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#suits season 1
happy74827 · 3 months
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Season 1 Mike hits different
Song: If You Think I’m Pretty — Artemas
Show: Suits
Character: Mike Ross
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redpool · 9 months
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I don't know if Suits is supposed to be funny but there are some really fucking funny moments. Like moments that made me genuinely laugh out loud.
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schrijverr · 2 years
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Knocking Some Sense into You
What if the fight between Mike and Trevor during 1x03, Inside Track, is more heavy than in the show? What if Mike is so injured he goes to Harvey for help? And Harvey patches him up.
@ the anon who requested this, sorry it took a while I had to help my sister move and I dug a well for my mom, because we Dutch people love water managment xp
On AO3.
Ships: none
Warnings: fight and being helpless in a fight. Injuries, first aid and insecurity.
~~~~~~~~~~~
Fucking Trevor. Like really. It’s always Trevor. Trevor with his drug deal. Trevor who lied to Jenny, Trevor who was in trouble, Trevor Mike had to cover for, Trevor who went behind his back. Mike is just so tried of it all. He’s done.
And yet…
Yet he finds himself at his doorstep trying to get through to him for the last time. Because Trevor is his friend. Trevor is a constant in his life. Trevor never left him. So, here he is, offering help and money, something that puts him at risk for his friend and all he gets is nothing.
“Look, what matter is that you don’t help me out, okay? I help you out. And I’m not interested in transitioning into anything.” The words hurt more than Mike cares to admit.
Instead of doing the smart thing and walking out, dropping Trevor as Harvey always suggests, he attempts one other thing. Yeah, bringing up Jenny wasn’t a smart idea in hindsight.
Before he knows it punches are flying and it’s a full blown fight. Mike has fought off some bullies here and there, but Trevor has long since been his protector. Maybe that’s why the words hurt so much. Trevor has always helped him, Trevor was always the strong one and now Trevor is using that against him.
He later won’t even claim he makes a strong defense, because he’s been tackled to the ground in seconds, Trevor punching him where he can reach as Mike tries to grab his fists or stop the punches in any way he can think of.
When that proves unsuccessful, he tries to roll over and claw away in a pathetic crawl, but even that is undermined with Trevor grabbing his shoulder and pulling him back into a choke-hold that nearly does him in.
Mike is on the point of passing out, eyes bulging, when he is saved by a knock from a concerned neighbor, who calls: “Is everything alright in there?”
Before Mike can even think to scream, Trevor switches his hold, so he is clamping down on Mike’s mouth. He’s barely out of breath as he pleasantly returns: “Yeah, everything is fine. Thank you. I stubbed my toe and fell, pesky things those coffee tables.”
His laugh is returned and the neighbor leaves with a goodbye, Mike’s savior disappearing without taking notice of his suffering.
However, it alerts Trevor to what he is doing can be heard and he wants to nip that in the bud as quick as possible. The last thing he needs is a cop showing up to ask questions. So, he leans in and whispers in Mike’s ear: “I’m going to let you go and you can just get out. As long as you don’t make more noise, you got that?”
Trevor, at this point, doesn’t know that Mike also won’t benefit from the police poking too close in his life, especially in connection to Trevor. However, Mike hopes his enthusiastic nod (as far as he can manage it in his position) conveys how much he’ll be quiet and leave.
“Good.” Trevor lets go.
Mike doesn’t even care that his scramble to get away is highly undignified as he hightails out of the apartment.
His head is spinning and one eye is swelling rapidly. He can taste copper in his mouth, coming from what is likely a bleeding nose. His blinks hurt and he lifts his arms with difficulty as he feels his way to the elevator.
On the way down, he nearly collapses, but he manages to stay upright.
At this point, he realizes that he should get help. For a moment he considers going to the hospital, but the questions and bills that will give him discourage that notion. So, he sways on his feet and dials a cab, muscle memory saving him.
The cabbie is probably convinced he’s picking up a drunk somewhere until he pulls up and sees Mike. Then he exclaims: “Fucking hell. What the fuck happened to you?”
“Long story,” Mike offers in a slurred voice, before rattling off Harvey’s address, since he doesn’t know where else to go.
The cabbie asks if he’s sure he doesn’t need a hospital and Mike insists he doesn’t. When it becomes clear he isn’t changing his mind, the cabbie shrugs and tells him not to throw up in his car, before driving off.
In the end, not throwing up proves to be a challenge and Mike is glad when the cabbie announces that they have arrived. He hands him a fifty and doesn’t check what he gets back as he thanks the man and makes his way into Harvey’s building.
He has never been there before now and if he were more present, he’d be intimidated by the opulence of it. Now, he just focuses on setting one foot in front of the other and worrying how Harvey is going to react to him showing up like this. And how he’s going to explain what happened and that Harvey truly was his only option.
God, what will Harvey think of this sad display? Is this the limit? Harvey has sacrificed a lot for Mike to be here and he told him to let Trevor go. Is this what will make him see how dumb it was to let Mike in?
His mind is spinning with the questions and pain as he finds himself in front of Harvey’s door. This is the moment of truth, he thinks, only now realizing he isn’t sure if Harvey is even home.
With all that playing on his mind, he finally knocks.
Meanwhile, Harvey has been enjoying a quiet evening at home, mentally working through their strategy for the McKernon Motors case again. The company is his most treasured client and he wants it to go well tomorrow.
When he hears a knock on his door, he is annoyed. Who the hell wants anything from him at this time, not to mention, who doesn’t know how to find the bell?
Harvey considers ignoring it, but it comes again and it sounds almost desperate. Deciding he can always slam the door on whatever idiot is bothering him now, he gets up and swiftly pulls open the door. He growls: “What the hell do you want?” It’s only then that he sees Mike and what a horrid picture he makes.
Mike’s face is covered in blood and it’s unclear where it comes from (other than his still bleeding nose), just because of the amount. His left eye is black and swollen shut, not to mention the other bruising on his neck. He is swaying precariously and Harvey dreads to think what other injuries his outfit is hiding.
“What happened?” he asks, feeling his brows pull together in an emotion he hates: concern.
“I wen’ to Tr’vor, ‘cause he lied to J’nny ‘bout me talkin’ and I di’n’t an’ then we fough’,” Mike explains, his voice raw as if he has a cold, though Harvey suspects it has something to do with what happened to his throat.
He clenches his fist as he hears the name Trevor. That name is always followed by something stupid Mike did and Harvey is going to hurt that Trevor kid at some point, he fucking swears. But for now he slips an arm under Mike’s shoulders and tries to be annoyed instead of worried about how the kid leans on him as he leads him to the kitchen.
The bar stools are the only seating option, but they’re white and were expensive. Besides, he’s going to need water. So, instead he takes Mike to the sink, instructing him to sit on the counter, helping him when it becomes clear that Mike isn’t doing it by himself.
With Mike slumped back against the wall next to the sink, Harvey turns to get his first aid kit, something he still regularly stocks fully. A habit from his boxing days in college he is now grateful for.
On his way back, he also gets a washcloth and a bowl. He runs the tap until it’s lukewarm, then fills the bowl, setting it next to Mike, the first aid kit popped open on the other side.
Throughout it, they’re both quiet. Mike keeps blinking, though it’s more winking. His eyes aren’t truly focused and again that pesky concern creeps over Harvey’s spine. In an attempt to ignore it again, he gets an ice pack and roughly pushes it in Mike’s hands, telling him to hold it to his eye to stop the swelling.
At that point Mike apologizes softly and offers: “I di’n’t have anyw’ere else to go.”
It tugs at something Donna would call heartstrings and Harvey doesn’t want to deal with it right now, so he wets the cloth and starts by cleaning the blood off Mike’s face. The kid kid flinches and whimpers, so Harvey has to hold his face as he continues, having difficulties with ignoring Mike’s little noises that he can’t seem to keep in.
The whole thing reminds him of his youth. Back when Markus was bullied and came home with split lips and black eyes. Back when he and his dad boxed together and his dad told him to man up as he cleaned him up after the matches. Back when he didn’t win every fight.
But he doesn’t tell Mike to man up, unable to say the harsh words when Mike looks to utterly pitiful. Instead he tells him what he always told Markus: “I know it hurts, just a little bit longer. You’re okay,” not noticing how his voice got the soft, fond tint it always used to get with Markus.
Slowly the washcloth reveals that Mike has a split lit on top of his bleeding nose. The nose doesn’t seem broken, luckily, but there is nothing more he can do there, except roll up two tissues so that Mike can place them in his nostrils to absorb the blood flow and hope it will end soon.
For the split lip, he takes care to clean it with water, cold from the tap. He takes a bit of clean gauze and puts pressure on the lip. The bleeding should stop there in five to ten minutes if they keep pressure on it.
He doesn’t see blood anywhere else, which he is glad for. The shirt is ruined, but Harvey is pretty sure the blood splatters are from Mike’s face. However, he isn’t sure about what other injuries there could be, or if he should worry about internal bleeding or a concussion.
They have a lot of overlapping symptoms, if Harvey recalls correctly from the probing questions doctors at fights used to ask him.
To try and figure out if he should be calling an ambulance for internal bleeding, he asks: “Did he hit you on the stomach? Or in your sides?”
Mike startles a bit as if he’d been drifting before Harvey broke their silence. Then the words catch up to him, because he shakes his head wincing as he does. He replies: “No, I used my arms to block him.”
Harvey doesn’t like how Mike sounds, though he’s relieved by the clear answer and the fact that Mike isn’t about to pass out on him near death. Apparently sitting in the dim light of the kitchen has done him some good.
He still wants to check if it isn’t a concussion, so he asks: “Headache?”
“A bit.” It’s mumbled, but a reply.
“Feeling dizzy?”
A small shake of the head.
“Nauseous?”
“Only in the car.”
“Any ringing in your ears?”
“No.”
“Can you see alright? Besides the black eye?”
Mike blinks, then peers around, shrugging. “Don’t know.”
He looks tired, but he isn’t forgetful or confused. He’s also answering quickly and clearly. Harvey decides that he’s likely not concussed. Still, the voice is bugging him and the conclusions he’s making by himself aren’t pleasant, so he asks: “What happened to your throat?”
And Mike, who has cleared up a bit, looks away, the gauze nearly dropping out of Harvey’s hands as he tries to follow the movement. It is a clear unwillingness to answer and it gets Harvey’s guard up. He can deduce what likely happened, but he doesn’t like that Mike won’t tell him anything, despite being obviously injured.
“Mike,” he says in a warning tone. “What happened? You mentioned Trevor and a fight. Did he did this to you?”
Again Mike doesn’t answer and Harvey swears he sees his cheeks light up with a blush.
“I know a thing or two about fights,” he goes on when it becomes clear Mike isn’t going to speak up. “And by the looks of it, you got one hell of a beating. And those bruises look like you were choked, especially with that voice.”
Mike’s little glance in his direction tells him he’s on the right path. He sighs. What is he going to do with this kid, he wonders.
“Look, I don’t what’s going on with you, but you showed up on my doorstep at nearly midnight, bleeding everywhere,” he tells Mike, who is finally looking at him, the ice pack, stuffed nose and gauze not doing anything to make him look less sad. Harvey feels almost bad for being stern, which he hates even more. “Just tell me what the hell happened,” he finishes a bit more lamely than intended, asking himself when he started caring.
The kid hadn’t been there for that long, yet apparently that hasn’t stopped Harvey from letting him behind the walls. Maybe it’s the sad face, he thinks. Or the fact that he now misses how it usually grins.
