Home

Previous Entry | Next Entry

Fic: Paresthesia and Pain

  • May. 25th, 2008 at 10:06 AM
adorable
Title: Paresthesia and Pain
Author: Mer
Characters: Wilson, House, Kutner
Rating: PG
Word Count: 1906
Summary: Wilson wants to cure everyone's pain but his own.
Author's Notes: Written for [info]anj1290 for her generous donation to the [info]rsl_bday_drive. And beta'd by the always awesome [info]elynittria. Spoilers for "Wilson's Heart" and other parts of S4.

It started with a twinge in the mornings when he got out of bed. At first, Wilson just attributed it to stiffness and the aches and pains of general aging. He was a little older, a little heavier, and his body was going to protest a little more at the positions he placed it in. Nights spent on couches and generic hotel mattresses left him sore and stiff in the morning, but that was just another external symptom of everything rotten in his life, and it eased once he started the antidepressants.

The pain returned when he moved in with Amber, but this time a change of mattress — one they bought together — made all the difference. But it didn't last. Nothing lasted.

The twinge turned into an ache that he could relieve with a hand pressed into the small of his back or a shift in posture. He tried to walk straighter, abandoning the lilting gait that he had adopted unconsciously to match House's, but some things were too ingrained to change, even with the best intentions. He iced, took over-the-counter NSAIDs, and called Ingrid for a massage. He had it under control.

At least until his left leg buckled as he pivoted to walk away from the duty desk, and he had to grab the edge of the counter to keep from falling. He laughed self-deprecatingly and said he'd tripped over his own feet, but an hour later, Kutner knocked on his office door.

"House sent me," he said superfluously, and led Wilson through a series of movement tests, cataloguing each flinch carefully, then tested his reflexes and raised and bent his legs. "It's lumbosacral radiculopathy," he said finally. "Most likely from a herniated disk at L4. How long has this been going on?"

Wilson shrugged gingerly. "Not long."

"House said your back was bothering you in the spring. Before..."

"That was the mattress," Wilson said quickly. He didn't want to talk about her with Kutner, who was kind and meant well, but had found the last secret she'd kept from him.

Kutner nodded, and while the words that spilled unwittingly from his mouth occasionally made him seem insensitive, Wilson thought that he truly understood. It occurred to him that House had sent Kutner for reasons other than his specialty.

"House is going to want an MRI," Kutner said, but Wilson shook his head quickly.

"I don't need an MRI; I just need physical therapy and some anti-inflammatories."

Kutner looked disappointed that he wouldn't get to play with one of Cuddy's expensive machines. "I'll write you a prescription for diclofenac," he said. "And a referral for PT. But if there's no improvement in the next couple of weeks, I'm scheduling an MRI."

Two weeks later, the pain was undiminished, despite daily physical therapy sessions and a faithful adherence to the exercise regimen. If nothing else, he could at least set a good example for House. House had never been interested in examples, though, only results.

"You're an idiot," he said, bursting into Wilson's office and dropping a file folder on his desk. For a moment it was as if nothing had changed.

Wilson glanced down and saw that it was his own file. "You're an ass. Next round."

House ignored him. "The PT isn't working. You're still in pain. You need surgery."

"It's unnecessary. Most herniated disk issues resolve themselves without surgical intervention."

"Most," House stressed. "But you could be at risk for cauda equina syndrome. Both Foreman and Kutner think surgical intervention is going to be necessary eventually. Are you going to ignore the advice of a neurologist and a sports medicine specialist?"

"Why not? You do all the time."

House ignored that as well. "You make idiots look like Einsteins. Are you holding out for incontinence? Permanent nerve damage? Paralysis? Let me see your feet," he demanded.

Wilson tucked his feet defiantly under the desk, though he knew resistance was futile. House just stared at him until Wilson pushed his chair back and swivelled to face him. House dragged a chair over and patted his lap.

"The heels of your shoes are creased and scuffed because you've been slipping them on and kicking them off without bending over." He slipped Wilson's shoes off and removed his socks. "Your socks are bunched and crooked. Left foot worse than right. You can't reach as far down on that side." He shook his head. "You'll be in top-siders and bare feet soon."

