Title: What Happens In
Provincetown...
Fandom: L&O: SVU/Rizzoli & Isles
X-Over
Pairing: Alex/Olivia, Serena/Abbie,
Jane/Maura
Spoilers: SVU up to Season-11 (including Loss,
Ghost, and beyond); R&I 1st season, especially the episode
'Kissed A Girl' and season Finale
Disclaimer: L&O belongs to Dick Wolf, not
me. *sad face*; R&I belongs to Tess Gerritson, Janet Tamaro,
and TNT.
Rating: MA +
AN: I was SHOCKED to find no one had done this
yet. I'm still half convinced someone else has and I'm just missing
it... part of the Magnetic Resistance
Universe.
...
Part One
...
Chapter One:
Olivia Benson sighed. Each of her hands was firmly gripping the
shoulder of an angry blonde woman, and a small crowd had gathered
around them. "All right, which one of you wants to tell me how it
started?"
"Excuse me? This is really none of your business," said the
first blonde woman, who was sporting very expensive clothes (after
sharing a closet with Alex Cabot, she could recognize Dolce and
Gabbana at twenty paces) and an irritated frown. "This…
woman… assaulted me. It was completely
unprovoked-"
"Unprovoked my ass!" Serena Southerlyn shouted, causing even
more of the dance floor's patrons to stop and stare. "She was
making out with my girlfriend!"
"Excuse me?" the strange blonde repeated, looking at Serena with
a mixture of horror and shock. "I would never- what on earth are
you talking about. Jane?"
The blonde's companion stepped forward. "Let her go, please,"
she said, "you've got your hands full with that
one…"
Now, Olivia had a pretty good idea what was going on. The broad
vowels of the woman's Boston accent only confirmed her suspicions.
Obviously, she should have paid more attention to Munch's theories
about Pod People and/or Government Cloning Research, because this
woman looked exactly like…
"Abbie! You promised that you weren't going to do this anymore!
I can't believe I trusted you…"
"Serena, cool it," Olivia said, giving the blonde's shoulder
another firm squeeze and releasing the other blonde. "That's not
Abbie."
"What do you mean it's not-"
"Look at her clothes."
Pausing in her tirade long enough to check, Serena was
astonished to realize that the woman she had mistaken for Abbie was
wearing jeans and a white tank top instead of the black, slitted
skirt and v-neck that her girlfriend had donned earlier that
evening. In addition, her hair rolled down her back in tight waves,
and Abbie had worn hers up.
"Oh my God, I am so sorry," she said, a horrified look
transforming the angry features of her face as she realized what
she had done. "I thought - I thought you were… you look just
like…"
"What on God's green earth has you throwin' such a conniption,
Ser? People are starin - Well, fuck me blind! Lord in Heaven, call
me the crazy Aunt and hide me in the basement, because I'm staring
myself in the face."
The statement was so absurd that none of the four women could
think of an appropriate response.
A long, astonished silence stretched between them until another
voice added, "I've heard of Doppelgangers, but this is bordering on
the ridiculous."
Slowly, Olivia turned towards Alex, who had accompanied Abbie to
the bathroom ("it's a girl thing," she had claimed, forcing Olivia
to remind her that she was most definitely also a girl). "We've
entered the Twilight Zone."
"What did I miss?"
The brunette detective sighed. "She," she pointed at the blonde
stranger, "was attacked by Serena for touching…" - what did
that woman call her? Jane! - "Jane here, who just happens to look a
hell of a lot like Abbie."
Alex groaned. "I'm getting a headache."
"Listen," Serena interrupted, putting on her best apologetic
face, "I'm really sorry about slapping you,
um…"
"Maura Isles. And I accept your apology. Now that you and your
date have been reunited, I can see why you made the mistake. Their
cranial structure is remarkably similar."
Disappointed that there was no longer going to be a catfight,
the crowd began to disperse, leaving the six women to their own
devices. "Please let me buy you two your next round of drinks. I
feel terrible."
"You mean let me buy them their next round of drinks," Abbie
interrupted. "You didn't bring your purse or your credit
card."
"I didn't have a purse that matched this dress. I'll pay you
back later. Besides, you use my checking account just as much as
yours, so stop bitching. This is all your fault anyway for having
some kind of freaky identical twin that you never told me
about."
Jane smiled. "Well, I'm not gonna say no to a free beer. How
about it, Maura?"
...
"You're a detective, too? No shit!" Jane Rizzoli exclaimed,
leaning forward across the large table that they had snagged on the
side of the dance floor. "This night just keeps getting more and
more bizarre."
"Yep, with the NYPD. Special Victims," Olivia said after taking
another drink from her bottle. "Pretty ugly stuff."
"Tell me about it. At least mine are always dead," said Jane,
resting her weight on her elbows until Maura shot her a
disapproving look and reminded her with a silent glare to place her
hands in her lap. "We're at a club, Maur, not a five star
restaurant," she complained.
Alex gave the blonde a nod of approval. "I like you," she
declared. "You know how to keep your woman in line." Both of them
ignored Jane's eye-roll.
"I like your Manolo Blahniks," Maura offered in
return.
"Why thank you."
"I'm just glad no one was hurt too badly," Abbie said. "You sure
you're all right, Maura? Serena can pack a mean punch." She winced
in sympathy as several long-ago memories resurfaced. "Trust me, I
speak from experience."
"Thank you for your concern, but I'm fine."
"Between you and me, Serena's lucky she got out of that one
without a scratch on her," Jane told Olivia. "She's a medical
examiner and she knows all the weak points of the human
body."
"That's it!" Alex said triumphantly. "I've been trying to figure
out why your surname sounded familiar ever since you introduced
yourself," she explained, nodding her head at Maura. "Do you know a
Dr. Melinda Warner?"
Maura's eyes widened in surprise. "Yes, actually, I do. Do you
know her as well?"
"She's our - um, Olivia's - medical examiner."
"Curiouser and curiouser," Abbie quipped. "We didn't just go
down the Rabbit Hole, I think we all stumbled ass-over-tits into it
after smoking a couple of very strong joints."
"Please forgive my obviously inebriated
girlfriend-"
"I've only had one-"
"Shh, Abbie!"
Olivia sighed. "Nope, that's Abbie sober."