Still, whatever he said worked, because Mike moves to bite his lip (quickly discouraged by how it hurts), then says: “It’s stupid.”
“I’ve gathered,” Harvey replies. “Tell me anyway. It won’t leave this kitchen.”
“Alright,” Mike says after a deep breath. “I went to Trevor’s. He lied to Jenny about us talking and I was just mad about it. I shouldn’t have gone. I should have let him go.”
He sounds so dejected and Harvey feels the foreign urge to hug him, something he pushes away in favor of saying: “You should have.”
“Sorry.”
Again he sounds so sad and Harvey finds himself giving in at a place he should be able to stand his ground easily. “It’s okay, don’t say sorry, kid. Just don’t do that again. He’s not a friend if he beats you up over a girl.”
“It wasn’t about, Jenny,” Mike tells him. “I wanted to help him get out of selling drugs. He didn’t want to, told me he liked doing it and that I didn’t help him, but he helped me. Then we just yelled and before I knew it he was throwing punches and I was down.”
He looks away, this time Harvey lowers the gauze, the lips slowly starts bleeding again. “I won’t even make a ‘you should have seen the other guy’-joke,” Mike says bitterly. “I couldn’t do anything and then- then he was pinning me down.”
To Harvey’s horror tears starts to fall and Mike drops the ice pack as he wraps his arms around himself in a sad imitation of a hug.
His days in the DA office made that he saw a lot of people, who had just been attacked or otherwise assaulted and it makes him a bit sick how Mike reminds him of them. But it has been a while since he worked as ADA and he is rusty on what to do.
Still, he tries for Mike. He gently places his hand on the side of Mike’s face again, this time holding the ice pack to his eye. It’s starting to melt, but it’s still cool. He also places the gauze back on his lip.
This is as much physical comfort he can offer while still taking care of the injuries. However, he also ensures that Mike is looking him in the eyes as he says: “That must have been terrifying. I can’t imagine. But it’s not your fault. You were attacked by someone you trusted. That’s something you should never had to prepare for.”
For a moment, he doesn’t know if he’s getting through to Mike. The tears are still falling and he looks on the fence. Then he blinks and looks away and timidly says: “But I couldn’t get away. What if it happens again and I can’t get away again? God, I was so, so scared, Harvey.”
“I know,” Harvey tells him, trying to put as much compassion in his voice as he can. “How about you and I start boxing together. I know a bit about self-defense, I can teach you. You won’t have to be helpless again.”
However, he thinks he can make an exception for Mike, who is meeting his gaze again, eyes shining hopefully as he asks: “Really?”
He remembers how many of the people he represented started taking self-defense classes to protect themselves, both physically and mentally. He even taught a woman a few punches after she nearly broke down in his office. Her smile was one of the reasons he didn’t go to Jessica yet.
Harvey likes helping people like that, but this world of corporate law just isn’t the place where you can allow yourself to help people. It’s one of the reasons he hates pro-bono’s, they make him break his walls within Pearson Hardman. He doesn’t mix those worlds easily, he likes boxing them off and away from each other.
“Course,” he smiles in return. “It’s good to bulk up, projects an image of power. Besides, I can use a new sparring buddy, my old one stopped.”
“Why?” Mike asks, sounding apprehensive, but there is a twinkle in his eye and a joking note in his voice. Harvey has never been more relieved to be teased, the Mike he knows coming through the cracks again.
“I kept being better than him,” Harvey smirks cockily, playing up the arrogant persona Mike knows well.
“Then you’ll just have to have a challenge,” Mike says.
“And you’ll give it to me?” Harvey raises a brow.
“I’m a quick study!” Mike protest.
“Well, we will just have to see that, now won’t we,” Harvey says, his smile a bit evil as he does.
Mike swallows, but doesn’t back down and Harvey is grateful for it. Mike has fire, it’s one of the reasons Harvey hired of him, he would hate to see that killed over an idiot who dares to call himself a friend.
“Here, I’m gonna get you a new ice pack, can you hold this against your lip?” Harvey asks, deciding that was enough of a moment for him for today. He also takes the tissues from Mike’s nose, the bleeding having stopped there.
“Yeah, course,” Mike answers, taking the gauze on his lip.
As he goes to get the ice pack and throw away the tissues, he pushes away the anger with what he knows best: work. They have to crash that meeting tomorrow and he needs Mike there. He should call Donna, tell her to come by early tomorrow and bring a suit for Mike and makeup to cover the bruises. The idea of sending Mike home doesn’t cross his mind for a second.
Calling Donna at this hour is dangerous, but Harvey thinks a new bag can fix it. If she sees Mike, maybe that’s not even necessary. He knows she has a soft spot for this kid and if he’s honest with himself and how he is behaving, so does he. Seeing him hurt like this, will likely make her as protective and angry as he is right now.
With the next step in mind, he returns to Mike with the ice pack. However, telling Mike about the plan is postponed when he gets there.
Silent tears are falling again and Mike softly says: “Sorry,” wiping his non-swollen eye and pressing the new ice pack to the other, practically hiding behind it. “You shouldn’t have to put up with me like this.”
“What?” Harvey says, not able to come up with a better reply.
It’s not the best response, he realizes as Mike start sniffling. “I’m just continually fucking up and then I just show up here and you have to be all nice to me, because I’m being pathetic about loosing a bit of a scuffle and-”
“Stop that, Mike,” Harvey cuts him off. “First off, this wasn’t ‘a bit of a scuffle,’ alright? Second, of course I’m gonna be nice, I’m not a fucking monster. It’s okay to come ask for help. Because, third, I told you – multiple times, by the way – that I’m the guy you tell. I am glad you came here and I didn’t have to find out because you came in with a black eye and split lip tomorrow.”
“R- really?” Mike asks, like he doesn’t believe Harvey, even though he wants to
“Really,” Harvey repeats. “God, what am I going to do with you, kid. You’re gonna give me gray hairs and I’m not old enough for that.”
Mike gives him a look that is usually accompanied with a mocking remark, but before he can begin, Harvey says: “Don’t.”
“Alright,” Mike shrugs, but he looks relieved and happier than earlier.
“Okay, so here is what’s going to happen,” Harvey gets around to proposing his plan and glad not to have to comfort Mike more (it’s not that he hates it, it’s just not his thing and he feels awkward when he does it). “You’re staying in my guest room, this is not debatable. I’m not sending you home in this condition.”
When Mike nods that he understands and Harvey continues: “I’m going to call Donna, she’s coming over tomorrow with a suit for you and makeup to make you look a bit presentable. Then we’re dealing with McKernon Motors and after all that, we’re dealing with Trevor.”
“What? You don’t have to do anything with Trevor,” Mike protests, after nodding along for the rest, having resigned himself to doing what Harvey tells him to after all that had already happened this evening draining him.
“Yes, we are,” Harvey says in a tone that allows no arguing. “I don’t care if it’s a restraining order, if we put a tail on him to get him arrested, or putting him on a bus to somewhere, but you are not seeing Trevor again.”
“I wasn’t planning on it,” Mike replies, sounding indignant, like he thinks Harvey thinks he’s stupid instead of that bleeding heart that keeps pulling him down. “But that’s a bit much. You don’t need to get involved like that, you’ve done enough.”
Harvey has a lot of things he wants to say to Mike about Trevor and the shit friend he is to Mike, but it’s also past midnight at this point and they have better things to do than to waste more breath on Trevor.
“This conversation isn’t over,” he tells Mike, who pouts, hissing at his split lip when he does. “For now, you’re going to bed. We need to get up early. Want to shower first?”
Mike still looks moody, but listens anyway, choosing not to argue. Just says: “Shower would be nice.”
“Good, it’s over there, I’ll get you a clean shirt to sleep in,” Harvey says, stepping away from the counter and dawdling long enough for Mike to get off the counter without accident, before walking away to get a shirt.
The t-shirt he picks is a Harvard one, because he is hilarious, thank you very much. Though Mike only raises a tired eyebrow when he hands it to him.
He waits outside the bathroom while Mike showers, keeping his ears peeling for the potential sound of Mike falling over as he does.
When Mike is done showering without any incidents, he is relived. Until Mike steps out the bathroom and he finally gets a good look at the extend of the damage. There is one big bruise on his upper thigh and one on his shoulder, fingers clear as day. Beyond that, his arms are more blue and black than pink and a new wave of anger washes over him.
Seeing how exhausted Mike is, he manages to suppress it for now and instead leads him over to the guest bedroom, bidding him goodnight as he turns off the light. He’s pretty sure Mike is asleep before he’s gone.
With Mike asleep he dials Donna, who picks up with an angry: “What can you possibly want at this hour, Harvey?”
“It’s important, I wouldn’t call you if it wasn’t,” he says.
Something in his voice must have given away how much he means it, because Donna just sounds concerned, not angry when she asks: “What happened?”
“Mike was attacked by an old friend of his,” he tells her, hearing her gasp. He quickly assures her: “He’s fine, mostly. He’s sleeping it off right now, but he has a couple of nasty bruises. His nose was bleeding, but not broken, and he has split his lip.”
“God that is terrible,” Donna replies, sounding the proper level of horrified and mad, just like Harvey had expected.
“Yeah and we’re getting the bastard, but later,” Harvey says. “For now I just need you to come by my condo early tomorrow. Bring a suit for Mike and makeup. We need to go to that meeting and Mike needs to look like he didn’t get put through the ringer.”
Donna sighs and mutters about it always being about work, but clearer she promises: “I’ll be there.”
“Thank you, Donna,” Harvey says sincerely.
“Of course, Harvey,” she tells him, then hangs up.
After taking care of that, the exhaustion of the evening and the emotions catches up with him and he stumbles through his evening routine, before falling in bed.
When Donna arrives the next morning, she has no clue what to expect. Harvey sounded serious yesterday and what he described was nothing good, but he also alluded that Mike is good enough to go into work, so she hopes it’s nothing that bad as she rings the bell at 5:00 AM.
Harvey is still in his pajama joggers and shirt when he opens the door. He looks like he barely slept and his shoulders are drawn tight. It isn’t that noticeable, but to Donna it is obvious that he is worried and she only recalls seeing him like that when Markus was in the hospital.
“How is he?” she asks to open the conversation.
“Still asleep,” Harvey answers, waking up enough to let her in.
The first aid kit is still on the counter, but it’s closed and there is nothing to suggest something massive went down there, which calms Donna. On the counter are also ingredients and a bowl with batter in it. “What’s this,” she inquires, indicating the bowl.
“I’m making breakfast pancakes,” Harvey says. “Want some?”
“You can make pancakes?”
“What can I say, I’m a man of many mysteries and talents,” he tells her, going to make his pancakes, correctly assuming she want some.
Once he has three sizable stacks, he open a door and kindly calls: “Mike, wake up. I have breakfast for you. You need to get out of bed. We have work.” Faintly, Mike groans something and Harvey laughs. “I am definitely not your Grammy.” Then she hears a squeak and Harvey laughs again.
He is still smiling when he gets back to the kitchen and Donna mirrors it. She is glad to see him so happy and content, Mike is the best addition they have had in a while and with Harvey smiling, he can’t be that bad off.
Naturally, that smile drops when she actually sees Mike. He is also still in his pajama, but his pajama is his boxers and a t-shirt. His arms are covered in bruises, with one on his shin and thigh as well.
Not to mention his face!
The black eye is prominent and looks horrible. His split lip is swollen and looks nasty. But his neck takes the cake, with bruising lining it like a necklace. Though choker would be a better word and she feels her blood boil at the thought. Whoever did this, is going to pay.
