Shades of Gray
Title: Shades of Gray
Fandom: White Collar
Author: tigerlily0
Rating: T (a.k.a. PG-13)
Genre and/or Pairing: gen
Spoilers: 1.11 Home Invasion
Warnings: Violence and blood.
Word Count: 2400
Disclaimer: White Collar and its characters are property of its
copyright owners. No copyright infringement is intended. No profit is taken
from this story.
Summary: What if Peter did not get Neal's "power" message after Pierce
forced him to cut his anklet?
Neal got the chance he was desperately hoping for when the murdering
thief who called herself “Pierce” (and who was currently holding Neal at
gunpoint in his own apartment) got distracted by June’s arrival at his door. He
sat down on the couch, made sure that his anklet was out of Pierce’s sight, and
quickly cut it. The con man silently thanked God that he’d learned Morse code
years ago (as it frequently came in handy in his line of work). Since he knew
that Peter knew it too, he immediately tapped out “power” by hitting together the
cut ends of the anklet’s band.
God, he really hoped that Peter would get his message. If
not, he was royally screwed. As screwed as Christopher Gray was a few days ago.
Pierce had shot the stock broker, and Neal knew he’d be next unless somehow
Peter got the message and figured out what it meant. It was crazy how sometimes
he and the FBI agent seemed to be thinking the same thing - be on the same
wavelength - and Neal prayed this was another one of those times.
When he heard his landlady leave, Neal back turned towards
his captor, only to see her point the gun at him again.
He held up the now-free tracker. “Tick-tock.”
“Let’s go.”
Neal stood up and tossed his former anklet on the floor. As
they left, he figured all he could do now was play out the game and hope that
Peter did his part.
Lauren rushed into Peter’s office. “Neal cut his anklet.”
Peter cursed to himself. What was the ex-con up to? Did this
have anything to do with Alex and Pierce and the jade? Peter immediately picked
up the phone and dialed Neal’s cell. Maybe it wasn’t what it looked like. His suspicions
only deepened, however, when it went straight to voicemail. Peter slammed down
the phone. “Damn it, Neal.”
Peter’s phone rang. He picked it up quickly. “Neal?”
“Oh, thank god, Peter.” It was June. She sounded agitated.
“I think Neal’s in big trouble.”
“Calm down, June. Tell me what happened.”
Peter heard June take a deep breath, probably to steady
herself. “This girl showed up, wanted to wait for Neal. I showed her in. But I
swear there was something off about her. A few minutes later, I heard the door
slam. I figured Neal was home. I went up to talk to him, but the girl answered
the door and gave me some excuse and pushed me out. A minute later, they both
left.” June started speaking faster, more insistently. “Peter, he didn’t want
to go. I could tell. She was forcing him or something, somehow. I tell you,
he’s in trouble. You have to help him!”
“June, June, it’s alright. I will. I swear. Now, what did
this girl look like?”
“Blonde, maybe mid-twenties, tiny little thing -”
“Okay, June. I’m coming to your place. Me and my agents.
We’ll get your statement, see if you can ID this girl, search Neal’s room -”
“No, Peter. That will take too long. There’s nothing here.
And Neal is in trouble right now. I’m coming to you. I know where your office
is.” She hung up.
Peter hurried out of his office, shouting orders to his
subordinates. “Lauren, Jones, set up a photo array. Neal’s landlady June is
coming in to identify the woman he left her place with. It sounds like Pierce.”
While he was waiting for June to arrive, Peter went to
inform his boss Hughes about what was happening. He wasn’t looking forward to it.
Hughes had never trusted Neal. God only knew what he would think.
When June got to the office, Jones and Lauren showed her the
photos. She immediately identified Pierce. “Oh, that’s her.”
In the meantime, Hughes was instructing Peter.
“Alright, pull every alias Caffrey has. Hit the airports
and the waterways. We can’t let them escape with the jade or the Japanese are
going to be very, very upset.”
“I don’t think they ran together. Neal knows better by
now.”
“Peter, he set Alex up as a fence for the jade and he let
Pierce escape tonight. Caffrey put every damn thing in place.”
