I never ask, and I've been MIA on here lately. But I read this prompt and I could picture Chibs đ
11. âThose kids? They get their noise right from you, you know.â
â€
Oh my gosh HELLO love! How nice to see you pop up in my inbox, how've you been? And yes, you most certainly can! Enjoy :)
"Dad, dad, DAD?"
"Tell 'em I went out." He moves to the pantry in the corner of the kitchen, closing the door behind him, prompting the soft fits of laughter from you that always inevitably bring about his own.
"Dad! Can we play William Tell? Can we? Where are the apples? Mom? Do we have apples?"
At hearing this, he can't remain hidden. "Where did you find that?" he demands to your youngest son, snatching the very real, very sharp bow and arrow out of his grasp. "How many times have I got to tell you, you're not to shoot apples off your sister's head with a bloody bow and arrow!"
"You have to get better at hiding things, dad!" you son grins, and that grin? 100% Telford DNA.
"And you need to stop nosing around the garage and climbing up the stepladders. Go on now, back outside, you wee shite!" He reaches to ruffle his hair, pointing the hyperactive maniac of a seven-year-old in the direction of the back door, he and his sister hurtling back out into the sunshine, screaming. Always screaming.
âThose kids? They get their noise right from you, you know.â
You turn with a look of mild incredulity. "Oh, they do now, do they?"
He chuckles, wrapping you in his arms. "Aye, they do. Well, it depends on the context, but we both know there's one place you're never quiet."
Smacking you on the butt, he picks up an apple from the fruit bowl, taking a big bite as he goes off to hide the bow and arrow once more. Or at least you hope that's what he's going to do.
I just wanna say thank you to the people who continuously write for The PITT.
Thank you for feeding my obsession! I love you all đ„°
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Chapter Seven: Unconventional
Y/N was thankful that Skeeter had been willing to allow her to borrow his Toyota pick up truck as she was quite sure the old hearse would not even manage to make the short thirty mile drive from Charming to Lodi.Â
Although it should reasonably only take her a couple of hours to travel from the funeral home in Charming to Saint Elizabethâs Institute in Lodi, Y/N was not willing to take the risk of anything happening to the old hearse.Â
Given that her Acura was still in the care of TM Auto, and would be for a while at least according to Chibs, she was not looking to add another broken down vehicle to her problems.Â
Skeeter had not seemed to mind her borrowing his truck for a few hours at the very least. He knew sheâd been putting this off for far too long now.Â
Y/N would be lying if she tried to claim she had not been tempted to use her lack of reliable transportation as a reason to avoid making this trip today, but she knew sheâd been putting it off for far too long now.Â
The last time sheâd made the trip had been two Christmases ago when sheâd visited home for the holidays. Â
She adjusted her coat pulling it closed tighter against her body as she made her way through the long hallways of Saint Elizabethâs.Â
It was a plain looking building, a little dull to be honest. It was a large structure that looked very much like any other hospital. The sign out front simply stated Saint Elizabethâs Institute and stated the year it had been established.Â
The inside of the building felt sterile and always held an odor of bleach and an undertone of something quite unpleasant that someone had attempted to cover with lavender air freshener. The scent always gave Y/N a headache.Â
The entire place actually made her feel ill. The building always felt far too cold even in the winter. The sparse furniture in the hallway and the lack of decor only added to the feeling of cold. The walls were all either white or a pale blue. Sheâd assumed the color choices were meant to be calming, but it just made her feel lethargic.
The overhead lights gave the hallway a far too bright tone and patients and nurses alike passed Y/N on occasion as she slowly made her way through the halls, though the patients for the most part seemed to be escorted by a nurse or some other aide.
Y/N cringed as she neared the hospitalâs recreation room having been told by the nurse on hand that this would be the best place to visit with her brother.
Lunch had ended not long ago and medications had just been given out. Most of the hospitalâs residents were in their rooms or off to their daily therapy sessions. Y/N had been told simply to head to the recreation room and a nurse would fetch Daniel and bring him to her.
She sighed as she reached the room trying not to cringe as she took a seat in a plastic chair by a small table. Sheâd never grow accustomed to the strange furniture in the institute. It was all plastic and mostly bolted down to the floor.
She knew the reasoning of course; some patients might be prone to violent fits and it wasnât wise to have heavy furniture that was not attached to the floor. A nurse had reassured Y/N, the first time sheâd noticed the strange furniture, that it was intended both for the safety of the staff and residents alike.
The recreation room didnât seem to have much for recreation. There was a television which was bolted up high against the wall, a few board games in a cabinet, a few books and magazines, and a few jigsaw puzzles. Y/N guessed that the staff kept most of the recreation locked away until it was time to use it.Â
Y/N adjusted the visitors badge that had been attached to her coat, briefly debating taking the coat off but deciding against it as she noticed a chill to the air as the air conditioner switched on making the cold space all the more icy.
She shifted in her seat crossing and uncrossing her legs. She frowned slightly regretting not wearing something more casual.Â
Sheâd chosen to wear an outfit she might usually wear at work; a black dress, tights, a dark coat, and a pair of black ballet flats.Â
She was technically making this trip during a work-day after all, so sheâd dressed for the work day.
She sighed, staring down at her hands as she placed them on the table in front of her. She resisted the urge to pull out the pocket mirror she carried in her purse and check her appearance. She silently debated if she should have worn her makeup a little lighter. The darker lipstick most likely made her look all too much like a woman in her late twenties instead of the girl Daniel at times remembered her as being.
A voice in the back of her head warned her that Daniel might not entirely recognize her today, though sheâd been told by the nurse that he was having a good memory day.
Y/N knew that most of the time though Daniel most likely still pictured her as that eighteen year old girl with a nostril piercing and an honestly peachy tone of pink hair that had faded over the summer, her roots all too noticeable. He remembered her as sheâd been back when he was 24 years old, the year heâd had his accident.
She knew sheâd grown since then. She no longer appeared to be that rebellious punky teen girl. She looked like an elegant young lady.Â
It felt strange to realize that though she was the younger sibling it felt as though she'd somehow taken the role of the older sibling. She was older now than her brother had been when he'd had his accident.
She was certain her more professional adult look might seem alarming to him if his memory happened to be struggling that day.
Y/N wouldnât lie, at times she feared that a day would come where Daniel would no longer recognize her as his sister. As they grew older she knew her appearance would change all the more.Â
The doctors didnât seem to have any clear answers as to whether his memory would decline further with his head injury. For the most part she felt that the doctors seemed to stick to the line that no head injury was exactly alike. Sheâd heard the promise that they would monitor his symptoms but only time would tell what the future held for him.Â
All they knew was that her brother struggled with his impulse control, his emotional control, and occasionally short term memory. He also struggled with self-care; remembering to do something as simple as bathing and brushing his teeth. Then there was the issue of the seizures, though they were rare.Â
The medications he took were meant to control the seizures as well as his emotional outbursts.
For the most part Y/N felt that the medications only made him drowsy and slow. Theyâd caused him to put on weight as they increased his appetite. That was why he would not stay on them if he was left to his own devices. He didnât like how they made him feel, but without them his symptoms only worsened.Â
She knew that because of all of these issues that the hospitalization was necessary. It didnât stop her from feeling guilty as hell though.
She tried to appear as though she was carefree as the nurse sheâd spoken to entered the room guiding her brother over to the table.
Y/N hesitated to reach for him as he was sat down at the table across from her. She always feared touching him first, almost certain that one day he would only see her as a stranger.
Her brother was clean shaven; it was a stark contrast to how heâd been before the accident. He usually always wore some scruff. His hair was no longer shaggy the same way heâd once kept it; instead it was cut shorter than heâd ever keep it if it was entirely up to him. He seemed far too pale and the dark circles under his eyes were far too noticeable. He was wearing the same thing he usually wore each time she saw him; gray sweatpants and a white t- shirt with socks and houseshoes.Â
He was at least clean; the staff made sure he bathed.Â
Y/N at least made sure to send him clothing as often as she could, always initialing the tags with his name so that it would hopefully not be misplaced when the laundry was done. The hospital bracelet he wore on his wrist alerted staff of his name and his level of care along with some other information. The print was always too fine to read without making her feel like she had to strain her eyes.Â
She was relieved as he seemed to recognize her after a moment of uncertainty. He spoke his voice a raspy sluggish tone as his hand reached out for hers. âWhat are you doing here?â
Y/N spoke her voice soft as she tried to pretend the nurse wasnât lingering nearby clearly monitoring the situation. âI was in the area. I thought Iâd come for a visit.â
âIs dad here too?â The question spilled from Danielâs lips Y/N doing all she could not to outwardly grimace.
Telling her brother that their father was dead was not something that had stuck in his memory. He went back and forth between remembering their father was dead to forgetting it entirely.
His doctors had advised her not to tell him that their father was dead during the times he seemed to forget. It was too upsetting to him, sheâd been told. It would only make him relive the fresh grief over and over again.
âNo, he couldnât make itâŠwork is busy. Skeeter and he had a big funeral they had to prep for.â Y/N lied through her teeth hating that it had to be like this.
She knew it was the best case scenario of course. It was cruel to keep making him relive that grief in times like this.
However it was difficult to pretend that their father wasnât dead and buried in Charmingâs cemetery where heâd been for months now. She knew well enough he was dead. Sheâd embalmed his body at his request in his final wishes. Sheâd chosen the casket and the flowers as well as the pamphlets for the funeral. Sheâd found a minister to speak at his funeral. Sheâd written the obituary and paid to have it posted in Charmingâs local newspaper. She had stood in a receiving line for mourners playing the role of the bereaved instead of the funeral director. Sheâd had to take on the emotional and financial burden of the funeral. She had to read his will and realize her life was changed forever.Â
She had to do it all by herself, and now she had to carry on this act pretending that none of that emotional turmoil had happened.Â
Daniel twisted his lips, his brow furrowing. âHeâs mad at me.â
âWhy would you say that, sweetheart?â Y/N asked managing to give his hand a gentle squeeze trying to keep her voice level.
She winced a voice in the back of her head taunting her that she was an awful sister, lying to her brother carrying on this charade that their father was alive.
Daniel scoffed at the question, his brow furrowing further. âI donât knowâŠheâs just mad at me. I must have done something awful. That's why he never visits.â
Y/N sighed that cruel voice in the back of her head insisting if their father was still living and had any reason to be mad at anyone then she would probably be the one in deep shit at the moment given her current ties to SAMCRO. She was quite sure she would be the reigning champion of being the family disappointment at the moment.Â
She pushed the thought from her mind, her voice cracking somewhat as she struggled not to start crying. âThat isnât true, my darling. Heâs not mad at you. He loves you very much. He loves both of us more than we know. Even if we upset him, heâd never deny us that love. You know heâs always been there for usâŠeven when we mess up. Thatâs the kind of dad he is. Remember that time I broke that brand new urn that we had in the display room because I kept playing in the display room after he told me not to. He was so upset but he didnât even yell or spank me. It was a super expensive urn tooâŠuh had the gold edges to itâŠit probably cost a fortune, but he only gave me a firm talking to and didnât make me feel bad for it for too long. I was barely grounded. You know dadâs heart. He wears it on his sleeve. Even if you upset him, he wouldnât be a jerk about it.â
She paused, taking a deep breath once again lying through her teeth. âYou know how he is, Danny. Heâs a workaholic. Once he gets caught up with work thereâs no pulling him away. Iâm sure heâs going to visit soonâŠmaybe once work slows down.â
âWhen can I go home? I want to go home.â Daniel remarked, apparently moving on from the subject of their father on to another difficult subject.
She sighed, shaking her head, not surprised by the choice in subject. They had this talk often and it was always difficult. âI donât know when, Danny. Youâre still not well. You have to stay here a little longer. Just until you get better. I know itâs hard, but you have to stay here a little longer.â
âI feel fine though. I feel okay, I just want to go home. Please, Y/N take me home.â He insisted his voice cracking, he squeezing her hand almost hard enough it hurt.
She took a deep breath shaking her head, a stray tear working its way down her cheek. She wiped it quickly with her free hand. âI canât. I wish I could, but I canâtâŠnot yet.â
âWhy not?â He snapped, squeezing her hand even harder enough to make her flinch the pain shooting through her nerve endings.
She sighed as the nurse stepped forward ready to step into action if things got too out of hand.Â
She spoke, taking a deep breath. âBecause you arenât well. I know you think you feel fine, but you arenât ready to go home yet. Just be patient, sweetheart.â
âItâs easy for you to say. You donât have to stay here.â He snapped again his grip on her hand not loosening even slightly.
She took another deep breath, shooting the nurse a glance of reassurance before she spoke again. âI know. Iâm so sorry. I would take you home if I could, in a heartbeat. We have to wait though.â
She spoke again trying to distract him knowing it was the best method to take when he got worked up like this. âIn the meantime try to find things to keep you busy. The grounds here are nice, arenât they? I saw some flower beds the last time I was here. I know you like going outside and seeing them when it's nice out. You should see the greenhouse back home. The tomatoes and cucumbers are getting bigâŠthe strawberries are looking good too. I can bring you some strawberries next time, if theyâll let me. You like those right? The strawberries were always your favorite. I know you didnât care much for the gardening part of itâŠexcept for that time you grew that marijuana plant that you tried to hide behind my tomato plant. I was so annoyed when I found itâŠand it didnât really work anyway because you couldnât keep enough light on it to actually do anything. Remember that?â
âI donât care, I want to go home.â Daniel snapped at her squeezing all the harder she audibly letting out a gasp the pain becoming a little too much to ignore.
With this the nurse stepped forward two orderlies seeming to appear out of nowhere.
Y/N cringed as her brother was yanked from her by two large orderlies while fighting against the pull. She held her aching hand trying to ignore the pain and keep her voice soothing as she spoke to him. âDaniel, please. Donât fight them. Just take a deep breath and calm down. Itâs okay, just calm down, please, my darling.â
Of course, her soothing did little good, her brother struggling against the hold. Y/N shrank away as the nurse stepped forward placing a hand on her shoulder. âWeâve got this handled, Miss. Y/L/N. Donât worry. Weâre going to give him something to relax him.â
Y/N parted her lips tempted to snap that she didnât want him doped up more than he already was, but she kept the words at bay
She turned her eyes to the floor feeling helpless as the nurse guided her from the room. She felt the tears begin to fall at the words that were shouted at her by her big brother as she left the room. âI hate you! I donât want you to come back! I hate you!â
â---
She didnât allow the tears to fully fall until she left the building, practically collapsing against a bench on the walkway up to the entrance.
She took a deep breath trying her best to keep her composure as she wiped at her eyes furiously.Â
She was thankful that there were seemingly no other visitors nearby though she had a feeling if there were they would not pay her any mind. She had a feeling her reaction was a normal one for those visiting loved ones at the institution.
She took another deep breath trying hard to push the last words sheâd heard her brother say from her mind.
She knew he didnât mean them, not really. That was the thing about his condition. The filter that should stop him from saying the first thing that came to his mind just didnât exist anymore.
Y/N stared down at her purse, opening it and searching through it for the travel sized container of tissues she always carried, her hands brushing across her cell phone.
She was stunned as a thought crossed her mind; she wanted Filip.
It felt odd to admit, even if it was only in her head.
It had been a few weeks since that date theyâd had and surprisingly Chibs had called her loyally every single day. Although the calls were never quite at the same time each day, they still managed to be a daily occurrence.
It was strange to admit that sheâd found some comfort in the calls.
The calls were something she actually found herself looking forward to.
It was almost funny to consider how a few weeks before she had just wanted her admittedly criminally prone Scottish admirer to get lost, but now she happily anticipated the daily phone conversations they had.
She was a bit surprised that he had not pushed her to plan the second date sheâd promised him. A small part of her had to wonder if perhaps he was waiting on her to make the next move. It felt almost amusing to consider that the scary outlaw was feeling nervous and waiting for her to make the next move.Â
The phone conversations they'd had felt light, especially considering the way sheâd practically dumped her past traumas into his lap on that first date.
Theyâd talked about their days, Y/N discussing whichever body she was prepping or her frustrations with the local florist who was always screwing up orders for funeral flowers. Heâd talk about something dumb Half-Sack or Juice had done and a bike or car he was working on at the garage.
Sheâd found that she liked the clear sense of adoration she heard in his voice when he discussed his brothers even when he called them idiots. Sheâd also discovered that she liked the passion in his voice when he talked about whatever motorcycle he was repairing.Â
Sheâd enjoyed listening to him discuss a terrible but healthy smoothie Juice had tried to get him to drink or something truly awkward Half-Sack had managed to say right in front of Clay.Â
She was surprised to find that Chibs made her laugh. Even when she was stuck in the gloom of embalming a difficult case that felt honestly depressing; she was able to place Chibs on speaker phone and feel some sense of light through the gloom.Â
The conversations had felt easy with him though they hadnât necessarily been deep conversations.
It still felt nice; discussing her day with someone. It wasnât something sheâd had with someone in a very very long time.
She was stunned to admit that she had found a sense of comfort with Chibs. It was such a contradiction when she said it outloud; the dangerous outlaw biker felt comforting.Â
She was surprised to find that he was sweet; it was something sheâd not expected. She knew no one would believe her. It sounded like another huge contradiction; the admitted criminal was sweet.
She wasnât naive of course. She knew that Chibs most likely had a side to himself that was far from sweet. She was aware enough to know that he had most likely done horrible things in the past and was capable of doing terrible things in the future.
It was a simple fact that she was surprised failed to invoke fear in her. If anything, a voice in the back of her head was quick to remind her that sheâd done a few awful things of her own latelyâŠeven if those awful things were at SAMCROâs request.
That voice in the back of her head still taunted her of course that Chibs would only lead her back to being the unhappy girl she was living in the chaos of SAMCRO. The voice was all quick to call Chibs a devil whoâd tempt her back into being in that dark place sheâd been in almost a decade before. The voice insisted heâd lead her right back into hell. It reminded her of something her grandmother used to say; you canât dance with the devil and then keep wondering why youâre in hell.Â
Another voice snapped that it was hard to believe she would be unhappy though. She certainly didnât feel unhappy around him. Being around him didnât feel like she was in hell. Sure, she was aware that the world he existed in came with a level of chaos.Â
She reasoned that in a way she had already signed herself back up for that chaos. Sheâd signed herself up for it the second sheâd agreed to help SAMCRO out and had insisted she would be their new funeral home contact for future favors.
She had asked the devil to dance first hadnât she?
She was still surprised sheâd felt so comfortable explaining everything with her brother and dumping some of her childhood traumas onto Chibs. She was even more surprised that heâd not run screaming.
Y/N could admit sheâd not exactly been open about the darker aspects of her childhood and teen years with past boyfriends.
She had only mentioned that sheâd been raised in a funeral home and her brother was special needs. Sheâd casually mentioned sheâd been rebellious at one point in her life not going into too much detail.
With Chibs, sheâd realized that heâd find out the reality of her brother eventually. If she didnât say something, surely someone around town would mention it.Â
Sheâd guessed telling him herself would at least let her control the narrative. At least if it came from her lips then heâd get the truth and not whatever wild tale he might hear from someone else.
Somehow even with the truth about her brother and the darker aspects of her childhood, Chibs had not seemed to shy away.
It was something she was astonished by. She was accustomed to people leaving when she was too much.
Sheâd more often than not been told she was too exhausting to be around. Sheâd more than often been referenced to as being difficult by boyfriends and friends alike. She was too morbid, too snarky, too moody, and just flat out too much to put up with for the long-term.
Chibs didnât seem to think that she was too much.
So maybe that was why she reached for her cell phone dialing the familiar number.
She let out a breath sheâd not even realized sheâd been holding at the sound of his voice on the other end of the line. âHen, I was jusâ thinkinâ bout ya.â
She managed to feel a small tight smile cross her features at the statement. She was no longer tempted to tell him that he was full of shit and just trying to flatter his way into her pants.
Heâd often started out the phone calls he made to her the same way I wanted to call because I was thinking about you.
It felt nice to believe that he thought about her enough to want to hear her voice.
She managed to speak grimacing as she realized her voice felt as weepy as she felt. âHey.â
âWhatâs wrong? Ya sound rough, lass.â The concern was evident in his voice. She could distinctly hear the sounds of the garage in the background hinting he was at TM Auto.
The noise grew fainter indicating he seemed to be moving further from the garage most likely wanting to find some privacy for their conversation.
âI justâŠIâm out in LodiâŠvisiting my brother.â She admitted staring down at her lap the stark black of her clothing looking inky and harsh against the pale concrete below her feet.
âAye, wasnât a good visit Iâm guessinâ?â Chibs was fast to respond that concern still so clear in his voice.
She let out a weak laugh shaking her head as she responded. âNo, no it wasnâtâ
Chibs was fast to speak his voice taking a softer tone, the sound feeling soothing. âYa wanna talk âbout it?âÂ
âI kind of want a good stiff drink to be honestâŠbut uhâŠyeahâŠI mean, itâs just difficult. He doesnât remember our dad isâŠgoneâŠand he doesnât get why he canât go home. Itâs justâŠitâs a shit situation. The last thing he said before I left was that he hates me and never wants me to come back.â She remarked a shaky sigh leaving her, her eyes still focused on the pavement below her trying hard to not let herself break down again.
âOh, Hen, ya know that ainâ true righâ. He doesnâ mean it. Heâs jusâ...confused, love. Yer his sister. He loves ya.â was the reply she received. She was a bit surprised to hear a hint of shakiness in his own voice.
âI know, I knowâŠheâs no longer has the ability to stop himself from saying the first thing that comes to his mindâŠI mean most people if theyâre upset might first think they hate someoneâŠbut usually that filter in their head will stop them from just blurting that outâŠhis filterâŠit just doesnât do what it should. I just hate itâŠtoday was allegedly supposed to be a good memory day tooâŠso much for that.â She remarked another shaky sigh escaping her lips.
She swallowed the lump developing in the back of her throat before she spoke again not having it in her to hate how needy her voice sounded. âCan you talk to me about something differentâŠanything? Something nice?â
She was surprised by the response she got. âYa ever had shortbread? Scottish Shortbread?â
âUh, I meanâŠIâve had shortbread cookiesâŠfrom the grocery store.â She admitted, a bit thrown off by the conversation choice, but she had requested that he talk about literally anything else other than her current situation.
She rolled her eyes, unable to stop the hint of a genuine smile from crossing her lips at his quick reply. âNah, not that. Thatâs pure shite, Hen. Leave that grocery store prepackaged stuff alone. Iâm talkinâ real Scottish shortbread.â
âI guess, Iâve never had it then. Whatâs so special about it?â She dared to ask the misery she felt a moment before lifting by the second.
Chibs didnât waste a moment to reply. âItâs amazinâ, one of my favorites. My ma used to make it the bestâŠI canâ get hers round here of course. The trick is ya gotta have it fresh, with tea or milk on the side. Iâm gettinâ ya some real shortbread. Ya gotta try it at leasâ once.â
She spoke, shaking her head the words falling from her lips. âMaybe you should take me to get some then. I apparently need to see what Iâm missing.â
âAye, ya askinâ me out on a date, Hen?â The response came so naturally a flirty tone entering his voice.
She smirked it not taking her long to answer. âI amâŠand I wonât even bribe you with car repairs.â
She felt as though the misery sheâd felt just moments ago was long gone as Chibs managed to laugh at the response he fast to respond. âAye, ya donâ gotta bribe me to take ya out, love.â
She shook her head ignoring the cruel voice in the back of her head that claimed she belonged locked up right alongside her brother if she was agreeing to another date.
She distinctly remembered the comment Gemma had made the day sheâd given Y/N a ride home. It's never just one date.
It would seem indeed that it was not destined to be just one date.
â--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chibs sighed, his stomach churning as Tig gazed up at him as he passed by the bar in SAMCROâs clubhouse. âYou going to see Y/N again?â
Chibs let out a huff knowing that the cologne heâd put on had most likely given him away. Heâd only worn it once afterall the last time heâd taken Y/N out. He was certain Juice must have blabbed his big mouth all about Chibsâ big date and the effort heâd put into his appearance for said date . âAye, I am.â
âYouâve been talking to her a lot lately. Lots of phone calls.â Tig observed the comment making Chibs feel uneasy.
âAye.â He kept the response short, shifting the box of shortbread heâd rode out to pick up from a bakery early this morning before they had a chance to sell out.
It wasnât his motherâs shortbread but it was the closest thing he could find all the way out in California.
âSo, you hitting that?â Tig dared to ask, Chibs narrowing his eyes at the question, his free hand that wasnât holding the box of cookies forming a fist.
He pushed back the desire to throw a punch as he replied. âAinâ none of yer business.â
Tig smirked, clearly spotting heâd maybe struck a nerve with his brother. Occasionally he could admit he liked pushing his brothersâ buttonsâŠmostly out of boredom.
Heâd taken notice of course, that Chibs had been skipping out on Friday night parties and had definitely been neglecting the croweaters.
There was only one possible thing keeping Chibs so distracted. Heâd definitely noticed the little looks Chibs had sent SAMCROâs new asset that night at the crematorium.Â
Tig didnât particularly care to be honest. He was struck by a sense of curiosity though.
He had been around almost a decade before when Y/N had been a frequent visitor to the clubhouse. He could remember the mouthy girl who had been more than willing to drink and smoke a joint. He could also distinctly remember that sheâd been less than interested in letting him in her pantsâŠ.and heâd tried quite hard to charm his way into them.
He could admit it was a bit of a knock to the ego to think that Chibs might very well be traversing territory Tig had failed to explore. He had to admit he felt envious of the Scot.
Tig shook his head. âJust saying, brother. Be careful with that one. She knows a million ways to get rid of a body. I wouldnât piss her off.â
âYa ainâ got nothin to worry bout.â Chibs snapped thinking back to the tense conversation heâd had with Clay before that first date heâd had with Y/N.
Tig shook his head a sigh leaving him not helping but to prod a little more even if he knew his next statement was an asshole move. He could admit that a sense of jealousy was maybe pushing him to run his mouth. âIâm guessing little Miss. Death doesnât know about your wife back in BelfastâŠpretty sure youâd already be in a casket somewhere if she did. Didnât think sheâd be cool with being a mistress. I mean, she was wild back in the day, tight as hell and a great set of tits from what I heard too, but she still had some moral backbone.â
Chibs moved forward, his fist partially raising but he didnât have a chance to get far, Juice taking enough notice to step in between Chibs and Tig. Juice maneuvered Chibs away quick to speak. âLetâs take a walk man, come on.â
âYa keep yer fuckin mouth shut bout her. Ya donâ know what yer talkin bout.â Chibs snapped sending a warning glare at Tig's direction as Juice pushed him away.
Chibs yanked from Juiceâs attempts he glaring down at the younger man. âI donâ need a fuckinâ walk. Ya tell that prick if he ever mentions her body or calls her a mistress again Iâll fuckinâ bash his head in.â
Juice groaned as he watched Chibs storm off towards his bike. He rolled his eyes as Tig approached him, the man shrugging his shoulders apparently not minding the death threat. âWas it something I said?â
Juice shook his head as he watched Chibs ride off. He sent Tig a look he speaking. âReally?â
Tig shrugged, playing innocent. âIâm just looking out for him. She finds out about his wife, heâs dead meat. Not to mention, if he pisses her off real good then we lose our funeral home contact.â
Juice shook his head, not responding as he made his way back into the clubhouse. He had to hope that if Chibs continued whatever he had going on with Y/N that he explained his complex past and she didnât murder him. Â
Even with as crude as Tig had been, Chibs most likely would be buried alive if he kept that tidbit of information from Y/N.
â-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Y/N sighed as a firm knock sounded at her office door, cracking slightly Skeeterâs head barely peeking in.Â
The man spoke, his eyes rolling ever so slightly at the information he was about to share with his boss. âYou have a gentleman caller.â
Chibs frowned, unable to see past Skeeter as Y/N let out a groan from behind the half closed door. âI canât decide if thatâs worse than calling him the outlaw biker. It sounds less panic inducing to anyone that might overhear it, but it makes me sound like Iâm some sort of freaking Southern Belle.â
She paused before speaking again. âWell, let him in.â
Skeeter did as he was told though he looked as though heâd much rather deny Chibs entry. Chibs didnât miss the stern look of disapproval as he passed by the mortician.
Y/N spoke, spotting that Skeeter was still lingering. âYou can go, Skeet. I promise Iâm fine all on my lonesome.â
Chibs didnât miss the glare Skeeter sent his way before he shut the door behind him.
He took a deep breath trying to calm any rage that was still lingering around in his gut after his confrontation with Tig. He refused to let her see the enraged parts of him.
He studied her, the sight of her soothing him. She was dressed in another work outfit, another black dress similar to the one heâd seen her wear the first time heâd come to the funeral home.
He had to wonder how many black dresses she owned. He had a feeling it had to be quite a few.
She pushed back her chair standing up from her desk and rounded it as she made her way over to him.
She pressed a soft kiss to his cheek, the action soothing him further. She spoke, spotting the tension practically vibrating off him. âAre you okay? You seemâŠagitated.â
Chibs did his best to give her a smile though he knew it came out as more of a grimace. âJusâ Tig bein a fuckinâ prick.â
She let out a small bitter laugh rolling her eyes at the comment. âI guess he hasnât changed much in my time away.â
Chibs took a deep breath tempted to ask her if sheâd ever been intimate with Tig, but he bit his tongue.
He had a feeling sheâd not given Tig had only commented on what heâd heard about her.
Chibs silently reminded himself that he didnât care what her past with SAMCRO was. She had said it herself. She was no longer a club hangaround.
A possessive little voice piped up in the back of Chibsâ head insisting she was his now. Another voice piped up that heâd meant what heâd said to Tig. Heâd kill the man if he ever commented on her body ever again. He didnât care if the man was his brother, heâd bash his face in.Â
He took a few more deep breaths trying to calm himself.Â
Another thing Tig had said had troubled Chibs; the mention of Fiona. It was something Chibs knew would have to come up sooner than later.
Chibs knew Tig was right about one thingâŠif he kept that part of his past hidden from Y/N sheâd probably shove him in the ground. In fact, Chibs was sure that if he withheld this information from her then Y/N would bury him so deep that the devil himself would need a shovel to dig him back up again.
He took a deep breath holding out the box of shortbread heâd gotten; he was no longer as giddy about presenting it to her as heâd been moments before. âI got ya somethin.â
She took it from him, a soft laugh leaving her becoming distracted from his clearly tense mood. âShortbread. Iâm supposed to drink it with tea right, or milk?â
âAye, whichever ya want. Try it tonighâ and let me know what ya think.â Chibs replied, his strained mood fading by the second.Â
She placed the box on her desk giving him a soft smile. âYou didnât have to come all the way over here just to give me some cookies.â
âAye, I wanted toâŠI was hopinâ I could take ya out fer lunch too.â Chibs insisted, having made up his mind on the way to the Funeral Home.
He had to come clean about his past. He had to open up and pray she didnât hate his guts or assume he was attempting to make her into the other woman.
She gave him a soft smile nodding down to her clothing. âDo you mind if I change shoes? I donât think heels are a smart idea on the back of a bike.â
He nodded his head trying his best to give her a smile and hide the anxiety beginning to bubble in his stomach. âAye, heels are probably not a good idea, Hen. Iâll wait on ya.â
She pressed another kiss to his cheek, that warm feeling washing over him again soothing a bit more of his agitation and anxiety.
He watched her leave the room, taking a deep breath as he dropped down into one of the chairs across from her desk.
He stared around the office studying the multitude of items. He clasped his hands together spotting a thick binder sitting on a shelf behind her desk that was labeled casket catalog 2007-2008.
He prayed to any God that might be listening that she wouldnât shove him in any of those caskets after he broke the news about the life heâd been banished from in Belfast.
Chibs tried to find something less distressing to focus on. His eyes caught a photo on the wall it lifting his spirits momentarily.Â
He barely recognized Y/N in the photo. She was so young, clearly barely a teenager. He could distinctly spot a pair of braces on her teeth and a t-shirt emblazoned with Charmingâs nearest high schoolâs mascot. He guessed that perhaps it was a photo leftover from when the office had belonged to her father.
Another photo was framed beside it. Y/N was even younger in this one sat on the front porch of the Funeral Home with a little boy beside her. She looked quite miserable in the soft pink dress she was wearing judging by the clear scowl fixed into her little features. He felt his stomach turn realizing the boy sitting beside her had to be her older brother.
He sighed thinking back to the phone call theyâd had the day before after she visited her brother, hoping he wasnât about to give her another reason to cry.Â
He didnât have long to focus on the fear as the office door opened the object of his adoration reentering the room, a pair of black converse on her feet and a dark coat over her dress.
She spoke nodding to him. âOkay, Iâm ready when you are.â
He stood up taking her hand in his once again praying to anyone who might happen to be listening that he wasnât about to lose the woman heâd just barely managed to start winning over.
â---------------------------------------------------
The taco stand was a bit of a surprise. Y/N didnât think much of it though, deciding that she was just happy to have a second date with Chibs even if it was a little more spontaneous than sheâd expected.
