Tony had invented a hundred private fantasy scenarios that led to
him kissing Gibbs. They ranged from so ridiculous that he would never,
ever confess them, not even to Abby, to so commonplace that if there'd
been any substance to them, he'd have been kissed a dozen times by now.
If you'd asked him an hour ago, he'd have said that there was no possibility
he hadn't explored, no excuse his imagination hadn't seized upon. But
that was an hour ago.
Somehow, he'd missed this one.
"Are you kidding?" he hissed at Kate. McGee looked just as stunned.
The three of them stood clustered tightly around Tony's desk, their heads
together like football players in a huddle. Tony glanced towards the elevators,
utterly paranoid that Gibbs would somehow materialize at one of their
shoulders and overhear what was a thoroughly unprofessional conversation.
"Do you want to win the bet or not?" Kate asked impatiently.
Tony glared at McGee. "I haven't lost yet," he muttered. "We're tied.
And Palmer disappeared halfway through. That means he comes in last."
"Palmer disappeared because he got a date," McGee said.
"What? A date?"
McGee nodded firmly. "With Mandy Stevenson. From Records. They went out
to lunch."
Tony gaped at him for a long moment. "But... I kissed Mandy."
"All three of us kissed Mandy," McGee corrected.
Kate smirked. "Apparently Jimmy kissed her best," she said, poking Tony
in the ribs. "And he has a dinner date with Jessica Conway."
"Wow." McGee's eyebrows rose. "She's really pretty."
"She's not just pretty, Probie, she's a babe," Tony moaned.
"Jessica Conway. Did we kiss her?"
McGee shook his head. "She said that you were a...uh..." he paused and
frowned apologetically before going on, "that you were a slut and I was
a puppy trailing around after you. Sorry."
Tony winced. "If you hadn't kissed every girl I kissed right after I kissed
them--"
"Well how else was I supposed to keep up?" McGee demanded. "Besides, it's
not like you didn't follow up on the women I kissed first."
"At least I'm not the one who started in on the men," Tony muttered.
"I kind of thought you'd give up after the first one," McGee said, shrugging,
"and Henry is a good sport."
"My honor is at stake, McGee," Tony said sharply. "There was no way I
was going to let you brag that you'd kissed more people in a day than
I did, even if it meant sucking face with a man."
"Not like you don't have experience in that area, Tony," Kate smirked.
Tony shot her a sour look. "If you're still going to rib me about that,
you better start in on McGee, too. He even knew it was a guy he
was kissing when he got started."
"I am secure enough in my sexuality to joke around with a friend," McGee
said calmly.
"I'm not insecure," Tony snapped.
"I didn't say you were."
"You implied."
"No, you inferred."
"There's a difference?"
"Implied means--"
"I didn't ask for a definition, Probie!"
"You--"
"Boys!" Kate poked them both, hard. Tony subsided, but he treated them
both to his best glare. "Back to the topic at hand," Kate said. "Kissing.
Specifically, you two need a tie breaker and I think anyone who took me
up on my suggestion would be the clear, unquestioned winner."
"But... But... It's... I mean... Gibbs," McGee stuttered to halt.
Kate shot Tony a smug look. "You see? He knows he can't do it. You'd beat
him hands down."
"I don't see why you can't just pick one of us," Tony muttered. Kissing
Gibbs, on a bet, in the middle of the office was just about the
worst idea he could possibly think of. If he was lucky, Gibbs would sock
him one and he'd be nursing a black eye and a bruised ego. If he was unlucky,
or stupid, or just got too caught up in things, Gibbs would guess that
he was interested in a hell of a lot more than winning a bet and he'd
be out on his ass so fast his head would spin.
"I wouldn't get into the middle of this if you paid me," Kate said. "It's
going to be bad enough listening to you two crow about it when it's over."
"Surely there's someone else," McGee said helplessly.
"Not someone else that you haven't already kissed or that isn't ducking
out of sight the minute they see you coming," Kate pointed out. "The whole
building knows about the bet by now. If they were willing to get kissed,
they've been kissed."
