even after all these
years.
"Then you wouldn't understand," the old
man said. "You think I'm hard on Tony
but you try and imagine how it felt,
getting a call from your son's military
academy saying they're throwing out your
boy because he's been found screwing
another student."
Gibbs gazed at him, expressionlessly. So
that was it. He’d always wondered,
although he’d guessed it had been
something like this.
"A male student," the old man added,
clearly not satisfied with Gibbs's lack
of reaction. "I had to drive straight
down and pick him up – they didn't want
to keep him under their roof for one
more night. Thought my son was many
things – he always was a charmer, and
he'll play the fool for anyone who'll
watch him - but a fag? I never saw that
one coming."
"Tony's had plenty of girlfriends,"
Gibbs pointed out.
"Yeah," the old man chuckled. "Never got
married though, did he? Never had any
kids. I know my son, Gibbs, and I'll bet
you he's still dicking around with any
fag or any piece of skirt that'll show
him a good time."
Gibbs grunted – the old man was right
about that at least – or he thought so.
It seemed to him that Tony's flirting
wasn't as rampant nowadays as it had
once been, and he rarely talked about
the women he was dating any more.
"I work in a closed little world,
Gibbs," DiNozzo said. "And the circles I
move in…well, let's just say that word
about why Tony was expelled from Drewes
didn't just get out – it spread around
like wildfire. Couldn't show my face for
weeks afterwards because of the shame."
"So you washed your hands of Tony?"
Gibbs asked.
"Like I said, you wouldn't understand.
You're not a father," the old man
growled at him.
"I had a daughter. She was killed when
she was eight," Gibbs said quietly. "If
I could have her back I wouldn't give a
damn who she slept with or what the hell
job she did – I'd just tell her how much
I love her and how proud of her I am."
DiNozzo's eyes flashed.
"Call yourself a father? Man like you
doesn't deserve the title," Gibbs told
him, in a low, dismissive tone.
"What does it matter to you?" DiNozzo
demanded, his eyes cloudy and tired.
"What the hell does any of this matter
to you?"
"It matters to Tony," Gibbs replied.
"Listen, old man – you're dying, what
harm would it do to give Tony something
before you go? Oh, not your money,"
Gibbs growled, as he saw the old man
open his mouth to interrupt. "Just tell
him you love him, and that you're proud
of him. That's all. It's only words –
they won't cost you anything and they'll
mean a hell of a lot to him."
"What if it's not true?" DiNozzo asked
quietly. Gibbs stared at him icily.
"Be a man," he said. "No, be a *father*.
Say it – even if it's not true. Do that
for him."
The old man looked at him and Gibbs
looked back. There was a long silence
which was disturbed only when they heard
a sound in the hallway. The door opened,
and Tony walked back into the room. His
hair was completely wet, as if he'd
stuck his whole head under the faucet –
maybe he had. Gibbs could understand the
impulse – this room stank of an old
man's anger and the bitter scent of
reproach – he wasn't surprised Tony had
tried to wash it away. It must have been
crippling living with that hanging over
him all these years.
Gibbs got up, vacating his bedside seat
to Tony. Tony looked more purposeful
now, less hunched and miserable. He
crossed the room and sat down.
"Listen – I didn't come here to
quarrel," he said softly, taking hold of
his father's hand and squeezing lightly.
"Haven't we done enough of that over the
years? I'm sorry you're dying, Dad, and
I'm glad I've got this chance to say
goodbye. Whatever's happened between us
– it's in the past. Let's just let it
go."
Gibbs stood behind Tony, and glared,
meaningfully, at the old man lying in
the bed.
"Now would be a good time to say that
thing we talked about," Gibbs muttered.
DiNozzo gazed at his son for a long
moment, and then at Gibbs, and then,
finally, he extricated his hand
pointedly from Tony’s grasp, and closed
his eyes.
"I'm tired now," he said.
~*~
1991
They spent the day watching TV. For an
active man like Gibbs, it was a novelty
he’d never experienced before – an
entire day doing nothing except lie on a
bed watching TV - but Andy seemed to
relish it. Or, more particularly, Gibbs
suspected the kid liked having a father
figure around with nothing better to do
than give him attention.
Andy was in his element; he started
talking after finishing the bagels Gibbs
brought him for breakfast and didn’t
stop for a solid few hours. He bounced
around on the bed, nudging Gibbs in the
ribs every few minutes in an effort to
make him look up from the newspaper he
was trying to read, constantly pointing
out useless pieces of trivia related to
the dire daytime TV he was watching.
Gibbs found it incomprehensively
relaxing after all the recent weeks of
driving followed by drinking. The drink
might have numbed his grief but it also
had made his mind fuzzy and his body
bloated; drying out felt good.
Andy was a fidget, unable to stay in any
one position for more than a few
minutes, and he was forever throwing his
pillow around the bed and then launching
himself on top of it, elbows and feet
often digging into Gibbs in the process
as he tried to get comfortable in his
new position, only to abandon it a few
minutes later. Gibbs could forgive him
that – the kid was bruised and battered
so he guessed that lying in one position
for any length of time must be
uncomfortable.
Spending time with Andy was hardly a
restful experience but it was endlessly
entertaining. Andy's constant demand for
some kind of connection or interaction
with Gibbs should have been irritating,
but somehow Andy's natural charm
rendered it endearing instead.
After lunch, and another dose of
medication, Andy zonked out for a two
hour sleep and Gibbs found he missed the
kid’s stream-of-consciousness verbal
diarrhoea. He put down his paper and
glanced at Andy. He was lying on his
side, facing Gibbs, nestled under the
blanket, his hair a mess of long,
bleached spikes on the pillow. It was
impossible not to feel fond of the kid;
there was just something appealing about
him, even when he was being a pain in
the ass – which was most of the time.
Gibbs moved his own pillow a fraction
higher to ease a crick in his back and
frowned when he felt something digging
into his ass. He pulled out his gun from
beneath the pillow and gazed at it.
Those suicidal impulses that had brought
him on this journey no longer felt so
acute. Maybe he just needed to be needed
– by the men in his unit, by his wife,
by his daughter…by all those things that
he’d lost. Instead he’d found this young
man, who sure as hell needed him, and
that need was an anchor for him right
now.
He put the gun in the nightstand drawer
and closed it – he wasn't sure that he
was done with it yet, but he did know
that he didn't need it right now. Then
he settled down beside Andy, face to
face, one arm placed protectively around
the kid’s midriff, and closed his eyes.
There wasn’t much else to do except take
a nap.
He woke half an hour later to find a
pair of eyes gazing at him hopefully,
and something hard digging into his
thigh.
“Oh Christ,” he sighed. “You can’t be
serious. You’re ill, Andy.”
“What? You never been ill and horny at
the same time?” Andy grinned, grinding
his hips hopefully in Gibbs’s direction,
making the presence of his rock hard
erection even more firmly felt.
“Are you seriously always this sexed
up?” Gibbs grunted. Andy made a show of
thinking about it for a couple of
seconds and then grinned again.
“Yeah,” he said. “So…?”
Gibbs gave another grunt, more strangled
this time, as Andy slipped a hand into
his boxers and stroked his cock, which
responded with a more eager leap than
Gibbs would have expected.
“You could fuck me,” Andy whispered.
“That was pretty damn hot last time.”
“I’m not going to fuck you, Andy, not
while you’re ill.”
“I could fuck you then,” Andy suggested.
Gibbs reached out and grabbed his wrist,
firmly, in his fingers. “Not going to
happen,” he said. Andy pouted.
“You should try it – it’s good,” he
said. “But if that’s not your thing –
how about I suck you?” He pulled up the
blanket and began sliding down the bed.
Gibbs grabbed hold of a fistful of his
thick hair to stop him in his tracks.
Then he hauled him back up again.
“Is this payment, Andy?” he asked. “For
the room? For the doctor? For the
medicine? If it is then forget it – I
don't want sex in payment for any of
that.”
Andy rolled his eyes. “No. I told you,
you’re hot, and I *like* sex. A lot,” he
added.
“Why aren’t you out there chasing girls
then?” Gibbs asked. “Kid your age –
that’s what you should be doing and I
know you like girls - your head swivels
whenever you see anything in a short
skirt.”
“I do like girls,” Andy agreed. “I
really do,” he added with a laugh. “And
trust me, I definitely chase after
girls. But I like guys too. I like being
fucked, I like sucking cock. I know I’m
not supposed to but I do. I’ve tried not
to but I can’t help myself. Is it that
bad?” He looked at Gibbs for
confirmation. “It doesn’t feel that bad
– it just feels like sex, but other
people get freaked out about it. I’ve
learned to pretend to freak out too, so
nobody figures out what I like. It’s
easier that way.”
"Your friends don't know, do they?"
Gibbs said. "That you're bisexual?"
"Hell no!" Andy grinned. "I'm majoring
in Phys Ed, Jethro – they'd never let me
in the showers with them after a game if
they knew."
“Yeah – but that means you have to lead
a double life,” Gibbs pointed out. Andy
shrugged.
“Cool,” he said. “Kind of like being a
spy. Talking of which - ah, Mr Bond, vot
haff we got here?” he asked, in a
terrible Eastern European accent, moving
his hand down to find Gibbs’s semi-erect
cock again. He gave another one of those
infectious grins and moved his hand
rhythmically up and down Gibbs’s cock.
Gibbs gave in and grabbed Andy,
stripping the kid out of his underwear
and tearing off his own at the same
time, getting them both naked within
seconds. Then he pulled Andy over so
that he was sitting astride him, over
his groin, taking care not to touch any
of the many cuts and bruises on the
kid's body.
Then, with a determined grin, Gibbs took
hold of their erections and pressed them
together. Andy gave him a startled look,
and then grinned back at him, delighted
by what Gibbs had in mind, and within
seconds he was making those orgasmic
noises again.
There was something very erotic about
being with a partner as uninhibited and
up for anything as Andy, and somehow,
and Gibbs wasn’t sure how, it became an
unspoken competition as to who could
hold out the longest before coming.
Andy tried to push Gibbs over the edge
by grinding his balls into Gibbs’s
groin, moving his long, dextrous fingers
over his own body, tweaking at his
nipples as he worked. He locked gazes
with Gibbs while slipping his tongue
enticingly between his lips, wetting
them, making the full lower lip seem
especially plump and inviting. His eyes
were gleaming with challenge and he was
utterly confident in his own sexual
prowess, sure that he could turn on
Gibbs as much as Gibbs was turning him
on, and win the competition.
In return, Gibbs moved his hands with
expert precision, making Andy gasp with
every firm, confident stroke on his
cock. Their cocks pulsed together, both
of them rock hard and slick with
pre-come.
"I don't think you can hold it much
longer," Andy teased, rocking his hips
so that his hard cock bumped against
Gibbs's. Gibbs gritted his teeth as the
movement sent pleasure waves coursing
through him, almost sending him over the
edge.
"That what ya think, Andy?" Gibbs
growled, barely holding on as Andy
taunted him with those sinful eyes,
daring him to give in and come. Gibbs
held back manfully, working both his
hands on their cocks, rubbing them in
synchronous time, enjoying the sensation
of having two handfuls of hard, pulsing
flesh instead of the usual one. There
was no way he was going to lose this
challenge. He was Leroy Jethro Gibbs,
and there was no way some cocky kid was
going to get the better of him, in the
bedroom or out of it. He gazed up at
Andy, a small, confident smile tugging
at the corner of his lips, daring him to
give in.
"Oh you really don't like to lose, do
you?" Andy grinned, and then he started
to laugh, and at almost the same moment
he came, spurting out onto Gibbs’s
belly, his laugh turning into an
orgasmic moan and shudder of pleasure.
“Call that stamina, kid?” Gibbs smirked,
continuing to pump his own cock with a
triumphant flourish of his hand. Andy
grinned down at him.
“Yeah – but I’ll be ready to go again in
ten – while you’ll be struggling to get
it up again this side of Christmas, old
man,” Andy teased him back.
Gibbs came with a groan of pleasure, his
come mixing with Andy's on his belly,
and then he lay there for a moment,
completely out of it, waiting for the
blood to return to his head.
Andy sat astride him, smiling down at
him, his lips still wet from where he'd
licked them. Gibbs stared up at him,
transfixed, and then he found his hands
sliding up Andy's body, and he twisted
one hand in the kid's hair, took hold of
it, and pulled Andy down so that he was
flat on top of him, belly against belly.
He kept his hand tangled in Andy's hair
as he kissed him on the mouth for the
first time, sliding his tongue between
those teasing lips and working them
open. He slid his arm around Andy's body
to keep the naked flesh pressed hard
against his own, and pushed up into
Andy's willing mouth, his lips
relentless and his tongue ravenous as he
worked.
This should have felt wrong, it should
have been guilty or furtive, a betrayal
of Shannon and what they'd shared, but
it didn't. Gibbs paused for breath, and
then pushed Andy over, and rolled on top
of him. He held the kid's arms above his
head and gazed down at him, gasping for
breath, wondering what the hell had
gotten into him. Andy gazed back up at
him, chest heaving beneath Gibbs's
knees. Gibbs surrendered; he moved his
head down to kiss those inviting lips
again, biting, nibbling and sucking on
them, thrusting his tongue deep into
Andy's mouth.
He thought that if Shannon could see him
now she'd understand. She'd understand
that this wasn't just a kiss – it was
the kiss of life - a way back to being a
living, breathing human being when he'd
only been a shadow these past few
months. He wasn't sure why it had been
this person, this mixed-up,
irrepressible kid who had somehow
brought him back to life, but it was.
Maybe Andy wouldn't have been his
choice, if he'd been given one, but
Gibbs knew there was no way this would
be happening if Andy had been a woman.
He couldn't kiss or make love to a woman
like he’d just done with Andy - not yet.
He wasn't ready for that yet.
He kissed Andy for a long time – deep,
powerful, intense kisses, full of need,
like a drowning man welcoming air into
his lungs after months of holding his
breath. Then, finally, he rolled off him
and lay down on the bed, gazing up at
the ceiling blankly, feeling the blood
course through his veins and the
pounding of his heart.
He was alive. His body smelled of sex,
his mouth tasted of Andy, and he was
alive – and, what's more, he knew now
that he wanted to stay that way.
Andy rolled over, propped his chin on
his hand, and gazed at him.
"Shit," he whistled. "And, uh…wow. I
thought you didn't do kissing."
"I don’t," Gibbs said tiredly, and he
reached up and traced one finger over
Andy's swollen lips.
~*~
2008
Waiting for someone to die wasn't an
interesting pastime. Gibbs leaned
against the drapes, and watched Tony
watch his father sleep. Tony looked
exhausted but it was late now, and it
had been a long day.
He wondered if DiNozzo Senior would
relent before he died and say the words
Gibbs had asked him to say, but Tony's
father was a stubborn old bastard so
maybe not - although Gibbs hadn't yet
given up hope.