They sat outside on benches the weather thankfully not cool enough for the outdoor space to feel uncomfortable. They seemed to be the only patrons at this stand and she hoped that this wasnât a sign of the quality of their meal.Â
Chibs himself was debating if the taco truck was the best plan. Heâd decided that an outdoor space was probably best for the bombshell he was about to drop on her.Â
He sighed as she spoke, raising an eyebrow at him taking notice of the fact that he seemed distracted. Heâd not even touched his food yet and had seemed dazed as heâd ordered. âAre you sure everything is okay? I mean, how bad did Tig piss you off?â
She cringed worrying that she was pushing it. She imagined it had something to do with the club. She wasnât sure if they were at the level where Chibs was going to be that open with her about anything related to the club despite her partnership with SAMCRO as a provider of favors.
Chibs let out another sigh deciding he wouldnât repeat exactly what Tig had said. He had a feeling sheâd probably kill the man for commenting on her body in that crude of a manner especially in relation to her past. âHeâs jusâ an arse sometimes. Itâs jusâŠI got somthin to tell ya.â
She felt her stomach roll hating that statement. It sounded so ominous. âWhatâs going on?â
Chibs sighed, deciding to ease into this. âI know I ainâ told ya much bout my family.â
Y/N spoke her cheeks flushing the words falling from her. âI havenât given you much of a chance. I meanâŠI kind of turned our first date into a trauma dumping session. I didnât leave you much room to talk about your own family.â
Chibs spoke, shaking his head reaching out his hand pressing over hers. âItâs fine, Hen. I didnâ mind it.â
He took a deep breath speaking again the words falling out of his lips. âI have a daughter.â
She widened her eyes, not expecting that. She guessed it shouldnât be too surprising though. He was in his forties. He had to have some life before her. âHow old is she?â
âThirteenâŠKerrianneâŠher name is Kerrianne.â Chibs responded a small smile crossing her features.
âThatâs a pretty name, I donât think Iâve ever heard it before. Whatâs she like?â Y/N asked genuinely curious to know.
She was surprised she didnât mind the concept of dating a guy with a kid. Sheâd never really been around children, but she liked them. She had never really put much thought into if she wanted children of her own. She found that she liked Chibs enough to accept that he was a parent and to accept whatever role she played in that if their relationship should progress to that point.Â
Chibs cringed the words falling from him. âI donâ knowâŠI ainâ seen her since she was bout four.â
Y/N felt her stomach drop at this information. He was a deadbeat? She felt her stomach sour at the thought.Â
Chibs sighed, shaking his head, spotting the look on her face only able to imagine the thoughts running through her mind. He had a feeling none of them were positive. He spoke again the words sliding from his lips before he could stop them. âShe lives in BelfastâŠwith my wife.â
Y/N was certain if she had a drink in her hand she would have tossed it in his face. She glared at him, yanking her hand from his her voice harsh. âYouâre fucking married? Are you serious?âÂ
She scoffed getting up from the bench before he had a chance to register what was happening.Â
She spoke, snatching up her purse and her coat as she prepared herself to leave her temper rising by the second. âWhat am I then? Am I just some stateside fun? Was I meant to be the girl you fucked in the US while your wife and kid sit back in Ireland? I mean, I knew you SAMCRO guys were kind of dysfunctional when it came to relationships and monogamy but this really takes the cake on fucked up. I donât know what youâve heard about me from Jackson and all your little friends down at the clubhouse. I know I havenât always been smart about the guys Iâve hooked up with in the past, but I have developed way more of a sense of self worth than I had almost a decade ago. I am no oneâs fucking mistress. Have a nice life ChibsâŠactually, no, you have the life you deserve. You are such an asshole.â
Chibs scrambled up from the bench moving quick to follow her. He reached out taking her hand in his not shocked as she yanked it away her voice raising. âDonât you dare touch me!â
Chibs moved fast moving in front of her placing his hands on her shoulder he fast to speak. âJust give me five minutesâŠJusâ five minutes to explain.â
âExplain what? Youâre a married deadbeat dad, Iâm the other woman. End of story. Good riddance.â She snapped moving aside trying to move past him.
Chibs moved just as fast stepping in front of her. âThereâs more to the story, lass. Jusâ please, hear me out. If ya still hate me after I tell ya the entire story, Iâll fuck off.â
She groaned tempted to tell him that there was not a story on this planet he could tell to explain away the bombshell heâd just dropped on her.
She gazed up at him, hating to admit that she noticed the longing in his eyes. There was a sense of desperation there that she didnât like.Â
She let out a huff crossing her arms over her chest. âYou have five minutes. If I sense even an ounce of bullshit, Iâm leaving and not looking back.â
Chibs nodded his head nodding over to a nearby bench. âCan we sit?â
She scoffed, rolling her eyes. âFine, but the time to go to the bench and sit deducts from the five minute timeline I set.â
He spoke as they sat he sighing. âFiona an I are estranged. I ainâ seen her in close to a decade now. I ainâ even spoke to her on the phone.â
âBut you havenât divorced her and you donât see your kid.â Y/N snapped not entirely impressed if this was his attempt to explain himself.
Chibs cringed fast to speak again. âIt ain' an option⊠neither the divorce or seein my Kerrianne.âÂ
He paused, spotting the look of annoyance on her features as she spoke. âLet me guess? Getting divorced is a huge Catholic no no? Is being a deadbeat dad just a passion project for you?â
Chibs let out a huff shaking his head. âI ainâ exactly practicinâ So, noâ entirely and I ainât a deadbeat by choice.â
She glared at him her words harsh. â Donât you dare try to feed me that my ex is nuts and wonât let me see my kid bullshit. I have heard it from a guy before and I donât believe the story.â
He spoke shaking his head. âThis ainât me being some arsehole da abandonin his kid. Fiona ainât the one keepin me away.â
He paused, clearing his throat knowing he had to tell the entrie story, every painful detail. âI met Fiona when I was sixteen. Iâd moved to Belfast with my ma an my sister Cait. We moved from one housinâ estate to anotherâŠwe were poorâŠMy daâŠhe was a real prickâŠmean bastard who no one missed when he walked outâŠmy ma worked herself to the bone to barely scrape by. I was angry, mad at the world. I was pissed at the government and establishment in general. FionaâŠer family was involved in the cause. Third generationâŠTrue IRA.â
He paused not wanting to meet Y/Nâs eyes as he explained this bit of information. He spoke again, a sigh leaving him. âShe talked bout the causeâŠbout her family. Told me grand tales of the fighâ fer a free Ireland. I was entranced with her storiesâŠentranced with her. By the time we were married I was fully involved in the cause.â
He took another deep breath taking a chance to peek over at Y/N not liking that a hint of fear had joined the rage in her eyes.
He spoke again hoping that even if she understood the history behind Fiona and him that the mention of his involvement with the cause wouldnât destroy things anyhow. âThere was this ladâŠan olâ friend of FionaâsâŠthey were childhood friends. He knew her before I didâŠJimmy OâPhalen. He loved her before I didâŠHe hated meâŠhated that I won FionaâŠhated that she loved meâŠhated my background. He claimed I couldnât be loyal to the cause given my ancestryâŠI wasnâ Irish, so I wasnât as dedicatedâŠI didnâ pay him any mind. I kept on with the cause. Life went on. The years passed by. Fiona an I somehow survived all of our twenties intact..made it to our thirties.â
âKerrianneâŠshe was born and it was like my lifeâŠit got brighter. I loved beinâ her da. I saw it as a chance to be a better lad than my bastard of a da. I stopped beinâ so angryâŠIâŠJimmy Oâ called it a weaknessâŠHe rose up in the ranks of the causeâŠgot himself into a pretty high spot on the food chainâŠHe started sowing distrust among others involvedâŠstarted sayinâ I was a loyalist to the crownâŠsayin I was not truly dedicatedâŠand then when my Kerrianne was barely a year oldâŠJimmy Oâ did this to me.â Chibs explained reaching up to slide along the scars embedded into the flesh along his cheeks.
He paused his throat growing tight still not wanting to meet Y/Nâs eyes. He spoke again a shaky sigh leaving him. âI gotta nother scar, along my belly. He tried to gut me tooâŠit wasâŠI almost diedâŠI losâ a lotta blood, lost consciousness. I think the faceâŠthe attack was a play on my birthplaceâŠGlasgowâŠHeâŠhe changed his mind toward the end I guess, decided not to kill me. Decided to give me a chance to live. Had his crew drop me off at the front steps to a hospital. He excommunicated me from the cause.â
âFionaâŠyour daughter?â Y/N dared to ask amazed she found the words as she tried to absorb everything heâd told her thus far her mind going a million different directions all at once.
Chibs let out a shaky breath the words falling from his lips. âJimmy Oâ took em as hisâŠFer over a decade nowâŠtheyâve been with him. He took my wife anâ raised my little girl as his own. Told me if I ever tried to get em back heâd kill em.â
He shook his head a sigh leaving him. âI wished Iâd died thaâ nighâ fer a long timeâŠ.i wished heâd just killed me instead of keeping me alive to torment me. I joined up with SAMBELâŠBelfast Sons. I knew em from business with the cause. I was their firsâ prospect. They took care of me. I found my place in that world. IâŠI tried to watch my Kerrianne from aâfarâŠJimmy Oâ let me fer a wee bitâŠguess he liked dangling her round meâŠtormenting me with seeinâ her from far awayâŠI lasted in SAMBEL fer a few yearsâŠbut it jusâ it got soâŠit hurâ seeinâ my sweet wee KerrianneâŠnot beinâ able to even go near her. The chance to patch over to SAMCRO came up an I took it. I wanted to escape.â
He dared to look over at Y/N as he spoke, explaining himself. âDivorcinâ Fiona ainâ an option. Jimmy Oâ wonâ even let us speak on the phoneâŠI ainâ seen her since I left Belfast. Ya ainâ my mistress. Ya canât be the other woman when the only reason I ainâ divorced is âcause I canât even talk to my estranged wife to start a divorce.â
Y/N let out a shaky sigh, her mind and her heart feeling heavy. She let everything heâd just told her soak into her brain, her mind going a million different directions.Â
The rage sheâd felt left her body making her feel exhausted. She felt as though sheâd been hit by a mack truck. She felt so drained that all she wanted was to lie down and not move again for a long while.Â
Those pesky voices in the back of her mind that screamed that Chibs would lead her to ruin were so fast to speak up insisting that everything heâd just told her was the only evidence she needed to know that heâd lead her to destruction.
Her heart spoke up easily picking up on the pain in his voice as he recalled the story. She thought of him lying in a hospital recovering from the attack all alone wishing for death knowing heâd lost everything.Â
She thought of his reaction each time sheâd kissed his cheek thus far, the look on his face that told her that no one had shown him that kind of softness. It hit her that sheâd kissed a reminder of all that heâd lost.
She let the realization that he was still legally married roll through her brain debating his insistence that she was not his mistress.Â
She thought of his daughter and his wife, what their lives must be with the man who had harmed Chibs. She questioned why Fiona had not fought for him though she cursed herself for having such a thought. She didnât know how she would react if it had been herâŠif sheâd been a mother.Â
She felt her stomach turn, her mind flashing back to what heâd said about the True IRA. The thought frightened her.Â
She sighed knowing that sheâd already realized that Chibs had most likely done horrible things in the past and would do horrible things in the future. She knew heâd never pretended not to be a criminalâŠat least to her.
She felt a voice in the back of her mind perk up pointing out that Chibs had not given her a reason to think he might harm her. If he was going to harm her he would have killed her that night in the cemetery when she was burying those cremains.
Yes, his past involvement with the cause definitely made her stomach turn and she had a feeling that SAMCRO was still involved given his mention of SAMBEL being involved with the True IRA.
A voice in the back of her head piped up that she wasnât exactly innocent. Sheâd done some pretty heinous things for the club lately.
The realization hit her that she didnât feel afraid of him even with the past misdeeds he may have done for the cause. Even with what heâd doneâŠwhat he would do in the future for the Sons; she was shocked to find that she didnât fear for her life.Â
Chibs felt as though he was the last person on this planet she expected might harm her. Filip Chibs Telford was no monster.Â
She thought of how sweet heâd been on that first date and how lovely he continued to be.Â
A monster wouldnât hold her hand so gently while she spilled her heart about her brother and her past. A monster wouldnât bring her shortbread. A monster would never look at her like she was a fine work of art.Â
Chibs dared to speak knowing he had to spill his heart as a last ditch effort to hopefully not lose her. âI ainâ been interested in a woman fer more than sex since IâŠsince FionaâŠI took advantage of all that came with the clubhouse.â
Y/N cringed decoding that he meant the croweaters.Â
Chibs spoke again, a sigh leaving him. âI let myself get swallowed up by life in the Sons...I didnâ want to feelâŠdinâ want to let my heart get involvedâŠThen I met ya. I didnât expect yaâŠdidnâ expect Iâd like ya as much as I do. All I know is yer the firsâ woman I met in over a decade who I wanâ more than just sex with. I like beinâ with ya. I love talkinâ to ya. I think bout ya more often than not. I feel good with ya around. Iâm havin a good time with ya and I want to see where it takes us. I donât want to lose ya when Iâve jusâ barely gotten to have ya. I know I ainâ conventionalâŠI may not be able to give ya the traditional path mosâ relationships takeâŠI jusâ know that when Iâm with yaâŠI donâ want get swallowed up by chaos to escape the misery. So, all Iâm askinâ fer is the chance even if it ainâ conventional.â
Y/N let the words marinate in her mind. She picked up on what he said about wanting to be swallowed by chaos to escape feeling awful. Wasnât that what had led her to hanging around SAMCRO almost a decade before?
She sighed at the realization that no, Chibs would not exactly be able to offer her the stereotypical relationship path. If he was still married there would be no white wedding in the future.
She furrowed her brow knowing she wasnât exactly in the place in this relationship with him to even consider marriage. The concept of even thinking that far into the future this soon in a relationship that was barely even beginning to bloom was preposterous.Â
She glanced over at Chibs her heart telling her that sheâd had fun with him. She didnât want to sink into misery and isolation when he was around.Â
She recalled the thought sheâd had that first date when she had to leave to attend to the deceased that had fallen into the care of her funeral home.
For the first time in her life she preferred the company of someone living and didnât want to avoid life to tend to the dead.
Her heart screamed that she didnât want to go back to isolating herself and spending all her time with the dead.
She wanted to live. Chibs made her want to live.
She reached out, making up her mind, her hand sliding over his as she spoke. âDo you promise me every single thing you just said to me is the absolute truth? I am not the other woman?â
âI swear to ya. You are not a mistress. I may be a bastard, but I ainâ goin to lie bout that.â Chibs insisted his heart daring to lift just the slightest.
Y/N sighed telling the fears in the back of her head to shut up, deciding to listen to what her heart screamed. âOkay. Iâm hereâŠIâm not going anywhere Filip.â
She paused, shaking her head as she spoke again. âIâve never been the conventional typeâŠI donât expect traditional from youâŠat least not in the white picket fence stereotype ... .I do expect monogamy, Filip. If you want someone whoâs fine sitting by while you get your dick wet somewhere else then Iâm not the girl for you.â
âI am fine with that. I donâ want anyone else, Hen. I havenâ even considered it since we met.â He replied being completely honest with her, surprised to find that he didnât think heâd miss the freedom of not being committed.Â
She paused, deciding to be honest. âJust promise me something FilipâŠSwear to me that Iâm not a cheap replacement or a fill in for your estranged wife. I canât be a substitute for what you want ... .I canât just be the girl you bide your time with while you wait for what you really want to come back to you. I have already filled the role as a substitute pussy for a guy in the past. I refuse to do that again. I donât want to be used to fill a void in a man. Iâm worth more than that.âÂ
Chibs furrowed his brow surprised by the anger that bubbled up in him at her admission about this man from her past.Â
He gave her hand a squeeze, the words leaving him without hesitation. âYer not fillin any void fer meâŠya ainâ a substitute fer Fiona. I ainâ bidin my time with ya. I want ya fully and completely fer exactly who ya are. Ya ainâ filling a spot fer anyone else.âÂ
She let out a shaky breath, her heart insisting that this was all she needed to know.
She leaned in her lips close to his cheek as she spoke. âIs this okay?â
He widened his eyes as he realized what she was asking. He nodded his head quick to reply. âYes, please.â
She pressed her lips to his cheek he surprised by the dampness gathering at the corners of his eyes.
The kiss remained lingering, Y/N reaching up to wipe a stray tear from his face as she finally pulled back.
She spoke her voice soft, finding some humor in the moment. âOkay, next date no trauma. We arenât allowed to cry on the third date.â
Chibs let the laugh leave him, he nodding his head agreeing wholeheartedly.
He wrapped an arm around her waist not helping but to tease her the horrible mood heâd been in all afternoon lifting. âSo, Iâm gettin a third date?â
She leaned into his embrace a small laugh leaving her. âSo long as you promise we donât cry.â
âAye no tears from me.â He insisted, squeezing her all the tighter.
She relaxed against him, her eyes closing her body feeling lighter than it had felt in so long.
She knew this was far from conventional but she wasnât lying. Sheâd never been a conventional girl.
You Are In Love
Jack Abbot x Reader
Warnings: canon-typical medical descriptions, a dad joke, VERY FLUFFY
Description: Jack needs the reader to help him with a VIP patient, but she soon learns about his chosen family.
ââ
Jack Abbot was the reason you wanted to go into emergency medicine. Watching him under pressure was like watching an Olympian in their medal-winning sport. He handled every case with control and diligence, and that lured you into the specialty even more. It only took one medical school rotation with him to know that you wanted to play the game.
So now, in your third month of your internship, you spent nearly every moment with Jack Abbot on the night shift. You rarely had a different attending. The scheduling gods seemed to be in your favor. Of course, you had gotten to know everyone else on staff. You had made friends with the other residents and attendings. Dana had become your favorite charge nurse. Even the social workers were happy to see you walk through the doors.
You arrived an hour early for your night shift, hoping to practice some more suturing in the skills lab before shift change. Just as you were about to escape the doctors lounge and head to the lab, a voice called out behind you.
âHey, kid, I could use your help.â
You turned to see Jack pulling a pair of gloves off and tossing them in the trash. âOh, hi.â You replied as you walked toward him. âWhat are you doing here this early?â
Jack raised an eyebrow, that smug asshole smile on his face. âI could ask you the same.â
You shrugged. âI was gonna go to the skills lab and suture. But not if you need me.â
He nodded and pressed a hand on your back as he lead you to one of the Central rooms. âWe have a VIP.â He explained.
He swung the curtain open to reveal a little girl with long, dark hair and big brown eyes. Youâd seen those eyes beforeâŠ
âUncle Jack!â The five year old exclaimed at the sight of your attending.
It was like magic, the way Jackâs usual stoic demeanor turned into one that would rival a Disney hero. âHey, princess!â He returned her enthusiasm, a wide grin on his face. He dropped to his knees in front of the child and grabbed her tiny hands in his. âWhat are you doing here, huh?â He took a quick glance at the mother, who was holding a small blue bundle in her arms.
âIâm hurt.â The child replied, albeit vaguely.
The young woman let out a strained sigh. âWe were at the park, and Eliza jumped out of the swing when she saw some older kids do it. Landed on her arm.â She explained.
Jack nodded, giving a donât-blame-yourself look to her. Then his eyes flicked back to Eliza. âCan I see your arm, please?â He asked, a voice so gentle that it had to have been someone elseâs. A moment of hesitation from the child. Then a head-tilt from the silver-haired man. âUncle Jack is gonna make it all better.â He promised.
That seemed to convince her because she slowly, feebly presented her swollen arm. Jack delicately held the arm in his hands and examined it.
âBump her up to next in line on X-ray. Weâll get her some IV morphine to help her relax. Could need realignment and screws.â He said to you.
Just as you were about to walk out of the room, you bumped into someone rushing into the room. A mumbled apology was the only thing you heard before a shrill âDaddy!â
You turned to see Michael Robinavitch kneeling to the ground in front of the little girl. âHey, sweetheart!â He greeted.
Oooh. VIP. This was Robbyâs family. The patient was Robbyâs daughter. You left while the family reunited to order the X-Ray. When you turned to enter the room again, Dana was leading Robbyâs wife, who held a tiny baby, to the cafeteria.
âX-Ray order is in. Next in line.â You announced to the attendings.
Jack gave you a thumbs up. He was sorting out the materials needed for IV morphine. He pulled the butterfly needle out of the packaging, and like clockwork, Eliza began to cry. Robby knelt to meet his daughterâs eyes, the ones that were a perfect mirror of his. âSweetheart, look at me. Look at me.â He whispered. âWe have to get you the medicine so your arm will stop hurting, okay? Just a quick poke.â
Eliza shook her head, more tears streaming down her face. âDaddy, please, donât do it.â She begged. âDonât hurt me.â
And if youâd never seen a manâs heart break in real time, the look on Robbyâs face would be ingrained in your memory forever. His body seemed to go limp at his daughterâs words, unable to insert the needle if he tried. Jack quickly intervened, kneeling next to Robby. âDaddy isnât gonna hurt you.â He assured the child. âHeâs gonna hold you while Uncle Jack gives you the medicine. Does that sound okay?â
Eliza still continued to cry. You remember being her age and having a paralyzing fear of needles. So, you stepped forward to distract from the two pathetic men on the ground. âHey, baby. Iâm gonna show you how it works, okay?â You said.
You grabbed the blue elastic tie from the tray and wrapped it around your forearm. âFirst, Uncle Jack is gonna wrap this around your arm. Itâs gonna give you a big hug for a few minutes!â
You picked up the alcohol swab package and opened it. âThen, he is just going to give your hand a little bath to get it all clean. Like this.â You said, swiping the wipe across the back of your hand. âSee? All clean!â
You tossed the wipe and grabbed the J-tip, pressing it on the cleaned part of your hand. âThen, heâs going to give you a stamp that makes your hand tingle. Whatâs your favorite soda?â You continued.
Eliza followed your every move with an intense curiosity. âSprite.â She sniffled.
You smiled. âWhen Uncle Jack gives you the stamp, itâs going to sound like youâre opening a Sprite can. Itâs just air.â You explained.
Eliza nodded, rubbing chubby fingers across her wet eyes. You reached for the butterfly needle after placing the J-tip back on the tray. âLast, heâs going to let this little butterfly give you a kiss where the stamp was.â You finished, inserting the needle into one of your own veins. âSee? It doesnât hurt!â You lied through your teeth. It always hurt more to get an IV on the back of your hand, but that was Elizaâs best bet.
You yanked the blue tie off your arm, then removed the butterfly needle. âThink you can let Uncle Jack try now?â You asked.
Eliza didnât answer, but she didnât protest either. You smiled, motivated mostly by pride, and looked to your senior attendings. Both men stared back at you. Robby with a look of relief, mostly because you got his daughter to calm down. But JackâŠyou couldnât read the look on his face. He broke your gaze to pat Robby on the back, standing up with him.
âAlright, princess, letâs get you that medicine.â He said, grabbing a fresh butterfly needle.
Robby sat on the bed, crossing his legs, and pulled Eliza carefully into his lap. He cradled the little girl in his arms, using his free hand to smooth her dark hair as she whimpered. âShhâŠDaddyâs got you.â He soothed.
Eliza melted into her fatherâs embrace, blinking slowly when he brushed stray tears from her reddened cheeks. Jack tenderly grabbed her uninjured arm and wrapped the blue tie around her forearm still loose. âAlright, Eliza. Youâre about to feel that big hug, okay?â He explained, then pulled the blue tie snug.
A small sound of discomfort escaped the child, but she remained docile in her fatherâs arms. Jack traced the tiny veins on the back of her hand and found his target. When he turned around to reach for an alcohol swab, you already had it ready for him with an outstretched hand. For a brief moment, Jack was caught off guard, but he took the swab from your palm, fingers brushing against the sensitive skin for a beat longer than normal.
âNow, letâs give your hand that cold bath.â He said.
Jack rubbed the wipe across his tiny workspace, and Eliza let out the smallest, softest giggle. Robby smiled, probably for the first time since he stepped foot into the room. âThat tickle? Yeah?â He teased. Eliza nodded, just a little bit.
âYou ready for that Sprite can sound?â Jack asked, once again reaching, and you already met him halfway with the J-tip.
âYeah.â Eliza whispered, her face half nuzzled into Robbyâs chest, but still enough to keep an eye on Jackâs movements.
Jack placed the J-tip over the vein he wanted, and just like you said, it sounded like a can of Sprite opening, minus the sugary fizz that followed. Eliza jerked her hand pack at the odd sensation of carbon dioxide shooting across her skin. Robby reached his finger under her palm for her to grasp, and she did, just like she always had since she was born.
âSee? That wasnât so bad.â He said softly.
Jack rubbed the spot on the back of her hand. âOnce it starts working, weâre gonna let that butterfly land on it, okay?â He explained.
âAnd it will give me a kiss?â Eliza asked, looking to you, her source of information.
Jack and Robby both chuckled, and the latter pressed a kiss to her hair. âYeah, just like that.â He replied.
Eliza giggled, but in her joy, she shifted and moved her broken arm. The laughs quickly turned to screams of pain again, and Jack winced.
âOh, you gotta be still, princess. Weâre almost ready for the medicine.â He said. Then, he leaned in, like he was trying to keep his voice from Robbyâs earshot. âYou know, if you keep being a brave girl, once youâre all healed up, you can come to my house and go swimming.â His voice was playfully sly.
The cries reduced, just a little. âI can?â She blubbered.
Jack nodded. âSure. As long as your mommy and daddy say itâs okay.â He replied, glancing up at Robby, hoping he didnât just make a promise outside of his power.
Robby smiled and nodded. âOf course. You need to show Uncle Jack how you can swim without floaties now.â He said.
Jackâs eyes blew comically wide. âWithout floaties? Only big girls can swim without floaties.â
Eliza nodded, her bottom lip still quivering, but a glint of pride was in her eyes. The same one youâd seen in Robbyâs eyes many times. âCan Abby come, too?â She asked.
Jack nodded, a smile playing at his lips. âAbsolutely. Weâll have a pool party.â He reached back for the butterfly needle, and once again, the brush of your fingers against his. He kept it out of Elizaâs view, continuing to hold her hand. âYour daddy and I will grill some hamburgers and hot dogs. You can teach Abby how to swim. Weâll invite Nana, too.â
Eliza didnât even flinch when Jack inserted the butterfly needle. You carefully concealed your morphine syringe and connected it to the line. But just as you could see her entire body relax in Robbyâs arms from the push of meds, she looked to you with those big brown eyes. âAre you gonna come to the pool party?â She asked.
You froze, unsure of how to answer. Does an invitation from a five-year-old have enough warrant to show up at your bossâ house? Jack placed a hand on your back, lower than he probably meant to. âYes, sheâll be there, too.â He confirmed for you.
You snapped your head to his direction. Those hazel eyes bore into you, and you couldnât find the words to respond. In that silence, he winked at you, a smug smile on his face.
âUncle Jack, sheâs pretty.â The little voice broke your small moment.
Your eyes widened, heat crawling up your neck. Robby let out an involuntary sound, a mixture of a laugh and a choke. But Jack never looked away from you. In fact, he doubled down with, âI know.â
Before you could melt away in a puddle of embarrassment and giddiness, the curtain swung open, revealing Dana and Robbyâs wife, still cradling a tiny bundle.
âNana!â Eliza sluggishly squealed.
Dana leaned over and gently tickled Elizaâs shoulders. âThereâs my girl!â She exclaimed.
You tilted your head, confused by the connection. âNana?â You questioned.
Robby chuckled. âEliza couldnât say âDanaâ when she was little, so she kept calling her Nana.â He explained.
Dana gave you a stern but playful look. âKeep in mind that I am not old enough to be a real Nana.â She stated.
Jack raised an eyebrow and crossed his arms. âI know plenty of people your age who are grandmothers.â He said.
Dana pointed a finger at him and jabbed his chest. âHow would you like to lose another foot?â She threatened.
Your jaw dropped at the comment. That wasnât allowed, right? Surely, that crossed some kind of line. But Jack just chuckled and swiped her hand away.
âIâd love to. Iâll be one step closer to becoming a robot.â He replied. âLiterally.â
Robbyâs wife groaned at the unfortunate pun. âPlease, stop. I already have to listen to Robby and his dad jokes.â She begged.
Robby grinned proudly. âYeah, leave it to the professionals.â He teased, but his eyes moved to the bundle his wife was holding. âHowâs my little man doing?â He asked.
She smiled and moved to sit on the bed next to Robby and Eliza. âHeâs been a sleepy boy all day. Better than testing out his lungs though.â She leaned her head on her husbandâs shoulder as she spoke. âHowâs my big girl?â
Eliza grinned sheepishly when her mom reached to gently pinch her rosy cheeks. âUncle Jack said we can have a pool party at his house.â She stated, beginning to slur her words in sleepiness. âHe said Nana can come. And he said Abby can come.â
Dana chuckled. âStill calling him Abby, huh?â She asked.
Robby smiled, shifting so that Eliza could rest horizontally as she began to doze off. âWeâre working on it.â He answered. âSomewhere she learned that nickname. Canât imagine from who.â He joked.
Jack huffed and moved to where Robbyâs wife sat, offering his pinky to the baby boyâs tiny hand, activating his palmar grasp reflex. âHave they been desecrating our name, buddy?â He asked, a lilt in his voice. âUs Abbots are fighters. We donât take shit from anybody.â
Danaâs swat at Jackâs shoulder for cursing in front of Eliza and his following defense of âSheâs asleep!â didnât distract you from your new piece of information.
âHeâs an Abbot?â You questioned, a feeling of warmth in your chest.
Robbyâs wife smiled. âMichael Abbot Robinavitch. We stuck with Michael for about a week, butâŠâ She trailed off, looking to her husband.
Robbyâs shoulders hunched a bit. âShe calls me Michael when Iâm in trouble. I got a little scared every time she said his name.â He admitted, but his smile remained. âSo we settled on Abbot.â
Jack carefully cradled Abbot as Robbyâs wife passed him over. His tanned biceps that strained against the sleeves of his scrub top made the baby look incredibly small. He slowly walked over to you, his right foot stepping heavier as usual, his eyes focused on the baby. A deep smile graced his lips. And just on the edges framing the smile were huge dimples. You wanted to save that image forever. You brushed a finger against the babyâs tiny hand, smiling when he moved in response.
Meanwhile, Robby was elbowed by his wife, who exchanged an excited but knowing glance with Dana at the sight of you and Jack sharing that unintentionally tender moment. All he did was nod in response, eyebrows raised in a silent confirmation.
âWhy Abbot? Is Jack that important?â You teased.
Dana threw her hands up in exasperation. âThank you!â She said. âThatâs what I said. Iâm still waiting for a little Dana.â
âWorking on it.â Robby said with a wink, quickly receiving an elbow in the ribs from his wife.
âMichael!â His wife hissed.
Robby cowered slightly at his birth name. Jack nodded his head towards them. âSee? Thatâs why this is Abbot.â He said.
You giggled and gently ran a hand over the babyâs soft hair near his forehead, afraid to venture too far back towards the fontanelle. âWell, Abbot is very cute.â You complimented.
A simultaneous âThank youâ filled the room. One genuine, from Robbyâs wife. The other facetious, from Jack. Laughter filled the room, and you felt oddly a part of a family. Their family.
Perlah entered the room with a pediatric wheelchair. âX-ray is ready for Eliza.â She said, smiling at the sight before her.
Robby stood carefully, holding his daughter snug against his chest. âIâll go with her. We can walk.â He said and followed Perlah out of the room.
As if it were a snap back to reality, Jack walked back over to Robbyâs wife and carefully transferred Abbot back to her arms. âIâm gonna go check on that DUI kid in Central Four.â He said before looking over to you. âGo ahead and get the cast materials ready. Sheâs gonna want pink.â
Jack left the room, holding onto the ends of his stethoscope as he walked. You found yourself frozen for a moment, processing everything that had happened in the last thirty minutes or so. Someone cleared their throat, and you snapped your head in that direction, embarrassment coursing through your veins.
âOh, Iâm so sorry.â You said, moving to the drawers of the room quickly to grab the liner and plaster.
Robbyâs wife looked to Dana with a smirk and a raised eyebrow. Dana nodded, intercepting her question in the air.
âSo, what do you think of Abbot?â She asked.
You smiled, bringing the supplies back to the tray near the bed. âHe looks just like Robby.â You answered.
Dana rolled her eyes. âNo, not Dana Jr.â She deadpanned, then nodded her head toward the Pitt. âThe Lieutenant Colonel.â
Your hands froze where they were, sorting out the supplies. Slowly you looked up, and you were met with both women staring intently at you. âOh, Doctor AbbotâŠâ You corrected yourself. âHeâs nice.â
âDo you think heâs cute?â Robbyâs wife immediately responded.