"I promise, she can be very refined when she wants to be. She's
actually a federal prosecutor."
"Federal prosecutor by day, lesbian superhero by night!" She
gestured at Jane. "I even have my own stunt double!"
"My mother's never going to believe this," the Boston detective
muttered. "No, scratch that… I'm not going to tell her.
She'll probably fly you up from DC and make you home-cooked
lasagna."
Abbie laughed. "Your mother, too? Oh heavens, mine will up and
faint like a proper Southern lady before getting all in your
business… you don't have kids, do you? Please say no, because
I don't want to hear, 'but if this nice woman who looks just like
you can have children, why can't you, Abigail?' I would run away
from home."
"Your mother is all the way in Texas, sweetie," Serena reminded
her.
"There's no escaping a Texan mother…"
"Or an Italian one."
"So, we're agreed-"
"- tell them absolutely nothing."
"Right."
Alex snorted. "Even though mine is deceased, I doubt any of us
would want to regale our respective mothers with tales of the brawl
we almost engaged in at a gay bar in Provincetown."
"I told you we shouldn't have come here," Olivia muttered. "This
place is too… gay."
Alex laughed. "Too gay? Olivia, you're gay. You wear a man's
watch and sensible shoes. You scream dyke."
"No I don't. I'll have you know that a suspect asked me out a
couple of weeks ago."
"And what did you say?"
"That I was single, but didn't mix business with
work."
"You said you were single?"
"Well, I wasn't going to tell him I had a girlfriend. Then I'd
never have been able to get rid of him!"
...
Several hours and even more alcoholic beverages later, the six
women were wandering down Commercial Street in search of some food
to fill their stomachs and help them sober up. Alex, who was the
most sober of the six, held a map of the general area in both hands
and guided the two other inebriated couples (as well as her own
inebriated detective) with a firm hand. However, a sight across the
street under a sign that said 'The Vault' caused her to misstep and
lose her balance. Afraid of falling over, she clung to the sleeve
of Olivia's jacket for support.
Olivia was a little buzzed, but still coordinated enough to keep
Alex from tumbling backwards into the rest of the group. "What is
it, honey? Are you okay?" she asked, looking concerned. While Abbie
was a hilarious drunk and Serena's moods ranged from cheerful to
depressed, Olivia was an emotional drunk. Instead of dulling her
feelings, alcohol sensitized them and made her extra concerned
about Alex's little stumble.
Alex's mouth opened and closed like a fish as she stared across
the street, struck mute by the shocking sight.
"I think that man over there startled her," Maura chirped,
pointing over at a tanned, well-muscled man wearing nothing but a
leather g-string and black strips across his chest. Both nipples
were pierced and he had something that looked like a spiked dog
collar around his neck.
"Oh, come on, Alex. You've seen worse than that before. He's
probably some harmless fluff named Barry that works as a daycare
assistant or a shoe salesman when he's not… er… dressed
like that."
"I've seen worse at work, Olivia, not during my vacation! Maybe
you're right. Maybe we are too old for this."
"That's what I said," Jane Rizzoli agreed. "I told Maura we were
too old to go clubbing like a bunch of baby dykes, but did she
listen? Nooo… she wanted an 'authentic lesbian experience'
even though we started dating, what, over six months ago? And she's
not even a lesbian…"
"I told you, bisexuality is a natural point of reference on the
Kinsey scale, a perfectly normal variation-"
"Well, just don't start checking out the gluteus maximus on our
friend Barry over there, Doc, or I might have to revoke your
license to practice medicine."
Abbie, meanwhile, was thoroughly amused by the entire affair. "I
bet he could show a man a good time," she said, reaching up a hand
to wave at the leather boy and giving him a loud wolf whistle. He
winked and blew her a kiss, which made Serena burst out in
laughter.
"Only in Provincetown…"
"You'd be surprised. We get some pretty crazy stuff up in
Southie. One time, Maura and I went undercover at a lesbian bar and
set up an online dating profile for me to attract a
killer…"
Olivia snorted. "I hate undercover work. I've been a hooker, a
porn star, a woman asking a receptionist for a vaginoplasty, a
crack whore, "married" to my partner Stabler, who is actually
married in real life, an inmate at a women's prison, and the FBI
borrowed me once and turned me in to some kind of hippy-dippy tree
hugger."
Alex brushed her fingers against Olivia's hand and the brunette
realized that she was rambling. "Sorry, got carried away. Tell the
story about the lesbian bar. I want to hear
this…"
...
Chapter Two:
"Jeez, I am soooo drunk… I don't know whether to scratch
my watch or wind my butt," Abbie slurred, flopping back onto the
queen-sized bed and kicking her shoes into the wall.
"That reminds me of a joke!" Jane said gleefully, sitting
cross-legged on the foot of the bed and bouncing a little to test
the mattress. "What's a blonde's mating call?"
Abbie sat up, holding a pillow tight to her chest.
"What?"
"I'm soooo drunk! I'm soooo drunk!" Both women dissolved in
giggles.
Olivia, who was leaning against the wall beside the door and
trying to figure out the safest way to get to a comfortable chair,
snorted with laughter. "I heard a different version. What's a
blonde's mating call?"
"What?" Abbie repeated dutifully.
"Next!"
"Oh, I've got one. How do you keep a blonde occupied for
hours?"
"How?" asked Jane.
"Scribble 'turn over' on both sides of a piece of
paper."
"I have a better one! One time, a blonde cop pulled over a
blonde motorist for speeding. The cop asks for ID and the girl in
the car says, "I don't have any, but I've got this picture of
myself you can look at," and holds up a mirror. The cop says,
"damn, if I knew you were a cop, I never would have pulled you
over!'"
That one made Jane and Abbie start laughing hysterically. None
of them seemed to realize that their blonde lovers were all glaring
at them, particularly Alex, who was the most sober. She cleared her
throat loudly, catching their attention. "I've got one. What's
brown, red, black, and blue?"
Olivia, Jane, and Abbie looked at each other in bleary, drunken
confusion. Alex pressed her lips into a thin pink line. Stepping
over to Olivia's side of the door, she gave her girlfriend's
backside a sharp pinch. "A brunette that's been telling too many
blonde jokes."
"Hey, ow! That hurt!"
"Come on, you big baby, I should tuck you in before you get in
any more trouble."