"It is sailing season," Wilson said, not willing to admit to the struggle that the simple act of putting his socks on had become.

"That's another thing," House continued, as he ran a pen along the outside sole of Wilson's foot. "Your brother called. He said you cancelled out of the annual sailing trip."

"Because my back hurts."

"He also said that he suggested going to an all-inclusive in Mexico instead, but you claimed you couldn't get the time off. Which is crap. Cuddy would give you a week off in a heartbeat."

"It's not that simple. I have responsibilities to my patients, to my staff."

House tapped Wilson's ankle a little harder than necessary. "He's worried about you. When was the last time you talked to your parents? When was the last time you talked to anybody but your patients or your staff?"

"I'm talking to you right now," Wilson retorted. "And I love my family, but I can't be around them right now. I don't expect you to agree, but I thought you'd at least understand."

House looked away and tapped again, almost gently. "Plantar and Achilles reflexes reduced," he said, though not with his usual satisfaction at identifying a new symptom. "What about saddle paresthesia?"

Wilson pulled his feet away. "It's not cauda equina. L4 is too low and there's no bladder or bowel dysfunction. The pain and diminished reflexes are consistent with sciatica. I just need to give the physical therapy more time."

"We don't know that it's L4, because you haven't had an MRI," House retorted. "You're booked in an hour and I'm putting Chase on stand-by for a microdiscectomy."

"I'm not authorizing surgery," Wilson said flatly.

"If it's cauda equina syndrome, emergency surgery is the protocol. And even if it's not, surgery is the next step when conservative treatment isn't working."

Wilson shook his head. "No elective surgery. It's my body. I'll have the MRI, but I'll make the decision." A bolt of pain shot down his leg, but he ignored it. He could live with pain. House had been doing it for years.

"It's the wrong decision," House said. "You have two choices. You can agree to the surgery now or I can knock you out and authorize emergency surgery myself."

"Right. Because that worked out so well for Stacy." Part of him wanted to take the words back the moment they slipped out, but another part wanted the words to hurt. It was all he knew now.

But House just gazed steadily at him. "It's not the same. She crippled me and left me in pain. I'm trying to prevent you from being crippled and in pain."

"She saved your life." But that was an argument that never worked with House. He would rather have died than been proven wrong. Stacy had known that. Wilson knew that, but he had always wondered if he would have had the courage to make the same decision, knowing he could lose House either way. Now he knew what it was like to throw the dice and come up snake eyes. "I'm not dying."

"You're not living either," House snapped. "When was the last time you did anything other than work or sleep? When was the last time you played golf?"

Mini-golf, Wilson thought. Play date. There wouldn't be any more of those.

House stood up and paced around the front of the desk. "You're just going through the motions. No wonder the PT isn't working. Do you want to be in pain?"

Wilson looked away. "It's better than feeling nothing at all." When the first sharp grief had finally subsided, all that remained was numbness, a paresthesia that had nothing to do with nerve compression. He didn't even have sorrow to remind him that he was still alive.

House stopped pacing abruptly as if he had slammed into an invisible wall. "That's never been your problem," he said quietly and left Wilson alone again.

It wasn't until the sun had set and Wilson's office was lit only by a dim desk lamp that House returned. He stood framed in the doorway, just a slouched silhouette against the hallway light. Wilson looked up, but didn't say anything. He'd stopped knowing what to say to House weeks ago.

"I don't want to be miserable," House said, so softly that Wilson could barely hear him. "I don't want to be in pain. But more than that, I don't want you to be miserable. I couldn't save..." House never mentioned her name. He didn't have to. She was still there. With them. Between them. "I can't fix that. Let me at least fix the pain."

The words hurt in a way that Wilson had thought no longer possible. But House's pain had always been more important to him than his own, even when he was the one to cause it. "You did everything you could and more than I had the right to ask," he replied, his voice breaking slightly.