“Donna!” he exclaims when he sees her, his cheeks pinking. “Ah, sorry, I don’t have pants right now.”
“It’s okay, sweetheart,” she says, pushing her anger aside for concern and care. “God, how are you feeling? Are you okay?”
“Oh, yeah, uhm, I’m fine,” he assures her, taking the plate Harvey hands him and tentatively sitting next to Donna, Harvey sitting down on the other side of him at the breakfast bar.
“Are you sure?” Donna asks, her eyes gentle but probing.
“Still can’t really believe that happened, but I’m better now,” he reassures her again. “Harvey is going to teach me self-defense and I’m happy about that!”
He shares that as a positive upbeat thing, meant to distract her. However, she has also worked in the DA office and that statement tells her a bit about his mental state about it. Behind his back, she shares a look with Harvey, who communicates: later.
Breakfast passes with no more words said about the whole thing. Mike gets dressed in the suit Donna got him, telling her he wants to pay her back for it, something she denies him, telling him she used Harvey’s credit card anyway.
During the makeup part, she feels a bit like a terrible person as Mike winces as she pressed product onto his sore face. However, he sits through it like a champ and in the end you can only tell what happened to him if you’re up close and paying attention.
Satisfied with her handiwork, Donna declares him ready to leave and the two men leave for the hotel where there’s a meeting they have to crash.
While they do that, Donna goes to the office. As promised, Harvey send her an email in the car detailing more what happened and who did it. Along with Mike’s wishes of them not getting involved and how they are going to ignore those.
She realizes that Harvey is going to agree with Mike when he asks him again to stay out of it, so she’s subtle in what she does. But if she’s correct (which she always is) Trevor’s girlfriend will leave him soon and more that 3/4 of his clientele will mysteriously go to another buyer. He will also run into some cops on an unfortunate moment.
With that done, she sets to updating her network to include people that keep an eye on this Trevor asshole and people that will keep a different kind of eye on Mike. He doesn’t need more shit about this and she would hate it if something happened that set him off, because it reminded him off last night.
Later Mike will be relieved Harvey doesn’t bring up a restraining order again and is grateful for Donna’s extra concern. Not to mention Harvey being there whenever an associate gets too close for Mike to be comfortable with yet (how he does it, Mike doesn’t know).
Slowly his wounds will heal, he’ll get more comfortable and more secure in the fighting techniques Harvey shows him. It’s not perfect, but he feels safe with the people he has around him now and that’s worth more than he can tell them.
~~
A/N:
I had a lot of fun handing over the POV to every new arrival lmao
Also, the fact that Mike had two tissues in his nose for most of time is kinda sending me, ngl. I always do that when I have a nose bleed and it looks so fucking stupid. But like, in this context, it’s a bit sad too
@liar-or-lawyer bc u wanted to get tagged
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Things they should've kept in TUA S1
Klaus's telekinesis
Pogo and Five being besties
Luther's comment about how he would have liked to have a life but he can't be normal anymore
Diego performing an entire autopsy on his dead father instead of just stealing the coroner's report
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io-lu-art · 3 months
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Your concerned 3rd party...
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...is watching you.
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finn95o · 3 months
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Finally coloured it🙌
I can’t do backgrounds, someone save me…
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Simon: Don’t be cocky. It doesn’t look good.
Anthony: *Raises eyebrow*
Simon: On YOU. I can pull it off.
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liar-or-lawyer · 9 days
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fekoff · 1 year
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do you understand my vision?
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princessbrunette · 10 days
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season 2 was the only season that all of rafe’s outfits were good. every single one.
season 3 had a couple of really good ones, i enjoyed a lot of the shirt + dress pants combos on him, but there was also a bunch i hated. i.e: that disgusting dark red stripy tshirt get it out my face
you guys know i love season 1 rafe and his colourful outfits idc i’ll defend them til the end of this earth and i was really about to say season 1 had zero bad fits either but that was when i remember his gym outfit and projectile vomited don’t you ever wear a neon yellow tank top around me boy i can see you from space.
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happy74827 · 3 months
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Mike Ross
Suits (Season 1)
Please give credits if used
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redpool · 9 months
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See I was enjoying watching Suits, but then shithead Trevor came back and now I don't want to anymore.
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schrijverr · 2 years
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Old Wounds May Scar, but They Never Stop Hurting
Mike used to be in the Army before he ran into Harvey. He doesn’t like talking about what he saw back then or the injuries he suffered. However, when they prevent him from getting up, Harvey steps in and helps him, not only with the pain, but also in getting better accessibility at work.
AKA I give Mike chronic pain, cane swag and shit on the US Military and healthcare for 13k words.
@flawsome4ever I hope this is what you expected, sorry for the length, but this prompt gripped me by the throat and inspired me!
On AO3.
Ships: none
Warnings: The US Army, the US healthcare system, war, mentions of old injuries and death, chronic pain, interalized ableism, trauma, reference to drug addiction.
~~~~~~~~~~
In hindsight Harvey will wonder how it took him this long to notice and then he’ll look at Mike’s thin figure and fail again to see a soldier in there. However, sometimes when Mike levels his eyes at him, he wonders how anyone could ever miss it.
Yet, Harvey consoles his bruised ego about people reading with the fact that there were some things that he picked up. Despite the fact that they didn’t click until later.
When they first meet, Harvey notes the calloused hand that shakes his. He shakes a lot of hands. He shakes the hands of the powerful, of the wealthy, of the desk job workers, the business men. And especially today, he has shaken a lot of lawyer hands already, much to his dismay.
All the hands today have been soft, with too much product to keep them like that. Except for these, who lack the grooming and appearances that is part of this world. They instead speak of work, actual hard work that requires more effort than what your average Harvard gradate does. These hands, combined with the wink from Donna, make him look twice at the kid, who just entered his interview room.
The second thing Harvey notices, is Mike’s walk.
This takes him a few times. There isn’t anything extremely particular about it, just a good confident walk, like so many have in the business world. Yet it is odd on Mike, who he met during a drug run and has seemingly never owned a suit in his life past prom.
Because when Mike walks, he walks with confidence. It is almost like he walks to a drum beat only he can hear, with his shoulders upright and his face forwards. He is still clumsy from time to time, but Harvey has also noticed how he plays it up when that paralegal girl, Rachel he thinks her name is, is around. And he mostly seems to have butterfingers. Because his posture is immaculate.
Harvey is grateful for it when he does notice. He has been worried about being found out ever since he hired the kid. Mike still has a lot to learn about being a lawyer and all the things that come with going to law school. But a good posture takes a while to ingrain and he appreciates that it is one less worry on his list.
Another thing Harvey has never truly noticed, but in hindsight is something his subconscious noted, is how Mike sits facing the door.
They rarely sit together, but Harvey notices that Mike doesn’t sit down unless there is a seat facing the door. He would rather pace the area, picking up items that don’t belong to him, flip through vinyls or lean against desks.
In the conference room, he prefers it if they sit facing the firm, telling Harvey it is because the skyline behind them is intimidating and that way they can see Jessica coming if they’re doing something she said they shouldn’t.
It says a lot about Harvey as a person that the second reason is the most convincing.
Even in his cubicle, which is located alongside a passageway, he ensures he never has a blind spot. At first, Harvey thinks it is just childishness that has Mike spinning in his chair like it’s a theme park ride. However, after a bit of reflection, he realizes that it is to follow people as they pass. To spin towards the elevators as they arrive, bringing strangers, and ensuring that no movement slips past him.
And then there are the things Harvey chalked up to being from a poorer background. Again, he found the kid on a drug run, it isn’t a weird assumption that he would have a few leftover habits from that time.
For example, Mike will eat anything. Sure, he may look at some things with suspicion, but if he gets it and it is presented as food, he will eat it. And Mike eats fast.
Harvey has watched in amazement as a burger disappeares in seconds, as he tries not to think of whatever made him eat like it was the first time in days and someone might take it away if he doesn’t hurry.
Besides that, he has also discovered that Mike carries a knife with him at all times. He discovers that when a package arrives while they’re late in the office. It’s the files they subpoenaed and the other side is trying to make it difficult for them to access them.
He himself has a letter opener, something Mike had laughed at when he first saw it, but now is useful, or so he thinks. However, the opposition has really taped the box shut and the delicate knife is struggling with getting through.
After watching him for a few moments, Mike rolls his eyes and pushes him aside. From his pocket, he produces a sturdy pocket knife and deftly cuts through the tape, removing a few staples in the process as well. Once done he cheekily grins: “There you go.”
“Why the hell do you have that?” Harvey asks, not even bothering to be grateful they can access the evidence now.
“Because it is useful,” Mike informs him, looking a bit confused.
“If the police even suspects that you’re carrying that for unlawful purposes, they can arrest you, you know that, right?” Harvey says.
“Relax,” Mike assures him. “It’s under four inches, thus allowed and on top of that, I have been carrying this since I met you and you’ve never noticed. And opening boxes isn’t really unlawful, now is it?” Then he shrugs, “Besides, it could have been worse, I used to carry a switchblade.”
“You what?” Harvey exclaims.
“I said used to, I don’t do it anymore. I’m not stupid,” Mike tells him and in that second Harvey doesn’t even think to remember that active US Army personnel is allowed to carry a switchblade in the state of New York.
“Just don’t be an idiot,” Harvey says, for lack of something better to say.
“Never,” Mike grins, before grabbing a stack of papers out the box. “Now, lets find what these sons of bitches are hiding.”
At the end of the night, Mike has found the discrepancy. After handing it to Harvey he rubs his back and shoulder, grimaces for a moment, before collapsing against the desk and immediately falling asleep, so that he can catch as many hours as possible. Which is coincidentally another thing Harvey has noted, but never thought much about.
Mike can sleep anywhere at anytime.
It’s a skill many associates have to learn through trial and error as they struggle with the workload they never thought could be bigger than college exams. Harvey remembers being them. Remembers walking through the hallways, desperately wanting to sleep, but an uncomfortable chair and hard desk preventing him.
He still sees them walking around like he used to do and wondered how Mike would fare. It has been a while since the kid was in college after all.
However, he needn’t have worried, because Mike sleeps instantly and wakes up just as easily, ready and alert. Though, he always stretches and groans afterwards, scowling more than on other days, something Harvey can understand, shuddering as he thinks back on the many nights he used his desk as pillow.
Donna has made up all sorts of stories about why that is, the next one sadder than the last, but Harvey always just rolls his eyes. There might be truth to it, but with what Mike lets slip, he has never truly been on the streets. Privately, he thinks it’s because he needed to keep an eye on his grandmother and this was the way to cope with that.
But even without all that, it isn’t particularly odd that Mike sleeps well even on the floor of the file room, or slumped against a desk. Associates work hard. They work until they’re exhausted and then a few hours more. Harvey would be more concerned if he never saw Mike sleep. And as long as he is functional, Harvey doesn’t care much about Mike’s sleeping habits.
So, yeah, all the signs were there. Harvey knows that in hindsight. But they were all scattered throughout their interactions and Harvey isn’t knowledgeable enough about ex-Army personnel habits to put the pieces together.
Therefore, Harvey finds out that Mike used to be a soldier by complete accident and to his complete surprise on an innocuous Tuesday.
General Curtis, an older gentleman, who has been collaborating with private security for a few years now as liaison. He is still active in the Army, but when he is in Harvey’s office, the man knows he’s not there on the military’s behalf, but on the company’s that Pearson Hardman represents.
