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- At Least We'll Be Together
Chapter 12- The Wandering Widow
Chapter 13- Knock Before Entering
Chapter 14- Mine
Chapter 15- Raspberry leaves
Chapter 16-coming soon
It's never over
parings. jack abbot x reader
warnings. implied age gap (jack late 40s, reader late 20s/early 30s), established relationship, jack and reader fight, reader gets drugged and creeped on, hospital setting, medical emergencies, reader is okay tho, accurate as possible medical talk, soft!jack eventually, angst and hurt/comfort, let me know if there's anything else!
notes. I can't believe this is my longest fic and I don't like it đ I do love them though, and I love the angst, I just think this wasn't my strongest so we'll see how I feel when I get some more of yall's opinions. as always any and all feedback is appreciated!
wc. 4100+
You were just finishing your makeup when you heard the shower turn off.
It was a quiet kind of hope that filled your chestâsmall and delicate, but real. It had been weeks since the two of you had a night off together. Back-to-back night shifts, emergency call-ins, 4 a.m. arguments whispered in the dark⊠it had all blurred into something numb. Something too heavy.
But tonight?
Tonight was supposed to be the reset button.
You stepped out of the bathroom, smoothing your dress down with your hands, a nervous flutter in your stomach. Something soft played from the speaker on your nightstand. The perfume you wore on your first date still lingered in the air.
Then you saw it.
Black scrubs. His badge clipped to the collar. Go-bag on the floor.
You froze.
Jack stepped into the room, towel around his shoulders, running a hand through damp curls. He paused the second he saw your face.
âBabeââ
âNo,â you said, your voice barely above a whisper. âPlease donât say it, you didnâtâŠâ
He glanced at the scrubs like he wished theyâd disappear. âShen called when you were in the shower. Theyâre short. Real short. Two nurses out and a doctor is MIAâheâs drowning.â
You blinked. âAnd you said yes.â
Jack rubbed the back of his neck. âHe sounded desperate. I figured youâdââ
âYou figured Iâd be fine,â you cut in, hurt creeping into your voice. âBecause itâs always me who has to make the compromise.â
âItâs one shift,â he said, already tugging on his top.
âItâs never just one,â you snapped, then caught yourself, hands tightening at your sides. âI got off three hours ago, Jack. Iâve been dragging myself through twelve-hour nights, sometimes more just like you. And the one time we both actually had a night offâŠâ
He looked away. âThis isnât about us.â
âIsnât it?â you said, your voice cracking. âBecause it feels like it is.â
Silence pressed in between you.
âI get it,â you added. âI know what itâs like when the unitâs falling apart. I know what itâs like to be needed, to be the one that says yes every time. But God, Jack⊠when do I get to be your emergency?â
He stiffened.
âYou think I want to do this?â he snapped suddenly. âYou think I donât feel it too? That I donât want to just stay here, take you to dinner, act like our lives arenât chaos 24/7?â
âThen why don't you?â you said, voice breaking. âWhy is it always someone else who gets the best of you?â
He looked at you then, eyes tired, voice bitter. âBecause they need me. You wouldnât get it.â
Your heart stopped.
âWhat did you just say to me?â
He hesitatedâtoo long. âI didnât mean it like thatââ
âNo. Say it again,â you said, stepping back. âSay I donât get it, Jack.â
Jack sighed, frustrated. âYou know what I mean. Youâre notââ
âNot what?â you snapped. âNot enough? Not capable of understanding? I work the same damn shifts as you do. I patch up the same wounds, hold the same dying handsâdonât you dare act like I donât understand.â
âI didnât mean it like that,â he muttered, but it was already too late.
You grabbed your bag, throat thick with hurt. âYou want to play doctor, Jack? Fine. Go save Pittsburgh. But donât expect me to sit here and wait again for whateverâs left of you after.â
He moved toward you, but you stepped around him, heart pounding in your chest.
âI gave you tonight,â you whispered at the door. âAnd you gave it away.â
And then you leftâheels in your hand, dress still clinging to hope, the soft click of the door the only sound between you.
Things didnât get much better after you left.Â
The music thumped in your chest, the bass vibrating through the soles of your feet. It was loud. Too loud. But that was the point, right?
After the fight, after the disappointment and the sting of Jackâs words, you just needed something different. Something that would make you forget for a little while. So, when Marina and Kat suggested hitting the club, you agreed. Youâd always enjoyed the energy, the people, the feeling of being free, even if just for a night.
So now you found yourself in a packed, dark club with flashing lights and bodies grinding against each other on the dance floor. You didnât know exactly why you were here, but the thought of being home alone, stewing in anger and confusion, was too much to handle.
The girls were already lost in the crowd, their laughter cutting through the music as they grabbed drinks from the bar. You followed, trying to shake off the ache in your chest, the one that kept whispering that Jack shouldâve been out with you, not at work.
âAnother round?â Kat asked, leaning close enough for you to hear over the beat.
You nodded, your eyes scanning the bar area, the chaos of the club almost soothing in its madness. The atmosphere was a welcome distraction, even though it wasnât the night youâd planned. You hadnât expected to feel so⊠hollow. Jackâs absence was like a weight pressing against your chest, and you were trying to ignore it. Trying to not think about how your plans had been shattered, how this whole night had been supposed to be different.
You made your way toward the bar, needing a moment of quiet, a break from the noise, when a guy approached. He was dressed in a tight shirt that seemed to shimmer under the club lights, his hair perfectly styled. He smiled at you, one that was too eager, almost practiced.
âHey, I couldnât help but notice you,â he said, leaning in just a bit too close. âIâm Alex. And youâwow. You look incredible.â
You forced a smile, taking a step back instinctively. âThanks,â you said, trying to keep the interaction polite, your voice still a little stiff. âIâm just here with some friends.â
His smile didnât falter. âI can tell, I just had to come over. I mean, with a woman like you, how could I not?â
You glanced around, hoping to spot either Marina or Kat, but the crowd was thick and you were feeling boxed in. âIâm not really looking for company,â you said, hoping that would be enough.
He didnât take the hint. Instead, his hand moved closer to your arm, brushing against the bare skin of your shoulder.
âYou sure? Iâm just trying to have a good time, and you seem like youâre someone who knows how to enjoy herself,â he said, his voice dropping lower, almost a whisper. A chill ran down your spine. You werenât sure if it was the way he said it or just how off his energy felt, but it made your stomach turn.
âI said no, thank you,â you said, trying to sound firm, but your words barely made it through the noise of the music.
He didnât back off, though. His dark eyes raked over you like he was trying to figure you out, like you were some new prize to be won. âCome on, whatâs the harm in just one drink? One dance?â He stepped in closer, his breath warm on your neck.
You shook your head, feeling the walls close in. Your palms were starting to get clammy, the tightness in your chest spreading. âIâm not interested,â you repeated, your voice sharper this time, but his grip on your arm tightened, just a little.
âDonât be like that,â he said, his fingers brushing the strap of your dress. âYou know you want to have some fun.â
That was it. The polite smile youâd been forcing finally slipped away. You wrenched your arm free from his grip, your voice loud and clear now.
âI said no,â you snapped, the force of your words cutting through the loud music.
His eyes flashed, surprised at your sudden change in tone, but then he just scoffed. âFine, whatever,â he muttered, his expression turning into a sneer. âGuess I misread you.â
You didnât even wait for him to finish walking away. You turned sharply, heart pounding in your chest, as you made your way back toward the dance floor. The excitement of the club had completely evaporated, replaced with the taste of bitterness and frustration.
You made your way back toward the dance floor, heart still racing, the heat of the club suddenly feeling suffocating. The beat of the music had lost its pull on you, replaced by the sting of unwanted attention and the frustration of a night gone wrong. You barely noticed the way the crowd shifted, how people pressed against you as you walked through them, each of them just another stranger in your path. You tried to shake the unease away, but it lingered like a shadow.
Marina and Kat, the only two familiar faces in this chaotic scene, were still at the bar, but you couldnât muster the energy to go back to them just yet. You needed a moment alone, even if that meant getting lost in the crowd. You found a quiet corner at the edge of the room, trying to collect your thoughts, breathing in the air that smelled of alcohol and sweat, but it did little to calm the storm in your chest.
The drink youâd had earlierâa rum and cokeâwas still sitting in your hand. Youâd been nursing it for most of the night, the ice now long melted, the liquid a watered-down version of what it had been when you first grabbed it at the bar. It wasnât your favorite, but you didnât mind. You hadnât been focused on the drink anyway, just trying to keep the edges of your frustration from seeping through.
But now, as you took another sip, something felt off. Your stomach tightened, but not in the way it usually did after too much alcohol. It was deeper, almost hollow, like there was something foreign inside you. You set the drink down on the nearest table, trying to ignore the growing sense of unease gnawing at the back of your mind.
Your vision started to blur, the flashing lights of the club becoming a chaotic swirl of neon. The music, once a vibrant pulse beneath your skin, now felt distantâlike you were hearing it from underwater. The pressure in your head built an oppressive weight that made it hard to think clearly. You stumbled slightly, your legs growing heavy, and it took all your effort just to stay standing.
You glanced around for your friends, but the crowd had thickened, and the girls were nowhere to be seen. Panic crept up your spine. You needed them. You needed someone to help. But the room felt like it was spinning now, faster and faster, and your body wasnât cooperating with you anymore.
"Hey, are you okay?" A voice cut through the fog in your mind, but you couldnât place where it came from. You tried to focus, to find the person speaking, but your vision darkened again, everything going black at the edges.
You blinked, trying to fight off the overwhelming dizziness, but it was useless. The world around you tilted, and the last thing you remembered was sinking to your knees, the floor rushing up to meet you.
The ER was chaotic as always.
Monitors beeped in staccato rhythms, stretchers lined the halls, and the air was thick with the scent of antiseptic and the metallic tang of adrenaline. Jack hadnât stopped moving since he walked in, not even long enough to get a proper cup of coffee. His scrubs still clung to his damp skin from the rushed post-shower change, and his muscles ached from tension he hadnât had time to notice until now.
A code had just cleared. He stood in the corner of north three, charting with one hand, the other gripping a barely-sipped paper cup of coffee that had long gone cold. The flicker of a headache gnawed behind his eyes.
He shouldnât be here.
His mind kept driftingâback to the house, to the way you looked in that dress, to the way your voice cracked when you said âwhen do I get to be your emergency?â
 God, that had hit harder than heâd let on.
And then heâd said the wrong thingââYou wouldnât get it.â The words kept echoing back in his ears like a cruel joke. You did get it. Maybe more than anyone ever had.
He hadnât checked his phone since you left. Couldnât bring himself to. If you texted, heâd crumble. If you didnât⊠Well, that was somehow worse.
âDr. Abbot!â
Jack snapped out of it at the sound of Johnâs voice shouting down the hallway. He turned toward him, brows knitting together. Shen was already halfway across the ED, panting slightly, eyes wide.
âWhat is it?â Jack asked, already moving toward him.
âOverdose. Young womanâunknown age, female. Brought in from the strip districtâsome club off Penn. Unconscious on arrival, GCS dropped to six en route.â
Jack's jaw tightened. âETA?â
âThey just pulled up.â
Jack tossed his chart aside and strode toward the ambulance bay without another word, adrenaline already kicking in.
Shen jogged beside him. âParamedics think her drink was spikedâGHB, maybe? Said she started seizing before they got her out of the club. Friends couldnât find her at firstâshe was alone when they found her on the floor.â
Something twisted in Jackâs gut. He didnât know why. Just a flicker of unease, a sick chill climbing up his spine.
The ambulance bay doors opened with a mechanical hiss. The flashing red lights reflected off the glass like warning signals in his head.
He stepped outside, heart thudding.
And then he saw her.
Or You.
Unconscious. Oxygen mask strapped to your still pretty face. IVs in both arms. Your dressâthe dress you had boughtâbunched awkwardly around your hips. One heel missing. A smudge of mascara on your cheek like a cruel reminder of what tonight was supposed to be.
The paramedic was shouting something, but Jack didnât hear it. His vision tunneled. His world narrowed to just youâstill, and small on the gurney.
âNo,â Jack whispered, stepping forward, his breath catching in his throat. âNo, no, noââ
He pushed through the medic, grabbing onto the rail of the stretcher.
âWhat happened?â he barked. His voice was hoarse, shaking.
âGHB suspected. Found alone. Low responsiveness. HR is unstable. Sheâs seizing on and offââ
Jack was already moving, wheeling you into trauma bay one. âGet Narcan ready just in case. Push fluids. Get me labs, tox screen, full workup. Page neuro for consultânow.â
He didnât even care that his voice cracked. Didnât care that every nurse and medic in that hallway was staring at him like heâd lost it.
Because he had.
You were his emergency now, and he was terrified he might be too late.
The doors slammed open with a bang as Jack wheeled you inside, every step fueled by sheer panic and clinical precision. His hands moved on autopilot, but his mind? His mind was screaming.
âSheâs hypotensive,â a nurse called. âBPâs droppingâseventy over fifty.â
âPush fluidsâhang a liter of LR, now. Get a second IV. 16-gauge if you can find a vein.â
Your head lolled to the side as the team lifted you onto the bed. Jackâs breath hitched.
âJesus, sheâs burning up,â he muttered, pressing his palm to your forehead. âGet her temp.â
â102.6,â Shen called.
âPossible serotonin syndrome or stimulant combo,â Jack said quickly. âStart cooling measures. Ice packs under the arms. Get a foleyâneed accurate output.â
A nurse moved to cut the dress from your body, but Jack put his hand out. âDonâtââ His voice cracked again. He paused, swallowed, forced the words out through gritted teeth. âLet me.â
No one argued. Everyone knewâthis wasnât just another patient, you were one of them, you were jackâs. His slightly trembling hands carefully unzipped the side of your dress, easing it off your shoulders and down. He fought to keep his face unreadable, but his throat felt raw, his stomach twisting into knots. The scent of your perfumeâthe one you wore on your first dateâstill lingered faintly in the air.
âVitals?â he barked, refocusing as nurses applied leads to your chest.
âHR 122. O2âs eighty-nine but climbing. BPâs coming up a little.â
Jack leaned over you, brushing damp hair from your forehead. Your lashes fluttered, just barely. A flicker of awareness behind your lids.
âCome on, baby,â he whispered, not caring who heard. âStay with me. Iâm right here. Youâre okay. Youâre gonna be okay.â
You stirred faintly, a tiny groan slipping past your lips.
âHey, heyâitâs me,â he said, brushing his knuckles gently along your cheek. âYouâre in the ER. Youâre safe now, alright? I got you.â
Your eyes opened a crack, glassy and unfocused. You blinked slowly, clearly struggling to process. And thenâ
âJâŠJack?â you croaked, barely above a whisper.
He exhaled, choking on relief.
âYeah, Iâm here,â he said quickly, squeezing your hand. âIâm right here. Youâre gonna be fine, I promise.â
You blinked again, trying to sit up, but your body betrayed you. âWhat⊠happened?â
âYou were drugged,â Jack said gently. âSpiked drink. Club downtown. Do you remember anything?â
You shook your head faintly, then winced as pain rolled through you. âIâheâthere was this guy⊠he wouldnât leave me aloneâŠâ
Jackâs jaw tightened. Fury flared behind his eyes, but he pushed it down.
âShh, itâs okay,â he murmured, brushing some hair out of your face. âDonât worry about that right now. Youâre here. Youâre safe.â
âY-you were supposed to be at work,â you mumbled, confusion clouding your voice.
His heart cracked clean in half.
âI am. But they brought you in,â he whispered, gripping your hand tighter. âThey brought you in⊠and everything else stopped.â
He didnât realize his hands were shaking until your hand weakly squeezed his.And for the first time that night, Jack let himself fall apartâjust a little. Because you were the emergency. And nothing else mattered now.
After an hour of working on you, Jack stood at the foot of your bed, hands braced on his hips, watching the slow rise and fall of your chest. Monitors beeped in steady rhythm. The IV pumped fluids into your system, and you were stable nowâgroggy but safe.
It had been the longest hour of his life..
He didnât realize how tight his jaw had been until he stepped out of the trauma bay and let the door swing closed behind him. He needed a second. Just one.
But thatâs when he saw themâMarina and Kat, hovering near the nurses' station down the hall like two ghosts.
They looked like hell. Club makeup smudged, heels in their hands, eyes wide and red-rimmed. Theyâd followed the ambulance but hadnât pushed forward until now.
When Jack made eye contact with them, they froze. The hallway felt too quiet, the tension snapping taut.
He moved toward them with slow, deliberate steps. His face was unreadableâtoo calm to be safe.
âYou two were with her.â His voice wasnât angry, not exactly. But it carried the weight of someone barely holding it together. âSo tell me what happened.â
Kat opened her mouth, but no sound came out.
Marina stepped in instead, her voice small. âWe didnât know. Jack, weâwe didnât know. She just said she needed a minute and went to the bar. We were right there.â
âShe was alone,â Jack said, his tone still deceptively even. âLong enough for some asshole to slip something in her drink.â
âWe didnât see anyone,â Kat said, her voice cracking. âWe were watching her an-and then she was gone until someone screamed. She collapsed. We thoughtâJesus, we thought she just had too much to drink, but she only bought one.â
Jack closed his eyes for a beat, dragging a hand over his face.
âShe didnât,â he muttered. âTox screen lit up like a goddamn Christmas tree. Probably in that one drink she barely touched.â
Marina blinked, horrified. âShe said it didnât taste right. Said it was too sweet.â
âShe was trying to be safe,â Jack said, his voice tightening. âDid everything right. Still ended up in my fucking ER, barely coherent.â
Neither of them had anything to say to that. Because what could you say?
âI shouldâve been with her,â Jack added quietly, more to himself than to them. âWe were supposed to have tonight. And I left.â
Marina stepped forward cautiously, soft as always. âShe didnât blame you, Jack. She didnât even say your name like she was mad. She justâshe was looking for you.â
That hit harder than it shouldâve. Jackâs throat worked as he swallowed, glancing back at the trauma room door behind him.