After DiNozzo withdrew his hand Tony
made no attempt to touch him again. He
just sat there, gazing sightlessly at
him as the old man slept, a faraway look
in his eyes. Gibbs wondered what he was
thinking and how he was feeling. Tony's
unresolved issues with his father were
an integral part of his make-up, so
Gibbs had no doubt that this was
affecting him deeply. He just hoped that
Tony wasn't so badly broken when this
was over that he wouldn't be able to put
him back together again. Tony was
resilient though – he knew that from
experience. No matter how many times he
got knocked down he always got back up
again, the wide, flashy grin on his face
distracting anyone from seeing the
shadows in his eyes.
Gibbs's gaze travelled from Tony to the
yellow, sickly face of the dying man in
the bed, lips set in a rigid, implacable
line. Gibbs knew something about dying.
He'd been close to it a few times
himself. Last time had been less than a
year ago when he'd been trapped in a car
at the bottom of a river…
Gibbs took a deep, ragged intake of
breath, remembering the slow loss of
consciousness as his lungs filled with
water. In his mind's eye he could see
Tony, swimming through the murky depths
towards him. He could feel Tony's strong
hands on his body, pulling him free, and
the weight of Tony's arm wrapped around
him as he carried him back up to the
surface and dragged him out onto the
dock.
Then there had been the firm, warm press
of Tony's lips on his as he tried to
breathe air back into him. The feel of
those particular lips on his had
resurrected a memory of the first kiss
of life that Tony had given him, when
he'd been dying in a very different way,
and that was what had caused him to
breathe in. Tony always did have a knack
for bringing him back to life.
"You guys want some coffee?" Pete asked,
from his place over by the door, cutting
through Gibbs's thoughts and breaking
into the silence.
"Sounds good," Gibbs said, relieved to
have an excuse to move. "Tony?"
"What? Oh. Yeah." Tony glanced up at
him, the faraway expression in his eyes
fading. "In fact – I'll come with you. I
need some air."
"I'll call the nurse back in to sit with
him," Pete said.
Gibbs followed Tony out of the room and
they walked in silence back down to the
kitchen where the crowd had thinned
considerably, and only a couple of
diehards remained. Tony slipped out of
the kitchen door and stood outside,
leaning against the wall, gazing up at
the full moon hanging overhead, his
breath clouding the frosty air around
him. Gibbs hung around by the window,
wanting to give him space but keep an
eye on him at the same time.
"He going to be okay?" Pete asked as he
got out some cups. Gibbs thought it was
ironic that a member of Tony's own
family should be asking *him* that, like
he was the expert on Tony and not them.
And, in a way, he probably was.
"Yeah," he said. "He'll be fine. He's
strong. Always bounces back."
"Mmm." Pete looked uncertain. "Look I
don't know what you know about our
family…uh…is it Gibbs, or do you like to
be called Leroy, or what?"
"Gibbs is fine," he said curtly. Pete
nodded.
"Just…I know you heard all that stuff in
there but I don't want you to get the
wrong idea," Pete said, looking almost
embarrassed. "I know my uncle sounded
like a total bastard when he was talking
to Tony but he's always been good to me.
When my dad died he took me under his
wing - he put me through college, and
offered me a position in his
business…he's spoiled my kids rotten and
he's charm itself with my wife. He's a
good man, Gibbs, he really is. He just
has this real blind spot where Tony is
concerned."
"Okay." Gibbs shrugged.
"No…I mean…I don't want you to think I
pushed Tony out or anything because I
really didn't. He and I have always got
along. I guess what I'm saying is that I
didn't try and take Tony's place with my
uncle - it just happened."
"Tony bear any grudges?" Gibbs asked,
glancing out of the window, his gaze
settling on the back of Tony's neck. His
fingers itched with an urge to stroke
the exposed piece of skin between the
collar of Tony's shirt and his hairline.
"No…but you know Tony - even if he did,
I doubt I'd know about it," Pete
replied, with a shrug. "He never likes
anyone to know what he's really feeling
underneath the big act. You must have
figured that out."
"Oh yeah." Gibbs nodded.
He knew all about the famous Tony
misdirect, had witnessed it at close
quarters over the past seven years –
hell, he'd seen it at an embryonic
stage, all those years ago, back in
Ohio. Tony had perfected it since then
though, and finely honed it during his
years at NCIS. Gibbs was sometimes
impressed by just how polished it now
was, as buffed up, shiny and dazzling as
could be. It had to be, to distract
people and to keep them from catching a
glimpse of the kid who got thrown out of
school for sleeping with another boy;
the son disowned by his father for not
being what he was supposed to be; and
the young, desperate hustler who turned
tricks in bars.
Yeah, Tony had a lot to hide and god
knows he'd learned how to hide it damn
well. His personality was like
quicksilver – the serious, capable agent
always carefully concealed behind the
attention-seeking idiot, so nobody would
ever piece all the clues together and
see the real man behind the mask. Except
Gibbs – and he only saw because he
remembered two weeks spent in a motel
room back in Columbus, Ohio a very long
time ago with a kid who called himself
Andy.
~*~
1991
With sleep, medication and rest – to say
nothing of several sessions of highly
pleasurable sex - Andy recovered
quickly, and the cuts and bruises on his
body soon faded. It was pathetically
obvious that he loved having someone
around who cared about his state of
health, even if it *was* Gibbs whose
actual displays of caring rarely went
beyond an injunction to take his meds,
and a terse insistence that he eat and
sleep at regular intervals.
The few days in that room, eating,
sleeping, fucking and not getting
drop-down drunk every night had a
positive effect on Gibbs too, and for
the first time since his family died he
started to feel like his old self again.
Gibbs was aware they couldn’t stay
locked up in this little bubble of
make-believe forever though. He didn’t
have any plans for the future, because
up until now he hadn’t been sure he had
one, but he was damn sure that any such
plans didn’t include spending the rest
of his life holed up in a motel room
with a nineteen year old boy.
Gibbs was under no illusions that this
was something that could last. Andy was
soaking up every crumb of gruff paternal
affection Gibbs could throw his way, and
Gibbs was happy enough to throw it, such
as it was, but he didn’t want to start
enjoying it too much. Kelly was gone,
and Andy wasn’t any kind of substitute.
Gibbs knew he was using Andy as much as
Andy was using him; they’d both found
something in each other that they needed
at this particular point in their lives.
It was an escape, a lifeline, and it
helped - god knows it helped - but it
wasn’t something that was going to go
anywhere.
After a few days of avoiding the world
Gibbs decided it was time to start
figuring out a way to solve this. He
took Andy out to a nice restaurant, both
of them washed and shaved and wearing
clean clothes, and waited until the kid
had devoured enough to feed a small
army, before sitting back, and clearing
his throat. Andy looked up, anxiously.
“Is it now?” he asked.
“Is what now?” Gibbs frowned.
“I’ve been waiting for the lecture for
days,” Andy shrugged. “The one on the
subject of allowing myself to get beaten
up in exchange for cash.”
“Well it was a pretty dumb move on your
part,” Gibbs said. “I know he paid well,
but you’ve been off work and off college
for days as a result so that kind of
defeats the object, doesn’t it?”
“I didn’t *know* it was going to be that
bad when I agreed to it, Jethro!” Andy
protested. “I thought I could handle
it.”
“Well you couldn’t, and that’s my
point,” Gibbs told him, with an
impatient flick of his fingers. “I also
don’t think you can handle being a
hustler for much longer. To be honest,
you’re just not that great at it, and
it’s dangerous – you could get arrested,
or hurt, or killed.”
“Wow, you’re a real optimist,” Andy
muttered.
“And you’re a fantasist,” Gibbs shot
back. “Now speak to me, Andy – I need to
understand what goes on in your head.”
“Not much,” Andy grinned.
“Seriously – what’s the plan here?”
Gibbs asked sharply, in no mood to be
won around by the kid’s undeniable
charm. “Why don’t you just quit college
and get yourself a real job? Surely
that’s got to be better than sleeping in
dumpsters and letting some guy kick you
around?”
“No,” Andy said quietly.
“Why the hell not?” Gibbs demanded. “You
can save up, go back to college later.
It’ll buy you some time.”
“No,” Andy said again. “I’m not screwing
this up. It has to be now.”
“Why?” Gibbs frowned, genuinely puzzled.
“Is this about your dad? Are you trying
to prove something to him? Do you think
he’ll come around if you get your
degree?”
Andy’s shoulders hunched automatically,
and Gibbs sighed.
“You think he’ll love you if you can
prove to him you’re worth it?” he asked
quietly.
Andy laughed out loud. “Oh you think
you’ve got me all figured out, don’t
you? Well, it’s not that simple, Jethro.”
“Then why?” Gibbs gazed at Andy
speculatively. “You said you wanted to
be a private investigator but that isn’t
the plan, is it?” he murmured.
“No.” Andy shook his head. “At
least…it’s not the main plan. It’s the
backup plan.”
Gibbs thought about those expensive
sneakers in Andy’s bags, and the kid’s
sheer athleticism, and all the sport
he’d been watching on TV these past few
days. Those shoes in Andy’s bag had been
high tops, which meant…
“You tall enough to play pro
basketball?” he asked. Andy looked up
sharply.
“How did you…? Oh never mind,” he
sighed. “You’re good at figuring stuff
out about people, Jethro.”
Gibbs grinned, and rubbed his jaw. Maybe
Franks had been right, and he *would*
make a good agent.
“I’m still growing,” Andy said, “and I’m
good – very good. It’s not all about
height – I’m the best ball handler the
team has.”
“So that’s it. This is your best shot at
turning pro, which might just earn you
enough money to impress your father and
get you back in his good books - because
I’m not sure what happened there, or
what you did to piss him off but you’ve
fucked up big time with him. If that
doesn’t work, you get the degree at
least and that’s more than he expects so
maybe that’ll be enough.”
Andy threw back his head, downed the
last droplets from his glass of coke and
then glanced around, looking for the
waitress.
“Could we leave now and go back to that
bar? I liked you more when you were
stinking drunk,” he said.
“No,” Gibbs said firmly.
“What about you?” Andy flung at him.
“You keep nosing around in my life but I
know fuck all about you. Why do you cut
your hair like that? Are you in the
military? What’s with the road trip and
all the drinking? You said you were
running away from something – what the
hell are you running away from, Jethro?
You fuck me like you’ve fucked guys
before but you’re not gay. You don’t
look at women when we’re out but you
sure as hell don’t look at men either.
You fuck like you just want to get off
and you don’t care how or who with, and
then you get weird about kissing, like
it does matter after all and you haven’t
figured out why. What’s your story,
Jethro?”
He said all this in a low, even tone,
not even close to losing his temper, but
Gibbs was impressed. It was like a
switch had been flicked, and he was
seeing a very different side to Andy.
The kid was undeniably smart – much
smarter than he seemed with all the
clowning around. Gibbs leaned back in
his seat and gazed at Andy, without
saying a word. Andy gazed back at him
defiantly but Gibbs was confident that
he wasn’t the one who was going to
break. He started tapping his fingers on
the table in a dull, monotonous beat.
They stared each other out for a long
time, the tapping of Gibbs’s fingers the
only sound between them, and then
finally Andy dropped his gaze and looked
down at the table.
“My father is a drunk and a bully,” he
said. Gibbs stopped tapping, and leaned
forward. “He paid for me to go to all
these expensive schools but he never
once asked me what I wanted. He had all
these plans for me – I was supposed to
get a business degree and join him in
the family business but that’s not me.”
Andy glanced up at Gibbs, and he looked
suddenly much older than his nineteen
years. “Seriously, that’s not me. I want
to have some fun, Jethro, and I don’t
think his plans included that. If I
can’t make it in basketball then I want
to be a private investigator, or a cop,
or something cool. Besides, if I worked
with him I’d annoy the hell out of him.
I also wouldn’t be able to…”
He broke off with a shrug.
“Hide that overactive libido of yours?”
Gibbs asked. “And the fact that you’re
not exactly fussy about which gender you
sleep with? He know about that?”
Andy was very still for a moment, and
then he gave a curt little nod. “Yeah.
He knows,” he said tightly, and Gibbs
had no doubt at all there was a story
there. He wondered if that was behind
the cold tone of that letter the lawyer
had written to Andy on his father’s
behalf.
“If he already knows…” Gibbs began.
“Knowing is one thing – accepting is
something else.” Andy made a face. “He’s
kind of unforgiving. He divorced my mom
because she embarrassed him by getting
drunk in public the whole time but he
drinks more than she ever did – he just
hides it better. Hiding’s okay – getting
caught isn’t.”
Gibbs leaned back in his seat for a
moment, and thought about it. If he was
going to get involved – and he didn’t
kid himself for a second that he wasn’t
already involved up to his eyeballs –
then he needed to know more.
“You’re what – a sophomore? You must
have made some friends at college –
couldn’t you at least bunk down with one
of them until you figure out a way to
make some money?”
“You don’t get it,” Andy said, with a
firm shake of his head. “I don’t want
them to *know*.”
“Why the hell not – if they’re your
friends?” Gibbs frowned. “Your mom was
paying your way through college but she
died. Your dad won’t help out – where’s
the shame in that?”
“Like I said…I don’t want them to know,”
Andy stonewalled, his eyes narrowing.
“You don’t want them to know you’re
broke, you don’t want them to know
you’re a hustler, you don’t want them to
know you’re bisexual…that’s one hell of
a double life you’re building up around
you, Andy,” Gibbs pointed out. Andy
shrugged. “You sure you can keep it all
straight in your head?” Gibbs asked.
“Can’t be easy.”
“I can handle it,” Andy said
confidently, and Gibbs had no doubt at
all that he could.
“If the basketball thing doesn’t work
out, you’d make one hell of an
undercover cop,” he grunted. Andy
grinned, clearly loving that idea. “So
when’s your next game?” Gibbs asked
unexpectedly. Andy looked surprised.
“Thursday night. Why?”
“Your dad ever come watch you play?”
Gibbs asked. Andy laughed.
“Nope. Never.” He shook his head
vehemently. Gibbs suppressed an urge to
drive to Long Island right now, find
Andy’s father, and slam his fist into
the man’s face. He thought he was doing
well, unravelling the mystery that was
Andy, but there was still something that
wasn’t slotting into place, and he
couldn’t put his finger on what it was.
“I want to watch you play,” he said
suddenly. “Can I come along on Thursday
night?”
Andy’s face was a study in various
emotions – surprise, bemusement, and an
almost pathetic kind of joy. Gibbs saw
the ten year old in him again, and while
he knew he was just getting in deeper it
was worth it to see that look in Andy’s
eyes.
“Yeah. You can come,” Andy said
casually, as if his entire face hadn’t
just lit up at the suggestion. He
thought about that for a moment, and
then leaned forward, and spoke straight
into Gibbs’s ear. “And talking about
coming…” he whispered.
