A/N: Set in season five once again. There had to be moments when all the awful things of the last year weighed on him.
***
The Bad Times
Deeks sighed, chin resting on his fist, a half-drunk beer cradled in his other hand. A rerun of some cop show played on the TV in front of him, but he didn’t have a clue what the episode was about. The screen blurred slightly, glowing harshly in the dark room. He didn’t really care. The last few days, he hadn’t cared about all that much.
Up til now, he’d kept most of his darker thoughts at bay. Something had happened this week and he couldn’t hide how awful he felt. Maybe it was the sudden wave of flashback-like nightmares he’d had recently, or the realization that he had no idea when Kensi might come back. Or where she was.
God, he missed her.
Taking a long drink of beer, Deeks let his head fall back on the couch. The alcohol only slightly dulled his misery. He’d avoided drinking since recovering from his unplanned dental reconstruction, but right now, two or three more beers sounded a lot more desirable than sitting with his thoughts.
“Deeks, open up!” Sam’s voice called out, his knock on the front door hard enough to rattle one of Deeks’ surfboards. Deeks considered not answering for a moment, but knew Sam was persistent to wait him out. Groaning under his breath, Deeks stood, and opened the door.
“Sam, what are you doing here?” Deeks said, leaning in the doorway. Even to his own ears he sounded annoyed and tired. Maybe Sam would take the hint.
Sam gave him a very obvious once over. “You were supposed to go for drinks with the team. What happened?”
“I decided I didn’t feel like it.” Which was the truth.
“Uh-huh. You gonna make me stand out here on your doorstep?” Sam asked.
“Would you leave if I did?” Deeks said, stepping to the side without waiting for an answer.
He flipped on a single light because Sam would almost certainly comment on it. Ruffling his hair, Deeks crossed his arms, and waited. “So, why are you here? Cause it’s late, I’m tired, and I don’t really feel like socializing tonight.”
“It’s not even seven yet,” Sam pointed out, mirroring Deeks’ pose, though he looked annoyingly worried instead of confrontational.
“I got up early.”
“I can see that. Doesn’t look like you’ve been sleeping much lately. You’ve been pretty off the last couple of days too.”
Deeks snorted. “If this is your version of a pep talk, you might want to get some pointers, cause it kind of sucks.”
“I’m just worried about you. I wouldn’t want anything to happen,” Sam told him, nodding to the beer bottle Deeks had left on the table.
“I’m fine, Sam,” Deeks said reflexively.
Nodding, Sam licked his bottom lip, seeming to wrestle with saying anything else. “I’ve been where you are you are before man.”
Deeks chuckled derisively. “Man, you have no idea what’s going on with me.”
“I can guess,” Sam said with more understanding than Deeks felt comfortable with.
“I’m not going to do anything stupid,” Deeks sighed. Because that was where Sam was headed with this. Just like when he came back from medical leave and after Kensi decided he was demonstrating risk seeking behavior.
“I believe you, Deeks. Just remember, you’ve got people who care about you. You can call anytime.”
“Thanks, man,” Deeks said, appreciating the offer, even if he didn’t want it.
“Of course.” Sam gestured around the room. “You want some company? There’s a couple games on.”
“Uh, some other night.”
“Ok. Remember what I said,” Sam told him on his way out.
Deeks shut the door behind Sam and walked back to the couch, flopping down on it. No, he didn’t plan to do something stupid or life altering. But damn, if he didn’t feel awful.
Rolling onto his side, Deeks closed his eyes, and tried to picture Kensi’s face.