âSheâs sleeping now,â he said finally. âOut of the woods.â
âCan we⊠see her?â Kat asked gently.
Jack nodded. âJust be quiet. She might not wake up for a while.â
Marina hesitated, then touched Jackâs arm, tentative. âShe loves you, you know that. Donât let tonight be the thing that breaks you both.â
Jack didnât answer, but something in his expression softenedâjust barely. The steel cracked for a second, showing the man underneath. The one who hadnât left her side. The one who never would.
And then he stepped back toward the door, glancing once more at the monitor inside.
âTell her Iâm here,â he said. âWhen she wakes upâŠâ
The soft beeping of the monitor was the first thing you heard. It was steady, rhythmic, almost comforting, but it felt like the sound was a distant echo, like you werenât quite sure where it was coming from. Your eyes fluttered open, blurry at first, the room around you coming into focus slowly.
Your head throbbed with a dull ache, a tightness in your chest pulling at your breath. Something felt wrongâlike the world had shifted just slightly, leaving you off-balance.
Then, the scent of antiseptic and faint, stale coffee mixed with the familiar one that had always been home to you: Jack.
Your eyes scanned the dimly lit room. There, sitting at your side, was Jackâhis back to you as he slumped in a chair, his hand resting near yours on the bed. His posture was stiff, but there was something in the way his shoulders hung, the way his breath came a little too fast, that told you he wasnât just tired.
He was worried.
You tried to speak, but your throat felt dry, raw. You croaked out a faint sound, and Jack snapped to attention, immediately leaning forward. His eyes met yours, and there it wasâthe instant relief, mixed with guilt, storming across his features.
âHey,â he said softly, his voice hoarse. âHey, look at me. Youâre okay.â
You tried to say something, but your voice wouldnât cooperate. You croaked again, your hand weakly reaching for his.
Jackâs fingers tightened around yours, warm and steady. His thumb traced over the back of your hand as if to reassure both of you.
âIâm so sorry,â he murmured, his voice cracking. âI shouldâve been there. I shouldâve been with you.â
You blinked, your mind sluggish as it pieced things together. You could barely remember what had happened. The night, the club, the man at the bar, the drinkâŠThe wave of nausea hit you, and you squeezed his hand harder. He immediately noticed.
âTake it easy,â he said, his free hand brushing a few stray hairs from your forehead. âYouâve been through a lot.â
It wasnât just the physical tollâit was everything else. The confusion, the anger, the heartbreak.
âI⊠I didnâtâŠâ You stopped, your throat closing up. The words didnât come out easily, but Jack was right there, waiting patiently.
âYou didnât deserve this,â he said gently, like he could hear everything you couldnât say. âI know. I shouldâve done better. I shouldâve been with you.â
You squeezed his hand again, the weight of his words and your own swirling in the space between you. The thought of him taking the blameâthe one who had stayed behind, who had always put in the workâwas almost too much.
And you didnât have the strength to argue.
âYouâre here,â you whispered finally, eyes barely open. âThatâs all I need right now.â
Jackâs chest tightened at that, his eyes darkening as he bent closer, brushing his lips against your forehead.
âIâm not going anywhere,â he whispered. âIâll never do that to you again.â
Your heart gave a flutter at his words, and though your head was still spinning, your chest felt just a little lighter.
A quiet comfort settled between you, something unspoken but deeply understood. For all the chaos of the world outside, for all the mistakes and regrets, you knew that together, youâd get through it.
And for tonight, that was enough.
mercvry-glow 2025
Long Fics:
Death and the Lady: Chibs Telford X Reader. :
Y/N has tried hard to forget her past as a club hang around in Charming. She's tried to be a better person attempting to run her family's funeral home and be an upstanding member of society. However a request for a favor from SAMCRO in exchange for payment for debts drags her right back into the life she tried so hard to leave behind. The offer of payment isn't the only thing pulling her back into the world of SAMCRO. A certain Scotsman proves to be another incentive to Y/N to possibly find her way back to the life she'd sworn to leave behind.
One , Two , Three , Four , Five , Six , Seven , Eight , Nine , Ten , Eleven , Twelve , Thirteen , Fourteen , 15 ,
Lilies and Thistles:
Lily Unser comes back to Charming to be with her ailing father. She finds that the world she left behind for college is changing. Things are changing fast and she doesn't know where to stand. Soon Lily finds herself connected to someone who gives her a reason to stay in California. Is Chibs enough to keep her here? Is Lily enough to mend his damaged heart? Starts before season 1.
1 ,
Now That I Have You
Molly and her young son have come to Charming trying to start a new life after fleeing an abusive marriage. The last thing she expects to find is a relationship with a certain Scot. Chibs didn't expect to find love either but finds that he doesn't want to let go of Molly and her boy. Can he protect them when her past comes knocking? Can she accept Chibs' often dangerous life?
One , Two , Three , Four , Five , Six , Seven ,
Scorned
When Sheriff Althea Jarry returns from a sabbatical and discovers that Chibs Telford has taken an ol lady, she's none too pleased. Will her attempts to destroy the peace Chibs Telford has found with Y/N have dangerous consequences for Chibs and Y/N and all that they hold dear?
One, Two , Three , Four , Five ,
Oneshots:
Wrong Number
When Y/N sends some enticing photos meant for her ol man to the wrong number, she receives some surprising but much hoped for results.
Belonging
Chibs decides that the best way to protect Y/N from the violence of his life is to break her heart. Y/N decides that the best way to mend her broken heart is to agree to a date with a rookie cop much to Chibs' irritation. Chibs is left attempting to win back Y/N and show her they belong to one another the only way he knows how. A smut dialog request. 18+
Deserving
When Frankie Diamonds takes Chibs Telford hostage after going on a rampage and Diosa, Y/N is left fearing the man she loves may be gone from her life forever.
Homecoming
Y/N longs for Chibs Telford after a week apart. A moment of attempting to find some relief from the tension and longing for her fiancé ends in a surprising result as Chibs arrives to a welcome home he had not been anticipating. 18+ Smut dialogue request.
Sweetness
Chibs Telford reflects on how his ol lady came into his life and showed him a sense of sweetness he never thought he deserved. During a moment of intimacy Y/N and Chibs make a surprising but pleasing discovery in the bedroom. 18+smut
Never Lost
President Chibs Telford needs some reassurance from his ol lady as he contemplates the future of SAMCRO. 18+ smut
Fight for What You Want
One ,
When Chibs Telford overhears the woman heâs been unwilling to make a move on has a first date lined up, will he be willing to fight for her? When Y/Nâs first date turns into the first date from hell will Chibs Telfordâs efforts to protect her be enough to turn the night around?
Jack Abbot x f!Reader
5.1k || All my content is 18+ MDNI || C.W.: mentions of blood, mentions of guns and shootings, mentions of death/dying/coding, CPR, anxiety about partner's safety, Jack's traumatized, reader's traumatized, mentions of dissociation and compartmentalization, poor description of medical events, potentially incorrect medical descriptions/knowledge, very very light smut, angst, age gap kind of implied with Jack but not explicitly referenced, no use of y/n or related, not proofread, no beta, I think that's all but if I missed any please (nicely) let me know.
Summary: This is my Pitt-Fest-But-Not fic. Development of your relationship through vignettes of the past and conversations between Jack, Dana and Robby. There's a shooting where you work. Jack is at the ED when the dispatch comes in and is terrified when he can't get in touch with you.
A.N.: If my Robby reads like John Carter I'm sorry, except that a little bit I'm not. I feel like I'm struggling with my Jack characterization but can't tell if that's just me hating everything I do. This is my take on one of my fave tropes where reader is in mortal danger. I needed a physical location that could be associated with reader and settled on a courthouse, but what it is reader does there is not described. Probably (definitely?) needs a part two. If you get the nickname, thank you, I feel seen. If you don't I explain it at the end. This is absolutely something I would call him, in part to fuck with people who know his real name. I would love to know if you enjoyed and to hear any thoughts you'd like to share.
âHe has a girlfriend,â Robby smirks at Dana.Â
She blinks at him. âIâm sorry, I thought weâre talking about Jack Abbot.â
âOh we fucking are.â Robby stifles his smirk and forces his lips to remain closed and as neutral as possible.Â
âYouâre shitting me.â Danaâs incredulous look breaks Robby a bit and he starts to laugh, tries to turn it into a cough when both he and Dana look up to find Jack staring at them as he takes his snow dusted beanie off. He gives Robby a âreally?â look even though he knew Robby would rat him out to Dana the second Robby had dragged it out of him.Â
Dana looks back at Robby. âWho? How did they meet?â
Robby holds up his hands. âYou now officially know as much as I do about her.â Dana makes a noise of vague discontent but knows Jack well enough to know Robby is telling the truth. Thatâs all thatâs been revealed.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
âItâs not worth it,â you whisper. Jack blinks and looks around, unsure if youâre talking to him. He has no idea who you are, has never seen you before in his life but it appears that you are in fact whispering to him in the middle of this bookstore.Â
He raises his eyebrows. âItâs not?â
You shake your head, give him an almost conspiratorial smile. âNo, he must have gotten a new ghost writer. Itâs really bad in comparison to his other stuff. Save your time and money. Iâll give you a summary right now for free if youâre that curious.â
Jack smiles to himself a little bit as he sets the book back on the shelf. Thereâs something about you, your smile, the way you just randomly spoke to him. Heâs drawn to you. An alarm goes off in some part of his brain telling him to ignore it, ignore you, he could get hurt. He pretends to weigh his options as he turns to face you fully. âHow about for a cup of coffee?â
Your brows furrow in confusion for a moment. Thereâs simply no way this unfairly attractive man is asking to buy you a cup of coffee. âThe summary?â You clarify. âThat Iâd give for free. You want it to cost a cup of coffee instead?â You let out a nervous laugh and some part of his heart aches because youâre so adorable. âI just want to make sure I understand before I potentially make an even bigger fool of myself.âÂ
âYep.â He canât help but laugh a little. âYou give me the summary over coffee. Actually, you know what? Youâre going to have to give me a recommendation too because now Iâm going to have nothing to read.â He clicks his tongue at you.Â
âWell,â you laugh out, all breathy as you try to pull yourself together. âYou drive a hard bargain but I think Iâm willing to accept those termsâŠâ you glance at his name badge, âDr. Abbot.â You give him a full smile and Jack knows then and there heâs totally fucked in the best of ways.Â
âJack.â He smiles at you as you both begin walking towards the cafĂ©. âCall me Jack.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Everything quiet enough after handoff, Robby walks out with Jack into the morning sun that does little to warm the breeze pulling leaves off the trees. âAny chance you can cover a shift on Saturday night?â Robby is asking, yes, but he knows itâs not really a question, Jack is always willing to work.
âCanât.â Jack says simply, shrugging his shoulders. âSorry.â Thereâs an expectant silence that hangs between the two as they keep walking.
âCare to elaborate?â Robby finally asks.
âNo.â Jack turns and smirks at him. âItâs none of your and Danaâs business.â
âHa!â Robby laughs. âSo itâs her, itâs about her! The ever elusive girlfriend. Will we ever get to meet her? Or does she not want to meet us? Is she real?â Jack stops walking and gives Robby one of his looks. âHoly shit, is it someone here?â
Jack snorts at that. âNo itâs not someone here. Sheâs not even in the medical field.â He sighs, half longing and half resignation of some kind. âSheâs honestly dying to meet you guys, especially you and Dana, but Iâm trying to protect her from this hellhole. Itâs hard with schedules too, to find a time.â
âThatâs such fucking bullshit,â Robby laughs. âAre you afraid to truly commit? Think bringing her here will make it too real?âÂ
Itâs a valid question but one that Jack nevertheless resents. âNo, actually, if you must fucking know Saturday is our one year anniversary. We have plans. So youâll have to find someone else to cover. But Iâll bring her around soon,â he laughs through his nose to himself at your stubbornness, âif I donât sheâs liable to just show up one of-â
âA year?â Robby laughs, incredulous. âA fucking year? How the hell did you hide it for three months before I dragged it out of you?â
Jack ignores him. âAlso, Iâm moving to days. Itâs better for us.â Heâs so nonchalant about it, just states it like heâs saying the sky is blue, like itâs not going to make Robbyâs eyes widen and mouth drop open like it does.
âI donât,â Robby huffs a laugh, âI donât even know where to fucking begin.â
âThen donât.â Jack smirks, starts to walk again while Robby stays frozen, running a hand through his hair. âGo do some actual work.â
âI thought you found comfort in the darkness?â Robby yells after him.Â
Jack slows and turns around but keeps walking backwards, one hand holding the strap of his backpack to keep it over his shoulder. He glances down at his phone and the photo of you that is now his wallpaper. He smiles to himself a little, yells back. âGuess I find it somewhere else now.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You giggle, honest to god giggle and Jack could lose his damn mind as he nibbles at your collarbone. âYou know if my anatomy class had been this fun, I might have become a doctor too.âÂ
Youâre laying on your back in bed as Jack kisses your sweat slicked skin all over as you both come down from your last round. Heâs taken to 'teaching you anatomy' like this, identifying different parts of the human body with his mouth.
âHmm,â Jack hums against you. âIâm glad it wasnât then. Fuck doctors.â He starts to kiss down your chest.Â
âThat has become quite the favorite pastime of mine, yes,â you smirk. âFucking one specific doctor, actually.âÂ
âGetting fucked by one specific doctor more like it,â he murmurs into your sternum. He kisses laterally, lips hitting your breast and moving towards your nipple.Â
âI think weâve established what those are,â you moan softly as he takes your nipple into his mouth. You let your hands run through his salt and pepper curls that you adore so much.Â
âCan never be too thorough.â You giggle at him again and can feel him smile against you. âBut fine, you want something new?â You nod, let your nails scratch gently at his scalp.Â
âNipple,â he kisses your nipple and then down your torso to right above your belly button, âto navel is no manâs land.â He continues to lavish kisses on the soft skin of your stomach before looking up at you when you donât respond.Â
âI canât tell if youâre fucking with me or not.â You eye him with mock suspicion.Â
He laughs and itâs your favorite sound in the whole world, you swear. Well maybe second, only behind hearing him tell you that he loves you.Â
âIâm not. Nipple to navel is no manâs land. Itâs a real thing. Itâs one of the worst places to get shot or stabbed because thereâs so many organs that could be hit and the place weâd expect to get hit would depend on whether the person was breathing in or out at the time, whether their lungs were inflated or deflated. And we generally have no way of knowing. It can be difficult to get clear imaging.â He starts kissing lower, down below your belly button, rubbing his stubble along your skin to tease you as he gets lower and lower. âItâs never a good time. Lots of poor outcomes.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Itâs supposed to be his day off and yet Jack finds himself staring at the board and running a hand over his face. âItâs still so fucking weird seeing you here during the day and it not meaning something catastrophic has happened.âÂ
Jack turns to look at Dana. âIâve been working days for a month now and itâs my day off.â
âYou can go, weâre fine for now,â Robby nods at Jack. âThanks for the brief assistance brother.â
âNo, no,â Dana interjects, âheâs not allowed to leave until we nail down a time to meet his girl.âÂ
Robby raises his eyebrows and starts to tilt his head and open his mouth to agree with Dana. A dispatch comes through before anyone can say anything else and Dana grabs it, pinning Jack down with her eyes, daring him to leave before discussing meeting you.Â
âSaved by the bell,â Jack huffs, taking his stethoscope off and starting to walk away.Â
âShooting at a courthouse,â Dana relays to Robby, ânot a mass cas, just a few people, two a little iffy, one theyâre already doing CPR on, a few caught in the race to get out. Two dead on the scene.â
It takes a few seconds for Danaâs words to truly register with Jack, but when they do his hearing fades to only a sharp ringing in his ear. This wasnât happening. This wasnât fucking happening to him again. Heâd been so reticent at the beginning of your relationship, waited so long to give in and define it and hand his heart over to you, terrified heâd lose you because of himself and who he was, his imperfections, his past, his trauma, his PTSD, his baggage, as he thought of it. He feels so stupid now, in the moment, not having worried about how he could lose you from a random act of violence, that in the moments he canât be there to protect you somebody could come in and rip you from him. Just like that. With the pull of a trigger.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
âYou know, I can confidently say this is the most unique date Iâve ever been on,â you tease Jack.Â
âHey,â he pants, âme teaching you CPR is a great date.âÂ
âIt would be better if you took your shirt off,â you whisper and wink at him before letting your eyes linger on his arm.Â
âIf I did that youâd be so distracted youâd learn nothing,â he smirks at you, sweat glistening on his skin just a little. Just enough to drive you nearly feral for him.Â
 âI think Iâve got the compressions part down, but I may need more help learning the mouth to mouth part.â
He rolls his eyes at you. âYouâre ridiculous.â
âYou fucking love it,â you shoot back at him, leaning into his space and bumping him with your shoulder.Â
He canât help but kiss you. âYes,â the word is muffled against your lips, âyes I do.â He gives you a firmer kiss this time before he pulls away. âBut really. You should know how to do it, just in case. It will help you feel in control in the moment if the need for it ever arises. Youâll know what to do.â
You bite your lip and smile at him.Â
âWhat?â He eyes you with suspicion.Â
You shrug. âNothing, I just love you so much. Sometimes it overwhelms me, how much I love you.â
He can see it in your eyes, how much you love him, can almost feel it physically squeezing him like a tight hug. Heâs really not sure what he ever did to deserve you or your love. âI love you too, Doll.â
âI love you more, Peter.â Your face pulls up into that usual self-satisfied and silly grin you get sometimes when you call him that nickname. Itâs a recent thing. Youâre calling him it more and more though, itâs becoming a natural way of referring to him. From anyone else he would hate it, hearing it between another couple would make him roll his eyes. But from you? He loves it more than youâll ever truly know.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jack spins around.