Gibbs sighed.
~*~
2008
“You guys must be hungry,” Pete said to
Gibbs. “Why don’t I arrange some food?
Take out okay? Chinese?”
“Fine.” Gibbs shrugged. He was hungry
but with all that was going on he hadn’t
given it much thought. Neither he nor
Tony had eaten since that sandwich on
the plane hours ago, and Tony wasn’t
exactly famous for doing without food
for any length of time.
Pete walked away to arrange it and Gibbs
decided that Tony had had long enough on
his own out there.
He went outside, and took a sharp intake
of breath as the icy cold air hit him.
Tony had left his jacket inside and
wasn’t wearing anything warmer than a
shirt. He had to be freezing. He was
standing underneath a single outdoor
light, which shone on his dark hair,
illuminating a few paler strands, making
him look more like Andy than Gibbs cared
to think about right now.
“Christ it’s cold out here,” Gibbs said,
going over to stand beside him. Tony
glanced at him.
“Yeah. Feels good. My head was pounding
being locked up in that stuffy dark
room. Feels like it’s starting to clear
now.”
“Yeah.” Gibbs nodded, glad that Tony was
acknowledging just how goddamn awful
that room had been. “Pete’s getting us
some food. I said Chinese would be
okay.”
“Thanks.” Tony looked down at his shoes,
and then glanced at Gibbs. “Sorry you’re
being dragged into all this, boss,” he
said quietly.
“My choice to come along,” Gibbs
shrugged.
“About that…” Tony began, looking up,
directly at him.
His face was illuminated by the overhead
light, and his gaze was open and honest,
and in that instant Gibbs knew that Tony
remembered every single minute of those
two weeks all those years ago, and he
knew exactly who he'd spent them with.
Gibbs wasn't surprised; he didn’t
believe in coincidences, so he’d always
suspected that Tony had tracked him down
to NCIS and applied for the job with the
agency in the express hope of seeing him
again. He thought maybe it had started
out as curiosity on Tony's part, just
the usual DiNozzo nosiness, but then
Gibbs had been intrigued enough about
how the kid had turned out to offer him
the job, despite the many black marks on
his resume, and Tony had clearly been
intrigued enough to take it. Gibbs
remembered Tony’s job interview, and how
they’d both pretended those two weeks in
a motel room had never happened – just
like they were still doing, seven years
later.
Gibbs shifted his weight slowly from one
foot to the other, gazing back at Tony
stonily, his eyes hard and his face
impassive, giving nothing away. Gibbs
knew that Tony was looking for some sign
– any sign at all – that would show that
Gibbs remembered but Gibbs couldn’t give
him that sign – with it came
accusations, revelations and no doubt a
whole truckload of unintended
consequences.
If only he’d known back then what he
knew now, would he have still done the
same thing? He didn’t even have to think
about that; he knew he would. Tony was
here, wasn’t he? He was here, alive and
if not exactly well then better than
anyone might have expected given kind of
life he’d been leading back then. What
was it Mike Franks had once said to him
after the murder of his family? That he
was battered and bruised but not broken?
That was Tony too – maybe that was as
good as it got for either of them,
considering who they were and what
they’d done in their lives – and what
had been done to them.
Tony’s gaze faltered when he didn’t find
what he was searching for and he shook
his head. “Thanks,” he muttered, looking
back down at his feet.
“Pete thinks you might hate him,” Gibbs
said. Tony looked up again immediately,
an expression of surprise on his face.
“For stealing your inheritance,” Gibbs
explained.
“Too right I hate the thieving little
shit,” Tony replied, and then he
grinned. It wasn’t up to his usual
standard but it was something. “Of
course I don’t hate him,” he said.
“Pete’s one of life’s good guys. My
Uncle Nico was as much of a bastard as
my father. Pete and I used to get
together and swap horror stories. My dad
didn’t have a good word to say about
Pete when Uncle Nico was alive – he
moaned about him all the time because
Pete was everything he wanted me to be,
and he was so competitive with my uncle
that he felt like Nico had got one up on
him by having this perfect child. Then
Uncle Nico died, and I got thrown out of
school again, and Pete was heading off
to do a business degree so Dad decided
Pete was the son he should have had.
Turns out Uncle Nico was up to his
eyeballs in debt when he died, so Dad
put Pete through college and then
welcomed him into the business after. He
got to wash his hands of the real son
and get his hands on the prodigal. That
wasn’t Pete’s fault though and I don’t
blame him for it.”
“Christ that’s fucked up,” Gibbs said,
startled by that story into saying more
than he’d intended. He looked into
Tony’s eyes and saw the shadows that
lurked there, and wondered how Andy had
felt, still barely more than a kid,
knowing his dad had found such an easy
replacement for him. That put a whole
new dimension on the way he’d viewed
Gibbs all those years ago. Suddenly that
request that he call Gibbs “Dad” took on
a different perspective. He’d seen his
father get a replacement son – maybe it
wouldn’t be so hard for him to get a
replacement father. If only things were
that simple.
“Welcome to the DiNozzo family,” Tony
grinned. “’Fucked up’ is the family
motto. At least Dad’s always been honest
with me about how totally worthless he
thinks I am – he’s never lied to me
about it.”
Gibbs thought about the lie he’d asked
Tony’s father to tell just a short time
ago, and then about that massive great
lie he’d told Tony seventeen years ago,
and was still telling him now, in a way.
Who was the good father, he wondered?
The one who lied to his son - or the one
who subjected him to the brutal, honest
truth?
“Truth’s over-rated,” he muttered,
leaning back against the wall of the
house.
“Yeah, well, you would say that, boss,”
Tony said, with a sideways glance at
him. Gibbs raised an eyebrow. “Your
track record with telling us anything
isn’t exactly stellar,” Tony pointed
out. “You had to be blown up and
comatose before we found out about your
past, and then there were a couple of
cases where you hid stuff from us.
Important stuff. Stuff we should have
been told,” he added firmly.
Gibbs considered slapping the back of
his head but Tony was right – and he
guessed it took them being here, with
all that was going on around them, to
make him brave enough to say it.
“You can’t talk,” he pointed out with a
grunt because Tony was the master of the
misdirect after all. Gibbs just kept his
mouth shut and dared people to ask,
whereas Tony sent them off in the wrong
direction with a series of smart
comments and idiotic jokes.
“Yeah. Well.” Tony flushed, the tips of
his ears turning a pale pink colour
under the lamplight. Neither of them
wanted to go there.
“Would you rather be lied to?” Gibbs
asked. “If it was a lie designed to help
you, or maybe even to protect you?”
Tony turned to him, and they stared at
each other for a long moment, the past
hanging perilously between them.
“Depends on the lie,” Tony said softly.
~*~
1991
Gibbs took his place in the gym and
glanced at his watch. Andy had been like
a cat that got the cream for the past
few days. He was fully recovered from
the beating he’d received, most of the
cuts and bruises now almost completely
gone, and he had so much energy that it
had been all Gibbs could to do keep up
with him.
The sex, predictably, had been both
frequent and satisfying, and between
bouts Andy had taken him around town and
showed him just about everything there
was to see. Gibbs had also insisted he
attend his classes again, and hang
around with his friends; Gibbs had given
him a key to the motel room so he could
come and go. It was intriguing, getting
to know the college student instead of
the hustler. He could now see that there
were two very distinct sides to Andy’s
personality and he suspected Andy was
very different when he was with his
friends compared to the way he was when
Gibbs was alone with him.
Gibbs sat back as the teams emerged from
the locker room, and saw Andy search the
crowd for him, his gaze restless until
it settled upon him. Then he gave a big
grin and a massive thumbs-up sign. Gibbs
rolled his eyes.
Andy was right about one thing – he
*was* good at basketball. In fact he was
the best on a strong college team. Gibbs
watched him leap around the court like a
hurricane, outclassing his opponents, a
whirling force of nature as he passed,
dribbled and jumped. He was infused with
a wild, exuberant energy that was
familiar to Gibbs from his performance
in the bedroom. All the same, Gibbs
wondered whether his performance on
court was enhanced to a certain degree
by having someone in the audience to
show off for. Andy always did like to
have an audience – whether for his
idiotic jokes, endless knowledge of
movie trivia, or even just when he
wanted his erection admired.
Andy’s team won easily, 52 – 29, and
Andy accounted for almost half his
team's points. He wasn’t as tall as some
of the other players but he had a
springy leap that made up for that, and
his cocky sense of triumph when he
scored and the low-level chat he kept up
trying to distract the players on the
other team made it clear that he was
having a great time.
Gibbs went down courtside after the game
ended, and Andy came running over.
“Did you see that three pointer?” he
asked Gibbs excitedly. He’d scored from
mid-court just before the buzzer, a
testament to both his timing and his
showmanship. “Did you see what I did
there?”
“Yeah, I saw,” Gibbs said, grinning
because Andy’s excitement was
infectious. At that moment a throng of
Andy’s team-mates and friends surged
over to join them, in a
testosterone-fuelled mass of exuberance,
excited by their victory.
“Hey, Tony, we’re going to be pouring
the beer down your throat tonight,” one
of them said, grabbing Andy in a neck
lock. Andy pushed him back and they had
a minor tussle.
“Did you see those hot girls watching in
the second row?” another kid asked,
gesturing. Andy glanced over to where a
gaggle of girls was standing, pretending
they weren’t looking at the team but
casting surreptitious glances their way
all the same. Andy’s face split from ear
to ear with a grin that boasted of his
supreme confidence in the imminence of a
new sexual conquest.
“Tonight, my friends, we get lucky,” he
leered. “Just observe the master at work
– watch and learn!”
Gibbs stood back and studied Andy
interacting with his friends, and then,
suddenly, the last piece of that jigsaw
slotted into place. Andy didn’t want his
friends knowing about the reality of his
life because he wanted *this*. He wanted
acceptance, wanted to keep up the
persona he’d had when he started out
here. He was the frat boy, the player,
the rich kid without a serious thought
in his head, and that was how he fitted
in here. It was what his friends wanted
him to be, what they expected of him -
and what he wanted to be when he was
with them. They didn’t want to know
about nights in a motel room with a man
old enough to be his father, and they
sure as hell didn’t want to know about
him spending nights in a dumpster, or
blowing strangers in bar restrooms for
cash.
No, this, right here, was the world Andy
belonged to – it was the only world his
upbringing had equipped him for, and he
was trying to hang onto it as best he
could by caddying at the country club
and hanging out with the frat boys, kids
who had led similar lives to him. No
wonder he didn’t want them knowing –
Andy’s experiences would set him too far
apart from them, and change the nature
of their friendship, and, fundamentally,
Andy just had too much pride to allow
that to happen. Gibbs could understand
that kind of pride; the unbending kind
that would break rather than yield.
Finally he recognised in Andy something
of himself, and he felt a certain
empathy for him and what he was trying
to do, misguided and dangerous though it
was.
One of the kids joking around with Andy
turned to him, and Gibbs recognised –
too late – the boy he’d talked to at the
country club the previous week.
“Hey – you’re Tony’s dad aren’t you?” he
asked.
Gibbs looked at Andy for one long
second, and Andy looked back at him,
with anxious eyes, both of them clearly
wondering what he was going to say – not
least because the kid had used Andy’s
real name. In the end, the answer was
simple – there was only one thing he
could say.
“Yeah,” Gibbs said, putting an arm
around Andy’s shoulder and squeezing.
“Yeah, that’s right - I’m Tony’s dad.”
He didn’t even want to think about the
way that made Andy look at him, because
he was all too well aware of just how
much that had meant to the kid. Andy
slid a sweaty arm around Gibbs’s waist,
and leaned against him for a moment.
“Thanks, Dad,” he whispered into his
ear.
Noise erupted around them as another
group of their friends joined in the
celebrations, but all Gibbs could see
was Andy, looking over at him every few
seconds, his eyes glowing. Then the team
left to hit the showers and the crowd
started to disperse.
Gibbs walked over to where the coach was
sitting, and took a seat beside him. He
was a big man, with thick, dark hair,
and a bushy moustache.
“Good game,” Gibbs said. “I’m…uh Tony
DiNozzo’s father.” He held out his hand
and the coach took it and shook.
“Nice to finally meet you,” he said.
“Tony’s told us a lot about you.”
“Really?” Gibbs raised an eyebrow,
wondering what the hell Andy had told
them about his father.
“Yeah.” The coach nodded, grinning, the
ends of his moustache drooping over the
sides of his mouth, giving him a
lugubrious look. “Way he made it sound
you’re about the best dad in the world.
Always sending him money, calling him
before each game to wish him luck – said
you were too busy working to come watch
a game, but looks like you finally found
the time to see your boy play.”
“Yeah.” Gibbs shook his head wryly at
the image of the fantasy dad Andy had
created. It sounded very Andy.
“Listen…just how good is Tony?” he
asked. “He was pretty impressive tonight
but does he have a chance of turning
pro?”
The man hesitated before replying,
obviously weighing his words. “If he
could make it to the pros, then he’d be
here on a scholarship and he isn’t, as
you know.” The coach stroked his
moustache thoughtfully. “He’s good -
damn good - but I think he knows he’s
never going to be tall enough to turn
pro.”
Gibbs nodded. He’d suspected this was
another of Andy’s fantasies, and he also
suspected that Andy knew it was a
fantasy too – just like having the
perfect father, and living the life of a
spoiled rich kid when he was flat out
broke and hustling to get by. All the
same, if the fantasy kept him in college
and helped him get his degree, what did
it matter?
Out of the corner of his eye he saw Andy
emerge from the locker room, his hair
wet, and he and his friends made a
beeline for the pretty girls standing
courtside. Andy was grinning, clowning
around and talking too fast – most of it
total crap Gibbs suspected but the girl
he was trying to impress was giggling
inanely so it was working.
This was where a kid like him belonged -
not out there, turning tricks in bars.
Gibbs turned back to the coach, and held
out his hand.
“Thanks,” he said. “You’ve been a great
help.”
“No problem, Mr DiNozzo. Nice to finally
meet you. You take care now.”
Gibbs returned to the motel room alone.
It felt strange, after the past couple
of weeks of being holed up here with
Andy, to have the place to himself. He
found himself missing the kid but he
wasn’t expecting him back tonight. They
hadn’t exactly talked about it but Gibbs
was pretty sure that a hot girl who was
willing to put out trumped your dad any
time. He packed up his stuff, which
didn’t take long, and then he sat down
and wrote a short note:
Dear Andy,
It’s time for me to move on. The room is
paid for until the end of the month so
that gives you three weeks to figure
some stuff out. I’ve left you some cash
under the pillow for food. Do not go
back on the streets.
Take care,
J
He left it on the table with a grimace.