"You had the right." He shuffled over to the desk and dropped a file in front of Wilson. "No compression on the cauda equina, but there's a lesion on the sciatic nerve." He nodded to himself when Wilson couldn't quite hide his surprise. "You never thought the pain was real. That's why you've been ignoring it."

"It got worse after she died. After Amber died." Saying her name sent pins and needles through his heart, as though it were waking up after a long, still sleep.

"You were in pain when you were happy."

Wilson had to squeeze his eyes tightly shut to hold back the tears, from the memory and House's acknowledgement. He heard House shift uncomfortably and looked up.

"Coblation nucleoplasty will decompress the disk and reduce the sciatic pain almost immediately," House said evenly, taking refuge in the medicine. "Minimally invasive, low risk, and a short recovery period. But if you want a second opinion, I can send the scans to McNeill at Princeton General. He's not a complete idiot."

It wasn't like House to suggest a second opinion, but then Wilson had a history of making House doubt himself. He closed his eyes against another pulse of pain. "No," he said firmly. "I trust you." He opened them again and forced himself to look directly at House. "Schedule the procedure."

House crossed over to the couch and sat down, resting his chin on the curve of his plain wooden cane. Wilson missed the flame cane. He missed a lot of things. But when he looked at House and saw him smile with satisfaction, he knew that not everything was gone.

"It'll get better," House said, and Wilson knew he wasn't just talking about the back. "There'll always be some pain, but you can play golf again. Go sailing again. Get your life back again."

Wilson didn't think he was ready for that yet, but he'd lived too long with paresthesia and pain. Maybe it was time to start healing.

Comments

[info]donutsweeper wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 05:38 pm (UTC)
Oh this is beautiful. A great look at the damage the season finale would have caused, and how Wilson would react to the idea of physical pain.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 11:20 pm (UTC)
Thank you! Pain is such a prevalent theme in the show that it's easy to find little resonances from past episodes. I do think there's a part of Wilson that thought he deserved the pain.
[info]chaoskir wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 05:47 pm (UTC)
Great story. Thanks for sharing. I enjoyed reading it and I do love both stubborn heros so much. You have done a great job with them.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 11:27 pm (UTC)
Thank you - they are very stubborn, aren't they? It's fun to smack some sense into them, metaphorically speaking.
[info]phinnia wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 06:16 pm (UTC)
Lovely. Elegant, not overdone, melancholy with a light touch. Just - beautiful.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 11:39 pm (UTC)
Oh, thank you! I'm glad it didn't stray too much into melodrama. It's hard to resist the unrelenting angst, sometimes.
[info]cindy_lou_who8 wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 06:23 pm (UTC)
This is one of the first post 4.16 fics that didn't make me break down, and for that I thank you. Wonderful. :)
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 12:02 am (UTC)
I'm glad you enjoyed it - and that it was a tear-free zone.
[info]blackmare_9 wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 06:29 pm (UTC)
Oh, what a lovely and different thing this is. :-)

Thanks; it was nice to see this today, to have things mending in such a quiet, realistic way.

[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 02:10 am (UTC)
As much as I like the angst, I like the healing even better. Hopefully we'll get some of that at the beginning of S5.

Thanks for reading!
[info]purridot wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 06:32 pm (UTC)
Oh, you make me so happy. I love this story for its gentleness and down-to-earthness, and the fact that the back pain is both real and a metaphor. Past, present, and future, all connect so beautifully.

And my future fictional husband made a caring cameo call to House! *hugs him* But... if things don't work out between us (perish the thought!) there's always Kutner.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 02:31 am (UTC)
Thank you! Fortunately, pain is such a well-established metaphor on the show that the connections are already there to be made.

Peter is devastated to hear that your heart doesn't belong only to him. He says it's not his fault the writers forget that Jimmy has a family...
(no subject) - [info]purridot - May. 26th, 2008 04:32 am (UTC) Expand
(no subject) - [info]mer_duff - May. 26th, 2008 05:18 am (UTC) Expand
[info]med_anomaly wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 06:49 pm (UTC)
This is really beautiful, painful, hopeful.
Thanks for sharing this gem.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 02:32 am (UTC)
Thank you! I hate the thought of there being pain without hope. So I'm hoping for happier times after the initial agnst in S5.
[info]valn wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 06:54 pm (UTC)
So good.
That's my immediate reaction--to the theme, the plot, the telling details and the sensitive imagining of grief.