Not that it matters much to Harvey on whose behalf he is there, as long as the client pays. Besides, he likes General Curtis. He knows what he wants, is friendly enough and lets Harvey do his job with minimal interference. Mostly content if he can return with a good deal.
So, he warmly welcomes General Curtis and is discussing what needs to be done for an upcoming deal to run smoothly when Mike enters, looking a bit disheveled as always and carrying a file. “I have the McCuffins file,” he says, not yet spotting General Curtis.
When he does spot the General in full military uniform, his eyes grow wide. For a second, Harvey thinks it’s the uniform that makes Mike try to be respectful as he salutes the man.
Even as he greets him with: “General Curtis, sir,” Harvey faintly thinks he must have seen the man in Harvey’s files before.
It’s not until General Curtis salutes back and Mike falls into a parade position as General Curtis returns, “Corporal Ross? You work here, son?” That Harvey begins to realize what is happening right in front of his eyes.
“Sir, yes, sir,” Mike responds as Harvey watches with surprised fascination. Behind his eyes all the aforementioned puzzle pieces start to click together as the words ‘Corporal Ross’ ring around his head on a loop.
“It’s good to see you on your feet again, Corporal,” General Curtis smiles as if seeing an old friend when saying that.
“Sir, thank you, sir,” Mike nods in response, tensing slightly.
On his face in an expression Harvey doesn’t know. He knows the cheeky grin Mike wears, the serious expression as he argues, the smug face when they win, the disbelieving one when Harvey does something he could never.
However, now his face is blank. It’s an odd expression. Like he is a doll, a toy soldier with only this expression carved on. Not at all the expressive Mike he knows. It is a weird thing to witness. It feels wrong.
Meanwhile, General Curtis slaps Mike left shoulder hard enough to make him wince. Then he grins: “None of that formal military stuff. Neither of us are here for the Military. Harvey here is helping the company I’m a liaison for in a deal. You two work together?”
“Sir- Yes. I’m his associate,” Mike informs him. “I do the paperwork. Still climbing my way up here, sir.”
“Well,” General Curtis laughs, “knowing you, you’ll be there in no time.”
“Thank you, sir,” Mike replies, not sounding like he means it and Harvey wonders why he is underselling himself to General Curtis and why he looks uncomfortable. Mad, even.
And it’s not just the stiff politeness that is so unusual on the kid, it’s the way his back is ramrod straight, the way he is trying to end the conversation, the way he is showing any emotions. The whole interaction is creeping Harvey out.
“While I appreciate this reunion, Mike has a lot of work to get back to and we have a lot to discuss,” he cuts in before General Curtis can react.
“Of course,” General Curtis says jovially. “I hope to run into you again, son.”
“Sir,” Mike salutes again, dropping off the files and briskly walking away in that manner Harvey has always known and can now suddenly place.
It hasn’t hit him before, but it is now. Mike used to be Military. Mike is a veteran. Mike knows General Curtis. Mike was a Corporal.
The whole thing is swirling through his head as he quickly gets through his meeting with General Curtis. He is slightly off kilter the entire time, but enough of a professional that General Curtis doesn’t notice. And before he knows it, he is saying goodbye and falling into his chair.
It’s hard to connect skinny, fishbone, ex-drug addict, difficulty with authority Mike with the image of a soldier. Yet here Harvey is, attempting to reconcile the two.
He wonders what happened to the kid.
He sits in his office staring for long enough that Donna comes in. She looks a bit uncertain, something she rarely does, before she takes a breath and sits down as she says: “That was certainly something.”
“Did Mike look off to you?” Harvey asks, not really reacting to the statement that was more meant as an icebreaker than something that needed a reply.
“Stiff as a board and the most un-Mike I have ever seen him?” Donna ask rhetorically. “Yeah, he did. If you don’t go to talk to him, I’m calling down there to say you asked for him. Don’t stop trusting your gut now.”
“Yeah,” Harvey nods absentmindedly, before blinking the world back into focus and nodding: “Yeah, I’m going.”
He gets up and walks down to the cube farm. Another thing he subconsciously noticed now pops out to him again as he watches Mike twirl to face the door right as he walks through it. The only one there, who notices his arrival.
Their eyes meet and Mike’s immediately flit back to the pages in front of him, ignoring Harvey’s presence, despite the fact that he would usually jump up in hopes he could get to leave and do something more fun than research or paperwork with Harvey.
Slightly on guard, Harvey makes his way over to Mike’s cubicle. He leans on the edge of Mike’s desk as he always does, attempting casual. “So,” he starts, “you never told me that before.”
“And I don’t see how it is relevant for you to know,” Mike shoots back, not looking up. “Now, Louis is already giving me shit for the paperwork I put off to get you that McCuffins file, so if you have nothing to discuss except for my previous employment, then I’m going to ask you to leave. I am busy.”
For a second, Harvey looks at Mike flabbergasted. He isn’t used to rejection in general, but even more so from Mike, who has rarely rejected him this bluntly. “Mike,” he starts.
“No,” Mike cuts him off, finally looking up. “I’m serious, Harvey. I don’t want to talk about it and you have no leg to stand on in asking me. So, for both our sake, leave it alone.”
“I just wanted to-”
Again Harvey doesn’t get to finish his sentence as Mike interrupts again: “If you’re doing that thanking for your service crap, shut up. And don’t mention this to anyone, I mean it.”
“I won’t,” Harvey promises.
“Thanks.”
“But, I wanted to say, if you ever need to talk, I’m here,” Harvey says, ignoring the surprised and confused look Mike is giving him. Anything is better than the emotionless guy he saw in his office, besides he likes keeping the kid on his toes. “Or, you know, I can do something.”
“Oh, uh, I- I might,” Mike says awkwardly.
They share a nod, before Harvey walks away. He gets a few steps before he stops and turns around, asking: “Not even Donna?”
Mike rolls his eyes and says: “Like I didn’t already assume Donna would find out. It’s impossible for her not to know when you’re concerned. I half-assumed she wired you and was listening in at this point.”
Harvey snorts, then truly leaves. It’s good to see that Mike is still his Mike, he is just touchy about this topic. Though Harvey doesn’t know why.
When he relays the conversation to Donna, she shares his confused concern. However when she suggests digging with her Military contacts, he shuts her down. It is against his nature to do so and he explains: “You didn’t see him, Donna. I have never seen him like that. He really doesn’t want us digging and he is right that we wouldn't have known if it weren’t for this. Unless it starts to interfere with work, we’ll keep out of it.”
Grudgingly Donna agrees muttering: “I hate having to say you’re right to encourage your emotional development.” Something he pretends not to hear.
And for a few weeks that was that.
The first time he returns to Harvey’s office, he eyes the both of them suspiciously with unfamiliar calculating eyes. When there seems to be nothing to require a reaction, he carries on like it’s any other day without a word.
Harvey tries to forget it and that mostly works. His eyes are opened, however, and from time to time he’ll spot the habits he noticed before and will be reminded of the fact that Mike used fight in the Army. Used to be part of something that has rendered him unable or unwilling to speak about what he did back then.
It is hard to fight his curiosity, something he has never before had to do. When General Curtis comes by again to work out the last details and to sign, Mike is coincidentally busy.
As Harvey covers for his associate he wants to ask about the kid’s service time so badly, but doesn’t.
He has just about accepted that he will never learn more about Mike’s Military time.
Maybe if he becomes even closer with the kid, he thinks for a moment, but they’re about as close as they can get with Mike calling him whenever he pleases, if he has found what they need and Harvey dropping by unannounced, if he needs something from Mike. The late nights at the office, the movie references, the secrets that bind them.
So, yeah, unlikely, or so he thinks.
That assumption is challenged, because his phone starts ringing at an hour that is inhuman and causes him to want to murder whoever is other side. “Harvey Specter, this better be important,” he grouches into the phone. He’s not even ready for his 7 AM run yet.
“Hi, Harvey,” Mike sounds sheepish, but something else is tinting his voice, which sets Harvey on edge.
“Mike?” he asks. “What’s wrong?”
“Well, I wanna preface this by saying that I can usually handle this and I know that I am technicality fine,” Mike starts, doing nothing to calm Harvey’s nerves. “But I don’t think I’m making it to work today and I need you to fight Louis for me, because I have a ton of work that I have to give him today, but it’s lying here on my coffee table, so I won’t be able to do that.”
Harvey is now fully awake and his head is filled with question marks. His primary worry is the fact that Mike can’t make it to work and decides to focus on that for the moment as he says: “Are you okay? What do you mean can’t make it to work?”
He hears Mike sigh and mutter something about knowing it wouldn't be this easy. Then he speaks to Harvey again: “To be frank, I’m lying in my bed and I’m pretty sure that if I were to move I would start crying.”
That is one of the most worrying things he has heard, so – arguably, correctly concerned – he asks: “What happened? Are you hurt?”
“I mean, you could say that,” Mike says and now that he knows what it is, he can place the pain that laces his voice.
“What?” Harvey will later argue that his voice was not shrill, thank you very much.
“Oh, yeah, okay, that can sound wrong, wait,” Mike tells him. “I’m fine now, just old pains. They don’t tell you that when you sign up for the Army, but some of that shit hurts and never leaves.”
It’s only when Mike says Army that Harvey realizes what is going on. Old pains are haunting Mike, apparently to the point where he can’t get out of bed and the fucking idiot is more worried about Louis’ work instead of his own well being.
“I’ll be there in 30,” he says.
“Huh? No!” Mike replies. “Why? I’m fine. I told you I’m fine. I just need today. Come on, man.”
“Yeah, you told me a lot of thing,” Harvey says, wanting to get angry, but managing to think today through, before switching to a tactic that has worked for him in the past. Lying. “But Jessica is on my ass for that thing with Louis last week and if Louis even sniffs something is off, he is running to her to convince her to punish me. So, here’s what is going to happen, I’m not fighting him for you today, instead I’m getting the work from you and you can deal.”
Mike is quiet for a moment, then grudgingly agrees: “Sure. Whatever.”
“Alright,” Harvey nods. “I have the keys, be there in 30.” Then hangs up.
He gets dressed in the first clothes he pulls out of his closet. Him being him, that means he is wearing a full suit, though he isn’t bothering with all the buttons or the tie, so he looks a lot more rumpled than usual.
Ray isn’t on duty yet, since it is so early, so he hails a cab and pays extra for the driver to break a few laws. Exactly 30 minutes later he is rolling up to Mike’s shitty apartment building, where the elevator has never been in working order and he takes the steps two at a time.
Harvey is pretty sure he has never looked more like a mess when he lets himself into Mike’s apartment, sweaty and breathing heavy.
The apartment is the biggest question mark to Harvey, who always thought that Military personnel were neat and organized. Meanwhile Mike’s apartment can best be compared to a hurricane and the kid in question is never without a button missing or his hair disheveled.
But he barely gives it a thought now, quickly making his way to the bed in the back of the room to ensure with his own eyes that Mike is alright. Well, as alright as he can be.
Mike is half asleep when he gets there. One eye is watching him, but his gaze isn’t as alert as it usually is and his hair looks even more messier than normal. He is wrapped up in multiple blankets, his phone on the pillow next to him. Tiredly, he croaks: “Heyyy,” failing at casual.
“Hi,” Harvey humors him anyway. “You look like shit.”
“Thanks,” Mike rolls his eyes goodnaturedly. Then causally comments one of the most horrifying things ever. “You get multiple shots in the back once and your body never lets you forget it.”
“What?” Harvey isn’t ashamed to admit he choked on those words.