That gave Peter pause for a second. He wanted to believe in
Neal, really he did. But it was so hard sometimes. And right now, things did
point to Neal working with Pierce. His fence Alex had shown up just at the
right time. Neal had lied to Peter about who she was, then got very upset when
Peter pulled her prints. And Alex could have come to the bar and blown their
operation there intentionally, letting Pierce get away.
Peter sighed. After the serious argument they’d had earlier
that night, Neal was majorly pissed at him. Maybe that was the trigger. Maybe
their partnership was over. Maybe Neal didn’t trust him any longer, not enough
to stick around any more, at least.
It was a good thing that June was there to get his head on
straight. “Peter, we both know he didn’t run.”
Peter stared at her for a moment and then nodded. Yeah, he
did. He knew Neal. Inside and out. She was right. There was no way that Neal
did this. There was no way this was what it looked like. But now he had to
prove it. And if Neal was in trouble, to rescue him.
Lauren got his attention, holding up Pierce’s picture to
show him that June had identified Pierce as the woman with Neal. Peter walked
over to her. “Pull Neal’s tracking information. I want to see everywhere he
went this week.”
When he got the information, Peter poured over it, trying to
find something, anything, that could help him find Neal, figure out where he’d
go. Okay, he was at the ice rink at Rockefeller center at the time that Gray
was shot. And the rest of the information - was useless. Neal didn’t go
anywhere unexpected, and Peter was with him most of the time anyway (especially
as he’d been staying at his place for the last two days).
“Argh!” Peter threw aside the worthless information. He knew
that now the only thing left was to do it the hard way. Neal and Pierce
couldn’t have gotten far.
“Jones, order a city-wide APB for both Neal and Pierce. Make
sure to put out that Pierce is armed and dangerous, and Neal is most likely a
hostage and definitely not dangerous.”
“Yes, sir.”
Peter sat down at his desk, putting his head in his hands.
Think, think, damn it. Where would Neal go?
Neal arrived at the Burkes’ townhouse, Pierce still in tow.
He quickly picked the lock and let himself in (making a mental note to talk to
Peter and Elizabeth about improving their home security, especially with their
new home entertainment system).
He led Pierce in. “My buddy’s upstate. Cuts the power
when he goes.” Neal flipped the lights on and off, carefully making sure to
leave them in the “on” position. “It’s the perfect hiding place for the
jade.”
“Where are the pieces?”
“He told me he put them in a drawer.”
“Hey! You think I’m stupid? Stay back where I can see
you.”
While Pierce was distracted by pawing through Peter and Elizabeth’s dining room drawers, Neal positioned himself next to the stereo, turning it on
and dialing the volume up to the max. If Peter had gotten his “power” message,
hopefully he had figured out that it meant that he’d be taking Pierce to Peter’s
place and he wanted Peter to turn the power on at the right moment.
Neal carefully sidled his way over to the other side of the
living room, near the new HDTV Peter was going to die for. But before he could
turn it on, Pierce turned her flashlight - and her gun - on him.
“Where the hell are they?”
“He swore to me they are here, okay?”
“Don’t play with me, Caffrey.”
“Hey, hey, I want this thing over just as much as you do.
Alright?”
Neal breathed a sigh of relief when Pierce went back to
pawing through the Burkes’ stuff. It gave him the chance to turn on the TV and
turn its volume up as well. Unfortunately, the respite didn’t last long. After
a few minutes, she turned on him again.
“They’re not here, Caffrey.”
“If he said they’re here, they’re here. We just gotta
keep looking.” Neal put his hands out and started to back away as his words
didn’t seem to be working. She was looking more and more pissed, and she was
raising her gun towards him in a purposeful manner. Neal started shaking his
head. “Please.”
As he stared down the barrel of her gun, a refrain started
in his head. Come on, Peter. Where are you? It’s about time. Any time now. As
if he really could communicate with Peter telepathically. That would come in
really handy right about now. Neal held his breath. Waiting. But nothing
happened. No Peter, no nothing. Neal started to lose hope that Peter had gotten
his message. And then suddenly -
BANG!