Dana gave her a look of way-to-blow-our-cover. You let out a nervous laugh. âI mean, yeah. But heâs way older than me. And we work together.â You answered, using your answers to ground yourself as to why your crush was a dead end.
Robbyâs wife shrugged. âSo? Robby is almost 20 years older than me. And we work together.â She countered.
You tilted your head. âWait, you work here? In emergency?â You asked.
She smiled and nodded. âYeah. Iâve been on maternity leave.â She explained.
âOhhhh.â You drew out, finally connecting the dots.
Dana smiled. âSee? So what are your other excuses?â She pried.
You laughed slightly and shrugged. âI guess I donât know if heâs interested.â You replied.
The two women shared another glance, debating on revealing any other information. âBut you are?â Robbyâs wife asked.
You smiled slightly, looking down at your hands. âWho wouldnât be?â
The conversation ended there when Robby reentered the room with a slightly awake Eliza. âDistal radius fracture. No surgery.â He announced.
His wife let out a sigh of relief and smiled when her husband sat next to her again, still cradling the little girl. âThat means we can all go home tonight.â She said, pressing her forehead to Robbyâs shoulder.
â
After you followed Jackâs careful instruction while shaping the cast on Elizaâs arm, the little girl begged everyone to sign it. By the time she left with her family, there was a âMommyâ, âDaddyâ, âNanaâ, and your name with a smiley face on the hot pink wrapping. And as soon as you finished writing your name, Jack had snatched the sharpie from your hand, scrawling âUncle Jackâ right next to your signature.
As you watched the Robinavitches leave the Pitt, you found yourself smiling. You wanted that. The devoted parents, the precious children, the caring friends who became family.
You knew Jack was approaching by the uneven foot pattern, but you didnât turn around. âYou think Iâm pretty?â You asked.
He stood by your side, brushing his thick shoulder against your frame, looking down at you with a trace of a smile. âIâd be a fool to think otherwise.â He answered honestly.
You looked up to meet his gaze. Those bourbon eyes were intoxicating, but you fought to maintain eye contact. âYouâre really great with kids.â You complimented. âEliza loves you.â
His smile deepened to a sincere one you werenât used to seeing. âThank you.â
The stare off continued. âDo you want kids?â You blurted out, and you nearly clamped your hand over your mouth at the word vomit.
Jack tilted his head, smile unfaltering. âIf I find the right person to have them with.â He replied, leaning down closer to you just slightly. âBefore I turn to dust.â
You laughed and nudged him with your shoulder. He laughed with you and crossed his arms, the muscles rippling across his skin. You didnât notice when he leaned down, his lips dangerously close to your ear.
âWhat you did in there with Eliza. Walking her through the process. Got her to stop crying. Good job.â He whispered lowly.
The hair on your neck stood at attention at the praise, and you could feel his hot breath on your skin. You tried to brush off the feeling. âThanks, Doctor Abbot.â You replied.
His face twitched when you called him by his last name, like he forgot you were his intern and not his. âJack.â He corrected you.
You looked up to him again, taking in another drink of his eyes. There was vulnerability this time. âJack.â You repeated in a whisper. âI didnât know you had dimples.â
It was Jackâs turn to get flustered. âWhat do you mean?â He asked, and you could see the red creeping up his freckled neck.
You gently poked at his cheeks where the divots had appeared earlier. âYou have dimples when you smile. Itâs really cute.â You teased.
You could see the muscles in his face actively working to hold back a smile. He shook his head. âI donât know what youâre talking about. I donât smile.â He answered as seriously as he could.
You wrapped your hands around his bicep and rested your head on his shoulder. âItâs okay. I wonât tell anyone. Itâll be our secret.â
And the smile Jack held back flooded onto his face. Dimples and all. He placed a hand over yours and pressed a gentle kiss to your hair. Nobody said another word. You didnât have to. You could hear it in the silence.
ââ
A/N: this is probably gonna get a Part 2 featuring the pool party because I canât help myself. Also this can technically be a Robby x Reader fic because I intentionally didnât give his wife a name so you can have the best of both worlds here đ
â” The Walk-In Appointment:Â May 1909. Clara learns to walk a bit later than her twin, but once she does thereâs no stopping her from following her big brother around wherever he goes.Â
â” Tired of the Wait: 1912. When Tommy brings his sisters downtown with him to run an errand and Ada decides to run one of her own, Tommy and Clara both grow tired of waiting on their sister.
â” Interminable Moonlight: Tommy meets Greta by the cut in the moonlight.
â” Our Bloody Idiot: 1913. Tommy may very well be a bloody idiot, but Clara still thinks he deserves a piece of cake.
┠The Horsewoman: 1913. Clara and Finn are ready to start school, but Clara is a bit hesitant. Thankfully, her older brother Tommy knows how to negotiate.
â” The Devilâs Footsteps: 1913. Tommyâs taken on quite a bit of responsibility in caring for his younger siblings. He never expected that responsibility would require him explaining the inappropriateness of tossing erasers at people.Â
â” For Old and Young Alike:Â Set in 1913 and 1922. All Clara Shelby wants for Christmas is a little quality time with her favorite people.Â
â” The Road that Leads to Trouble:Â 1914. The Shelby dinner table is rarely a thing one would call quiet or calm, and itâs no different on the night the family learns their youngest has been kissing boys out on the lane.
â” Like the Leaves:Â 1914. In the wake of Gretaâs passing, Tommyâs little sister offers him some comfort.
â” Things They Left Behind - Parts 1-3: 1918. John, Arthur, and Tommy have just returned from France to rediscover the things theyâve left behind: Ada, a set of twins, the business, and a few treasures their youngest sister has been keeping safe for them. *COMPLETED*
â” The Shelby Inheritance: 1918. When Clara and Finn are being teased at school, Tommy helps them get things sorted.
â” Thank you. I can take it from here: 1918. Clara Shelby wants to bake her brother a special treat for his birthday but needs a bit of assistance in gathering ingredients. Â
â” Little Lady Blinder Series: 1919. Clara Shelby is a kind girl, a smart girl, a well-behaved little sister in a town full of gangsters and ruffians. With the girlâs raising thus far being such a simple task, the Shelby family is left unprepared for all that accompanies a perfectly respectable little girl growing up and becoming a lady among Peaky Blinders.
â” The Shelby Womenâs Alliance: 1920. Clara navigates the first milestone of puberty on her own in a house full of clueless brothers, keeping it all to herself until Ada comes at the weekend and takes over, managing their brother and formally inducting her sister into the Shelby Womanâs Alliance.
â” Warmth: 1920. It takes a special sort of person to fall asleep during a birthday party at the pub. Turns out it takes a special kind of person to wake them too.
â” A Small Comfort: 1921. When Claraâs horse gets sick, Tommy tries to shield her from seeing the worst of it, but Clara has her own plans.
â” Seeing Stars: 1921. When Finn, Isiah, and Clara get themselves in to trouble with Polly, theyâre left in the church to wait on their comeuppance.
â” Kind Eyes:Â 1922. Clara finds herself in Tommyâs office, studying a picture on his desk, searching for a resemblance to a mother who looks nothing like her.
â” Something: 1922. Tommy has sensed a change in the way his youngest sister relates to the boys of Small Heath.
â” Give Away: 1922. Itâs a family dayâArthur and Lindaâs wedding dayâbut rather than celebrating, Arthurâs got Tommy thinking about something heâd never consciously given much thought toâtheir Claraâs wedding and who would be giving her away.
┠A Candle in the Darkness: 1923. Clara may be growing older, but she still needs her brother Tommy from time to time.
â” The Council:Â 1923. The boyâs reaction to fifteen-year-old Clara Shelby being friends with the Watery Lane boys.Â
â” Close-knit: 1923. Itâs Christmas 1923, otherwise known as the year of Claraâs Christmas sweaters.
â” Youâre Not Me:Â 1924. When Claraâs running herself ragged preparing for an exam, Tommy steps in to reassure her.
â” Youâve always been naive: 1925. After an epic row, Tommy allows Clara to stay more regularly on Watery Lane with a few conditions, one of which is a mid-week meeting at the Midland Hotel to check in.
â” My Person:Â 1925. Clara and Isiah havenât talked in weeks but after a drunken night filled with a break up and scrapping in Small Heath, Isiah insists on going out to Arrow House to see her.Â
â” Bloody Rotten: 1925ish. Claraâs feeling bloody rotten, but thankfully her brother arrives home just in time to look after her.
â” A Big, Beautiful Fellow: 1926. Tommy didnât set out to bribe his sister and win back her good graces, but when the opportunity presents itselfâŠ
â” They Waited for You:Â 1927. Tommyâs been away in London and Clara tries to bring him home to Arrow House, to be present for his son and daughter, and for her.
â” Stars in the Sky:Â 1927. Clara Shelby is feeling overwhelmed with trying to balance university, family, and business responsibilities, but that doesnât stop her from noticing something is off with her brother. When have her own problems ever stopped her from trying to fix someone elseâs?
â” Gestures of Fairness: 1927. Thomas Shelby isnât ticklish, at least thatâs what a few decades of Claraâs intel says. Charles and Clara test the theory of his god-like ability to remain stoic in the face of writhing fingers.Â
â” Five of Swords: 1929. An evening of tarot cards and forgiveness.
â” A Little Raven: 1930ish (AU). Lizzie and Clara have a chat about Lizzieâs concerns, for the children sheâs raising without much help from their father, the baby growing in her belly, the twins so eager to prove themselves, and the Shelby curse. Clara tries to offer a bit of comfort, but its Tommy coming home early on a Friday that assuages her concerns.
┠Family Meeting - Modern AU Tommy, Isiah, and Clara
â” LITTLE LADY BLINDER MASTERLIST â”
Synopsis: After taking a bad fall, Y/N gets rushed to the ED of Pittsburg Trauma Medical Hospital only to come face to face with a man she had a one-night stand with, and who ghosted her that same morning without a word - Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch. As if her bad day couldn't get any worse than it was...
Pairing: Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch x fem!Reader (age-gap relationship (Reader is 26, Robby is implied 46-48))
Genre: angst, fluff, SMUT
Warnings: descriptions of wounds (open breaks), puke, swearing, etc., SMUT
Word count: 13,320 (yeah, this sort of started out like a cute little chaotic story and became... this. I might make more parts to these two, people like it enough, because I already have some ideas, and ideas for other stories too also, let's please pretend like Robby didn't have the worst shift of his life and everyone is happy and alive :) )
Please don't copy my work or repost it onto other platforms. all of the characters belong to HBO Max.
In all honesty, Y/N thought Sara was overreacting. There was no need to be hauled to the ER on a Monday morning, at seven AM. So, what if sheâd slipped in the shower? So, what if sheâd hit her head against the towel rack? So, what if sheâd sprained her ankle? Y/N could just pop a couple of Tylenol and be on her merry way, but no.
           When Sara had heard the thud and the subsequent crash of shampoo and conditioner bottles, sheâd rushed inside the bathroom only to find Y/N sprawled out in all her naked glory. She cursed the stupid bathroom latch their landlord refused to change.
After Sara had had her fill of laughter, she helped Y/N stand, get somewhat dressed (a loose cotton shirt and some shorts), and helped her hobble down the stairs of their apartment, her leg in a make-shift splint of dishtowels and left-over wood paneling from an IKEA dresser.
           A groan of protest escaped her as Sara parked in the hospital parking lot and rushed to the passenger door, opening it for Y/N and helping her get out.
           âYou are worse than my mother,â she huffed as she leaned her weight onto her good leg. âI am completely fine.â
           Sara sighed, and Y/N rolled her eyes, knowing what was coming. âMy love,â she said. âMy other half. The Yin to my Yang, the milk to my matcha. My partner in crime for whom I would kill and/or dispose of a body. I can quite literally see the fucking bone sticking out of your lower leg.â
           âItâs a sprain,â Y/N gritted through clenched teeth.
           âItâs an open fucking break and the fact that you refused to have an ambulance called, boggles my fucking mind, yet here we are.â
           To that, Y/N had nothing to say, but still, she thought Sara was being way too overdramatic. And honestly, if she kept mentioning the real situation of her sprain, making her remember the sound of the snap, how it had been the worst sound sheâd ever heard, and Y/N had spent more than twenty years listening to her brother singing in the shower, before she moved to Pittsburg for her job, she would put Sara in a hospital bed herself. And then they could be the ED besties.
           But the worst was the pain that came when Sara reminded Y/N of why she had to go to the hospital.
           It had been a miracle no neighbor had called the cops or the EMTs themselves, though it didnât necessarily comfort Y/N either. If she could scream bloody murder like that and nobody batted an eye, it didnât say anything good about the complex they lived in.
           One look down had confirmed Y/Nâs worst fears â she had, in fact, broken her leg. Not only that, it was an open break where part of her lower femur was sticking right out of the meat of her calf. For the first few moments, sheâd been in such a shock, that the only thought running through her head was â I look like a poor manâs version of a Disney turkey leg. Then sheâd started screaming. And that had made her puke.
           Right then and there, still lying half out of the shower, half on the floor, sheâd emptied her stomach. There hadnât been much in it, just the cup of water sheâd drank when sheâd awoken, but still. At least Y/N had been in the bathroom when it had happened. Tiles were easier to clean up than carpet, and she already felt bad enough Sara would have to wash the floor.
           But now, as some form of punishment, no doubt, Sara was helping Y/N hobble towards the emergency department of Pittsburg Trauma Medical Hospital, when a sad-looking man noticed them and rushed inside, grabbing a wheelchair, and getting by Y/Nâs side in a matter of a second.
           âHere, sit down.â The man, Dennis Whitaker he introduced himself, took hold of her other bicep and moved the wheelchair behind her.
           âIâm fine,â she groaned. âIâm not an invalid. I can make it inside on my own. Besides, that wheelchair could be used for someone that actually needs it.â
           âYou actually need it.â Sara levelled a gaze at her. âAnd I will make you a fucking invalid because I will clock you so hard in the head, you will have a concussion, if you donât have one from the fall.â
            For a tense second, Y/N stood (or wobbled) her ground, Y/E/C eyes locked onto Saraâs hazel ones which were slowly narrowing with each passing moment until she cursed and said, âAlright fine.â Together Whitaker and Sara lowered the injured woman into the wheelchair. âGod, I hate your mom-stares.â
           âItâs the only way to get you to do anything in terms of taking care of yourself.â
           âItâs not!â Y/N protested. âIâll have you know, I made myself an omelet yesterday for breakfast. Veggies and all.â
           âYeah, after I berated you that a stale Coke from three days ago, isnât actual breakfast.â Sara walked side by side as Whitaker pushed the wheelchair into the madhouse that was the emergency department.
           It was fascinating to observe the situation as an outsider â nurses and doctors were like level-headed owls, their heads swiveling this way and that way, as they assessed the patients and their statuses, while the residents and patients themselves, not all, but quite a bunch, were like headless chickens, rushing around and trying to prioritize afflictions or become a priority to the doctors.
           Codes were called left and right, people moved from one side to the other, snapping on gloves and donning protective gear, and in the center of it all, was the command post â the nurseâs station which Whitaker had wheeled her to.
           âDana, is there a room available?â he addressed a slim, blonde woman, probably the one in charge.
           âRoom six is available, whatâs the, oh,â she stopped mid-sentence as she noticed Y/N and the bone sticking out of her leg.
           âI donât mind waiting,â she gave her a sheepish smile. âThereâs probably loads of people before me. Besides, itâs just a sprain.â
           âWell, thatâs probably one of the worst sprains Iâve ever seen,â Dana deadpanned as she motioned with her head towards someone behind them.
           Y/N shrugged. âWell, I am just special like that.â
           âYeah, maybe in the head,â Sara grumbled as she gave the charge nurse all the necessary info for the moment. âSpeaking of which â she also hit her head when she went down with her⊠sprain.â
           Danaâs lips quirked up as she hummed and tapped something on her iPad, weaving around the table, leaving Whitaker to follow her like a lost puppy as they moved to the room Y/N was now assigned to. âWeâll schedule you a CT ASAP.â
           Y/N turned her head to look at her best friend. âGiven how this little trip was your idea, youâre paying off my medical debt.â
           âJust let these nice doctors and nurses take care of you.â Sara pinched the bridge of her nose. âBecause quite honestly, Iâm not too into the idea of searching for a new roommate. Do you know how many creeps Iâd have to go through? And what if the one normal one I find has a fatal flaw?â
           âSuch as?â
           âI dunno. What if they hate musicals?â
           âOh, the tragedy.â Y/N pressed a hand against her chest as they wheeled her inside the room.
           There was another presence there, a young doctor, probably late twenties or early thirties. A cute little dimple on his chin, dark hair, and blue eyes. Reminded her a bit of the guy from Air Bud, if she squinted a bit.
           âMy nameâs Dr. Langdon,â he introduced himself, giving Y/N a reassuring smile. âAnd this is Dennis Whitaker, our fourth-year medical student. Would it be alright, if he and another one of our residents observed the situation today? This is a teaching hospital, but it is well within your rights to refuse.â
           She shook her head. âObserve away. Not much I can hide.â
           âAlright, thank you.â He ventured out for a quick second only to come back with a young woman who introduced herself as Dr. Mel King, a second-year resident. âOkay,â Dr. Langdon said. âLetâs get you onto the bed and see what weâre working with.â
           The three medical professionals surrounded her and helped Y/N move from the wheelchair on the paper-covered bed, without jostling her leg too much, but it was enough.
           So far, sheâd been able to take her mind off the pain by distracting herself â she bickered with Sara, recited the script of The Hunger Games movie in her head while fantasising about a blond Josh Hutcherson, because Peeta was just elite like that. Sheâd even gone so far as to go over the division table, but now, as more attention was being placed on the broken leg, it started to hurt more and more. It was like Y/N mind-over-mattered an itching spot left by a mosquito by chanting âItâs not itchyâ over and over in her head, but the second she stopped, the itching came back in full force.
           âSo,â Dr. Dimple, she nicknamed him in her head, started. âWhat happened?â
           Y/N sighed, looking at the ceiling. âCan I just give you the not-humiliating version and say Iâm a klutz?â
           He gave her a charming smile as a nurse prepped an IV line. âUnfortunately, we need to know beyond âclumsyâ. The environment where this accident happened is important.â
"It could introduce pathogens into the wound," Mel, as Dr. King had requested to be called, said.
           Y/N chewed on her bottom lip before muttering, âI slipped in the shower and sprained my leg. And then got assaulted by some shampoo and conditioner bottles⊠and then I threw up.â
           âAnd donât forget the head!â Sara said from the door where she still stood, observing the work happening.
           Y/N threw her a knowing smirk. âNever do. And I havenât had any complaints yet.â
           âThe throwing up could indicate a concussion,â Whitaker said. âDanaâs already scheduled a CT. And in terms of the leg, you actually have an open fra-,â
           Y/N took hold of Whitakerâs bicep like heâd done so for her when heâd helped wheel her inside the emergency department. âPlease listen to me when I say this â unless you want me to hurl all over you, and trust me, I can aim, the only thing I have, is a sprain. Got it?â
           He gulped and nodded, stepping away from Y/N like a man whoâd gotten sprayed by too many fluids in one day and didnât want to be anywhere near the danger zone. âLoud and clear Miss Sprained-Ankle-Woman.â
           âGood.â The nausea thatâd started creeping up her belly subsided. âBecause I can deal with you people having to do things, but if I have to actually listen to any of it, or think about it, I will be sick.â
           âWe can give you some anti-nausea medication for that,â Dr. Dimple soothed. âBut first, weâll get you a CT, and then weâll have a surgery room prepped for you because you need to get this reset as quickly as possible. You will probably have some metal plates and screws to hold the uh⊠sprain together, and then a cast for about six to eight weeks.â
           âGreat,â Y/N grumbled. âThis is just fucking great. This is exactly how I wanted to spend my vacation, before, oh⊠oh, absolutely not.â Y/Nâs eyes widened to a comically large size as she looked past her room and into the waiting area. âSara, you need to get me out of here right the fuck now.â
           âHey, woah, what is going on?â Dr. Langdon rushed to where Y/N was trying to get the IV line out. âPlease don't do that, you'll only hurt yourself more.â
           âY/N, whatâs going on?â Saraâs brows were pulled tight in a frown, as she tried to help Dr. King get the oxygen monitor back onto her finger. âYou need surgery, for fuckâs sake.â
           âItâs him,â she hissed, not taking her gaze away from where itâd locked on. âAnd I donât want to spend a second anywhere near the dick.â
           âWho?â Sara swiveled her head to look beyond the glass separating them from the chaos beyond. âWhoâs the dick?â
           âHim.â
           And then four pairs of eyes locked onto the man standing and talking with the charge nurse at The Hub, Y/N was glaring at.
           âDo â do you two know each other?â Dr. Dimple asked. âDo you feel unsafe with him around?â
           âYeah, you could say we know one another,â she scowled and crossed her arms as Mel managed to finally reattach the oxygen monitor, all of their attention onto her. âThatâs the dude I hooked up with two weeks ago, and completely ghosted me that same morning.â
           Every single head snapped to look back at Dr. Michael âRobbyâ Robinavitch, whoâd also finally noticed Y/N was at his workplace, as a patient no less. His eyebrows were right up to his hairline, brown eyes wide with disbelief and mouth agape as she glowered at the older man.
           It was quite a surreal moment â all of these capable doctors and residents and nurses, stunned by the information so bad, that they almost seemed to forget Y/N was there. She wondered what was going through their heads, as this seemed like it wasnât a regular occurrence. Which stung even more â if Michael had been a fuckboy, she could take it, but it didnât seem so. So, what was wrong with Y/N that had made him run away after the night theyâd spent together?
           When theyâd met at the bar, he had told her he was an emergency department attending. The big boss of his little duckling residents, dutifully running the hospital department with the help of the nurses.
Why, when Sara had finally managed to get Y/N inside the car, it hadnât occurred to her, he would work in this particular hospital. Just why?
Y/N couldnât say. Maybe sheâd hoped he worked the night shifts. Maybe sheâd hoped, he worked somewhere else, or even out of town, but, of course, for whatever sins sheâd committed, karma couldnât do her a solid one.
           Sara gasped, rushing by her side as Y/N watched Michael flounder and try and decide what to do â whether to interfere and face the music or run away from the hospital. He apparently chose the latter as he twisted on his heel and high-tailed it to the other end of the department, leaving a cackling Dana behind.
           âThatâs him?â Sara strained her neck. âThatâs the hot doctor?â
           Y/N scoffed. âThe one and only. Couldnât even leave a fucking note or something. Like I can take a hint a one-night-stand is a one-night-stand, alright? But donât just fucking bolt out of the door like your ass is on fire before the other party wakes up. Fucking dickhead.â
           âWell, maybe it wasnât as fun of a night for him, as you thought, and he didnât want to hurt your feelings.â Sara raised a brow.
           âOh, trust me,â Y/N smirked. âIt was a very fun night for him. I would know. I was there, and you canât fake the kind of shaking. Four hours will do that to a guy,â she winked and touched the tips of her pointer finger and thumb in an A-Okay sign.
           âYeah,â it was Dr. Dimple smiling at her, the grin on his face almost wolfish in nature. âYeah, you are absolutely my new favorite person in the world.â
           However, whatever he wanted to say or ask, was cut short when Dana returned to inform that her CT slot was coming up, and so Y/N was wheeled away, not daring to look at Michael as they passed one another in the hallway.
           As the results came back for a minor concussion, the anesthesiologist informed, that they recommended a spinal for the surgery, while the team prepper, but Y/N shot it down immediately.
           âAbsolutely not. Look, I know itâs not safe to go to sleep after a concussion, but I will not be listening to the sounds of some bone-carpenter crunching on my leg. Put me under,â she gave him her most pathetic look. âPlease.â
           The specialist still tried to argue, but he couldnât do it much longer, as Y/N needed surgery as soon as possible, so after five minutes of strongly recommending the spinal, he relented and in half an hour, Y/N had managed to get hers â she was out like a light, without a sound in her ears.
           It was the best sleep sheâd ever had in her life. Like floating on a cloud, surrounded by doves and angels singing her lullabies. She never wanted to wake up, but something was rousing her out of the blissful state.
           A large warm hand around her palm, thumb rubbing the top of it, was soothing her senses. It was like hot chocolate after being out in the sow. Or sitting by a fireplace with a blanket wrapped around your shoulders.
           âGood afternoon, Miss Sprained-Ankle,â a low, rumbly voice greeted Y/N as she floated back into consciousness. Her eyes locked onto two gentle, brown ones, and despite the medication, she knew she wasnât hallucinating him.
           Michaelâs face was beard-covered like it had been when theyâd met. He still had the same worry lines on his forehead and the crowâs feet around his eyes. Y/N had said she liked those the best.
           âIt shows youâve smiled and laughed despite everything else,â sheâd informed him over the rim of her Pornstar Martini.
           She couldnât truly imagine just how draining his line of work was, both physically and mentally, but the laugh lines she could see hiding under the beard, harmonizing with those around his eyes, was a feature Y/N had noticed first.
           âSo,â she slurred her tongue a swollen mass of sandpaper in her mouth, and Michael noticed that, holding a cup of water against her lips until sheâd had her fill. âDo I have to keep breaking bones to wake up with you next to me?â
           âI hope not.â With gentleness Y/N knew he possessed, yet didnât expect, he brushed away a droplet thatâd slipped past her mouth, and onto her cheek. âI hope this is the only time I ever have to see you in such a state.â
           âCanât promise that,â she shook her head. âI do have a reputation to uphold.â
           âYeah?â amusement was evident on his weary face. âAnd what kind of reputation is that?â
           âWhen I was in first grade, on the first day of school, I broke my arm. And then like a few months later, I smashed my face against a radiator and split my lip open. Still have a scar,â she pointed right below her right nostril where a sliver of lighter skin was. âAnd then, but that was like third grade or something, I smashed my head against a metal railing and split my head open. I could even push my fingers inside and scrape my -,â
           âOkay, I understand,â Michael interrupted her and pulled the hand that was tapping against the hairline on her forehead. âYou are an ED connoisseur, but please, donât make this a habit.â
           âDamn, straight I am.â Y/N gave a confident nod, but before Michael could ask anything else, she said, âYou know what I donât get? Like why did my leg bone hurt while sticking out of my body, but my teeth that are sticking out right now, donât?â She clacked them for emphasis. âTheyâre outside bones.â
           A soft smile bloomed on Michaelâs face as he brushed a strand of hair away from her forehead. She could feel someone had put her hair in a protective style and had to wonder if it had been the man beside her. But that wouldnât make any sense. Why would he care like that for her?
           âFor one,â he muttered. âYou broke your fibula â the smaller bone in your lower leg, and in doing so, hurt the surrounding things like muscles and skin. That is one reason why you felt such pain. And two â if you broke a tooth, it would hurt too. Your cavities hurt, donât they?â
           âMmm,â a self-satisfied smile bloomed on Y/Nâs face. âI wouldnât know. Iâve never had a cavity.â
           âThatâs good. Dentists arenât cheap.â As a response she just clacked her teeth again, making Michael laugh. âHow are you feeling? Any pain? Nausea?â
           âNope, I am A-Okay. Honestly, that was like the best sleep of my life. WellâŠâ Y/N pouted, taking her gaze away from Michaelâs. âThat night when I fell asleep with you is also up in the Top 5, but then I woke up and⊠you know⊠you werenât there.â
           She was obviously delirious from the medication being pumped through her veins, but much like when Y/N was drunk, she was a throw-up-remember-everything kind of a girl, instead of a black-out-drunk. Besides, it wasnât like she could run anywhere. Quite literally.
           Michael sighed, dragging a hand down his face, visibly cringing at her words. âAbout that⊠I â yeah, I think the only thing I can say is Iâm sorry. For, you know, ghosting, as you youngsters say.â
           â âS alright.â Y/N shrugged, trying to act nonchalant, as if the second sheâd seen him, she hadnât been ready to bolt. âIâm over it.â
           âNo, no itâs not okay. I shouldnât have done that. Because that night was⊠great. It was amazing, actually. And everything leading up to the uh, you⊠you know, the...â he cleared his throat, and a smirk pulled up on Y/Nâs lips.
           âThe sex? Come on, you can say it in your big old man age. Itâs just three letters.â
           âJesus Christ.â Michael rubbed his neck as a slight pink shade crawled up his neck, which made Y/N let out a chuckle at how uncomfortable he looked talking about this. Maybe it was time to let this go, for his sake and her own sanity.
           âLook, if it makes you feel any better,â Y/N shifted to the edge of the mattress and patted the side of her bed, so he could sit down. After asking if she was sure, he did take the offered space. âI â Iâve been treating you a bit unfairly with this. I think my ego was a bit crushed after waking up and not having you there, but, umm⊠youâre off the hook. Besides, I think Iâm in your debt with all of this. Your team is amazing.â
           âTheyâre pretty great, arenât they?â he mumbled, one of his hands having moved to toy with the wristband the hospital had assigned to Y/N. âBut still, how I reacted then, and even earlier in the morning⊠it wasnât right. I mean, Iâm pushing fifty for fuckâs sake. Thatâs not what someone my age does.â
           âSo what?â she raised a brow. âThe issue is you think youâre a cradle-robber? Because youâre no more that than I am a grave robber. Iâm twenty-six, Michael,â she turned her palm up hoping heâd accept it and slide his hand in hers. After a moment of hesitancy, he did, and Y/N squeezed it in reassurance. âI mean, if you think youâre doing something bad, by having slept with someone two decades younger than you, Iâll have you know, according to regency times, as a woman whoâll be turning twenty-seven this year, Iâm pretty much a decrepit old spinster.â
           Michael let out a soft laugh as his fingers trailed the lines on Y/Nâs palm. âYou have your whole life ahead of you. Me? Iâm your probably dadâs age.â
           âAnd looking hotter than ever, if you ask me.â
           âYeah? You think so?â He asked as Y/N hummed in affirmation. âWell then, for a decrepit old spinster, you are beautiful. And acting with much more grace than I deserved or deserve.â
           Something in the way he said those last few words made her heart squeeze. âMichael⊠of course you deserve grace.â
           âYouâre being far too good to me⊠youâre far too good for meâŠâ
           Y/Nâs brows furrowed at that. Slowly, she attempted to rise in a sitting position, but she didnât get far before Michael had his arms around her waist, like theyâd been two weeks ago, pushing a pillow to stabilize the small of her back. Once he was sure she was comfortable, he opened an apple juice box and handed it to her.
           âTo get your sugar up.â
           But she just stared at him, only reaching for the little carton after heâd resumed his previous sitting position. âIs that what this is about?â she asked. âSome insecurity you think I deserve better than you? Because I can decide those things for myself. I am an adult. With a fully-developed frontal lobe, mind you.â
           He took in a deep breath, held it for a second, then released it, and Y/N watched that whatever kind of decision heâd come to, had released a certain tension thatâd been accumulating in his body. âKind of, I guess. But mostlyâŠâ he swallowed, then nodded to himself, eyes trained on her wristband. âMostly I got scared.â
           âOf what?â Y/N tilted her head. âI mean, I know my morning breath probably isnât that attractive, and the smeared makeup made me look like a coked-out raccoon, but -,â
           âNo,â Michael shook his head, chuckling. His cheeks were reddish at her words, but as he lifted his eyes to hers, there was a grateful look to them. Like he was thankful she wasnât making fun of him even in his ripe old age. âYou,â he stumbled over his words a bit, âwhen I saw you there, sleeping by my side like you belonged⊠I donât think Iâve ever seen anything more beautiful than that. And thatâs when I thought to myself â if I worked up the courage, could there be more mornings like that? Could I make you breakfast and coffee one day? Maybe Iâd get the privilege of falling asleep next to you as we watch movies at night. And that scared me.â
           âThe possible future?â
           âWanting that possible future, because that feeling, the one that started to grow right here,â he tapped the center of his chest. âI couldnât think straight. So, I had to go.â
           âI mean,â Y/N swallowed hard. âThat is a lot to imagine after only a few hours together.â
           âDoes that⊠creep you out? âCause itâs totally understandable if it does. I mean Jesus, Iâm old⊠and youâre so young.â
           âNo, it doesnât.â And she meant it when she said it. âI find it actually quite endearing, but you can stop being so hung-up on the age difference. If you think there might be some daddy issues on my side, I can assure you â thereâs none. I quite like my dad, and I definitely donât see you as such a figure. Not after the things you did to me. âCause, quite honestly, sex with you was probably the best dicking-down Iâve had in a year.â
           If Michael had been drinking anything, Y/N was sure he would have choked with how he sputtered at her words. âWell, uh, yeah, I uh⊠Iâm glad you⊠enjoyed it.â
           âI did. And I know you enjoyed it too,â her smile was nothing short of wicked.
           âYeah, and apparently now the rest of the residents and nurses and doctors know it too?â Michael raised his brows at her.
           It took Y/N a while to realize he was talking about when sheâd gotten admitted and spilt the beans on their night together, implying their copious amount of copulation. âHey, donât shoot the messenger, but Iâd like to think your reputation has now gone sky-high between the female nurses and doctors. Maybe the guys and theys as well. But I do apologize for talking about your private life while at your work. In my defense, until that very moment, I didnât know you worked here. And well, I was pissed.â
           âYou and your mouth will get you in trouble one day,â Michael pointed at her.