At that point Mike seems to realize what he has admitted and cringes sheepishly, as he softly tries: “It’s not that bad?”
“Mike…” Harvey starts.
“The paperwork!” Mike cuts him off with forced cheer, trying to sit up to hand it over, only to groan in agony before collapsing back onto the bed with a choked: “Fuck.”
“Mike,” Harvey repeats, this time with concern as he hover around the bed, unsure of what he can do to help.
“I’m fine,” Mike exclaims in an obvious lie. “Just moved wrong.”
“Mike…” Harvey is starting to feel like a broken record.
“Don’t worry,” Mike fails to assure him. “It’s usually not like this, I promise. Just the rain and cold that hate me.”
“Just stay down,” Harvey orders.
And Mike groans: “Don’t have to tell me twice,” as he burrows back into the comforter.
“Thank fuck,” Harvey mutters to himself, uncomfortable with seeing Mike in pain and being unable to do anything. He looks around, slowly realizing he has no clue where to start. So, he just asks Mike: “Alright, what do you need?”
“A glass of water?” Mike replies, almost unsure if Harvey will actually help. Like he isn’t used to that.
Harvey tries not to think about it.
He gets the water, wrinkling his nose at the dirty dishes, before he remembers his own associate apartment with a shudder. Returning he wants to hand Mike the water, but the kid can’t drink lying down. “We’re going to need to get you into at least a semi-seated position.”
Again Mike groans, before his eyes widen a bit and he assures Harvey: “I promise I’m usually not this whiny. I swear.”
It makes Harvey wonder who told Mike he was being whiny about being shot in the back and the feeling of wanting to strangle someone comes to mind. “Mike, you got shot in the back, I would be milking this for pity and service, calm down.”
“Sorry,” Mike says sheepishly.
“Now, come on. Think that if I pull you’ll live through the momentary agony?” Harvey asks and after Mike’s nod, he pulls him up into a sitting position, rearranging his pillows so Mike can flop back slightly more upright.
“Thanks, dude,” Mike says. “Having to lie all day, or for however long this lasts, would have sucked.”
“Don’t call me dude,” Harvey replies, unable to react to the genuine thanks about just basic and minor help.
“Whatever dude,” Mike snipes cheekily, though Harvey gets the uncomfortable feeling Mike knows that he cares.
Harvey just levels him a look that does nothing anymore as he gives him the glass and orders him to drink. With the request for water, he realizes Mike is probably not in the state to get food for himself either. So, he leaves the kid on his bed and starts rummaging around in his kitchen.
Mike follows his movements with a confused look as he sips his drink. After a moment, he says: “I know my house is a mess, but the paperwork for Louis isn’t in my cupboard. It’s on the coffee table.” He looks to the coffee table in question, which looks like a bureaucratic war zone. “Well, somewhere on there.”
For a moment Harvey tries to comprehend that his associate is truly that stupid. Then he just sighs and rubs the bridge of his nose and turns back to what he was doing.
“What?” Mike asks confusedly after a moment.
Again, Harvey levels him a look, but this time he explains: “I’m getting you food, idiot. You’re not and that’s understandable, but if you starve I have to do your paperwork. Or find a new associate, which I already hated the first time around.”
“Oh,” Mike says, sounding touched, but also unsure of what to with that emotion. He follows Harvey’s movement a little longer, then asks: “But what about Louis?”
“I can still take it, but first food,” Harvey replies. “I haven’t eaten either yet.”
“Ah, I see,” Mike says, getting back to safer ground for both of them. “All of this is just a trick to steal my food. I see you.”
“No, my evil plans to steal your stale bread and two eggs, down the drain,” Harvey deadpans, unearthing oil and salt to cook the eggs with.
Mike snorts and turns back to his water, picking up his phone with slow movements and checking his messages. Harvey keeps an eye on him as he cooks the eggs. He looks comfortable, but the twinges here and there give away that he is in pain. It makes Harvey wonder how many times he didn’t say anything. How many times Harvey didn’t notice. How many times he was alone in bed, unable to make food or grab a glass of water and just suffering.
He quickly texts Ray that there is no need to pick him up today, but that he might need him later, before plating the eggs as he contemplates whether to text Donna.
On one hand, she would want to know and cares enough about Mike to be concerned about this. On the other hand, it isn’t his place and he is pretty sure Mike doesn’t want her to know. In the end, he decides to save making the decision for later and hands Mike his plate. Sitting down on the foot of the bed with his own, since the couch has been overtaken by laundry.
They eat in silence, but it isn’t uncomfortable.
As they eat, Harvey tries to make a plan of action for the rest of the day. He needs to find out to what extend this is affecting Mike and how to take that into account, maybe clean a bit because Harvey doesn’t think he could live like this. Then he also needs make sure Mike is comfortable today and won’t get any shit at work without telling people about this, whose business it absolutely isn’t.
“So,” he starts after another moment. “Does this happen often?”
Mike gives him a calculating look, before he swallows his bite and shrugs, wincing at the movement: “Depends. It hurts often, kind of comes with the territory, but to this extend is rare. I can usually function just fine.”
“Would you have ever told me without the paperwork for Louis hanging over you?” Harvey asks then, biting the bullets one by one.
At the question, Mike doesn’t meet his eyes. “I don’t know. Probably not. It’s not really something I like to bother people with.”
“Bother?” Harvey repeats, unable to stop himself.
“Harvey,” Mike says in a ‘lets be serious here’-tone. “You had to haul me up and make me food, it is a chore to know this, because people feel guilty. Especially since it’s old Army pain. They feel this need to help. Hell, even you, a known uncaring bastard felt the need to do it. I don’t want to push that on people. Besides, it’s not even that bad most of the time.”
It’s the first time he has heard Mike speak about the Army freely and it breaks his heart. Feeling the need to set the record straight, he says: “Mike, stop. Yeah, it’s a little work, but it’s not like you have any control over this. I don’t feel guilty or whatever other emotion you’ll try to pin on me. Believe it or not, I consider you a friend and I don’t mind lending a hand, if you need it. And right now, you just happen to need it.”
If he were to go off Mike’s look, he would think he has grown an extra head. It is as if he has never heard anything like that before.
“Goddammit,” he sighs. “Mike, just accept that this is a thing that is happening. I don’t mind and it is all fine, alright.”
“You- You don’t mind?” Mike asks, like he still isn’t sure.
“I don’t,” Harvey repeats, forcefully. “I have never done anything I don’t want to and I’m not starting now.”
That luckily seems to be something Mike can believe.
“But, just so you know, you can just walk away,” Mike feels the urge to emphasize anyway.
“Okay, I’ll remember that,” Harvey says, not feeling like fighting Mike more on this, since it is apparently not going anywhere anytime soon. There are more important things to focus on. “Now, when this happens, what do you usually do?”
“Just lie in bed,” Mike answers. “If I feel like it I’ll get some water and easy snacks to pile around me. And a hot water bottle. Then I might read or sleep more. But that’s just if it gets like this, most of the time I’m fine and I just try to go on about my day best I can.”
Harvey restrains himself from getting angry at the injustice of it all and the fact that Mike is trying to undersell this, instead choosing to get up. “Where is the hot water bottle?”
Despite all he has said to him, Mike still looks surprised as he tells Harvey. Something Harvey also tries to ignore.
He makes the hot water bottle and checks the time. It’s 8 AM. Technically work starts at 9 AM, something Harvey tends to ignore in favor of showing up whenever he wants, while Mike is usually there at this time (or so he has been told, he’s never really there to check).
However, Louis gets to the office strictly at 9 AM and he is not showing up early just to hand Louis of all people his paperwork. He’ll hand it to him sometime in the morning, he resolves.
With that decision made, he goes to hand Mike the hot water bottle. Mike takes it and puts it over his left shoulder, groaning as he twists to get there. He is still wrapped in his blanket and has an oversized shirt on to sleep in. With the hot water bottle in place he settles back into his pillow kingdom, the grimace slowly fading from his face.
Again Harvey wants to ask what exactly happened, because all he has now are bullets and rain and cold. But he knows better.
So instead he walks around the messy apartment and finds a stack of books, the top one bookmarked indicating this is the stack Mike is working through.
He had once commented on Mike’s messy desk and he explained that he worked with stacks, bookmarking the top thing of the ‘to be read’-stack as he worked his way down and having the done-stack face down, because he basically flipped the through the stack like a book. If you just happened to work on five cases, things got out of hand easily.
Harvey sets them down on the nightstand, then notes how far Mike will have to stretch to grab them, the probable reason he keeps his phone in his bed, just in case something like today happens. So, he takes the top three books and deposits them on the bed instead.
Mike sends him a grateful little look, then takes the top book and starts reading, though to Harvey it will always look like he’s barely scanning it. Mike’s brain always amazes him.
He takes a moment to look at Mike, a kid who has become like a brother to him, someone to protect and guide, and it hits him how small the chances were of them ever meeting, of him even considering hiring Mike. How he almost never ended up in this place with the brilliant, kind and genuine kid.
After the moment has passed, he takes the dirty breakfast plates and brings them to the kitchen. In the background Mike calls out: “Just leave them near the sink. I’ll do the dishes later.”
Harvey takes a look at the sink and concludes that Mike must have been saying that to himself for quite a while, because it is piled high. It’s gross and honestly, Harvey would rather just do the dishes than have to look at them all day. So, he starts to run the tab.
From his place on the bed, Mike hears and yells: “I’m serious, Harvey. Just leave the dishes, I can do them just fine.”
“Mike, these dishes are gross and I have literally nothing better to do,” Harvey calls back. “I never have to do my dishes, because I have a goddamn dishwasher. It’s not the biggest punishment.”
“But it is a punishment,” Mike argues. “So, just leave them. It’s fine, I swear.”
“Just read your damn books, Mike,” Harvey says, proceeding to ignore any other protest Mike makes after that.
When he is done, he leans against the door and asks: “I thought Military personnel is thought to be neat,” not really expecting an answer.
“It is almost like I had five years to redevelop all the bad I habits I already had,” Mike tells him with an amused brow raise. “I’m a messy person by nature. The Army took that from me, I just took it back.”
Harvey is surprised to have gotten such a straightforward answer to his Army question. The end phrasing strikes him as odd, but Mike has turned back to his book already, obviously done with the conversation.
By now it’s a quarter past nine. He’s been at Mike’s for about two hours and done as much as he could to get Mike comfortable. It might be time to deliver on the reason he is ever there in the first place and go bring Louis his goddamn paperwork. Mike should be fine for the time that takes.
So, he starts sorting through the paperwork filled coffee table, trying to recall Mike’s complaining about the case Louis was demanding his help on.
In the end he finds three thick yet completed briefs, which came in yesterday according the date, but have all been clearly proofed in Mike’s handwriting. He holds them up to Mike and asks: “These the paperwork Louis needs?” while texting Ray.
“Yeah,” Mike says. “You going?”
“You look comfortable enough,” Harvey shrugs in explanation.
“Thanks for all this, by the way,” Mike smiles. “I really appreciate it. I’ll likely be able to come in tomorrow, so don’t worry.”
“Wait,” Harvey says, hearing the goodbye, “you do realize I’m coming back after, right?”
“What? Why?” Mike frowns in a confused manner.
For a moment all Harvey can do is look disbelieving at him. He forcefully reminds himself that Mike seems to have no clue what the words ‘taking care of’ mean. Not that he has said them out loud, because he is still Harvey Specter.