âJack you can still go, weâve got it covered.â Robby looks at Jack for a minute and then meets Danaâs eyes as she looks to him after taking her own look at Jack.Â
âWhat courthouse?â Jack asks. Itâs quiet, controlled and clipped and almost missable in the chaos of the ED. Heâs not looking at either of them, staring past them at a wall with a chest heaving more and more by the second as his face grows paler.Â
He tries to keep it together. Dana will say the name and it wonât be your courthouse and heâll go straight to your actual courthouse, grab you, take you home and never let you leave. A perfectly reasonable reaction, he thinks.
âJack-â
âWhat fucking courthouse?â Itâs louder this time, almost enough to pause the chaos of the ED.Â
Jackâs voice drips with what sounds like rage to most of those who hear him but is unmistakably fear to Dana and Robby.Â
Neither of them have ever seen Jack like this, this scared, struggling this hard to keep it together, truly raising his voice for anything other than to quiet down an unruly patient. His eyes find Danaâs and theyâre glassier than sheâs ever seen them, the intensity of his gaze making it painfully clear heâs hanging on every word and the wrong ones will shatter him.Â
She swallows and opens her mouth and Jack knows what sheâs about to say before she even says it. And she does. The name of your courthouse.Â
âIâll triage.â He says it before Dana has even finished, the words hollow and breathless and commanding all at once. He spins and starts off to the bay doors with nothing more. He obviously knows from the report Dana gave that they wonât need triage. He just needed to get out of there and try to create an excuse to stay in the ambulance bay. He knows Robby wonât let him, that Robby and Dana already know youâre at that courthouse, could be a victim.Â
Robby and Dana share another look, So you work at a courthouse. This courthouse. âFuck,â Dana mutters, âI really hope we donât end up meeting her today.â
Jackâs hand dives in his pocket as he strides to the ambulance bay. He already knows in his heart that thereâs not going to be a text from you saying that youâre okay. He hasnât felt his phone buzz. He never even kept his phone on him until you.Â
Even though he knew he wouldnât have any messages, waking his phone and seeing none hits him like a freight train all the same, right in the chest. It threatens to bring him to his knees, make him sick, but he canât. He sets it all aside. If you do come out of one of the ambulances he can hear in the distance youâre going to need him at his best. But what if youâre one of the two people dead at the scene? He has to shove that out of his mind too, canât give into the complete panic that threatens to consume him.Â
Disassociate. Compartmentalize. Do the job. ABC. Assess. Stabilize. Repeat.
His fingers fly across his phone automatically, calling you having become so routine. He prefers it so much to texting, hearing your voice, communicating more directly. âCall me,â he starts, âthe second you get this message. Or fucking text me,â his voice breaks, âplease. Fucking please.â He hangs up and calls again, knowing heâll get your voicemail again but trying anyway because itâs all he can do.Â
Heâs helpless, powerless, he canât do anything to try and save you and that threatens to swallow him whole.Â
Your voicemail recording telling people to leave a message plays again and all Jack can wonder is if this is all heâll have left of your voice in his life. Your voice on your mailbox, maybe some voicemails youâve left him, videos, voice memos youâve sent. All distorted by recording, not your real voice. He canât remember what your real voice sounds like all of the sudden. What your laugh sounds like, how you sound when youâre sleepy or in the throes of pleasure or telling him you love him. God, did he even tell you he loved you the last time he saw you, when he said goodbye?Â
âI need you to call me,â he says into the phone again, pauses. âI love you.â He takes a ragged breath in and speaks through his teeth. âI love you so fucking much, so you have to be okay and you have to fucking call me.â
He sends a series of texts asking you to call him or text him or call the hospital or do anything to let him know youâre okay, asking if you are okay, asking where you are as though youâre going to respond. He already knows youâre in the back of one of those ambulances because of fucking course you are, because heâs not allowed to have anything good in his life apparently. How could he be so stupid to think differently? Â
âHey, we donât need triage for this. The numbers are controlled.â Robby walks out to stand next to Jack in the ambulance bay. âIf you want to stay you can, but you canât wait out here to see who shows up, you have to-â
âYeah, yeah, jump on the first patient that pulls up, I know, I got it,â he interrupts Robby.Â
Thereâs a silence as Robby passes him a gown and ties for him before he does the same for Robby.Â
âJack, if sheâs in one you cannot-â
âLike fuck I canât.â Itâs just a statement. Cool and collected and a projection of indifference. It scares Robby more than if Jack had yelled.Â
âNo, actually brother, you canât. Iâm telling you right now. Youâre not working on her. We donât work on family, on significant others, and you would tell me the exact same thing. Itâs too risky, youâll be too clouded.â Robby watches Jackâs jaw clench and roll as he stares out at the street.Â
He wants to argue that of course heâll be clear, heâll be focusing on saving you, heâll have never been so clear in his life. But part of him knows that seeing you like that on his trauma table, your blood all over the table and him and his hands might make him freeze.
âFine.â Jack whispers. âBut if sheâs,â Jack has to pause and take a shuddery breath. âIf sheâs gone or really going and itâs inevitable you have to let me in. You have to let me try to save her. You have to let me code her, Michael.â
He can taste the rising bile in his throat just at having to talk about coding you.
The first ambulance pulls up before Robby can respond and Jackâs on it so fast Robbyâs surprised Jack doesnât get smacked in the face by the door opening.Â
Itâs not you. Itâs someone who is very much not you and is clearly one of the iffy ones.Â
Disassociate. Compartmentalize. Do the job. ABC. Assess. Stabilize. Repeat.
Jack forces himself to go emotionally numb as he listens to the paramedic rattle off vitals and history, trying so very hard to focus on this, something he can do, even if itâs not for you. By the time they hit trauma one Jackâs fine and in full swing, running it like he would any other trauma. Nobody on the team in the room with him suspects anything is amiss. Â
He hates the way he canât see the otherâs who come in, that he has to stay with this patient until theyâre stable and canât go looking for you. He chastises himself for not having brought you here before or at least having you meet Dana and Robby. They donât even know what you look like, couldnât identify you.
âJack!â He glances at Dana who stands at the door as he preps for the chest tube. âWhatâs her name?â
He yells your name at her, impassive and stoic as he reaches for the scalpel, ignoring the looks everyone throws each other at the slightest tremor in his voice.
âIâll look for her.â Dana promises. He doesnât respond. He canât. Heâll fall apart.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The restaurant youâre at has to be the fanciest place youâve ever been to. Itâs the hottest place in the city and you have no idea how Jack snagged reservations here for dinner to finish out celebrating your one year anniversary.Â
The lighting and low hum of other patrons talking to each other and glasses and silverware and plates tinkling is cinematic. You feel like the main character. But then thatâs always how Jack makes you feel.Â
âI got you something.â He pulls out a wrapped rectangular object.Â
You click your tongue and tsk at him. âWe said weâd do them at home! I didnât bring yours!â
âI know. I have something for you at home too.â His eyes sparkle in the flickering candle light, a little smirk pulling up. âI didnât mean for it to be a double entendre, but both are true.â You snort a laugh at him and take the gift from him. âOpen it.â Heâs still smiling, eyes still sparkling, but thereâs something there. Heâs nervous. It makes you even more curious.Â
You carefully unwrap the object until it reveals itself as a hardcover book. That same one Jack had in his hand a year ago and that you told him was bad and gave him a summary of over coffee.Â
âOh, Jack,â you say softly, eyes getting a little watery. Itâs so perfect. So sweet and sentimental. The book that brought you together, that gave you each other. Itâs almost like a physical representation of the foundation of your relationship in a way.Â
âYou have to open it,â he instructs you in a whisper.
You raise an eyebrow but do as he says.Â
âMove in with me?â is written on the blank first page.Â
You look between the page and Jack. âIs this?â You look back at the page and then up at him again. âAre you really askingâŠ?â
He nods. âMove in with me. Or move somewhere with me, we can get our own place, it doesnât have to be my apartment. We basically live together anyway at this point. Letâs just make it official, yeah? Wherever you want, you can decorate however you want. Just as long as itâs our place.â
You bring a hand to your mouth for a second before using your napkin to dab at the inner corners of your eyes to stop the tears from falling and look back at him.Â
âYouâre a romantic, Jack Abbot,â you hum all dreamily.Â
âYou better not tell anyone. Canât have you ruining my street cred.â He smirks, but his expression and the way he fidgets show heâs still anxious. âSo?â
You realize then you never actually answered him. Sniffling a little laugh and letting a few tears fall you give him his answer, voice thick and full of emotion. âYeah, I think Iâm willing to accept those terms. Iâd love to move in with you⊠Peter.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He hears you counting to yourself before he sees you. âOne, twoâŠâ
Itâs not loud, just said in a normal voice, softer if anything because of how youâre panting, but Jack is so on edge and so desperate to find you heâd subconsciously been listening closely to his surroundings, military training kicking in. His head snaps to you and he doesnât even know what to think when he sees you being rolled in on top of a gurney, performing CPR that would rival the quality of his own.Â
âWhy is she..?â He hears Robby question the paramedic as you roll in.Â
âShe was performing them just as well as we could and it was better to just scoop and run,â the paramedic explains. âShe must have had one hell of an instructor.â
âPeter!â You yell, without looking up, not sure if heâs still here. Youâre so used to it by now that the nickname is just what comes out of your mouth as you look for him. Heâd texted you to let you know he was going in for a bit. Â
Jack could sob and the entire team in the room with him can feel a crushing tension shatter. Maybe he does get a little teary just from the sheer relief. He tells himself itâs sweat in his eyes.
âYeah Doll?â He yells back, not giving a fuck about everyone hearing him call you Doll, and you calling him Peter, knowing full well heâs going to have so much explaining to do about this entire situation, the confusion in the room palpable.Â
âIâm okay!â This time he does laugh to himself.Â
âYeah Iâd say so,â he mutters, smiling. Heâs still anxious to see you, get his own eyes on you, feel you with his own hands.Â
Itâs only about thirty more seconds before his patient is stable enough and he can rip his gloves and gown off and start putting fresh gloves on as he walks into the trauma room youâd been wheeled into. Normally heâd yell out for someone to talk to him or ask what theyâve got but not this time. This time he doesnât even care about whoâs on the table, only the person who came off it. Only you.Â
Youâre standing to the side now, watching Robby and the rest of the team work, impassive as pink tears stream down your face from the dried blood on it. Youâre just so fucking overwhelmed by everything and now that youâre not doing CPR everything thatâs happened is hitting you at once.Â
Jack says your name as he moves to you, needs his hands on you.Â
âAre you hurt? Were you hit?â He rushes out. His voice brings you back and you look up at him with wide, terrified eyes. He goes to look you over but you latch onto him, hugging him tightly, shaking a bit.Â
âIâm fine, Iâm okay, Iâm, Iâm sorry,â you start to rattle off, fisting at his scrub top and clinging to him like heâs the only thing keeping you tethered to reality. In the moment he might just be.Â
He hugs you back just as hard, kisses the top of your head. He doesnât care who sees right now, all he cares about is you. âItâs okay, you have nothing to apologize for. Iâm just so fucking glad youâre okay. I thought⊠I thought you wereâŠâ He doesnât have to finish, you know what he means. âI canât fucking lose you. I love you way the fuck too much.â
Youâve been so wrapped up in each other neither of you have noticed that Robbyâs patient, the one you were doing CPR on, has started to code again. âAbbot, need you here!â
You let him go, nod at him. âGo on,â you whisper, âIâll be right here. Iâm okay. I love you more.â Jack nods at you and walks over, jumping in and assisting Robby.
Itâs once youâre out of Jackâs arms, away from his warm body and more grounded in reality that you notice how cold you are, how youâre swaying because he was supporting you far more than you realized, how lightheaded you are, how your abdomen and chest really fucking hurt. You chalk it up to the adrenaline wearing off and being sore from the chest compressions you just did.Â
On the other side of the room an instrument tray gets knocked over, metal hitting the floor in a loud clang. It startles you, makes you jump and twist quickly to see what it was, if it was another gun, another shot. You feel something almost tearing, a sharp pain across your abdomen and lower chest, a feeling of sticky warmth against your shirt.
You sway a little, start to realize how much worse the pain is now. Itâs bad enough that you canât even make noise to express the pain. Thereâs no air in your lungs, you swear. You realize your lightheadedness is now much, much worse, that youâre shivering from how cold you are. Or are you just shaking? You canât tell. It doesnât make sense. The room isnât even that cold. You shouldnât be so cold. Not unless.
You pull your shirt up slowly and look down and run your hand over your skin and sure enough, thereâs a bullet hole seeping blood, about half way between your nipple line and belly button, skin now covered in a dark bruise.Â
You cough a little, itâs quiet. It starts feeling like thereâs water in your lungs. Like you canât get any oxygen in even though youâre in a room full of it. The metallic taste in your mouth is what manages to seep into whatâs left of your consciousness next. You cough again, into your hand, and feel something wet hit your skin. Blood.Â
It hits you. Youâre drowning in your own blood. Thatâs why it feels like you canât breathe. Youâve been shot. In a bad place, one of the worst places, Jack had told you that night. You get scared, feel your heart pounding. It feels like youâre dying. You donât want to die, donât want to leave Jack. Youâd just finished moving into your new place together, were going to spend all weekend unpacking and painting and getting furniture where you wanted it. You were going to make your home.
Time. You were supposed to have more time together.
âHey, Jack,â you slur softly, struggling to keep yourself standing. Luckily he hears you. Your use of his first name and the slur to your voice has him panicking again already. Time slows as he turns around to take you in, eyes going from your face and the blood coating your teeth and trickling from your mouth as you try and smile reassuringly at him, down to your torso where youâre still holding your shirt up just enough for him and everyone else in the room to see the bullet hole and bruising marring your skin. âI think, I think Iâm not good, itâs not good.â Your vision tunnels so fast you can just barely see Jackâs expression of sheer abject unadulterated horror and panic as you get out your last words. âNipples to navel⊠no manâs land.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Peter. Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter. Yes, I worked in a bookstore through college.
dr. jack abbot x reader
author's note: i will say, i have so much love for this fic. def one of my favorites that i've written, so i hope you all enjoy!! (also i might write the smut to this eventually, i don't know yet though friends)
wc: 7.9k
warnings: mutual pining, crazy tension, no one doing anything about their feelings, a bit of angst?, stubborn old man
(gif not mine)
Youâre not sure how the nickname came to be, but at this point everyone was saying the same thing about Jack Abbot: he had become your bodyguard. Every time that there was any sign of harm near you, low and behold, he was no more than two steps behind you to back you up. Even if you werenât in harm, he immediately jumped into protective mode.Â
The first time that it happened was at the beginning of night shift. You always got there at least 10 minutes early, just so that way you were able to stop at the cafeteria and get your usual tea, while having long enough for it to be cooled down by the time that you dropped it at the nurses station - because for whatever reason, they made their drinks piping hot.Â
Today though, you were running late. Not late to the extent that it interfered with the beginning of your shift, but late enough that your tea was still piping hot by the time you made it to the Emergency Department. Even if it was placebo, you needed at least some of your tea before your shift, but you werenât able to do that, so you were practically dragging yourself around the Emergency Room.Â
âWhatâs wrong with you?â Abbot asked, noticing the dragging of your feet as you paraded around the nurses station for a moment.Â
âMy tea was hot,â you grumbled, suddenly irritated at anything and everything, which only earned a confused look in response.Â
âIs it⊠not supposed to be?â he said, carefully examining the contents of the thermal cup that sat in front of you.Â
âI mean, itâs supposed to be hot, but the cafe makes it too hot sometimes and I usually get here with enough time for it to cool off and I-â you paused, watching as he grabbed your small pink thermal and walked over to the lounge. âAbbot, I didnât mean throw out what I already had.â
âIâm not, kid. Iâm just getting you an ice cube or two so you can calm the fuck down. I donât want one of my best residents dragging the whole shift.â
You simply looked at him for a moment, âyou think Iâm one of your best residents?â A smile slowly growing on your face.Â
âDonât let it get to your head, I just donât want you burning your tongue.â
â
Here and there more mundane things happened, but it still showed the care and consideration that he had for you.Â
The next significant time that it happened was when a multi-patient trauma came and it was all hands on deck; all hands on deck including a particular surgeon that Abbot just could not get along with.Â
âWhat are we looking at?â she asked, storming in as if she had been seeing this patient the entire time that you and Abbot had been working on her. It was a teenage girl that was struck by the car on the passenger side of the vehicle.Â
âWe got this one, Walsh. Pretty sure I heard someone needed a surgeon in trauma 3,â Jack said, not wanting to deal with Walsh at this very moment. He also had the perfect opportunity to teach you something new, but he knew Walsh would immediately interfere.Â
âYou canât just put your trust in any resident, especially one you show favoritism to, Abbot. Itâs not wise and could kill a patient,â she said, calmly. Even though her words didnât bother you, you still hesitated for a moment when you were handed the scalpel.Â
âAs I said before, Walsh, this doesnât look like trauma 3. Go harass whatever patients are in there,â he spoke, turning towards you,âI wouldnât let you do this one if I didnât know that you could do it, kid. Now we donât have time for whatever she has to say right now.â
You looked up to grab the scalpel from him, âthank you.â You earned a simple hum in response.Â
You didnât notice the way that his actions immediately caught the attention of everyone in the room, not just Walsh. Perlah made note to talk to Princess about it later.Â
â
Although you usually worked night shifts, you got called in to help just a bit earlier today - only by a few hours. Only unfortunate thing was whenever you got called in, you needed to get there as soon as you could, so that meant no tea today.Â
Jack also got called in, but he was close enough to the hospital that a quick stop to the cafe wasnât going to throw off his day - he knew you were likely 10-15 minutes out still, so he made sure that he grabbed the tea on his way in.Â
Hustling in, you made sure to set your things in your locker before making it back to the nurseâs station. It wasnât rare for you to see Dana, but it was rare for you to see her for more than 15 minutes at work.