Neal gasped as he felt the bullet rip through him. He went
down, shoulder burning, barely aware of Pierce as she ran by him and out the
door. Damn, damn, damn. Neal pressed his left hand against his right shoulder,
which hurt like hell, but he needed to stop the bleeding. He got shakily up to
his feet and staggered towards the door. He knew that the shoulder had a hell
of a lot of blood vessels and if he didn’t get to a hospital soon, he could
easily bleed to death.
He stumbled down the Burkes’ steps and then collapsed onto
the sidewalk, where he lay, trying to get his bearings. His shoulder was burning
with a pain worse than he’d ever felt in his life. He could feel the blood,
sticky and warm, covering that side of his body. Things were starting to gray
out, like he was about to pass out from the blood loss. He took a deep breath.
Keep it together, Neal. Think, think, damn it.
He finally got enough brainpower together to come up with
one thought: Cell. 911. Now. He scrambled to get his phone out, but could
barely see it, barely handle it. He fumbled with it, trying to get his hands -
sticky and slick with blood - to work the little buttons. Before he could,
though, the gray out turned into a black out and he fell back, no longer aware
of anything.
Peter sat in the emergency room, watching Neal, waiting for
him to wake up. According to the doctor, the primary problem was that he’d lost
a lot of blood. There was no major damage otherwise. And now that they were
giving him a transfusion and replacing the blood, he should be waking up any
time now. And right on cue...
Neal groaned and started to move around, his eyes
flickering. He froze, however, his eyes popping open when his left arm was
stopped mid-motion with a clank. He was handcuffed to the side rail of the bed.
“Hey. Easy there.”
Neal’s eyes flicked over to Peter at the words, then over to
the cuffs. “Peter...” He whispered.
“These are courtesy of the NYPD.” Peter’s hand moved over to
still Neal’s and lower it gently to the bed. He studied Neal’s face for a
moment. His forehead was creased. He looked worried.
“How am I? Is it -”
“You lost a lot of blood, but you’ll be fine.”
Neal lay his head back, saying softly in relief, “Thank
God.”
Peter studied Neal for a moment, remembering how worried
he’d been when he got the call that Neal had been shot and rushed to the ER. It
was a harrowing half hour until he’d gotten the news that Neal would be all
right. He remembered how the relief had flooded through him.
Peter took a deep breath and sat back. “You know, Neal, you’re
very lucky that you made it outside. A neighbor called 911. And when you got
here to the ER, they were legally required to notify the NYPD about the gunshot
wound. They’re the ones who cuffed you to the bed. And they notified us once
they figured out who you were.”
Neal didn’t respond right away. Peter sat and gave him time
to process everything. After a few minutes, Neal picked up his head and watched
Peter for a moment. Then he licked his lips.
“You didn’t come.”
“Come?”
Neal blinked but didn’t respond for a moment, watching Peter
some more. “You didn’t get my message?”
Peter leaned forwards in his chair, closer to Neal, and
studied him. “What message?”
Neal sighed and lay back. “Doesn’t matter.”
“Neal, what message?”
But Neal just shook his head. After a moment, Peter gave up
and sat back. Maybe he’d get the full story later. Peter could wait Neal out.
Eventually, Neal was ready to talk again, after a nurse’s visit, and after he’d
gotten some water and was allowed to sit up a bit.
Neal looked intently at Peter. He took a deep breath. “Look,
Peter, I didn’t run. I wasn’t working with Pierce -”
Peter held up his hand and interrupted him. “I know.”
“You know?”
“Yes, I know, and I’m sorry.”
Neal looked confused. “You’re sorry? About me getting shot?”
“No, well, yes, I’m sorry you got shot. But I mean, I’m
sorry I doubted you.” Peter took a deep breath and looked Neal in the eyes.
“After we learned that you’d cut your anklet, I thought that maybe - just for a
moment there before I came to my senses - I thought that maybe you’d decided to
leave after our argument. You were pretty pissed at me.”
“No.” Neal chuckled a little. “I don’t even remember what we
were arguing about anyway.”
Peter followed suit. “No, me neither.”
Peter and Neal both sat back and sat in companionable
silence for a while. Then Neal spoke up.
“You know, now that I think back on it... I think I was
pissed at you for being you, and you were pissed at me for being me.”
Peter thought for a moment, remembering what all they said,
then chuckled. “Yeah, I think you’re right.”
The End