This is the beginning to part II which is obviously entitled denial. It is rather long. As always please comment. =D
Part II: Denial
6 months later
All human beings have ways to defend themselves from their pain. Some pop pain medication at an alarming rate and drink themselves to sleep. Some channel their pain into a savior complex, turning themselves into the proverbial white-knight for all. Some change their names and hop on the first greyhound they come across, hoping that if they erase their identity they can erase what happened. But the most common human defense mechanism is denial. It is much easier to deny the unpleasant than it is to face your reality. Denial is the panacea of pain…until it is the bearer of pain. It is an escape rope for those in agony…until it becomes a noose. You can only run for so long before it all catches up to you and hits you at once, but that did not stop Lisa Cuddy from indulging in it. It was easier for her to get through the day if she didn’t face the truth.
She was sitting at her desk staring at the same file she had been for the past hour. For some reason she just couldn’t concentrate today. She threw her pen down on her desk in frustration and buried her face in her hands, tears burning at the corners of her eyes. Her work used to be her safe-zone, where she could go to get away from all of the turmoil in her life, but now even it was tainted. The lack of sleep and caffeine was taking a toll on her mental acuity. The memories of all that had happened thus far nagged her and the more she tried to repress them the stronger they became. Each day was a perpetual battle, filled with fear and anguish. There was no reprieve for her anymore. Then there was the matter of the baby, the baby she was supposed to feel some sort of attachment to, the baby she was supposed to care about. No matter how hard she tried to love and care about it she didn’t. In her mind that made her a horrible person. Sarah had assured her that it was normal to feel that way, but her assurances meant nothing to Cuddy. Sarah did not show emotion and the front of hyper-rationality was too well constructed to be fake. If she felt nothing how could she understand how Cuddy felt? Sarah had worked hard at stripping herself of all humanity and she had succeeded. Save for the one angry outburst back in Cuddys’ living room, she had never once shown any sort of feeling, but anger didn’t count. Everyone knew that Sarah was angry at, well, the world.
What did she have to be angry about, Cuddy thought with surprising annoyance, Sarah was a white girl from the suburbs with a relatively intact family, an insanely high IQ, and three careers.
Then Cuddy remembered what she had said in the hospital, “... but you could run. You could get a new hospital, get a new name, start over. That’s not to say that you’re old life won’t haunt you, that you won’t see him dying every night when you close your eyes, that the guilt won’t linger in the back of your mind, tormenting you for the rest of your life, but you’ll survive, you’ll adapt.”
For some reason Cuddy felt there was some sort of hidden meaning in those words. Once again she dismissed this as over-analysis.
“I would think you would’ve covered up your tracks better,” House said smugly laying a couple of old newspaper articles out on her desk in front of Sarah.
She smirked at him, amused by his obsession with her ambiguous past and its cause.
“It would be more constructive for you to tell Cuddy that you are hormonally attracted to her and if I did a substandard job covering up whatever it is you think I’m hiding then why did it take you six months to find anything of seeming importance?”
“I’m not in love with Cuddy.”
“The alternative is that you are hormonally attracted to me and since a relationship between us would be like a relationship between Hitler and Stalin if they had both been homosexual and we would destroy each other I don’t think that’s the case.”
“Shouldn’t you be more nervous,” House said ignoring her.
What he had found was not really of significance, but he wanted to test her, see if he could trick her into betraying her secrets, or at least betraying that she had any deeper than what he had found.
“Over newspaper articles,” Sarah scoffed, “I’m trembling on the inside.”
As he suspected it didn’t work.
“Who were Wanda Crawford and Dylan Stratford?”
“Why do you ask?”
“I found these articles in with your mothers things when she was visiting.”
“That only proves that these people were significant to my mother. It doesn’t prove that they were significant to me.”
House listened carefully for any sign of annoyance or anxiety in her tone. There was none, she sounded just as cold and bitter as she always did.
“If they were significant to your mother, chances are you at least knew them and their untimely demises affected you in some way. The fact that they were both thirteen in 2023 when you were thirteen makes me think that they were probably your friends.”
“So what if they were? What exactly is it that you think this says about me? The fact that Dylan tried to kill Wanda who killed him out of self-defense and in turn killed herself three days later out of guilt is a possible explanation for my misanthropy and it is rather dramatic, but it did not directly involve me like you thought whatever had damaged me would.”
“I don’t believe that and I don’t believe this is the only piece of the puzzle.”
“Since you will not find all of the pieces to whatever puzzle you have construed in your imagination why don’t you just go tell Cuddy that you have feelings for her?”
“As I stated earlier I don’t have feelings for her.”