âDana, hi,â you immediately rounded the station to give her a hug, âI feel like I only see you in small doses anymore.â
âItâs good to see you, too, hun. No tea?â
âYou know me too well, but no. I was running late in general, plus I hate being late whenever I get called in, so I didnât-â your words stopped in your throat as you saw a small black thermal pop into view.Â
âHere, kid,â and before you could even say thank you, he caught up to talk to Robby - who didnât miss the interaction either.Â
âOh, well. Nevermind, then?â you said, a confused look on your face, which only made Dana laugh more. âHe did say I was one of his favorites, but I didnât know that that entailed getting me my tea?â
âYouâre definitely something to him,â she spoke, in true Dana fashion. âMaybe more than a favorite.â
âNo, he just said I was one of his favorite residents, it wouldnât be anything more than that,â you said, taking a sip of your tea, only to be met with silence, âRight?â
âThatâs a question for him, hun. Let me know how asking goes.â
You knew you werenât going to ask - this was just one of those mundane things that he did for you.Â
âYou know, I donât get any of my residents their âmorningâ drink,â Robby said, as he walked beside Jack.Â
âOkay, well news flash, itâs actually 4:30 in the afternoon, so no morning drink here, brother,â he spoke, keeping his voice even. In all honesty, he didnât know why he had gotten you tea. It wasnât like he even got himself a coffee or anything, he just knew that you would need the pick-me-up before todayâs shift and felt inclined to do so - for whatever reason.Â
âStill doesnât give any reason for you getting her tea,â Robby said, a slight smirk on his face, simply brought on by his friend deflecting.Â
âI donât really need to give you reasoning. I just need my favorite resident to be on point.â
âOh, so sheâs moved on from âone of your favoritesâ. I see.â
Jack could only roll his eyes in response. Of course thatâs what Robby picked up on.Â
â
Loss wasnât foreign to you. Especially in this profession - but today it hit harder. You were no stranger to the idea and concept that you canât always save people, but for whatever reason, today was a day where you couldnât deal with the loss.Â
You had an older patient, she came in stable for a simple procedure, but something went wrong. You had walked away under the impression that she was stable, and she was, but when you were checking on another patient, you heard the nurses call and code. This had you sprinting through the ER and giving compressions for 40 minutes.Â
She should have been fine. She quite literally was here for one of the easiest procedure you could perform in the ER, yet it wasnât enough. You stayed in her room a bit too long before Jack found you.Â
âYou know, itâs not your fault,â you had found a point on the tiles that was more interesting than anything else.Â
âYeah, so why does it feel like it?â You hadnât meant to be short with him, but you just couldnât deal with it right now. You didnât need comfort or patience, you needed someone to yell, scream, anything other than sympathy. It was somehow more draining than if someone just yelled at you.Â
âKid,â he said, stepping closer to you. He reached a hand out to your shoulder, but you nudged him off and left the room. He could only watch you walk away. He had never gotten that kind of reaction from you - part of him wanted to leave you be, but the other part was ready to chase you down to offer some kind of comfort.Â
You just werenât in the mood for it today. You were no stranger to self soothing, growing up in a place where it was every man (or woman) for themselves, so Jack trying to offer something threw you off. It wasnât that you didnât want the comfort, it was that you simply couldnât accept it.Â
Another reason that he wasnât shocked to see you up on the roof, not on the side of the railing that he usually stood on though - which gave him some peace of mind. So he simply stood beside you, a peaceful silence taking over the both of you.Â
He didnât say anything, only moving his hand over just enough to where your pinkies were touching each other.Â
â
âHi, Iâm Dr. y/l/n, what brings you in today?â you asked, pulling the curtain closed, only to see one of your ex flings in the bed in front of you. It hadnât ended badly, just ended because the mixed work schedules made a difference. âOh, hey, Lucas.â
âHey, y/n/n,â the familiar nickname left his mouth as though nothing had really ever ended between you two.Â
âWhat brings you in?âÂ
âWell, note that I wasnât skateboarding at night, but I did skateboard earlier and the issue just got worse. I figured it wouldnât hurt to check that my favorite doctor was working tonight to help me out though,â he said, which only earned a laugh from you - loud enough that someone else in the ER heard.Â
Jackâs ears perked up at the sound of your laugh, âwhich patient is she with right now?â
Ellis simply laughed in response, âdonât ask questions you donât want to know, Abbot.â
âWhat the hell is that supposed to mean?â
She could only smirk in response, only because she knew exactly who you were with right now because she had seen the name when checking boards, âsheâs with Lucas, if I recall correctly.â
âWho the fuck is Lucas?â he said, a look of disgust crossing his face. He thought for a moment, as he process Ellis had spoken like he should know who she was talking about. âWait, as in that Lucas?â
She couldnât help to hide the smirk on her face, âmaybe.â The smirk turning into a laugh as she watched him shoot up from the nurseâs station to go check on a patient that likely has a simple sprain. Before he knew it, he was moving the curtain back to see you and Lucas talking.Â
âNo, but itâs not like anything crazy, just a small get together. We also wouldnât have to exclusively stay with Marcus and them, I didnât plan on it at least,â he spoke, glancing up to see the older Doctor behind you.Â
âI mean, I can see what I can do. No promises though, remember, Iâm a very busy woman,â you spoke, checking the bandages on his ankle. Feeling a presence behind you, you moved to check behind you, only to see Jack there. âOh, hey?â
âHi,â he said, tone short and voice laced with something you couldnât recognize. He simply kept his eyes on the patient in front of you.Â
âThis is Dr. Abbot, by the way. Usually, heâs at least a tad bit more personable, but heâs not really trained to deal with some people, so give him grace,â you said, earning a laugh from Lucas.Â
âI gotcha. Hey, man. Are you one of her teachers or?â
âSomething like that.â
Sensing whatever tension was there, you quickly just to dissolve the tension. Iâm going to go check back on some results though and Iâll be right back. Dr. Abbot?â you asked, nodding your head outside of the curtain,âcare to explain what the fuck that was?â
âI donât know what you mean,â he said, looking anywhere but your face. You took a moment to examine the expression on his face before you smiled. âWhat is it?â
âDid Ellis tell you who Lucas was?â
âNo, but heâs been mentioned before in passing,â he spoke, tone still short.Â
You couldnât help but laugh, âYouâre jealous?â He couldnât say anything in response - he wasnât a liar. âOh my god, you are. I was just saying that. Wait. I have so many follow up questions.â
âAnd I have no follow up answers for you, y/l/n.â
â
âOkay, wait, so you mean to tell me, that he did all that and didnât say anything else after you said you had questions,â your friend asked.Â
âI can respect top tier avoidance, but doing that without actually clarifying did not help me one bit,â you had today and tomorrow off and your friend hit you with a âgoing out, you wanna come?â text - so who were you to say no.Â
âHmm, you know what I sense, a planned drunk text,â she said, taking another sip of her margarita. You guys had made a stop at the bar before you would go to the club, mainly to rehash, but also make sure you had enough food in your system.Â
âI donât know, thatâs a little much for knowing nothing for sure,â you said, but you had already been contemplating it.Â
âOkay, so then, letâs get fucked up, so you can forget about your indecisive-hot-older-doctor crush,â she said, calling the waiter over to you, so you could get your checks.Â
The two of you elected to meet some more friends out at the club, mainly for the safety of having a bigger group. As the night went on, the drinks kept coming and the music kept playing, but it was a much needed break after the tension filled days and thoughts of the doctor in your head.Â
By the time that your friends were considering leaving, you knew that you were done for. The thoughts of Jack that were in your head werenât going away - in fact, your drunk, delusional brain was starting to convince you that the idea of calling him was the best idea ever.Â
âShould I call him, guys?â you said, your words somehow rushed and slowed simultaneously. âI kinda want to call him.â You were immediately met with mixed reactions, but your brain chose to ignore those disagreeing.Â
Before anyone could even process, your phone was open to his contact and you were pressing the call button. It might not have been your smartest decision, but here you were. The phone rang once, twice, but on the third ring he picked up.
ây/n?â his voice sounded concerned - of course it did, you never just randomly called him.
âHi, Jack,â you said, a smile grazing your face, even though he couldnât see it. âI just wanted to, um, to talk to you.â
âWhere are you?âÂ
âIâm out with friends.â
âFriends? Or Lucas?â
You giggled at that, âwouldnât you like to know, pretty boy.â
A deep chuckle rang out from his side of the phone, âyou think Iâm pretty?â
âI think a lot about you, a lot. But, Iâm not, donât think Iâm complaining about it.â
He simply sighed, âyou have a safe way home?â
âYes sir,â you said, he wouldnât admit that it did something to him.Â
âA sober driver?â
âAn uber,â you said, getting into the car with your friends. The laughing in the background alerting him that you were on your way.Â
âLet me know whenever you get where youâre going safely. Okay, sweetheart?â
âYou called me sweetheart.â
âI know. Goodnight, y/n.â
âGoodnight, Jack,â and it wasnât too late after that that he received a slightly misspelled text that you were home safe.Â
Luckily, you were someone that didnât get hangovers, but that didnât make the pain of acknowledging the outgoing call to âJack Abbotâ or the mistyped message saying you made it home any easier. You silently cursed yourself as you spent the day to yourself, knowing that you would have to see him tomorrow.Â
Going into your shift, you prepared yourself for anything, you werenât prepared for the small black thermal to be filled with your favorite tea, with a note signed off from âpretty boyâ on there. You could only shake your head knowing exactly who the note and tea was from, along with the knowledge that he probably signed it off that way because of you.Â
âPretty boy? Thatâs an interesting sign off,â Dana spoke from behind you.Â
âYeah, itâs something,â you spoke, folding the note and putting it in your pocket, you simply sipped on your tea. It wasnât until you saw both Jack and Robby walk out, a smirk on both of their faces. âIf you have something to say, just get it out now.â
The two of them could only cackle in response before Jack finally spoke up, âlook, I just didnât take you as the type to drunk call, y/n. Thatâs all⊠or call me pretty boy for that matter.â
You could only drink your tea and walk away in response. âIâm sorry, sweetie. Iâll make them leave you alone,â you heard Dana say from behind you.Â
Before you could process it, Jack had fallen into rhythm with you. âWhere are you going, sweetheart?âÂ
âNowhere in particular, pretty boy.â
âLook, I know I made fun of it, but I canât say I hate it,â he speaks, honestly.Â
âI didnât hate you calling me sweetheart either.â
â
 You tried to avoid her, you really did, but unfortunately Gloria was the type to always find a way to you. âDr. y/l/n, Iâm glad I could catch you before your shift actually started.â
You simply smiled, sipping on your tea, âcrazy stuff, Gloria. How are you?â
âIâm good, I wanted to bring something up with you,â you remained silent, letting her continue. Looking behind her to see Jack already looking at you, âI was making sure that you knew, due to excellent patient satisfaction ratings on your part, youâve been invited to our annual gala.â
âThe one that is primarily only attendings?â you were surprised that it was being brought up to you.Â
âYes, some of the board members were extremely impressed by a lot of things on your record - patient satisfaction ratings being one of the bigger ones - but they like to see that you genuinely care about things that happen in this hospital and they were wanting to see some new faces.â
You laughed at the last part of the sentence, knowing that implied they were tired of seeing Jack and Robby being the main ones there every year. âI donât have a choice, do I?â
âYou always have a choice, Doctor, but there is a wrong answer here,â she said, handing you the paper invitation.Â
âGee, thanks.â Now you had to find a dress.Â
The next day, you texted Dana asking if she would be free at some point to go dress shopping with you soon before the gala, to which she was ecstatic to go with. So, the next day there was crossover in your days off - which was way too close to the gala for your liking - you went dress shopping.Â
âLook, honey, all Iâm going to say is that old man youâre into is going to lose it,â she said, laughing to herself once you stepped out of the dressing room. The dress was simple, but enough. A simple, long black dress with a white bow in the back to contrast.Â
âDana.â
âYou know Iâm right, you look good, kid.â
â
Jack didnât want to be here. He knew Robby didnât want to be here either, but here they both were. Him with his whiskey, Robby choosing against drinking. âI still hate these things, Iâm just waiting for Dana to get here, so she can talk shit with us like she usually does,â Robby said, speaking up first.
âYeah, I donât think these things will ever get anymore interesting, especially when all these donors care about are the surface level issues, never what actually matters,â Jack spoke, his eyes scanning the group of people that were here. âI just need Dana to get here to at least make sure Iâm not falling asleep during all this.âÂ
âYou know this is y/nâs first gala,â Robby said, gauging Jackâs reaction.Â
A confused look came over his face, âwait, she was invited?â
âYeah, your favorite resident isnât just your favorite. Her patient satisfaction scores were above everyone. I know she didnât learn that part from you.â
âShut up, you already know that sheâs one of the best that we have. Sheâs going to go far with whatever she decides to do,â he said, turning back towards the bar to set his now empty glass up. âI canât wait to see where she goes in life.â
âYou being a part of it? Or?â Robby wasnât a stranger to asking Jack about you anymore. He knew his friend well enough to know that he was only hesitant of where things would go, in fear that things would end badly. Jack didnât want to risk losing you to any extent.Â
âIf she wants me to be, I will be there.â
âIf who wants you there, youâll what?â he turned at the sound of your voice. His jaw dropped at how gorgeous you looked. Dana stepped into the circle after she finished talking to one of the donors.Â
âShe looks nice, donât you think, Jack?â Dana asked, but she could clearly see that you had, in fact, left him speechless.
âYeah,â he paused to gather his thoughts, âyou look gorgeous, y/n.â
âThank you, Jack. You donât look too bad yourself,â you said, as if you werenât absolutely losing it over the way he looked in a tux. âI really feel out of place here, I think I only talked to one other resident so far - and that was out of the five people we had to talk to to get over here.â
âYou deserve to be here, sweetheart. Donât worry,â he left it at that, watching as Dana and Robby left to go check in with Gloria. He came closer to you, unsure of what to do. He considered reaching for your hand, but as he go closer and the smell of your perfume hit him, all he could do was ball his fist before flexing his hand. âI canât even think straight around you during a work day, you have no idea how hard it is for me to keep my thoughts together right now.â
A smile grew on your face that he had seen countless times before, but this time was different. You werenât any different, but the smile on your face meant something different.Â
Before he could say anything else, he was interrupted by Gloria swooping in, âDr. Abbot, Dr. y/l/n, Iâd like to introduce you to Mr. Palmer. He was the one that saw some of your records and made sure that you were invited today,â she said, leaving the three of you alone.Â
âDr. y/l/n, I was extremely impressed when I saw and heard certain things about you. Patients love you, other doctors are incredibly impressed by you, you have a lot of potential,â he said, a cocky grin on his face that screamed âI have money and I hope that it showsâ.
âThank you Mr. Palmer, that means a lot,â you could feel Jackâs eyes on you.Â
âYeah, of course. You look stunning tonight, I would never miss the opportunity to ask someone so beautiful to dance,â he said, moving his hand for you to take. âCan I have this dance?â
You paused, not missing the glare that was sent in Mr. Palmerâs direction. You wanted so badly to object, but you knew this wasnât the place that you could. âYou may.â
Jack was heated. No. Correction, Jack was fuming. He could tell based off the way that he was looking at you, he wasnât actually impressed, it was a base level statement. Unfortunately given context of time and place, he couldnât do anything but watch from a distance.Â
Robby and Dana had watched the whole interaction, moving closer to talk to Jack, but not before placing bets on how long he would last before cutting in. âYou okay?â Dana asked, softly.Â
âJust peachy,â his eyes didnât leave you. He watched as the two of you started dancing, keeping watch of where he decided to set his hands - moreso how badly he wanted to be murdered.Â
âYou know, I told her whenever she bought the dress that it would catch your attention. Goals were achieved tonight,â Dana joked, hoping to add light to the situation, but he was still laser focused on you.Â
âYeah, it definitely caught my attention.â
You smiled to keep face, but truth was Mr. Palmer, who ironically was in fact named Chadwick, was a cocky son of a bitch that did not seem to have respect for you or any doctor for that matter. Conversing with him was nauseating, to say the least, but you knew that you had to keep up appearances - especially being a specially invited person.Â
You were letting him go on and on about his recent golf experiences, when he suddenly changed the subject to you and how you looked in the dress - you knew immediately where he was going to go with this. You knew you were right when he talked about wanting to get out of here eventually and he tried to move his hand lower on your waist.Â
âNo, sir. I donât think so,â you said, attempting to pull away, but he pulled you tighter. âYouâre not getting what you want, even if you try pulling me tighter.â
âOh, I would hate for something big to mess up that star reputation of yours, wouldnât you?â he spoke, you had seen this move too many times. A very unfortunate abuse of powers, you were stuck.
âI know how good my reputation is, you canât tarnish that, you prick.â
âOh, but one word to Gloria and I can easily get you taken out of a program. Iâd be cautious.â
âYeah,â a familiar voice spoke from behind you, âI would be cautious, too. Get your hands off of her.âÂ
You didnât know, but Robby and Dana had also moved in closer. You felt yourself let out a breath of relief. You stepped back and were on your way back to the bar when he had the audacity to say something else, âdamn, I didnât realize you got this far by fucking your âmentorâ.â
The wire snapped. Anything that was holding Jack Abbot back from letting the man in front of him have it disappeared and before he knew it, the man was on the ground from a mean right hook. âWatch your fucking mouth.â
You stood there in awe. So much had happened in a short timespan, you didnât even have the chance to recollect your thoughts. Robby had simply pulled Jack back just enough for him to process what was happening, âJack, not here.â
Jack simply looked back and grabbed you, both of you immediately leaving. ack didnât know what to say, the only thing keeping him in line right now was the click of your heels behind him.Â
âJack, wait up.â It wasnât until you two had stepped outside that you had said it, but the only thing that let him know that was the cooler air hitting his face.Â
âIâm not apologizing for defending you, sweetheart. I donât care, he had no right to say what he did to you. I should have done way worse,â he kept going. Ranting on and on about the man that had disrespected you.