In an attempt to give more constructive feedback, I'll tell you that I don't know if the medicine is real (I suspect it is), but it was very convincing. One more thing to admire about your writing is that your characters act (and talk and think) like medical professionals.

So good.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 03:12 am (UTC)
Thank you! The medicine is as real as I could make it, given that my science training ended in grade 12. But I try to fake it as best I can, because I enjoy the research.

Thanks for reading!
[info]bukabe16 wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 07:01 pm (UTC)
oh I hope wilson will heal in the next season... I don't want a gloomy, house-hating wilson running around the hospital!
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 03:15 am (UTC)
I hope he'll heal as well. Though I think the only person who's going to hate House is House himself. I don't think the writers will keep the doom and gloom too long - the light moments between House and Wilson are as wonderful as the angst.
[info]cenori wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 07:57 pm (UTC)
Oh, Wilson. Oh, House. Oh, this fic. Beautiful and touching and real, as always.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 03:27 am (UTC)
My heart breaks for both of those screwed-up souls. Thanks for reading!
[info]pwcorgigirl wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 09:16 pm (UTC)
This is a beautiful look at all kinds of healing going on.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 03:28 am (UTC)
Thank you! We definitely need a time for healing.
[info]jdr1184 wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 09:44 pm (UTC)
But House's pain had always been more important to him than his own, even when he was the one to cause it.

Uhg, you're killing me, Mer. He doesn't know how to care about himself, especially now that the one person who loved him enough to make him try is gone. I remember thinking when we saw that scene that he had to be pretty bad off to be hobbling that much just from an uncomfortable matress, but he brushed it off so quickly and changed the subject. I love how you've played with that idea.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 04:00 am (UTC)
I was thrilled, in a twisted way, by that bad back scene, because Anj had asked for Wilson in chronic pain, but not AU, and canon went and gave me an opening. We also know in canon that Wilson doesn't really look after himself, so the story essentially wrote itself :)

Thanks for reading!
[info]nightdog_barks wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 10:05 pm (UTC)
*sighs*

So wonderful, as always. I just can't tell you how delighted I am whenever I see something new from you pop up, and this is no exception.

The whole little diagnostic exercise by House -- the shoe heels, the socks, the bare feet -- is terrific. And the description of the socks is spot on. Mr. Nightdog has occasional bouts with sciatica, and putting on his socks is a nightmare. Great work.

*mems*
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 05:17 am (UTC)
My sympathies to Mr. Nightdog - I've had sciatic pain in the past and it's not fun. Mind you, my right hip doesn't release, so putting on my right sock is always a bit of a dance...

Thanks for reading!
[info]makeitstopjamie wrote:
May. 25th, 2008 10:11 pm (UTC)
Wonderful! I love the way that you really got into Wilson's head and House's reasons for wanting to heal Wilson. Very much enjoyed:)
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 06:23 am (UTC)
Thank you! I think they're both going to be hurting at the beginning of S5 - I look forward to seeing them both heal (at least as much as they're capable).
[info]roga wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 12:29 am (UTC)
Oh, gorgeous.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 06:34 am (UTC)
Thank you! I'm glad you liked it.
[info]topaz_eyes wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 12:48 am (UTC)
I love the levels you work with here--emotional pain and physical pain mingling until one melds into the other. Nice.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 06:52 am (UTC)
Thank you! I've always found it fascinating how the show uses House's pain as a metaphor, so it seemed right to use it for Wilson as well. It was the ideal prompt, really.
[info]perspi wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 02:52 am (UTC)
Absolutely lovely--I've found myself staying away from most post-ep fic, as I can't always handle the Melodrama, but this was understated and excellent--I think you handled the gulf between Wilson and House perfectly.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 05:59 pm (UTC)
Thank you! It is a bit of a minefield right now. There have been some absolutelly beautiful post-eps, but some other ones that just make me shake my head. Each to his/her own interpretation, however. I think (fear) there will be a gulf between them at the beginning of S5, but I think it will be one of guilt and grief rather than anger/hatred.