           âYeah? Would you like to put something in it, to shut me up? Last time, you really liked it when I -,â
           âOkay, trouble, thatâs enough.â Even though his words had a finality to them, humor glowed on his features. He seemed relaxed. Content even, as he took the now empty apple juice box Y/N had been sipping on this whole time.
           âYou on a break?â She started scooting down the bed once more, and Michael instantly helped her get situated.
           âWant to get rid of me so quickly?â
           âNo. Itâs just youâre spending an awfully long time with me. Donât you have other patients to check in on? I donât want you to waste your time if you need to get to someone else. Or maybe grab a bite to eat? Iâm fairly sure doctors donât know how to have a good work-life balance, despite continuously recommending it to us, mere mortals.â
           âTime with you isnât a waste.â
           Oh.
           Oh, how badly did Y/N want to rip off the little wires connecting her to the heart monitor, because had Michael not turned the sound off, she was sure the whole hospital would be hearing it go nuts at his words, the squiggling beat of it a treat for only Michael this time, because when he noticed it, a smirk bloomed on his mouth. He didnât say anything, but he didnât need to, not when he murmured, twining their fingers together, âI want to kiss you so bad.â
           âI definitely wonât be opposed to that.â Y/Nâs answer might have come way too quickly, but she was beyond feeling embarrassed about wanting him. âYou have permission to kiss away. For as long as possible. All day, every day, whenever you want to.â
           âWell, thank you for that,â Michael chuckled, cupping her cheek, and she leaned into the touch. âBut⊠not right now. Let me take you out on a proper date. Let me do this right.â
           âOh my God, seriously?â Y/N whined throwing her head back. âYouâre gonna make me wait? Especially after that whole speech and whatnot? You are a cruel, cruel man Dr. Michael Robinavitch.â
           Slowly, without breaking eye contact, he leaned to hover over Y/N, a golden necklace slipping from the inside of his shirt and dangling before her. She wanted to pull it between her teeth like sheâd done so during their one night together. It took every dwindling ounce of willpower not to.
           âMaybe, I just want you aching. And yearning. You were the one who said men donât yearn enough nowadays. But I have. For you, for two whole god-damned weeks. Now itâs your turn.â
           It was pathetic how Y/N wanted to cry and whimper. âBut I didnât even do anything! You were the one that ran out! Why am I being punished for your actions?â
           âDo you â do you not want to go on a date with me?â
           âI do, but Iâd rather you rail me as soon as possible.â
           âWell, for one,â Michael tried to continue on as if Y/Nâs words hadnât made heat creep up his face, but he could only do so much. He was a human, after all. âYouâre not allowed any strenuous activities until youâve got a clean bill of health. And two, all teasing aside, I want to do this properly. I want to do right by you this time.â
           âWhy would you?â she exasperated. âI wasnât complaining when you didnât do it right by me, and Iâm certainly not going to if you suddenly decide to stop being chivalrous. Maybe even right here. We could recreate some scene from Greyâs Anatomy?â Y/N wiggled her brows at him, eliciting a deep rumble of a chuckle.
           âGreyâs is just a malpractice lawsuit after a malpractice lawsuit, and I, unlike the characters there, donât want my medical license to be revoked. Until you get discharged, Iâm one of your doctors.â
           âMy hot doctor, you mean.â
           The sigh that left Michael was not weary or a worn-out kind of noise. Rather it was a resigned I-guess-this-is-my-life-now kind of a sigh, especially combined with the endearing look on his face, it made Y/N feel warm all over.
           Slowly, as they talked a bit more, her eyes began to droop, exhaustion from the morning, from the surgery and the subsequent consequences settling in once more. âWill you stay?â she asked as Michael brushed a knuckle along her jaw. âJust until I fall asleep?â
           âOf course,â Michael took her hand in his, sitting down by her side again, as he pressed a kiss to her wrist. âAnd I⊠I wish I could promise Iâll be here when you wake up, but I, -â
           âI know,â Y/N interrupted him with a soft and understating smile. âBy that point, youâll probably be off saving lives. Itâs why Iâm not asking you to.â
           âIâll try though.â He promised.
           âOkay.â
           And with her hand still in Michaelâs, Y/N drifted off once again without even realizing it was pitch-black outside, and Michael hadnât been wearing his shift scrubs. He should have long been home resting, and yet, he hadnât been able to leave her. Not like he did before.
           By the time she awoke early the next morning, Y/N was clearheaded, and yet all her thoughts mulled over the conversation sheâd had with Michael the previous night. Would he go back on his word? Had he only talked with her like that because she was high on pain meds, and maybe thought she wouldnât remember their discussions?
           She knew he hadnât promised to be there when she awoke, so Y/N didnât hold it against him, but she couldnât deny the sting. But that was immediately soothed by the hoodie thatâd been laid over the back of a chair.
           His hoodie.
           A promise he would at least have a reason to come back and check in on her. It was Dana, the charge nurse, peeking her head inside that pulled Y/N back into the present. âHow are we feeling today? Ready to be discharged? Dr. Langdon will be with you shortly for a follow-up.â
           The woman in the hospital bed groaned. âCanât I just stay here? Like you people â you are normal. Sara will be a mother hen on crack. I am willing to brave hospital food, as long as I donât have to go home to all that fussing. Sheâs probably already bullied our landlord into installing a lift or something.â
           âShe cares for you,â it was Dr. Langdon piping in, as he entered her room, pulling on a pair of gloves and nodding to Dana in thanks. âYouâre pretty lucky to have a friend like her.â
           âYeah, I know,â Y/N sighed as Dr. Langdon looked over her leg, asked some questions about pain levels and talked her through the post-op care. âBut in my defense, she has a tendency to overreact.â
           âIâd say you have a tendency to underreact, but thatâs just my professional opinion.â
           She rolled her eyes as Dr. Langdon finished his assessment and handed off her chart to Dana, so they could start the discharge process. âGod forbid a girl has hobbies.â
           âIn any case, I do think the whole ED is in debt to Sara.â
           To that she raised a brow.
           âWell, had she not made you come in, I donât know if Dr. Robby would have had a chance of seeing you again. Because, if I have to be honest, weâve all been scratching our heads the past couple of weeks trying to figure out why heâs been in such a mood. Now we know why.â
           âYou two shit-talking me?â Michaelâs soft tone interrupted the conversation, as he crossed his arms and leaned against the entryway. âHow are you feeling?â
           She tried and failed to hide the heat creeping up her veins. Even if Y/N had succeeded, that damned monitor, the sound no doubt having been turned back on by Michael before he left, to make sure if anything went awry at night, someone was there for her, betrayed her anyway. God, she wanted to punch the smile off both the men's faces.
           âFine.â She turned her head to look at the wall, as a nurse stepped in and removed the IV catheter and wrapped her hand in gauze. âNot looking forward to the itching that will appear, in what? Three days?â
           âNo scratching,â Dr. Dimple pointed at her with a pen. âYou could injure yourself and cause a serious infection. No rulers, no knitting needles, no crochet needles, no twigs or branches, no nothing.â
           âBut what about -,â
           âNo nothing,â he emphasized. âOr I will have to recommend Dr. Robby make a house call on you. Though that isnât much of a threat for you two, is it?â
           âOkay, Frank? Scram. Now. Thereâre patients that need checking on. I can take care of Y/N.â
           âYeah, I bet you can,â Dr. Langdon let out a laugh but was out of the room before either she or Michael could say anything.
           The only thing Y/N was happy about, was that the comment had made not only her flustered, but Michael as well, as he shifted on his feet and rubbed the back of his neck in a nervous tick. In the end, he gave her a smile that said âSorry about himâ and padded over to where heâd left his hoodie.
           And that only made her even more flustered, because seeing a man like him, so level-headed and sure, get visibly nervous over her, did things to Y/N. Which made her want to do things to Michael, but then Dana returned, two crutches in hand, Whitaker wheeling a wheelchair once more, and all passion slipped away.
           âRight, thanks.â She eyed the crutches like they were cow-eating pythons. âI fucking hate my life.â
           Low, warm laughter filtered through the room as Dana helped Y/N get redressed and situated her in the wheelchair, crutches placed over her knees as she was rolled to the nurseâs station.
           âI uh, took the liberty of calling Sara for you,â Michael said as he leaned against the table. When Y/N raised a brow in question, he elaborated, âSheâs in your emergency contacts. Should be here in fifteen or so.â
           âThank you. You didnât have to do that, you know.â
           âI know,â he smiled. âBut I wanted to.â
           And there it was again, that warmth that blossomed in her chest, only this time she let it spread, let it wrap around her heart and wash away that bitterness, thatâd been there since the morning Y/N had woken up cold and alone.
           It hadnât been just the sex, though that night Michael had given her some of the most earth-shattering orgasms sheâd ever had (thankfully, Sara had been away with her girlfriend, so she didnât have to suffer through the teasing).
           It was the conversations leading up to it, the sense of ease Y/N felt around Michael. He was witty and sarcastic, his humor dry, but not at the expense of others while being engaging and thought-provoking at the same time. What had sealed the deal for her though was when he actually engaged in the debate, she presented him â if he had to kiss a fish-spider hybrid, what would he choose â fish head, spider body or fish body, spider head?
           Heâd made her laugh so hard she cried, and when Y/N had deemed it was time to call an Uber and go home, sheâd taken the risk and asked if he wanted to come to her place. And after a few moments where she wanted the earth to open and swallow her whole, heâd nodded.
           Together they waited for the cab, standing side by side, yet not touching. Heâd opened the car door for her, before slipping in himself.
           The tension could be cut with a knife, and afterwards, Y/N had given the driver five stars for enduring it, while the whole way, one of Michaelâs palms had slowly moved to rest against her thigh, and sheâd had to clench them together because if she didnât, there would be a noticeable wet spot underneath.
           After an agonizing half an hour's drive, they finally got to her place. Michael held the door open for her, and insisted on paying for the Uber, no matter how much Y/N protested.
           Every step towards the apartment she was renting on the fourth floor of the complex, was agony. As she fumbled for her keys, Michaelâs fingers were slowly skimming the side of her dress where the zipper rested.
           Y/Nâs whole body was a live-wire, and she wondered how in the world had the lock not melted from the heat, as it slid in place and she unlocked the door, the motion now forever having a sexual connotation, for in that moment Michael was the key that would unlock her desires.
           Together, they stepped beyond the threshold, and yet still, he never once removed his touch from her body. From that damned little black number. Sheâd only worn it because sheâd been set up on a blind date. They were supposed to meet up at the bar for a drink before going to a play, but as it turns out, even guys who like theatre can ghost.
           When Y/N realized the situation, she wanted to go home, as her date was the one who had the tickets, pull this thing off and drink the already opened bottle of wine that was in the fridge, but she could have at least one good cocktail before that.
           Thatâs when Dr. Robby, or as heâd asked her to call him by his first name, Michael, slid into the seat next to her. They didnât talk for the first five minutes, not until sheâd been scrolling through Instagram and some post had caught her eye. Something about green tea enemas and glowing skin, and the man beside had released a heavy-duty sigh, accompanied by âfucking Dr. Google.â
           Itâs when slowly but surely, theyâd struck up a conversation, which had now resulted in Y/N having Michael towering over her, his beard scratching against the crook of her neck where heâd placed his chin.
           When his hands wove and settled against her stomach, any sort of resolve sheâd had, snapped. Instantly, she turned, weaving her arms around his neck and pulling his mouth to hers in a bruising kind of kiss. The kind that left you breathless and dizzy and wanting more.
           She felt an insatiable thrill rush down her spine as Michael responded with just as much vigor, the pads of his fingers digging deep into her hips and pulling her to be flush against his chest, so much so, that Y/N could feel his own desire growing in his groin.
           âIâve never hated clothes more than I do right now,â she giggled as Michael grappled with the door handle and pushed it close without disconnecting from one another.
           âThen letâs get them off, shall we?â
           The way he dragged the side zipper open, was almost reverent, worshipping even. Like he wanted to prolong the build-up between them, and Y/N couldnât lie â she was loving it, even if she was losing her mind. So many times, when sheâd had hook-ups, guys tended to just get her naked as fast as possible, which was fine. She was down for it, but there was something indescribable about how Michael reveled in feeling her slowly start to tremble, in how he kissed up and down her neck, while his fingers took their sweet time. It drove her insane with want, in an amount sheâd never felt before.
           His pointer finger dragged its way up Y/Nâs bicep, making goosebumps erupt all over before he slowly slid a strap down. Then the other, until the dress was pooling around her waist, and still, where usually sheâd be helping the guy shimmy herself out of the dress, Michael didnât rush. He simply allowed his hands to explore her body, skimming along her ribs and up to the black lacy number sheâd worn, then right back down.
           âYou counting if I have all my ribs in place, Dr. Robby?â Y/N let out a shaky breath, trying to alleviate the gathered tension, for she was just about to combust, but all she got was a soft smile as he leaned down and pressed a kiss to her neck where her pulse was visibly thrumming.
           âI donât have much time in my day to stop and admire art. So please, indulge me. And art, which Iâm allowed to touch, should be revered even more so.â
           Her eyes may or may not have rolled to the back of her head at his words, and he hadnât even gotten his head between her legs yet. Yeah, Dr. Michael âRobbyâ Robinavitch, the attending of a trauma centre, would be the death of her.
Name of the deceased - Y/N Y/L/N. Date of death - 4th of April, 2025. Cause of death â self-combustion. Reason for self-combustion â a sexy as fuck doctor.
           Quite honestly, if that was how she was going to go, so be it.
           Finally, though, after what felt like ages, her dress was shed, leaving her only in her underwear and strappy high-heels sheâd worn.
           âIf there is one thing I hate, itâs not having a photographic memory,â Michael grumbled as his hands skimmed along the waistband of her panties. âBut trust me when I say this, I will be picturing this moment for decades to come.â
           âYou are more than welcome to have a look at whatâs hiding underneath,â Y/N said. Or that is what she would have said, had she not simply whimpered in response. Not very sexy of her, but the feeling of his chest rumbling with a laugh, totally made up for it.
           She gathered enough of her bearings to step out of the fabric around her feet and move them along to her room. Never did his eyes leave her, never did his gaze waver or wander as they faced one another, her queen-sized bed behind her.
           âYou are awfully overdressed,â Y/N mumbled, allowing herself the luxury of running her palms along the still-covered planed of his chest. His breathing was steady, but to feel the erratic thumping of his heart excited her beyond measure. It meant all that composure was just an act, and she was thrilled sheâd be the one to crack it.
           She was just about to move her fingers to the buttons of his shirt when Michael slid down to his knees. If his hands hadnât been resting against her thighs, she was sure she wouldâve buckled and crashed. And Michael, damn the man to hell and back, knew it, if only by the smirk that stretched his face as he unlaced the strappy heels she had on and helped her stand on her feet.
           Y/N covered her face and groaned, throwing her head back. âYouâre enjoying this, arenât you? Torturing me?â
           âTorturing you?â A kiss against her navel. âThe only person being tortured tonight has been me. At the bar. In the car. Even now, youâre driving me crazy. So, if this is torture, simply consider it payback.â
           With the gentlest of touches, only a doctor could manage, Michael skimmed over Y/Nâs stretchmarks, scars and blemishes â pieces of herself she didnât particularly like, but the way he touched her⊠it was like he was mapping out the carve-marks of a Michelangelo statue. She was Venus and those â the history of her life.
           By the time he got back up to her mouth, she was a trembling mess, her nails digging into the muscles of his back, as finally, to her relief, he allowed her to rid him of the shirt.
           Much like heâd done to her, Y/N allowed herself the pleasure of exploring his body, mapping out the ridges and slopes of his chest and abdomen, before moving around to his back, and once they made their way to the small of it, she dug her nails against the skin there. The groan she was rewarded with, was sweeter than the cocktail heâd bought her.
           âIs it okay, if I touch you here?â Michaelâs fingers slipped along the tops of her breasts before they moved to her back where they toyed with the clasp of the garment.
           âMore than,â Y/Nâs words were a breathless whisper by that point, and her inhale stuttered in her chest as she deftly snapped it open.
           It was clear he had experience, and not just because he was two decades her senior, but probably also because heâd done so in the trauma center, he worked at. For a brief, stupid second, she wondered how he could still find such acts pleasurable when heâd no doubt had to have done it during horrendous emergencies, yet all that was wiped away when Michael lowered his head and his teeth grazed a nipple.
           Her sharp gasp echoed around them, and Y/N weaved her fingers through his hair, pushing his face closer, as he lavished at her chest. The next day, she was sure, there would be bruises and love bites blooming like flowers across her chest and sternum, not to mention the delicious beard burn.
           Y/N moaned as he pulled the peak into his mouth, but when an uninhibited thought entered, it made her throw it back in a deep groan.
           âThat feel good?â
           âSo fucking good, but also, so yeah, I,â she stammered trying to get her brain to cooperate and create a coherent sentence. âOkay, so I just imagined you in glasses, and this got like ten times hotter.â
           âGlasses?â Michael chuckled, pulling slightly back and looking up at her. âThatâs what does it for you?â
           âCorrection â you in glasses. Though you right now are so doing it for me too. But that image just⊠yeah⊠kinda glad you donât have any on. Iâd probably be a pile of ash by this point.â
           âNow that would be a shame, wouldnât it?â He said, slowly moving to her other breast, but not neglecting the one heâd already loved on, by cupping it in his large palm. âI mean, Iâm just getting started.â
           Yeah, Y/N was dead and done for.
           As he continued licking at her chest, the hand thatâd been fondling one of them, slid down her front and tentatively brushed against her clothed core. It was a single knuckle right against where her clit was, but it was enough for her to jolt in his grasp. Michael just steadied her and held tighter around her waist. Â
           Once he deemed Y/Nâs breasts worshipped enough, he trailed back up between them and covered her mouth with his, yet the knuckle, that damned fucking knuckle, still slid against her pussy. He could no doubt feel how wet she was, the material, though there wasnât much of it anyway, soaked through so bad, her thighs were already sticky.
           âMichael please,â Y/N was now openly begging. She was way beyond feeling embarrassed for such a move when in the span of half an hour, heâd reduced her to liquid fire. No one had ever made her feel this wanted. This needed. And she desperately wanted and needed him too.
           âTell me what you want,â he murmured, as he pushed his thumbs beyond the waistband of her panties and started to lower them down. The cool air hit her exposed core, and Y/N released a breathless moan. âYou gotta tell me what you want and donât want. Iâm not gonna go any further until you do.â
           âI want you to touch me.â
           âI am touching you.â
           She could feel him smirk as his hands took hold of the globes of her ass and squeezed.
           âNo, I want you to touch me there,â Y/N whined and tried to chase his mouth with hers, but Michael pulled back, shaking his head.
           âGotta be more specific than that, sweetheart.â
           She debated on pulling away completely, on not giving him what he wanted either, but she was pathetic for this man. So, instead, she took one of his hands and guided it from where it rested against her ass, towards the front, sighing in relief as he let her do so. With her fingers guiding his, they slid to rest between her legs as Michael slowly, ever so exploratory, found her clit. She pressed her hand harder against his, so he could match the pressure on her core, and when he did so, overwhelming pleasure flooded her veins.
           âThere,â Y/N breathed. âI want you to touch me there. And then,â she moved his hand deeper, by the wrist, until she could feel the pads of his fingers nudging against her entrance. âI want you to put three of your fingers inside me, while you suck on my clit, until Iâm a crying mess.â
           As Y/N lifted her head back to look at him, there was absolutely no sign of the warm brown irises thatâd looked at her so gently at the bar. Sure, it was dark in the apartment, yet even in bright daylight, sheâd bet all her student loans, only two black abysses would be staring back at her, especially with how fast his chest was rising and falling.
           âAnd then?â
           God, had his voice dropped even lower? How did he manage to make it so gravelly, yet smooth as the darkest, most succulent chocolate?
           âAnd thenâŠâ Her fingers trembled as she moved her hands to the front of his pants, undoing the buckle and flipping open the button, lowering the zipper as she went. All the while, Michael applied steady pressure on her clit, circling the bundle of nerves just enough to drive her towards the edge, but not enough for release to come. âAnd uhm, thenâŠâ She pushed his pants down as far as they would go, letting them bunch around his knees.
           It took barely a moment for him to step out of them completely, kicking them to some forgotten corner of her room, leaving him in only his boxers. Somewhere along the way heâd lost the shoes and socks, but Y/N wasnât about to go and hunt for them. Not with how he still circled her clit with those experienced appendages.
           âYes?â He raised a brow and pressed harder against her clit, making her pull in a sharp breath.
           âAnd then,â Y/N trailed a teasing finger along the band of his boxers, for once delighting in how his abdomen muscles went taut, and his obviously hard dick twitched inside the confines. âAnd then I want you to fuck me. However, you want to. As long as by the end of it, neither of us know up from down and left from right.â
           When she cupped him over the clothes he still had left on, it seemed like it snapped something in Michael, some taut, already fragile wire, thatâd begun fraying ever since sheâd invited him back to her place. Because this time when he kissed Y/N, it was a hungry kiss. A man starved being served the most lavish meal of all.
           She was on the mattress in a matter of seconds, body covered by his towering frame. They molded perfectly together, Y/N thought. When she rolled her hips up to get at least some form of friction, he responded in kind, clearly searching to satiate his own desire.
           Michaelâs hands slid from her shoulders down the length of her arms before intertwining their fingers and bringing them up and over Y/Nâs head, not once disconnecting from the kiss.
           âYou keep them there,â he instructed, breathing the words into her mouth. âAnd when Iâm done with my appetizer, weâll move on to the first of the main courses.â
           âAppetizer?â Y/N squeaked out. A good hook-up in her books was at least two orgasms, usually only having one. But calling eating her out an appetizer, and then having a numbered list of courses, was something else completely.
           Michaelâs only response was that same damned smirk sheâd learned could only mean torture, as he made his way between her legs, and without wasting another second, diving in between them.
           The first lick of his tongue was a broad, all-encompassing one. And Y/N could only hope her neighbors had some good noise-cancelling headphones at the ready.
           His forearms had settled against her hips and palms splayed themselves over her stomach to push her down against the bed, as she tried to chase his mouth.
           And what a mouth it was.
           Who knew the soft-spoken trauma doctor sheâd met on a random Friday night at a bar while waiting for a date that never came, would be the creation of the Devil himself?
           But when he pushed two thick fingers inside, shortly followed by a third, just like Y/N had asked, all thoughts flew out of the window. The way he curled them in an attempt at finding that spot that made her gasp and choke on air, the way he scissored them, stretching her, preparing her for the first course he had in mind, was diabolical.
           Her first orgasm came unexpectedly. She could feel it like a wave â pushing and pulling â but she hadnât expected the moment it crested and shattered against the rocks, swift and sharp, coming without a warning, all due to the teasing thatâd happened before, no doubt.
           Michael rode it out with Y/N, until her hips stopped grinding against his mouth, and he could gently remove his fingers from her pussy.
           He placed a soft kiss against the inside of her thigh, the skin raw and tender from his beard, that now glistened with her juices.
           â âM sorry,â Y/N mumbled, an arm thrown over her eyes as she came down from her high and tears streamed down to her temples, just like sheâd requested.
           âWhatever for?â
           âDidnât warn you I was coming.â
           As the aftershocks receded, and she removed her arm, she found Michael looking up at her completely puzzled. âAnd why would I need a warning? I could tell, you know.â He rose to hover over her. âThe way you were clenching. Fucking proud of it too.â
           âNo, I mean,â she huffed, trailing a hand down his chest. âSometimes guys donât want to⊠you know⊠have that in their mouth. Theyâd rather finish a girl off with their fingers and not have to⊠taste it.â
           Now that was one way to kill a mood, but Y/N had already opened her big mouth and the words were out.
           âAnd why wouldnât I want to taste it, hmm?â Michael tilted his head at her, as his hands drifted up and down her sides, over her breasts and clavicles, to skim along her neck and finally settle on the pillow beside her head. âWhy wouldnât I want that, when itâs the end goal? You got your tears,â he kissed the corners of her eyes where the salt still lingered. âAnd I got my wine.â
           Her gaze drifted to the beard, the one she would be feeling for days to come, as she went about her life. The one that was glistening with the remnants of her orgasm even in the dark, and Y/N wondered, what it would be like to sit atop it. To have him pull her down by the waist as she claimed his mouth for her throne. They were such salacious thoughts, for a moment, embarrassment flushed through her, but come on! After such an eating out, Y/N was allowed to fantasize.
           âAnd by the end of this, if you let me,â Michael mumbled, a golden chain dangling in between them. Quickly she snatched it between her teeth and pulled, making him come closer. âIâd like to do so at least once more.â
           âYou are absolutely welcome to it. Morning, noon and night.â
           But at that moment, Y/N had no intentions of allowing him to go for another round, as when he leaned down for a kiss, she lifted a leg over his hip and twisted, throwing Michael off his balance and onto his back, with her now on top.
           âBut right now⊠you had your starter.â She gave him a wicked grin. âAnd Iâve yet to still have mine.â
           âFuck me,â was all he managed to groan out as he threaded a hand through his hair, head pressed tight against her silk-covered pillows while Y/N rid him of his boxers.
           His length sprang free, thick and aching. It slapped against his abdomen and her hand curled around it immediately to give him some sort of relief, precum dripping from the tip. Or maybe, she intended to do quite the opposite.
           Heâd taken his sweet fucking time riling her up. She could take hers. But it was the way he let out the smallest of âpleaseâ, the way his eyes locked onto hers, practically begging to put him out of his misery, that did her in. Sheâd tease him come morning. For now, she was way too aroused herself to deprive her body of his any longer.
           Y/N gathered a bit of saliva in her mouth and let it drip down onto his length, before dragging her tongue along the vein at the base of it, her lips wrapping around the tip as she made her way up and giving it a gentle, yet firm, suck.
           Michaelâs hips jolted, and a hand grasped onto her head. He didnât push it down or pull her hair in any way, more so it seemed he needed something solid to hold onto as she pulled his length into her mouth, until it hit the back of her throat, making both of them choke.
           âYou donât need to do that,â Michael started, ready to pull Y/N away if it became too much for her, but she stayed there, relaxing her muscles bit by bit, until he was so deep down her throat, her nose brushed against the hairs of his pelvis.
           âFucking. Hell.â Those were the only two words he managed to express before Y/N trailed her mouth up and started to really suck him off. After that, it was just grunts and groans, his hand tightening and then unclenching in her hair, but never pressing, never pushing her to take more than she wanted to. Michael was completely immersed with her pace, and ready to take whatever she gave him.
           That sort of power could make anyone lightheaded, and when Y/N started to feel him twitch in her mouth, she pulled completely off.
           Instantly, his eyes snapped open, head rising to look at how she climbed his body and settled her knees around his hips, pressing her core down against his length. She was just about ready to let it slide inside when Michaelâs hands closed around her waist and stopped her.
           âCondom,â he breathed out, chest rising and falling rapidly, probably the only word he could manage, which was great, because at least one of them still had some thinking skills left.
           âShit. Fuck. Right, yeah.â
           Leaning over to her nightstand, Y/N half-fell over the bed to open the lowest drawer. In between her panties and vibrator, was a little foil packet which she fished out. She was glad of Michaelâs unwavering hold, because the way she was precariously dangling over the edge, could end badly and with a stupidly gotten concussion.
           When she was back to straddling him, opening the packet and rolling the condom on his length, their eyes met.
           Michael rubbed his thumb in a circle on her hip. âWe can always stop if you donât want to go any further.â
           âIâm not a quitter,â Y/N scoffed, yet it didnât elicit the smile she was aiming for, as he rose into a sitting position, wrapping his arms around her, hers resting onto his shoulders.
           âAnd this isnât some race or competition. You can revoke consent anytime you want. And so can I.â
           âI know that,â Y/N nodded, her gaze softening at his words. He could easily create a power imbalance between them. With double the decades of age and experience on her, Michael could be pushing at her limits, trying to twist things into teaching her how to properly please a guy and so on, yet throughout all of it, his focus had been zeroed in on her wants and needs. She shifted a bit in her lap at the thought that she hadnât checked in with him. âDo you want to stop?â
           âNo.â His voice was soft but sure, and then, after a moment of him searching her eyes, the smile sheâd hoped for, formed on his face. âBut uh, and that is obviously if you are alright with it, I wouldnât be opposed to adding your⊠friend⊠to our activities sometime later.â
           âMy friend?â Y/N tilted her head in confusion. âOhâŠâ A furious heat exploded through her body, and not because of the fact Michaelâs cock was slowly rubbing against her clit, the head nudging just right for pleasure to zing through her.
           Heâd obviously noticed her vibrator, though the bright purple shade would be hard to miss. âYouâre not turned off by it?â
           âWhy would I be? Youâre a woman who has needs. And if thatâs how you take care of them, itâs completely fine. I mean, as long as youâre being hygienic and safe about it. Besides,â Michael breathed against her neck, as his hand slid between their bodies and he grasped himself, lining the tip up with Y/Nâs entrance. âReal men see them as tools to use to their advantage, not competition. And well, not to stroke my own ego,â he smirked, âbut I donât think I have any competition here.â
           Y/N wanted to call him out for that statement, but he wasnât lying. Not with the way his length stretched her out as he pushed inside. The fingering beforehand was incomparable to the feel of Michael sliding inside at a slow and agonizing pace, but one she desperately needed and welcomed.
           He was thick and veiny, all ridges and girth, and so, so perfect for her.
           It took a minute for him to be fully sheathed, and a minute more for Y/N to adjust, her forehead pressed against his, while he rubbed his hands up and down her back while she settled.
           This wasnât fucking. This was sex. This was intimate, and it was something she hadnât known sheâd wanted from a partner. Usually, it was fast and hard, leaving both her and the guy she was with, panting against the sheets. Satisfied in the sense that both (hopefully) had had orgasms, but something was always missing. Now, Y/N knew it was this â time.
           Time spent exploring one another, time spent learning and teaching, and time spent simply enjoying each otherâs bodies.
           âYou good?â Michael muttered, shifting ever so slightly and making the tip catch a spot inside of her, Y/N had only reached with her purple âfriendâ.
           âYeah,â she nodded. âYou?â
           âYeah.â Michael kissed her. Whether as an affirmation of his words or simply because he could, she didnât know. But neither did she care. He was the best kisser sheâd had the opportunity to enjoy, so sheâd take it.
           While they kissed, Michael started moving. At first, it was slow rolls of hips, figuring out what movements made both of their breaths hitch and hearts pound, but it wasnât long before Michael was on his back, knees bent as Y/N bounced up and down, his thumb pressed against her clit the whole time.
           Her second orgasm of the night was a more controlled approach. She could feel the coil tightening in her abdomen, and when Michael started lifting his hips up to meet hers, Y/N listed forward, balancing herself against his chest.
           âYou gonna come?â he breathed against her ear as she pressed her chest against his, Michaelâs hands wrapping along the small of her back and holding onto it, so he could fuck up into her pussy. âI can feel you clenching around me. Fuck, you feel good.â
           âMichael,â Y/N moaned his name. Not Dr. Robby or Robby how heâd explained the people in his life called him, but the name heâd asked her to call him. His real name.
           One snap, two, three. That was all it took for heat to explode. The only grounding thing in the world was his scent â some form of cheap cologne, antiseptic and sweat, but she knew she still had a long way before she came down, with how he was drilling up inside of her, chasing his own release.
           It elicited another, albeit smaller orgasm, but the most pleasure she got was when she realized heâd come with her as his palms grabbed onto her ass and pulled her sharply down, her name a sweet grunt on his lips against her ear.
           Yeah. Y/N needed to go out with more doctors. At least they knew where to find the clit and not neglect it once they had.
           He brought a hand up to her face and pulled her by the cheek to meet his mouth, a satisfied sigh leaving her as he did so.         Â
           âThat was the best one yet,â Y/N mumbled against his lips.
           âAnd the nightâs still young.â
           They went three more rounds after that (because she only had three more condoms, and sheâd rather use them on one man who knew how to make her come three more times, than three men, who would have trouble getting one out of her).
           Michael was also a man of his word, as he had her vibrator join in on the fun. Y/N had her ass up in the air while he railed her from behind, an arm wrapped around her middle, pressing the toy to her clit, the vibrations sending pleasure unlike any other through her.
           His front was flush to her back, beard having left delicious burns down her spine, as heâd kissed her there, before eating her out once more in between the rounds and pushing his again-hard cock inside.
           That was the final orgasm she could manage, and it seemed Michael knew it. It was the kind that not only made her legs, but her whole body shake, leaving Y/N a trembling mess against the sheets, while he soothed her through the aftershocks.
           âYou with me, sweetheart?â he mumbled against her temple as he gathered her in his arms and laid them side by side.