"You're already in trouble, Jane," Maura added. "You're supposed
to be a detective. You should know that the pigmentation of a
woman's hair has nothing to do with her intelligence, real or
perceived."
"Blondes get discriminated against all the time."
"No, Serena," Alex corrected her friend, "we get hit on all the
time."
The shorter blonde shrugged at Alex. "Eh, same thing. Did
Seinfeld ever put the moves on you in chambers?"
Alex snorted. "Did he ever."
"He didn't hit on me, but I slept with both of his assistants,"
Abbie said, sounding pleased with herself, but not pleased enough
to make Serena angry. She knew that Abbie's "war stories" were
mostly for show, and whenever she felt the stirrings of jealousy,
she reminded herself that none of the other women had ever rated a
second date, and the idea of a relationship with them was
completely out of the question. In that respect, she was
unique.
"I knew there was something I didn't like about that creeper,"
Olivia mumbled, casting another forlorn look at the chair before
deciding that she was really better off against the wall. Besides,
that was where Alex was, and Alex smelled good. She leaned her head
against the blonde's shoulder, her eyes drifting
shut.
"My knight in shining armor," Alex drawled, her tone caught
somewhere in between annoyance and amusement. "All right, Olivia
mine, you look like you're about to fall over and I'm tired.
Bedtime." She would probably never admit it, but it was nice to see
Olivia let her guard down for a change. Her lover rarely drank at
all, and Alex knew that she was afraid of becoming an alcoholic
like her mother. She decided to compliment her lover on her
restraint the next morning, just in case her hangover conjured up
bad memories from the recesses of her mind.
Abbie waggled her eyebrows. "Bedtime? Yeah right… you two
might as well just call it 'sex time' for accuracy's
sake."
"Ha ha ha. Your manners are even more impeccable while drunk,
Carmichael. Now, you and Serena need to leave. It's…" the
attorney glanced at the digital clock on the nightstand provided by
the hotel. "Past 1:00 AM. Oh, and make sure to find Jane and Maura
a cab-"
"This isn't New York City," Abbie grumbled, while Jane said
"that really isn't necessary" at the same time.
"Why do we have to leave?" Serena pouted. She had already taken
her shoes off and was rubbing the arches of both feet. Getting
tired of massaging her own feet, she plopped them in Abbie's lap,
allowing the brunette to take over.
"I told you not to borrow Alex's shoes, Ser. The heel is too
high for you."
"But they're nice shoes…"
"Yes, they are nice shoes, thank you, Serena - and you two have
to leave because this is the hotel room that I paid for. Yours is
on the floor below us, if I recall."
"I hope we're not right under you or we'll never get any
peace."
Maura gave Olivia an amused look. "Is this much banter a normal
part of your interactions?" she asked.
Olivia shook her head. "They're being downright friendly
tonight. You haven't seen anything yet."
"Now I'm intrigued. I suppose we should trade contact
information."
Jane laughed. "That's her way of asking for one of your cell
numbers. Maura's a little…"
"Loquacious?" Alex suggested, urging Olivia over to the bed and
undoing the detective's leather jacket, more for her own pleasure
than because Olivia was unable to use her fingers. Despite her
slightly unsteady walk, Olivia was not really that drunk, only a
little buzzed.
"Here," said Abbie, tossing Jane her cell phone, which the
Boston detective easily caught with her quick reflexes. "Wow, how
did you catch that? Aren't you still drunk? Oh well, type your
number in here, long lost twin of mine. Maybe we can hook up
tomorrow for brunch or something."
Maura examined her lover, who was swaying a little and looked
completely worn out, even though she had managed to catch the phone
and correctly remember her own contact information. "Maybe a late
lunch. I have a feeling all six of us are going to want to sleep in
tomorrow."
...
"I'm never drinking again," Abbie groaned, staggering out of the
bathroom in nothing but her underwear. Her face was noticeably
pale, and Serena pulled back the covers on the left side of the bed
so that Abbie could climb back in. She leaned in to give her lover
a sympathetic kiss on the lips, but paused a few inches away,
thinking better of it. "I brushed my teeth, and there was nothing
but water in my stomach to throw up anyway… Ugh." Reassured,
Serena gave Abbie the kiss she had been hinting at, which the
former ADA accepted gratefully.
"Don't you think you're a little old to be drinking so much?"
Serena chided gently.
Abbie closed her eyes and settled her head back against the
double stack of hotel pillows, wishing that they had thought to
close the blinds the night before. Sunlight was streaming in
through the open slats, and the brightness was bothering her even
with her eyes shut. "I'm improvin' with age," she said in a husky
voice, her southern accent very obvious. "I know where I was last
night, who I was with, what I did, and most importantly, I know the
person I woke up next to in the mornin'. That's kind of a nice
feeling. Compared to some of the stuff I did in years gone by,
that's downright mature behavior."
Despite the lighthearted tone with which the statement was
delivered, Serena knew Abbie well enough to guess that she was
being serious. "I'm glad you decided you like waking up next to
me," she said, giving Abbie a second kiss on the forehead. "Do you
want me to get some toast?" A hand stroked up Abbie's leg, tugging
at the side of her panties. "Why on earth did you fall asleep in a
thong?"
"I wore a thong so I wouldn't have panty lines, and I was too
drunk and too damn tired to take it off. Strange, though, 'cuz I
got the skirt off just fine."
Serena rolled her eyes. "I was the one who took your skirt off,
but you kept grabbing my breasts, and then you fell asleep and
snored loud enough to wake the dead."
Abbie blushed. "Did I really? I'm sorry…"
That made the blonde laugh. "No. You didn't snore. I would have
nudged you to make you roll onto your back. But you did grab my
breasts."
"Oh, that's all right, then." The dark haired Texan's hands
drifted up Serena's naked stomach, taking pleasure in the feel of
bare flesh under her palms. "Like this?" she said, squeezing the
two subjects of their discussion.
Serena made a soft sound of pleasure in the back of her throat.
"Hmm… I'm not sure. Maybe you should try again…" Her
lover was more than happy to comply, letting one of her thighs
drift between Serena's legs as she rolled an excited nipple between
the thumb and index finger of her right hand.
