One Word Ficlet Challenge - Neal/Luck
Jun. 16th, 2010 10:09 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Title: Luck
Author:
elrhiarhodan
Rating: Gen
Fandom: White Collar
Spoilers: Out of the Box
Warnings/Enticements/Triggers: None
Word Count: ~300
Summary: The totally sublime
photoash opened up a terrific ficlet challenge yesterday. She gave me three prompts, and here is my response to the second one:
Neal - Luck
Neal doesn't believe in luck. That's why he plays chess, not poker; backgammon, not baccarat. Skill is what matters, the untalented rely on luck.
This doesn't explain Peter Burke, though. There was nothing about skill that resulted in the random assignment of Special Agent Peter Burke to the investigations of a series of seemingly unrelated art thefts, confidence schemes and forgeries. But luck had nothing to do with Burke's ability to piece together those random crimes into a singular pattern and track Neal with the tenacity of a bloodhound on the scent.
Neal never considered the assignment of Agent Burke to his case to be bad luck. As he once told Kate (who had bemoaned the fact that Burke was responsible for the hasty abandonment of their lovely apartment in Venice), there where probably hundreds of FBI agents equally skilled. They'd just have to work a little harder to keep ahead of the very tenacious Agent Burke. That hard work paid off in Prague - Neal had very deliberately picked a third floor apartment over a bakery with a sturdy awning. Just in case he needed to defenestrate in an emergency. Luck had nothing to do with him standing next to the opened window when Burke burst into the apartment.
Neal didn't even consider his eventual arrest a matter of good (Burke's) or bad (his own) luck - Burke was just that much smarter, and he respected that immensely.
In fact, the only time he even remotely considered that his relationship with Peter Burke was lucky was the day after he nearly boarded a small private jet that was supposed to take him and Kate to a whole new life.
Author:
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Rating: Gen
Fandom: White Collar
Spoilers: Out of the Box
Warnings/Enticements/Triggers: None
Word Count: ~300
Summary: The totally sublime
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Neal - Luck
Neal doesn't believe in luck. That's why he plays chess, not poker; backgammon, not baccarat. Skill is what matters, the untalented rely on luck.
This doesn't explain Peter Burke, though. There was nothing about skill that resulted in the random assignment of Special Agent Peter Burke to the investigations of a series of seemingly unrelated art thefts, confidence schemes and forgeries. But luck had nothing to do with Burke's ability to piece together those random crimes into a singular pattern and track Neal with the tenacity of a bloodhound on the scent.
Neal never considered the assignment of Agent Burke to his case to be bad luck. As he once told Kate (who had bemoaned the fact that Burke was responsible for the hasty abandonment of their lovely apartment in Venice), there where probably hundreds of FBI agents equally skilled. They'd just have to work a little harder to keep ahead of the very tenacious Agent Burke. That hard work paid off in Prague - Neal had very deliberately picked a third floor apartment over a bakery with a sturdy awning. Just in case he needed to defenestrate in an emergency. Luck had nothing to do with him standing next to the opened window when Burke burst into the apartment.
Neal didn't even consider his eventual arrest a matter of good (Burke's) or bad (his own) luck - Burke was just that much smarter, and he respected that immensely.
In fact, the only time he even remotely considered that his relationship with Peter Burke was lucky was the day after he nearly boarded a small private jet that was supposed to take him and Kate to a whole new life.