He knew this was going to trigger all of
Andy’s abandonment issues but it was the
best way. Andy would bounce back – it
was a knack he had. Besides, Gibbs
really did need to move on. It was time.
He glanced around the room, at the
rumpled bed where they’d fucked so many
times, and at the TV, which had almost
driven him insane from an exposure
overload. Then he picked up his bag and
left.
~*~
2008
Tony gazed at Gibbs and Gibbs gazed back
at him. He could tell him, he thought.
He could just open his mouth and tell
him. Maybe it’d even be a relief after
all these years but they were both in
such a different place now, and such
different men. Did either of them want
to be reminded of those two weeks in
that motel room seventeen years ago and
how fucked up their lives had been back
then? What the hell must Tony think of
him, he wondered. Last thing Tony knew
Gibbs had abandoned him, just like his
real father. So why come chasing after
him ten years later, and why work with
him for seven years, neither of them
ever saying a word about it?
Pete broke the impasse by sticking his
head out of the door. “Food’s here,” he
said. “Damn – it’s freezing out here.
You guys should come in.”
Tony gave one final glance at Gibbs, and
then returned to the kitchen. Gibbs felt
a muscle in his jaw twitching with
tension. “Depends on the lie”,
Tony had said. Well, this was a massive
lie, too big to be ignored if it ever
came out; the kind of lie that would
change everything between him and his
agent. Maybe it wouldn’t come out, and
they could continue to play this game of
purposefully not remembering around each
other. It would sure as hell be easier
that way.
He was kind of surprised the truth
hadn’t come out already, maybe during
one of those Christmas Day phone calls
between father and son, but it clearly
hadn’t. He’d braced himself these past
seven years, ever since Tony joined NCIS,
knowing that if Tony ever found out then
he’d say something – he'd have to - but
he never had so Gibbs was sure he didn’t
know.
He took a deep breath of the icy air,
and followed the two cousins inside.
That feeling he’d had in his gut when he
woke up this morning had been right, and
the storm clouds were now all around
them. He had no idea how this would play
out - all he could do was wait and see.
He joined Tony and his cousin at the
dining table where they were opening up
the take out. He took his seat opposite
Tony, who, now he’d got his head
together, was back in full charm
offensive mode, mask firmly in place so
nobody would see how much he was hurting
right now.
“For an almost-dead guy he has a lot to
say,” Tony grinned. “I thought he’d be
more…you know…out of it.”
“He has been these past couple of days,”
Pete said. “That’s why I called you.
That conversation he just had with you
is the most he’s said to anyone in a
week.”
“Well, you know, this is his last chance
to win one final argument with me,” Tony
said, handing Gibbs a take-out box of
noodles. “I can see why that would make
him rally. He always did like a good
fight. Especially with me.”
Gibbs sat back in his seat and ate. He
was hungrier than he’d thought and the
hot food warmed him after being outside
in the cold night air.
“So how’s business?” Tony asked Pete.
“It’s good.” Pete nodded, talking around
a mouthful of rice. “Your dad was still
coming into the office and bugging the
hell out of everyone until a few weeks
ago. That was despite officially
retiring last year.” He grinned at Tony
and rolled his eyes.
“Poor Pete.” Tony grinned back.
“His business instincts are still sharp
though,” Pete said. “We’re in good shape
- just about to expand into a big new
office building.”
“Hah – see, if I’d joined the business,
like he wanted, I’d have bankrupted you
years ago,” Tony grinned. Pete laughed.
“Yeah, I remember when we both helped
out there together that one summer,”
Pete said. “You were about fourteen?
I’ve never had so much fun or got into
so much trouble – you were just crazy
back then, some of the stunts you
pulled. I hope you’re a better federal
agent than you were an office boy.”
“He is,” Gibbs grunted.
Tony looked up, startled. Gibbs pushed
the box of noodles towards him. Tony
hadn’t put anything on his plate yet,
and Gibbs had a feeling this was going
to be a long night.
“Eat,” he said.
~*~
1991
It was raining. It rained all night,
just like the night he pulled Andy from
the dumpster a couple of weeks ago.
Gibbs enjoyed driving through the rain –
it kept him focussed, and matched his
mood somehow. He arrived at the offices
of Weston & Grant just as they were
opening the next morning.
The receptionist didn't sound like the
woman he'd spoken to on the phone so
maybe she was a different one.
"I need to speak to Daniel Weston," he
said.
"Do you have an appointment?" She
glanced at a large, leather-bound
appointment diary on her desk.
"No, but he'll see me," Gibbs said
confidently. "Tell him it's about Tony
DiNozzo, and tell him it's urgent."
She looked at him with alarmed eyes, and
Gibbs guessed that nothing this dramatic
ever usually happened in the sedate
offices of Weston & Grant; then she
nodded, and disappeared.
A couple of minutes later a tall,
bespectacled young man emerged from a
nearby office, a puzzled frown on his
face. He had an earnest, scholarly look
about him, and Gibbs immediately got the
impression that this was a man of
integrity.
"Uh…I'm Daniel Weston. You wanted to see
me, Mr…?" He held out his hand, looking
at Gibbs speculatively.
"Gibbs." Gibbs shook the man's hand
firmly. "And yes I do. It's about Tony.
Can I have a few moments of your time?"
"For Tony – yes," Weston told him,
ushering him into his office. Gibbs
glanced around at the orderly stack of
files on the desk and on the floor. This
man was methodical and hard-working. He
wasn't some hot-shot high flier. He was
someone who had to work at what he did,
and was conscientious to a fault.
Weston sat behind his desk and gestured
that Gibbs take a seat in front of it.
"Is Tony okay?" Weston asked anxiously,
leaning forward. "Someone called here
last week when I was on vacation and
said he'd been hurt."
"That was me, and he had," Gibbs said.
"It seems his father is less concerned
about him than you though."
Weston sat back in his chair with a
sigh. "I've known the DiNozzo family all
my life. Tony is like a kid brother to
me. A real handful of a kid brother," he
added, with a faintly exasperated smile.
"I can't comment on Tony's relationship
with his father but I'm fond of the kid.
And you didn't answer my question – is
he okay?"
"He's recovered physically if that's
what you mean," Gibbs said. "But he's in
trouble and needs help – financial
help."
Daniel Weston shook his head. "I can
relay this news to his father but I'm
afraid I already know what his answer
will be."
"So do I," Gibbs replied shortly. "So
don't bother telling him. He's not
interested. I want something different
from you."
Weston frowned.
"I want to employ your services," Gibbs
said. "Will you take me on as a client –
for Tony?"
"I don't understand," Weston said.
"I have some money that I'll never
touch," Gibbs told him, thinking of the
payout he'd got from Shannon's death
that was burning a hole in his bank
account "It's no use to me but it'll
help Tony. It comes with conditions."
Weston was frowning even more now.
"He passes all his classes – hell, he
attends all his classes - and he works
hard. That's where you come in. If he
fails or flunks out then the money
stops; you make that clear to him."
"I'm not sure I really understand,"
Weston said.
"Yes you do," Gibbs said curtly. "I want
to help him but I don't want him knowing
it's me. I don't want him feeling like
he owes me anything, or he has to repay
me. When he graduates he's on his own.
Money stops."
"I won't lie, Mr Gibbs," Weston told
him. "Are you asking me to pretend the
money comes from his father?"
"No." Gibbs shook his head. "I'm asking
you not to say it doesn't."
"I don't see how…" Weston began.
"It's easy," Gibbs cut in tersely. "How
about something like – "Dear Tony,
I've been instructed to send you the
enclosed. Your tuition, board and rent
will be paid for monthly from now on…etc
etc". No need to say *who*
instructed you. Tell him to send any
correspondence on the subject to you,
not to his father. I believe Tony's
father has already made it pretty clear
he doesn't want to hear from his son in
any case."
"And if Tony asks who the money is
from?"
"If he asks, which I doubt he will, then
I'm sure you'll think of something to
tell him - but I want to remain
anonymous," Gibbs said firmly.
Weston gazed at him owlishly from behind
his spectacles.
"Do you want to help Tony or not?" Gibbs
asked him softly. "You said he was like
a kid brother to you."
Weston thought about it for a moment,
and then leaned forward again. Gibbs
noticed how sharp his blue eyes were,
behind the spectacles. This man was
nobody's fool.
"What kind of a person *ever* has money
they know they'll never touch?" he
asked.
"Someone who lost the two people he
loved most and doesn't want the cash
settlement he got for it," he replied
tersely. Weston's eyes widened. Gibbs
took a check out of his pocket and
handed it to Weston.
"This won't be enough to see him through
another three years of college," Weston
told him, glancing at it.
"I know." Gibbs nodded. "I'll send you a
sum monthly until he graduates."
"You sure you can afford this?" Weston's
gaze travelled over his unshaven jaw and
his casual clothes, dishevelled from his
long, overnight drive.
Gibbs gave a tight grin. "I can afford
it," he said. "Have you got any more
objections or will you handle this for
me?"
Weston thought about it for a moment,
and then nodded. "I'll do it. To be
honest…you're not the kind of man I can
imagine many people say no to."
Gibbs managed a wry grin at that, and
rubbed the stubble on his jaw
thoughtfully. "Don't tell Tony's father
about this," he said. "This is just
between me and Tony. It's got nothing to
do with him."
Weston nodded again. Then he got up,
came around to the front of the desk,
and perched on it, right in front of
Gibbs. He leaned forward and gazed at
him, sharp blue eyes blinking earnestly
from behind his glasses.
"Why are you doing this?" he asked.
"Like I said – I lost everyone I loved
and I was looking for a reason to get up
in the morning," Gibbs told him. "Now I
have one. I'm helping myself as much as
I'm helping Tony."
"What did he tell you about himself?"
Weston asked. "I wouldn't want to take
your money under false pretences. He
might have lied."
"Oh he lied – about a lot of things,"
Gibbs laughed. "But I'm good at seeing
through lies. It's kind of my job – or
at least it will be, soon."
Weston raised an eyebrow. Gibbs got up
and drew an envelope out of his jacket
pocket.
"Here's my address if you need to
contact me," he said, handing the
envelope to Weston. "Send me his exam
grades at the end of every semester and
any updates you think I should know. Do
not give him my address. Do not tell him
who his anonymous benefactor is. Do not
contact me unless it's important."
Gibbs held out his hand and Weston took
it, and shook it firmly. "I still don't
understand why you're doing this," he
said. "What's Tony to you?"
There were all kinds of suspicions in
Weston's eyes, and Gibbs thought that at
least some of them were pretty much
well-founded. He wondered what Weston
knew of Tony's sexual preferences, and
whether he'd guessed how he might be
funding himself through college since
his mom died.
"He's just a kid who needs a dad," he
said. "And I'm a dad who just lost a
kid. That's all." It wasn't all – it was
a hell of a lot more complicated and
fucked up than that - but it was
something Weston could understand. His
expression softened.
"I'm sorry – and thank you, Mr Gibbs.
This really is most extraordinarily
generous of you. I'll make sure your
instructions are followed to the
letter."
"Good." Gibbs nodded curtly, and then
turned on his heel and left.
He walked down the road to a phone
booth, stepped inside, and reached into
his jacket pocket for a scrap of paper
that had been scrunched up in there for
weeks. He dialled the number.
"Franks? It's Gibbs. That job you
offered me? I'll take it," he said. He
heard the NIS agent give a gruff laugh
on the other end of the line.
"Knew you'd see sense eventually,"
Franks said. "You can start on Monday."
"I'll be there," Gibbs said. That only
gave him a couple of days but he didn't
give a damn about that; the sooner the
better.
"8am sharp." Franks added. "Don't be
late. I'm a hell of a boss to piss off."
And then he put the phone down.
Gibbs made his way back to his car and
sat there, gazing at the steering wheel.
He'd finally come to terms with his loss
back in that motel room but learning to
live with it was going to take longer.
Every day he woke up and they weren't
here it hit him in his gut and made him
wonder what the hell he had to live for.
Now he had no choice. For the next three
years he had to get up every day and go
to work to make enough money to put Andy
through college. Maybe, when those three
years were up, he'd have found some way
to live with the gaping hole in his
heart.
Maybe.
~*~
2008
Tony fell silent as they finished their
meal, and Gibbs guessed they both felt
an imminent sense of dread about going
back into that room. He wasn't sure if
he preferred it when they all stood
quietly around at the bedside, or when
Tony and his father tore into each
other. Neither was particularly
appealing but if Tony wanted him to go
back in there with him then he'd go.
Finally they couldn't delay it any more
and Tony pushed his plate away and stood
up.
"Time to go back into the ring for round
three," he muttered. "I think he's ahead
on points but there's still some fight
left in me."
"You've been pulling your punches,"
Gibbs pointed out. "I understand why but
keep your guard up and make sure he
doesn't land a knockout blow." He
gestured with his fists in front of his
face, in a defensive posture.
Tony shook his head ruefully. "One thing
you need to know about my dad, boss – he
always wins."
They walked slowly up the stairs and
back into the room. DiNozzo was still
asleep. Gibbs went over to his usual
spot next to the window. He hooked his
finger in the dark green silk drapes,
pulled them aside an inch, and looked
out at the full moon and the bright
stars shining in the clear black sky.
He turned back to find that Tony had sat
down in a chair beside the bed again,
and Pete was sitting at the end of the
bed. Gibbs pulled up a chair, sat down
by the window, and listened to Tony and
Pete chat in quiet voices about little
stuff – mainly Pete’s wife and kids.
After an hour or so, DiNozzo opened his
eyes and looked at his son as if he
didn't know who he was, and then
recognition crept in and he grunted.
"You still here, Tony?" he asked. "I
thought you'd have left by now. Where
are you staying anyhow? Not here." He
glanced at Pete suspiciously. "I told
Pete you weren't staying here."
"Not here, no. In the hotel on Old
Country Road," Tony assured him.
"Good. I meant what I said back then,
after you got expelled from Drewes and I
sent you to live with your mother. I
don't want you spending another night
under my roof," DiNozzo said.
"Yeah, I know," Tony said wearily.
"Seriously, Dad – you're dying. Let's
forget about this stuff. Pete and I were
just reminiscing about the good old
days."
"You remember when Tony and me came to
work in the office that summer when we
were kids?" Pete said, leaning forward,
doing his best to aid Tony in the whole
"let's play nice" thing he was clearly
working so hard on right now.
"I remember," DiNozzo chuckled.
"I think you were relieved when fall
came," Pete added, with a grin.
"You had ambition, even then, Pete,"
DiNozzo told him. "I could see that. You
didn't fool around like Tony. You knew
what you wanted to do with your life.
Tony never did."
"I did," Tony said quietly. "It just
wasn't what you wanted to hear so you
never listened."
"Oh yeah, I remember now - you thought
you could throw a ball around for a
living. Whatever happened to that, huh?"