âJack.â
âAnd him using, well attempting to, use the money thing against you made it even more of a dick move.â He kept ranting.Â
âJack, look at me,â you said, stepping closer to him.Â
âWhat is it, sweetheart?â and before he knew it, your lips were on his.Â
â
Robby was going to hurt Jack. Not that he did anything specific, but after the events at the gala, he went MIA. He didnât completely disappear, but he made an adamant point to avoid you and anyone he could at work. He was simply in a clock in, clock out mode.Â
You tried your best not to care, you really did - it just took a lot to go from bits of nothing to the events of the gala back to square one. You missed seeing his black thermal next to your pink one or his little notes. Or him, for that matter.Â
It was a total switch up from the emotional roller coaster that you had been on for the past eight months. How could he just go from this to normal? How could he just go from this to nothing with you?
It seemed too easy for him. Maybe it had been.Â
Dana had made the suggestion that maybe you switch to days for a little bit, that way you werenât constantly pressed on the issue that was Jack Abbot. She was also on the verge of attacking the man verbally - maybe physically - for what he was doing to you.Â
Robby knew. Robby knew exactly what had happened, but he also knew his closest friend well enough that he couldnât press on the issue in fear of making it worse. Jack was scared. You had eased him out from behind certain walls, but the certainty of a kiss made him want to build them back up.Â
Jack knew, too. He knew that he was hurting you, but he couldnât stop himself. He had his walls built up for a reason: to protect himself and you - but unfortunately, he was just harming you in the process. You switching from night shift for a few days per week is what made him immediately regret the decisions he had made after the gala.Â
He showed up an extra 40 minutes early when you worked the day shift, just so that he could see you for longer than what he had been. He found peace in the night and darkness, but you were the one that was bringing him light for the time being.Â
âI expected to find you up here,â he heard Robby say, eventually sensing him right behind him.Â
âI know. I knew someone would know I was up here.â
âShe knows too, sheâs who sent me up here to make sure you didnât jump,â Robby said, making Jack turn to face him. âYou should talk to her. Sheâs holding it together, but sheâs not doing good, man. Iâm not going to say itâs your fault-â
âBut you want to though.â
âYeah. You might be her mentor, but at least she didnât pick up on your small lack of emotional intelligence.âÂ
âI fear itâs too late for her to forgive me. I donât want it to be, I-â
âYou love her?â
âYeah, I do.â
âSo, you have to fix this, Jack,â and before he could respond, Robby left him on his own. Â
â
It started off gradually. You went back to working just night shifts, tired of letting him get to you. You were cordial, you did your job, and at the end of the day you immediately went home.Â
The way that you and Jack worked together didnât change, he still rightfully encouraged you to be the best doctor that you could be - he would blame himself if this directly hindered your career.Â
âSweet cheeks, why so glum?â you heard Myrnaâs voice ring out from behind you.Â
âIâm okay, Myrna. Also, sweet cheeks?â you questioned, sending a confused look her way.Â
âYouâre sweet and-â
âYou know, Iâm okay without you elaborating.â
âSuit yourself. You seem upset, who hurt ya? I can hurt them like I hurt my husband,â she said, making you glad she was still in cuffs.Â
You smiled at the older woman, âI appreciate you, Myrna, but I promise Iâm okay.â You removed yourself as far from her as you could, but when you heard the doors open, you made direct eye contact with him. You didnât miss the two thermal cups in his hand.Â
It was a silent exchange, he didnât say anything else; opting to simply set down the mug and send a nod your way before he went to talk to Robby for handoffs.
âHave you two talked any since the gala?â Dana asked, pulling you away from your thoughts. Simply shaking your head, she let out a sigh. âI donât like to see either of you hurting like this, especially you. Heâs just too stubborn for his own good.â
âI know,â you said, sadly. âI just donât feel like itâs my place to try and fix things as heâs the one that MIA, I just miss us - not that it was anything for sure, but it still felt like enough.â
âHeâll get it eventually,â Dana said, putting her jacked on and grabbing her bag, âI just hope sooner than later. Alright, hun, Iâm heading out. Holler if you need anything.â
With that, it was you and the rest of night shift - and Robby, who couldnât leave on time to save his own life. You fell into rhythm with Chen and Ellis as they walked during handoffs.
âHavenât seen you with your bodyguard recently,â Chen said, his tone even.Â
âMy bodyguard?â
Ellis made a face and Chen could only laugh at you, âAbbot.â
âHeâs not my bodyguard,â you grumbled, choosing to ignore the two of them.Â
âThatâs not what I heard, especially with him punching some guy out for you at that gala. A non-bodyguard wouldnât do that,â Ellis said, a pointed look on her face.Â
âWhatever.â
â
Dana had decided to have a small, sweet get together for her birthday; she was able to leave her daughters with a babysitter and just wanted to spend some time with the people she cared about most. This led to you being sat near Heather, Robby, Frank, Cassie, Samira, and Jack, at a table in one of Danaâs favorite bars.Â
You elected to ignore the ongoing sense of Jackâs eyes on you as you talked to Samira and Cassie. Cassie was ranting about her ex making a stop in the hospital for something as stupid as the skateboarding accident, but her voice kept fading into the background as you looked to see Jackâs eyes already on you.Â
âCan you guys just make up already? The tension is actually insane,â Samira whisper-shouted to you.Â
âPlease, weâre begging,â Cassie added, âit even makes my heart beat witnessing all of this. Itâs tiring. Just kiss, make up, maybe do more, we sure as hell wonât stop you.â
You laughed, âdonât you guys have jobs? My life and relationships should not be the primary focus of your day. Now, I donât know about you guys, but I need a drink - will one of you guys come with?âÂ
Samira was already getting up when Cassie spoke up, âIâll come with you, but I wonât get anything.â She told the table where you guys were going before she caught up to you. âWait, y/n/n, isnât that, uh, what was his name? That fling you had last summer?â
âWho? Lucas?â you asked, looking up to see him on the other side of the bar, you sent a small smile his way that he immediately reciprocated. He moved away from some of the friends that you recognized and headed your way. âHey, Lucas. How are you?â
âIâm good,â he nodded towards the two other girls around you as you introduced them. âYou ladies getting anything to drink? They can be on me. y/n, you want your usual? Or are you drinking drinking tonight?â
You didnât miss the smirk that was on his face, âIâll have my usual, but I wouldnât be opposed to a round of shots for us, too. Donât think youâre going to get lucky though just for buying us drinks, Lucas.â
âCan I not just buy a pretty girl drinks without any ulterior motives?â he spoke, smoothly before turning to the bartender. âFour shots, a strawberry mojito, and - would you ladies want anything else?â
âIâll have a tequila sunrise,â Samira mentioned.Â
âIâm not drinking, but thank you,â Cassie added. Lucas nodded before getting the order finished.Â
âIâm going to go back to the table, are you cool here with Samira?â Cassie asked, looking to you for a response.Â
âIâm good, thank you though. You think I should drink the extra shot?â
âAs long as you can handle it, y/n/n,â she said with a laugh. Turning back to the table, she let out a cackle at the sight in front of her: Dana and Robby watching Abbot, trying to hide the smiles on their faces as Jack looked like he was about to lose his shit - if he hadnât already lost it.Â
Once Samira got her drink and took the shot with you guys, she turned back to the table to already see most eyes on you and Lucas. âOh, Iâm not saying I can see steam rising from Jackâs head, but the man could very easily have steam coming from his ears.â
âHe canât get mad if heâs not going to say anything about how he feels,â you spoke honestly. Lucas turned and immediately recognized the doctor that had been looming the last time he had to go to the ER.Â
âI donât think Iâve ever gotten a look like that from a man that wasnât in love,â Lucas said, taking a sip of his beer.Â
âWhat?âÂ
He shrugged, âHe wouldnât look at me like he wants to kill me, if he wasnât in love with you.â
âRandom man does make a fair point,â Samira said, âcan I please have your permission to stir the pot some? Just to see what the old man does?â
Lucas laughed at that, âjust donât get me murdered if you do, I have a lot to live for.â
âI donât know what you have planned, but do what you have to do at this point,â you said, mentally preparing for what could happen.Â
When Samira sat down, she immediately turned and told Cassie what was going on - she didnât exactly have a master plan, but she did know it wouldnât be difficult to get him to his breaking point.Â
âWhyâd you leave her up there, Samira?â he said, blinking slowly before taking a sip of his water.Â
âShe seemed okay up there, plus Iâm not one to interfere on romantic matters,â Samira said, earning a laugh from Cassie and Dana. Robby could tell based off of Samiraâs face that nothing was actually going on, she was just saying stuff at this point. Jack simply rolled his eyes before going back to his y/n watching.Â
âI remember them being a thing,â Heather added to the mix, âthey were cute, it didnât work out just because of schedules though. Honestly, if his job changed any, I donât think they should avoid trying again.â
Jackâs face remained still, but everyone at the table was on the same page: push his buttons just enough for him to do something. His attention was brought back to the bar at the sound of your laugh, which was usually one of his favorite sounds, but not when it was because of another man. âHe canât be that funny.â
Everyone at the table could barely contain their laughter anymore, continuing to say things in hopes that it would finally make him get up and talk to you - but for whatever reason, nothing was working. Maybe it was just simple self control?
Jack kept his eye on the table, the noise of the bar drowning out as he waited for you to return to the table. He didnât see you come back, but the smell of your perfume had has head snapping up, âyou have fun, sweetheart?â
You smirked, the nickname usually kept between the two of you. âYes, I did. Thank you for asking.â You continued talking to everyone at the table, but didnât miss the feeling of eyes dancing between you and him.Â
âJesus Christ,â Robby muttered, shaking his head and you thought you could see Danaâs eye twitch.Â
âBitch,â Samira said, eyes wide, âI swear to god, if you do not leave tonight with him, I will hurt both of you.â
âSame,â the collective said. Â
More time passed, but nothing happened. Jack didnât really say anything else to you and you assumed that he had given up on whatever there was with the two of you. Before you knew it, another hour had passed and the table that was full before was down to just you, Robby, and Jack - everyone else going home together so they made it back safely.Â
Robby looked at both of you before he started, âYou guys need to figure your shit out. If you need me here to talk it out, cool - note, I wonât stay past anything other than conversation though.âJack didnât say anything. You didnât know if that made you feel better or worse. âOkay, so this is the part where the conversation happens, if you were unaware.â
He stayed silent again, this time you werenât having it though. âI appreciate the attempt, Robby, but I think everyone has tried hard enough.â You tried your best to keep your voice even, turning to grab your purse and move your chair, you were ready to make the walk home or get an uber home.Â
ây/n, wait,â Jackâs voice finally said, âI- Can I drive you home?â
You looked from Robby to Jack, âI was just going to get an uber. Itâs all good though.â
ây/n. Please,â at that your eyes turned to him. He was pleading with you, saying a million things at once. A million things that he had intended to say, but you saw it - you knew him well enough to see it.Â
âOkay.âÂ
âWell, kiddos, if thatâs all settled, Iâm headed out. Let me know when you guys make it back safe though. Iâll see you guys at shift change,â and with that it was just you and Jack.Â
âAre you ready to head out or?â you asked, breaking the silence that had taken a moment to settle between the two of you.Â
âIâm okay staying for a second,â another beat of silence, âyou look beautiful tonight, by the way. I just didnât want to add fuel to the fire that our friends were waiting on, only reason I didnât say anything sooner.â
âYeah, thereâs a lot of things you could have said sooner.â Was the comment a bit mean? Maybe. Warranted? Yes.
He sighed, âI know. Trust me, I know.â
âOkay, so if you knew, why? Why did you drag this on, push me away, all of that? I would much rather you just said that you didnât want something with me than drag me along.â
âSweetheart,â he said, reaching his hand across the table to yours, âtrust me, I want you. So bad that I fear it could kill me. I just- I pushed you away because I was scared and for that Iâm so sorry. In no way did I want you to feel unwanted.â
âScared? Of what?â you werenât even mad at him anymore, you just wanted answers.Â
âScared that, if I admit how I feel about you that I would lose you.â
You stayed silent a moment, tilting your head in confusion, âyou thought you would lose me? So you pushed me away?â
âIt sounds stupid like that, but Iâve lost so much in my life already. You mean so much to me and I didnât want to risk losing that. I love you, y/n, and me admitting that made it real. And when itâs real, I have something to lose,â his eyes met yours again, âI canât lose you.âÂ
You didnât know how to respond. He had just admitted that he was in love with you and all you could do was look at him for a moment - his hand on yours was the only thing grounding you. âI love you, too, Jack. I just didnât deserve you pushing me away. You mean too much to me for that.â
âI know, and Iâm so sorry that I put you through that,â a small smile appeared on his face, âIâlll make it up to you, I promise. Let me get you home.âÂ
You didnât know if you should, but all disagreements flew out the window when you saw the way he was looking at you. âOkay.â
â
As the sun eased into the room the day after, you felt yourself pulled back towards the body behind you. You felt at ease, at peace. A night of repeated âI love youâs and âIâm sorryâs to make up for lost time. A morning routine that the two of you developed in a few hours, him making breakfast for the two of you and you being the comforting presence he needed in that moment.Â
The two of you made up for lost time before you had to prepare for work. Stopping at your apartment so that you could grab your scrubs and work bag, he looked at the pictures you had around of friends, family, and the memories that you had made - his mind immediately going to the new ones the two of you could make.Â
Opening your cabinet to grab one of your thermal mugs, he saw the multiple pink thermals that stayed there, âI didnât realize you had a problem.â
âI have at least one for every day of the week and then some for if I donât feel like washing them, itâs a system that worksâ you said with a shrug of your shoulders. He let out a light chuckle at your âsystemâ, but he couldnât ignore the way that seeing two of his black thermal mugs in there made him happy.Â
âI see Iâve made guest appearances here that I didnât even know about,â he said, placing his hands on your waist from behind. âAre we stopping for tea before work?â
âOf course, pretty boy. Your favorite resident canât be dragging,â you said, heading out.Â
The two of you made your way through the cafe and into the Emergency Department, not missing the way that Danaâs face lit up at the two of you entering together.Â
âI see the two of you finally made up,â Dana said, a smirk on her face, âand based on the way your skin is glowing, maybe more than just a make up.â
âThank God, you guys needed to do something,â Robby said, nearing the nurses station. âI was genuinely so close to actually losing it, you have no idea.âÂ
------
taglist: @dayswithoutcoffee @dragonsondragons @literazine
hope you guys enjoyed!! feedback is always welcome
xoxo
ash
Chapters: Chapter One, Chapter Two, Chapter Three
Warnings: Language might be the only one in this chapter? Very fluffy
Description: After babysitting Eliza and baby Abbot, Jack doesn't exactly sleep with the reader. At Eliza's ice skating recital, the reader decides to help Jack learn how to skate again after losing his foot.
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Robby leaned against the high counter of the desk hub, pulling his glasses out to read a message on his phone. His wife approached him, bumping him with an elbow when she copied his lean against the desk hub.
âI know something you donât know.â She greeted in a sing-songy voice.
Without looking up, trying to focus his phone screen through his glasses, Robby answered, âI already know about the patient in Psych One. Had a potato peeler shoved up his ass. Guess who had to remove it.â
She tilted her head, genuinely concerned. âWhat?â
Robbyâs eyes flicked up over his glasses, realizing that was not the gossip she knew. âThe patient in Psych One?â He repeated.
She shook her head. âThatâs not what I was talking about.â She replied, but then giggled, wrapping an arm around his bicep. âSorry you had to do that.â
He shrugged. âNot even in the top ten items Iâve pulled out of someoneâs ass.â He mumbled before looking at his phone again, holding it an elderly distance away from his face. âWhat do you know?â
His wife grinned devilishly, pushing his phone away so that she had his full attention. Robby smiled slightly at the excitement in her eyes. âShe came to work today in his scrubs.â She revealed.
âWait, waitâŠhow do you know theyâre his?â Robby was incredibly invested now.
âI saw the shirt tag on the scrub tub.â She continued, her smile somehow widening even more. âJ Dot Abbot.â
â
Only two more days of working the day shift. Thatâs the record you kept on loop in your brainâonly two more days of annoyingly simple cases that should have gone to urgent care. At least at night, the urgent care centers were closed, and patients had no other choice but to land in the Pitt. But more importantly, only two more shifts until you worked with Jack again.Â
The words âboyfriendâ and âgirlfriendâ had not been uttered, but the connection was intensely deep. When you went home with him after babysitting Eliza and baby Abbot a couple of weeks ago, you thought the trajectory to his bedroom was obvious. The hot kisses against your car door seemed fictional now that he didnât sleep with you that night. All the signs pointed to his lap, but you ended up in his arms instead, separated by layers of clothes. He hadnât even removed his prosthesis. You couldnât complain too much because you woke the next morning, more rested than you had been in years, to the smell of bacon, banana pancakes, and coffee looming from the kitchen.
His chrome ringlets were still holding onto water from the shower, glistening in the early morning sunlight that shone through the window. His massive, flexed forearms looked more delicious than the pancake mix he was stirring. You were met with the warmest, dimple-filled smile as you padded into the kitchen.
âI didnât want to wake you.â He greeted, voice slow as honey.
You stepped closer, pulling at the sleeve of your lavender sweatshirt from the day before. âIâve gotta go get my scrubs for work.â You said sheepishly.
Jack pointed to the black scrubs lying on the counter, folded neatly with military precision. âTheyâre not Figs, but they get the job done.â He noted.
