Fic: Stray

Dec. 8th, 2009 12:47 am
csi_sanders1129: (jason spin)
[personal profile] csi_sanders1129
Title: Stray
Chapters: 2/2
Author: [livejournal.com profile] csi_sanders1129
Genre: Drama. Angst. Fluff.
Ratings: T
Word Count: ~5,600
Pairings/Characters: Jason/Spinelli friendship.
Synopsis: Damian Spinelli has just found a box full of abandoned kittens. Jason Morgan has just had the day from hell. Not a good combination.
Comments: Okay, majorly huge thanks go out to [livejournal.com profile] suerum on this one, she talked me into it and got me through it. This plot bunny would have never taken any form at all without her pointing out that yes, kittens can equal plot. Who knew? But, yes. Anyway. Had to split it because LJ is evil, so yeah. Characters aren’t mine. Sadly I do not own the kittens either, for which I am also glad because then I would never stop sneezing. Enjoy!

<-- Part 1

Jason wasn’t worried. Really. After Spinelli left – a shock, but one he figured would last all of about ten minutes before the hacker came home again – he’d jumped into the shower, a nice, long, warm shower that served to make his bad day seem marginally less hellish. He’d changed into clothes that did not reek of smoke and did not drip water all over the place. By the time those suspected ten minutes, and an additional fifteen had passed, Jason was felling much better. He’d bandaged the burn on his arm and was heading toward the pool table when the phone rang.

“Spinelli.” He figured, grabbing his still drying cell phone out of his ruined jacket’s pocket. Not Spinelli. “Robin?”

“Jason, what were you thinking? You’ve got Spinelli out wandering the streets trying to find homes for abandoned kittens in the middle of a blizzard!” She exploded at him.

Somehow, that surprised him. He’d pretty much believed that Spinelli would have just gone over to Maxie’s place for a while or something. Figured he would go someplace safe, dry, warm. Of course, he also figured that the hacker would be home again by now, too. “Is he still there?”

“No, he kept babbling about having to find homes for the kittens and took off. He said he’d crash at Lulu and Maxie’s place once he was done since you didn’t want him to stay with you anymore.” Robin replied, the last few words she said quite tartly.

“Alright. I… I’ll go find him.” He assured her, hanging up before she could further rant at him for his bad day induced reaction.

The first thing he did was call Spinelli’s phone. No answer came and he could distantly hear the notes of .38 Special’s ‘Stone Cold Believer’ playing somewhere in the vicinity of upstairs. He figured that that was his ringtone. Following the sound, he found Spinelli’s phone amongst a pile a wet clothes on the floor, tucked into a jeans pocket.

Great, Spinelli was out there, in this weather, with a box full of cats, with no cell phone.

Returning to the living room, he found a spare jacket and tugged that on over his warm, dry, clothes and made for the door, with both of their phones in hand.

He checked Lulu and Maxie’s place first, just in case he’d given up and gone back there for the night, like a marginally sane person might be inclined to do. There, he found Lulu, and Maxie just arriving home, as well.

“Oh, hey, Maxie. We have a cat now, mostly because Jason was a jerk and kicked Spinelli out over a bunch of adorable kittens. I think we should name it Crimson.” Lulu greeted her surprised roommate while simultaneously glaring death at Jason. “And no, I have not seen Spinelli since he came by earlier. He said he’d be back once he found homes for all of the kittens.”

“You did what?” Maxie glowered at Jason. “You… you sent him out into this storm because you don’t like cats?” She picked the offending creature up out of the box Lulu had located for the kitten and cuddled it. “Why does this not surprise me, Jason? Why?”

“I didn’t kick him out over the kittens.” Jason defends, because it’s not… it wasn’t like that. It wasn’t about the stupid kittens. It was about a bad day and bad timing and overreacting. “I’m trying to find him.”

“He told me he was heading to Robin’s.” Lulu informed him. “Maybe he’s still there.”

“He’s not. Robin called me when he left.” Jason answered, dragging a hand down his face in exasperation. Not at Robin’s, not here, where else might he have gone? Jason had no idea.