Tony's shoulders hunched, and Gibbs
winced. "I busted my knee, Dad," Tony
said. Then he sighed. “And I wasn’t good
enough in any case.”
DiNozzo raised his eyes heavenward, and
Gibbs wondered if this was the knockout
blow he'd been trying to land since he'd
first set eyes on his son again. He was
a stubborn old bastard, and this was his
last chance to win this old argument
with his son before he died.
"Story of your life," DiNozzo muttered.
"And what did you major in again, Tony?"
"Phys Ed," Tony said quietly.
"Phys Ed," DiNozzo crowed. He might be
dying but he had scented blood and he
could see he had his son on the ropes
now. Tony looked defeated, his body
language completely dejected. He'd taken
too many body blows and it wasn't a fair
fight in any case; Tony was essentially
too nice to fight back as hard as he
could against a dying man. Gibbs thought
maybe it was time Tony retired from the
ring; he might not be able to win but
there was no reason why he should stay
and allow his father to kick him when he
was down.
"Phys Ed." DiNozzo shook his head again.
"Pete here got a business degree, and my
son studied Physical Education. What the
hell damn use did you think that would
be?"
Gibbs wondered if he should step in and
get Tony out of here, but then it was
too late, and suddenly that dead body
he'd been dreading, that seventeen year
old corpse he'd been waiting for all
this time, blindsided him by rising to
the surface with unexpected speed.
"If you thought it was such a waste of
time, why did you help pay for it after
Mom died?" Tony asked quietly.
DiNozzo gazed at him blankly. "Pay for
it? I told you, Tony, I wouldn't spend
another dime on you after you got
expelled from Drewes. That was your last
chance – you knew that and you blew it.
I wasn't going to throw good money after
bad. I didn't pay for anything."
"But then you…" Tony paused, a puzzled
look on his face. Gibbs got up from his
chair. Tony glanced at his father, and
then at Gibbs, and Gibbs could see the
exact moment the shocked realisation
showed on his face. "No, no of course
you didn't," Tony said softly to his
father. He ran a hand through his hair,
and got up. "I've been…kind of an
idiot," he said in a strangled tone. He
glanced at Gibbs again, his jaw tight,
and then he turned and strode out of the
room.
Pete gave Gibbs a startled look.
"I'll go after him," Gibbs said.
His heart was pounding as he ran down
the stairs after Tony. He had no idea
what he was going to say when he caught
up with him, and that look in Tony's
eyes hadn't been pretty.
The front door was open when he reached
it; he ran out onto the driveway just in
time to see the lights on their rental
car disappearing as Tony screeched out
of the gate at high speed. Gibbs cursed,
and went back into the house, slamming
the door behind him.
"What the hell is going on?" Pete asked,
coming down the stairs. "Did Tony
finally have enough? I'm not surprised.
My uncle was behaving like a total
bastard. What happened back there
though? Did I miss something?"
"Yeah. You missed something," Gibbs told
him. He got out his cellphone and
punched number one on his speed-dial; he
wasn't exactly expecting Tony to pick up
so he wasn't surprised when his call
went straight to voicemail, Tony's
teasing, pre-recorded voice at odds with
the way Gibbs had just seen him.
"Maybe he needs some time to himself.
That was pretty heavy," Pete said.
"Maybe." Gibbs pressed number two on his
speed-dial; it rang a few times and then
McGee's bleary voice answered.
"Hello? Boss? Is that you? You do know
it's two o' clock in the morning don't
you?" McGee said with a yawn.
"I don't care what the hell time it is,
McGee – I need you to get a fix on
Tony's cellphone."
"Tony's cellphone…is Tony in trouble?"
McGee asked, his voice suddenly sounding
wide awake. Gibbs could hear him getting
up.
"Just do it, McGee," Gibbs snapped.
"On it, boss. Uh, boss? Where are you?"
McGee asked. "Tony said something about
going to Long Island but he didn't say
why…"
"Just call me back when you have a fix
on him," Gibbs said, in a voice like
thunder. He snapped the phone shut to
find Pete gazing at him, a startled look
on his face. "What?" he growled.
"You sound just like my uncle chewing
someone out at the office, back before
he got ill." He gestured with his head
towards the upstairs bedroom. "Tony must
find that kind of familiar."
Gibbs's anxiety spilled over in the way
it usually did – to full blown rage. "I
am nothing at all like that bastard
upstairs!" he roared. Pete took a step
back, and Gibbs fought to get himself
back under control. "I'm a different
kind of bastard," he said in a calmer
voice. Pete managed a nervous grin.
Gibbs commenced pacing around anxiously,
waiting for McGee to call back. Pete sat
down on the bottom step of the stairs,
clearly unsure what the hell was going
on.
"Is Tony going to be okay?" he asked.
"If I can get to see him, and talk to
him, and explain something to him, then
he will be," Gibbs said, hoping Tony
didn't lose control of his car driving
like a maniac out there.
"Can you tell me what's going on?" Pete
asked.
"No," Gibbs replied shortly. His
cellphone rang and he snapped it open.
"McGee? What do you have for me?"
"I've got a fix on Tony's GPS –
he's…well he seems to be driving around
in circles," McGee told him, in a
puzzled voice. "What's going on, boss?"
Gibbs thought about it. He didn't like
the idea of Tony driving around out
there in his current state of mind, but
on the other hand he thought Tony might
need the space right now. The last thing
he wanted to do was make it worse by
requisitioning Pete's car and driving
after him while he was circling around
out there. That might end badly.
"Nothing," he said to McGee. "Just keep
an eye on the signal and tell me
immediately he stops somewhere."
He snapped his phone shut again and
turned to Pete. "I need your car," he
said.
"Okay." Pete, like so many people before
him, knew not to argue with Gibbs when
he was in this kind of mood. "Look, I'm
really worried about Tony. He looked
really shaken when he left," Pete said,
getting up and reaching into his pocket
for his keys.
"Go back to your uncle," Gibbs told him.
"I'll take care of Tony. He isn't your
responsibility – he's mine."
"He's my cousin!" Pete protested.
"Yeah." Gibbs gave him a scathing look.
"And you've been so scared of that
vicious old man up there that you never
stood up to him the way Tony did, did
you? At least Tony's got some balls."
He grabbed the keys out of Pete's hand,
ignoring his stupefied look, and strode
out of the front door, slamming it shut
loudly behind him. He found Pete's car
and got in. At that moment his cellphone
rang again.
"McGee – what do you have for me?"
"He's just pulled up somewhere," McGee
said, and Gibbs could hear his fingers
clicking away on his keyboard.
"Where?" Gibbs demanded impatiently.
"Uh…seems to be a hotel near your
current location, boss. The Holiday Inn
in Westbury. Is that where you’re
staying?”
"You can go back to bed now, McGee."
Gibbs threw his cellphone down on the
seat beside him and drove Pete's car
down the driveway and out of the gate at
70 mph.
There was no traffic on the roads at
this time of night and he drew up
outside the hotel within minutes. He
parked the car and ran inside, heading
straight for Tony's room. There was no
reply to his knock on the door so he
picked the lock without a second's
hesitation – only to find the room
empty. He wondered if Tony was in the
bar, and considered calling McGee back
to make sure he'd got this right. Then a
thought occurred to him; Tony was just
as good at picking a lock as he was –
hell, he'd taught him.
He took out his key and let himself into
his own room. It was in darkness, and
for a moment he thought he'd guessed
wrong – and then he saw Tony, standing
by the floor-to-ceiling window at the
far end of the room, one arm resting on
it, his forehead pressed against his
hand as he gazed out.
"Tony?" Gibbs said, turning on the
light.
Tony didn’t turn around. "No," he said
firmly. His shoulders were hunched and
he looked like a man who had taken too
many body blows this evening - one more
might have him out for the count.
Gibbs thought about it for a moment.
Seventeen years led inexorably to this
single point in time and there was no
use pretending any more.
"Andy?" he asked.
Tony moved his head to look at him.
“Yeah,” he said softly. He looked
unbelievably tired, and in his current
vulnerable state Gibbs thought he really
*did* look just like Andy again. "So you
do remember,” Tony murmured, never
taking his eyes off Gibbs.
“I remember,” Gibbs nodded.
"Well of course you do. See, I was never
sure before today. I could see how you'd
forget two weeks all those years ago –
they were probably far more important to
me than they were to you anyway – but I
guess it's a lot harder to forget
someone when you've put them through
college."
Gibbs wasn’t sure what to say.
“Christ, Gibbs!” Tony exploded. “All
these years you knew what you’d done for
me and you never said a damn thing!”
"I didn't want you to know." Gibbs
shrugged. It sounded pretty lame now but
it had all made sense at the time.
"Clearly." Tony walked slowly towards
him. He came close, too close, and Gibbs
stood his ground, wondering where the
hell this was going.
"Why?" Tony asked, and there were a
dozen unanswered questions in his voice
and a whole world of pain.
"I had the money and you needed it,"
Gibbs replied, as if it had really been
that simple.
"No – why did you run out on me?" Tony
asked. He reached into his pocket and
pulled out his wallet, and then fished
around inside it. He found a very old,
very tattered piece of paper and handed
it to Gibbs. It was surreal, after all
this time, seeing his own writing on the
note he'd left for Tony on the night
he'd walked out.
"You kept it, all this time?" Gibbs
asked.
"Why are you surprised? I tracked you
down, didn't I?" Tony ran a hand through
his hair, leaving it standing up on end.
"You've always been my little obsession,
boss, and in the end it was too much for
me - I just had to find out what
happened to you. Took me awhile but
being a cop helped. Then it turns out
you were recruiting agents and, well,
you know me…that was too much for me to
resist. I had to see you again – had to
see if you remembered me."
Gibbs remembered the interview. He'd
seen the name on the resume and wondered
what the hell was going on, but, like
Tony, he'd been too intrigued to resist.
"I wondered if you were there to
confront me, but you never said a
thing," Gibbs murmured.
"Because you never gave any sign that
you knew me!" Tony protested. "And what
was there to say? 'Hey – I'm the guy you
fucked ten years ago – how about a beer
for old time's sake?' You were on
marriage number four at the time and not
many married men want to hear that kind
of thing."
"I couldn't figure out what you wanted –
so I thought I'd offer you a job and
find out," Gibbs said. "Never did figure
it out though. Why did you stick around
so long, Tony?"
"The same reason I tracked you down. The
same reason I kept your note all these
years. The same reason I never took that
job in Spain that Director Shepard
offered me a few years ago. The same
reason I'm here right now," Tony
replied, in a heated tone. Gibbs stared
at him, and Tony shook his head. "You
really don't get it, do you?" he said
quietly.
Gibbs held his gaze for a long moment,
and then nodded. He sat down on the side
of the bed and rubbed a hand over his
jaw, feeling it rasp over the stubble.
"Yeah. I do," he said. "I do, Tony."
Tony paced around the room. "There were
things I didn't understand back then,"
he said. "They became clearer over time.
I pieced it all together slowly, over
the years, bit by bit, like some giant
jigsaw of Gibbs. Wasn’t hard to finally
figure out what you were on the run
from; it was soon after Shannon and
Kelly had been killed, wasn't it?"
Gibbs cleared his throat. "Yeah.”
"You used to look at that gun you kept
under the pillow like you wanted to
stick it down your throat and pull the
trigger."
"Yeah." Gibbs nodded.
"Sometimes I was scared you would."
"I was thinking about it."
"I know. I was terrified I'd go back to
that room and find you in there with
your brains blown out. Or else that
you'd kill yourself in your damn car.
You were drinking a hell of a lot – you
can't always have sobered up when you
set off again and there was a look in
your eyes that sent shivers up my spine.
Then it went away, after…" He hesitated.
"After you let that guy knock you around
for cash?"
"Yeah." Tony shook his head, a little
grin on his lips. "I didn't always make
the best choices back then," he muttered
wryly.
"Ya think, DiNozzo?" Gibbs raised an
eyebrow.
"Nobody ever took care of me before
then, boss. Dad never gave much of a
shit about me, and Mom cared but she was
so drunk all the time that I was always
the one taking care of her. And it
turned out that when you weren't drunk
you were kind of cool – a bit scary but
cool. And then you ran out on me."
"It wasn't going anywhere, Tony," Gibbs
said wearily. "I’d just lost my family –
I wasn't ever going to be what you
wanted me to be. The only way I could
see to help you was to leave."
Tony stopped pacing. “I fell for you,
boss,” he said quietly. “I really did.
Took me a long time to get over you
walking out. Pressed all my buttons.”
“Yeah, I knew it would,” Gibbs sighed.
“Had to do it anyway.”
“I got back to the motel room that
evening just in time to see your car
pulling away.”
“I didn’t think you’d be coming back
that evening. I thought you’d found a
date,” Gibbs said, surprised. Tony
frowned.
“No – I looked around and you’d gone. I
chased after you but I was too late.” He
sat down on the bed beside Gibbs,
looking deflated. “I know,” he sighed.
“I was just a screwed-up kid and you
weren’t in any shape to fall for anyone,
let alone someone like me. I can see
that now but not back then.”
“You were just looking for a father,
Tony - and having met your dad I can see
why,” Gibbs grunted.
“It was always more than that,” Tony
replied. “I’m not saying that wasn’t
part of it, but it was always more. You
know that. I mean, trust me, I have
never – ever - had any sexual fantasies
about my father.” He shuddered. “And
some of the things we did…they weren’t
exactly things you do with close
relatives.” He gave a ghost of his usual
bright smile, and then it faded.
“Christ, I still can’t believe you sent
me all that money. Three years. You sent
me money for three years.”
“Gave me a reason to get up in the
morning,” Gibbs told him. “When things
were tough. It made me take the job at
NCIS – it was the kick in the ass I
needed to keep going.”
“Why didn’t you want me to know?” Tony
asked. “I mean, all those years making
that fuck awful yearly phone call to my
father because I felt it was my duty,
because he’d relented and paid for me
even though he thought I wasn’t worth
it. Why let me believe it was him?”
“You were the one who wanted the
fantasy,” Gibbs pointed out. “The
perfect dad, playing pro basketball, the
double life…I didn’t want you to be
hustler any more, or to have to feel
grateful to some guy you fucked when you
were down on your luck. That was kind of
the point. I wanted you to forget about
that, and lead the life you’d chosen to
lead with your friends. That’s what I
wanted to give you.”
Tony stared at him. “I guess I’m not the
only one who knows how to lead a
convincing double life,” he muttered.
“What do you mean?” Gibbs frowned.
“Always trying to make people believe
you’re a bastard?” Tony grinned. Gibbs
slapped the back of his head.
“I *am* a bastard, Tony – don’t ever
forget that,” he said, with a faded grin
of his own.
Tony fell back on the bed. “Christ I’m
tired,” he yawned. “That fucking room
and my fucking father…now, *he’s* a
bastard.”