"There was always something… different… about
touching you, something that wasn't there with the others," Abbie
hummed in Serena's ear, grazing the sensitive shell with even white
teeth, "even back when we first met… I'm a fool for taking so
long to realize what it was."
The only other time Abbie had ever mentioned other women while
making love with Serena had been the first time. She had whispered
reassurances, trying her very best to convince Serena that no one
else in her past could hold a candle to her, but after that, both
of them had agreed that it was better not to rub salt in old wounds
and let it be. But this time, instead of drawing her attention to
Abbie's past and dampening the mood, the soft reminder made
Serena's heart swell with joy.
"You caught the train," Serena said, still a little dazed. She
kissed the ball of Abbie's shoulder, pausing to nuzzle the soft
skin of her inner wrist and pressing a kiss to each fingertip. "I
love your hands…"
"Mmm? What?" It was Abbie's turn to sound dazed, her mind still
fuzzy.
"Because of how good they always make me feel."
Abbie grinned before sucking on one of Serena's fingers and
capturing it between her teeth. When she released it, she gave her
lover a roguish wink. "You know what they say. Save a horse, ride a
cowgirl…"
...
Chapter Three:
Jane was having a very confusing dream. She was on a tropical
island, and clones of herself were serving her piña coladas as
she lounged in a beach chair under an umbrella. Maura was
curled up on a towel beside her, wearing a bikini and a floppy sun
hat. She was reading an anatomy textbook, which Jane found a little
redundant, since Maura already knew almost all there was to know
about human anatomy. Secretly, the blonde preferred grisly horror
novels, which Jane hated because they reminded her too much of the
job. There was no accounting for taste, she
supposed.
That was when Jane's mother replaced one of Jane's friendly
clones. "Jane, you didn't call me last Friday! Did I tell you that
Mrs. Grisbaum's son is getting married? I'm making tortellini and
sour cream for you tonight and bringing a nice young man over for
you to meet, so don't be late."
"Ma, this is my dream… leave me alone!" Jane
complained, glancing down at Maura for support. Unfortunately, the
medical examiner was still engrossed in her textbook… or, at
least, she was pretending to be. "I told you that I'm dating
Maura… and I'm a lesbian."
"Oh well, I still expect you to give me grandchildren! All
the lesbians are doing it these days…"
Squeezing her eyes shut tight, she began chanting, "go away,
go away, go away…" under her breath. To her surprise, when
she opened her eyes again, the image of her mother gradually faded
away into nothingness. "Wow," she said, looking at the empty space
around her with a sense of pride. "This is cool." The clones of
herself were gone too (and so, unfortunately, were the piña
coladas), but Maura was still beside her, nose buried in a Stephen
King novel this time.
Maybe I'm having one of those lucid dreams, Jane thought. Of
course, that gave her other ideas. "Hey, Maura," she said, looking
down at her blonde lover, "take off your top." Tossing the Boston
detective a seductive look through half-lowered lids, the blonde
lifted two pale arms, lightly freckled from the golden sun, and
reached around her torso to untie her bikini
top…
A persistent poking sensation at her shoulder roused Jane from
her dream. "Dammit!" she grumbled, closing her eyes and burrowing
deeper under the covers. "No no no…"
"Jane? What on earth are you doing?" Maura's voice drew Jane out
of her protective cocoon, and she opened one eye a crack to realize
that she was facing the wrong direction on the bed. "You were
moving around and talking in your sleep, so I decided to wake you
up."
The dark-haired woman pouted. "You ruined my dream," she said,
ignoring the bothersome sunlight pouring in through the open blinds
and flipping over so that her head was near Maura's
again.
"Was it a good dream?" the blonde medical examiner teased,
pressing a teasing thigh between her lover's legs.
Jane groaned. "It was a terrible dream, but it was getting good
when you woke me up. We were on a beach and you were wearing a
bikini…"
"That sounds like a nice dream."
"-and then my mother appeared."
"Jane…"
"And said we had to give her grandchildren-"
"That's a nightmare."
"Then I asked her to go away, and she disappeared. Since I
seemed to be able to control what happened, I asked you to take off
your top. You woke me up before I got to see anything, though,"
Jane pouted.
Maura smiled, combing her fingers through disheveled dark curls
and kissing Jane's chin. "Well, it's a good thing I decided not to
wake you up with oral sex, then. It would have been terribly
awkward with your mother being in the dream…"
Jane's cheeks flushed. "Um. I'm awake now…"
...
What is love? Baby don't hurt me…
Don't hurt me… no more.
What is lo-
Olivia groaned, slapping the front of her cell phone until one
of the buttons silenced the annoying song. "What?" she mumbled, not
realizing that she had accidentally hung up on the caller. When
there was no response, she closed her eyes again and rolled over
onto the empty right side of the double bed. Realizing that there
was no warm body for her to hold, she began to feel around, trying
to figure out what had happened to Alex.
What is love? Baby don't hurt me…
Don't hurt me… no more.
Wh-
Olivia got to the phone quicker this time, but not soon enough.
Her head was pounding and it took her a few moments to read the
blurry letters on her phone's illuminated screen. 'The Old Ball and
Chain'? What the hell…? Finally, she just decided to answer
it.
"Olivia, pick up the goddam- oh, hi."
"Alex?" she croaked, her voice raspy from dehydration. It did,
however, explain why the blonde was not in bed next to her. "Hon?
S'at you?"
"Yes, it's me. Get out of bed and open the door to our hotel
room. I'm locked out."
"Ungh." Too tired to remember to hang up the phone, Olivia left
it on the bed and slumped towards the door, rubbing at one eye and
opening the metallic handle with a click. Alex was waiting outside,
already dressed and carrying coffee and a bagel. To Olivia's tired
eyes, she looked like a goddess.
"She awakens! You look like the living dead. And why did you
give me that godawful ringtone? I could hear it through the door. I
didn't want to knock loud enough to bother the people next to
us…"
"Didn't," Olivia muttered, hooking a possessive arm around
Alex's waist and dragging her back to bed. "C'mere." Having
reclaimed her missing mate, the detective fell back onto the bed
and tried to pull Alex with her. "Sleep now."
"It's almost noon, Olivia, and I'm already dressed. I'm not
getting back in bed." Reaching for the phone, Alex stared down at
the screen. "You have me listed under 'The Old Ball and Chain'?"
she asked, sounding less than amused.