He pinches the bridge of his nose, before saying: “Mike, I said, I’m going to lend a hand, if you need it and unless you can make me believe you couldn't use one for the rest of the day, I’m coming back here and you can’t stop me.”
“This is weird, like you’re threatening me with help,” Mike says, for lack of better response, since anything else is pushing the boundaries of emotional displays that have grown between them.
“Alright, I’ll see you in an hour and half or so,” Harvey nods satisfied. “I’m also picking up stuff for me to work on, so Donna is probably going to ask…” the unasked question of how much he can tell her silently tacked on.
“You can just tell her, but I would appreciate if you didn’t mention the shooting thing, or the fact that I’m too much of a dramatic little bitch to get out of bed,” Mike says. “But I think her knowing will help in fighting Louis when I come back to work,” he grins at that and he is right that having Donna’s protection is the best methods against Louis.
Still, Harvey can’t let the wording pass without comment. So, he says: “I won’t, but I don’t really think you’re being a ‘dramatic little bitch.’ Anything else?”
Mike raises a brow, but doesn’t respond to the comment, instead tentatively saying: “I have some briefs you asked for on my desk? I can work on those from here.”
Harvey gives him an assessing look, asking: “You’ll be okay doing that?”
“I’ll be fine,” Mike tells him in a tone that screams ‘stop mother-hening me,’ which is foreign in being directed at Harvey. “I can read just fine, briefs is reading.”
“You’ll also be writing,” Harvey points out, ever the lawyer.
“And I’ll be writing,” Mike concedes. “But my bad shoulder is on the left and I’m right-handed, so – like I said – I’ll be fine.”
After one last look, Harvey believes him and leaves the apartment, sliding into the car that is waiting for him downstairs. Ray asks if everything is alright and Harvey assures him that Mike is okay, just not feeling very well, without giving away any details.
During the drive he finally does the last of his buttons and ties his tie. He is going to look like always and ignore how he is bringing Louis his paperwork, like he’s some sort of delivery boy. He has left his mail room days behind him, please and thank you.
30 minutes later and he is strolling into the cube farm like he owns it. The associates there stare for a second, before pretending to be working really hard. He spots a few glancing at Mike’s empty desk with sick glee in their eyes. They probably think he is here for Mike and that the kid is about to be punished for not showing up.
Harvey finds joy in casually strolling up to Mike’s desk like he expected this (which he did) and taking a stack of briefs bookmarked and right side up. He puts them in his briefcase, taking out the work for Louis, because if he knows the man, he’ll be there any moment.
Louis doesn’t disappoint and indeed comes walking in, already demanding to know where Mike is and what Harvey is doing there, because unlike other people, Louis works hard and needs the briefs that were supposed to be done today.
Casually Harvey waits until Louis is done with his tirade, before smirking and holding out the requested files. “I’m not here to mess up your little schedule, Louis. Not enough fun, honestly. Here, your briefs.”
“Huh?” Louis takes them, his face filled with confusion. “Why do you have these?”
“To give to you,” Harvey answers, like this is a normal thing and Louis is weird for how he is reacting.
“I can see that, Harvey,” Louis snaps. “Why are you delivering Mike’s paperwork?”
“Because I have commandeered him for today, since he is my associate after all,” Harvey pulls something out of his ass. “I’m pretty sure he’s running around like a headless chicken collecting all I need right now, but because Mike care about whatever the fuck you do for some godforsaken reason, he asked me to make sure you got this.”
“And you just did it?” Louis asks, rightfully suspicious.
“I am a man of many mysteries and layers, Louis,” Harvey tells him condescendingly. “You wouldn't get it and that’s okay. Now, I have actual work to do.” And with that he turns around and walks away.
As he does, Louis yells after him: “Don’t think I won’t find out what you’re planning, Harvey! And I am the most mysterious man there is. You don’t even know the depths I have. I’m like the Grand Canyon.”
Then the elevator doors close behind him and he’s off to the fiftieth floor.
Donna is sitting at her desk when he arrives, diligently typing away. Something that ceases the moment he gets there as she asks him: “Where is Mike? He didn’t bring me my morning coffee like he usually does,” as if she is an interrogator.
“Home,” Harvey answers, knowing there will be follow up questions.
“Home?” Donna repeats. “Why? Is he alright?”
“He is technically fine, but old Army injuries are acting up, so he can’t really come in today,” he explains. “I’m picking up some paperwork for us to do, so I can keep an eye on him and ensure that he doesn’t do anything idiotic.”
“Old Army injuries?” Donna asks.
“He asked me not to say,” he tells her apologetically.
“I should go, I can help,” she says, already reaching for her stuff.
“Don’t,” Harvey stops her and she sends him a look. “He already hates that I’m there and thinks I’m being dramatic. He’s barely talking to me. It’s pretty worrying, not going to lie. At this point he is more likely to yell at you if you show up. Besides, I need you here to keep Jessica and Louis off our backs.”
Donna clearly doesn’t like that reply, but gives in. She never passes a chance to bully Louis. So, she sighs: “Alright. What is the story.”
“You’re the best,” Harvey grins.
“I know.”
“Anyway, I told Jessica nothing and she might not even notice that neither me or Mike have shown up today. However, I gave Louis some of the briefs Mike has done for him and he asked why the hell I was doing that,” Harvey explains. “So, I said that Mike was running errands around the city for me and I am just that nice.”
“Tsk, like he’ll believe that,” Donna snorts.
“Exactly,” Harvey agrees. “So, he might come asking questions or go to Jessica. I need you to mollify him and keep me updated on whatever bullshit you feed him.”
“And if Jessica comes asking?” Donna inquires.
“If you can convince her of the same bullshit as Louis, try that and I’ll deal with the fallout. Otherwise just tell her to call me.”
“Alright.”
“Thank you, Donna.”
“Of course,” she smiles kindly. “Now grab you paperwork and go help your boy.”
He wants to protest the moniker, but is reminded of the scene of this morning when Mike was reading and how content he felt. Suddenly he feels incapable of protesting it, so he just ignores it and goes to collect some of his own paperwork.
Then he bids Donna farewell, promising to tell her if anything happens, before leaving again. He sighs when back in the car, glad to leave the place behind him, despite the fact it feels more like home than his own condo.
Half an hour later, he is again laboring up the steps, wondering why Mike hasn’t tried to fight his landlord over this neglect, especially since the kid apparently does this while carrying his bike each day.
When he finally makes it, he unlocks the door and is immediately greeted by a loud thump and a groan. His heart beats with worry and he hurries to the bedroom, calling Mike’s name.
In the bedroom, Mike is lying curled onto his side, clutching his hip and shoulder as he groans again. Next to him on the floor are the books Harvey left there. He looks fine, beyond the obvious and relief fills Harvey’s bones.
“Holy hell, Mike,” he breathes. “You fucking scared me. What an earth were you even trying to do?”
Mike looks up pitifully and answers: “I just wanted to go to the bathroom. Ugh, I knew I shouldn’t have shoved my cane in the back of my closet.”
“Cane?” Harvey exclaims, unable to hide the shock at the revelation.
“Oh, yeah,” Mike replies, waving a hand vaguely. “They gave me one. I should probably use it more, but Trevor always said it made me look like a grandfather and the stares are fucking uncomfortable.”
Harvey tries to process that this is a thing (the urge to strangle Trevor is familiar and back in full force) as he asks: “Do you want me to grab it?”
“Can’t hurt, but if you don’t mind helping me hobble to the bathroom, it’s up to you,” Mike answers, pushing himself into a seated position with his right arm, wincing as he does.
The blankets are now pooled around him and Harvey can see that his is in dressed in nothing but a shirt and trunks. He stretches and Harvey can spot a nasty scar on his left shoulder when the wide sleeve slides down. Mike groans and they can hear bones crack.
With that done, he rubs his eyes, before looking at Harvey, who offers a hand and says: “I don’t know how long it’ll take to find it.”
“Smart,” Mike nods. “I have to go really bad.”
Harvey gets on his right side to avoid agitating the scared shoulder on the left, letting Mike sling an arm around him, before hauling him to his feet. As he does, he notices there is also a scar on Mike’s right hip that snakes out from under his trunks. But he doesn’t comment on it.
As they go, Mike makes small pained noises that make Harvey want to fight someone. He also apologizes a few times to Harvey for being an inconvenience, as well as comment how fucking embarrassing this is.
While Harvey can understand being embarrassed about being helped to the bathroom, he shrugs it off. He also shuts the inconvenience thing down real fast.
Mike pees. He waits outside. Then they make the track back to the bed. Harvey can’t help, but peek at the nasty looking scars, continually picturing Mike bleeding out somewhere. An irrational fear grips him as he thinks of Mike not making it.
Of course, Mike notices it, but neither brings it up just yet. Harvey just hands him the paperwork and tells him about what went down at the office as he digs through the closet for the cane.
“Maybe I should have tried to hold on to a bit of that cleanness,” Mike comments as he watches Harvey dig further and further, the ground around him now filled with all the other crap he had stuffed in there haphazardly.
“Why didn’t you?” Harvey asks, seeing an opening and remembering the odd phrasing from earlier that morning.
He can feel Mike’s eyes burn into his back, but he doesn’t stop looking for the cane, content to wait for a reply and already prepared to never get one.
“Like I said, I’m a messy person,” Mike’s voice comes from behind, surprisingly answering. “In the Army you’re supposed to be a cog in a bigger machine. There is no room to be a person, to be anything but what they need you to be. They forced me to be this clean person, they changed me and when I got back, I tried to find who I was again. And I am just a messy person.”
“You talk about it like the Army did something to you,” Harvey comments idly, mulling over the words.
“And?” Mike sounds defensive.
“Nothing,” Harvey shrugs. “Most soldiers talk about the brotherhood, how they miss it, how it taught them things. Not used to hearing anyone be so bitter about it.”
Mike snorts: “That’s because they really try to push that narrative to find new recruits. Anyone being critical is quickly shut down or doesn’t make it.”
“Doesn’t make it?” Harvey asks, as he triumphantly pulls the cane from the closet, finally facing Mike again as he holds it.
The kid smiles and shakes his head, taking it and placing it next to his bed. The way he handles it looks familiar and Harvey again wonders what happened to him and if he’ll get an answer or if Mike has shared enough for today.
“Yeah, doesn’t make it,” Mike surprises him by answering when he’s done. He looks right at him and says: “I saw you watching.” Harvey looks guilty at that. “It’s alright, I get it. But I’m one of the lucky ones. We were hit by a spray of bullets, three got me. My shoulder, my back and my hip. I got an honorable medical discharge and they shipped me back to the US where I got the care I needed for the lowest cost, before they threw me on the streets and told me to figure it out. That is being lucky, Harvey.”
Harvey is quiet as he listens. He never served, never even thought of it, just blindly listened to whatever he heard from people who didn’t serve either. What Mike is telling him is all news to him and he wonders how he never knew.
“I had just received three heavy blows to places that were already damaged by always carrying a heavy pack around,” Mike continues. “I had no college degree, since I joined after I was kicked out, because there was nowhere else for me to go. What could I do? Nothing. They don’t tell you that you’re done when you leave the Army.”
At this point it’s less an answer to Harvey’s question and more a rant. It sounds like it has been trapped inside Mike for a long time, so Harvey doesn’t interrupt.
“I was constantly in pain and with my record before the Army, no doctor was willing to prescribe me painkillers, so I turned back to drugs. I couldn't work and was too weak to care for Grammy, so I spiraled back into criminal activity again. The Army doesn’t get anyone back on their feet, they just take and spit people out. They destroyed my future more than drugs and cheating did,” Mike says, breathing heavily.