He ended up walking toward the park in his blind quest to locate and retrieve Spinelli. He’d just reached the exit on the opposite side when his phone rang, revealing Coleman’s phone number.

“Hey, Jason.” Coleman greeted. “Spinelli was just here. He’s looking pretty bad, man.”

“What do you mean?” Jason asked, now significantly alarmed.

“He’s shivering and sneezing and coughing. Do the math.” The bartender snapped back at him. “Not to mention he’s moping around like somebody ran over his cat – That’s not a good way to put it, I guess, is it? Looking like someone made him get rid of all of his kittens?”

“Yeah, I got it.” He was just a block away from Jake’s, maybe he could catch Spinelli. “Did you see which way he went?”

“Nope, sorry. I have a new kitten to look out for.”

Jason hung up with a bit more hope and a lot more guilt. If Spinelli was getting sick from being out here like this, it would be his fault. His bad day seemed more and more irrelevant in the scheme of all of this. Spinelli had really only been trying to do a good deed in the face of a bunch of abandoned kittens and Jason had tried to force him out of it.

With a resigned sigh, he continued on towards Jake’s, hoping that maybe he’d happen upon Spinelli’s trail or something equally unlikely.

The trail went cold quickly, mostly because any footprints that might have aided him were abruptly covered over by the still falling snow, or else they were simply blown away by the wind. Either way, he had no clues to follow and could only continue to wander away from Jake’s.

He’d started to mentally map out the location of people Spinelli knew well enough to go and visit about this, and he’d just finished narrowing down the list when Spinelli’s phone rang out in his pocket. The ringtone sounded like some Disney-style theme song (later identified by Molly, the caller, as Kim Possible, because she’d selected it).

“Spinelli?” She’d greeted, sounding about as worried as Jason felt.

“No, this is Jason. Have you seen Spinelli?”

“He was just here with the kittens. He looked… really sick. I was worried, so I was calling to make sure he got home okay.” She told him, just as his own phone rang, too.

“I have another call, it might be Spinelli, so I have to go, okay?” He explained, and was still in the process of extricating the other phone when she hung up after a quick agreement. It wasn’t Spinelli. It was Alexis.

“Jason,” She started, before he could even say anything. “Spinelli, he seemed quite ill when he was just here. I’m pretty sure he nearly passed out. I had to ask him to leave, I was afraid that the girls would get sick, too.” She confined, in tones of both concern and guilt. “He just left, so if you can get here quick, you might catch him.”

He can’t even comment on Alexis sending Spinelli out into this blizzard, he’d done the same thing. Though he couldn’t help but wish that someone, of the several people Spinelli had encountered, had attempted to keep him there and called him before the hacker took off again. It was making this tracking thing very difficult.

“Do you know where he was going?”

“No, sorry. I’m not even sure he knew where he was going.”

Worry did not even begin to cover Jason’s feelings at this point. All he wanted now was just to find Spinelli, make sure he was okay and not lying in an alley somewhere turning hypothermic. “Alright, I’ll be there soon, unless I get another lead on where he might be.”

He’d been walking in the wrong direction from Alexis’ house, so he had to backtrack toward Jake’s. Moving faster now, he consulted his mental list of nearby residents who might occur to Spinelli. The Quartermaine mansion and Sonny’s place were totally off the list, way too far away for Spinelli to get to in conditions like this. Elizabeth’s was back across the park. Sam was out of town for the week, both he and Spinelli were aware of that. He really hoped Spinelli stayed away from the water and didn’t attempt to get to Spoon Island and the Cassadine clan. There was, it struck him like a ton of bricks, Carly and Jax’s place nearby, however.

With a destination in mind, he picked up the pace even more.

He’d been getting close when Carly called him to inform him that Spinelli was there. And not making any sense. Babbling and swaying on his feet. “Try to keep him there for me, alright?” He asked, and he really hoped that she could because all he wanted at this point was just to make things right and he couldn’t do that if Spinelli kept unknowingly running away from him like this.

“Yeah, yeah. I’ll try.” Carly promised him, and then he’d heard talking in the background that suddenly got louder and then there was a door slamming.