"Not me," Olivia said, burying her face in the pillow. The cup
of coffee in Alex's hand, however, smelled very good, and she was
beginning to wake up properly. "Prob'ly Munch."
"You should have known better than to let Munch get a hold of
your cell phone," Alex said, unsympathetic. She shook the
brunette's shoulder and forced the cup of coffee into her hand when
she sat up. "I even got that decaf crap you like. Drink that while
I get you some water and pain relievers for the headache I know
you've got."
"Thanks. How did you get locked out?"
"Key card stopped working."
"Did you put it next to your cell phone?"
Alex shrugged. "Maybe. Don't remember. I guess I shouldn't have
reamed out the desk clerk, then."
"Why didn't he give you a new key?"
"I guess I scared him a bit too much, because he wanted to
accompany me back up the stairs to make sure it worked, and I
didn't want him catching a free show."
Olivia looked down and realized that she was naked. "Oh," she
said, watching Alex as she filled a tall glass of water and dug
around in her purse for the tiny bottle of pills she always
carried.
"Eat the bagel. It will settle your stomach," she ordered,
pointing imperiously at the forlorn looking bagel that sat on a
white paper napkin. "I don't know why you're so picky about your
cream cheese, but I put jam on it instead."
The detective suddenly realized that this was probably a little
like what being married felt like. If that was true, she decided,
it wasn't so bad. Obediently, she nibbled at the bagel and took the
bitter tasting pills, chasing them with some water. "Sorry," she
said, remembering the state she had been in the night before.
Having Alex take care of her served as an unpleasant reminder of
her own past. She had been in the attorney's position too many
times to count.
"Olivia, you're a responsible adult and you very rarely indulge.
Last night did not change my opinion of you at all. I think it's
admirable that you are careful around alcohol because of your
mother's past, but you are a different person than she was. You
know your limits and don't test them, and I've never felt
uncomfortable around you after you've been drinking, so please stop
punishing yourself for a problem that doesn't even
exist."
With her self-deprecating inner dialogue cut off before it could
really begin, Olivia had no prepared response. Luckily, she was
saved by the ringing of her cell phone, which was now playing
'Redneck Woman' at a very loud volume.
So here's to all my sisters out there
Keepin' it country…
Let's all get a big HELL YEAH
From the Redneck Girls like me
Olivia hurried to answer it before Gretchen Wilson could get to
another 'Hell yeah'. "Hello, is that you, Abbie? Munch changed all
my contact info and ring tones, so I'm not
sure…"
"Well, howdy to you, too, Benson," said Abbie Carmichael. "And
it's your own fault for letting him get near your
phone."
"That's what Alex said," Olivia mumbled, shooting a glare at the
laughing blonde standing beside the bed. She reached down to give
Olivia's nipple a sharp tug, making the brunette
yelp.
"Ooh, am I interrupting something? Sorry, I already got mine
this morni- Ow! Serena!'
Olivia snickered. "I think both of us need to find some
less-violent women."
"So, Munch changed your ring tones? What was
mine?"
The detective grinned into the phone. "Redneck
Woman."
"Hell yeah!" the federal prosecutor crowed. "Remind me to give
that boy a big ol' hug next time I see him."
"At least it wasn't something sexually explicit."
"No, I'm past all that. My long-lost twin gave me a call this
mornin' and asked if we wanted to get some brunch with her and
Maura. I said I'd give you a call."
Olivia decided that brunch with Jane and Maura sounded fine, but
looked up at Alex for confirmation. When the former ADA gave a nod
of approval, Olivia said, "yeah, sure. Alex already ate, but I'm
sure she'll come just to torment me. Ow!" The light slap to the
back of Olivia's head was more surprising than painful, but earned
an exclamation from her anyway.
"Tell Alex to stop hitting you and get some clothes on. We'll
come pick you up in a few minutes."
"How do you know I don't have any clothes on?" Olivia asked
suspiciously.
Abbie hmmed in response. "Lucky guess. Get dressed before we
come up or Serena and Alex will both kick my pretty ass off the
hotel roof. And you should keep my new ring tone, I like it!"
Without saying goodbye, Abbie hung up, leaving Olivia scrambling
off of the bed to find something to wear.
...
Chapter Four:
A short time later, the six women met up at a nearby restaurant.
Thankfully, it was Saturday, and the breakfast buffet was open well
past noon. Olivia and Jane immediately sat next to each other,
which surprised Alex until she realized that there were three seats
to each side, and their side happened to be facing the door so that
they could keep an eye on the people entering and exiting the
restaurant. Their cop rituals are so alike it's scary. She slid in
the other side of the booth opposite Olivia, allowing Maura to cozy
up next to her while Abbie sat on the end. Serena took the open
seat across from Abbie and next to Jane. "So, how did you and Jane
meet?" Serena asked. "Was it at work?"
"Yes," said Maura, answering Serena's question. "She wasn't
overly fond of me at first, and she still calls me the Queen of the
Dead."
Alex snorted. "That's nothing. Olivia and her partner came up
with some very creative nicknames for me during our first few weeks
as colleagues. The 'Ice Princess' one was, perhaps, the most
kind."
"Repressed sexual desire," Olivia said, glossing over the
clashes they had experienced all those years ago. "And it didn't
help that you were appointed to make sure my partner and I weren't
a bunch of crazies."
"You're still sore about that Morris Commission thing? Honey,
that was, what… over a decade ago?"
Maura looked surprised. "You two have known each other for that
long?"
Olivia grinned. "Yep."
"And how long did it take you to enter a relationship?"
Remembering her manners, Maura added a hasty, "if I'm not being too
intrusive by asking, of course."
By this time, Alex was grinning, too. "Of course not." She took
Olivia's hand under the table, which made Serena give them a look
that clearly said 'that's adorable' while Abbie pretend to choke
over her glass of orange juice. "Actually, we've only been together
for about a year."
"It took you that long to convince her to put up with your ass,
Benson?" Jane teased. Even though neither of them was on the job,
the two cops were already acting like old
colleagues.
"Actually, she pursued me… I didn't think I could trust
her. It's kind of a long story."