Tony frowned. "Then Gibbs has to know about it, too," he said thoughtfully.
Maybe he could get out of this without a black eye after all.
"Yeah," McGee seized upon the observation. "He wouldn't let either of
us kiss him."
Tony wasn't so sure. Gibbs had a weird sense of humor. He might let McGee
lay one on him just to see how uncomfortable it made him and for how long.
"Gibbs wouldn't believe you'd try," Kate argued. "You just sidle up to
him and give him a peck when he isn't looking."
"When is Gibbs not looking?" Tony muttered.
"I don't think it's a good idea," McGee said doubtfully.
"What isn't a good idea?"
The three agents jumped and spun around to find Gibbs standing before
them, the ever present coffee cup in one hand and an inquiring look on
his face. Tony's heart thundered in his chest, as much from anticipatory
fear as from surprise. He was going to do it. He hadn't thought so a second
ago, but now Gibbs was here and he looked kind of amused and there was
a little voice in the back of Tony's mind screaming, Do it now! You're
never going to have a better chance. He knows about the bet, he'll think
it's a joke, do it now!
Tony handed control over to the little voice. The next thing he knew he
was stepping forward and he had a hand on Gibbs's shoulder and he was
tilting his head and then there were warm dry lips under his and suddenly
it hit him--I'm kissing Gibbs! Terror and common sense took over
and Tony stepped back, heart in his mouth, and yet somehow already regretting
that the kiss had hardly been a kiss at all, really.
Utter silence reigned. Tony could almost hear Kate and McGee holding their
breath, waiting for Gibbs's reaction. Gibbs himself had a steely glint
in his eye. He didn't seem angry, though. Tony spared a moment to hope
he might live.
"You call that a kiss, DiNozzo?" Gibbs said at last. He held out his coffee
cup and McGee automatically took it for him. "That wasn't a kiss. This
is a kiss."
Gibbs cupped Tony's face in strong, callused hands and stepped forward
until their bodies were pressed together and Tony had just enough time
to gasp for breath before Gibbs's lips met his. There was nothing uncertain
about this kiss. Gibbs's lips were firm and warm against Tony's and when
Gibbs's tongue brushed his mouth, asking for entrance, Tony let him in
at once. Gibbs had started this, he couldn't kill Tony for something he'd
started and this was worth the teasing Tony would get from the others.
The taste of Gibbs and the hot, slick caresses he gave Tony as the kiss
deepened were worth a hell of a lot more than teasing.
The kiss went on, or maybe time slowed down. Tony didn't care which, though
he was fighting every moment not to get hard, not to moan, not to give
too much away. He was kissing Gibbs back and that would have to be enough,
even if he desperately wanted to grind against the man.
At last Gibbs pulled back and let him go. Tony stood there, dazed beyond
the ability to speak, and struggled not to lick his lips for a last taste
of Gibbs. Gibbs watched him for a long moment. Just as Tony blinked himself
back into something resembling coherency, Gibbs turned to McGee and quirked
an eyebrow. "Well?" he prompted, quirking an eyebrow. "You going to defend
your honor, McGee?"
Right, Tony remembered. The bet.
"I'm just fine with second place, boss," McGee said firmly.
"Okay," Gibbs said, striding over to his desk and plucking his coffee
cup out of McGee's motionless hand as he went. He paused before sitting
down and stared at them. "Work, people!"
Kate and McGee scattered to their own desks. Tony managed to make it down
into his chair and stared at his computer screen. The screensaver was
almost mesmerizing. Tony knew he should be doing something, but for the
life of him he couldn't think what. Unbidden, his tongue flickered out
and touched his lips, but the taste of Gibbs was gone. Tony glanced over
at his boss quickly.
Gibbs was watching him.
Tony fought down a blush and turned his attention back to his computer,
but the weight of watching eyes remained. Maybe, he thought, twitching
the mouse to clear the screensaver, just maybe, some of those fantasies
aren't so ridiculous after all.
--The End--
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