In the back of his mind, Harvey feels guilty about taking Mike’s one pain relief when he started working for Pearson Hardman. However, he also knows that weed was keeping Mike chained down in his shitty situation.
Still, he resolves to ask how Mike manages his pain now.
“Hell, I can’t walk through a metal detector normally anymore,” Mike rant on, “because they just sewed the bullets back in order to get bleeding to stop enough to drag me out of there. Though, not before digging around in them with a knife, making sure the scaring would be horrible, as they decided to fuck it to save time and my life. And, now, if they try to get them out, they might paralyze me for life. Not to mention all the mental bullshit that comes with it.”
“And I have to live with the fact that I’m one of the lucky ones,” he is bordering on hysteria now and Harvey isn’t sure if he should intervene.
His fists are clenched and he is shaking slightly. Tentatively, Harvey sits down next to him, putting a hand on the back of his neck as he softly says: “…Mike.”
“I used to have really bad nightmares when I just came back,” Mike confesses softly. “I remember everything I saw out there in vivid detail. I hoped the weed would dim them, but it never did.” He chuckles bitterly. “I still have them actually, I just don’t wake up screaming anymore, because I have become so desensitized to them. It’s just a part of my life now. Part of me.”
At the soft, broken tone Harvey can’t take it anymore and carefully pulls Mike into a side hug. He pretends not to feel the tears slowly staining his suit.
“Sorry,” Mike sniffles after a while.
“Please stop apologizing for the most reasonable reactions and things you can’t control,” Harvey tells him gently. “I can’t even imagine what you’ve been through, it’s okay to be upset. Hell, to be traumatized.”
“Ah, so-, uhm,” Mike clears his throat. “Thank you. You don’t have to do this, but I’m glad you’re here. I didn’t expect today to be this much. It’s been a while since it was this bad, I guess all sorts of things came to the front.”
“It’s no issue at all,” Harvey says, nearly admitting how glad he is Mike didn’t hide this from him and that he can be here for him.
Mike doesn’t really reply to that, just leans further into Harvey’s side and wipes his eyes. “It’s hard to explain how bad it was. But no one cares about you out there and no one cares when you get back. You see the worst shit and then you just have to report for duty the next day like nothing happened. Like you didn’t try and fail to hold the blood of your friend inside him hours before. Like you don’t want to go curl up into a ball, cry and go home.”
“Is that the reason you don’t like General Curtis?” Harvey asks, remembering the dislike that radiated off Mike, hidden under that impassive mask, while the General seemed friendly.
At that Mike snorts bitterly and pulls back a bit as he explains: “When I knew him, he was Sargent Curtis. Friendly, but sneaky. I’m a Corporal, I was a team leader, but I reported to him. He took pride in me being under him, since I was bright and he could take credit for my successes, without having to take the risks.”
Harvey is just starting to think that sounds a bit like him, when Mike says: “He was kind of like the anti-you. Pretended to care then stabbed you in the back without teaching you a thing.
That earns Mike a raised brow, since not many would describe Harvey as the opposite of that, but Mike ignores that and moves on: “Anyway, we had just come back from one of the shittiest missions to date. We were all exhausted, so I told my men to take the evening, while I went to check up on the wounded. Maybe write a few letters to widows or now childless mothers.”
A part of Harvey doesn’t want to know how this story ends and his heart breaks for Mike, who has lived it.
“The next morning, I stumble back to camp and Sargent Curtis is in my face screaming about why my platoon didn’t show up for evening drills,” Mike continues. “I had just returned from the medical tent. Two of the three wounded didn’t make it through the night. I had held their hands the entire night and promised them that they would be okay. That they would go home soon.”
Mike stares unseeingly at the ground. “I decided then, the whole Military could choke and I would never sign up for another tour. However, a week later that decision was made for me. I will never forget that fucking asshole. I wonder whose coattail he rode to General.”
“Fuck. Mike,” Harvey breathes after a second.
“I’m fine now,” Mike assures him, giving him a crooked smile that is only half believable. Then he clears his throat and blinks. “Wow, I just really dumped that all on you.”
“You looked like you needed it,” Harvey says, adding, “And I’m the guy you tell, remember?”
That gets a laugh out of Mike, which makes Harvey prouder than it has the right to. Mike softly elbows him and rolls his eyes. “Alright, Mr. Lawyer-man. Just hand me my paperwork. I need a distraction right now.”
“Course,” Harvey agrees, having pushed more than enough for today.
The rest of the day passes slowly, but companionably. Harvey puts the stuff back in the closet in a more organized manner and gets lunch at some point. He also organizes Mike’s coffee table and rearranges the mess on the couch, so that he can comfortably work there.
It’s about half past 3 that Harvey’s phone rings. Donna’s face smiles up from the screen and he picks up with a smooth: “Hello, Donna. What’s up?”
“I’m trying to keep your line busy, since Jessica was just here and she is probably on her way to her office to interrogate you,” Donna informs him.
“Louis didn’t believe you?” he asks.
“No, he did, she just happened to hear what I fed Louis and didn’t believe that,” Donna says. “She asked me what was really going on and I told her you weren’t really out on a free day, but finalizing the paperwork for a deal for the company of Louis’ sister and didn’t want him to know.”
“Let me guess, she didn’t think I would be that considerate.”
“Bingo,” Donna agrees. “So I hope you have something to tell her, because I’m sure she’ll be able to find you otherwise. By the way, how is Mike doing?”
Harvey glances at Mike, who sends him a questioning brow. He is still in bed with the hot water bottle now on his hip, surrounded by paperwork, marker behind his ear. “He is good,” he tells Donna. “We’ll come up with something.”
“Alright, bye,” Donna says. “I’m off to call Jessica and stall her to give you time.” Then she hangs up with a click.
“What did Donna need?” he asks.
“Jessica can call any moment, because she didn’t believe our excuses for not being in today,” Harvey answers, getting up and walking back over to Mike. “What are we telling her?”
“We can say I’m just sick?” Mike offers.
“Wouldn’t work, she knows I hate being sick and avoid sick people like my life depends on it. If you were contagious, I wouldn’t be here,” Harvey shakes his head, falling down on the bed as he shoots the idea down.
“So now what?” Mike asks.
Harvey has another option, but he doesn’t know how it will be received. Carefully he suggests: “We can also just tell her the truth. We’re lawyers, she knows the anti-discrimination laws, you’re entitled to sick days and aid.”
“And what about you, huh,” Mike challenges, not shooting the idea down, but also not pleased with it at all.
“I’m doing my work and ensuring you can still do yours in these circumstances,” Harvey says. “She also doesn’t really care if I work from home, though working in office is better for our image, handier and better for if we have walk-ins. I still did my part.”
“No,” Mike shakes his head. “I’m not going to tell Jessica I’m not in, because my bones just hurt a little bit. She already doesn’t like me very much, I’m not giving her more reasons to think I’m a whiny little bitch.”
“I asked you to stop with calling yourself a whiny little bitch,” Harvey reminds him. “You have an actual medical condition that is not a moral failing. She’ll understand and then you can discuss accessibility aid.”
Mike scowls: “I don’t need accessibility aid.”
Harvey sighs. “Why not?”
“Everyone there already thinks you’re giving me special treatment and I have been functioning fine until now,” Mike says. “If I randomly show up with a cane or get help, everyone will have questions and I don’t need the extra shit. I get enough already.”
“If that happens you can file a discrimination lawsuit,” Harvey points out. “I’ll represent you, pro-bono.”
“No,” Mike says.
“What are you going to do then?” Harvey asks. He doesn’t want to force Mike, but he also doesn’t get it. “How are you managing now. You said yourself you should use the cane more and weed isn’t really an option to cope anymore. Are you just going to swallow a bunch of Tylenol and keep your fingers crossed?”
“I’ve become immune to Tylenol,” Mike shrugs. “So, I’ll just deal like I’ve always done and I’ll be fine.”
“And if a day like this rolls around again?”
“I’ll call in sick,” Mike says. “I should have done that today, honestly. It was my plan after calling you, but I thought that counted. Next time, I’m calling Donna.”
“Oh, yeah, because Donna will let you get away with being miserable like this,” Harvey points out the flawed logic.
“Dammit, Harvey, why are you pushing me here?” Mike explodes.
“All I’m wondering is if all this can be lessened or even prevented, if you tell Jessica,” Harvey replies. “If you had a good chair, if you could get a moment to stretch, if you could use your cane, would the chances of having a day this bad be lower? I know you don’t want to tell anyone and you don’t have to. You know they’re legally not allowed to ask you. Throw title 1 of the ADA in their faces and try to give less fucks.”
“People don’t really tend to believe it’s this bad,” Mike points out softly.
“Jesus, Mike, you got shot. Multiple times. The bullets are still in you,” Harvey says. “It’s pretty hard to deny. Just tell me, if it would help.”
Mike is quiet for a moment, then he shrugs: “I guess, the strain would be less. It might help, but these things are unpredictable.”
“Alright,” Harvey nods. “Look, all I’m saying here is tell Jessica. You don’t have to do anything more with it, but think about it for a minute.”
It’s quiet, then Harvey’s phone starts ringing again, this time Jessica’s severe eyes stare judgmentally at them and Harvey says: “Make that a second.”
“Wait. What are you going to say?” Mike asks, stressed out.
“We’ll see,” Harvey replies cheerfully, before picking up. “Hello, Jessica. What can I do for you today?”
“Harvey.” How Jessica can say so much with just his name, he’ll never know.
“That is me, yes,” he says anyway, instead of being serious. As he stalls, he makes a few inquiring faces at Mike, who is still thinking, brows pinched.
“You know why I am calling you,” she tells him.
“Probably, but before I confess to something you don’t know yet, remind me?” Harvey answers.
“I have become aware that you and your little minion, Mike, aren’t in the office today,” Jessica informs him. “Now, this would be only mildly worrying, if you didn’t have Donna lying straight to my face. So, what the hell are you doing out there, Harvey?”
“Nothing, I swear,” he says, feeling a bit like a boy called to the principal’s office
“Harvey, this is not a time to play games with me,” Jessica tells him sternly. “I let a lot of the shit you do slide, but there are still rules that need to be followed and I can’t have you drag Mike out of work for your little escapades. People talk, Harvey, you know this. What am I supposed to say if the partners start asking why I’m letting you and your associate have days off without explanation?”
“Yes, Jessica, I know,” Harvey agrees, turning serious. She is not amused in any way and now is not the time to be cocky or cute with her.
“So, I’m asking you again,” she says. “Where the hell are you?”
And for this first time in a long time, Harvey flounders. While he has an opinion on what Mike should do, he’s not just telling Jessica when Mike said no. However, she needs some sort of explanation and if he lies to her now and she finds out, he is done for.
He opens and closes his mouth a few times, waving his hand around as if it will give him inspiration.
Mike has been sitting next to him, listening as he attemps to cover for Mike. He has heard everything, but has also taken the time to think about what has been said. So, when Harvey runs aground, he plucks the phone out of his hands and puts on his most chipper voice as he greets: “Hi, Jessica, how are you today?”
It isn’t often that he hears that tone, but surprised, Jessica answers: “Mike? Why are you here?”
“I thought you knew Harvey and I were in the same location,” Mike shoots back.
“Are you toying with me, kid?” And when Jessica says it, it doesn’t sound as fond as when Harvey does. “Why isn’t Harvey answering?”
“Because Harvey was about to lie for me, even though he didn’t want to,” Mike tells her honestly, hoping the switch in tone will throw her off enough to prevent her anger.