Alex, ever the artist with words, decided to summarize. "A drug
lord took pot shots at me because I wouldn't drop a rape case
against one of his lieutenants, I had to go into Witness
Protection, and when I came back to testify, I might have misled
Olivia into believing that I was sleeping around in Nowhere,
Wisconsin under an assumed identity." She looked appropriately
repentant as she recounted the story. "Then I came back for good,
didn't call her, got engaged to a man I hated, cheated on my
fiancé with a scumbag at the DA's office because I hated
myself, and went through a lot of therapy. After that, I decided to
work with SVU again without giving Olivia any warning, and just
when we were starting to treat each other civilly again, I
announced to the world that I was going to the Congo to prosecute
war criminals there."
"She sent me roses the next day," Olivia added with more than a
hint of sarcasm.
Maura and Jane were shocked. In fact, the Boston detective's
mouth was hanging open. "My God," she finally said. "And I thought
our story was bad…"
"Oh, I don't know, I think it was pretty entertaining." Abbie
gave her an encouraging look, and she explained. "Well, a few weeks
after the lesbian bar fiasco that Jane told you about last night,
we were investigating-"
"-I was investigating, you were just supposed to do the
autopsies. But you couldn't keep from getting
involved-"
Maura glared at her. "We were investigating a drug-related cop
shooting. A certain someone forgot to log a package of cigarettes
that contained key evidence. Then, the drug runners came in and
started shooting people in the station."
Olivia's eyes widened. "I read about that in the Times. That was
only a few months ago, right? You were there when it went
down?"
"Yes, that was it. Anyway, they were looking for the cigarette
pack-"
The brunette rolled her eyes. "You were too busy in the autopsy
room trying to feed that damn turtle of yours and forgot to remind
me."
"I did remind you, just before you got on the elevator. And Bass
is a tortoise," Maura corrected her lover in a very superior voice.
"You know that. He's a Sulcata tortoise. You only say turtle to
make me angry."
"Turtle, tortoise, tomato, tomahto. I still say that thing hates
me."
"He likes you, Jane. He always sticks his head out of his shell
to say hello when you come visit."
"Yeah, and then he glares at me with those beady little
eyes… Reptiles. Eugh." Secretly, Maura knew that Jane was
very fond of Bass, and her professed hatred of him was an ongoing
joke between them. After all, Bass had helped save Maura's life, if
only indirectly.
"Okay, wait a minute," said Abbie, who was having trouble
following the conversation. "So, there were people shooting at you
in the station house, and you own a tortoise?"
"Yes," said Maura, as if being shot at and owning a tortoise was
something that everyone did. "Jane's brother Frankie, who is also a
police officer, was shot, and I had to perform emergency surgery to
prevent his lungs from filling up with blood-"
"So there was a tortoise, guns, and emergency
surgery?"
Deciding that Maura was taking way too long to tell the story,
Jane jumped in. "The cop who was shot, his partner was dirty. When
we found out, he took me as a hostage and Maura and Frankie got to
an ambulance. By that time, we had contacted my partner and there
was a SWAT team outside the building."
"And then Jane tried to be a hero and got herself shot. We had
shared a few… encounters… before that, but almost
losing her was the catalyst that forced me to admit my feelings for
her."
Abbie whistled, clearly impressed. "Damn. Our story is downright
boring compared to those two."
Serena shrugged. "Plenty of emotional drama, just not as many
near-death experiences."
"I don't know about that," Abbie teased, "you almost killed me a
few times. Serena was my replacement at the DA's office in New
York. I met her, bedded her, and was too stupid to admit that I had
a good thing going. We saw each other off and on a few times over
the years, and that usually ended with me in some kind of physical
pain. Then Alex decided to get off her ass and pursue Olivia, and I
thought, 'what the hell. If those two crackpots can try to fix
their relationship, which is way more messed up and complicated
than mine and Serena's ever was, I have no excuse.' So I hopped on
a train to DC and forced Alex to let me stay in the guest room
until I had won the fair lady over."
The smaller blonde rolled her eyes. "You make it sound so
romantic, darling."
"Hey, at least no one got shot in our love
story."
...
Two hours later, the six women were still clustered around the
same table. The waitress had already offered to deliver their check
multiple times, but when Alex had taken her aside and whispered
that they would compensate both her and the restaurant properly for
continuing to take up space where they could be seating new
customers, the waitress was more than happy to let the group stay
for as long as they wanted.
Over the course of brunch, the conversation had meandered to
several interesting destinations, never settling on one topic for
too long. At the moment, they were in the middle of a game of
'Never Have I Ever', which had, surprisingly, been instigated by
Maura. When the blonde medical examiner revealed that she had never
been invited to a sleepover during her high school years (the
traditions of the rich included society dos, it seemed, but not
slumber parties where you painted your nails and talked about boys
- or girls), Abbie had insisted that they play, even without
alcohol.
"I can't believe we're doing this," Olivia groaned, taking a
swig of her third glass of water. The hangover she had woken up
with was beginning to recede now that she was sufficiently
hydrated. "At… almost two in the afternoon in a restaurant,
completely sober."
"It's for Maura's sake," Abbie said, nudging Olivia's shin with
her foot. Unfortunately, she missed and hit Jane. The detective
flinched and shot a glare at Alex, whom she thought was the
culprit. Alex then kicked Abbie for getting her in trouble, and she
didn't miss. "Ow! Jeez, it was an accident, both of you. No need to
hurt a person. It's your turn, Olivia."
"Fine, fine. Since we're all in some branch of Law
Enforcement… Never Have I Ever… gone on a date with a
suspect in one of my investigations." Serena, Alex, and Olivia did
not drink (all of them had decided to ignore the fact that their
beverages were non-alcoholic), but Abbie, Maura, and Jane did. The
last two looked at each other with surprise.
"You did?" Maura asked. Jane blushed.
"It was before I met you. I was young and stupid… and he
turned out to be guilty, too. The case almost got thrown out, and I
learned my lesson."
The Irish medical examiner gave her a disapproving look. "At
least I waited until the woman I asked on a date was eliminated as
a suspect," she said.
It was Jane's turn to look disapproving. "A woman? Why didn't I
know about this?"
"You knew you weren't the first woman I dated, Jane. Besides,
you dated her, too… for five minutes."
"It was one of those creeper women from the dating
website?"
"She was attractive," Maura defended herself. "Her facial
structure was very symmetrical and she had nice eyes. In fact, the
reason I picked her was that she reminded me of you." Jane's
expression softened, and then all of them looked at
Abbie.