You walked to the counter, pulling the shirt off the top, letting it unfold. A laugh escaped your lungs. âJack, these are yours.â You scoffed.
âI know.âÂ
A warmth crawled across your cheeks and slithered down your chest. âAll this so I can stay for breakfast?â You teased, making your way over to him again.
âMmhmm. Go on, get changed. Iâll be done here in a minute.â He finished his order with a kiss on your forehead.Â
That morning had ended with sticky, syrupy kisses before he sent you off to work with a protein bar and an energy drink. When you arrived in the baggier-than-usual black scrubs that smelled perfectly of Jack, sandalwood and citrus, Robbyâs wife clocked it immediately. She gave you a nudge on the arm when you stood next to her in front of the patient board.Â
âThanks for watching the kids. Eliza told me all about it this morning.â She said.
You smiled, looking at her for a brief second, and you were met with the smuggest, all-knowing smirk. You couldnât hold back the giggle in your chest. âNothing happened.â You defended, and it wasnât a complete lie.
She leaned closer, arms crossed. âWell, something happened because unless your washing machine can magically make clothes growâŠâ She gestured to your oversized scrubs. âThose are not yours.â
The blush on your cheeks blew your cover. âFine. I slept over with himâŠbut we did not sleep with each other.â You clarified.
Because of your current schedule, you only saw Jack at shift change if he wasnât elbows deep in a patient before you got called to another patientâs room. He wouldnât kiss you or even touch you, but he had a coffee waiting for you in your locker with a fluorescent sticky note that read âGood luck today -Jâ every single morning. And every morning, you would tape the sticky note to the inside of your locker, creating a colorful collage that began to rival the betting wall. You would prance out of the lounge, warm coffee in your hands, and sit at your desk. And if time allowed, Jack would sit at the computer next to you, charting, and let his knee just barely brush against yours. No words. But you could hear it in the silence.
As you shucked off your gloves after handling your last patient of the day, you heard a tiny voice screech your name, and something clung to your leg. You looked down to see Eliza, hair pulled back into a sleek bun, in a sparkly dress that matched the hot pink cast encasing her arm.
âOh, where did you come from?â You asked as you hauled the giggling girl into your arms.
âAre you coming to my recital?â She asked, wrapping her arms around your neck.
Before you could answer, you heard hurried, uneven footsteps approach from behind you. âEliza, do not run away from me like that again.â You heard your soldierâs gravelly voice order. âDo you understand me, young lady?â
You turned around to see Jack, holding baby Abbot in his arms, approaching with an aggravated gait and piercing gaze. Eliza cowered in shame into your shoulder. âYes, sir. Iâm sorry.â She mumbled, giving him the biggest, brownest, puppy dog eyes you had ever seen.
And Jack was a sucker for that little girl. The frustration immediately washed from his face, and he placed a gentle hand on her back. âItâs okay, princess. You just need to hold an adultâs hand when youâre here, okay?â He soothed.
Eliza nodded in innocent understanding. âOkay.â She answered.
Jack shook his head but smiled nonetheless. Finally, he focused on you, eyes softening when they met yours. âHi.â He greeted with a sigh.
You nudged your shoulder against his, itching for a sliver of physical contact. âHey.â You replied. âDropping off the kids?â
Jack shifted baby Abbot in his arms so that you could see his chubby little face. You ran a gentle finger against his cheek, and the baby smiled. âYeah. Eliza has an ice skating recital tonight, so weâre gonna watch the ice princess do her thing.â He answered, poking at Elizaâs side, illiciting a giggle from her. âYou coming?â He asked you.
Even though you only hesitated for just a second, Eliza immediately piped up, holding your face in her tiny hands. âPlease come see me skate!â She begged with those same convincing eyes she had flashed at Jack just moments ago. Damn, Robinavitches can get whatever they want with those eyes.
âOf course, wouldnât miss it for the world.â You assured her.
Eliza cheered in excitement, hugging your neck tightly. You laughed and squeezed her closer. It felt so natural now, holding her like this, like she was your family. Baby Abbot began to kick his legs and babble with a gummy smile as he looked behind you and Jack.Â
âHey, little man.â Robbyâs uncharacteristically, overly-cheerful voice came from behind you.
âDaddy!â Eliza immediately squirmed out of your arms, reaching for her father.
Robby carefully took her into his arms, pressing a squishy kiss against her cheek. âHey, big girl.â He greeted her before pulling her away slightly to look her in the eyes. âI heard Uncle Jack get on to you. What happened?âÂ
He looked at Jack, waiting for an answer, but Jack only gestured to Eliza, letting her explain. Eliza looked down, an ashamed pout on her face. âI ran away from him so I could hug her.â She said, pointing towards you at the end.
Robby nodded, squeezing her a little tighter at the thought of her being snatched up by some deranged patient. âYou know the rules, Eliza. If you come to see Mommy and Daddy at work, you have to stay with a grown-up. No running away.â He lectured. âItâs to keep you safe, okay?â
The little girl nodded, moving her hands to play with his beard. âYes, sir.â She replied, still ashamed, but with an adorable respectfulness.
And just like Jack, he was no match for her sweetness. He pressed his forehead against hers. âAre you ready to skate?â He asked with a playful seriousness.
Eliza grinned and pulled at the mesh sleeve of her skater dress. âYes!â She affirmed. âIs Nana coming to watch?â She asked, looking around for the blond charge nurse.
Robby nodded. âYes, sheâs going to meet us there. She had to leave a little early, but youâll see her when we get to the rink.â He assured.
The little girl smiled big, excited that her whole family would be there to see her figure skating. Robbyâs wife approached your huddle, greeting both of her babies with a kiss on the cheek. Jack, almost reluctantly, handed over baby Abbot to his mother.Â
âAre we ready to go?â She asked, resting her forehead on baby Abbotâs head, absorbing his cuteness after a rough shift.
Robby looked around, searching for a certain attending holding his signature iced coffee. âI need to talk to Shen before shift change. You might need to head on without me so she isnât late for warm up.â He answered.
His wife nodded. âOkay, I can take the truck. Gonna ride with Jack?â
Jack gave a nonchalant thumbs up, affirming the plan. Robby nodded before focusing his attention on Eliza. âDaddy has to work a little bit longer. Youâre gonna go ahead with Mommy and-â
âNo!â Eliza exclaimed, face scrunching with frustration.
It caught everyone off guard. It was rare for the angelic child to have any kind of outburst. Robbyâs brow furrowed. âEliza.â He said sternly.
âNo, Daddy!â Her big, brown eyes began to well up with tears. âYou said that last time, and you didnât come watch me skate.â
There was an uncomfortable silence amongst all of you, but everyone else seemed to know a backstory that you didnât. Robbyâs wife stepped forward, one arm holding up baby Abbot, and the other moving to rub soothing circles on Elizaâs back. âSweetheart, Daddy is going to watch you skate. Last time was different.âÂ
Elizaâs bottom lip quivered as she grabbed her dadâs face, fingers nestling in his beard. âPinky promise?â She begged.
Robby took in a shaky breath, something unusual in his eyes. OhâŠthose were tears. Not heavy enough to fall, but just enough to reflect light. He wrapped his large pinky around the tiny one that settled on his face. âPinky promise.â He whispered.
Reluctantly, he let go of his daughter, so she could walk with his wife to the car. Jack noticed Robbyâs distress and, for the first time in public, grabbed your hand in his.Â
âWhy donât you ride with them? Iâll make sure Robby gets there.â He mumbled, only low enough for your group to hear.
You nodded, offering a small smile. âOkay.â You squeezed his hand once before heading off with Robbyâs wife and the kids.
â
You sat in the bleachers next to Robbyâs wife. She had wrapped baby Abbot snugly in a warm blanket so he wouldnât get cold from the chilly indoor air. Eliza moved around the ice with her friends, more advanced than the other five-year-olds.
âIâm sorry about that.â Robbyâs wife finally said.
You raised your eyebrows in confusion. âFor what?âÂ
âFor Elizaâs outburst back at the Pitt.â She elaborated.
You shrugged, offering a reassuring smile. âKids will be kids.â
She sighed, shaking her head as she seemed to relive a painful moment. âA few months ago, right when Abbot was born, she had a competition. Jack was watching the baby for us, so Robby and I could both come to the rink. But right as we were leaving, five MVC patients came in. So I took Eliza, and Robby had to stay behind and help Shen.â She explained, shifting the baby boy in her arms so that he could rest comfortably as his eyelids began to droop. âIt was the first time he missed any competition or recital.â
You winced, knowing there was no way to explain that situation to a young child. âIâm assuming she didn't take it well?â You added.
Robbyâs wife huffed a sarcastic laugh. âYou would be correct. She cried and cried, even when he got home. Eventually, she tired herself out, but it was the first time she wouldnât let him put her to bed.â She continued, frowning again as she said, âRobby cried for an hour that night.â
You felt your heart ache at the thought of one of your mentors crying over his little girl. âI know that was hard for him. He loves her so much.â You replied.
She nodded and smiled slightly. âHeâs the best dad. Heâs always talking about how the kids and I are his second chance at life. How we brought the light back into himâŠâ Her smile grew warmly as she reminisced on her marriage and family.
You couldnât help but smile with her. Footsteps approaching behind you distracted you from your conversation. Robby and Jack walked down the stairs of the bleachers, arms linked to give Jack extra balance. They each held a bouquet of roses, undoubtedly for Eliza after the recital. A quiet âThanks, brotherâ was all you heard before the men settled on either side of the two of you. Robby leaned in to kiss his wife, mumbling something that you couldnât quite decipher.
Meanwhile, Jack bumped his shoulder against yours, gaining your focus. âYou ready to be on night shift again?â He asked.
You pretended to hesitate. âI mean, I guessâŠâ You trailed off, looking away from his gorgeous stare.
He chuckled and looked out at the ice rink. âOuch.â
Cautiously, you grasped the interior hook of his elbow, placing your other hand on his bicep, and leaned close. âReady to be with the night shift people again.âÂ
He tilted his head lower to rest on yours, his arm flexing under your grasp. âThe people?â He questioned. âLike all of themâŠor some of themâŠor just one of themâŠ?â
You giggled at his antics, lightly squeezing his bicep. âJust one of them.â You confirmed.
Music began to play overhead, and all of the little ice skaters lined up. Eliza looked out into the bleachers amongst the other parents, searching for her family. The four of you clocked it, and you all waved at her. Even from a distance, you could see her excited grin as she waved back. Someone sat behind you on the bleachers, patting Jackâs shoulder.
âYou know, you need to whip your night shift into shape.â Danaâs voice grumbled. âI left an hour late because of them.â
Jack turned around, an offended look on his face. âMy night shift? Itâs Robbyâs department.â He defended.
Robby peeked his head up at the sound of his name being brought into an argument. âNot my monkeys, not my circus.â He retorted.
Jack huffed. âUm, it absolutely is your circus. Youâre the fucking ringleader.â
âYeah, but not night shift. Theyâre another breed.â Robby replied, eyes focused on his daughter.
Dana raised an eyebrow at Jack, waiting for his next response. âWhatcha gotta say about that, Lieutenant Colonel?â She taunted.
Jack waved her off. âCan you leave me alone? Iâm trying to watch my niece.â He complained.
You looked up to him. âThe recital hasnât started yet, theyâre just doing warm-up drills.â You countered.
His bewildered eyes flicked to you. âAnd itâs cute.â
Dana chuckled before waving at baby Abbot, who giggled at her. âHey there, sweet boy.â She greeted.Â
The baby reached for her, and Robbyâs wife willingly exchanged him to Danaâs arms so she could record the recital on her phone. You heard Dana mumble something about âMaybe weâll just rename you Daniel,â as the lights in the bleachers dimmed, and the rink illuminated the tiny dancers in their glittery outfits.Â
â
The music ended, and the audience cheered for their kids. The little skaters made their way off the ice, and you all met Eliza at the bottom of the bleachers. She carefully wobbled over to her parentsâ embrace. Robby snatched her up so they could kiss her cheeks.
âYou did so good, baby girl!â His wife praised.
She giggled and covered her face. âThank you, Mommy.â She answered politely.
Robby lifted the bouquet of light pink roses that he had concealed behind his back. âThese are for you.â He announced with the chivalry of a prince.
Elizaâs eyes widened. âFlowers!â She exclaimed. âI love flowers!â
Jack smiled and held up his bouquet of white roses to her. âThen I guess youâll like these, too.â He suggested.
The little girl could not fathom that she had so many flowers. The bouquets in her little arms nearly took up her whole body.
âWhat do you say?â Robbyâs wife cued.
Eliza wrapped her arms around the necks of both men, squeezing them in until the sides of their heads bumped together. âThank you, Daddy and Uncle Jack!â
They both pressed a kiss to the side of her head. Your heart fluttered at the sight of Jack caring so deeply for his niece. Dana bounced baby Abbot in her arms and reached for her phone.
âOkay, we need a family picture.â She announced.
Robbyâs wife reached for baby Abbot. She sat him up in her arms and nestled into Robbyâs embrace, squishing their family together. Dana took several pictures while you and Jack made silly faces behind her to make the baby laugh, inevitably making Eliza giggle, too.
âWe need a big family picture!â The little girl exclaimed.
You absentmindedly reached for Danaâs phone to take a picture of all of them. Robby stopped her by saying, âWhat are you doing? Youâre in the picture.â
Oh. You were in the family now. Jack smiled, holding his arm out for you to curl into for the picture. You handed the phone to another parent and wrapped your arm around Jack, leaning in close. After the picture, he pressed the most subtle kiss to your temple, and your heart nearly jumped out of your chest.
âCan we skate now?â Eliza asked her parents.
Robbyâs wife smiled. âYeah, let me get our skates out of Daddyâs truck, okay?â
You looked to them, a little confused. Jack caught your expression. âThey let the families free skate with their kids after the recital.â He explained.
You nodded slowly before looking up at him again. âAre you gonna skate?âÂ
There was a hint of sadness in his gold-flecked eyes that hit you in the chest. âI donât skate anymore.â He answered, wiggling his right foot.
Robby shifted Eliza in his arms so that she sat on the side of his hip. âItâs a shame. Me and Jack used to play in a pick-up hockey league when we were young.â He revealed.
Your eyes widened, mouth dropping in shock. âExcuse me?â
Jack chuckled and crossed his arms. âWe are still young.â He protested.
Dana scoffed and rolled her eyes. âGod will strike you down for lying.â She warned. âThey used to come in to work with bloody noses and sprained fingers. Theyâre lucky they worked in a trauma center.â
The old men waved her off but still laughed. Robbyâs wife returned with a duffel bag with two pairs of skates. You sat on the bleachers with Jack as they pulled the skates on and set off on the ice with their daughter holding each of their hands. Dana sat behind you both a few rows up, cradling baby Abbot as he slept in his warm blanket.
You leaned your head on Jackâs shoulder as you watched Robby expertly move across the ice. âDo you miss it?â You finally asked.
Jack looked down at you, trying to read your expression. âMiss what?â He questioned.
âSkating?â You clarified.
The silence that followed seemed never-ending. You worried that you might have struck a nerve, but then he quietly answered, âYeah, I do.â
You smiled slightly. âThen, why donât we go out there?â
He let out a sigh, shaking his head. âI donât knowâŠâ
âWhy? Are you scared?â You taunted with a smirk, thinking if you playfully challenged him, he might cave.
Jackâs eyes met yours, and boy, you could see that vulnerability again. âYes.â His answer was short and quick.Â
You smiled reassuringly. âWhatâs your skate size?â
â14.â
âOh.â Your eyes widened slightly, not expecting that large of a number. âWell, you know what they say.â You said with a wink.
Jack rolled his eyes but chuckled at you as you pranced away to the skate rental booth. You were going to be the death of him.Â
â
You stepped onto the ice, ankles stabilizing as the traction under your feet changed. The ice wasnât fresh, but you had no issue gliding a couple of feet. You carefully turned around to help Jack. But he waited at the entrance, stricken with fear. His eyes were blown wider than usual, and his chest moved quickly. He looked like he was about to jump out of a plane and not step onto an ice rink.Â
A couple of steps, and you were right in front of him. Your hands reached out to grab his with a grounding firmness. âIâll be right beside you the whole time.â You promised.Â
He only nodded. He shifted in the skates uncomfortably, like he had every intention to take a step forward, but his feet still didnât move. His grip on your hands tightened so much that they began to shake.