           âJusâ give me a momenâ,â Y/N slurred while Michael brushed a finger from her cheek to her jaw and back. âI think Iâm a medical fucking miracle with how you just fucked my brains out, and yet, I can still function. Barely though.â
           Michaelâs chuckle reverberated through her body, as after sheâd recovered slightly, he gathered her up and moved them to where she instructed the bathroom was, to make sure she peed and didnât get a UTI. If these had been normal circumstances, she would have never let a guy see her peeing, but quite honestly, Y/N wasnât sure sheâd be able to get back from the toilet seat on her own.
           âYouâre more than welcome to have a shower if you want. Of course, only if youâre down with smelling like peaches or passion fruit.â Y/N nudged her chin towards the shower gels lining the floor, one hers, the other Saraâs.
           âI wouldnât be opposed to, but only if you join me.â
           She hissed, biting her lip. âI donât have any condoms left. Besides, from what Iâve heard and read, shower sex can be quite precarious. Iâm surprised that you as a trauma doctor would risk such a thing.â
           âIâm not asking to have sex,â Michale laughed and helped her stand on her still wobbly legs after she flushed. âIâm asking for you to shower with me. Nothing more, nothing less.â
           And thatâs what they actually did. They simply had a shower. Michael washed her back and she washed his, along with his hair. When she did so, the blissful look on his face, the way he allowed himself to melt against her touch, sent a new kind of thrill through her. But it also made her wonder â when was the last time he allowed someone to take care of him?
           By the time they got out from under the water, it was close to four in the morning, so they dried themselves down and went to bed. Y/Nâs down duvet was a warm and fluffy cloud around them. Sure, she could have asked him to leave, but why would she, when he seemed so content to be there? Whether anything came from it once they awoke, didnât matter. If he didnât want to leave at that moment, Y/N would be the last person to push him to.
           She drifted off almost instantly, warm and safe in Michaelâs hold, but when the real morning came and she rubbed the sleep from her eyes, body sore and satiated, she was met with a cold spot next to her.
           There was no fucking sign on Michael, and judging by how sheâd been tucked in, heâd left a while back.
           Her dress and underwear had been neatly laid out on the chair in her room, heels tucked beneath it. As she ventured into the apartment, there were absolutely no signs of him, except for a cup of tea on the kitchenette. She knew itâd been made for her â it was filled to the brim, but much like the sheets, it was also already cold.
           Sourness settled in her mouth as she poured the liquid down the drain. Not even a single fucking note. It was like theyâd never even met.
           Y/N hadnât expected him to leave his phone number, God forbid, his address, what with how heâd laughed when sheâd told him she was twenty-six, and heâd responded that he could be her father with that age gap. She knew she was some kind of spur-of-the-moment mistake heâd made. A weakness in his judgement, but fucking hell, she at least deserved an âit was great meeting you, wish you all the best,â note. Especially because he knew the only reason sheâd gone to the bar was because sheâd been ghosted by a date.
           And now â now Michael was also a ghost, an unscratchable, unreachable itch under her skin she couldnât get to.
           That was the real reason Y/Nâd felt so bitter for the past two weeks. If heâd been a bad lay, or maybe sheâd been the bad party, she would understand the one-and-done-dump, but something about falling asleep while being wrapped up in one another, and then just leaving without so much as a goodbye, was crueler than if heâd left while she was still coming down from her release.
           Now though, as she watched him while they waited at the nurseâs station, she noted how his fingers twitched by his side. She wondered whether he wanted to touch her as badly as she wanted to touch him, but then horrible reality kicked in â there wouldnât be any sort of touching for a while.
           She was stuck with her leg in a cast, and a scheduled check-up with Dr. Langdon in a week to take it off and remove the stitches, before it would get swaddled again for a month or more.
           Y/N cursed the day sheâd met Dr. Michael Robinavitch, for heâd released a monster of carnal urges, she didnât even really know resided in her. And he was the only one who knew how to properly tame it because even in his scrubs and hoodie, surrounded by the smell of antiseptic and all sorts of bodily fluids she didnât want to think about, all she wanted to do was grab him by the neck and get him to some supply closet to have her way with him like they were actually in Greyâs Anatomy.
           âMichael, I,â Y/N started but got cut off by Sara waltzing into the emergency department.
           âHowâs my pirate doing?â She threw her arms around her shoulders and squeezed. âThey assign you a parrot yet?â
            âI donât have a fucking peg-leg.â Y/N rolled her eyes as she signed a final form. With that, Sara took the wheelchair handles, gave Dana a salute and wheeled her out of the hospital, making Y/N crane her neck back and shout a final thank you to the nurse.
           She was just about to ask Sara to slow down as she needed to talk to Michael, when she felt his presence moving with them, silent, steady and strong, his hands taking hold of the crutches as the automatic doors opened.
           He followed them out and once they got to Saraâs car, helped Y/N settle in the front seat.
           âYou good?â He tucked a strand behind her ear.
           âYeah.â She gave him a genuine smile, and her heart pounded in her chest as his eyes trailed to trace her lips. âI am. Thank you. For taking care of me in there.â
           âHonestly, I canât believe Iâm saying this, but the only time Iâd like to see you back here is for your check-ups.â
           Y/N nodded, suppressing a smile. âDuly noted. No shower karaoke for me.â
           âIâm serious. You have an appointment with Frank in a week, but other than that, please take care of yourself, alright?â
           âYou donât have to worry about that.â She nudged her head towards Sara who was wrangling the crutches inside the boot of the car. âMother hen is on the job.â
           âGood.â Michael nodded and before Y/N could properly prepare herself, heâd leaned down, cupping her jaw in his hands and kissed her.
           Her brain short-circuited at that, but when his tongue probed against the seal of her lips, she had to start wondering if sheâd actually died when sheâd hit her head in the shower. It didnât take more than that though for her to open up, for her arms to brush against his scrubs and weave into the salt-and-pepper hair.
           By the time Michael pulled back, both their lips were kiss-swollen.
           âLet me take you out on a date.â
           Y/N let out a breathless laugh, scratching the back of his neck. âWhat happened to the doctor-patient thing?â
           Michael only smirked. âYouâve been discharged. Youâre no longer a patient of mine.â
           âOkay, but even so â what would we do? My legâs in a cast, and I can barely hobble around with the crutches.â
           âI can carry you. I donât mind.â
           âAnd throw out your back, old man?â
           âHey, Iâm not that old!â Michael protested, and when he noted the smile on her mouth, he pressed his against it once more.
           âHow about this,â Y/N proposed, âwhen youâre done with your shift, you could come over to my place, and -,â
           âOur place,â Sara butted in, sliding into the driverâs seat. âSo, whatever you have in mind â no hanky-panky with me next door.â
           If Y/N rolled her eyes any harder they would get stuck in the back of her head, but she returned her attention to the awaiting attendant. âAnd we order some take-out. We watch a movie and then just⊠go to sleep?â
           âIt might be very late by the time Iâm off.â
           When she raised her hand and cupped his rugged cheek, it took him no time at all to lean into her touch. âI can wait.â She pecked his lips. âIâm in no rush.â She could only hope he understood the double meaning behind what she meant with it.
           Later that night as Y/N sat by the TV, the glow of the screen illuminating her face, she fell asleep with her head against Michaelâs chest.
           And when she awoke, her sheets were warm with the remnants of his body, even if he wasn't there anymore.
           She was alone, yes, but atop the pillow rested a note:
           Shift started at 8. Sorry, I canât be there to wake up with you.            Iâll be home by 9.
           It was almost impossible to wipe the smile off her face for the rest of the day.
Even as the itching under the cast started.
-----
Tags: are open :) if you wish to be tagged in further fics, please drop a comment under the fic or message me or leave me an ask :)
A/N: I have arisen
if you wish to know how this man makes me feel, please listen to Slutty by The Scarlet Opera.
I am FERAL.
P.S. I hope you enjoyed it :) feedback/constructive criticism is always appreciated :)
Thorin Oakenshield x reader
Smoke, Iron, and Thorin (Ongoing)
Chapter 1- Smoke, Iron, and Thorin
Chapter 2- I Wasn't Completely Nude
Chapter 3- Anger Translator
Chapter 4- Like We Used To Be
Chapter 5- Care to Make a Wager?
Chapter 6- Owe You One
Chapter 7- The Voice of Hunger
Chapter 8- You Love Bread
Chapter 9- Good Girl
Chapter 10- What We Left Behind in the Flames
Chapter 11- coming soon
Brain rot so bad Iâm posting on Tumblrđ
Word count: 1.2k
Heâs a stubborn alcoholic with depression who copes by being rude or otherwise sarcastic, you test his patience SO MUCH. He knows he hates you, thatâs about it, but also he finds a good deal of fun in goading you and bantering with you whenever youâre around. This man is a handful, and heâs mean, and he has literally no patience for bs.
Idk how you win him over, the logistics donât matter rn Iâm going nutty thinking about him. Imo I love the whole co-mentor thingy, anything that forces him to be around you bc otherwise heâs off hiding somewhere moping. Like imagine being depressed together, fighting over your different tastes in drinks or coping. Heâs hugging a whole bottle of liquor or maybe wine if itâs fancy enough and heâs scrutinizing your fruity cocktail like itâs any of his business.
Especially love the thought of getting drunk with him, at this point he just falls asleep when heâs buzzed but heâs trying to stay awake just to bicker and get as much of a reaction from you as he can. The only time he shuts up is if you roast tf out of him, heâd slump down into a chair or on the couch mumbling something barely coherent and then heâs out like a light.
Or, even better, youâre both sleepy drunks and start nodding off at the bar. You barely remember the walk to bed, all you know is somehow youâre still arguing with Haymitch. He throws himself onto the mattress, your mattress, both to piss you off and because heâs too burnt out to bother walking to his own bed across the hall. You flop down next to him and then all of a sudden youâre waking up hungover and half hugging that fool. The both of you freak out to find youâre in bed with one another, fearing the worst, and eventually having to accept the harsh reality that you spent the whole night cuddling and nothing more.
He doesnât just refuse to admit he likes you, heâs literally oblivious to even the idea of it. No he definitely doesnât enjoy your company, and he definitely doesnât seek you out, and thereâs no way he would ever think about you outside of your brief and unfortunate interactions. But then you start joking around talking about some pretty celebrity or a handsome victor from another district and suddenly heâs so defensive.
âHer? Sheâs two faced.â
âHim? Heâs not even average.â
âThem? Theyâre frugal.â
He canât even begin to realize heâs getting jealous, heâs too busy trying to shoot down all your compliments to these half baked crushes.
But if you compliment him he thinks youâre joking. You say he looks handsome and heâs all âHaha, very funny, yâknow you look good too- with your mouth shut.â Heâs gonna go for the jugular, but also he finds it getting harder and harder to insult you. Since when did your annoying smile become something he could tolerate? He must still be drunk..
Youâve wormed your way into his life and his head and suddenly youâre over at his house in the Victorâs Village, cleaning up for him while talking about self care and how he deserves it. Youâre infuriating, and yet his lawn is trimmed and his walkway is clear of weeds and even his bookshelves are free of dust- and maybe he should go outside for a bit today and get some fresh air.
Youâre tidying everything up and then heâs bringing you some old Knick Knacks, keeping track of your hobbies so he can leave you gifts, forcing you to sit down and relax for a minute between daily stressors. You call him an enabler and the laughter that follows makes your heart all fuzzy in the worst way. Every time you do something for him he thanks you in a way that makes it clear he didnât think anyone would ever do this for him. And when you thank him for his gifts, his occasional reality checks, and his unwilling hospitality, he canât help but feel more proud than he should that something he did held even an ounce of substance in your life.
How do you even confess??? Do you??? Itâs like one second nothing was there and the next you both just agreed that you were a thing, end of discussion. Heâs yours, youâre his. Youâve basically moved in at this point, and youâve been egging him on and showing him heâs worth the effort, and itâs starting to get through his thick skull that maybe thereâs worth in improvement. You donât fix him, as I said before, heâs stubborn, but he finds his own rationale getting weaker and weaker each time he tries to argue why he should go out for drinks tonight. And then when things break and youâre telling him just what he means to you, heâs finding himself falling into you like a damn safety net.
And once heâs got you he is not letting go.
Protective is one thing, this man is clingy. Like Velcro. But heâs a brat and heâs not going to let you tell him how needy he is, itâs just a coincidence that heâs always by your side. Heâll say heâs âkeeping you in lineâ its âyour faultâ because youâre in his way, but you both know heâs been following you around on his own fruition. Heâs attached to your hip at this point, literally. He has a particular affinity though, and thatâs hugging you from behind. He just comes up like he owns the place and wraps his arms around your midsection, shoving his face into the back of your neck with the biggest sigh he can muster. And if you reach up to play with his hair thatâs it, heâs going to drag you to whatever couch is closest and have an impromptu nap session.
Also did I mention heâs petty? Because he is. And heâs annoying unlike anything. You go to sit down in a chair? Heâs already seated in it, patting for you to come into his lap. You want to try a bite of his food? Heâs making you take it from his mouth. You need to shower? Heâs asking to come so he can keep you company. And if you let him join you, heâs 100% sitting there watching while going on about how âyou missed a spotâ just to see how irritated you can get.
Letting him come into the bathroom with you when you shower is like making a deal with the devil. This man is going above and beyond for your attention while youâre trying to focus on the task at hand. Heâs definitely offering to help you out, saying he can scrub your back for you and all that, itâs up to you whether you let him join or kick him out.
Either way after youâre done heâs so soft and tender, wrapping you in a towel and drying your face off, saying you look like a drowned rat while also telling you that youâre the prettiest thing heâs ever seen. He ruffles your hair with the towel just to squeeze it around you and grab you by your waist, pulling you until you kiss him. But if youâre still mad at him heâll keep drying you off and messing with you until he can get you to crack a smile, and then heâs peppering kisses all over your cheeks as you push his face away.
Heâs a nuisance, but heâs your nuisance, and you wouldnât have it any other way.
Ummm anywho thatâs all I got đ
God I hate to be that person but ughhhhhh I love that jack fic where they find out reader is pregnant and I'm CRAVING a second part to that (if you're u to of course). Like, how it'd be during her pregnancy, him being sweet but also worried and protective. Omg I need more soft jack w a baby on the way!!!!!
The Camouflage Onesie
part two of he begins to notice (read this first!)
content warnings: pregnancy, medical references, nausea/morning sickness, sexual content (explicit but consensual), body image changes, hormonal shifts, domestic intimacy, emotional vulnerability, labor and delivery scene, emotionally intense partner support, and high emotional/physical dependency within a marriage. yeah. pregnancy
word count : 5,735
WEEK 5
The test turned positive on a Sunday. By Monday morning, the entire medicine cabinet had been rearranged like it was a trauma cart.
Your moisturizer had been nudged over to make room for prescription-grade prenatals, a bottle of magnesium, a DHA complex, andâof all thingsâtwo individually labeled pill sorters with day-of-the-week dividers. One pink. One clear. Yours and Jack's, apparently.
You found him in the kitchen at 6:42 a.m., already in scrubs. He was calmly cutting the crusts off toast while listening to NPR and making a second cup of coffee for himself.
When he turned, he gave you a long once-overânot in a critical way, but diagnostic. Like he was scanning you for vitals only he could see.
âYouâre flushed,â he said. âAnd your pupils are dilated. You feel dizzy yet?â
You furrowed your brow. âNo?â
âGood. Youâre hydrating better than I thought.â
You blinked. âJack, I havenât even said good morning.â
He walked over and handed you a glass of room-temp water. âIâm loving you with medically sourced precision.â
You stared at the glass. âThis isnât cold.â
âCold water upsets your stomach. Lukewarm helps with early bloat.â
âJack.â
âI know what Iâm doing.â
You raised an eyebrow. âDo you?â
He tilted his head. âIâve watched septic patients stabilize faster than accountants facing a positive Clearblue. I know exactly what this is.â
You pressed your hands to your face and groaned. âYouâre not going to hover this much every week, are you?â
Jack leaned down, brushing a kiss over your shoulder. âNo. Some weeks Iâll hover more.â
âI made your appointment already,â he said, voice casual. âFriday. Dr. Patel. 3:40.â
You blinked. âYou didnât even ask me.â
âShe owes me a favor,â Jack said. âGot her niece into ortho during the peak of the shortage last year. Trust meâsheâll take care of you.â
You frowned, stunned. âHow did you even pull that off so fast?â
Jack raised an eyebrow. âSweetheart. Iâm an ER doctor. I have connections. I can get my wife seen before the weekâs out.â
Your eyes welled up suddenlyâcaught off guard by how steady he was, how sure. You were still half-floating in disbelief. Jack was already ten steps ahead, clearing the path.
WEEK 6
You learned very quickly that pregnancy was a full-time jobâand Jack approached it with quiet precision.
The first time you dry-heaved over the kitchen sink, he didnât rush in with a solution. He didnât lecture or hover. He just stepped into the room, leaned against the counter, and waited until you looked up.
âStill thinking about that leftover pasta?â he asked softly.
You made a face. âDonât say the word pasta.â
He crossed the kitchen, wordless, and pulled open a drawer. Out came a wrapped ginger chew. Then he disappeared down the hall.
When he returned, he had your cardigan in one hand and a bottle of lemon water in the other.
You blinked at him. âWhat are you doing?â
Jack handed you the water first. âYou always run cold when youâre nauseous. But I know youâll refuse a blanket if youâre flushed.â
You stared.
He draped the cardigan over your shoulders.
âYou okay?â
You nodded slowly. âI think so.â
âOkay,â he said. âLet me know when you want toast.â
You half-laughed, half-cried, wiping your eyes on your sleeve. âYou donât have to be this gentle every second.â
Jack leaned in. âIâm not being gentle. Iâm being exact. Thereâs a difference.â
Later that night, you sat curled up on the couch, still wrapped in the cardigan, while Jack quietly swapped your usual diffuser oil with something new.
âPeppermint,â he said when you asked. âHelps with queasiness.â
You raised an eyebrow. âAnd the bin next to the couch?â
âLetâs call it contingency planning.â
You smirked. âYouâre really building systems around me, huh?â
Jack looked at youâsoft, certain. âNo. Iâm building them for you.â
He moved across the room and brushed your hair back off your forehead, thumb pausing at your temple like he could smooth out whatever discomfort lingered there.
âYouâre not the patient,â he murmured. âYouâre the constant. And Iâm going to do whatever it takes to keep the ground steady under your feet.â
You didnât have a clever reply.
You just pulled him onto the couch beside you and tucked yourself into his chestâgrateful beyond words that this was who you got to build a life with.
WEEK 9
Jack was folding laundry on the bed when you walked into the room barefoot, carrying a bowl of cereal and wearing his old college sweatshirt.
You caught his glance. âWhat?â
He shook his head, smiled a little. âJust thinking you wear my clothes better than I ever did.â
You rolled your eyes, but your smile gave you away. He set a towel down. Reached for your bowl as you sat on the edge of the bed.
âI got it,â you said.
âI know,â he murmured, holding it anyway while you shifted the pillow behind your back. Once you were settled, he handed it back.
You took a bite, then glanced at the basket of half-folded laundry.
âYou know thatâs mostly my stuff, right?â
Jack looked at the pile. âItâs ours. Who else is gonna fold your seven thousand pairs of fuzzy socks?â
You laughed into your spoon.
He leaned against the dresser and just looked at you for a second. Not in a way that made you self-consciousâjust soft. Familiar.
âYouâre quieter this week,â he said.
You shrugged. âIâm tired.â
He nodded. âWant to go somewhere this weekend? Just us?â
âLike where?â
âNowhere big. Justâout of the house. We could rent a cabin. Lay around. Sleep until noon. Let you pretend Iâm not watching you nap like itâs my full-time job.â
You raised an eyebrow. âYou do that now?â
âNot always. Just when you start snoring like a golden retriever pup.â
âJack.â
He grinned, walked over, and kissed your temple.
âAlright, no trips. But at least let me cook something tonight. Something warm.â
You sighed. âYou already do too much.â
He looked at you seriously then, crouched a little so you were eye-level.
âI donât keep score,â he said. âIâm your husband. Youâre growing our kid. If all I have to do is make dinner and fold socks, Iâm getting off easy.â
WEEK 14
By week fourteen, the second trimester hit like an exhale.
You werenât queasy every morning anymore. Your appetite returned. You could brush your teeth without gagging. And Jack, for the first time in weeks, actually relaxed enough to sit through an entire episode of something without checking on you mid-scene.
You were curled on the couch togetherâyour head in his lapâwhen he slid his hand beneath your shirt and rested it on the soft curve of your stomach.
You raised an eyebrow. âYouâre subtle.â
âIâm consistent.â
You snorted. âYouâre clingy.â
His thumb brushed just under your ribs. âIâm memorizing.â
You shifted slightly, tucking your feet closer. âYou already know everything about me.â
Jack looked down at you, the corners of his mouth twitching. âI know the before. This part? This is new.â
He went quiet, and you could feel the shift in himâsomething deeper, more reverent than before.
âIâve seen pregnancy before,â he said. âBut Iâve never⊠watched it happen to someone I come home to.â
You turned your head to look up at him. âYou okay?â
Jack nodded slowly. âI just keep thinking⊠youâre building someone I havenât met yet. And I already know Iâd give my life for them.â
Your throat tightened. You reached for his hand where it rested on your stomach, lacing your fingers through his.
âWeâre doing okay, right?â
Jack bent down, kissed your forehead. âYouâre doing better than okay.â
You smiled. âWeâre a good team.â
âThe best,â he said. âEven if you keep stealing all the pillows.â
You laughed. âYou sleep like a corpse. You donât need them.â
He grinned. âYouâre getting cocky now that the nauseaâs eased.â
âYouâll miss her when sheâs gone.â
âNo, Iâll just be glad to have you back.â
You rolled your eyes. âYou have me.â
Jack kissed you again. Longer this time.
âYeah,â he whispered. âI do.â
WEEK 15
It started with the baby books.
Not the ones you bought. The ones Jack picked upâthree of them, stacked neatly on the nightstand one morning after a grocery run you hadnât joined him on.
You noticed them after your shower. He was still in the kitchen, loading the dishwasher, humming something that definitely wasnât in tune. But the titles made you pause.
ââWhat to Expect for Dads,ââ you read aloud, holding the top one up when he walked in. âYou going soft on me?â
Jack raised an eyebrow. âHardly. Just figured if youâre doing the building, I can at least read the manual.â
You smirked, flipping through a page. âYouâre the manual.â
âIâm the triage guy. I donât have maternal instincts. I have protocols.â
You leaned back against the headboard. âYouâre being humble, but youâre gonna ace this.â
He shrugged, crossing the room to sit on the edge of the bed. âI just want to know whatâs coming. Iâve done newborn shifts. Iâve handed babies to people shaking so hard they could barely hold them. But this? This isnât a shift. This is us.â
You touched his arm. âYouâve already done more than I can even keep track of.â
Jack looked at you for a long moment. Then placed his hand over yours. âI donât want to just be useful. I want to be good. For both of you.â
You didnât know what to say.
So you leaned forward and kissed himâgentle, deep. His hand slid to your stomach as naturally as breathing.
You pulled back just enough to whisper, âYou already are.â
That night, when he thought you were asleep, he cracked open the book again.
And stayed up past midnight reading about swaddling, latch cues, and the difference between Braxton Hicks and the real thing.
WEEK 16
Jack stood in the doorway of your office for almost a full minute before saying anything.
You looked up from your laptop, eyebrows raised. âWhat?â
He didnât move. Just scanned the roomâyour desk, the bookshelf, the little armchair in the corner that you never actually used.
Then, finally: âIs our house big enough for this?â
You blinked. âFor what?â
He gestured vaguely toward your belly, then the room. âAll of it. A baby. Crib. Noise. Diapers. More laundry. Less sleep.â
You smiled gently. âI thought we were turning this room into the nursery.â
âWe are,â he said quickly. âI just⊠I keep running scenarios in my head. And this place felt huge when it was just us.â
You closed your laptop. âJack.â
He looked at you.
âWeâll figure it out. We already are.â
He crossed the room, leaned against your desk. âIâm not trying to panic.â
âI know.â
âI just keep thinking about how everythingâs going to change. I want to make sure we still feel like us once it does.â
You stood and wrapped your arms around his waist, head resting against his chest. âWe will. You think too far ahead sometimes.â
âThatâs my job,â he murmured.
âAnd mine is reminding you that itâs okay to not solve everything all at once.â
He kissed the top of your head. âI know. I just want it to be enough.â
WEEK 19
Jack was unusually quiet on the drive to the anatomy scan.
Not anxious. Just focused in a way that told you his brain had been working overtime since the moment he woke up. His hand rested on your thigh at every red light, thumb tracing small circles against the fabric of your leggings.
âYou good?â you asked, turning down the radio.
He glanced over, nodded once. âJust running through the checklist in my head.â
You smiled gently. âYouâre not at work, babe.â
âI know. But Iâve never seen one of these as a husband.â
You reached over and laced your fingers through his. âYou donât have to be perfect today. You just have to be here.â
He gave you a look. âI am here. Thatâs the problem. Iâm so here I canât think about anything else.â
The waiting room was dim, quiet, and smelled vaguely like lemon disinfectant. Jack sat beside you, legs spread in his usual posture, one hand on your knee. His thumb tapped once. Then again. Then stopped.
The tech was warm, professional. She dimmed the lights. Asked if you wanted to know the sex. You said yes before Jack could answer.
You held your breath as the screen lit up in shades of blue and gray.
âEverythingâs looking healthy,â the tech said. âStrong spine, great heartbeat, long legs.â
Jack tightened his grip on your hand.
âAnd it looks like youâre having a girl.â
You exhaled all at once. Then laughed. Or maybe cried. It blurred together.
Jack didnât say anything right away. Just stared at the monitor, jaw tense, eyes glassy.
You turned to look at him. âJack.â
He blinked. âYeah.â
âYou okay?â
He nodded slowly. âYeah, I justââ He swallowed. âSheâs real.â
The rest of the appointment was a hazeâmeasurements, murmurs of âgood growth,â the gentle swipe of gel off your stomach. Jack didnât let go of your hand the entire time.
That night, you came out of the bathroom in an old t-shirt and found him standing at the dresser, staring down at something small in his hand.
You stepped closer. âWhatâs that?â
He held it up without lookingâone of the newborn onesies youâd bought weeks ago in a moment of cautious optimism. Light yellow. Soft cotton.
âYou think sheâll fit in this?â he asked.
You smiled. âTheyâre tiny, Jack. Thatâs kind of the whole point.â
He nodded but didnât move.
You wrapped your arms around him from behind. âYouâre allowed to feel everything. Itâs a big day.â
He turned, wrapped his arms around you carefully. âI think I was more afraid of not feeling it.â
You pressed your forehead to his. âYouâre allowed to be happy.â
âI am,â he said, voice rough. âI just keep thinking about how Iâm going to keep her safe. How Iâm going to teach her to breathe through chaos. How Iâll probably mess it up a hundred times.â
âYouâre not going to mess it up.â
He looked at you. âYou really think that?â
âI married you, didnât I?â
Jack smiled for real then. âYouâve always been the smarter one.â
You rolled your eyes. âBut youâre the one whoâs going to end up wrapped around her finger.â
He kissed your temple. âThat part was inevitable.â
WEEK 25
Jack convinced you to finally start looking at houses.
Youâd been reluctantâemotionally attached to the place youâd built your early marriage in, skeptical about change when everything in your life already felt like it was shiftingâbut Jack had waited. Quietly. Patiently.
And then one morning, while you were brushing your teeth, he leaned in behind you, kissed your shoulder, and said, âYou deserve a bigger closet.â
That was how it started.
Now, you were standing in a half-empty living room with sun pouring through tall windows and a sold sign posted out front.
Jack had just gotten off the phone with your realtor. âItâs official,â he said, sliding his phone into his back pocket. âInspection cleared. We close in three weeks.â
You blinked. âWe really bought a house.â
He walked over, wrapped his arms around your waist from behind, rested his chin on your shoulder. âCorrection: we bought your dream closet.â
You laughed. âYou think youâre funny.â
âI know I am. Also, thereâs a window bench in the nursery. You donât even have to try to make it Pinterest-worthy.â
You leaned into him, eyes scanning the bare walls. âI can already picture her here.â
Jack pressed a kiss to your neck. âI already do. I see her trying to climb that windowsill. Leaving fingerprints on every square inch of the fridge. Falling asleep on the stairs with a book she couldnât finish.â
Your throat tightened.
You turned in his arms. âYou really love it?â
He looked at you seriously. âI love what it gives you. I love that it lets you breathe. And yeahâI love that itâs ours.â
Later that night, back in your current house, you sat on the floor with your laptop open, scrolling through registry links and bookmarking soft pink paint samples. Jack handed you a cup of tea, then lowered himself on the couch beside you with a quiet grunt.
âIs it weird that I already want to be moved?â you asked.
He shook his head. âNo. Itâs called nesting. I read about it in that chapter you skipped.â
You shot him a look. âYouâre the worst.â
âIâm the one folding swaddles while you build spreadsheets. This is our love language.â
You leaned into him, content. âYeah. I guess it is.â
WEEK 27
Youâd been on your feet all dayâorganizing documents, boxing up odds and ends, making lists of what needed to be moved and what could be donated. Jack told you to slow down three separate times, each time gentler than the last.
But now, at 8:43 p.m., you were barefoot in the kitchen, half bent over a drawer of mismatched utensils, when he walked in, tossed a dish towel on the counter, and said, âOkay. Thatâs it.â
You looked up. âWhat?â
Jack didnât raise his voice. He didnât have to. He crossed the room, took the spatula from your hand, and gently nudged you toward a chair. âSit. Let me take over.â
You blinked at him. âIâm fine.â
âYouâre stubborn.â
You folded your arms. âSame thing.â
Jack crouched in front of you, resting his forearms on your knees. âYouâve done enough today. Let me be the husband who makes you sit down and drink something cold while I finish sorting forks from tongs.â
You softened, your fingers drifting to his hair. âI know youâre right. I just feel useless when Iâm not doing something.â
âYouâre 27 weeks pregnant,â Jack said, voice warm. âYou made a person and folded three boxes of bath towels. Thatâs two more miracles than anyone else managed today.â
You exhaled and leaned back.
Later, when you were curled on the couch with a glass of iced water and your feet propped on a pillow, Jack settled next to you and tugged a blanket over both of you.
âHouse is gonna feel real soon,â he said.
You nodded. âSheâs going to be born there.â
Jackâs arm slid around your shoulders. âWeâll bring her home to that nursery. Hang that weird mobile you picked that I still donât understand.â
âYou said it was âavant-garde.ââ
âI was being polite.â
You smiled, tired and full. âWeâre really doing it, huh?â
âWe are.â
You rested your head on his chest. Jackâs hand drifted instinctively to your belly, and stayed there.
âHey,â you said after a minute. âThanks for making me sit.â
Jack kissed the top of your head. âThanks for letting me.â
WEEK 30
You caught him standing in the doorway of the nursery around 9:00 p.m., arms folded, shoulder braced against the frame like he was keeping watch.
The room was nearly done. Diapers in bins. Chair assembled. Books on shelves. But Jack wasnât looking at any of that. He was staring at the window, like he was imagining the light that would come through it in the early mornings.
You leaned against the opposite side of the doorway, watching him.
âWhatâs going on in that head?â you asked.
He glanced over at you. âJust thinking.â
âDangerous.â
Jack cracked half a smile but didnât move. âI keep picturing her. Not just baby-her. Grown-up her.â
You walked toward him. âWhat version?â
He tilted his head. âSeventeen. Wants to borrow the car. Has someone texting her who I probably donât like.â
You laughed. âYouâre already dreading a boyfriend?â
âIâm already dreading anyone who gets to be in her world without knowing what it cost us to build it.â
That stopped you.
Jack finally looked at you thenâreally looked. âSheâs not even born yet and I already know Iâd lay down in traffic for her. And I know how fast people can break things they donât understand.â
You rested your hands on his chest. âYouâre not going to be scary.â
Jack raised an eyebrow.
âWell. Youâll look scary. Army vet. ER attending. Perpetual scowl. Built like you bench-press refrigerators for fun.â
He snorted. âThanks.â
âBut youâll love her in a way no one will mistake for anything but devotion.â
Jack leaned down, pressed his forehead to yours.
âIâm not good at soft,â he murmured.
âYouâre good at us,â you whispered. âThatâs all sheâll need.â
He pulled you into his arms then, one hand resting flat against the curve of your belly. âSheâs gonna hate me when I make her come home early.â
âSheâs gonna roll her eyes when you insist on meeting everyone she ever texts.â
Jack grinned. âDamn right.â
You laughed into his shirt. âYouâre so screwed.â
âI know.â
But he held you a little tighter. Didnât say anything else. Just stood there in the dim nursery, one arm wrapped around the two of you, as if holding his whole world in place.
WEEK 32
Youâd read the pregnancy forums. The blog posts. The articles with vaguely medical sources claiming the third trimester came with a spike in libido. You thought youâd be too sore, too tired. Too preoccupied.