“What’s going on?” He demanded.

Carly didn’t answer him for a moment. When she came back, it was with answers. “He just ran out into the storm. Dominic’s chasing him.”

“Damn it! I’m almost there.”

He was all out running now. He had to find Spinelli before he did something stupid like pass out in the snow somewhere or slip on ice and bust his skull open. Thinking like that, however, only served to send his brain into panic mode.

“Jason!” He heard Dominic shout from not far off. “I lost him!” The younger jogged over to him, meeting at where a cardboard box lay on the ground. “He left his coat behind. Wasn’t wearing gloves or a hat or anything.” He summarized. “I think he still has the one kitten with him, but he ran into the woods when he saw me chasing him. And I didn’t want you to not know where we went...”

“Okay, we’re both going in. I have my phone; call me if you find anything. Spinelli doesn’t have his.” Jason planned, already ducking into the trees himself. He split off in one direction, and Dominic in the other.

The search began, with occasional shouts of “Spinelli!” coming from both men. Flashlights would have been a good idea, but Jason hadn’t wanted to risk returning to Carly’s house to find them. He didn’t want Spinelli out here longer than he had to be, getting that much farther away from him.

“Damn it, Spinelli. Come on! Where are you!?” He called out, ducking under tree branches and stepping carefully over rocks.

A needle in a haystack would seem easy compared to this. At least you could see.

***

Spinelli ran as fast and as hard as he could. He dodged under branches and over rocks, all the while protecting the kitten hidden away in his hoodie. The snow had thoroughly soaked him through already. His teeth were chattering like crazy and his vision occasionally swam if he dared to stop for the briefest of seconds. He’d been turning to see if he was still being pursued when it had happened. He’d hit one of those icy patches beneath the fallen snow and found himself propelled into a tree branch at chest level. It hit him hard, like the impact of a car crash, and it knocked the wind from him. He twisted awkwardly on his way down to the ground and his ankle paid the price for that, as had his jeans, on impact with the ice, which had blown out and bloodied his knees. He did, however, even in his sheer panic, manage to protect the kitten from any sort of impact from his fall.

He didn’t even try to get up again.

***

He had to be the one to find him. Jason knew it was going to be him even before he happened upon the same icy patch that had befallen his roommate. He caught himself before he fell, though, and avoided the badly-placed tree branch.

And there was Spinelli.

Lying there.

Covered with a dusting of snow and not moving.

“No,” Jason said, dropping to his knees beside the younger man. “No way, Spinelli. You’re not doing this.” He checked for a pulse, found one. Checked for breathing, he was. “Spinelli. Wake up, come on.”

Something moved in Spinelli’s hoodie – which quite alarmed Jason – and slowly the shivering kitten squirmed out of it.

“Alright, alright.” Jason said, tucking the kitten into his own pocket for the time being. “Spinelli, come on. I need to get you out of here.” He looked around for Dominic, shouted for his searching partner. “I found him!”

“Mrngh, S-stone C-cold?” Spinelli mumbled out, eyes still closed as he shivered in the snow. “Nnno, I, I have to find a home for the l-last one.”

Jason didn’t realize what he was babbling about for a moment, until he remembered the kitten in his pocket, at which point he laughed in exasperation. All of this and Spinelli was still going on about kittens. “He has a home, Spinelli. He has a home and you have a home and as soon as I can, I’m getting both of you back to it, okay?”

Dominic appears then before Spinelli can respond, with his phone out, calling 911.

Jason took inventory then. Bloody knees, nothing a couple of band-aids wouldn’t fix. An ankle that was twisted and swelled at an odd angle, that’d be a bit more difficult to deal with. He was pale and shaking. “You okay besides the ankle?”

Spinelli shook his head. “I, I hit the branch there.” He motioned with one hand toward the offending tree. “Chest hurts.”

Using the glow from Spinelli’s phone, he looked for signs of blood on Spinelli’s chest and found none. Eventually he resorted to lifting the snow-soaked material enough to look for bruises or otherwise threatening injuries. “Yeah, you hit pretty hard.” He decided, looking back to Dominic, who had still been on the phone. “Ask if we should move him out to the sidewalk.”