“Then why aren’t you obsessing over whatever she’s hiding since whatever she’s hiding is most likely way more interesting than what you think I am hiding? You know that is true and you are way more interested in her secrets than mine yet you are ignoring them because you don’t want to admit that you like her. You don’t want to admit that you care because the chances of whatever twisted relationship you two would have ending with you alone and even more in pain than you are now are very great.”
“Sorry to interrupt,” an unfamiliar voice interjected from the doorway.
Both Sarah and House looked in its’ direction, thankful for the distraction, for an excuse to stop the conversation they were having. A small, Hispanic nurse stood in the doorway shifting her weight from foot to foot.
“There’s a patient in Exam Room 1 that wants to see you,” she said to Sarah.
“Thanks pal,” Sarah replied, “Have a nice rest of the day House.”
For once in her life she was happy to be interrupted by what would undoubtedly be a moron with a cold or a pulled muscle. Her and her mother would have to have a discussion about holding on to those newspaper articles though. Sarah had worked to hard constructing her cover-up to have it torn apart by the front page of a five year old Plain Dealer and an asshole with a cane looking to distract himself from his feelings for a shattered woman who would probably die.
Cuddy sat in the rocking chair in the nursery she had built the week before. She had hoped that buy expending some effort in her future childs’ room she would grow attached to it, but she was wrong. In her mind it didn’t feel like her child, it felt like Tritters’ child, a constant reminder of that one stupid event that had sent her life spiraling out of control, slipping through her fingers like sand. She wanted desperately to love it, to be concerned about the brain damage it had suffered not in terms of how much harder it would be for her, but in terms of how it would affect the child. No matter how hard she tried the only emotions she felt in regard to it were dread and hatred, but she would never admit it, not even in the privacy of her own mind. Two weeks, she had two weeks to become the damn kids mother. Somewhere deep in her subconscious she wished that the extreme blood loss and temporary renal failure had killed it, but again she would never admit that.
Two damn weeks before my life goes to hell, she thought bitterly.
You’ll be fine, her conscience soothed.
Cuddy didn’t buy it and she wished that her conscience would shut the hell up. If it did then she wouldn’t feel so damn guilty all the time. All of the sudden she felt a sharp, intense pain in her lower abdomen.
You’ve got to be kidding me, she thought.
With the next contraction came a wave of shear panic. She was not ready for this. She was supposed to have two more weeks God damn it!! Why couldn’t anything ever go as she had planned?
She pulled herself out of the chair and felt a warm fluid running down her lift leg. The inner part of her pant-leg was stained bright red. Blood, as if things weren’t bad enough. It felt like eternity before she made it into the kitchen to the drawer with the false bottom and the syringes containing what she needed to make it to the hospital. Her hands shook as she tried to inject the contents into her arm causing her to miss the vein several times. The pain would come in waves intense enough to bring her to her knees, but she did not collapse. She did not curl up on the floor and act pathetic and helpless. She handled the situation with a calm that did not betray the panic within. After calling Sarah to meet her at the door she got into her car and drove to Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. By the time she got there the pain had gotten so intense that she didn’t know if she could walk anymore. Luckily Sarah was at her door seconds after Cuddy pulled into her parking spot. Wasting no time, Sarah yanked the door open and threaded her arm underneath Cuddys’.
“Do you think you can at least support zero point one percent of your weight,” she asked.
“You should get a wheel chair or something,” Cuddy said weakly.
“You shouldn’t have driven here. Do you weigh over two hundred pounds,” Sarah asked sarcastically.
“No.”
“Then I’ll be fine,” Sarah replied pulling her up effortlessly.
“I owe you so bad.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
About seven minutes later Sarah had practically dragged Cuddy to the maternity ward.
“I need an OB/GYN STAT,” she shouted.
A tall, middle-aged woman seemingly appeared out of nowhere, wheel-chair in tow, and stared at the scrawny red-head and the pregnant, and obviously hemorrhaging woman she had obviously carried up to the maternity ward in astonishment. This had to be the weirdest admittance of a patient she had ever seen. At once the OB/GYN lowered Cuddy into the wheel-chair.
“Is the placenta ruptured,” she asked the red-head. The OB/GYN, Dr. Hanson, recognized her as that bitter, misanthropic, young girl who had synthesized a treatment for Influenza that was effective against most strains and was now close to a cure for Polio. To Dr. Hansons’ surprise she recognized the black-haired, pregnant girl, as Dr. Cuddy. This was turning out to be a very strange day.
“I would assume so, though I’m not sure considering I didn’t really have time to check,” Sarah replied walking along side them to a delivery room.
“She doesn’t appear to be hemorrhaging too severely anymore,” Dr. Hanson commented.