Abbie shrugged. "I hooked up with three women I prosecuted -
after I lost and if I didn't think they did it." That made Serena
groan. "I know that groan was about the number and not the fact
that I prosecuted them, but hey, I don't choose which cases I take
to trial. There were a few times Branch made the call and I
disagreed with it."
"Actually, it was about both. Okay, moving on, please. Never
have I ever faked an orgasm."
Everyone but Olivia drank. The detective looked shocked. "Wow,
really? All five of you? You're too sympathetic." A horrible
thought occurred to her, and she glanced at Alex. "Not with me,
right?" she whispered, a little frantically. Alex
snorted.
"Of course not with you, you idiot." Leaning forward over the
table, she cupped her hand around her mouth and whispered into
Olivia's ear, the one farthest from Jane. "You're the only person
I've been able to with reliably, and only the second person to get
me there at all."
The pretty blush that covered Olivia's cheeks pleased her, but
four sets of eyes staring at her from the other side of the table
distracted her. "Whispering sweet nothin's in Olivia's ear, Alex?"
Abbie teased, dodging another kick under the table. This time, Jane
foresaw the attack and lifted her legs up in time to keep from
getting in the way.
"I was just saying that when you're a lesbian forcing yourself
to sleep with stubborn men, it's kind of a requirement because they
just won't quit until they think you're satisfied," she
lied.
"Here here," Serena muttered. "Been there, done
that."
"It's not just men," Abbie said. "I have never been with a man
and I've encountered the same problem once or
twice."
"Okay, my turn," Maura said, looking cheerful. "Never have I
ever done it at work."
Jane's jaw dropped, firstly at the sexual nature of Maura's
question, and secondly at her use of slang. Normally, she would
have expected her lover to say 'sexual intercourse' or
'participated in coitus' or something along those lines. Thanks to
Jane's influence, Maura did not use textbook terms for sex in the
bedroom, but she was still uncomfortable using such
'unprofessional' language outside of it.
"You have to drink, Jane," Maura patiently reminded her
girlfriend. "It's the rules." Still stunned, Jane took a swig of
her afternoon coffee, heavy on the sugar.
Abbie also drank, and so did Serena, which caused Alex to grin.
"Oh, are you both thinking of the story I'm thinking
about?"
Serena laughed. "Actually, we did it in the photocopy room near
Branch's office. Aside from the black eye I gave Abbie afterward,
it was pretty amazing."
Abbie did a mock half-bow from her seated position. "I try. Oh,
and we actually DID do it in McCoy's office…"
"Oh, I didn't know about that one," Alex said, looking
interested.
"And the bathroom," Abbie added. Serena wrinkled her nose with
distaste.
"I still say that's unsanitary…"
"At least it's better than a morgue."
Jane shuddered. "Ew, no. Maura and I have NEVER done it in the
morgue. That's just… wrong."
"My morgue is perfectly sanitary," Maura argued. Jane gave her a
long-suffering look. "But it would still be a very poor choice for
such activities," she conceded.
"I may or may not have visited Olivia in the crib…" Alex
said evasively.
Abbie laughed. "Oh jeez… And I slept in there once or
twice… who knows how many other people used it for that?
Ew."
Alex frowned at her. "This is coming from the woman who
regularly has sex in both my guest room and master
bedroom."
"That's not at work, and I was talking about other people, not
you. We're practically sisters by now, Cabot. I already have your
cooties."
"This conversation is making me extremely uncomfortable," Olivia
said. "Whose turn is next?"
"I have one," said a familiar voice that still had the power to
make Alex stand at attention. "Never have I ever been in jail."
Everyone froze. Olivia stopped eating her pancakes mid-chew, and
Serena nearly dropped her coffee mug.
Her hand shaking slightly, Alex took a drink from Olivia's
glass, deliberately using the extra time to conceal her
embarrassment and replace it with a well-practiced, neutral
expression. "Hello, Your Honor," she said, standing and tilting her
hips to move past Maura and Abbie, who gave her a reassuring pat on
the behind. Alex made a mental note to hurt Abbie later. "This is
certainly… unexpected."
...
Chapter Five:
Maura and Jane looked on in confusion as Alex stood - perhaps
not to greet, but to defend herself against the strange woman who
had approached their table. Although not beautiful, she was
impressive in a grand, powerful sort of way despite her age. "Who
is that?" Maura mouthed across the table to Jane, not adding breath
to her words. She knew that her detective was adept at reading
lips.
Jane's shoulders shrugged. She had no idea. And so Maura decided
to play investigator and look for clues. The woman was older, a few
decades older than Alex, probably too old to be an ex. Their
physical structure had almost no similarities, so she doubted that
they were relatives, but she disliked making assumptions without
conclusive DNA evidence. Human reproduction sometimes produced
strange results.
Perhaps the biggest clue came when she returned her attention to
Alex. The blonde woman was acting very differently. Her posture had
improved, even though she carried herself well even in casual
situations. This was not the same Alex who had captivated the dance
floor by gyrating seductively to Apple Bottom Jeans the night
before (and she had known all the words).
Ah, a colleague at work, then. Perhaps someone she had to answer
to.
Jane nudged her foot under the table, obviously trying to remind
her not to stare, but she continued for the sake of scientific
research. A recent UCLA study had concluded that up to 93% of
communication was nonverbal, and right now, Alexandra Cabot looked
like she was mentally armoring herself for some kind of jousting
tournament.
"-Your Honor. This is certainly…
unexpected."
It clicked. Maura's imagination supplied the black robes and
everything made sense.
"I could say the same, Ms. Cabot. I see your habit of placing
yourself in uncomfortable situations both inside and outside of the
courtroom hasn't changed. And as for you, Ms. Carmichael, have you
finally succeeded in cloning yourself, or is the woman on the other
side of the table some kind of relative? God help the female
population of Provincetown either way."
Abbie looked positively thrilled. "No such luck!" she sang,
apparently feeling no need to stand up and face the infamous Lena
Petrovsky on even ground. "We just met last night. That's Jane
Rizzoli, Boston Homicide, and this is Dr. Maura
Isles."