âJack?â You whispered.Â
He didnât look at you. Only stared at the ice before him like it was a lava floor. âHmm?â
You decided to take a trick out of his book. You moved your head until his eyes had no choice but to meet yours. Seeking out the contact. His whiskey eyes were nearly black from dilation. The fear was truly crippling him. âIâve got you, baby.â Your voice was powerfully gentle.Â
Baby. You called him baby. The first term of endearment between each other. The word left your lips so naturally, like you had called him baby a thousand times already. It was enough to ground him. It was enough to move his left foot forward, letting the blade touch the ice.Â
You turned your ankles in to stabilize yourself on the ice so you could wrap your arm around his waist. His hands moved to your shoulders, grabbing painfully tight, but you didnât care.Â
âYouâre doing so good, Jack.â You sang sweetly.Â
The softness in your voice was the same one you spoke to Eliza with, but he didnât feel patronized. He felt stronger and affirmed by the way you said his name. He swallowed hard when he began to move his right foot up to the ice.Â
âThere you go.â The praise continued to fall from your lips.Â
Finally, the blade hit the ice. The feeling was so foreign to him. There were no sensors in his foot to feel the slickness of the ice. He had to predict it from halfway up his shin. Since he was a child, he could skate on ice better than he could run, and he was a fucking track star. After losing his right foot, he hadnât dared to get on the ice again. Not because he couldnât. He had learned to walk and run again with enough physical therapy. But he was afraid that he couldnât. The confirmation that he couldnât do something was terrifying.Â
Jack took the smallest step forward with his right foot, studying the way his balance reacted to the ice. You patiently waited as he loosened the painful grip on your shoulders, moving his hands down to your forearms.Â
Slowly, you skated backwards, pulling him with you. His feet moved cautiously, and his breathing began to deepen with confidence.Â
âThatâs it. Youâre doing it.â You said, not raising your voice enough to draw attention, but enough to make him look up.Â
The beaming smile on your face could have melted the entire rink. Jack knew in that moment that he had never been looked at with such pride and love in his life. Your eyes told him that he had hung the stars, and he believed it. A smile tugged at his lips, daring to share in your happiness.Â
The happiness only lasted for a few more feet and cautious feet shuffling. His skate caught in a groove that yours had managed to avoid. The fall happened so fast, but you were ready to catch him in your arms and drop to the ice, undoubtedly hitting your head. But that wasnât what happened. You never hit the ice. Your entire body was cushioned by his. In that split second, your soldier had changed the trajectory of your fall, taking your place of hitting the ice.Â
âFuck, Iâm so sorry.â Was the first thing you heard from him, his voice breaking. âAre you okay, are you hurt?â
You sat up quickly to see him below you, fighting back the pain that had to be wracking through his body. You pulled him to sit up, grabbing his face in your hands.Â
âJack, Iâm fine. Are you okay?â You asked, scanning his body for any dislocated or broken limbs.Â
Before he could answer, the smallest âUncle Jack!â rang from across the rink. You both looked up to see Eliza scurrying over. Knowing she was moving too fast and couldnât stop herself without falling, you caught her in your arms.
âUncle Jack, are you okay?â She asked, the worry palpable in her question.Â
Jack faked a smile, but you could see him cracking behind it. âIâm okay, princess.â He confirmed. âJust fell down.â
Eliza threw her arms around his neck, and for the first time that you had seen, he didnât relax or let go of his troubles. He numbly hugged his niece, eyes devoid of the usual joy she could impart.Â
Robby quickly approached, kicking up a wave of shaved ice as he halted next to you. âYou alright, brother?â He asked as he knelt down.Â
Jack continued holding Eliza, hoping that eventually the pain would numb if he did. âI knew this wasnât a good idea. Iâm not ready.â He said, looking up at Robby.Â
While the comment was clearly about ice skating to your ears, Robby knew its double meaning. Just as he was about to speak, your voice cut through. âJack. You have to keep trying.â
Jack shook his head, letting go of Eliza. He began to struggle, wanting to stand up, but the skates kept slipping as he tried to get a grip. âI donât think I can do this.â
You put a settling hand on his shoulder, letting it drag to his sharp jaw, forcing eye contact again. âWell, I know you can.â You reinforced.Â
This time, Jackâs eyes were glassy. The threat of tears loomed off the distance in the storm in his eyes. Your thumb brushed his cheek, ready to fight back against anything that fell.Â
Eliza moved over to Robby, letting him place a protective hand to stabilize her. âItâs okay, Uncle Jack. I fall down all the time, but Daddy says âSuck it up, buttercup.ââ She imparted her wisdom.Â
The tension broke. Everyone burst into laughter at the little girlâs innocent pep talk. Robby pulled his daughter tightly into his arms, shoulders still shaking with chuckles, and kissed her forehead. âThatâs right, sweetheart.â He said.Â
When you could see clearly again after recovering from laughter, you looked at Jack. He lost the battle to tears, letting them fall freely as he smiled. With the sleeve of your underscrub shirt, you wiped them away before Eliza could see them and worry further.Â
âYou have your own army around you, Jack. Weâre with you every step of the way.â You assured him.Â
Jack took a much-needed deep breath and reached to grasp your hand resting on his jaw. He looked up to Robby, who smiled and gave him a playful salute. He never imagined that he would find himself uttering these words as his grown ass age, but he finally said, âOkay. I can try again.â His voice was stronger now, the gravel back in his words.
You and Robby helped him stand to his feet on either side of him. With one arm thrown around each of your shoulders, he stabilized on the ice, testing the pressure on his right foot. Eliza danced ahead, doing her little twirls showcased in her recital.
âEliza, you donât have to show off.â Jack called out to her. âLet Uncle Jack get his sea legs back.âÂ
The little girl giggled as she continued to prance on the ice. Carefully, you and Robby moved to help Jack adjust to how his body balanced on the ice. Tiny steps, shuffling forward, left foot always moving more confidently than the right.
âYouâre gonna be skating circles around me again pretty soon, brother.â Robby said, and it drew a laugh from Jack.
âIâll have to pull my hockey stick out of the attic. Gotta teach Abbot how play since he doesnât have anyone else to teach him.â He replied.
Robby chuckled and held back the urge to shove him. âYouâre forgetting that I am the only thing between safety and falling back on your ass right now.â He teased.
The old men laughed, but not like usual. Like they were boys again, fresh out of medical school, having fun before they had split for different residency programs. Just like old times. As if on cue, tiny screams could be heard from the bleachers outside the rink. Robbyâs wife was bouncing baby Abbot in her arms, trying to soothe him, with Dana at her side. She looked out to the ice desperately, and Robby let out a sigh. He looked at you, brow furrowed with conflict.
âI need to go help her. You got him?â He asked.
The look in his eyes transcended the simple question. Asking not if you could keep him from falling, but if you could care for him. If you could support him more than just on the ice rink. If you could handle him. You nodded, wrapping your arm tighter around Jackâs waist. âIâve got him.â You affirmed, a small nod to let him know that you read past the question.
Robby smiled slightly and let go of Jack. âAlright, brother. Stay with her, alright?â He said before quickly moving off the rink to tend to his family, Eliza following behind him.
After a few moments of shuffling carefully, never fully picking your skates off the ice, you spoke up. âIâm sorry for pushing you to do this. You werenât comfortable.â You apologized.
Jack stopped his movements, pulling you back to him when you glided a couple of inches ahead. âI needed this.â He replied, squeezing your hand tightly. He led your hand to his chest, then wrapped his arms around your waist. âI need you.â He added.
His breath was hot on your cheeks, warming from the cold air that surrounded you. You rubbed small circles on his chest, able to trace the muscles that hid beneath his shirt. âNeed me how?â You asked.
A smile tugged at the corner of his lips. âIn every sense of the word.â He leaned closer, your noses brushing. âI need you.â He repeated.
His lips captured yours in a tender kiss, and he pulled your body as close as it could get to his, threatening to combine skin cells together. One hand trailed to his jaw, massaging the muscles there as he brushed his tongue against your lips. Fortunately, you were snapped back to reality and reminded of your public location because a shriek from the bleachers rang through the rink:Â
âMommy! Daddy! Theyâre kissing just like you said!âÂ
â
In the car on the way home, Robby and his wife whispered quietly as he drove, careful not to wake the exhausted kids in the backseat.Â
âHeâs in love with her.â He finally suggested.
His wife looked at him, an eyebrow raised. âHow do you know?â She asked.
Robby smiled and squeezed her hand he held across the console. âBecause heâs looking at her the way I look at you.âÂ
She smiled bashfully and shook her head. âBe serious.â
âI am. Jack never even looked at his first wife that way. Thereâs a connection between them thatâs justâŠdifferent. I saw it tonight with my own eyes.â He explained, twirling the wedding and engagement ring on her finger.
âTheyâre taking it slow. Much slower than we did.â She teased.
Robby chuckled, bringing her hand to his lips. âItâs hard to take it slow with you. With that laugh. That smile. That bodyâŠâ He trailed his kisses up her forearm, still managing to watch the road.
âRobby, stop it.â His wife demanded, but she didnât really mean it.
âI think Abbot wants to be a big brother.âÂ
âMichael!â
--
A/N: Thank y'all for reading! I don't know why but I just have this headcanon where Robby and Jack used to play pick-up hockey before his accident. Thank you all for reading! Chapter 4 will be a veryyy spicy one!
okay hear me out⊠a jack abbott inspired by imgonnagetyouback⊠the angst? the lust? i fear you would eat this up
pairing: jack abbot x f!resident!reader warnings: language, angst with a happy ending, age gap (unspecified, but reader is late 20s/early 30s and jack is mid/late 40s), reader slaps a man hehe (not jack), power imbalance (reader is a resident and jack is her attending), drug use (weed), sexual content (brief but there), jack absolutely grovels and it's a vibe word count: 3.2k summary: jack attempts to walk away. you attempt to reel him back in. it leaves you both raw and vulnerable. notes: if you are under 18 do not interact with my work or this fic. imgonnagetyouback, back to me by the marias, and honeymoon by lana all helped inspire this fic! i'm a little worried i wrote jack ooc, but then i remembered that man is a canonized yapper. this exists within the ring of fire universe, but that does not have to be read first. it is linked here if you would like to, though! i took some liberties with this so i apologize if it's not exactly how you imagined it! but i had a great time writing this! i hope you enjoy it <3 not proofread, apologies for errors!
you know exactly what it is that youâre doing. and if jack feels torturedâ fine. let him. this is all his fault, anyway.
the whole time youâd been with him, whatever that even meant, youâve felt this sense of⊠waiting for the other shoe to drop. you tried to tell yourself that you were crazy, that jack was good and honest and that he wasnât going to get cold feet. that the fact that you were his resident and he was your attending didnât bother him. that he wasnât irrevocably haunted by demons from his past, a dead wife and an endless war that runs on a replay in his head, pain in a limb that he doesnât even have anymore.
itâs not that you expect him to forget all of that. you just want him to be real with you.
and when he falls right into the trope, the trap that was laid by fate, you decide that youâre not going to be resentful. youâre just going to prove to himâ and maybe yourselfâ that youâre not so easily forgotten. that you canât be left.
it sounds both arrogant and pathetic when you think about it like that. but you donât care. youâre going to get him back.
maybe it is cruel that you started flirting with donnie in front of him. maybe itâs evil, the way that when you all gather for your post-shift beer, itâs donnieâs bench that you settle at. when you meet abbotâs gaze from across the walkway, his eyes are always at a level of stony that make you a little bit nervous. but then you remember that he iced you out and you lift your chin up and turn your face back to donnie.
heâll pick his poison, you decide.
when you enter leftyâs at 11pm after getting wind that the day shiftâ which was jack, conveniently, since he uttered the words this is a bad idea, kid. god, you want to shake his shoulders, you want to call him a coward and scream from the top of your lungs: do you need see how good it could be if you let it?
a delicate lilac top clings to your skin. you push your hair over your shoulder as santos crosses the bar to greet you with a big hug, laughter on her lips. âjesus christ, who are you trying to give a heart attack?â
your hand splays on her back and you find abbot looking at you from across the bar. you shrug your shoulders and pull back, pushing back pieces of santosâs hair. âi donât know. maybe someone new?â
trinityâs eyebrows shoot up. âwow. spicy. i like it.â
you donât know how much time passes. you feel a bit silly: overdressed, a beer in your hand, nothing on your mind except the man that you want to lure back in to you. your outfit is a siren song and all you can wonder is if abbot is a sailor who is as desperate as youâve pinned him as.
if heâs as desperate as you are.
every time you look at him, heâs either already looking, or feels your gaze on him. there will be a beat of eye contact before you look away and laugh at something garcia said or engage, rapt, in a conversation with samira about the first date that she went on last week. suddenly, itâs been hours, and youâre closing out your tab when you feel a presence beside you.
itâs not the presence that you want. itâs one thatâs unknown and makes you feel uncertain. itâs not abbotâs easy, calm, present demeanor beside you. the one that tells you donât worry, iâm here, i got this. the one that washes over you like a delicious wave. the one that smells woody and warm and delicious. the man next to you is a little too clean cut, a little too polishedâ he smells like laundry and looks like heâs never been through a bad thing in his life.
he takes a drink of the last of his beer. âiâve been watching you all night.â
you didnât notice. faintly, you think that if you were twenty three, this man next to you would have been the apple of your eye, instantly. you wouldnât be able to take your eyes off of him. but when you look at him and you see deep dimples and dark hair, all you see are dimples that are a little too deep, and hair that isnât streaked with silver.
that pick up line strikes you as unimpressive. your finger tip circles your glass. âoh, am i supposed to say thank you?â you ask, but you manage what you try to play off as a coy smirk. absentmindedly, you look around, instinctively looking for jack. and not even because you want to see if heâs jealous. not because you want to see the look on his face, to feel that sick sense of satisfaction at the fact that youâre getting to him.
no. you want your friend. you want to give a bleak eye roll and make him smirk. you want to go back to him and say what a prick and carry on with your life. you want to go back to the normal that youâve gotten used toâ the one that, maybe, you took for granted.
if you canât have jack as your whatever he was, youâd take him as your friend. any day.
but when your eyes scan the bar⊠heâs not there. the spot that he occupied next to robby is vacant. and all youâre left with is this sick sense of shame, embarrassment, and something else that you canât quite articulate. longing, if someone put a gun to your head and forced you to put a name to it.
the man next to you says something. you donât hear it. static rattles in your ears and suddenly all you want to do is go home, tear those lilac clothes off, wash your face, and cry. in bed.
and maybe smoke a joint on your patio, too.
he says something again. you, once again, donât respond. you look at the bartender and answer their questions with one word answers. yes, you want to close. no, you donât want a copy of your receipt.
âare you ignoring me, or are you just a stupid fucking bitch who canât hear?â
at the level of shut down youâre at already, you donât even care what heâs said. but heâs gotten the attention of the others. robby is already on his feet.
and abbot is walking down the hall from the restroom.
âiâm ignoring you,â you turn to him, spitting the words out, loud and clear. âbut if calling me a stupid fucking bitch makes the rejection hurt less, knock yourself out.â
he screws his entire face up, and abbot is approaching quicker now, with that lethal anger on his face. robby isnât far behind⊠or santos, either, for that matter.
âyou are a stupid fucking bitch,â he says, taking a step closer to you, shrinking himself in size to be on your level. âand youâre not pretty enough to get away with an attitude likeââ
abbot makes a move to lunge, and robby has to physically pull him back. the man lets out an ugly laugh and all you see is red, bright red. âoh, whatâs your fuckinâ grandpa going to do?â
the crack that rings out when your palm hits his cheek could be heard around the world. it opens up a cacophony of mayhemâ between you and him, the bartenders, abbot, robby, santos getting ready to throw in a punch of her own⊠but it all culminates with the lot of you being told to get the fuck out, this isnât philly.
with your jaw set and your head held high, you are the first one to storm out of the bar. and maybe itâs the alcohol, maybe itâs the fact that a stranger just called you a bitch, but all you feel is an unsettled sort of anger.
you hear abbot say your name behind you.
you stop. the pittsburgh early spring still has a bite to it, especially when itâs nearing midnight. the wind makes your eyes sting, tears trailing down your cheeks. itâs the wind. itâs just the wind. âno,â you say lowly, pointing a finger in his direction. âfuck you.â
âfuck me?â
âyeah. fuck you.â you tug your jacket closer to yourself and wipe the tears away with the back of your hand. âyou ignore me, you tell me this isnât going to work, and then want to play protective⊠yeah. fuck you.â you go quiet, go to turn, but you canât. youâre frozen in place. âno, itâs not even that. not really. i shouldnât be mad at you. i should be mad at myself. iâve been doing things, this whole time, trying to earn your affection back. trying to get you to see what you were missing, see why it was so silly to pretend that weâre not good. but⊠iâve felt like shit every day, doing that. iâve felt small.â
jack doesnât say anything. robby has ushered all of your coworkers down the street and far away, bless him. when you assess jackâs face, thereâs a myriad of things you see. you think you see regret. you know you see hurt. you want to believe you see love.
âand i donât want to feel small,â you sniffle and wipe a fat, real tear away. âi donât want to wear a cute outfit because you might see it. i donât want to flirt with donnie to watch your knuckles go white. i wantâ i want to sit on your fucking couch. i want to watch some stupid show with you. i want to lay in bed and listen to the police scanner after sex. i want you to want me. and if you donât, if this is all too much for you, thenâŠâ you look him up and down. the body you know intimately, the person youâd be with forever if he let you.
âthen no hard feelings.â
you donât give jack the opportunity to respond. maybe thatâs its own special brand of self preservation. you turn, and you walk away from him, towards an empty apartment.
â
when you get home, you do exactly as you cited. you rid yourself of your clothes. you furiously wash your face and then go through the rest of your skin care. you roll yourself a joint, and you bring it out to your patio, and the small table, chair, and ashtray that sit out there.
your apartment isnât as high up as jackâs. you live in an old building on the third floor, one of the world war two types, with the radiators and beautiful hardwood floors and all of the character in the world. in exchange, you get no dishwasher and a patio that probably isnât up to city code.
lighting the joint with one hand, you take in a long, nice, inhale. you lean your head back against the wall. you grab your phone and put the marias on and let those big tears roll down your cheeks freely.
the low rumble of a truck pulling up gets your attention. you lift your head up and watch as the vehicle that youâd sat in countless times goes into park. you hear the door open. you watch jack round it, and his eyes are instantly drawn to your patio. he holds his hand up in a wave.
you flip him off.
the chuckle that gets out of him should infuriate you. but it doesnât.
âyeah, i deserve that.â
âyouâre a dick,â you reply, marijuana leaving you honest. you stand up and lean on the railing, looking down at him.