A brief moment passed and Jason was already gearing up to do so whether or not the dispatcher agreed. Finally though, Dominic answered him. “They would suggest carefully, and they stress, ‘carefully’, getting him to someplace warm and dry. Response time is slow because of all the accidents going on with the snow. It’ll be a while before anyone can get here.”

Jason nodded. “Let’s get him back to Carly’s then.” He extricated the kitten from his pocket and offered it to Dominic to hold and then shrugged out of his jacket, using it to cover Spinelli. “Spinelli,” He said, getting the hacker’s attention – he was no longer shivering Jason noted, and he was pretty sure that that was actually very, very bad. If your body decided it was too cold to bother trying to keep you warm… - “Spinelli, listen to me, okay? This is going to hurt, and I’m sorry, but we need to get you inside, so just bear with me.”

“There’s a bear?” Spinelli mumbled deliriously, as Jason carefully eased an arm under his knees. “We should get away from the bear.” The other arm slipped beneath his back, careful of his sore chest and slowly, and as gently as he could manage while dodging the branch that had put Spinelli in this position, he got to his feet.

Dominic led the way back toward the street, the kitten now wrapped up in his jacket, and finally, after what seemed like forever, they made it back to the front steps of Carly’s place.

“Is, is the bear gone now?” Spinelli mumbled against Jason’s damp t-shirt. “It didn’t get the kitten did it?”

Jason cautiously maneuvered through the doorway, shivering considerably himself now. “Yeah, Spin. The bear’s gone.” He answered, just to mollify the delirious and confused boy in his arms. But then his attention returned to the important matter at hand. Getting Spinelli warm.

He requested somewhere to lay Spinelli down, as many blankets as could be located, clothes from Michael, who was closer to Spinelli’s size than Jax, to change Spinelli into once Jason got rid of the soaked ones, and an electric blanket if they had one lying around somewhere.

Michael led Jason toward his room, where he deposited Spinelli carefully and grabbed up some clothes for Spinelli from the dresser. Jax appeared a moment later with some old sweats and a long-sleeve t-shirt for Jason to wear.

He didn’t want to leave Spinelli alone like this, but in the long run, dripping snow and ice all over Spinelli while attempting to get him warm and dry would only be counterproductive, so he left Spinelli in Jax and Michael’s care and ducked into the bathroom to dry off as best he could and change into the proffered clothes. It didn’t take long to do, but it felt like an eternity before he got back.

With a couple of towels on hand, he shooed everyone else out of the room and set to work on his task. Spinelli had been silent since his last bear-related comment, which Jason found unnerving, but the younger was still awake, at least, and somewhat responsive.

Shoes came off first; those were easy, as were socks, which revealed extremely pale, cold feet. But that was the end of the simple part of this procedure. He’d considered attempting to undress the kid, but found that wet clothes were hell to get off in the best of times, with injuries it was made all the worse. So, he settled for grabbing a pair of scissors.

“Hold still for me, okay?” He said, even though it was him that was shaking and not Spinelli. He cut the hoodie away first, wanting to check out the damage done to Spinelli’s chest. It was clear where the branch had hit him, it had left nearly a straight line across his chest and arms, just below his collarbones.

Jason cut away the rest of the younger’s clothes as carefully as he could and then set about the task about drying the cold, pale, wet skin off so that he could begin the task of working on warming him up again. It was slow going, maneuvering the barely responsive Spinelli about, but eventually, he deemed his task complete and moved on to the next stage.

“Alright,” He said, tugging the sweatpants – similar to the one’s Jason was currently wearing – over Spinelli’s legs, careful of his ankle and scraped up knees. Once he’d wrangled Spinelli into those, he turned his attention to the shirt – a zip up hoodie like thing so that it wouldn’t have to go over Spinelli’s head - which might or might not have proven more of a challenge.

The mechanics of avoiding further injury of Spinelli’s chest in this complex process involved Spinelli sitting more upright, so Jason slid behind him on the bed, propping the younger against him so that he could slide his arms into it.