Sarah furrowed her eyebrows, but didn’t comment. Something was amiss…
Part II: Denial
6 months later
All human beings have ways to defend themselves from their pain. Some pop pain medication at an alarming rate and drink themselves to sleep. Some channel their pain into a savior complex, turning themselves into the proverbial white-knight for all. Some change their names and hop on the first greyhound they come across, hoping that if they erase their identity they can erase what happened. But the most common human defense mechanism is denial. It is much easier to deny the unpleasant than it is to face your reality. Denial is the panacea of pain…until it is the bearer of pain. It is an escape rope for those in agony…until it becomes a noose. You can only run for so long before it all catches up to you and hits you at once, but that did not stop Lisa Cuddy from indulging in it. It was easier for her to get through the day if she didn’t face the truth.
She was sitting at her desk staring at the same file she had been for the past hour. For some reason she just couldn’t concentrate today. She threw her pen down on her desk in frustration and buried her face in her hands, tears burning at the corners of her eyes. Her work used to be her safe-zone, where she could go to get away from all of the turmoil in her life, but now even it was tainted. The lack of sleep and caffeine was taking a toll on her mental acuity. The memories of all that had happened thus far nagged her and the more she tried to repress them the stronger they became. Each day was a perpetual battle, filled with fear and anguish. There was no reprieve for her anymore. Then there was the matter of the baby, the baby she was supposed to feel some sort of attachment to, the baby she was supposed to care about. No matter how hard she tried to love and care about it she didn’t. In her mind that made her a horrible person. Sarah had assured her that it was normal to feel that way, but her assurances meant nothing to Cuddy. Sarah did not show emotion and the front of hyper-rationality was too well constructed to be fake. If she felt nothing how could she understand how Cuddy felt? Sarah had worked hard at stripping herself of all humanity and she had succeeded. Save for the one angry outburst back in Cuddys’ living room, she had never once shown any sort of feeling, but anger didn’t count. Everyone knew that Sarah was angry at, well, the world.
What did she have to be angry about, Cuddy thought with surprising annoyance, Sarah was a white girl from the suburbs with a relatively intact family, an insanely high IQ, and three careers.
Then Cuddy remembered what she had said in the hospital, “... but you could run. You could get a new hospital, get a new name, start over. That’s not to say that you’re old life won’t haunt you, that you won’t see him dying every night when you close your eyes, that the guilt won’t linger in the back of your mind, tormenting you for the rest of your life, but you’ll survive, you’ll adapt.”
For some reason Cuddy felt there was some sort of hidden meaning in those words. Once again she dismissed this as over-analysis.
“I would think you would’ve covered up your tracks better,” House said smugly laying a couple of old newspaper articles out on her desk in front of Sarah.
She smirked at him, amused by his obsession with her ambiguous past and its cause.
“It would be more constructive for you to tell Cuddy that you are hormonally attracted to her and if I did a substandard job covering up whatever it is you think I’m hiding then why did it take you six months to find anything of seeming importance?”
“I’m not in love with Cuddy.”
“The alternative is that you are hormonally attracted to me and since a relationship between us would be like a relationship between Hitler and Stalin if they had both been homosexual and we would destroy each other I don’t think that’s the case.”
“Shouldn’t you be more nervous,” House said ignoring her.
What he had found was not really of significance, but he wanted to test her, see if he could trick her into betraying her secrets, or at least betraying that she had any deeper than what he had found.
“Over newspaper articles,” Sarah scoffed, “I’m trembling on the inside.”
As he suspected it didn’t work.
“Who were Wanda Crawford and Dylan Stratford?”
“Why do you ask?”
“I found these articles in with your mothers things when she was visiting.”
“That only proves that these people were significant to my mother. It doesn’t prove that they were significant to me.”
House listened carefully for any sign of annoyance or anxiety in her tone. There was none, she sounded just as cold and bitter as she always did.
“If they were significant to your mother, chances are you at least knew them and their untimely demises affected you in some way. The fact that they were both thirteen in 2023 when you were thirteen makes me think that they were probably your friends.”
“So what if they were? What exactly is it that you think this says about me? The fact that Dylan tried to kill Wanda who killed him out of self-defense and in turn killed herself three days later out of guilt is a possible explanation for my misanthropy and it is rather dramatic, but it did not directly involve me like you thought whatever had damaged me would.”
“I don’t believe that and I don’t believe this is the only piece of the puzzle.”
“Since you will not find all of the pieces to whatever puzzle you have construed in your imagination why don’t you just go tell Cuddy that you have feelings for her?”
“As I stated earlier I don’t have feelings for her.”