What you hadnât expected was the absolute onslaught.
It was like your body had one setting: Jack. Crave him. Need him. Get him here, now, fast.
Heâd just gotten home from a late shift, dropped his keys in the bowl by the front door, and disappeared into the shower while you laid in bed attempting to not whine out loud. That resolve lasted six minutes.
When he walked into the bedroom, towel low around his hips, water dripping down his chest, you didnât even mean to say it:
âIâm gonna die.â
Jack froze.
He crossed the room in seconds. âWhat is it? Whereâs the pain?â
You were already on your back, one hand pressed to your belly, the other covering your eyes.
âNot pain,â you groaned. âJust hormones. God, Jackâthis is insane.â
He crouched beside you. âYou need to describe whatâs happening.â
You peeked at him from under your hand. âI need you. I need you.â
Jack stilled. Blinked. Then dropped his forehead to your shoulder with a long exhale.
âChrist. You scared the hell out of me.â
âIâm sorry,â you mumbled, laughing into your wrist. âI justâIâm desperate. I thought it would go away. Itâs not going away.â
He lifted his head. Smiled. âDesperate, huh?â
âYouâre not helping.â
âI think I am.â
Jack kissed your temple, then your cheek, then hovered over your lips. âYou sure youâre good?â
You reached for him. âNo. Iâm feral.â
He didnât waste another second.
What followed wasnât franticâit was focused. Jack stripped you with efficiency and reverence, lips brushing every newly sensitive part of you. Your belly. Your hips. Your breasts. He murmured to you the whole timeâgentle things, grounding things.
âYouâre beautiful like this,â he said, kissing the swell of your stomach. âYouâve been patient. Let me take care of you.â
âPlease,â you whispered. âI feel insane.â
âI know. Iâve got you.â
He slid inside you slow, controlled, the way he always did when he wanted to make it last. But tonight, there was something more behind itâurgency without rush, intention without pressure.
You clawed at his shoulders, moaning into his neck. âJack, Jackââ
âRight here.â
âI missed you today.â
âI missed you too. I always do.â
You wrapped your arms around his neck, legs tightening around his waist. The angle shifted, and everything inside you splintered.
âOhâGodâdonât stopââ
Jack groaned, teeth catching your jawline. âYou feel so good, sweetheart. So damn good.â
He guided you through it, one hand braced behind your head, the other cradling your hip like youâd break without it. When you came, it was with his name on your lips and tears at the corners of your eyes.
He followed seconds later, low and deep and steady, body shaking over yours.
Afterward, he didnât move. Just curled around you, one arm anchored under your shoulders, the other stroking your belly in long, soothing sweeps.
âStill dying?â he asked eventually.
You huffed a laugh. âLittle bit.â
Jack smiled into your shoulder. âGuess Iâll keep checking your vitals.â
He pulled back just enough to kiss your chest, then your stomach, whispering something you couldnât hear but felt down to your bones.
When you shifted against him, needy again already, he looked up with a low laugh. âYouâve got to be kidding me.â
âJack,â you breathed, âIâm not done.â
And Jackâpredictable, capable, ready-for-anything Jackâjust grinned.
âI never am with you.â
The second round was slower. Deeper. You rode his thigh first, panting against his neck, clinging to his shoulders while he whispered filth in your earâsoft, low things no one else would ever hear from him. He touched you like he already knew exactly what youâd need next week, next month, next year.
And when you collapsed against him again, trembling and sore and finally, finally full in every sense of the wordâhe kissed your forehead and said, âYouâre everything.â
âI love you,â you whispered.
Jack tucked your hair behind your ear and kissed your cheek.
âGood,â he murmured. âBecause Iâm not going anywhere.â
WEEK 35
The third trimester had turned your body into a full-time performance art piece. You were a living exhibit on discomfort, hydration, Braxton Hicks, and the high-stakes negotiation of shoe-tying. Youâd stopped fighting the afternoon naps, started rotating three stretchy outfits on a loop, and made peace with the fact that gravity was no longer your friend.
Jack had adjusted too.
Without comment, he now drove you to every appointment. Without asking, he refilled your water before bed. Without blinking, he gave up half his side of the bathroom counter for the ever-expanding line of belly oils, cooling balms, and half-used jars of snacks.
But tonight?
Tonight he came home to find you crying at the kitchen table over a broken zipper on the diaper bag.
âSweetheart.â
You looked up, cheeks blotchy. âIt broke. It broke, Jack. And it was the only one I liked.â
âHey, heyâbreathe.â
You sniffled. âIt had compartments. It had mesh.â
Jack took the bag gently from your hands, and examined the zipper like it was a patient in trauma.
âLooks jammed,â he said. âNot broken.â
You stared at him. âYou donât know that.â
He looked up. âI do.â
He walked over to the toolbox without fanfare, and returned two minutes later with a small pair of pliers. Thirty seconds after that, the zipper slid closed like nothing had happened.
You burst into tears again.
Jack set the bag down and pulled you into his arms. âHormones?â
You nodded into his chest. âI love you so much.â
He smiled against your hair. âYou want to take a bath?â
You sniffed. âWill you sit on the floor with me?â
âIâll bring the towel and everything.â
Which is how twenty minutes later you were in the tub, steam curling around the mirror, your swollen belly just breaching the surface, while Jack sat on the floor, reading your baby book aloud like it was scripture.
âSheâs the size of a honeydew,â he said, tapping the page. âStill gaining half a pound a week. Lungs developing. Rapid brain growth.â
You hummed. âSheâs been moving a lot today.â
He smiled, reached over, and rested a palm over your belly. âShe likes the sound of your voice.â
âShe likes pizza. She tolerates me.â
Jack leaned over and kissed your temple. âShe already loves you.â
You sighed, settling deeper into the water. âSheâs going to love you more.â
Jackâs voice went quiet. âThatâs not possible.â
You looked over.
He was watching you like he was memorizing the moment. Like he knew it wouldnât last forever and wanted to hold every second of it.
âSheâs got the best of you already,â he murmured.
You shook your head. âYouâre the one whoâs been steady through everything. Sheâs gonna know that.â
He kissed your hand. âSheâs gonna know we did it together.â
And you believed him.
Even through the tears, the discomfort, the slow shuffle from couch to fridge to bedâyou believed him.
WEEK 36
Jack came home with a basket.
Not from the store. Not from a delivery service. From the hospital. Carried under one arm like it was made of glass.
You were on the couch, half-watching a cooking show, half-rubbing the spot where the baby had been kicking for the last ten minutes straight. Jack came in, dropped his keys, and didnât say anything at first.
He just set the basket on the coffee table and said, âRobby made me promise I wouldnât forget to give this to you tonight.â
You blinked. âWhat?â
Jack gestured toward it. âItâs from the ER.â
Inside: a soft blanket. A framed photo of the team crowded around a whiteboard that read âBaby Abbot ETA: T-minus 4 weeks.â A pair of hand-knitted booties labeled âPerlah Originals.â A stack of index cards, each one handwrittenâDanaâs in looping cursive, Collinsâs in all caps, Princessâs with hearts dotting the iâs. Robbyâs simply read: Your kid already has better taste in music than Jack. Congrats.
You turned one of the index cards over, reading Danaâs note about how you were going to be the kind of mom who made her daughter feel safe and loved in the same breath.
âI didnât know they even noticed me,â you whispered.
Jack rubbed slow circles against your bump. âThey notice what matters to me.â
You looked at him.
He shrugged. âYouâre my wife. Youâre not just around. Youâre part of everything.â
The baby kicked again. Hard enough to make you gasp.
Jack smiled, leaned in, and kissed the place sheâd just moved. âShe agrees.â
WEEK 38
Youâd read about nesting, but you thought it would look more like baking muffins at midnightânot following Jack from room to room like his gravitational pull physically outweighed yours.
He didnât seem to mind. Heâd brush his hand down your back every time you passed, help you off the couch like you were recovering from surgery, and kiss your temple every time he walked by.
By Thursday, the baby bag was packed and parked by the front door. Youâd zipped it, unzipped it, and re-packed it twice just to check. And when Jack got home that evening, he nodded at it, then set something down beside it with a quiet thunk.
You glanced over. âWhatâs that?â
âMy go-bag,â he said simply.
You raised an eyebrow.
Jack nudged it with the toe of his boot. âArmy-issued. Carried this thing through two deployments and six different states. Thought itâd be fitting to bring it into the delivery room.â
You blinked. âYou packed already?â
He nodded, unzipped the top, and tilted the bag open for you to see: a clean shirt, a hand towel, a toothbrush, a few protein bars, and a worn, dog-eared paperback you recognized instantly.
âThat one?â you said, surprised. âYou always said you hated it.â
âI did,â he admitted, zipping the bag shut again. âBut itâs your favorite. I read your notes in the margins when I miss you on long shifts.â
You crossed the room and leaned into him. âYouâre something else.â
WEEK 40
You woke up at 2:57 a.m. with a tight, rolling wave of pressure low in your spine. It wrapped around your middle like a band and didnât let go.
Jack was already shifting beside you. Years in the Army meant he didnât sleep deeplyânot when he was home, not when you were pregnant.
âYou okay?â he asked, groggy but alert.
You exhaled shakily. âItâs time.â
He sat up immediately. âHow far apart?â
âSix minutes.â
âLetâs move.â
By the time you got in the car, the contractions were coming fasterâsteadier. Jack didnât speed, but he gripped the steering wheel like the world depended on it.
You were wheeled in through the ER doorsâbecause of course you were going into labor at the hospital where Jack worked. Princess met you at triage with a knowing smile.
âSheâs in three,â Princess said. âPerlahâs setting it up now.â
You were halfway into the room when Jack froze.
He turned to Collins at the desk. âPatel?â
âStuck behind a pileup on 376,â Collins said. âSheâs trying to reroute.â
Jack muttered something under his breath and scanned the monitors. âWhereâs Robby?â
âDown in trauma. Heâs finishing up a round.â
Jack didnât wait. He left you in Princessâs care and went straight for the trauma bay.
Robby was wiping his hands on a towel when Jack stepped in. Hoodie half-zipped. Scrubs wrinkled. Wide awake.
âSheâs in labor?â
âSheâs in active labor,â Jack said. âAnd Patelâs not gonna make it, butââ
âYou want me in the room,â Robby finished.
âI need you in the room.â
Robby dropped the towel. âDone.â
When Robby stepped into your room, you exhaled like someone had lifted a weight off your chest.
âHey, doc,â you muttered through a contraction.
âYouâre in good hands,â Robby said, glancing between you and Jack. âYouâve got half the ER out there whispering about it.â
âTell them if they bring me chocolate, they can stay,â you joked.
Perlah dimmed the lights. Princess wiped sweat from your forehead. Robby took your vitals himself and kept your eyes steady with his.
Hours blurred together. Jack never left your side.
âYouâre okay. Iâve got you.â
âYouâre doing perfect.â
âSheâs almost here.â
Then everything started to move faster. Robby gave a nod to Princess and Perlah.
âOne more push,â he said. âYouâve got this.â
Jack leaned close, his forehead against yours. âCome on, sweetheart. Right here. Youâve got her.â
And thenâ
A cry. Loud. Full. Brand new.
âSheâs here,â Robby said quietly.
Jack didnât move at first. Just watched. His eyes were wet. His hand covered his mouth.
Princess handed her to you, swaddled and squirming. Jack kissed your forehead and brushed a tear off your cheek.
âSheâs perfect,â he whispered. âYou did it.â
Later, after theyâd cleaned up and the room was quiet, you watched Jack walk over to the bassinet. He held up a camouflage onesie.
âOh my God,â you said. âSeriously?â
He looked over, completely straight-faced. âThis is important.â
âYouâre impossible.â
He kissed you once, then again. And held her like heâd waited his whole life.
aaahh hi hello! :)
first thing, i just wanted to say how much i love the way you write for jack and robby. you capture their personalities so well! reading your works are an absolute treat. <3
second, would it be possible to request something for robby? he finds out that his wife was in a really bad accident on her way to work, so she's rushed to the hospital and admitted to their icu?
tysm, and keep up the amazing work!
And You Came Back to Me
content/warning : Serious car accident, medical trauma, cardiac arrest, emergency resuscitation, hospitalization/ICU setting, emotional distress, PTSD symptoms, brief combat/military reference, grief response, partner fear, sibling care, recovery from near-death experience. Heavy emotional themes including flashbacks, guilt, and the fragility of healing.
word count : 3,791
a/n ; Wrote this as an exploration of what happens in the quiet after chaosâthe weight of routine, the people who stay, and the small ways grief and love show up at once.
He shouldâve kissed you longer.
Thatâs the first thing that slams through Robbyâs chest when the officer says your name.
Not doctor. Not sir. Just: âMr. Robinavitch, your wifeâs been in a serious accident.â
It doesnât registerânot fully. Not until the next words hit him like shrapnel:
âShe was unconscious at the scene. EMS is transporting her to Allegheny General now.â
And suddenly, time snaps backwardâthrows him hard against the wall of the morning. Back to the kitchen. To the quiet hum of NPR on the radio. To the faint smell of burnt toast from the toasterâbecause you always forget about it halfway through brushing your teeth. Heâs told you a hundred times to stop using the âmax crispâ setting. You always say, âItâs faster.â
Back to the sound of your heels on the tile as you rushed inâalready dressed, hair still damp and twisted into that messy bun you always called âprofessional enough.â
âShit,â you muttered, digging through your purse. âIâm running late. Can you zip me up?â
He shouldâve stopped what he was doing.
Shouldâve set down the mug. Turned fully toward you. Looked at you the way he used toâlike you were something he still couldnât quite believe was real.
But he was distracted. Reading the news. Checking an overnight lab update. Half-listening to McKay complain in the group chat about last nightâs board decision.
So instead, he reached out automatically. Took hold of the zipper. Pulled it up the back of your dress like heâs done a hundred times before.
A quiet, familiar ritual.
âThanks, babe,â you said, glancing over your shoulder with a soft smile.
He leaned in, kissed the back of your neck, right where your hair curled against your skin.
âYou look beautiful,â he said. Distracted. Sincere, but distracted.
âYou always say that.â
âBecause itâs always true.â
You laughed and turned away to grab your keys.
He shouldâve stopped you. Shouldâve wrapped his arms around your waist, rested his chin on your shoulder, whispered something dumb and tender and marriage-soft like Donât go to work. Stay home. Letâs be irresponsible. Shouldâve asked about the dream you mumbled in your sleep. Shouldâve paid attention when you said, âI might take the highway if trafficâs clearâIâm too late for the long route.â
You hated the highway. Said it made you feel like one wrong move could ruin everything. Said the backroads felt saferâwinding, tree-lined, steady. He teased you for it. Called you dramatic. But he always agreed.
Take the long way. Whatâs ten more minutes if it means peace of mind?
And this morningâGodâhe hadnât even thought to remind you.
âYou driving in or Ubering?â he asked, eyes still on his phone.
âDriving. Highway if I have to. Donât yell.â
âJust⊠text me when you get there.â
âI always do.â
You smiled.
He didnât look up.
You walked out the door.
Now a stranger is telling him you were rear-ended at 70 miles per hour, spun into a guardrail, crushed on the driverâs side. That EMS pulled you from the wreckage with the jaws of life. That you werenât responsive. That you lost a lot of blood.
That theyâre bringing you in.
To him.
To his ER. His trauma bay. His staff.
And you might not survive the trip.
He shouldâve kissed you longer.
He shouldâve kissed you like it was the last time.
Because maybeâit was.
He drops the phone in the stairwell.
Heâs moving before his mind catches upâdown the steps, through the ER corridor, and straight into the trauma bay. The doors slam open so hard they shake on their hinges.
âWhere is she?â His voice breaks as it rips out of his throat.
Danaâs the first to reach him. Sheâs just stepped off the elevatorâchart in one hand, coffee in the other.
âShe just came in,â she says immediately. âLangdonâs leading. Mateo is on the vent. Santos and Javadi are in the roomââ
âWhere is she?â
The way he says it this timeâitâs not procedural. Itâs not about whoâs on what. Itâs you. Thereâs a tremor in his voice now, something raw enough to cut through Danaâs usual calm.
She steps in his path.
âRobby,â she says gentlyâtoo gently. She never uses that voice. Not with him.
âShe coded in the rig.â
He flinches like she slapped him. The hallway tilts.
âThey got her back,â Dana rushes to add, because the look in his eyes unravels something in her. âBut itâs bad. Sheâs notâsheâs not conscious.â
He doesnât stop to respond.
Robby just shrugs off Danaâs hand and barrels toward Trauma One, like his bodyâs moving on instinctâlike it never forgot how to find you.
And then he sees you.
Youâre nearly lost in the swarm of bodies around you, but heâd know you anywhereâeven battered and broken, even with your hair soaked through and clinging to your face in tangled strands. One of your feet is bare. Your dressâthat dress, the blue one you joked made you look like a lawyer even though you worked in nonprofit, the one he remembers zipping up hours agoâhas been sliced clean down the center. Blood saturates the fabric, blooming across it like ink in water, until thereâs barely any blue left at all.
Mateo is squeezing the ambu bag. Javadiâs covered in sweat, glove smeared in something dark. Langdon is barking orders like his throat is full of glass.
Robby freezes in the doorway.
Langdon doesnât even look at him. Just shouts, âGet him out of here!â
Danaâs behind him again. This time, she doesnât touch him. Just steps into his line of vision and holds it.
âYou know better. Let them work.â
âThatâs my wife. Thatâs Jackâs sister.â
Santosâ voice breaksâjust barely. âSheâs got internal bleeding. If we canât stabilize her, weâre opening the chest.â
And there it is.
Robbyâs hand slams against the doorframe. He backs away without realizing heâs doing it.
He ends up in Observation 2.
He doesnât remember walking there. Doesnât know how long he stands in the dark before someoneâmaybe Perlahâsets a bottle of water beside him. He doesnât touch it.
Heâs never felt like this before. Like the air is too thick. Like heâs breathing cement.
Jack shows up ten minutes later. Not in scrubsâheâs in a weather-beaten field jacket and dark jeans, the kind of outfit thatâs survived its fair share of long nights. Thereâs rain slicking his shoulders, water dripping from the cuffs like he didnât bother with an umbrella. Or didnât care.
âThey told me,â Jack says, low.
Robby doesnât move.
âI came as soon asââ
âShe took the fucking highway.â
Jack is quiet.
âShe never takes the highway. IâI always tell her to take 51. She hates the on-ramps. Says they make her feel like sheâs gonna die. She said it, Jack. She said it.â
Jack nods, slowly, but his posture is all wrongâtoo still, too rigid. Like heâs holding something in. His jaw is locked, eyes fixed somewhere over Robbyâs shoulder like if he looks at him directly, heâll break.
âYeah,â he finally says, voice rough and frayed. âShe told me that too. Said the on-ramps made her feel like the road would disappear underneath her. When we were kids, sheâd make me walk the long way to school just to avoid the underpass near 18th. Three extra blocks. Every morning.â
He exhales, sharp and uneven. âSheâd hold my sleeve like she thought the wind might carry her off if she let go.â
The pause that follows isnât empty. Itâs fullâtight with every year Jack spent being the big brother. Every time he covered for you. Every scraped knee, every school project, every time he stood between you and the door while your parents screamed.
Robby sinks down against the wall. His voice is hollow. âShe asked me to zip up her dress this morning.â He swallows hard. âI didnât even look at her. Not really. I was reading emails. I kissed her neck and said, âText me when you get there.ââ
Jack doesnât answer. Doesnât offer reassurance or statistics or hope. He just lowers himself to the floor beside Robby, head bowed like heâs praying to no one in particular.
âYou love her,â he says, and thereâs no bitterness in it. Just something steady. âYou take care of her in a way I never could. You know how to make her feel safe when itâs quiet. How to be soft when she wonât ask for it. Iâve spent my whole life guarding her from the world, and nowâŠâ
He trails off, staring at the floor.
âYouâre the part of her world I trust the most.â
Robby closes his eyes. His shoulders shake, once.
âI donât know how to be okay if she doesnât wake up.â
Jack reaches out, sets a hand firm and grounding on Robbyâs shoulderâsteady, like heâs done for you a hundred times before.
âThen itâs a good thing you wonât have to be,â Jack says. âBecause sheâs too damn stubborn to leave either of us.â
And for the first time since the call, Robby lets himself breathe.
The updates come like clockwork.
âSheâs holding.â
âWeâve got the bleeding under control.â
âSheâs going up to the ICU now. Sedated. Ventilated.â
Robby follows the bed upstairs like a shadow. No one stops him. Not even Langdon, who looks like heâs aged ten years in a single shift.
They set you up in 312A.
Youâre pale. Still. Your wedding ring sits in a plastic cup on the tray beside your bed.
He takes your hand.
âHey,â he whispers. âIâm here. Youâre okay. Youâre safe.â
You donât move.
He leans forward, pressing his forehead to your arm. His voice catches.
âBaby, please. Please come back.â
And thenâhe talks.
About the catâhow she followed you to the door that morning, meowing like she knew something was wrong. How you paused, scooped her up, kissed the top of her head, and whispered, âHold down the fort, okay? Back before dinner.â Then blew her a kiss like you always did, keys already in hand.
About the coffee mug still sitting in the sink. The one with the chipped handle and the faded red lettering from that anniversary trip to Vermontâthe kind of mug that never matched anything else but somehow became your favorite. You used it every morning, even when there were clean ones on the shelf. He used to tease you for it. Then he stopped.
About the basket of laundry half-folded on the couch. A pair of your socks tucked inside one of his. Your blouse still soft from the dryer, draped across the armrest like you might come back and finish putting things away. Like youâd walk in and complain that he always left the fitted sheets for you to deal with.
About the dress you pulled from the closet the night beforeâhow you held it up in the mirror and said, âIf this still fits, maybe Iâll wear it next weekend. The red one. You like this one.â And how he didnât say anything. Just looked at you like youâd already won the room.
Itâs those things.
The little ones.
The ones that never get written down or photographed.
The pieces of a life you donât realize youâre building until everything goes quiet.
âYou canât leave me yet,â he murmurs, voice rough. âI havenât seen you hold our kid yet. I havenât told you enough times that you saved my life just by saying yes.â
Day Two
He doesnât sleep.
Javadi comes by. Says nothing. Just looks through the glass and nods. Collins leaves coffee on the table without a word.
He doesnât leave your side.
Jack shows up again late that night. Sits with him in the dark.
Neither of them speak. Not until Robby, voice shredded and barely audible, says, âI canât lose her, Jack.â
Jack just nods. âYou wonât.â
âI always figured Iâd go first,â Jack says quietly, like the words slipped past his guard. âSheâs always been the brave one. Ran toward things I would've flinched from. I was the one who hung backâscanned the exits, counted the risks.â
His jaw clenches. He stares at the floor like heâs trying to make sense of it all from the grain of the tile.
âBut when I saw her in that trauma bayâŠâ His voice falters, and he has to force the next words out. âEven in combat, I never felt fear like that. Never felt that kind of helpless.â
Robby doesnât speak at first. Just sits with it, like the silence might soften the blow.
Then, quietly:
âShe told me once she felt safest when she was with the two of us. Like the world couldnât touch her.â
Jack exhales, slow and uneven. His eyes drift toward the bedâtoward where you lie, still and silent beneath the tangle of wires and monitors. Still unmoving. Still too quiet.
Like if he looks long enough, maybe something in you will stir. Maybe youâll meet his gaze and say his name like it means something.
âShe better wake up,â he murmurs. âBecause she still owes me twenty bucks. And Iâm not letting her off the hook just because she got hit by a truck.â
Day Three.
The room is still. Quiet in a way that feels deliberateâlike the air itself is holding its breath. Pale morning light creeps in through the ICU blinds, catching on the sharp corners of machines and the softer curve of your shoulder beneath the hospital blanket. Everything hums: the ventilator, the heart monitor, the sound of plastic tubing shifting slightly when you exhale.
Jack arrives before sunrise.
He doesnât announce himself. Doesnât knock. Just moves through the doorway like someone crossing into sacred ground. He sets a cup of black coffee on the counter for Robbyâno cream, two sugars, just the way you always made it for himâand then takes the same spot by the wall heâs stood in every day since you were brought in.
Robby hasnât slept. Heâs still in yesterdayâs clothes, eyes ringed with exhaustion. His hand hasnât left yours all night.
They donât talk for a while. Donât need to. Jack watches you breathe. Robby counts each rise and fall of your chest like heâs tethered to it.
The moment happens quietly.
Just after nine.
Your fingers twitch. Small. Involuntary, maybeâbut real.
Robby jolts forward. âJack.â
Jack is at his side in an instant, already reaching, already watching. âDo it again,â he whispers, knuckles white where they grip the bed rail. âCâmon, kid. Come back to us.â
And then you do.
Your hand tightens around Robbyâs. Weak. Barely there. But deliberate.
Robby exhales like heâs been underwater for days. A strangled sound escapes himâhalf sob, half stunned reliefâand he bows his head to your hand like itâs the only thing anchoring him to the world.
Jack grips the back of Robbyâs chair with one hand, the other dragging down his face. His mouth is tight. His eyes wet. But his voice, when it comes, is steady in the way only older brothers can manage.
âSheâs fighting.â
The nurses rush in. Langdon appears within minutes. Orders are called out. Sedation is reduced. The ventilator settings are dialed down. But Robby doesnât moveânot from your side, not from your hand.
The change is slow. But itâs there.
Color returning to your cheeks. Lashes twitching. A soft wrinkle between your brows like youâre dreaming, or hurting, or both.
When your eyes finally open, itâs dusk.
Theyâre glassy. Unfocused.
But they find him.
âHey, baby.â His voice cracks. âYou with me?â
You canât speak. Not yet. But your eyes do the work.
Thenâyour fingers tighten in his again.
Jack moves to your side, each step careful. Measured. He doesnât speak. Doesnât trust his voice not to crack the quiet wide open.
And for a second, something flickers across your face. Recognition. A tear.
It rolls down your cheek and Robby catches it with a shaking hand.
He kisses your fingers. Your knuckles. Your wrist.
âYou came back to me.â
Jack looks at you, jaw tight, throat working. Then he mutters, almost to himself, âDamn right she did.â
He doesnât say more.
He doesnât have to.
Youâre awake.
And theyâre both there.
Thatâs everything.
Three Weeks Later.
The apartment smells like lavender and laundry detergent. Your favorite blanket is folded over the back of the couch, and someoneâprobably Jackârestocked the kitchen with your exact tea and oatmeal brand, like muscle memory. There are flowers on the table, half-wilted, and a stack of unopened get-well cards beside them that you havenât yet had the energy to read.
Youâre home. And youâre alive.
But nothing feels normal yet.
Youâre thinner than you were. Your ribs ache when you turn too fast, and your hands shake when you try to open pill bottles. But you walk. You breathe on your own. You wake up in your own bed next to Robby instead of tangled in ICU tubing.
And RobbyâRobby hasnât let you out of his sight.
He tries to be subtle. Tries to hover without hovering. You catch the way his hand twitches when you lean down to pick something up. The way he stays awake two hours after youâve fallen asleep, just to make sure your breathing stays steady.
âIâm not going to break,â you tell him one morning, finding him standing in the hallway just outside the bathroom door.
He doesnât smile. Just steps forward and cups your cheek like itâs second natureâlike his hand was always meant to rest there.
âYou did,â he says, voice low and frayed at the edges. âYou almost died. And I stood there and watched it happen.â
His thumb brushes against your skin, gentle. Reverent.
âSo yeah,â he murmurs, eyes locked on yours. âIâm sorry, but Iâm gonna be careful with you for a while. You donât get to scare me like that and expect me to walk away unchanged.â
You donât argue. Just press your forehead to his and breathe with him.
Jack visits like clockwork. Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays. He always calls ahead, even though you stopped asking him to. He comes with practical thingsâgroceries, multivitamins, takeout from that one Thai place you craved when nothing else would stay down.
He never makes a scene of it. Just moves through your kitchen like itâs routine. Like you didnât code in the back of an ambulance while he was somewhere elseâdriving home, bone-tired and still smelling like antiseptic, unaware that your heart had stopped without him there to catch it.
He acts like nothingâs changed. Like you didnât almost leave him without warning. But the way he watches you when you walk across the room says everything.
âYou gonna let me in, or am I just supposed to enjoy the doorframe?â he jokes the first time youâre strong enough to answer it yourself.
âYou gonna keep looking at me like Iâve got a ticking clock strapped to my chest?â you fire back.
Jack shrugs. Steps inside. Kisses the top of your head. âYouâre still annoying. Good. I was worried.â
That night, you all end up in the living roomâcurled into Robbyâs side on the couch, a blanket tucked around your legs, while Jack settles into the armchair nearby. His prosthetic leans against the side of the chair, balanced carefully where he left it, like it belongs there.
He sits back, one socked foot up, the other leg stretched out and relaxed. Comfortable in a way he rarely lets himself be.
The TV plays some half-watched game on mute, casting flickering light across the room, but no oneâs really paying attention. The silence between you feels lived-in, not awkward. Familiar. But still edged with something tender. Like youâre all waiting to exhale at the same time.
The kind of night that feels quiet on purpose.
The kind that says: Weâre still here.
âI think I scared you both more than I scared myself,â you murmur, eyes still on the screen.
âYou scared the shit out of me,â Jack says, voice low. Honest. Not sharp, not teasingâjust stripped down. Like it costs him something to say it out loud.
Robbyâs grip around your waist tightens almost instinctively, like he can still feel the echo of that momentâthe call, the drive, the trauma bay. His fingers curl against your side, anchoring himself to something warm and alive.
âYou donât get to do that again,â he says, barely above a whisper. âEver.â
You turn your head then, eyes flicking between themâone sitting too still, the other holding on too tightly. And for the first time all day, you let yourself feel the full shape of what almost happened. What almost broke you.
âI didnât say this earlier,â Jack says, softer now, voice rough around the edges. âBut I meant it. Back at the hospital. You have him. Youâre not doing this alone.â
You donât look at him right away. Just nod, slow, like the words are settling into a place they hadnât quite reached before. Your eyes sting, but you donât blink them away.
âI know Iâm not,â you murmur.
And you do.
Even on the days itâs hard to feel it.
Healing isnât linear. Some days you get through without tears, almost like nothing ever happened. Other days, it hits you sidewaysâover coffee, in the shower, folding laundryâand youâre crying without knowing why.
You havenât driven yet. Not because you canâtâbecause you donât want to.
And everyone understands that.
Robby never asks. He just grabs the keys and opens your door first. Jack doesnât comment, doesnât teaseâhe just takes the driverâs seat without question when itâs his turn.
Even Dana understood. One Saturday, she showed up with oversized sunglasses and a tote bag full of snacks, knocked twice, and said, âGirlsâ day. Non-negotiable. Collins is already in the car.â
And sure enough, Collins was in the passenger seat, sipping an iced tea and pretending not to be amused. Dana took the wheel, flipped the radio to something from the nineties, and announced you were starting with pedicures and ending with overpriced appetizersââand maybe a shoe sale if weâre feeling emotional.â
But tonight, the air is still. Your body is tired, but not heavy. Thereâs a blanket over your legs, the low hum of the dishwasher in the next room, and two people who never let goâeven when you tried to disappear.
You close your eyes.
And for the first time in weeks, you donât brace for the fall.
.đ„ Ę ËÖŽ àŁȘâ Built for Battle, Never for Me Ę ËÖŽ àŁȘâ âčË
âAnd I will fuck you like nothing matters.â
summary : You loved Jack through four deployments and every version of the man he became, even when he stopped choosing you. Years later, fate shoves you back into his trauma bay, unconscious and bleeding, and everything you buried resurfaces.
content/warning : 18+ MDNI!!! long-form emotional trauma, war and military themes, medical trauma, car accident (graphic details), infidelity (emotional & physical), explicit smut with intense emotional undertones, near-death experiences, emotionally unhealthy relationships, and grief over a still-living person
word count : 13,078 ( read on ao3 here if it's too large )
a/n : ok this is long! but bare with me! I got inspired by Nothing Matters by The Last Dinner Party and I couldn't stop writing. College finals are coming up soon so I thought I'd put this out there now before I am in the trenches but that doesn't mean you guys can't keep sending stuff to my inbox!
You were nineteen the first time Jack Abbot kissed you.
Outside a run-down bar just off base in the thick of Georgia summerâair humid enough to drink, heat clinging to your skin like regret. He had a fresh cut on his knuckle and a dog-eared med school textbook shoved into the back pocket of his jeans, like that wasnât the most Jack thing in the worldâequal parts violence and intellect, always straddling the line between bare-knuckle instinct and something nobler. Half fists, half fire, always on the verge of vanishing into a cause bigger than himself.
You were his long before the letters trailed behind his name. Before he learned to stitch flesh beneath floodlights and call it purpose. Before the trauma became clockwork, and the quiet between you started speaking louder than words ever could. You loved him through every incarnationâevery rough draft of the man he was trying to become. Army medic. Burned-out med student. Warzone doctor with blood on his boots and textbooks in his duffel. The kind of man who took people apart just to understand how to hold them together.