“Yeah. He really is a piece of work. I
always wondered who screwed you up so
badly and now I know."
"I can't believe he's really dying,"
Tony said, putting his hands beneath his
head and gazing up at the ceiling.
"After all these years of doing battle
with him – I just can't believe it. It
doesn't feel real." He looked over at
Gibbs. "How did it work? Danny Weston
made me send him all my term papers and
got really pissy with me whenever I was
slow about it. I thought it was my dad
hassling him to make sure I didn’t screw
up and knowing the money would dry up if
I slacked off kept me focussed. I
suppose you knew me well enough even
back then to know I wasn't a model
student," he grinned.
"You didn't screw up though. Weston sent
me a report every semester – you never
flunked a class. I wondered if you would
when you busted your knee – thought that
might throw you but it didn't."
"Nah – you were right – I was never
really going to be tall enough – or good
enough - to turn pro anyway." Tony
shrugged, but Gibbs knew that he must
have had a hard time dealing with the
loss of that particular fantasy. “What
happened after I left college? Did you
check up on me?”
Gibbs shook his head.
“Weren’t you ever curious to see how I’d
turned out?” Tony frowned. “Weren’t you
tempted to show up at my graduation or
something?”
Gibbs shook his head again. “No. It was
in the past. I’d learned how to live
without my family – it wasn’t easy but
I’d found a way of getting by. I was
working in Europe at the time so I
couldn’t have gone to your graduation in
any case. And I’d done what I set out to
do.”
There was a long silence. Tony glanced
at the clock on the night-stand, and
then he glanced at Gibbs.
“It’s late. I don’t want to be alone
tonight, boss. Can I sleep in here?”
Gibbs hesitated.
“On the floor maybe?” Tony grinned.
“With a blanket?”
“Like there’s any chance you’d stay on
the floor all night,” Gibbs snorted,
rolling his eyes. “Yeah, you can sleep
in here, Tony – in the bed. I’m too
tired to argue anyway.”
They both stripped down to boxers and
tee shirts, and then climbed into the
bed. Gibbs turned off the light and
closed his eyes, feeling completely and
utterly exhausted. He felt Tony lying
stiffly beside him and could almost hear
him waiting for Gibbs to fall asleep so
that he could…
“Oh for god’s sake,” he sighed, moving
his arm. Tony rolled over immediately,
and rested his head on Gibbs’s shoulder,
and threw his arm over Gibbs’s midriff,
then slid his leg over Gibbs’s legs so
that they were entangled, and it felt
much like it had all those years ago –
like being suffocated by a giant puppy.
Tony was heavier now, but the weight of
him, the feel of him, and the smell of
him felt strangely familiar, even after
all these years.
Gibbs relaxed, and felt Tony relax
against him now that he was clinging on
like a limpet, in his favourite sleeping
position - and within seconds they were
both fast asleep.
The sun was shining through a gap in the
drapes when Gibbs woke, illuminating a
single bright stripe down the centre of
the bed. Gibbs blinked. He was still
lying on his back, and Tony was still
lying half on top of him, his hand
resting on Gibbs's chest, his tousled
hair soft beneath Gibbs's chin. It felt
like the years had rolled back, and they
were in that motel room again. Gibbs
moved his hand and ran it lightly down
Tony's arm, trying not to wake him. It
had been hard, these past seven years,
working with Tony, *worrying* about
Tony, and never allowing the fondness he
felt for Andy to bleed over into their
working relationship.
He remembered that time Tony had the
plague, and Director Morrow had ordered
him to call Tony's father and let him
know that his son was close to death.
That had been one of the few direct
orders Gibbs had disobeyed in his life.
He didn't want Tony's father anywhere
near him, especially not when he was ill
and vulnerable. Besides, he suspected
that his own presence would help Tony
far more – if his father had been there
Tony might have died just to get away
from the coldness and the accusations.
All he'd had to do was tell Tony to live
and he had.
A cellphone rang, breaking into his
thoughts, and Gibbs reached out a hand
to locate it on the nightstand, where
they'd both thrown their phones last
night. It was Tony's phone ringing – he
glanced at his agent, still fast asleep
despite the noise, and answered the call
himself.
"Yes?"
"Uh…Tony?" Pete's voice.
"No, it's Gibbs," he said. There was
silence for a moment. Gibbs wondered if
Pete was smarting from what he'd said to
him last night, but he didn't regret
saying it. All Tony's family tiptoed
around his father like he was some kind
of god – Tony was the only one who
didn't and he'd suffered years of crap
as a consequence.
"Oh. Right. Is Tony there?"
"Yes." Gibbs glanced down at Tony. The
only part of him that was visible was
his tousled hair.
Another hesitant silence. "Is he okay?
Can I speak to him?"
"He's fine, and no you can't. He's
asleep, Pete."
There was another silence and he could
almost hear the cogs in Pete's brain
turning as he tried to figure out why
Gibbs and Tony appeared to be sharing a
room.
"What do you want, Pete?" Gibbs growled
impatiently.
"It's my uncle – it looks as if the end
is near now. I thought Tony should know.
If he wants to say goodbye he should
come straight over."
"I'll tell him." Gibbs shut the phone
and tossed it back onto the nightstand.
Tony woke at *that* sound, and jumped,
startled. His head emerged above the
blanket and he gazed at Gibbs blearily.
"Not a dream then," he muttered.
"Nope."
Gibbs looked at him. They'd only had a
few hours sleep, and Tony had been
shattered when they’d gone to bed. He
looked a little better now but Gibbs
wasn't used to the expression of naked
vulnerability he saw in his eyes.
Usually Tony was so good at disguises
that it was easy to be taken in by them.
Now it looked as if he was too tired and
emotionally wrung out to bother – or
maybe it was just that he trusted Gibbs
enough to let him see him with his guard
down.
"Didn't think it would feel this easy,"
Tony said, with a little grin. Gibbs
raised an eyebrow. "Waking up in bed
with you again after all these years - I
thought it'd feel weird but it doesn't.
It feels like it used to."
"Yeah." Gibbs nodded because it *did*.
It felt lazy and comfortable and he
wanted to lie here all day like this,
holding Tony, but he couldn't because of
what Pete had just said. He braced
himself, because this wasn't going to be
easy for Tony. "Pete just rang," he said
quietly. Tony grimaced.
"I must have freaked him out running out
like that last night."
"Yeah – you did, but he didn't call
about that," Gibbs said. Tony sat up.
"He said – if you want to say goodbye
then we need to go straight over. Your
dad's not got much longer."
There was no reaction. Tony just sat
there, hair messy from sleeping, eyes
barely awake.
"You don't have to go," Gibbs said. "You
don't owe that bastard anything."
Tony thought about that for a moment,
and then he moved his head and placed a
quick, almost furtive kiss on Gibbs's
cheek, as if he wasn't sure Gibbs would
allow it, before sliding out of the bed.
"Yeah. I do have to go," he said,
getting up and walking towards the door,
picking up his clothes as he went. He
opened the door and then glanced back.
"I need to make sure he actually dies,"
he said, with a faint hint of one of his
usual stupid grins.
Gibbs took a hurried shower and got
dressed and then knocked on Tony's door.
Tony opened it and stood there,
unmoving; clearly he was finding it hard
to access his usual armour in the
current circumstances.
"Changed your mind about going?" Gibbs
asked, seeing the sense of dread in
Tony's eyes.
"No. Just…trying to get up the strength
to climb back into the ring," Tony
replied. "Still feeling a bit punch
drunk."
"You can do it. You're down but not out
yet," Gibbs told him. Then, without even
thinking about it, Gibbs did the one
thing he thought might help him get
through the day; he took Tony's jaw
gently in his hand, pulled his chin up,
and kissed him on the lips. It wasn't a
long kiss - it wasn't really more than a
brief press of his lips against Tony's -
firm, purposeful and reassuring, but it
seemed to work. When he pulled back Tony
seemed to have found some resolve, and
he gave Gibbs a decisive nod.
"Yeah. That did it. Let's go," Tony
said.
Pete had clearly done a lot of phoning
around because the kitchen was full of
people when they got there. Everyone was
walking around quietly, or gathered in
huddled groups, talking in undertones as
if Tony's dying father could hear them
all the way down here. Pete was
arranging them into groups to take up to
say goodbye.
Gibbs had never been part of a large,
extended family like this, and it felt
strange to be with all these people who
were waiting around for one man to die.
He wasn't aware people did this hanging
around a dying man's bedside thing any
more but it seemed they did; he felt
like he was trapped in a movie. Gibbs
followed Tony up the stairs and back
into the bedroom he knew they both
hated, to find a couple of women sitting
by the bed, one of them crying loudly
into a handkerchief.
"That's Aunt Maria," Tony whispered.
"Were she and your dad close?" Gibbs
asked, startled by the decibel level of
the tears.
"No, she cries like this about
everything. There are pictures of her
crying her eyes out at my parents'
wedding," Tony replied, with a grin.
"Although…with hindsight, tears were
probably appropriate on that occasion."
Tony's father seemed to have shrunk
overnight, and Gibbs thought Pete was
right; the old man clearly didn't have
much longer left.
Tony sat down on a chair beside the bed
and Gibbs stood beside him, allowing his
hip to touch against Tony's shoulder for
reassurance because god knows Tony
needed as much of that as he could get
right now.
Tony's father slipped in and out of
consciousness. When he was awake there
was something angry about him, and Gibbs
got a sense of the man's fury. He wasn't
ready to die yet. He was old but a long
way off from extreme old age. Just a few
months ago he'd been running his
business, and, no doubt, terrorising his
staff, and now he was reduced to this –
a shrunken shadow of himself, shuffling
towards death, and he was livid about
it.
When he was conscious he was lucid,
although he was clearly struggling to
get his words out now, in contrast to
the way he'd been the previous day.
Gibbs thought that if anything he'd
probably rallied yesterday just because
of Tony, his rage towards his son
spurring him to a last few moments of
coherency before he surrendered to the
inevitable.
It was a long day. People came and went,
everyone looking subdued and a little
scared, as if they weren't sure what
they were going to do when the old man
died. Gibbs could understand that; like
all the best monsters, Tony's father had
acquired a retinue of people who were
attracted to his strength and certainty,
and they had come to depend on him.
Gibbs felt a quiet sense of pride in
Tony, as he sat there silently. He, at
least, had dared to stand up to his
father, and while the price for that had
been high, he'd shown that he was his
own man and would lead his own life -
and damn the consequences.
Late in the afternoon the old man
regained consciousness again, and looked
straight at Gibbs. Gibbs looked straight
back at him; unlike most of the other
inhabitants of this room, he wasn't
scared of him. The old man gave a grunt,
as if he recognised that fact, and Gibbs
saw a glimmer of that fury in him again.
DiNozzo relished a fight, and he longed
to be well again so he could take on the
challenge that Gibbs represented, and
finally claim victory in his war with
his son. Gibbs suspected that there were
a number of battles this man still
wanted to fight.
Gibbs stared the dying man out, and
DiNozzo stared right back at him. Gibbs
raised an eyebrow, and then leaned
forward, under the pretence of adjusting
the man's pillow.
"It's not too late, old man," he
whispered into DiNozzo's ear. "You can
still say those words to Tony that we
talked about yesterday. If you don't say
them now then it will be too late. This
is your last chance."
He knew the old man had understood. He
saw the recognition in his eyes – and
with it one last, faint hint of total
obstinacy - and he knew in that second
that he would never say those words.
DiNozzo raised a feeble hand to brush
him aside.
"Where's my son?" he whispered, in a
thin, reedy voice. "Where is he?"
Gibbs moved back to his former position
and Tony leaned forward.
"I'm here, Dad," Tony said.
DiNozzo shook his head. "Not you. I mean
Pete. Where's my son Pete?" he cried,
looking around.
He saw Pete, sitting on the side of the
bed opposite Tony, and patted his hand
feebly. Gibbs felt a surge of anger on
Tony's behalf, but when he looked down
at Tony he saw a glint of amusement in
his eyes; Tony clearly admired his
father's insistence on prolonging their
feud to the bitter end if nothing else.
Gibbs was glad the old man hadn't
managed to deliver a knockout blow just
before his death, but then he had a
sudden flash of realisation as to why:
It was because of him. It was because
he'd let Tony sleep in his bed last
night, and kissed him on the lips this
morning. *He* had given Tony the armour
he needed to deflect anything his father
threw at him.
Gibbs watched as DiNozzo turned and
gazed at his son, his eyes flashing
triumphantly in expectation that he'd
landed the final, decisive punch that
would give him his victory, once and for
all. Gibbs wasn't going to give him the
satisfaction. He decided they'd all
played fair with this old monster for
long enough; he didn't deserve for them
to pull their punches any more.
He moved his hand, placed it on Tony's
shoulder, and squeezed, and at the same
time he flashed DiNozzo a victorious,
derisive smile. He didn't say anything
but his smile said it for him: "He's
mine now, old man. You've lost. He's
won. He's got me now - you can't hurt
him any more."
Tony seemed to understand perfectly that
there was an unspoken battle going on.
He glanced at his father with amused
eyes, making it clear that he just
didn't care any longer, and then he
glanced up at Gibbs, and smiled at him.
DiNozzo's look of triumph faded, and his
lips twisted into a bitter line, his jaw
clenching spasmodically as he gazed at
Gibbs and Tony, his eyes dark in defeat.
Then he closed his eyes and his head
rolled sideways and Gibbs realised,
before anyone else reacted, that he'd
died. He heard Tony exhale loudly, and
Pete mutter something, and then Aunt
Maria started wailing.
The next hour or so passed in a blur of
people talking in muted undertones, as
if they could somehow still disturb the
dead man. There were phone calls and
arrangements to be made - and Pete was
in his element.
"Pete's a small detail kind of guy,"
Tony whispered to Gibbs, as they stood
by and let Pete take centre stage. "He
loves this kind of thing."
Pete was speaking to the funeral home on
his cellphone, arranging for the
collection of the body after the doctor
had finished certifying that Tony's
father was dead. He finished the call
and came over to them, and Gibbs was
surprised to see that his eyes were
glassy. Maybe the old man really had
been more of a father to him than he'd
been to Tony.
"Your dad and me talked about the kind
of funeral he wanted. He had…well, you
can imagine that he had some strong
views on that so it's all been arranged
for some time now," Pete said.
"Great. I'm glad I don't have to handle
that. You're as organised and efficient
as ever, Pete," Tony said, patting his
arm affectionately. Pete rubbed his hand
over his eyes.
"I'm going to miss him, Tony," he
whispered.
"Yeah. I know, Petey." Tony wrapped his
arm around him, and Pete buried his face
in Tony's shoulder, his own shoulders
shaking suspiciously. Tony, by contrast,
remained dry-eyed as he comforted his
cousin. Eventually Pete drew back, and
pulled a large, white handkerchief out
of his pocket. He blew his noise
noisily, and then took a deep breath and
got himself together.