Once the shirt was as on as it was going to get, Jason had planned to extricate himself and start piling on blankets, however, Spinelli, as delirious and confused as he was, had other plans. Before Jason could make his escape, he found Spinelli curled against him. The hacker’s skin was like ice, and since Jason’s own skin was pretty close to that already, it was saying something. He couldn’t make himself push Spinelli away again.

“Carly!” He called out, and a moment later, she appeared with the pile of blankets he had requested, as well as the electric blanket.

“Good, I was going to make you do that anyway.” She said, upon spotting their position. “You’re nearly as cold as he is.” Blankets began forming a small mountain over the two of them, and Jason didn’t even try to protest what she’d said because it was true.

He shifted Spinelli in his arms, so that the younger’s back was pressed against his chest, arms wrapped around him. “Any word on the ambulance?”

“Not yet, there are a couple pretty bad accidents around town, so says the News.” She reported, as she plugged in the electric blanket, which had been the first thing on the pile. “I’ll go get you something warm to drink.”

“Thanks.”

Spinelli was still against him, all Jason could feel was the cold radiating off of him, the contrasting warmth of the pile of blankets, and the younger’s heart was beating fast under his touch, which was worrisome. The breath against his neck where Spinelli’s head was turned toward him, that was the reassuring part. He was breathing, alive and breathing. Jason could still fix this.

“Spinelli?” He tried, after a few moments had passed. “Still with me, right?”

“Mm,” Was the only reply he received, and Spinelli tried to shift closer to him. Jason imagined he was probably getting warmer faster than Spinelli was. The shifting, however, was clearly not a good idea, as it promptly started Spinelli into cringing in pain.

Jason wasn’t sure whether it had been his chest or his ankle that had caused it, but he curled his arms tighter around the other’s chest, careful not to hurt him further. “Hey, relax, okay. You’re okay.” He assured Spinelli. “Stay still.”

“But, I… the Jackal needs to get the kittens away from the bear, Stone Cold.” He mumbled out in his delirium. “It is most imperative that he finds homes for all of the itty bitty ones so that he may return home to Casa de Stone Cold…”

He’d thought they’d finished with the bear thing, and with the kitten thing, too, but apparently Spinelli’s frozen self was still catching up to things. “There’s no bear, Spinelli.” He said. “And you and the last kitten are coming back home with me just as soon as we get you checked out at the hospital.”

The door opened then, to reveal Dominic with the kitten in hand. “Hey, I didn’t know if Spinelli would want…” He started, but Jason waved him over. He set the kitten down on the blankets and looked over his two co-workers. “You guys alright?”

“Better once the ambulance gets here.” Jason answered on behalf of his injured grasshopper.

“I’ll go check on it again.” He answered, taking the hint and leaving them alone.

“The kitten is well?” Spinelli asked, reaching out for the furry thing with his numb fingers. Jason nodded and aided him in the task, settling it on Spinelli’s lap.

“Just as cold as us, I think.” He answered, and shifted one of the blankets so that the kitten was covered up a bit as well. “Once I get you settled at the hospital I’ll get someone to take him to the vet.”

The door opened again, this time revealing Carly and Michael. The younger offered Jason a travel mug filled with some sort of warm drink, he couldn’t be sure exactly what it was. He took a long drink for himself – and discovered that it was hot tea - and then spent a moment urging Spinelli to have some of it, too.

By the time the drink is gone, Morgan has wandered in as well, perched on the edge of the bed with his and Dominic’s kitten settled in his own lap. “You’re both going to be okay, right, Jason?”

At this point, Jason just wanted to get Spinelli seen to before the turn of the century arrived. He nodded to Morgan, “Yeah, we’ll be fine.” He said, though he wasn’t entirely sure it was true yet. There were too many people. Spinelli needed to be calm. Every time someone new would enter, for whatever reason they stated – the real one was always concern – Jason could feel Spinelli’s heart speed up even faster.

“Hey,” Jason started, looking to Michael and Morgan, and more pointedly at Carly, who has been lingering in the doorway. “Can we let Spinelli get some peace and quiet for a few minutes?” He suggested, hoping that a few more moments would be all it took for an ambulance to arrive so that Spinelli could get the help of doctors and nurses who knew what they were doing.