He used to say heâd get out once it was over. Once the years were served, the boxes checked, the blood debt paid in full. He promised heâd come backânot just in body, but in whatever version of wholeness he still had left. Said heâd pick a city with good light, buy real furniture instead of folding chairs and duffel bags, learn how to sleep through the night like people who hadnât taught themselves to live on adrenaline and loss.
You waited. Through four deployments. Through static-filled phone calls and letters that always said soon. Through nights spent tracing his name like it was a map back to yourself. You clung to that promise like it was gospel. And nowâhe was standing in your bedroom, rolling his shirts with the same clipped, clinical precision he used to pack a field kit. Each fold a quiet betrayal. Each movement a confirmation: he was leaving again. Not called. Choosing.
âIâm not being deployed,â he said, eyes fixed on the duffel bag instead of you. âIâm volunteering.â
Your arms crossed tightly over your chest, nails digging into the fabric of your sleeves. âYouâve fulfilled your contract, Jack. Youâre not obligated anymore. Youâre a doctor now. You could stay. You could leave.â
âI know,â he said, quiet. Measured. Like heâd practiced saying it in his head a hundred times already.
âYou were offered a civilian residency,â you pressed, your voice rising despite the lump building in your throat. âAt one of the top trauma programs in D.C. You told me they fast-tracked you. That they wanted you.â
âI know.â
âAnd you turned it down.â
He exhaled through his nose. A long, deliberate breath. Then reached for another undershirt, folded it so neatly it looked like a ritual. âThey need trauma-trained docs downrange. Thereâs a shortage.â
You laughedâa bitter, breathless sound. âThereâs always a shortage. Thatâs not new.â
He paused. Briefly. His hand flattened over the shirt like he was smoothing something that wouldnât stay still. âYou donât get it.â
âI do get it,â you snapped. âThatâs the problem.â
He finally looked up at you then. Just for a second.
Eyes tired. Distant. Fractured in a way that made you want to punch him and hold him at the same time.
âYou think this makes you necessary,â you whispered. âYou think chaos gives you purpose. But itâs just the only place you feel alive.â
He turned toward you slowly, shirt still in hand. His hair was longer than regulationâhe hadnât shaved in days. His face looked older, worn down in that way no one else seemed to notice but you did. You knew every line. Every scar. Every inch of the man who swore heâd come back and choose something softer.
You.
âTell me Iâm wrong,â you whispered. âTell me this isnât just about being needed again. About being irreplaceable. About chasing adrenaline because youâre scared of standing still.â
Jack didnât say anything else.
Not when your voice broke asking him to stayânot loud, not theatrical, not in the kind of way that could be dismissed as a moment of weakness or written off as heat-of-the-moment desperation. Youâd asked him softly. Carefully. Like you were trying not to startle something fragile. Like if you stayed calm, maybe heâd finally hear you.
And not when you walked away from him, the space between you stretching like a fault line you both knew neither of you would cross again.
Youâd seen him fight for the life of a strangerâbare hands pressed to a wound, blood soaking through his sleeves, voice low and steady through chaos. But he didnât fight for this. For you.
You didnât speak for the rest of the day.
He packed in silence. You did laundry. Folded his socks like it mattered. You couldnât decide if it felt more like mourning or muscle memory.
You didnât touch him.
Not until night fell, and the house got too quiet, and the space beside you on the couch started to feel like a ghost of something you couldnât bear to name.
The windows were open, and you could hear the city breathing outsideâcar tires on wet pavement, wind slinking through the alley, the distant hum of a life you couldâve had. One that didnât smell like starch and gun oil and choices you never got to make.
Jack was in the kitchen, barefoot, methodically washing a single plate. You sat on the couch with your knees pulled to your chest, half-wrapped in the blanket you kept by the radiator. There was a movie playing on the TV. Something you'd both seen a dozen times. He hadnât looked at it once.
âDo you want tea?â he asked, not turning around.
You stared at his back. The curve of his spine under that navy blue t-shirt. The tension in his neck that never fully left.
âNo.â
He nodded, like he expected that.
You wanted to scream. Or throw the mug he used every morning. Or just⊠shake him until he remembered that thisâyouâwas what he was supposed to be fighting for now.
Instead, you stood up.
Walked into the kitchen.
Pressed your palms flat against the cool tile counter and watched him dry his hands like it was just another Tuesday. Like he hadnât made a choice that ripped something fundamental out of you both.
âI donât think I know how to do this anymore,â you said.
Jack turned, towel still in hand. âWhat?â
âThis,â you gestured between you, âUs. I donât know how to keep pretending weâre okay.â
He opened his mouth. Closed it again. Then leaned against the sink like the weight of that sentence physically knocked him off balance.
âI didnât expect you to understand,â he said.
You laughed. It came out sharp. Ugly. âThatâs the part that kills me, Jack. I do understand. I know exactly why you're going. I know what it does to you to sit still. I know you think youâre only good when youâre bleeding out in a tent with your hands in someoneâs chest.â
He flinched.
âBut I also know you didnât even try to stay.â
âI did,â he snapped. âEvery time I came back to you, I tried.â
âThatâs not the same as choosing me.â
The silence that followed felt like the real goodbye.
You walked past him to the bedroom without a word. The hallway felt longer than usual, quieter tooâlike the walls were holding their breath. You didnât look back. You couldnât.
The bed still smelled like him. Like cedarwood aftershave and something darkerâfamiliar, aching. You crawled beneath the sheets, dragging the comforter up to your chin like armor. Turned your face to the wall. Every muscle in your back coiled tight, waiting for a sound that didnât come.
And for a long time, he didnât follow.
But eventually, the floor creakedâsoft, uncertain. A pause. Then the familiar sound of the door clicking shut, slow and final, like the closing of a chapter neither of you had the courage to write an ending for. The mattress shifted beneath his weightâslow, deliberate, like every inch he gave to gravity was a decision he hadnât fully made until now. He settled behind you, quiet as breath. And for a moment, there was only stillness.
No touch. No words. Just the heat of him at your back, close enough to feel the ghost of something youâd almost forgotten.
Then, gentlyâlike he thought you might flinchâhis arm slid across your waist. His hand spread wide over your stomach, fingers splayed like he was trying to memorize the shape of your body through fabric and time and everything heâd left behind.
Like maybe, if he held you carefully enough, he could keep you from slipping through the cracks heâd carved into both of your lives. Like this was the only way he still knew how to say please donât go.
âI donât want to lose you,â he breathed into the nape of your neck, voice rough, frayed at the edges.
Your eyes burned. You swallowed the lump in your throat. His lips touched your skinâjust below your ear, then lower. A kiss. Another. His mouth moved with unbearable softness, like he thought he might break you. Or maybe himself.
And when he kissed you like it was the last time, it wasnât frantic or rushed. It was slow. The kind of kiss that undoes a person from the inside out.
His hand slid under your shirt, calloused fingers grazing your ribs as if relearning your shape. You rolled to face him, breath catching when your noses bumped. And then he was kissing you againâdeeper this time. Tongue coaxing, lips parted, breath shared. You gasped when he pressed his thigh between yours. He was already hard. And when he rocked into you, It wasnât franticâit was sacred. Like a ritual. Like a farewell carved into skin.
The lights stayed off, but not out of shame. It was self-preservation. Because if you saw his face, if you saw what was written in his eyesâwhatever soft, shattering thing was thereâit might ruin you. He undressed you like he was unwrapping something fragileâcareful, slow, like he was afraid you might vanish if he moved too fast. Each layer pulled away with quiet tension, each breath held between fingers and fabric.
His mouth followed close behind, brushing down your chest with aching precision. He kissed every scar like it told a story only he remembered. Mouthed at your skin like it tasted of something he hadnât let himself crave in years. Like he was starving for the version of you that only existed when you were underneath him.Â
Your fingers threaded through his hair. You arched. Moaned his name. He pushed into you like he didnât want to be anywhere else. Like this was the only place he still knew. His pace was languid at first, drawn out. But when your breath hitched and you clung to him tighter, he fucked you deeper. Slower. Harder. Like he was trying to carve himself into your bones. Your bodies moved like memory. Like grief. Like everything you never said finally found a rhythm in the dark.Â
His thumb brushed your lower lip. You bit it. He groanedâlow, guttural.
âSay it,â he rasped against your mouth.
âI love you,â you whispered, already crying. âGod, I love you.â
And when you came, it wasnât loud. It was broken. Soft. A tremor beneath his palm as he cradled your jaw. He followed seconds later, gasping your name like a benediction, forehead pressed to yours, sweat-slick and shaking.
After, he didnât speak. Didnât move. He just stayed curled around you, heartbeat thudding against your spine like punctuation.
Because sometimes the loudest heartbreak is the one you donât say out loud.
The alarm never went off.
Youâd both woken up before itâsome silent agreement between your bodies that said donât pretend this is normal. The room was still dark, heavy with the thick, gray stillness of early morning. That strange pocket of time that doesnât feel like today yet, but is no longer yesterday.
Jack sat on the edge of the bed in just his boxers, elbows resting on his thighs, spine curled slightly forward like the weight of the choice heâd made was finally catching up to him. He was already dressed in the uniform in his head.
You stayed under the covers, arms wrapped around your own body, watching the muscles in his back tighten every time he exhaled.
You didnât speak.Â
What was there left to say?
He stood, moved through the room with quiet efficiency. Pulling his pants on. Shirt. Socks. He tied his boots slowly, like muscle memory. Like prayer. You wondered if his hands ever shook when he packed for war, or if this was just another morning to him. Another mission. Another place to be.
He finally turned to face you. âYou want coffee?â he asked, voice hoarse.
You shook your head. You didnât trust yourself to speak.
He paused in the doorway, like he might say somethingâsomething honest, something final. Instead, he just looked at you like you were already slipping into memory.
The kitchen was still warm from the radiator kicking on. Jack moved like a ghost through itâmug in one hand, half a slice of dry toast in the other. You sat across from him at the table, knees pulled into your chest, wearing one of his old t-shirts that didnât smell like him anymore. The silence was different now. Not tense. Just done. He set his keys on the table between you.
âI left a spare,â he said.
You nodded. âI know.â
He took a sip of coffee, made a face. âYou never taught me how to make it right.â
âYou never listened.â
His lips twitchedâalmost a smile. It died quickly. You looked down at your hands. Picked at a loose thread on your sleeve.
âWill you write?â you asked, quietly. Not a plea. Just curiosity. Just something to fill the silence.
âIf I can.â
And somehow that hurt more.
When the cab pulled up outside, neither of you moved right away. Jack stared at the wall. You stared at him.Â
He finally stood. Grabbed his bag. Slung it over his shoulder like it weighed nothing. He didnât look like a man leaving for war. He looked like a man trying to convince himself he had no other choice.
At the door, he paused again.
âHey,â he said, softer this time. âYouâre everything I ever wanted, you know that?â
You stood too fast. âThen why wasnât this enough?â
He flinched. And still, he came back to you. Hands cupping your jaw, thumb brushing your cheek like he was trying to memorize it.
âI love you,â he said.
You swallowed. Hard. âThen stay.â
His hands dropped.Â
âI canât.â
You didnât cry when he left.
You just stood in the hallway until the cab disappeared down the street, teeth sunk into your lip so hard it bled. And then you locked the door behind you. Not because you didnât want him to come back.
But because you didnât want to hope anymore that he would.
PRESENT DAY : THE PITT - FRIDAY 7:02 PM
Jack always said he didnât believe in premonitions. That was Robbyâs departmentâgut feelings, emotional instinct, the kind of sixth sense that made him pause mid-shift and mutter things like âI donât like this quiet.â Jack? He was structure. Systems. Trauma patterns on a 10-year data set. He didnât believe in ghosts, omens, or the superstition of stillness.
But tonight?
Tonight felt wrong.
The kind of wrong that doesnât announce itself. It just settlesâlow and quiet, like a second pulse beneath your skin. Everything was too clean. Too calm. The trauma board was a blank canvas. One transfer to psych. One uncomplicated withdrawal on fluids. A dislocated shoulder in 6 who kept trying to flirt with the nurses despite being dosed with enough ketorolac to sedate a linebacker.
That was it. Four hours. Not a single incoming. Not even a fender-bender.
Jack stood in front of the board with his arms crossed tight over his chest. His jaw was clenched, shoulders stiff, body still in that way that wasnât restfulâjust waiting. Like something in him was already bracing for impact.
The ER didnât breathe like this. Not on a Friday night in Pittsburgh. Not unless something was holding its breath.
He rolled his shoulder, cracked his neck once, then twice. His leg achedânot the prosthetic. The other one. The real one. The one that always overcompensated when he was tense. The one that still carried the habits of a body he didnât fully live in anymore. He tried to shake it off. He couldnât. He wasnât tired.
But he felt unmoored.
7:39 PM
The station was too loud in all the wrong ways.
Dana was telling someoneâprobably Perlahâabout her granddaughterâs birthday party tomorrow. There was going to be a Disney princess. Real cake. Real glitter. Jack nodded when she looked at him but didnât absorb any of it. His hands were hovering over the computer keys, but he wasnât charting. He was watching the vitals monitor above Bay 2 blink like a metronome. Too steady. Too normal.
His stomach clenched. Something inside him stirred. Restless. Sharp. He didnât even hear Ellis approach until her shadow slid into his peripheral.
âYouâre doing it again,â she said.
Jack blinked. âDoing what?â
âThat thing. The haunted soldier stare.â
He exhaled slowly through his nose. âDidnât realize I had a brand.â
âYou do.â She leaned against the counter, arms folded. âYou get real still when itâs too quiet in here. Like youâre waiting for the other shoe to drop.â
Jack tilted his head slightly. âIâm always waiting for the other shoe.â
âNo,â she said. âNot like this.â
He didnât respond. Didnât need to. They both knew what kind of quiet this was.
7:55 PM
The weather was turning.
He could hear itâhow the rain hit the loading dock, how the wind pushed harder against the back doors. Heâd seen it out the break room window earlier. Clouds like bruises. Thunder low, miles off, not angry yetâjust gathering. Pittsburgh always got weird storms in the springâcold one day, burning the next. The kind of shifts that made people do dumb things. Drive fast. Get careless. Forget their own bodies could break.
His hand flexed unconsciously against the edge of the counter. He didnât know who he was preparing forâjust that someone was coming.Â
8:00 PM
Robbyâs shift was ending. He always left a little lateâhovered by the lockers, checking one last note, scribbling initials where none were needed. Jack didnât look up when he approached, but he heard the familiar shuffle, the sound of a hoodie zipper pulled halfway.
âYou sure you donât wanna switch shifts tomorrow?â Robby asked, thumb scrolling absently across his phone screen, like he was trying to sound casualâbut you could hear the edge of something in it. Fatigue. Or maybe just wariness.
Jack glanced over, one brow arched, already sensing the setup. âWhat, you finally land that hot date with the med student who keeps calling you sir, looks like she still gets carded for cough syrup and thinks youâre someoneâs dad?â
Robby didnât look up from his phone. âClose. She thinks youâre the dad. Like⊠someoneâs brooding, emotionally unavailable single father who only comes to parent-teacher conferences to say heâs doing his best.â
Jack blinked. âIâm forty-nine. Youâre fifty-three.â
âShe thinks youâve lived harder.â
Jack snorted. âShe say that?â
âShe saidâand I quoteââHeâs got that energy. Like heâs seen things. Lost someone he doesnât talk about. Probably drinks his coffee black and owns, like, one picture frame.ââ
Jack gave a slow nod, face unreadable. âWell. Sheâs not wrong.â
Robby side-eyed him. âYou do have ghost-of-a-wife vibes.â
Jackâs smirk twitched into something more wry. âNot a widower.â
âCouldâve fooled her. She said if she had daddy issues, youâd be her first mistake.â
Jack let out a low whistle. âJesus.â
âI told her youâre just forty-nine. Prematurely haunted.â
Jack smiled. Barely. âYouâre such a good friend.â
Robby slipped his phone into his pocket. âYouâre lucky I didnât tell her about the ring. She thinks youâre tragic. Women love that.â
Jack muttered, âTragic isnât a flex.â
Robby shrugged. âIt is when youâre tall and say very little.â
Jack rolled his eyes, folding his arms across his chest. âStill not switching.â
Robby groaned. âCome on. Whitaker is due for a meltdown, and if I have to supervise him through one more central line attempt, Iâm walking into traffic. He tried to open the kit with his elbow last week. Said sterile gloves were âlimiting his dexterity.â I said, âThatâs the point.â He told me I was oppressing his innovation.â
Jack stifled a laugh. âIâm starting to like him.â
âHeâs your favorite. Admit it.â
âYouâre my favorite,â Jack said, deadpan.
âThatâs the saddest thing youâve ever said.â
Jackâs grin tugged wider. âItâs been a long year.â
They stood in silence for a momentâone of those rare ones where the ER wasnât screeching for attention. Just a quiet hum of machines and distant footsteps. Then Robby shifted, leaned a little heavier against the wall.
âYou good?â he asked, voice low. Not pushy. Just there.
Jack didnât look at him right away. Just stared at the trauma board. Too long. Long enough that it said more than words wouldâve.
ThenââFine,â Jack said. A beat. âJust tired.â
Robby didnât press. Just nodded, like he believed it, even if he didnât.
âGet some rest,â Jack added, almost an afterthought. âIâll see you tomorrow.â
âYou always do,â Robby said.
And then he left, hoodie half-zipped, coffee in hand, just like always.
But Jack didnât move for a while.
Not until the ER stopped pretending to be quiet.
8:34 PM
The call hits like a starterâs pistol.
âInbound MVA. Solo driver. High velocity. No seatbelt. Unresponsive. GCS three. ETA three minutes.â
The kind of call that should feel routine.
Jackâs already in motionâsnapping on gloves, barking out orders, snapping the trauma team to attention. He doesnât think. He doesnât feel. He just moves. Itâs what heâs best at. What they built him for.
He doesnât know why his heart is hammering harder than usual.
Why the air feels sharp in his lungs. Why heâs clenching his jaw so hard his molars ache.
He doesnât know. Not yet.
âPerlah, trauma cartâs prepped?â
âYeah.â
âMateo, I want blood drawn the second sheâs in. Jesseâintubation tray. Letâs be ready.â
No one questions him. Not when heâs in this modeâlow voice, high tension. Controlled but wired like something just beneath his skin is ready to snap. He pulls the door to Bay 2 open, nods to the team waiting inside. His hands go to his hips, gloves already on, brain flipping through protocol.
And then he hears itâthe wheels. Gurney. Fast.
Voices echoing through the corridor.
Paramedic yelling vitals over the noise.
âUnidentified female. Found unresponsive at the scene of an MVAâsingle vehicle, no ID on her. Significant blood loss, hypotensive on arrival. BP tanked en routeâwe lost her once. Got her back, but sheâs still unstable.â
The doors bang open. They wheel her in. Jack steps forward. His eyes fall to the body. Blood-soaked. Covered in debris. Face battered. Left cheek swelling fast. Gash at the temple. Lip split. Clothes shredded. Eyes closed.
He freezes. Everything stops. Because he knows that mouth. That jawline. That scar behind the ear. That body. The last time he saw it, it was beneath his hands. The last time he kissed her, she was whispering his name in the dark. And now sheâs here.
Unconscious. Barely breathing. Covered in her own blood. And nobody knows who she is but him.
âJack?â Perlah says, uncertain. âYou good?â
He doesnât respond. Heâs already at the side of the gurney, brushing the medic aside, sliding in like muscle memory.
âGet me vitals now,â he says, voice too low.
âSheâs crashing againââ
âI said get me fucking vitals.â
Everyone jolts. He doesnât care. Heâs pulling the oxygen mask over your face. Hands hovering, trembling.
âJesus Christ,â he breathes. âWhat happened to you?â
Your eyes flutter, barely. He watches your chest rise once. Then falter.
ThenâFlatline.
You looked like a stranger. But the kind of stranger who used to be home. Where had you gone after he left?
Why didnât you come back?
Why hadnât he tried harder to find you?
He never knew. He told himself you were fine. That you didnât want to be found. That maybe you'd met someone else, maybe moved out of state, maybe started the life he was supposed to give you.
And now you were here. Not a memory. Not a ghost. Not a "maybe someday."
Here.
And dying.
8:36 PM
The monitor flatlines. Sharp. Steady. Shrill.
And Jackâhe doesnât blink. He doesnât curse. He doesnât call out. He just moves. The team reacts firstâshock, noise, adrenaline. Perlahâs already calling it out. Mateo goes for epi. Jesse reaches for the crash cart, his hands a little too fast, knocking a tray off the edge.
It clatters to the floor. Jack doesnât flinch.
He steps forward. Takes position. Drops to the right side of your chest like itâs instinctâbecause it is. His hands hover for half a beat.
Then press down.
Compression one.
Compression two.
Compression three.
Thirty in all. His mouth is tight. His eyes fixed on the rise and fall of your body beneath his hands. He doesnât say your name. He doesnât let them see him.
He just works.
Like heâs still on deployment.
Like youâre just another body.
Like youâre not the person who made him believe in softness again.
Jack doesnât move from your side.
Doesnât say a thing when the first shock doesnât bring you back. Doesnât speak when the second one stalls again. He just keeps pressing. Keeps watching. Keeps holding on with the one thing left he can control.
His hands.
You twitch under his palms on the third shock.
The line stutters. Then catches. Jack exhales once. But he still doesnât speak. He doesnât check the room. Doesnât acknowledge the tears running down his face. Just rests both hands on the edge of the gurney and leans forward, breathing shallow, like if he stands up fully, something inside him will fall apart for good.
âGet her to CT,â he says quietly.
Perlah hesitates. âJackââ
He shakes his head. âIâll walk with her.â
âJackâŠâ
âI said Iâll go.â
And then he does.
Silent. Soaking in your blood. Following the gurney like he followed field stretchers across combat zones. No one asks questions. Because everyone sees it now.
8:52 PMÂ
The corridor outside CT was colder than the rest of the hospital. Some architectural flaw. Or maybe just Jackâs body going numb. You were being wheeled in nowâhooked to monitors, lips cracked and flaking at the edges from blood loss.
You hadnât moved since the trauma bay. They got your heart back. But your eyes hadnât opened. Not even once.
Jack walked beside the gurney in silence. One hand gripping the edge rail. Gloved fingers stained dark. His scrub top was still soaked from chest compressions. His pulse hadnât slowed since the flatline. He didnât speak to the transport tech. Didnât acknowledge the nurse. Didnât register anything except the curve of your arm under the blanket and the smear of blood at your temple no one had cleaned yet.
Outside the scan room, they paused to prep.
âTwo minutes,â someone said.
Jack barely nodded. The tech turned away. And for the first time since they wheeled you inâJack looked at you.
Eyes sweeping over your face like he was seeing it again for the first time. Like he didnât recognize this version of youânot broken, not bloodied, not dyingâbut fragile. His hand moved before he could stop it. He reached down. Brushed your hair back from your forehead, fingers trembling.Â
He leaned in, close enough that only the machines could hear him. Voice raw. Shaky.
âStay with me.â He swallowed. Hard. âIâll lie to everyone else. Iâll keep pretending I can live without you. But you and me? We both know Iâm full of shit.â
He paused. âYouâve always known.â
Footsteps echoed around the corner. Jack straightened instantly. Like none of it happened. Like he wasnât bleeding in real time. The tech came back. âWeâre ready.â
Jack nodded. Watched the doors open. Watched them wheel you away. Didnât follow. Just stood in the hallway, alone, jaw clenched so tight it hurt.
10:34 PM
Your blood was still on his forearms. Dried at the edge of his glove cuff. There was a fleck of it on the collar of his scrub top, just beneath his badge. He should go change. But he couldnât move. The last time he saw you, you were standing in the doorway of your apartment with your arms crossed over your chest and your mouth set in that way you did when you were about to say something that would ruin him.
Then stay.
He hadnât.
And now here you were, barely breathing.
God. He wanted to scream. But he didnât. He never did.
Footsteps approached from the leftâlight, careful.
It was Dana.
She didnât say anything at first. Just leaned against the wall beside him with a soft exhale and handed him a plastic water bottle.
He took it with a nod, twisted the cap, but didnât drink.
âSheâs stable,â Dana said quietly. âNeuroâs scrubbing in. Walsh is watching the bleed. They're hopeful it hasnât shifted.â
Jack stared straight ahead. âSheâs got a collapsed lung.â
âSheâs alive.â
âShe shouldnât be.â
He could hear Dana shift beside him. âYou knew her?â
Jack swallowed. His throat burned. âYeah.â
There was a beat of silence between them.
âI didnât know,â Dana said, gently. âI mean, I knew there was someone before you came back to Pittsburgh. I just never thought...â
âYeah.â
Another pause.
âJack,â she said, softer now. âYou shouldnât be the one on this case.â
âIâm already on it.â
âI know, butââ
âShe didnât have anyone else.â
That landed like a punch to the ribs. No emergency contact. No parents listed. No spouse. No one flagged to call. Just the last ID scanned from your phoneâhis name still buried somewhere in your old records, from years ago. Probably forgotten. Probably never updated. But still there. Still his.
Dana reached out, laid a hand on his wrist. âDo you want me to sit with her until she wakes up?â
He shook his head.
âI should be there.â
âJackââ
âI shouldâve been there the first time,â he snapped. Then his voice broke low, quieter, strained: âSo Iâm gonna sit. And Iâm gonna wait. And when she wakes up, Iâm gonna tell her Iâm sorry.â
Dana didnât move. Didnât speak. Just nodded. And walked away.
1:06 AM
Jack sat in the corner of the dimmed recovery room.
You were propped up slightly on the bed now, a tube down your throat, IV lines in both arms. Bandages wrapped around your ribs, temple, thigh. The monitor beeped with painful consistency. It was the only sound in the room.
He hadnât spoken in twenty minutes. He just sat there. Watching you like if he looked away, youâd vanish again. He leaned back eventually, scrubbed both hands down his face.
âJesus,â he whispered. âYou really never changed your emergency contact?â
You didnât get married. You didnât leave the state.You just⊠slipped out of his life and never came back.
And he let you. He let you walk away because he thought you needed distance. Because he thought heâd ruined it. Because he didnât know what to do with love when it wasnât covered in blood and desperation. He let you go. And now you were here.Â
âPlease wake up,â he whispered. âJust⊠just wake up. Yell at me. Punch me. I donât care. Justââ
His voice cracked. He bit it back.
âYou were right,â he said, so soft it barely made it out. âI shouldâve stayed.â
You swim toward the surface like somethingâs pulling you back under. Itâs slow. Syrupy. The kind of consciousness that makes pain feel abstractâlike youâve forgotten which parts of your body belong to you. Thereâs pressure behind your eyes. A dull roar in your ears. Cold at your fingertips.
Thenâsound. Beeping. Monitors. A cart wheeling past. Someone saying Vitals stable, pressureâs holding. A laugh in the hallway. Fluorescents. Fabric rustling. Andâ
A chair creaking.
You know that sound.
Youâd recognize that silence anywhere. You open your eyes, slowly, blinking against the light. Vision blurred. Chest tight. Thereâs a rawness in your throat like youâve been screaming underwater. Everything hurts, but one thing registers clear:
Jack.
Jack Abbot is sitting beside you.
Heâs hunched forward in a chair too small for him, arms braced on his knees like heâs ready to stand, like he canât stand. Thereâs a hospital badge clipped to his scrub pocket. His jaw is tight. Thereâs something smudged on his cheekboneâblood? You donât know. His hair is shorter than you remember, greyer.
But itâs him. And for a secondâjust oneâyou forget the last seven years ever happened.
You forget the apartment. The silence. The day he walked out with his duffel and didnât look back. Because right now, heâs here. Breathing. Watching you like heâs afraid youâll vanish.
âHey,â he says, voice hoarse.
You try to swallow. You canât.
âDonâtââ he sits up, suddenly, gently. âDonât try to talk yet. You were intubated. Rollover crashââ He falters. âJesus. Youâre okay. Youâre here.â
You blink, hard. Your eyes sting. Everything is out of focus except him. He leans forward a little more, his hands resting just beside yours on the bed.
âI thought you were dead,â he says. âOr married. Or halfway across the world. I thoughtââ He stops. His throat works around the words. âI never thought Iâd see you again.â
You close your eyes for a second. Itâs too much. His voice. His face. The sound of youâre okay coming from the person who once made it hurt the most. You shift your gazeâtry to ground yourself in something solid.
And thatâs when you see it.
His hand.
Resting casually near yours.
Ring finger tilted toward the light.
Gold band.Â
Simple.
Permanent.
You freeze.
Itâs like your lungs forget what to do.
You look at the ring. Then at him. Then at the ring again.
He follows your gaze.
And flinches.
âFuck,â Jack says under his breath, immediately leaning back like distance might make it easier. Like you didnât just see it.
He drags a hand through his hair, rubs the back of his neck, looks anywhere but at you.
âSheâs notââ He pauses. âItâs not what you think.â
Youâre barely able to croak a whisper. Your voice scrapes like gravel: âYouâre married?â
His head snaps up.
âNo.â Beat. âNot yet.â
Yet. That word is worse than a bullet. You stare at him. And what you see floors you.
Guilt.
Exhaustion.
Something that might be grief. But not regret. Heâs not here asking for forgiveness. Heâs here because you almost died. Because for a minute, he thought heâd never get the chance to say goodbye right. But he didnât come back for you.
He moved on.
And you didnât even get to see it happen. You turn your face away. It takes everything you have not to sob, not to scream, not to rip the IV out of your arm just to feel something other than this. Jack leans forward again, like he might try to fix it.
Like he still could.
âI didnât know,â he says. âI didnât know Iâd ever see you again.â
âI didnât know youâd stop waiting,â you rasp.
And thatâs it. Thatâs the one that lands. He goes very still.
âI waited,â he says, softly. âLonger than I shouldâve. I kept the spare key. I left the porch light on. Every time someone knocked on the door, I thoughtâmaybe. Maybe itâs you.â
Your eyes well up. He shakes his head. Looks away. âBut you never called. Never sent anything. And eventually... I thought you didnât want to be found.â
âI didnât,â you whisper. âBecause I didnât want to know youâd already replaced me.â
The silence after that is unbearable. And then: the soft knock of a nurse at the door.
Dana.Â
She peeks in, eyes flicking between the two of you, and reads the room instantly.
âWeâre moving her to step-down in fifteen,â she says gently. âJust wanted to give you a heads up.â Jack nods. Doesnât look at her. Dana lingers for a beat, then quietly slips out. You donât speak. Neither does he. He just stands there for another long moment. Like he wants to stay. But knows he shouldnât. Finally, he exhalesâlow, shaky.
âIâm sorry,â he says.
Not for leaving. Not for loving someone else. Just for the wreckage of it all. And then he walks out. Leaving you in that bed.Â
Bleeding in places no scan can find.
9:12 AM
The room was smaller than the trauma bay. Cleaner. Quieter.
The lights were soft, filtered through high, narrow windows that let in just enough Pittsburgh morning to remind you the world kept moving, even when yours had slammed into a guardrail at seventy-three miles an hour.
You were propped at a slight angleâenough to breathe without straining the sutures in your side. Your ribs still ached with every inhale. Your left arm was in a sling. There was dried blood in your hairline no one had washed out yet. But you were alive. They told you that three times already.
Alive. Stable. Awake.
As if saying it aloud could undo the fact that Jack Abbot is engaged. You stared at the wall like it might give you answers. He hadn't come back. You didnât ask for him. And stillâevery time a nurse came in, every time the door clicked open, every shuffle of shoes in the hallwayâyou hoped.Â
You hated yourself for it.
You hadnât cried yet.
That surprised you. You thought waking up and seeing him againâfor the first time in years, after everythingâwould snap something loose in your chest. But it didnât. It just⊠sat there. Heavy. Silent. Like grief that didnât know where to go.
There was a soft knock on the frame.
You turned your head slowly, your throat too raw to ask who it was.
It wasnât Jack.
It was a man you didnât recognize. Late forties, maybe fifties. Navy hoodie. Clipboard. Glasses slipped low on his nose. He looked tiredâbut held together in the kind of way that made it clear he'd been the glue for other people more than once.
âIâm Dr. Robinavitch.â he said gently. You just blinked at him.
âIâm... one of the attendings. I was off when they brought you in, but I heard.â
He didnât step closer right away. ThenââMind if I sit?â
You didnât answer. But you didnât say no. He pulled the chair from the corner. Sat down slow, like he wasnât sure how fragile the air was between you. He didnât check your vitals. Didnât chart.
Just sat.
Present. In that quiet, steady way that makes you feel like maybe you donât have to hold all the weight alone.
âHell of a night,â he said after a while. âYou had everyone rattled.â
You didnât reply. Your eyes were fixed on the ceiling again. He rubbed a hand down the side of his jaw.
âJack hasnât looked like that in a long time.â
That made you flinch. Your head turned, slow and deliberate.