"Uh…the funeral will take place the day
after tomorrow," he said. "I can tell
you what's been planned if you want…"
"No." Tony shook his head. "This is your
show, Pete."
"You are going to be there, aren't you?"
Pete asked anxiously. Tony nodded.
"I'll be there," he replied. "Don't want
the family gossiping about me not
showing up – they've gossiped about me
enough over the years as it is. Look –
we're going to head back to the hotel
now. Call if you need anything, okay?"
They drove back to the hotel in silence.
Gibbs wondered what was going on in
Tony's head – he had no idea how he was
feeling right now: Upset? Angry?
Relieved? They drew up and Gibbs parked
the car and turned to look at Tony to
find that Tony was already looking at
him. His eyes were dark but determined.
"Look," Tony said. "Say no if you want,
because I don't want your pity,
but…would you fuck me, Jethro? Would you
fuck me like you fucked me that first
time - really hard? Would you fuck me so
hard that I can't think about anything
else except being fucked? Except being
fucked by *you*?"
Gibbs gazed at him expressionlessly.
"I'm sorry," Tony grimaced, looking
away. "I shouldn't have asked."
Gibbs thought about what had happened in
that room back there. He'd just staked
his claim to this man, and he wouldn't
have done that if he hadn't meant it. He
reached out, put his finger under Tony's
chin, and drew it up so that he was
looking at him again.
"I'll fuck you," he said, surprised by
how throaty his voice was. "But that
time I fucked you before – that first
time - I was in a bad place. I didn't
have anything to give you back then. I
do now. If I fuck you this time I'll
want to keep fucking you – now,
tomorrow, when we go back home, hell –
forever probably. I won't be one of your
three week flings and I won't share you
with anyone else. If this is what you
want too then go get what we need and
come meet me in my room. If it isn't –
then I'll be here for you but I won't
fuck you. Understand?"
Tony stared at him, his eyes wide and
startled. "I understand," he replied.
"Good. Then it's your call."
Gibbs got out of the car and slammed the
door shut behind him, then walked into
the hotel and up to his room. He took
off his jacket and threw it on the
chair, and then took a deep breath and
sat down on the side of the bed. He had
meant what he said but it had taken him
by surprise all the same – not that he'd
said it but how much he wanted it.
He wondered if Tony was capable of
committing to one person the way he'd
asked, and whether he'd want to give up
all the women and the occasional furtive
flings with men, just in order to have
him. He remembered how insatiable Andy
had been but that had been a long time
ago and Tony wasn't nineteen any more.
Gibbs had no doubt he still had a pretty
active libido though – this was Tony
after all. And he might be vulnerable
right now but he was still capable of
making this decision, and knowing
exactly what he was getting into if that
was his choice. He wondered how long
Tony would take making up his mind but
he hadn't expected the knock on the door
quite so soon.
He got up and opened it, to find Tony
standing there with a tube of lube in
one hand and a pack of condoms in the
other. Gibbs looked at them, and then at
him.
"You sure?" he asked.
"Jethro – I've been in love with you
since I was nineteen. I'm sure," Tony
replied, his eyes deadly serious.
Gibbs took the condoms and lube off him
and threw them on the nightstand, then
he grabbed hold of Tony's jacket, pulled
him into the room, kicked the door shut
behind him, pushed him against the wall
and kissed him. Tony made a little
squeaking sound of surprise, and then
recovered, wrapping his arms around
Gibbs's waist. He was a lot beefier now
than he'd been seventeen years ago but
he still tasted the same, Gibbs thought,
as he opened Tony's mouth with his
tongue and pushed himself deep inside.
He held Tony against the wall as he
plundered his mouth with ruthless
efficiency, needing to explore him and
reacquaint himself with how it felt to
kiss him. He remembered the surprising
softness of Tony's lips, and the
half-remembered rasp of stubble on
stubble.
He grabbed Tony's hair and pulled his
face even closer, his hand tangled in
the thick softness, remembering how he'd
enjoyed holding him like this that first
time he'd kissed him. Tony kissed him
back just as eagerly – with more finesse
than years ago but just as good. Gibbs
drew back.
"You've been practising," he said.
"It has been nearly two decades," Tony
pointed out. "I picked up a thing or two
in that time."
"I don't even want to know how many
people you've kissed since then," Gibbs
growled, feeling his possessive streak
kick in. Tony grinned.
"Maybe not as many as you'd think," he
said. "Not everyone found me as charming
as I know I am. I never have managed to
figure out why." He gave another, more
self-deprecating grin, and Gibbs gave a
little grunt of amusement. He wasn’t
fooled though – Tony's armour wasn't at
full strength again yet, and he wondered
whether it ever would be around him.
Maybe he'd been right earlier, and Tony
was letting him see him with his guard
down because he trusted him. After all,
Gibbs had known him when he'd been a
fucked-up kid blowing strangers in bars
– he didn't have to pretend around
Gibbs.
Tony's eyes were dark with need, and
Gibbs saw in them everything he'd been
through over the past couple of days.
Tony nuzzled into his neck, his arms
tightening around Gibbs as he held onto
him for dear life.
"Please fuck me, Jethro," he whispered
desperately into Gibbs's ear. "I need
you to fuck me."
"I know." Gibbs put his hand on the back
of Tony's head, holding him close. "It's
okay. I know. Ssh." He kissed Tony's
ear, feeling Tony press against him, his
body shaking. "Ssh. It's okay. I've got
you." He rocked Tony for a couple of
minutes, kissing his hair and ear
repeatedly until the shaking stopped.
When he thought Tony was over the worst
of it, he released him.
Tony stood there, looking as if he
didn't know what to do next, so Gibbs
did it for him. He pulled Tony's jacket
off his shoulders and pushed him over to
the bed.
"Get undressed, Tony," he whispered
throatily in Tony's ear. Tony shivered
but complied immediately, taking off his
clothes with mechanical, shaky movements
of his hands. Gibbs got undressed too,
watching Tony the entire time. He took a
moment to enjoy seeing Tony's naked body
after so long. He'd filled out a lot –
his legs, his shoulders, his neck – and
he had considerably more chest hair than
he'd had back then. He was much more
solid now as well, but it suited him.
His cock was pulsing, standing erect,
and Gibbs felt his own cock harden in
response as he looked at it.
Tony got onto the bed, on all fours, and
glanced at Gibbs expectantly over his
shoulder. Gibbs shook his head.
"Not like that," he said. "I know you
think that's what you want but it isn't.
I can make it better than that. Let me
take care of it for you, Tony. Just do
what I say and relax."
He guided Tony firmly onto his back, and
then lowered himself down on top of him,
covering his upper body with purposeful
kisses. Tony gazed at him in the
semi-darkness of the room, his eyes
completely trusting. Gibbs took Tony's
head between his hands and kissed him on
the mouth again, gently, slowly, taking
his time, and Tony seemed to unwind
beneath him, his body relaxing, muscle
by muscle. Gibbs kissed him insistently
but tenderly, until every single ounce
of the tension that had built up in the
past couple of days had dissipated, and
Tony was boneless beneath him. Only then
did Gibbs reach for the lube.
He pushed Tony's legs apart and slid a
finger inside him, never once taking his
eyes off Tony's face as he worked his
finger in and out of Tony's body. Tony
opened up sweetly for him, offering
himself up with a trust that Gibbs found
surprisingly arousing. It didn't take
long to make him ready, and then Gibbs
rolled a condom onto his hard cock, and
settled between Tony's legs. He nudged
himself against Tony's entrance, and
then moved forward, sliding his cock
easily into Tony's welcoming heat.
It felt so good that it took his breath
away, and he hung there for a moment,
looking down on Tony as a wave of
pleasure rippled along his cock and
through his entire body. It had been so
long but it still felt as good as it had
all those years ago. The last time he'd
fucked Tony, he'd been too lost in his
own grief to care that much about
pleasing him. He'd wanted the release
that came with thrusting into a hard,
willing body, and had enjoyed the fact
that Tony was a sturdy, robust recipient
of everything he could throw at him.
This time around he did care about
pleasing Tony. This time around Tony was
fragile, and Gibbs wanted to make sure
he got what he needed. He adjusted his
position and thrust into him, and Tony
gave a little gasp. He wrapped his legs
instinctively around Gibbs's body,
desperately trying to force him in even
deeper, and Gibbs complied, thrusting
harder next time. Tony never took his
eyes off him, and Gibbs kept his own
gaze locked with Tony's as he fucked him
with long, deep strokes.
Time stood still and there was just the
motion of his hips, and the feel of
Tony's body clenched hard around his
cock, and the sensation of being *in*
Tony again after all this time. There
was the deep connection of Tony's gaze,
and the total trust he saw in it, and
the little sounds Tony was making, those
old, familiar sounds that he hadn't even
realised he'd been missing.
He leaned forward and kissed Tony's
mouth, and Tony arched up into him,
moaning. Gibbs kissed him and fucked
him, kissed him and fucked him, and he
didn't think either of them wanted to
come because they both wanted this sense
of connection to last for as long as
possible. Finally Gibbs knew he was
close, and he took Tony's hard cock in
his hand and began rubbing it firmly
with each inward thrust of his hips.
Tony was whimpering loudly now, his gaze
never leaving Gibbs's face.
"Come for me," Gibbs told him. "Come for
me, Tony."
Tony convulsed beneath him, and then he
spurted out over Gibbs's hand, gasping
for breath as he came. Gibbs smiled at
him, and continued thrusting into him
with slow, measured thrusts, feeling his
own climax build. He liked the way Tony
was looking up at him as he fucked him,
liked how loose his body was now he had
climaxed, and how good it felt to be
inside him.
Gibbs felt himself starting to climax
and he gave a groan of pleasure as he
came, still keeping his gaze locked with
Tony's. He hung there for a moment as he
got his breath back, and then reached
forward and stroked Tony's hair, and ran
his hand lovingly down the side of his
face. Tony's breath hitched, and Gibbs
leaned forward and kissed him again.
Tony's body rose up against his, seeking
the connection, and Gibbs kissed him
with a kind of quiet, purposeful
passion, needing to make Tony understand
the way it was going to be between them.
He wasn't going to be walking out this
time around; Tony had someone who was
going to be there for him from now on.
Finally, Gibbs drew back, and pulled
himself out of Tony's body with regret.
Then he broke gazes for the first time
as he removed the condom and chucked it
into the trash. Afterwards he got into
the bed beside Tony and pulled him over
so that Tony was in his favourite
position, head resting on Gibbs's
shoulder, arm slung over his body, legs
entwined in his. He pulled up the sheets
around them and held Tony close, and
Tony burrowed into him like he never
wanted to be released.
"Thank you, Jethro," Tony murmured into
his chest. "I was right you know," he
added.
"About what?" Gibbs asked, feeling lazy,
sated and genuinely happy for the first
time in years.
"You do know how to give a good fuck,"
Tony said, glancing up at him with a
grin.
"That wasn't fucking, Tony," Gibbs told
him, dropping his head down to claim
another kiss from Tony's lips. "That was
making love."
They spent all that night and the
following day in bed. It was strange how
familiar that felt, even after all these
years. Gibbs read the paper while Tony
watched TV, throwing his pillow around
the bed and pursuing it to get
comfortable with only slightly less
fidgeting than when he’d been a
teenager. Gibbs wasn't complaining. He
liked it best when Tony ended up lying
with his head and shoulders resting back
against Gibbs's bare chest, his hand
loosely wrapped around the remote as he
endlessly changed channels. Gibbs slung
his arm around Tony's body and pressed
the occasional idle kiss to his hair,
continuing to read his paper whenever
Tony wasn’t making him look up at
whatever trashy piece of TV he was
watching. Gibbs's only comment most of
the time was a grunt but that seemed
enough to satisfy Tony.
They had room service delivered and ate
that in bed too.
"I wish we could stay here," Tony said,
diving straight into the donuts.
"Worried about the funeral?" Gibbs
glanced at him over his glasses.
"No…well, yes, but that's not it.
Just…all we ever had was this, Jethro.
Us, holed up in a room somewhere. We
never had work before, or life, or, you
know, nosy co-workers." Tony grimaced.
"Tony, none of your co-workers comes
close to you in the nosy stakes," Gibbs
pointed out, with a roll of his eyes,
all too well aware of Tony's insatiable
appetite for gossip and almost
non-existent respect for other people's
privacy.
"True," Tony grinned. "But how do we
handle this? When we go back to DC? What
happens then, Jethro?"
Gibbs saw the flash of anxiety in Tony's
eyes, and he took off his glasses and
put them on the nightstand. Clearly they
had to talk about this.
"You think I'm going to run out on you
again?" he asked.
"No. Yes. Probably." Tony shrugged. "I
know you said it wouldn't happen but
things will get very complicated when we
go back. You're not a man who likes
complications, Jethro."
"Tony – I have three ex-wives. I'm
*used* to complications," Gibbs pointed
out.
"Yeah, but this – me – I might be one
complication too far," Tony said
quietly. "How *are* we going to handle
it when we go back home?"
"Well, I'm not going to enter into that
double life shit you're so good at. I
can't go around lying the whole time.
It'll irritate the hell out of me,"
Gibbs replied.
"Yeah, well, your whole 'ask me anything
personal and I'll break your legs'
approach won't work for me," Tony told
him. "I don't have the steely glare and
head-slapping down to a fine art yet,
either. Nobody's going to be scared off
the topic by me – diversionary tactics
are all I've got."
"So we have a basic difference of
style," Gibbs grinned.
"But then again we always did," Tony
grinned back.
"Look, Tony, nothing's going to change
back at NCIS," Gibbs told him. "I'm not
going to suddenly start calling you
'sweetie' and patting your ass in the
squad room, and you're not going to
start making goo-goo eyes at me across
the room when you're sitting at your
desk."
"It's tempting…" Tony grinned. "But no,"
he added, as Gibbs shot him a warning
glare.
"Work's work," Gibbs said firmly. "I
won't be treating you any differently
there and if you treat me any different
your ears will start ringing from all
the head-slaps you'll get. Got it?"
"Got it, boss," Tony said smartly.
"But I'm not hiding, and I'm not lying,
or making up any kind of shit, so don't
ask me to. If people find out – well I
don't really give a damn."
"Could be awkward though," Tony pressed.
"You ashamed of me?" Gibbs shot back.
Tony looked confused.
"No…just…you're new to this, Jethro, but
a lot people really aren't comfortable
with the whole bisexual thing. I've
always found it easier to hide it than
risk getting caught."
"That's your father talking," Gibbs
grunted.