Thanks for reading!
[info]alemyrddin wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 08:02 am (UTC)
I'd love to see this on the show.
So in character and meaningful (and hopeful!).
Beautiful.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 06:11 pm (UTC)
Thank you! I certainly hope there will be some healing at the beginning of next season, for both House and Wilson.
(Anonymous) wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 09:59 am (UTC)
Thanks for a ray of hope after the season finale ..
Very well done. I adore your writing.
Jo
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 10:02 pm (UTC)
Re: Thanks for a ray of hope after the season finale ..
Hope is always important - I'm glad you liked it!
[info]hwshipper wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 12:21 pm (UTC)
That was absolutely lovely. I've found most post-season fic to be unreadable even when its well-written; but this was perfectly understated, alluding to everything that happened & making the important points without going psycho about it. And Kutner was spot-on!
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 10:24 pm (UTC)
Thank you - I'm glad you liked it. I'm as capable of going overboard as the next person, but I did need this one to be restrained, almost numbed in tone, because Wilson was only allowing himself to feel through physical symptoms.

Kutner is fun to write!
[info]triedunture wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 04:35 pm (UTC)
Gah! Good, great stuff.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 27th, 2008 07:06 am (UTC)
Thanks! I'm glad you liked it.
[info]yukinakid wrote:
May. 26th, 2008 09:58 pm (UTC)
Perfect. I was really thinking about never watching House again if the friendship between the two died. It was going to, but you've given me faith that it might not. That the writers maybe aren't complete idiots. Beautiful. I can't explain to you how light and flowing this piece is. It's like a creme brulee, you have to cook it precisely or risk it being too soggy or too hard. You've done that.
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 27th, 2008 07:10 am (UTC)
Thank you! That's a marvelous metaphor for writing. I do think the writers know what they're doing, and I'm quite certain the producers knew what they were doing when they left things like that at the end of the season. But I also think the House/Wilson friendship is the emotional heart of the show (both in terms of humour and angst), so I don't think they'll kill it.
[info]lhoma320 wrote:
May. 28th, 2008 06:29 pm (UTC)
OMG, I just loved this story. I loved House in the background at first and then ever so slowly confronting Wilson. I loved all the detail you spent with House discussing Wilson's health but at the same time on House examining his feet and ankles. I loved the way you approached the situation with Amber and how House wanted to help her but wasn't able to but wanted to help Wilson. I wanted to cry. The dialog was so perfect between House and Wilson. I almost died when I read this "I don't want to be miserable," House said, so softly that Wilson could barely hear him." Oh it was so sweet.

Thanks so much for this. It just made me feel so good inside. :D
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 30th, 2008 08:16 pm (UTC)
Thank you! It's awful to say, but Amber's death actually made this story easier and more resonant to write. I'd actually started writing it before the couple of episodes, but being able to have House distant at the beginning and Wilson think that his pain was emotionally based let the story work on a couple of different levels that I hadn't originally intended.

Thaks for reading!
[info]chocolate_frapp wrote:
May. 30th, 2008 07:03 pm (UTC)
This was beautifully written. I do hope the guys work things out in canon. House went above and beyond the call. (hugs House)
[info]mer_duff wrote:
May. 30th, 2008 11:16 pm (UTC)
Thank you - I hope things work out as well. Their friendship is the emotional heart of the show for me and I'd hate to see it irreparably shattered.
(no subject) - [info]chocolate_frapp - May. 31st, 2008 02:53 pm (UTC) Expand
[info]genagirl wrote:
May. 31st, 2008 03:54 pm (UTC)
Oh, I could barely read the ending through my tears. That was so beautiful. I really hope we can have this level of love and trust back again.