“What?”
Ah, success!
“He is in my apartment,” Mike confesses. “I didn’t want him to tell you, because I don’t like talking about it, but he is right in that as my employer you should probably know.”
Jessica sounds like she is preparing for the worst as she asks what the hell they’re doing and Mike suddenly realizes how that might sound. He smartly chooses to ignore it.
“I used to be in the Military,” he says quickly, trying to get it over with as fast as possible. “I did three tours in Afghanistan and was honorably discharged after I got shot in the back. Today the neglect I’ve put my body through caught up and put me out of commission. Harvey came to bring me my paperwork and ensure I was alright.”
The line is quiet. Mike has done the impossible and rendered Jessica speechless for a moment as he processes all he has just said.
“That is- Ahum- Thank you for your service,” she says and Harvey sees Mike wrinkle his nose in disgust at the thanks.
“No problem,” is what he awkwardly replies.
“You said the issues were caused by neglect, has this anything to do with work conditions?” she then goes on in a businesslike manner, immediately trying to barricade herself in legally in case of a later lawsuit about the accessibility of Pearson Hardman.
“I- uh,” Mike fumbles, not yet prepared for this part of the conversation.
Harvey sends him a questioning, concerned look and Mike smiles at him, before turning back to the phone.
“Overall the work conditions have not directly impaired me. At the moment, I’m in a dialogue with Harvey on how to improve my work area. The only thing I would currently note is the atmosphere in the cube farm.” As he talks he chooses his words carefully and Harvey listens in with pride at how far Mike has come lawyer-wise.
“How so?” Jessica asks him and Harvey can picture her sitting there perfectly.
“While I get the hazing culture, it has discouraged me from using my cane,” Mike explains. “It helps lessen the strain. However, I’m sure that right now it would get missing sometime during the day or it will be broken. Not to mention the verbal abuse.”
“I’ll see what I can do about that,” Jessica says. “When you’re able to come in, please head to my office so that we can discuss this further. Bring your discharge papers and doctor’s notes, since we do need to see some proof. And tell Harvey to report what you two agree on surrounding this.”
“Certainly,” Mike promises. “And thank you for your understanding.”
“Of course,” Jessica replies. “We at Pearson Hardman promote a diverse and accepting work environment.”
Mike bites his lip to keep himself from laughing at the obvious sales line and says his goodbyes before hanging up. Then he sags into himself, the anxiety suddenly leaving him.
“Are you okay?” Harvey asks.
“Yeah,” Mike smiles. “That was just really stressful and scary, but she was nicer about it then expected.”
“Jessica is a black woman at the top of a multi-million law firm,” Harvey points out. “She has been diversity points and knows how shitty it is to not be seen as human beyond that. She has been pushing more diversity and less discrimination ever since she became name partner, but not in that corporate way you so often see.”
“Well, it’s appreciated,” Mike says. “Now I just have to figure out how I’m going to face the entire firm and its ridicule.”
“That’s not going to happen,” Harvey assures him and the brow he gets back tells him all he needs to know about what Mike thinks of that. He amends his answer slightly to: “Well, it might, but now you have me, Donna and Jessica backing you. And Louis, because Louis wants to lick Jessica’s boots at every moment.”
Mike considers that for a moment. “Alright, yeah. But it might still happen, before they can get reprimanded, or whatever. And that will suck.”
There isn’t much Harvey can do about it and that does, indeed, sucks. So, he wracks his brain for a moment, then offers: “You can work in my office the first few days, until the word has spread.”
“Thanks, Harvey,” Mike smiles. “But I think I’m passing. Your couch is nice, but working on it is killing for my back. I’ll just have to deal, I suppose. But I am keeping you to that offer, should it be necessary.”
“Alright,” Harvey nods and they shake on it. Then he says: “We should probably have that dialogue about how to improve your work conditions now.”
“Come on, man, that’s not necessary,” Mike tries to play it off. “I just came up with that so that I could hang up on Jessica as fast as possible. It’s fine, I swear.”
“And I thought it was a good idea,” Harvey raises a challenging brow. “In fact, I have already suggested a few things like a better chair and stretch room. If you tell me what would help, then I can say to what extend that can be arranged and then we can leave the subject be.”
“I hate it when you go all lawyer on me, did I ever tell you that?” Mike complains and Harvey just grins victoriously.
“So?”
For a moment, Mike is stubbornly silent, then he gives in. “I mean, a better chair would be nice, I guess. One with better back support and wheels so I don’t have to get up for every little thing. And if I didn’t have to continuously run around to bring people my finished paperwork, but that can’t always be helped, so whatever. Like I said, I’m fine most of the time. Hell, most people don’t even notice.”
Harvey guiltily counts himself among those people as he thinks for a second. “A chair should be no problem. And if you call, me and Donna can collect my paperwork, which is most of your workload. Louis is the other half, so that will depend on him, but maybe we can ask that paralegal-” “Rachel,” “Yes, Rachel, if she can take your work if she has the time.”
“I don’t know about that, Harvey. She already hates that associates and partners treat her like a secretary,” Mike shakes his head. “I would feel bad asking her.”
“She is your friend, right?” Harvey asks and Mike nods. So, Harvey says: “Well, then she might make an exception for you. Otherwise you can ask one of the associates, because Louis and Norma aren’t going to. Though, you never know.”
“Keep it as a backup option should Louis be shit?” Mike suggest.
“Sure,” Harvey agrees. “Anything else?”
“Not that I can think of,” Mike says.
“Alright. Then I’m calling Donna, so she can get on that and because she has probably been dying to know what’s happening ever since Jessica left her desk.” And Mike snorts at that as Harvey starts to dial Donna.
He was right about her curiosity, because she pounces the moment she picks up. Dutifully Harvey relays everything to her, ending in her promising that Louis will be collecting his own paperwork one way or another.
The rest of the day passes by peacefully. Mike’s body decides to be kinder and Mike can use the cane to get to the bathroom on his own when he needs it again. Harvey does a few groceries, claiming he just wants to cook for a change, but also getting Mike a few basics.
They eat at the small table Mike has and talk about upcoming cases. When it’s time to leave, Mike stays seated and tells Harvey he would normally walk him to the door, but you know…
“Mike, you live in a broom closet, you can be anywhere and still have walked someone to the door,” Harvey informs him when he says that.
“Shut up.” Mike sticks his middle finger up at him, but he is smiling again, so Harvey counts it as a win anyway.
At the door he hesitates again, then asks: “You sure, you’re gonna be alright?”
“I’m not made of porcelain, Harvey,” Mike rolls his eyes. “I had a bad day, that’s it. Tomorrow I’ll probably take a cab to work instead of my bike. That’s the worst of it.”
“Okay, but if you can’t come in tomorrow, call me,” Harvey is mollified, but makes Mike promise anyway.
“I will,” Mike says. “Now shoo. I need my beauty sleep.”
“Alright, alright.” And with that Harvey finally leaves, wondering how his day ended up like this and reflecting how much he didn’t mind. How much he missed being needed for a change.
He gets a lot of people asking for his help, of course, but this protective caring feeling is something he only knows from Markus, who hasn’t asked him for anything except money in years. It’s kinda nice. Makes him realize how much his friendship with Mike means to him and how badly he wants to hold onto it.
Harvey promises himself to have Mike’s back no matter what. Vows to ensure the kid is alright. To deal with whoever gives him even the slightest grain of shit.
So, the next day he gets in early. As if she has read his mind, Donna is there as well. He greets her and asks after developments.
“Louis will have a kid named Harold collect Mike’s paperwork and the chair got delivered yesterday in the late afternoon,” she informs him.
“How did you manage that?” Harvey asks, impressed.
“I have my contacts,” she shrugs nonchalantly. “What about Mike? Hear anything from him yet?”
“No, nothing so far.”
“If he keeps his usually schedule, he should get in at any moment,” Donna says after checking her watch.
“Jessica told him to report to her immediately, but perhaps he’s dropping his bag off at his desk first,” Harvey tells her, watching the hallway intently.
At 8 AM exactly, Mike steps off the elevator. His suit is done up neater than Harvey has seen it before, as if it’s an armor. His satchel is thrown over his right shoulder and he is leaning on his cane. On his face he’s wearing a confident grin that Harvey can see is partially fake. In his other hand he has a coffee carrier with three coffees in it.
He casually makes his way to Donna’s desk and sets down the coffee carrier. He hands her order, before giving Harvey his as he says: “I thought you would be here already.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Harvey asks as he takes a sip. Exactly how he likes it.
Mike drinks his own and grins. “Nothing, just that you can never deny you care again and I will be using this knowledge against you.”
“Don’t you have a meeting with Jessica to get to?” Harvey says, not denying what Mike says, but also not acknowledging it. He has an image to maintain after all.
“Wow,” Mike snorts, taking a sip. Then he explains: “I’m drinking my coffee first. I usually do that while I walk, but my hands were full.”
“How are you feeling?” Donna asks and Harvey is gratefully she does. If he had done it, it would have sounded overbearing or like he wanted to coddle Mike after his explicit wish not to, but he is curious about the answer and Donna is close enough to it, yet uninvolved enough, to be able to ask him.
“I’m fine, Donna. Thank you,” he answers with a kind smile. “I had forgotten how much this thing helped until I used it again.”
“It makes you look very refined,” Donna tells him with a smile of her own. “And don’t worry about Louis, he was offering to be your assistant when I was done with him.”
Mike laughs at the mental image. “What would the world do without you, Donna?”
“Crash and burn probably,” Donna replies in that serious yet cheeky way only she can pull off successfully.
“Probably, yeah,” Mike agrees. Then downs the rest of his coffee, before saying: “Well, I’m off to Jessica then. Wish me luck.”
“You’re going to be fine,” Donna assures him.
“Yeah, that,” Harvey agrees.
Mike takes a deep breath, straightening his shoulders as he hypes himself up. For a moment, Harvey can see the soldier clearly as he imagines all the muscle bulk Mike must have lost to his injury and drug addiction that was caused by it.
Then Mike walks away, the tapping of the cane announcing his arrival. He looks like a proper lawyer on a mission and Harvey can’t be more proud of the man his kid is becoming.
~~
A/N:
I feel so guilty abt my chronic pain (which, granted, is less bad than Mike’s) and I feel so dramatic, so welcome to the ~projection hours~
Harvey: *shows up and helps Mike even though he didn’t have to and is known not to*
Also Harvey: What if Mike notices I care?
Mike: *is so confused by said care*
Harvey: Nvm, I must tell this idiot I care
While writing this fic, I realizes that you would never know that Louis is one of my fave characters in the show. He just always gets the short end of the stick in my writing for some reason?? (that is in character though, lmao, poor Louis)
And remember kids, hate the US Military, be compassionate for the veterans who are ground up and used by the machine of war. My other PSA is, someone’s medical history is no one’s business except their own :)
(@liar-or-lawyer bc you asked to be tagged)
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ckducky · 9 months
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Superman and Deku-Eath 2 ver.
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Old remasted of my Deku/Superman art. Replacing Kingdom Come Superman With the Earth 2 Superman
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doctorsiren · 11 months
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MICHAEL??? 😨🤯
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hellomagicalsouls · 3 months
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‼️SHORT‼️HAIRED‼️KLAUS‼️
no curlies tho:(
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"one last shot"
maybe one last attempt to getting things back to normal??
is Rob wearing gloves outta safety reasons or so we can't see the tattoos?
babies are back tho 🥺🩷
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