The trio cleared out promptly, Carly a bit more reluctantly than the boys. And it was just a bit later when Dominic entered again, this time with two paramedics armed with bags of supplies and a stretcher trailing behind him.

“Finally.” Jason signed in relief, though when they shift Spinelli away from him and onto the stretcher, he found himself missing the contact, missing feeling Spinelli’s heartbeat right there where he could know that it was still beating.

***

The hospital was abuzz with activity. Accident victims and other people stuck out in the cold. The ER was simply swarmed. Jason, with one tiny kitten now on its way to some 24 hour emergency pet clinic with Dominic, and Spinelli already wheeled out of his sight and no doubt into x-ray or some room where they could warm him up, found that he had no further reason to avoid his own treatment.

Matt was on Spinelli’s case and Patrick had come on shift when he’d heard about what had happened. Dr. Drake ended up being the one to coerce Jason into properly warming up as well. They stuck him in a room and hooked him up to an IV that was distributing warmed fluids into his body and he felt better rather quickly once all that started.

He’d been feeling better, prepared to get out of bed and demand to be able to know what was going on with Spinelli when his roommate had been brought in, making them roommates yet again. They did the same thing to him as they had to Jason, offering blankets and attaching the IV fluids. His ankle was casted and Jason could just make out EKG monitors on Spinelli’s chest.

“He alright?” Jason asked of Matt, as Spinelli seemed to be sleeping.

“He has a broken ankle and bruises on his heart.” The doctor answered. “He’ll need to be on 24 hour watch with us before we can re-evaluate. And, of course, he needs to get back to a normal temperature.”

“A bruised heart?” The elder pressed. That… sounded quite dangerous in his mind. And it certainly fit in with everything else. After what he’d done to cause all of this, for Spinelli to come out of it with a bruised heart?

“From the impact of the… tree branch?” Matt questioned. “He was also mumbling something about a bear?”

Jason shook his head. “There was no bear. He was delirious and ran with the idea. But, his heart? Is he going to be okay?”

“We see this most often in car accidents, where someone’s chest hits the steering wheel. Typically, there aren’t any complications and the bruising will fade. But combining that with the hypothermia which messes with circulation and blood flow and we’ll have to be extra careful.”

Doctor Hunter left them alone following that exchange and it was only a matter of time before Jason extricated himself from his own pile of blankets and IV tubing and made his way to the other side of the room.

Sitting on the edge of Spinelli’s bed, he noticed that he seemed to be getting some color back, no longer ghostly pale. Spinelli was shivering only slightly now and his skin was no longer like ice to the touch. Progress, that was good.

He felt almost compelled to reach out, as he had before, to feel the beating of Spinelli’s heart under his hand, but he resisted, settling instead for watching the steady, rhythmic, if a little fast, beat on the EKG monitor’s screen. It lulled him into kind of a trance, so much so that he startled when a nurse came in to check on them.

“I’ll be out of your way in just a moment,” She assured Jason and briefly scribbled down notes on Spinelli’s chart about things he didn’t particularly care about, and as promised, with a moment she was gone again.

“You’re gonna be okay, alright?” Jason said to his still sleeping roommate. He was slowly coming back to life. Moving occasionally, shifting about as much as his various ailments would allow. Eventually, Spinelli reached out and Jason was relieved to find that the hand curled around his own wrist was warm to the touch now. “Spinelli?”

“Stone Cold?” Came Spinelli’s sleep-think response, his eyes still closed. “The Jackal heartily apologizes for not accomplishing his task to find homes for all of the itty bitty ones as ordered. He is well aware that his Mentor does not need any more stray’s regarding Casa de Stone Cold as home when the Ace of Cyberspace already causes enough trouble.”