“Then why aren’t you obsessing over whatever she’s hiding since whatever she’s hiding is most likely way more interesting than what you think I am hiding? You know that is true and you are way more interested in her secrets than mine yet you are ignoring them because you don’t want to admit that you like her. You don’t want to admit that you care because the chances of whatever twisted relationship you two would have ending with you alone and even more in pain than you are now are very great.”
“Sorry to interrupt,” an unfamiliar voice interjected from the doorway.
Both Sarah and House looked in its’ direction, thankful for the distraction, for an excuse to stop the conversation they were having. A small, Hispanic nurse stood in the doorway shifting her weight from foot to foot.
“There’s a patient in Exam Room 1 that wants to see you,” she said to Sarah.
“Thanks pal,” Sarah replied, “Have a nice rest of the day House.”
For once in her life she was happy to be interrupted by what would undoubtedly be a moron with a cold or a pulled muscle. Her and her mother would have to have a discussion about holding on to those newspaper articles though. Sarah had worked to hard constructing her cover-up to have it torn apart by the front page of a five year old Plain Dealer and an asshole with a cane looking to distract himself from his feelings for a shattered woman who would probably die.
Cuddy sat in the rocking chair in the nursery she had built the week before. She had hoped that buy expending some effort in her future childs’ room she would grow attached to it, but she was wrong. In her mind it didn’t feel like her child, it felt like Tritters’ child, a constant reminder of that one stupid event that had sent her life spiraling out of control, slipping through her fingers like sand. She wanted desperately to love it, to be concerned about the brain damage it had suffered not in terms of how much harder it would be for her, but in terms of how it would affect the child. No matter how hard she tried the only emotions she felt in regard to it were dread and hatred, but she would never admit it, not even in the privacy of her own mind. Two weeks, she had two weeks to become the damn kids mother. Somewhere deep in her subconscious she wished that the extreme blood loss and temporary renal failure had killed it, but again she would never admit that.
Two damn weeks before my life goes to hell, she thought bitterly.
You’ll be fine, her conscience soothed.
Cuddy didn’t buy it and she wished that her conscience would shut the hell up. If it did then she wouldn’t feel so damn guilty all the time. All of the sudden she felt a sharp, intense pain in her lower abdomen.
You’ve got to be kidding me, she thought.
With the next contraction came a wave of shear panic. She was not ready for this. She was supposed to have two more weeks God damn it!! Why couldn’t anything ever go as she had planned?
She pulled herself out of the chair and felt a warm fluid running down her lift leg. The inner part of her pant-leg was stained bright red. Blood, as if things weren’t bad enough. It felt like eternity before she made it into the kitchen to the drawer with the false bottom and the syringes containing what she needed to make it to the hospital. Her hands shook as she tried to inject the contents into her arm causing her to miss the vein several times. The pain would come in waves intense enough to bring her to her knees, but she did not collapse. She did not curl up on the floor and act pathetic and helpless. She handled the situation with a calm that did not betray the panic within. After calling Sarah to meet her at the door she got into her car and drove to Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. By the time she got there the pain had gotten so intense that she didn’t know if she could walk anymore. Luckily Sarah was at her door seconds after Cuddy pulled into her parking spot. Wasting no time, Sarah yanked the door open and threaded her arm underneath Cuddys’.
“Do you think you can at least support zero point one percent of your weight,” she asked.
“You should get a wheel chair or something,” Cuddy said weakly.
“You shouldn’t have driven here. Do you weigh over two hundred pounds,” Sarah asked sarcastically.
“No.”
“Then I’ll be fine,” Sarah replied pulling her up effortlessly.
“I owe you so bad.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
About seven minutes later Sarah had practically dragged Cuddy to the maternity ward.
“I need an OB/GYN STAT,” she shouted.
A tall, middle-aged woman seemingly appeared out of nowhere, wheel-chair in tow, and stared at the scrawny red-head and the pregnant, and obviously hemorrhaging woman she had obviously carried up to the maternity ward in astonishment. This had to be the weirdest admittance of a patient she had ever seen. At once the OB/GYN lowered Cuddy into the wheel-chair.
“Is the placenta ruptured,” she asked the red-head. The OB/GYN, Dr. Hanson, recognized her as that bitter, misanthropic, young girl who had synthesized a treatment for Influenza that was effective against most strains and was now close to a cure for Polio. To Dr. Hansons’ surprise she recognized the black-haired, pregnant girl, as Dr. Cuddy. This was turning out to be a very strange day.
“I would assume so, though I’m not sure considering I didn’t really have time to check,” Sarah replied walking along side them to a delivery room.
“She doesn’t appear to be hemorrhaging too severely anymore,” Dr. Hanson commented.
Sarah furrowed her eyebrows, but didn’t comment. Something was amiss…