âi am.â
his hands are in his pockets and you can see a war going on in his mind, but then he starts talking. âiâm not good at this part. the⊠communication, part. iâm not good at this part at all.â
you raise your eyebrows. he continues. âwhen annie died, i was content to not be with anyone. ever again. a random fuck there and again, just to get it out of my system, sure. but i was content with not opening myself up to that. i always just thought⊠i thought i was already so fucked up, and since annie knew me before i was so fucked up. i told myself that she was the only one that was going to get it. get me.â he stares up at you. ânow, i know that i was wrong in that. obviously.â
you give a slow nod of your head. âbut i lived in that reality for so long. that i wasnât going to be open to that again. and then we started hanging out, and at first, i was able to convince myself it was innocent. iâm your mentor. no lines would get blurred. and then, obviously, they did. but i told myself it was all casual. and when i told myself that, i felt like⊠yeah, i could do that. i could be good to someone in that capacity. but then,i felt greedy with you. i felt like i wasnât going to be able to let myself walk away if i stayed any longer. so i forced myself. thought i was doing you a favor.â he rubs the back of his neck. âthought i was doing right by myself. like, the safest option. and then i talked to my therapist.â
you smirk. âthe age old solution.â
âyeah, right?â he smirks back at you. âand i told him all of this, yesterday. and you know what he said?â he waits a beat. âhe told me iâm a fucking idiot. and i responded, and said that i know i was. because deep down⊠deep down, i knew it was all bullshit. a defense mechanism.â
he walks closer and puts his hands on the railing of the first floor patio, staring right up at you, you staring down at him. âi should never have made you feel small. and all i want is to show you that i mean it.â
nodding your head slowly, you mull over his every word. you open and close your mouth a couple of times. âi want to tell you to fuck off,â you say honestly. âi want to think youâre just bullshitting me. butâŠâ you meet his eyes. âthatâs probably my defense mechanism.â
the quiet overtakes the two of you. all there is is the lull of traffic and the faint whistle of the wind. âit wasnât about you,â you say. âi knew why you were pushing me away. i understood. i just wanted you to see why those things werenât real. and i thought that i could control that. and then i just left myself feeling disappointed, and desperate, and messy.â
the two of you watch each other like feral cats, unblinking and unwavering. maybe thatâs what you are.
âiâm sorry,â he says, voice softened. âi was a dick. and you were right.â
you nod your head. âcome inside before you catch a cold.â
most of the time, you went over to his place. when he steps over the threshold into your apartment, you think that it feels good to have him in your space. to watch him set his shoes by the door, hang his coat up on the little rack. thereâs this awkward sort of tension that simmers between the two of you. he must sense it, because he gives you a sideways look. âthat wasnât all i had to say.â
âyeah?â you ask with a playful smile, filling up a glass of water and taking a big gulp from it.
his hands pin you in at your kitchen counter. all of the air is sucked right out of the room. âyou told me that you wanted me to want you. right?â you give a nod of your head. âi wanted to be face to face with you when i said this part.â he ghosts his fingertips over your cheeks. âi want every fucking part of you. your wild, messy parts included. especially, even.â his eyes darken a shade. âdo you know how crazy youâve made me? flirting with donnie, that purple you wore tonight?â
you roll your eyes, mostly at yourself. âthat was sort of the plan.â
âit worked.â his thumbs brush your hipbones. âevery day, i went home to an apartment that had you all over it. a coffee mug on the counter with a lipgloss mark. the blanket that you love and curl into almost every single night. your book on my coffee table. i felt stupid. i felt small, too. i felt like a coward. i was a coward. and i justââ
you raise up your hand, pressing it against his chest. not pressing him away, just⊠there. his brows furrow. you say, âyou ramble when youâre nervous and when you want someone to feel better.â your hand slides up his chest. âi forgive you.â
the relief that washes over him is a visible, tangible thing. you feel it in the way he grips your hips as a result, the way his face falls into the crook of your neck. you close your eyes and run your hand through the silver streak you love so much. he pulls back and thereâs a little tear shining in his eye. and he says three words that are simple but profound, that strike you where you stand. âi love you.â he nods. that steady, stable, self-assured version of himself is there again. âi know that now. i knew it then, too.â
you nod your head slowly. âi know you do,â you say, because you do, you really do. âand i love you too.â
those dimples shine at you. not too deep. just right. he pulls your body in flush with his and itâs like you melt away into nothing but a glowing ball of light. fuzzy and warm.
a switch is flipped. your hands go hungry and your lips find his. jack leads you to your bedroom. he lays you down and he spreads you out. he takes off each article of clothing, slowly. he lowers himself until his head is between your thighs and apologizes with his tongue, until you arch off your bed. he climbs up and he sinks inside of you in one satisfying motion. youâre all nails down his back and relentless eye contact, and youâre the kind of desperate and messy that you want to be. heâs just the sameâ his pace is consistent, deep, and each thrust tells you just how sorry he really is.
you finish with an explosion behind your eyes, and he tumbles over off that cliff after you. he rolls off of you and you lay on your backs, staring up at the ceiling. your hand goes to rest on his chest. he takes it and presses a kiss to it before he raises, comes back with a damp cloth and cleans you up with care. love. he leans down and presses a kiss to your lips, tender and right.
he starts messing with the covers, brows all screwed up. âwhat could you possibly be looking for right now?â you ask, chest still heaving.
âthis,â he says, locating his phone. he stares down at it until he puts it between you. a faint static emits from it.
âwhat the hell isââ
â3B60, the subject is fleeing on foot.â
you between him and his phone, police scanner coming from the speaker, incredulously. he just grunts as he settles back into bed, pulling you into him. âiâm just listening to what you want, kid.â
spencer tries to hide his hickeys but it doesn't work
spencer's daughter struggles with her grades
spencer's touchy
nsfw headcanons for spencer
you prank spencer by wiping off his kisses
spencer stands up for you
spencer finds out you cut your hair
spencer's glasses fog up during sex
you crochet something for spencer
you listen to spencer's ramblings | 2
spencer's a munch
spencer helps you through airsickness on the jet
spencer gives you a key to his apartment
spencer helps you stop biting your nails
someone asks to buy you a drink while you're out with spencer
break, bite, bang
you bake with spencer
hotch tries to set you, his niece, up with spencer
professor!reid
the team meets spencer's girlfriend for the first time
it's safer to kiss
dbf!spencer x hotchner!reader
spencer's worried about your Girl Dinner
spencer gets along with your dad
you get cuteness aggression around spencer
you don't recognize spencer when you're drunk
spencer degrades you during sex
you protect spencer from his peanut allergy
you have a higher sex drive than spencer
you're a very affectionate drunk around spencer | 2
spencer helps you, hotch's daughter, study for college
Drop a comment or reblog this post if you want to be tagged in future chapters of Shut Up and Drive!
Summary : Y/N and Rafe confront their painful past after a chaotic beach fight between Y/N and Ruthie but begin to reconnect, exploring the possibility of a hopeful future together.
Rafe Cameron x Ex!Reader (season 4 spoiler alert!)
Warning : Swearing (english is not my first language)
A/N : Probably the longest fic I've ever written so far, it's like around 2.3k ish, and i think this was a request from @dkjndfnmdfmdmnd , hope u like it đ©”
For us Pogues, the beach wasnât just a place to visitâit was like our second home, a refuge where we felt truly ourselves. The salty breeze, the endless horizon, and the warmth of the sand beneath our feet brought a kind of peace that was hard to find anywhere else. The sound of waves crashing and seagulls chirping in the distance seemed to wash away our worries, making everything feel better, if only for a little while. There's nothing better than a day off with the people you love the most, in a place that feels like homeâthe beach.
âDonât you just immediately feel like everythingâs better at the beach?â Kie said, her gaze sweeping across the shoreline as she took in the sun, sand, and waves.
I nodded in silent agreement, sharing the same unspoken understanding that nothing compared to the serenity of the ocean. Together, we began setting up the chairs and cool box, the salty breeze tugging at our hair as the waves crashed in the distance. âLetâs get these boards off!â JJ exclaimed with excitement, his eyes gleaming as he headed toward the Twinkie to unload the surfboards, ready to dive into the thrill of the surf.
âWhat the hell?â I muttered under my breath, catching sight of Topper and his friendsâ trucks rolling toward us, their engines rumbling louder as they approached. âYouâre joking,â Sarah sighed, exasperation clear in her voice as she rolled her eyes at the unwelcome sight. âDonât stop,â JJ mumbled, focused on untying the ropes securing our surfboards to the top of the Twinkie, clearly determined not to let their arrival ruin our plans. âAnywhere but here,â Kie added with a frustrated tone, her eyes narrowing as she watched them close in, the tension in the air thickening with every second.
âGreat, just the perfect time,â I said sarcastically, rolling my eyes as their trucks came to a halt and parked just a few meters away from us. The sudden noise and presence of Topper and his friends felt like a dark cloud looming over our sunny day, threatening to ruin the fun we had planned.
âLetâs go, baby!â The voice rang out, unmistakable and familiar, stirring a rush of memories within me. The one that used to comfort me in moments of doubt, the one that whispered soothing words to ease my fears. Rafe Cameron had a way of making everything feel right, his presence a warm embrace that felt like home. I turned to locate the source of the voice, and our eyes metâhis striking blue gaze locking onto mine. The moment stretched, the world around us fading away as the connection lingered just a heartbeat too long. All of a sudden, Topper strode toward us with an air of confidence. âSunshine's coming,â JJ remarked, earning an exasperated sigh from John B as he stepped closer to him. Though I couldnât quite hear their conversation, they appeared surprisingly relaxed, exchanging easy banter that contrasted with the tension in the air.
We all surfed the waves together, and it felt utterly exhilarating. After months spent chasing the elusive City of Gold, finally engaging in something I was truly passionate about was a refreshing escape. The thrill of surfing, the salty spray of the ocean, and the laughter of friends combined to create a blissful sense of freedom that was simply amazing.
After surfing for what felt like hours, I made my way back to the shore, slipping into my denim shorts. âGuys, thereâs a turtle hatch!â Kie exclaimed, her excitement palpable. âY/N, look!â I rushed over to her, my heart racing as I squealed, âOh my god!â In awe, I added, âTheyâre so tiny!â Sarah and I echoed each other, our voices filled with wonder at the sight of the adorable little turtles making their way to the ocean. I have always had a deep love for sea creatures, particularly turtles and dolphins. This passion is what drew Kie and me together, as we bonded over our shared fascination for the ocean's incredible inhabitants.
As we helped the tiny turtles by creating paths for them to reach the ocean, the sudden roar of a truck engine interrupted our focus. My gaze shifted to Topperâs girlfriend, Ruthie, at the wheel, with Topper himself lounging in the passenger seat. âHey, stop! Thereâs a hatch!â I yelled, desperation lacing my voice. âStop!â Kie added, jumping up and waving her arms frantically. âGuys, stop!â I shouted again, but the truck only sped up, closing the distance between us. In a split second, Sarah yanked me out of the way just as the truck barreled past, sending me tumbling into the sand with a startled grunt.
âAre you okay?â Sarah, Kie, and JJ asked in unison. I managed a quiet âI'm fine,â but a sinking feeling twisted in my stomach as I noticed the truck circling around again, this time picking up speed. Panic surged through me, and I jumped to my feet. âStop! Thereâs a hatch!â I yelled, but my voice was swallowed by the roar of the engine as they barreled over the paths we had painstakingly created for the turtles. âNo, no, noâŠno!â I gasped, horror washing over me as I watched the truck crush a few of the fragile creatures beneath its wheels. My heart raced as I rushed toward them, my pulse pounding in my ears. Kie knelt beside a turtle with a shattered shell, its life flickering away. âFucking psycho,â she muttered, her eyes brimming with anger and sorrow. I felt a fire ignite within me, furious at their reckless disregard. Ignoring my friendsâ calls, I stormed over to where they stood, determined to confront them.
âLook what you did!â I shouted, cradling the lifeless turtles in my hands. âDo you think this is okay?â Ruthie stole a quick glance at the broken shells before quickly averting her eyes. âNo, look at it!â I protested, my voice rising with anger. âYou drove right over a turtle hatch, you idiots!â Rafe stood beside Topper, who tried to diffuse the situation. âI understand you're upset, Y/N,â he said, his tone calm but unhelpful. I hadn't even noticed my friends were behind me, their expressions mirroring my shock and frustration. âIâm more than upset, Topperâ I shot back, feeling the heat of my anger.
âLook, it was only one,â Ruthie interjected dismissively, shrugging as if it didnât matter. âI mean, there are so many more of them,â she pointed out, trying to minimize the damage. âYou know what? You should just throw that to the seagulls,â she added with a mocking tone. âCycle of life, right?â
My breath quickened as rage boiled within me, and I couldn't take it anymore. I pushed her hard, and just as she prepared to retaliate, Rafe stepped in between us, his presence a barrier against her aggression.
âStop,â he said firmly, pushing Ruthieâs arm away before she could retaliate. He turned to me, his eyes softening slightly. âThereâs something seriously wrong with you people,â I shot back, turning on my heel and striding away, handing Sarah the lifeless turtle.
âThatâs right, go back to your side, bitch! You donât belong with us anymore!â Ruthie shouted, her words laced with venom.
That was the final straw. Rage coursed through me, boiling over as I stormed toward her, every ounce of frustration and hurt fueling my movements. Without thinking, I swung my fist and connected hard with her jaw. The impact reverberated through me, and for a heartbeat, everything frozeâthe shocked look on Ruthie's face, the collective gasps of my friends.
She recovered quickly, her eyes blazing with anger. Without hesitation, she lunged at me, landing a swift punch that connected with my nose. The sharp pain shot through my face, and I felt warm blood begin to trickle down. I stumbled back, shocked by the sudden turn of events, my hands instinctively going to my face. John B tried to step in, attempting to intervene but Rafe was a lot quicker than him.
âControl your crazy bitch, Top!â Rafe said, his gaze locked onto me with a mix of concern and frustration. âAre you okay?â he asked, his voice softening.
âLike you care,â I shot back, my frustration boiling over. Without waiting for a response, I turned on my heel and stormed off, seeking refuge at my secret spot on the beach alone.
I perched on top of a massive rock, my knees drawn to my chest as I hugged them tightly, listening to the soothing sound of the waves crashing below. This spot was my sanctuary, the place I retreated to whenever I felt at my lowest. It never failed to calm me, wrapping me in a cocoon of peace. Suddenly, I sensed someone behind me. I turned to find Rafe standing there, his silhouette framed by the fading light. He climbed onto the rock and settled beside me.
âI didnât give you permission to sit here,â I protested weakly, trying to maintain some semblance of defiance.
âItâs a public place,â he replied, his voice steady as he leaned back against the rock.
I fell silent, my gaze drifting to the horizon as the sun dipped lower in the sky, lost in a swirl of memories and thoughts. âHow did you know Iâd be here?â I finally asked, my voice barely above a whisper. He turned to me, a hint of nostalgia in his eyes. âWe used to come here together, remember? You told me it was your favorite spot.â A sigh escaped me, heavy with longing. God, I missed those daysâwhen everything felt simpler and the weight of the world was lighter.
âHere,â he said, breaking through my thoughts as he handed me a tissue for my bloody nose. I took it, our fingers brushing briefly. âThanks,â I murmured, grateful for the gesture and the warmth of his presence.
âThat was a pretty great punch, by the way,â Rafe said, a playful grin breaking through the tension. The corners of my mouth turned upward, and I let out a small chuckle, the sound echoing against the backdrop of crashing waves. We fell into a silence that felt strangely comfortableâ not awkward at all. Despite the distance that had grown between us since our breakup, I still felt an undeniable sense of safety around him, as if we were wrapped in a bubble of shared history.
âI missed you, Y/N,â he confessed suddenly, his voice steady yet vulnerable.
My heart skipped a beat, and I turned to look at him, shock flickering across my face. This was the moment I hadnât expected, the admission I had longed to hear but feared would never come.
âI missed you too, Rafe,â I sighed, the words flowing out of me, heavy with unspoken feelings and memories of our laughter, our late-night talks, and the way he could make me feel like the only person in the world. âIâm sorry for what I did to you,â he continued, his expression earnest, his gaze unwavering.
âIâm clean now, Y/N. Havenât touched those shits for almost five months.â
âReally?â I asked, my disbelief melting into pride. I felt a swell of admiration for his strength and determination, and it made my heart ache a little.
He nodded, a flicker of vulnerability dancing in his eyes. âYeah, I realized I couldnât keep dragging you into my mess. I needed to changeâ for myself and for you.â
âIâm so proud of you, Rafe,â I said, my voice warm and genuine. I reached out, resting my hand on his for a brief moment, feeling the warmth radiate between us. A smile broke across his face, illuminating his features. âI did it all so I could be better for you,â he admitted, his sincerity wrapping around me like a comforting blanket. The air between us crackled with unspoken possibilities, and for a moment, I allowed myself to imagine what it would be like to rekindle the bond we once had.
âCan we at least try to work things out?â he asked, his gaze steady and hopeful. I paused, contemplating his words. He may have been a jerk to everyone else, but with me, he was sweet, protective, and loyal. The thought stirred something deep within me, a flicker of hope in the depths of my heart. âIâm not ready to be in a relationship again, Rafeâmaybe just for now,â I finally replied, my voice softer than before. The truth of my feelings hung in the air, vulnerable and raw.
âItâs okay,â he said quickly, a reassuring smile breaking through his earlier concern. âWeâll take things slow. Iâll wait until youâre ready, alright?â The sincerity in his eyes made my heart flutter, a mix of apprehension and excitement dancing in my chest.
âOkay,â I smiled, a sense of warmth washing over me.
âOkay?â he repeated, his eyes lighting up with hope.
âYeah, okay. Weâll take things slow,â I confirmed, feeling a rush of relief and anticipation. Rafeâs smile widened, and in that moment, it felt like we were stepping into a new chapter together, one where the past could fade into the background while we explored the potential of the future. As the sun began to set, painting the sky in hues of orange and pink, I leaned my head on his shoulder. The gentle sound of the waves lapping against the shore filled the air, creating a soothing rhythm that matched the beating of my heart. The warmth of his presence enveloped me, and I closed my eyes, letting the moment wash over me.
For the first time in a long time, I felt hope stirring within me, a belief that perhaps we could find our way back to each other, not as we were before, but as something new and beautiful.
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Trail cam catching a deer fawn with the zoomies