You stared at him. âHe talk about me?âÂ
Robby gave a small smile. Not pitying. Not smug. Just... true. âNo. Not really.â
You looked away.Â
âBut he didnât have to,â he added.
You froze.
âIâve seen him leave mid-conversation to answer texts that never came. Watched him walk out into the ambulance bay on his nights offâlike he was waiting for someone who never showed. Never stayed the night anywhere but home. Always looked at the hallway like something might appear if he stared hard enough.â
Your throat burned.
âHe never said your name,â Robby continued, voice low but certain. âBut thereâs a box under his bed. A spare key on his ringâbeen there for years, never used, never taken off. And that old mug in the back of his locker? The one that doesnât match anything? You start to notice the things people hold onto when theyâre trying not to forget.â
You blinked hard. âThereâs a box?â
Robby nodded, slow. âYeah. Tucked under the bed like he didnât mean to keep it but never got around to throwing it out. Lettersâsome unopened, some worn through like he read them a hundred times. A photo of you, old and creased, like he carried it once and forgot how to let it go. Hospital badge. Bracelet from some field clinic. Even a napkin with your handwriting on itâfaded, but folded like it meant something.â
You closed your eyes. That was worse than any of the bruises.
âHe compartmentalizes,â Robby said. âItâs how he stays functional. Itâs what heâs good at.â
You whispered it, barely audible: âIt was survival.â
âSure. Until it isnât.â
Another silence settled between you. Comfortable, in a way.
ThenââHeâs engaged,â you said, your voice flat.
Robby didnât blink. âYeah. I know.â
âIs sheâŠ?â
âSheâs good,â he said. âSmart. Teaches third grade in Squirrel Hill. Not from medicine. I think thatâs why it worked.â
You nodded slowly.
âDoes she know about me?â
Robby looked down. Didnât answer. You nodded again. That was enough.Â
He stood eventually.
Straightened the front of his hoodie. Rested the clipboard against his side like heâd forgotten why he even brought it.
âHeâll come back,â he said. âNot today. Maybe not tomorrow. But eventually.â
You didnât look at him. Just stared out the window. Your voice was quiet.
âI donât want him to.â
Robby gave you one last look.
One that said: Yeah. You do.
Then he turned and left.
And this time, when the door clicked shutâyou cried.
DAY FOURâ 11:41 PM
The hospital was quiet. Quieter than it had been in days.
Youâd finally started walking the length of your room again, IV pole rolling beside you like a loyal dog. The sling was irritating. Your ribs still hurt when you coughed. The staples in your scalp itched every time the air conditioner kicked on.
But you were alive. They said you could go home soon. Problem wasâyou didnât know where home was anymore. The hallway light outside your room flickered once. Youâd been drifting near sleep, curled on your side in the too-small hospital bed, one leg drawn up, wires tugging gently against your skin.
Before you could brace, the door opened. And there he was.
Jack didnât speak at first. He just stood there, shadowed in the doorway, scrub top wrinkled like heâd fallen asleep in it, hair slightly damp like heâd washed his face too many times and still didnât feel clean. You sat up slowly, heart punching through your chest.
He didnât move.
Didnât smile.
Didnât look like the man who used to make you coffee barefoot in the kitchen, or fold your laundry without being asked, or trace the inside of your wrist when he thought you were asleep.
He looked like a stranger who remembered your body too well.
âI wasnât gonna come,â he said quietly, finally. You didnât respond.
Jack stepped inside. Closed the door gently behind him.
The room felt too small.
Your throat ached.
âI didnât know what to say,â he continued, voice low. âDidnât know if youâd want to see me. After... everything.â
You sat up straighter. âI didnât.â
That hit.
But he nodded. Took it. Absorbed it like punishment he thought he deserved.
Still, he didnât leave. He stood at the foot of your bed like he wasnât sure he was allowed any closer.
âWhy are you here, Jack?â
He looked at you. Eyes full of everything he hadnât said since he walked out years ago.
âI needed to see you,â he said, and it was so goddamn quiet you almost missed it. âI needed to know you were still real.â
Your heart cracked in two.
âReal,â you repeated. âYou mean like alive? Or like not something you shoved in a box under your bed?â
His jaw tightened. âThatâs not fair.â
You scoffed. âYou think any of this is fair?â
Jack stepped closer.
âI didnât plan to love you the way I did.â
âYou didnât plan to leave, either. But you did that too.â
âI was trying to save something of myself.â
âAnd I was collateral damage?â
He flinched. Looked down. âYou were the only thing that ever made me want to stay.â
âThen why didnât you?â
He shook his head. âBecause I was scared. Because I didnât know how to come back and be yours forever when all Iâd ever been was temporary.â Silence crashed into the space between you. And then, barely above a whisper:
âDoes she know you still dream about me?â
That made him look up. Like youâd punched the wind out of him. Like youâd reached into his chest and found the place that still belonged to you. He stepped closer. One more inch and heâd be at your bedside.
âYou have every reason not to forgive me,â he said quietly. âBut the truth isâIâve never felt for anyone what I felt for you.â
You looked up at him, voice raw: âThen why are you marrying her?â
Jackâs mouth opened. But nothing came out. You looked away.
Eyes burning.
Lips trembling.
âI donât want your apologies,â you said. âI want the version of you that stayed.â
He stepped back, like that was the final blow.
But you werenât done.
âI loved you so hard it wrecked me,â you whispered. âAnd all I ever asked was that you love me loud enough to stay. But you didnât. And now you want to stand in this room and act like Iâm some kind of unfinished chapterâlike you get to come back and cry at the ending?â
Jack breathed in like it hurt. Like the air wasnât going in right.
âI came back,â he said. âI came back because I couldnât breathe without knowing you were okay.â
âAnd now you know.â
You looked at him, eyes glassy, jaw tight.
âSo go home to her.â
He didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Didnât do what you asked.
He just stood thereâbleeding in the quietâwhile you looked away.
DAY SEVENâ 5:12 PM
You left the hospital with a dull ache behind your ribs and a discharge summary you didnât bother reading. They told you to stay another three days. Said your pain control wasnât stable. Said you needed another neuro eval.
You said youâd call.
You wouldnât.
You packed what little you had in silenceâfolded the hospital gown, signed the paperwork with hands that still trembled. No one stopped you. You walked out the front doors like a ghost slipping through traffic.
Alive.
Untethered.
Unhealed.
But gone.
YOUR APARTMENTâ 8:44 PM
It wasnât much. A studio above a laundromat on Butler Street. One couch. One coffee mug. A bed you didnât make. You sat cross-legged on top of the blanket in your hospital sweats, ribs bandaged tight beneath your shirt, hair still blood-matted near the scalp.
You hadnât turned on the lights.
You hadnât eaten.
You were staring at the wall when the knock came.
Three short taps.
Then his voice.
âIt's me.â
You didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Then the second knock.
âPlease. Just open the door.â
You stood. Slowly. Every joint screamed. When you opened it, there he was. Still in black scrubs. Still tired. Still wearing that ring.
âYou left,â he said, breath fogging in the cold.
You leaned against the frame. âI wasnât going to wait around for someone who already left me once.â
âI deserved that.â
âYou deserve worse.â
He nodded. Took it like a man used to pain. âCan I come in?â
You hesitated.
Then stepped aside.
He didnât sit. Just stood thereâawkward, towering, hands in his pockets, taking in the chipped paint, the stack of unopened mail, the folded blanket at the edge of the bed.
âThis place is...â
âMine.â
He nodded again. âYeah. Yeah, it is.â
Silence.
You walked back to the bed, sat down slowly. He stood across from you like you were a patient and he didnât know what was broken.
âWhat do you want, Jack?â
His jaw flexed. âI want to be in your life again.â
You blinked. Laughed once, sharp and short. âRight. And what does that look like? You with her, and me playing backup singer?â
âNo.â His voice was quiet. âJust... just a friend.â
Your breath caught.
He stepped forward. âI know I donât deserve more than that. I know I hurt you. And I know thisâthis thing between usâit's not what it was. But I still care. And if all I can be is a number in your phone again, then let me.â
You looked down.
Your hands were shaking.
You didnât want this. You wanted him. All of him.
But you knew how this would end.
Youâd sit across from him in cafĂ©s, pretending not to look at his left hand.
Youâd laugh at his stories, knowing his warmth would go home to someone else.
Youâd let him inâinch by inchâuntil there was nothing left of you that hadnât shaped itself to him again.
And still.
StillââOkay,â you said.
Jack looked at you.
Like he couldnât believe it.
âFriends,â you added.
He nodded slowly. âFriends.â
You looked away.
Because if you looked at him any longer, you'd say something that would shatter you both.
Because this was the next best thing.
And you knew, even as you said it, even as you offered him your heart wrapped in barbed wireâIt was going to break you.
DAY TEN â 6:48 PM Steeped & Co. CafĂ© â Two blocks from The Pitt
You told yourself this wasnât a date.
It was coffee. It was public. It was neutral ground.
But the way your hands wouldnât stop shaking made it feel like you were twenty again, waiting for him to show up at the Greyhound station with his army bag and half a smile.
He walked in ten minutes late. He ordered his drink without looking at the menu. He always knew what he wantedâexcept when it came to you.
âYouâre limping less,â he said, settling across from you like you hadnât been strangers for the last seven years. You lifted your tea, still too hot to drink. âYouâre still observant.â
He smiledâsmall. Quiet. The kind that used to make you forgive him too fast. The first fifteen minutes were surface-level. Traffic. ER chaos. This new intern, Santos, doing something reckless. Robby calling him âDoctor Doomâ under his breath.
It shouldâve been easy.
But the space between you felt alive.
Charged.
Unforgivable.
He leaned forward at one point, arms on the table, and you caught the flick of his handâ
The ring.
You looked away. Pretended not to care.
âYouâre doing okay?â he asked, voice gentle.
You nodded, lying. âMostly.â
He reached across the table thenâjust for a secondâlike he might touch your hand. He didnât. Your breath caught anyway. And neither of you spoke for a while.
DAY TWELVE â 2:03 PM Your apartment
You couldnât sleep. Again.
The pain meds made your body heavy, but your head was always screaming. Youâd been lying in bed for hours, fully dressed, lights off, scrolling old texts with one hand while your other rubbed slow, nervous circles into the bandages around your ribs.
There was a text from him.
"You okay?"
You stared at it for a full minute before responding.
"No."
You expected silence.
Instead: a knock.
You didnât even ask how he got there so fast. You opened the door and he stepped in like he hadnât been waiting in his car, like he hadnât been hoping youâd need him just enough.
He looked exhausted.
You stepped back. Let him in.
He sat on the edge of the couch. Hands folded. Knees apart. Staring at the wall like it might break the tension.
âI canât sleep anymore,â you whispered. âI keep... hearing it. The crash. The metal. The quiet after.â
Jack swallowed hard. His jaw clenched. âYeah.â
You both went quiet again. It always came in waves with himâthings left unsaid that took up more space than the words ever could. Eventually, he leaned back against the couch cushion, rubbing a hand over his face.
âI think about you all the time,â he said, voice low, wrecked.
You didnât move.
âYouâre in the room when Iâm doing intake. When Iâm changing gloves. When I get in the car and my left hand hits the wheel and I see the ring and I wonder why itâs not you.â
Your breath hitched.
âBut I made a choice,â he said. âAnd I canât undo it without hurting someone whoâs never hurt me.â
You finally turned toward him. âThen why are you here?â
He looked at you, eyes dark and honest. âBecause the second you came back, I couldnât breathe.â
You kissed him.
You donât remember who moved first. If you leaned forward, or if he cupped your face like he used to. But suddenly, you were kissing him. It wasnât sweet. It wasnât gentle. It was devastated.
His mouth was salt and memory and apology.
Your hands curled in his shirt. He was whispering your name against your lips like it still belonged to him.
You pulled away first.
âGo home,â you said, voice cracking.
âDonât do thisââ
âGo home to her, Jack.â
And he did.
He always did.
DAY THIRTEEN â 7:32 PM
You donât eat.
You donât leave your apartment.
You scrub the counter three times and throw out your tea mug because it smells like him.
You sit on the bathroom floor and press a towel to your ribs until the pain brings you back into your body.
You start a text seven times.
You never send it.
DAY SEVENTEEN â 11:46 PM
The takeout was cold. Neither of you had touched it.
Jackâs gaze hadnât left you all night.
Low. Unreadable. He hadnât smiled once.
âYou never stopped loving me,â you said suddenly. Quiet. Dangerous. âDid you?â
His jaw flexed. You pressed harder.
âSay it.â
âI never stopped,â he rasped.
That was all it took.
You surged forward.
His hands found your face. Your hips. Your hair. He kissed you like heâd been holding his breath since the last time. Teeth and tongue and broken sounds in the back of his throat.
Your back hit the wall hard.
âFuckââ he muttered, grabbing your thigh, hitching it up. His fingers pressed into your skin like he didnât care if he left marks. âI canât believe you still taste like this.â
You gasped into his mouth, nails dragging down his chest. âDonât stop.â
He didnât.
He had your clothes off before you could breathe. His mouth moved downâyour throat, your collarbone, between your breasts, tongue hot and slow like he was punishing you for every year he spent wondering if you hated him.
âYou still wear my t-shirt to bed?â he whispered against your breasts voice thick. âYou still get wet thinking about me?â
You whimpered. âJackââ
His name came out like a sin.
He dropped to his knees.
âLet me hear it,â he said, dragging his mouth between your thighs, voice already breathless. âTell me you still want me.â
Your head dropped back.
âI never stopped.â
And then his mouth was on youâfilthy and brutal.
Tongue everywhere, fingers stroking you open while his other hand gripped your thigh like it was the only thing tethering him to this moment.
You were already shaking when he growled, âYou still taste like mine.â
You cried outâhigh and wreckedâand he kept going.
Faster.
Sloppier.
Like he wanted to ruin every memory of anyone else who mightâve touched you.
He made you come with your fingers tangled in his hair, your hips grinding helplessly against his face, your thighs quivering around his jaw while you moaned his name like you couldnât stop.
He stood.
His clothes were off in seconds. Nothing left between you but raw air and your shared history. His cock was thick, flushed, angry against his stomachâdripping with need, twitching every time you breathed.
You stared at it.
At him.
At the ring still on his finger.
He saw your eyes.
Slipped it off.
Tossed it across the room without a word.
Then slammed you against the wall again and slid inside.
No teasing.
No waiting.
Just deep.
You gaspedâtoo full, too fastâand he buried his face in your neck.
âIâm sorry,â he groaned. âI shouldnâtâfuckâI shouldnât be doing this.â
But he didnât stop.
He thrust so deep your eyes rolled back.
It was everything at once.
Your name on his lips like an apology. His hands on your waist like heâd never let go again. Your nails digging into his back like maybe you could keep him this time. He fucked you like heâd never get the chance again. Like he was angry you still had this effect on him. Like he was still in love with you and didnât know how to carry it anymore.
He spat on his fingers and rubbed your clit until you were screaming his name.
âLouder,â he snapped, fucking into you hard. âLet the neighbors hear who makes you come.â
You came again.
And again.
Shaking. Crying. Overstimulated.
âOpen your eyes,â he panted. âLook at me.â
You did.
He was close.
You could feel it in the way he lost rhythm, the way his grip got desperate, the way he whimpered your name like he was begging.
âInside,â you whispered, legs wrapped around him. âDonât pull out.â
He froze.
Then nodded, forehead dropping to yours.
âI love you,â he breathed.
And then he cameâdeep, full, shaking inside you with a broken moan so raw it felt holy.
After, you lay together on the floor. Sweat-slicked. Bruised. Silent.
You didnât speak.
Neither did he.
Because you both knewâ
This changed everything.
And nothing.
DAY EIGHTEEN â 7:34 AM
Sunlight creeps in through the slats of your blinds, painting golden stripes across the hardwood floor, your shoulder, his back.
Jackâs asleep in your bed. Heâs on his side, one arm flung across your stomach like instinct, like a claim. His hand rests just above your hipâfingers twitching every now and then, like some part of him knows this moment isnât real. Or at least, not allowed. Your body aches in places that feel worshipped.Â
You donât feel guilty.
Yet.
You stare at the ceiling. You havenât spoken in hours.
Not since he whispered âI love youâ while he was still inside you.
Not since he collapsed onto your chest like it might save him.
Not since he kissed your shoulder and didnât say goodbye.
You shift slowly beneath the sheets. His hand tightens.Â
Like he knows.
Like he knows.
You stay still. You donât want to be the one to move first. Because if you move, the night ends. If you move, the spell breaks. And Jack Abbot goes back to being someone else's.
Eventually, he stirs.
His breath shifts against your collarbone.
Thenâ
âMorning.â
His voice is low. Sleep-rough. Familiar.
It hurts worse than silence. You force a soft hum, not trusting your throat to form words.
He lifts his head a little.
Looks at you. Hair mussed. Eyes unreadable. Bare skin still flushed from where he touched you hours ago. You expect regret. But all you see is heartbreak.
âShouldnât have stayed,â he says softly.
You close your eyes.
âI know.â
He sits up slowly. Sheets falling around his waist.
You follow the line of his back with your gaze. Every scar. Every knot in his spine. The curve of his shoulder blades you used to trace with your fingers when you were twenty-something and stupid enough to think love was enough.
He doesnât look at you when he says it.
âI told her I was working overnight.â
You feel your breath catch.
âShe called me at midnight,â he adds. âI didnât answer.â
You sit up too. Tug the blanket around your chest like modesty matters now.
âIs this the part where you tell me it was a mistake?â
Jack doesnât answer right away.
ThenââNo,â he says. âItâs the part where I tell you I donât know how to go home.â
You both sit there for a long time.
Naked.
Wordless.
Surrounded by the echo of what you used to be.
You finally speak.
âDo you love her?â
Silence.
âI respect her,â he says. âSheâs good. Steady. Nothingâs ever hard with her.â
You swallow. âThatâs not an answer.â
Jack turns to you then. Eyes tired. Voice raw.
âIâve never stopped loving you.â
It lands in your chest like a sucker punch.
Because you know. You always knew. But now youâve heard it again. And it doesnât fix a goddamn thing.
âI canât do this again,â you whisper.
Jack nods. âI know.â
âBut Iâll keep doing it anyway,â you add. âIf you let me.â
His jaw tightens. His throat works around something thick.
âI donât want to leave.â
âBut you will.â
You both know he has to.
And he does.
He dresses slowly.
Doesnât kiss you.
Doesnât say goodbye.
He finds his ring.
Puts it back on.
And walks out.
The door closes.
And you break.
Because thisâthis is the cost of almost.
8:52 AM
You donât move for twenty-three minutes after the door shuts.
You donât cry.
You donât scream.
You just exist.
Your chest rises and falls beneath the blanket. That same spot where he laid his head a few hours ago still feels heavy. You think if you touch it, itâll still be warm.
You donât.
You donât want to prove yourself wrong. Your body aches everywhere. The kind of ache that isnât just from the crash, or the stitches, or the way he held your hips so tightly youâre going to bruise. Itâs the kind of ache you canât ice. Itâs the kind that lingers in your lungs.
Eventually, you sit up.
Your legs feel unsteady beneath you. Your knees shake as you gather the clothes scattered across the floor. His shirtâthe one you wore while he kissed your throat and said âI love youâ into your skinâgets tossed in the hamper like it doesnât still smell like him. Your hand lingers on it.
You shove it deeper.
Harder.
Like burying it will stop the memory from clawing up your throat.
You make coffee you wonât drink.
You wash your face three times and still look like someone who got left behind.
You open your phone.
One new text.
âDid you eat?â
You donât respond. Because what do you say to a man who left you raw and split open just to slide a ring back on someone elseâs finger? You try to leave the apartment that afternoon.Â
You make it as far as the sidewalk.
Then you turn around and vomit into the bushes.
You donât sleep that night.
You lie awake with your fingers curled into your sheets, shaking.
Your thighs ache.
Your mouth is dry.
You dream of him onceâhis hand pressed to your sternum like a prayer, whispering âdonât let go.â
When you wake, your chest is wet with tears and you donât remember crying.
DAY TWENTY TWOâ 4:17 PM Your apartment
It starts slow.
A dull ache in your upper abdomen. Like a pulled muscle or bad cramp. You ignore it. Youâve been ignoring everything. Pain means youâre healing, right?
But by 4:41 p.m., youâre on the floor of your bathroom, knees to your chest, drenched in sweat. Youâre cold. Shaking. The pain is blooming nowâhot and deep and wrong. You try to stand. Your vision goes white. Then youâre on your back, blinking at the ceiling.
And everything goes quiet.
THE PITT â 5:28 PM
Youâre unconscious when the EMTs wheel you in. Vitals unstable. BP crashing. Internal bleeding suspected. It takes Jack ten seconds to recognize you.
One to feel like heâs going to throw up.
âMid-thirties female. No trauma this week, but old injuries. Seatbelt bruise still present. Suspected splenic rupture, possible bleed out. BPâs eighty over forty and falling.â
Jack is already moving.
He steps into the trauma bay like a man walking into fire.
Itâs you.
God. Itâs you again.
Worse this time.
âHer name is [Y/N],â he says tightly, voice rough. âWe need OR on standby. Now.â
6:01 PM
Youâre barely conscious as they prep you for CT. Jack is beside you, masked, gloved, sterile. But his voice trembles when he says your name. You blink up at him.
Barely there.
âHurts,â you rasp.
He leans close, ignoring protocol.
âI know. Iâve got you. Stay with me, okay?â
6:27 PM
The scan confirms it.
Grade IV splenic rupture. Bleeding into the abdomen.
Youâre going into surgery.
Fast.
You grab his hand before they wheel you out. Your grip is weak. But desperate.
You look at himââI donât want to die thinking I meant nothing.â
His face breaks. And then they take you away.
Jack doesnât move.
Just stands there in blood-streaked gloves, shaking.
Because this time, he might actually lose you.
And he doesnât know if heâll survive that twice.
9:12 PM Post-op recovery, ICU step-down
You come back slowly. The drugs are heavy. Your throat is dry. Your ribs feel tighter than before. Thereâs a new weight in your abdomen, dull and throbbing. You try to lift your hand and fail. Your IV pole beeps at you like it's annoyed.
Then thereâs a shadow.
Jack.
You try to say his name.
It comes out as a rasp. He jerks his head up like heâs been underwater.
He looks like hell. Eyes bloodshot. Hands shaking. Heâs still in scrubsâstained, wrinkled, exhausted.
âHey,â he breathes, standing fast. His hand wraps gently around yours. You let it. You donât have the strength to fight.
âYou scared the shit out of me,â he whispers.
You blink at him.
There are tears in your eyes. You donât know if theyâre yours or his.
âWhatâŠ?â you rasp.
âYour spleen ruptured,â he says quietly. âYou were bleeding internally. We almost lost you in the trauma bay. Again.â
You blink slowly.
âYou looked empty,â he says, voice cracking. âStill. Your eyes were open, but you werenât there. And I thoughtâfuck, I thoughtââ
He stops. You squeeze his fingers.
Itâs all you can do.
Thereâs a long pause.
Heavy.
ThenââShe called.â
You donât ask who.
You donât have to.
Jack stares at the floor.
âI told her I couldnât talk. That I was... handling a case. That Iâd call her after.â
You close your eyes.
You want to sleep.
You want to scream.
âSheâs starting to ask questions,â he adds softly.
You open your eyes again. âThen lie better.â
He flinches.
âIâm not proud of this,â he says.
You look at him like he just told you the sky was blue. âThen leave.â
âI canât.â
âYou did last time.â
Jack leans forward, his forehead almost touching the edge of your mattress. His voice is low. Cracked. âI canât lose you again.â
Youâre quiet for a long time.
Then you ask, so small he barely hears it:
âIf Iâd died... would you have told her?â
His head lifts. Your eyes meet. And he doesnât answer.
Because you already know the truth.
He stands, slowly, scraping the chair back like the sound might stall his momentum. âI should let you sleep,â he adds.
âDonât,â you say, voice raw. âNot yet.â
He freezes. Then nods.
He moves back to the chair, but instead of sitting, he leans over the bed and presses his lips to your foreheadâgently, like heâs scared itâll hurt. Like heâs scared youâll vanish again. You donât close your eyes. You donât let yourself fall into it.
Because kisses are easy.
Staying is not.
DAY TWENTY FOUR â 9:56 AM Dana wheels you to discharge. Your hands are clenched tight around the armrests, fingers stiff. Jackâs nowhere in sight. Good. You canât decide if you want to see himâor hit him.
âYou got someone picking you up?â Dana asks, handing off the chart.
You nod. âUber.â
She doesnât push. Just places a hand on your shoulder as you standâslow, steady.
âBe gentle with yourself,â she says. âYou survived twice.â
DAY THIRTY ONE â 8:07 PM
The knock comes just after sunset.
Youâre barefoot. Still in the clothes you wore to your follow-up appointmentâa hoodie two sizes too big, a bandage under your ribs that still stings every time you twist too fast. Thereâs a cup of tea on the counter you havenât touched. The air in the apartment is thick with something you canât name. Something worse than dread.
You donât move at first. Just stare at the door.
Thenâagain.
Three soft raps.
Like heâs asking permission. Like he already knows he shouldnât be here. You walk over slowly, pulse loud in your ears. Your fingers hesitate at the lock.
âDonât,â you whisper to yourself. You open the door anyway.
Jack stands there. Gray hoodie. Dark jeans. Heâs holding a plastic grocery bag, like this is something casual, like heâs a neighbor stopping by, not the man who left you in pieces across two hospital beds.
Your voice comes out hoarse. âYou shouldnât be here.â
âI know,â he says, quiet. âBut I think I shouldâve been here a long time ago.â
You donât speak. You step aside.
He walks in like he doesnât expect to stay. Doesnât look around. Doesnât sit. Just stands there, holding that grocery bag like it might shield him from what heâs about to say.
âI told her,â he says.
You blink. âWhat?â
He lifts his gaze to yours. âLast night. Everything. The hospital. That night. The truth.â
Your jaw tenses. âAnd what, she just⊠let you walk away?â
He sets the bag on your kitchen counter. Itâs shaking slightly in his grip. âNo. She cried. Screamed. Told me to get outâ
You feel yourself pulling away from him, emotionally, physicallyâlike your bodyâs trying to protect you before your heart caves in again. âJesus, Jack.â
âI know.â
âYou donât get to do this. You donât get to come back with your half-truths and trauma and expect me to just be here.â
âI didnât come expecting anything.â
You whirl back to him, raw. âThen why did you come?â
His voice doesnât rise. But it cuts. âBecause you almost died. Again. Because Iâve spent the last week realizing that no one else has ever felt like home.â
You shake your head. âThat doesnât change the fact that you left me when I needed you. That I begged you to choose peace. And you chose chaos. Every goddamn time.â
He closes the distance slowly, but not too close. Not yet.
âYou think I donât live with that?â His voice drops.Â
You falter, tears threatening. âThen why didnât you try harder?â
âI thought youâd moved on.â
âI tried,â you say, voice cracking. âI tried so hard to move on, to let someone else in, to build something new with hands that were still learning how to stop reaching for you. But every man I metâit was like eating soup with a fork. Iâd sit across from them, smiling, nodding, pretending I wasnât starving, pretending I didnât notice the emptiness. They didnât know me. Not really. Not the version of me that stayed up folding your shirts, tracking your deployment cities like constellations, holding the weight of a future you kept promising but never chose. Not the me that kept the lights on when you disappeared into silence. Not the me that made excuses for your absence until it started sounding like prayer.â
Jackâs face shiftsâsubtle at first, then like a crack running straight through the foundation. His jaw tightens. His mouth opens. Closes. When he finally speaks, his voice is rough around the edges, as if the admission itself costs him something he doesnât have to spare.
âI didnât think I deserved to come back,â he says. âNot after the way I left. Not after how long I stayed gone. Not after all the ways I chose silence over showing up.â
You stare at him, breath shallow, chest tight.
âMaybe you didnât,â you say quietly, not to hurt himâbut because itâs true. And it hangs there between you, heavy and undeniable.
The silence that follows is thick. Stretching. Bruising.
Then, just when you think he might finally say something that unravels everything all over again, he gestures to the bag heâs still clutching like it might anchor him to the floor.
âI brought soup,â he says, voice low and awkward. âAnd real teaâthe kind you like. Not the grocery store crap. And, um⊠a roll of gauze. The soft kind. I remembered you said the hospital ones made you break out, and I thoughtâŠâ
He trails off, unsure, like heâs realizing mid-sentence how pitiful it all sounds when laid bare.
You blink, hard. Trying to keep the tears in their lane.
âYou brought first aid and soup?â
He nods, half a breath catching in his throat. âYeah. I didnât know what else youâd let me give you.â
Thereâs a beat.
A heartbeat.
Then it hits you.
Thatâs what undoes youânot the apology, not the fact that he told her, not even the way heâs looking at you like heâs seeing a ghost he never believed heâd get to touch again. Itâs the soup. Itâs the gauze. Itâs the goddamn tea. Itâs the way Jack Abbot always came bearing supplies when he didnât know how to offer himself.
You sink down onto the couch too fast, knees buckling like your body canât hold the weight of all the things youâve swallowed just to stay upright this week.
Elbows on your thighs. Face in your hands.
Your voice breaks as it comes out:
âWhat am I supposed to do with you?â
Itâs not rhetorical. Itâs not flippant.
Itâs shattered. Exhausted. Full of every version of love thatâs ever let you down. And he knows it.
And for a long, breathless momentâyou donât move.
Jack walks over. Kneels down. His hands hover, not touching, just there.
You look at him, eyes full of every scar he left you with. âYou said you'd come back once. You didnât.â
âI came back late,â he says. âBut Iâm here now. And Iâm staying.â
Your voice drops to a whisper. âDonât promise me that unless you mean it.â
âI do.â
You shake your head, hard, like youâre trying to physically dislodge the ache from your chest.Â
âIâm still mad,â you say, voice cracking.
Jack doesnât flinch. Doesnât try to defend himself. He just nods, slow and solemn, like heâs rehearsed this moment a hundred times in his head. âYouâre allowed to be,â he says quietly. âIâll still be here.â
Your throat tightens.
âI donât trust you,â you whisper, and it tastes like blood in your mouthâlike betrayal and memory and all the nights you cried yourself to sleep because he was halfway across the world and you still loved him anyway.
âI know,â he says. âThen let me earn it.â
You donât speak. You canât. Your whole body is tremblingânot with rage, but with grief. With the ache of wanting something so badly and being terrified youâll never survive getting it again.
Jack moves slowly. Doesnât close the space between you entirely, just enough. Enough that his handârough and familiarâreaches out and rests on your knee. His palm is warm. Grounding. Careful.
Your breath catches. Your shoulders tense. But you donât pull away.
You couldnât if you tried.
His voice drops even lower, like if he speaks any louder, the whole thing will break apart.
âIâve got nowhere else to be,â he says.
He pauses. Swallows hard. His eyes glisten in the low light.
âI put the ring in a drawer. Told her the truth. That Iâm in love with someone else. That Iâve always been.â
You look up, sharply. âYou told her that?â
He nods. Doesnât blink. âShe said she already knew. That sheâd known for a long time.â
Your chest tightens again, this time from something different. Not anger. Not pain. Something that hurts in its truth.
He goes on. And this partâthis part wrecks him.
âYou know what the worst part is?â he murmurs. âShe didnât deserve that. She didnât deserve to love someone who only ever gave her the version of himself that was pretending to be healed.â
You donât interrupt. You just watch him come undone. Gently. Quietly.
âShe was kind,â he says, voice barely above a whisper. âGood. Steady. The kind of person who makes things simple. Who doesnât expect too much, or ask questions when you go quiet. And even with all of thatâeven with the life we were buildingâI couldnât stop waiting for the sound of your voice.â
You blink hard, breath catching somewhere between your lungs and your ribs.
âIâd check my phone,â he continues. âAt night. In the morning. In the middle of conversations. Iâd look out the window like maybe youâd just⊠show up. Like the universe owed me one more shot. One more chance to fix the thing I broke when I walked away from the one person who ever made me feel like home.â
You canât stop crying now. Quiet tears. The kind that come when thereâs nothing left to scream.
âI hated you,â you whisper. âI hated you for a long time.â
He nods, eyes on yours. âSo did I.â
And somehow, thatâs what softens you.
Because you canât hate him through this. You canât pretend this version of him isnât bleeding too.
You exhale shakily. âI donât know if I can do this again.â
âIâm not asking you to,â he says, âNot all at once. Just⊠let me sit with you. Let me hold space. Let me remind you who I wasâwho I could beâif you let me stay this time.â
And god help youâsome fragile, tired, still-broken part of you wants to believe him.
âIf I say yes... if I let you in again...â
He waits. Doesnât breathe.
âYou donât get to leave next time,â you whisper. âNot without looking me in the eye.â
Jack nods.
âI wonât.â
You reach for his hand. Lace your fingers together.And for the first time since everything shatteredâYou let yourself believe he might stay.