"Maybe." Tony's eyes were suddenly
bright and intense. "But do you want to
know what kind of a formative experience
it was to be in love for the first time,
to be really in love, and to creep out
every night to meet him, so you could
fuck, and then to be caught with your
dick in his ass and your hand on his
cock, and have the school principal haul
you off him by the scruff of your neck?"
Tony's fingers clenched into fists, the
half-eaten donut now abandoned. Gibbs
sat back, startled.
"Do you have any idea what it was like
to have the principal *scream* at you
for being depraved, and dirty, and evil,
while your dick is hanging out and the
boy you were just fucking is being
hauled up too, and he's looking at you
like you've betrayed him. Then he's
saying that maybe it wasn't the mutual
thing you thought it was, and he wasn't
as totally into it as you know he was,
and that sounds like it's one step away
from you *raping* him and you sure as
hell know that wasn't what happened. And
then you're dragged back to the
principal's office and it's the middle
of the fucking night and he's calling
your *father* and telling him about it
and saying he has to come and get you
now - *right now* - because you've
disgraced yourself, and the academy, and
the family name and you can't be allowed
to stay there for another single second
in case you decide to stick your dick
into some other boy's innocent fucking
ass."
Tony broke off. He hadn't raised his
voice the entire time, he'd just talked
in a low, intense undertone, but the
emotion in his eyes was heart-breaking.
Gibbs nodded to him to continue.
"And then you have to pack up your stuff
with someone watching you the whole time
in case, I don't know, you corrupt some
other boy while they're not looking, and
then, worst of all, you have to sit in a
car for the long drive home beside a
father who can barely stand to look at
you. And you sit in your room for a few
days until he can bring himself to talk
to you and you wonder why this whole
thing is making everyone go so crazy
when it was just sex, and you *like* sex
- with girls, with boys, whatever - and
it was hot, and it felt good, and nobody
got hurt so what's the big fucking
deal?"
Gibbs watched and waited, needing Tony
to let all this out, because he doubted
he'd ever told anyone else about it in
his entire life. Tony took a deep
breath, and his eyes darkened. Gibbs
knew he was scaring himself by how much
this all hurt – that maybe he hadn't
even known it hurt this much because
he'd kept it bottled up for so long.
"What happened next, Tony?" he asked
softly. "Tell me."
"What happened next is that my father
finally called me into his study but
only to tell me that he'd disinherited
me, and he'd arranged for me to go and
live with my alcoholic mother, and that
he wasn't going to pay for my education
again because that was just throwing
good money after bad. Of course he'd
always known I was trouble, and a dumb
little shit as well, but he never
thought I was a fag and he fucking hates
fags and why couldn't I be like my
cousin Pete instead of embarrassing him
and the family, and did I know he had a
business to run and what the hell would
people think of him? And then he got his
*lawyer* to drive me to my mom's house
because he couldn't stand the sight of
me. Then when she died, he showed up at
the funeral and told me he hadn’t
forgiven me and he wasn’t going to spend
another dime of his hard-earned cash on
me unless I proved to him that I wasn’t
going to be worthless my entire life and
that was going to take some doing
because he didn’t think I had it in me.”
"It's a good thing he's dead," Gibbs
commented, "'Cause I want to go over
there and kill the son of a bitch all
over again."
"Yeah, so now you know, so don't sit
there, Gibbs, and judge me for hiding
it, for pretending to be oh-so-freaked
out when I discovered I’d kissed a
transsexual during an undercover op, or
for flirting like crazy with every hot
girl I see just so people never suspect
my tastes are a little broader - because
I *know* just what happens when you get
caught with your dick in the wrong place
and I don't want to go through that
again."
"I wasn't judging you, Tony," Gibbs said
quietly. He reached out and put a hand
on Tony's shoulder, wondering if he'd
shrug it off, but instead it seemed to
calm him down and he nodded, and managed
a faint grin.
"I know. I know that. I just…don't think
I can be any different," Tony told him.
"This is the only way I've ever found of
protecting myself, Jethro."
"Okay. Then we take it one step at a
time," Gibbs said. "I'm not in any hurry
and I won't tell anyone without talking
to you about it first."
"Okay." Tony nodded.
"But it's going to come out one day,"
Gibbs said. "And it won't be as bad as
you think. You're not a kid any more,
Tony, and you can handle it. Christ, if
I can take it then I'm damn sure you
can."
Tony laughed at that. "Yeah. I'm
guessing that's going to shock a few
people. The whole ex-marine, three
ex-wives, tough guy federal agent thing
will confuse the hell out of them.
You'll just stare them down though,
boss, if anyone dares to say anything."
"And you'll joke your way out of it.
Like I said, difference of styles – but
both of them work, in their own way. Now
come here."
Gibbs pushed the half-eaten donut aside,
ignoring Tony's squawk of protest, and
kissed him on the mouth. Tony opened up
immediately and Gibbs felt his hard cock
pressing into his thigh.
"Christ – it was just going to be a
kiss," he muttered after he released
him. Tony grinned, looking a little
shame-faced.
"You've always been my wet dream, Jethro;
around you my body is always going to
think it's nineteen."
"I'm flattered," Gibbs grinned, kissing
him again. He slid his hand inside
Tony's bathrobe, found his hard cock,
wrapped his hand around it, and then
rubbed it with long, firm strokes. Tony
started making his usual orgasmic noises
and Gibbs silenced them with another
deep kiss, caressing his cock the entire
time. Tony gasped, his body convulsing
against Gibbs as he was thoroughly and
expertly kissed and jerked off at the
same time, and then he came over Gibbs's
hand with a series of happy little
squeaks.
Gibbs laughed and released him, then
leaned forward and kissed his forehead.
"Your father is dead, Tony," he said.
"And you've been living by my rules for
the past seven years anyway, remember?"
"Uh, I don't think you have a rule to
cover this situation, boss," Tony
pointed out, grinning up at him.
"You're right." Gibbs nodded. "Here's a
new rule. Rule number twelve: Never feel
guilty about being who you are."
"I think there's a rule number twelve
already," Tony frowned. "Isn't it 'never
date a co-worker'? Because we're kind of
breaking that one."
"That's why we're replacing it with the
new rule," Gibbs said impatiently. Tony
laughed.
"Okay. New rule number twelve. I'll try
and remember it, boss!"
Tony grew quieter as the day turned into
evening. He received a few phone calls
from Pete about the funeral
arrangements, and each one made him
quieter still. Gibbs felt in his gut
that this wasn't good. They still had
one last hurdle to jump – he'd feel a
lot happier when the funeral was over
and he could take Tony back to DC and
love him back to his usual self.
Annoying though Tony's usual self could
be, he'd take it over this
hunched-shouldered, dark-eyed version
any day.
Neither of them slept much the night
before the funeral. Gibbs lay awake,
gazing up at the ceiling, one arm around
Tony, while Tony lay in his usual
position, head on Gibbs's shoulder,
tracing one finger in endless little
circles over Gibbs's chest.
Gibbs was relieved when the morning came
and they could finally get this over.
They washed, shaved and dressed in
silence, and Gibbs wondered what he
could say that would make this any
easier for Tony.
"What's going on in there?" he asked
eventually, pressing a finger to Tony's
forehead as Tony buttoned up his stiff,
formal white shirt.
"Just…mixed feelings," Tony replied,
fumbling with his cufflinks. "I'm not
sad he's dead but…I just wish it had
been different between us, you know?"
"Yeah. I know." Gibbs took the cufflinks
out of his hand, and threaded the first
one through his shirtsleeve.
"I did love him, Jethro," Tony sighed.
"As fucked up as it always was between
us, I did love him."
"I know that too," Gibbs said, fastening
the other cufflink.
"And then there will be everyone staring
at me. They all know why I got expelled
from Drewes and god knows it was years
ago but it's the best gossip they've
ever had so they'll never let it drop.
You'll almost be able to hear the
whispers. 'Is he married yet?' 'Is he
gay?' 'Does he have a girlfriend?'
'Who's that guy with him?' 'Are they
together?' 'Hey, Tony's date is *hot*'."
Tony grinned and pressed a kiss to
Gibbs's freshly shaven cheek.
"And then there's the will – they're
reading that after the wake and everyone
is pretty sure I've been disinherited
but they'll be hoping for some nice,
juicy scandal there too. They'll all be
looking at me to see how I react.
Nosiness kind of runs in our family."
He grinned again, but his hands were
shaking slightly as he reached for his
black tie and began knotting it.
"And I don't *know* how I'll react,"
Tony said quietly, making a mess of the
knot and starting again. "I don't know
if I'll just feel relieved the old
monster is finally six feet under, or
whether I'll screw it up and say
something inappropriate at the
graveside. Or even whether I'll do
something really dumb, like cry, because
there’s still a kid inside me who loved
his dad and just wanted him to love me
back and now it's too late."
Gibbs batted Tony's hands away and undid
his second completely useless attempt at
a knot, jerking it apart with terse,
purposeful movements of his fingers. He
thought about what he'd asked Tony's
father to tell him, and how he'd even
asked him lie to him if it wasn't the
truth, and how the old bastard had
remained stubborn to the end. He wasn't
sure that Tony's father *had* loved him,
and he was damn sure he hadn't been
proud of him, but, in the end, he also
wasn't sure that really mattered right
now. What mattered was that Tony heard
those words from somebody; somebody he
loved and respected, somebody he looked
up to almost like a father – and
somebody who really did mean them.
He did up Tony's tie for him, and
adjusted the knot with a smooth flourish
of his fingers. Then he rested his hands
on Tony's shoulders and looked him in
the eye.
"I love you, Tony – and I'm proud of
you," he said firmly. Tony gazed at him,
wide-eyed. Gibbs squeezed his shoulders.
"You hear me, son?"
"Yes. I hear you." Tony said quietly,
and Gibbs knew that it meant far more
coming from him than it ever would have
done coming from his father.
Tony's whole body seemed to change; his
shoulders broadened, and he stood up
straight, no sign of even a hint of
self-doubt, his eyes clear and focussed.
Gibbs helped him into his jacket, and
then they walked out there together,
side by side.
Tony didn't cry, and he was graceful and
charming to a fault throughout. Gibbs
could feel the eyes of hundreds of
relatives and family friends on them
both, could hear the little ripple of
whispers as Tony walked down the aisle
of the church, could see how people were
studying the black sheep of the family,
assessing and scrutinising him.
He was proud of the fact that Tony held
his head up high and didn't react. He
didn't pull any stupid faces or make any
inappropriate jokes, and afterwards,
when they went back to the house, he
made the rounds of the guests, shaking
hands, smiling, making polite
conversation and behaving with the
utmost dignity.
After an hour or so of that, he returned
to where Gibbs was standing, grabbed his
arm, and pulled him to one side.
"Okay, I'm done. We have to get out of
here before I snap, boss," he hissed out
of the corner of his mouth. "All this
being on my best behaviour is
exhausting." He caught the eye of an old
lady with immaculately coiffed white
hair and smiled at her benignly. She
smiled back, nodding at him approvingly.
"I'm ready to go when you are," Gibbs
told him. "The car's all packed up and
the shuttles fly every half hour."
"Then let's find Pete and say goodbye."
Gibbs followed Tony out of the room and
they found Pete in the hallway talking
to Daniel Weston.
"Pete – we have to go now," Tony told
his cousin.
"You're not staying to hear the reading
of the will?" Pete asked, surprised.
Tony glanced at Weston.
"Nah. I don't think there's any point,"
he said.
Pete looked embarrassed. "Look, Tony,
I'm sorry…" he began.
"Don't be," Tony interrupted him.
"Despite what he thought, I never did
want his money." He glanced at Gibbs.
"And I'm more than happy with what I got
out of this trip," he added.
Pete looked at Weston and then back at
Tony. "Look…there's one thing I want to
give you – if you'll accept it? It's not
from your father – it's just something
I'd like you to have."
Tony frowned, looking puzzled. Pete
reached into his pocket, pulled out a
set of keys, and threw them to Tony.
"It's outside," he said.
Tony glanced at Gibbs, still looking
confused, and all four men walked out of
the door and onto the driveway. Tony
took one look at the bright red Ferrari
standing out front and gave a whoop of
sheer joy. Gibbs couldn't stop himself
laughing out loud at the expression on
Tony's face; he was like a kid with a
new toy as he circled the car, still
whooping as he traced one finger over
all the gleaming red metal.
"You sure about this, Pete?" he asked,
fondling the car in a way that was
positively obscene.
"I'm sure, Tony. She's all yours," Pete
beamed.
"What about the rental?"
"I'll get someone to take it back to the
airport for you," Pete told him.
Tony made another circuit of the car and
then stopped beside Gibbs, a shit-eating
grin on his face.
"How about it, boss? Feel like a road
trip back to DC?"
"Sure," Gibbs said, grinning back at
him. “You know me – I like road trips.”
They transferred their luggage from the
rental car into the Ferrari, watched by
the little crowd of people who had
gathered out front, intrigued by all the
commotion.
They said their goodbyes, and then Tony
got into the car and rested his hands
lovingly on the steering wheel. Gibbs
got in beside him. Tony was silent for a
moment, and then he turned to face him.
"You know, I don't think I ever said
thank you," he said. Gibbs raised an
eyebrow.
"For putting me through college. I have
no idea where the hell I'd have ended up
if you hadn't done that. You pretty much
saved my life. "
"Just returning the favour," Gibbs said
softly, remembering how close he'd come
to blowing his brains out back then, and
how taking care of Andy had given him
something to live for.
Tony nodded, understanding. "Yeah – but
thank you all the same," he said
sincerely. "I might be saying it years
too late, but I want to say it."
"You're welcome, Andy," Gibbs said
softly. Tony's eyes sparkled in response
to the name, and he gave a bright, goofy
smile that was all Andy. "Now – let's go
home," Gibbs said.
Tony nodded. He glanced out of the
window at the little crowd of people who
were gathered around them, and then a
spark of total mischief flashed in his
eyes. He looked sideways at Gibbs, then
leaned over, took hold of Gibbs's head
in his hands, pulled him towards him,
and kissed him on the mouth – hard and
passionately - for several seconds.
A little murmur went up from the
watching crowd, and Gibbs could feel
Tony grinning into his mouth as he
kissed him, and then he was released.
Gibbs raised an eyebrow.
"What happened to the not being
comfortable with anyone knowing thing?"
he asked.
"Hey – new rule number twelve, remember?
Besides, I wanted to give them something
*else* to talk about for the next couple
of decades," Tony said, with a jaunty
wave at the crowd. He put the car into
gear, released the brake, slammed his
foot on the accelerator, and they shot
down the driveway at high speed.
"So…I was thinking…we could…I don't
know…stop over at a motel along the way,
fuck each other's brains out, and maybe
get roaring drunk as well, just for old
time's sake?" Tony said, with a sly
wink. "Whaddya say, Jethro?"
Gibbs rolled his eyes, but he grinned
anyway. “Sounds good to me, Andy.”
The End
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