Jason stared at the boy in the bed before him. There was no way Spinelli could actually think that. This moment of delirium-free speech was enough to cause Jason to re-evaluate his perception of tonight’s events. Spinelli thought that he’d kicked him out because he didn’t want a bunch of abandoned kittens in the apartment? Considered himself among them in the order to get rid of them? He hadn’t wanted to kick Spinelli out at all, not really. He’d just wanted a bit of time to unwind after what he had – at the time – perceived as a bad day. Spinelli had taken it upon himself to locate homes for each and every one of those kittens in the late hours of the night in the middle of the blizzard of the century because he thought Jason didn’t want him, either?

But, Spinelli wasn’t finished with his speech.

“Your grasshopper had hoped that he had found a home at Casa de Stone Cold, found someone who could tolerate all of the odd eccentricities that he knows that he possesses, but it was undoubtedly only a matter of time before it ended in exile, wouldn’t you suppose?”

What Jason supposed was that the Doctors had been grievously wrong in their diagnosis of Spinelli’s chest injury. Clearly, his heart was not bruised. It was, in fact, broken. And it was all Jason’s fault.

Spinelli was still rambling on, but Jason had heard enough. “Hey. Hey, stop. Listen to me.” He all but demanded, catching the hand that had remained curled around his wrist in his own, and Spinelli finally opened his eyes. “You are not a stray, okay? You might have thought you were, and maybe you were when you first showed up, but you’re my family now and nothing is changing that. Not a box of kittens that you were right to save.” Jason paused, waiting for a reaction, but Spinelli was just staring at him in confusion. “I, I over-reacted earlier. And I’m sorry. I never should have said that the cats – or you – had to go. I’m sorry.”

“Surely you cannot be speaking of the Jackal in regards to those you count amongst your family.”

He was really going to need to work on Spinelli’s self-esteem levels if that was his reaction. “I am and that is exactly what you are to me, got it?” Jason continued on with his very important line of reasoning. “Not a hacker who’s scary good. Not the kid who talks like he has a dictionary permanently implanted in his head. Not whatever other people believe you about in Tennessee, or here in Port Charles. All that matters is what I know – that you are my family.”

Spinelli seemed utterly bewildered by his mentor’s words, up until the point when they actually appeared to register. “I am most honored by your words, Stone Cold.” Spinelli said, gazing at him in something not unlike awe. As if he was surprised that someone cared that much about him.

Jason opted to change the topic to something that would get Spinelli focused on the future instead of the past. “What are you going to name the kitten?”

***

It was Spinelli’s first day back at home. He’d finally gotten to take a warm shower, albeit with a bit of aid from Jason in the process because he had to attempt to balance on one leg in order to keep his broken ankle out of the spray. He’d finally gotten back into his own clothes, even though the black t-shirt was actually Jason’s because it didn’t brush against the deep purple bruise on his chest as badly as his own did. And now, finally, he was laid on out on the couch, his leg propped up, his laptop sitting on the coffee table well within reach, right beside what was once a mug of steaming hot chocolate that he had tasted and enjoyed every drop of.

The new kitten, for the moment, was settled on the arm of the chair Jason was occupying.

“Mistoffelees,” Spinelli called, waggling his fingers to attract the smoky grey kitten’s attention. “C’mere.”

Jason just laughed. “You do realize that no matter what you do I am never calling this cat by name?” He nudged the creature, which seemed content not to move. “Go get him, cat.”

Spinelli frowned, even as Mistoffelees stretched and wandered over to investigate Spinelli’s still wiggling fingers. “Stone Cold, you will confuse the feline.”

“It’s a cat.”

“Yes, which you seem intent upon confusing beyond all help.” The younger retaliated, scratching the kittens back and it settled down on his lap.

“Spinelli, I know that you probably already have about twenty nicknames in mind for him, one more is not going to do any damage.” And it was a logical argument. He’d already heard Spinelli refer to the creature by things other than its name.

“This is true.” Spinelli agreed.

Jason stood, motioning to Spinelli’s empty hot chocolate mug. “You want some more?” He offered and headed into the kitchen with it upon Spinelli’s affirmative answer.

Spinelli sighed to himself as much as his bruises would allow. “It is most definitely a relief to be back at Casa de Stone Cold where we belong, is it not, Mistoffelees?”

Still within hearing range, Jason could only smile. He was glad that they were all where they belonged, too.

May 2021

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