"I don't blame you for the confusion," Maura said. "Serena made
the same mistake. Their cranial structure is
remarkabl-"
"Shh, Maura!" Jane's foot nudged her calf under the table again.
"Um, it's nice to meet you, ma'am," she said, getting unsteadily to
her feet and pushing past Serena to shake hands. The shorter blonde
lawyer was content to look on with amusement and not draw attention
to herself.
"Lena Petrovsky," she said. "How refreshing to meet someone with
good manners." Alex frowned. "Oh, don't look at me like that,
Cabot. You have good manners - when you aren't busy grandstanding
or trying to find ways to twist the law without getting
caught."
"Coming from you, Your Honor, that sounds almost like a
complement," Alex said dryly. She suddenly realized that, since she
was no longer an employee of the New York County's District
Attorney's Office, she could treat Petrovsky any way she
liked.
"It was. And Detective Benson, please stop glaring a hole
through my head. I promise I haven't come to send Alexandra off to
jail - again."
"No, that was her fault," Olivia said. "I'm just shocked to see
you in jeans and a sweater."
To everyone's surprise, Petrovsky laughed. "What, did you think
those robes were attached or something?"
"I hope not." Abbie smirked.
"Ms. Carmichael," Petrovsky said, sounding slightly bored, "what
have I told you about making sexually inappropriate comments in my
courtroom?"
"This isn't your courtroom."
Petrovsky raised one eyebrow. "I happen to know your
boss."
Abbie did not seem concerned. "I'll wear a short
skirt."
"No, you won't. Leonard is a creeper," Serena muttered. She was
not particularly fond of Abbie's boss, who seemed far too
interested in both of them whenever she met Abbie for lunch or
dropped off some papers she had forgotten (Abbie was a brilliant
attorney with a gift for improvisation, but not particularly
organized at times).
"Astute as always, Serena. But no more so than
Seinfeld."
"Did you just call Seinfeld a creeper?" Alex asked
disbelievingly. She had never imagined a conversation quite like
this ever taking place with Petrovsky - even in her worst
nightmares. And Petrovsky had made several appearances in her
nightmares over the years.
"Actually, I believe Jamie Ross said it first."
Abbie folded her arms proudly over her chest. "Yep. Slept with
her, too."
"Oh come on, I don't even believe half the stuff you tell me
anymore." Olivia rolled her eyes.
Maura shrugged. "Abbie is very attractive," she pointed out. "I
believe she would not have a difficult time finding romantic
partners."
"I'm going to pretend you're saying that about me since we look
so much alike," Jane added.
Olivia would not be deterred. "But Ross, Abbie? You slept with a
judge?"
"She's attractive, and she wasn't a judge then," Abbie
protested. "Besides, she's got a husband and twins now, I'm not a
homewrecker."
"No, you just like to make my life miserable."
"And here I thought that was my job," Petrovsky said. "Good for
you, Ms. Carmichael. I'm glad someone has taken over bothering
Alexandra in my absence."
Abbie grinned. "I knew I liked you! Pull up a
chair!"
...
"And so the ferret jumped out of Korsak's trench coat and landed
right on top of Jane's head… I'm not sure which of them was
more afraid, the poor ferret or Jane, because she was running
around in circles and screaming for someone to get it off
her."
Jane sighed, putting up with the humiliating story because she
knew Maura enjoyed telling it. It was definitely not one of her
proudest moments. "And, of course, the reporters who were there
took a lot of pictures. Her face was on the front of the local news
page the next day. I think there's even a video on
youtube…"
Abbie took out her iPhone. "Ooh, let me find it! What should I
type in? Cop Attacked By Wild Ferret?"
Maura grinned deviously. "Go for it."
Petrovsky leaned in to look at the screen over Abbie's shoulder
with unabashed interest. Serena was still laughing into the palm of
her hand. Jane rolled her eyes. "Hey, Maura, maybe I should tell
the story about the time you showed up to our ball game in a
wetsuit."
"It wasn't a wetsuit, it was a therma-"
"It looked like a wetsuit… or some kind of alien Halloween
costume."
"I did hit the ball, if you remember," Maura said, sounding
proud instead of embarrassed.
"You're a baseball fan, Jane?" Olivia asked. Jane nodded. "You'd
get along great with our friend Casey Novak, then. Wait - you're
not a Yankees fan, are you?"
"Ugh, no! Red Sox all the way. What do you think I am, crazy?
Anyone walking around in Yankees gear anywhere near Southie would
get their face smashed in."
"That's an exaggeration, Jane. In most circumstances, I think
they would only receive mild drunken harassment on game days and
perhaps dirty looks on an elevator."
Alex grinned wickedly. "Olivia has a Yankees hat and shirt," she
told Maura.
"Casey gave them to me!" Olivia protested as Jane started to
glare at her. "You know I root for the Mets, you're just trying to
cause trouble! I'm not out to shed blood over baseball, but Casey
is a hardcore Yankees fan and I want to make sure she won't kill
Jane if they ever run in to each other sometime in the
future."
"Oh my!" They were both interrupted by a startled exclamation
from Petrovsky, who was laughing at the image on Abbie's
iPhone.
"You are so materialistic," Serena said, glaring at her lover.
"She had to get one as soon as it came out… she thinks it
makes her hotter or something." Alex, who also disliked iPhones
(although she was a Mac user, much to Olivia's chagrin), was
nonetheless intrigued enough to take the device from Abbie so that
all three of them could see.
"Damn, Jane, watch out for that tree," Abbie drawled after
watching a miniature version of the detective run face first into a
sturdy trunk that happened to be nearby. "Ouch… I bet you
looked like the dog had been keepin' you under the porch after that
mess."
Maura looked confused. "Why on earth would Joe Friday be keeping
you underneath a porch, Jane?"
Olivia patted her arm. "Don't worry, Maura. None of us
understand Abbie most days, either."
Fortunately, Alex understood what she meant, having been a
frequent 'test subject' for Abbie's colorful slang. "It's a Texan
saying that means 'ugly', which I assume she was after the
bruising," she clarified, still laughing at the video. "Ferret: 1.
Jane: 0."
"Was the ferret all right?" Serena asked, since she couldn't see
the screen.
"Was the ferret all right?" Jane repeated in a low, irritated
mutter. "The damn thing was fine. Korsak rescued it before he
helped me stop the bleeding."