Champagne Problems
Lavender Haze
Exile
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
Words in Total: ~60k
Pairings: Dr. Jack Abbot x fem!reader
Synopsis: She's his Dove. The ER nurse who is the definition of chaos, trauma and humour in scrubs. He's her Captain, gruff, emotionally guarded war veteran with a prosthetic leg and completely in love with her. Six years together, a mortgage, four dogs and the ability to conquer anything. This is a story of their life in one day. He is 49, she's 30. This is one day of their life based on the 15 episodes of 'The Pitt'. There will be little imagines of their relationship over the years.
Warnings: Swearing, Age Gap, Trauma, Medical Language/Procedure, Pregnancy, Miscarriage, etc.
Hope you enjoy :)
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Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
.đĽ Ý ËÖ´ ࣪â Built for Battle, Never for Me Ý ËÖ´ ࣪â âšË
âAnd I will fuck you like nothing matters.â
summary : You loved Jack through four deployments and every version of the man he became, even when he stopped choosing you. Years later, fate shoves you back into his trauma bay, unconscious and bleeding, and everything you buried resurfaces.
content/warning : 18+ MDNI!!! long-form emotional trauma, war and military themes, medical trauma, car accident (graphic details), infidelity (emotional & physical), explicit smut with intense emotional undertones, near-death experiences, emotionally unhealthy relationships, and grief over a still-living person
word count : 13,078 ( read on ao3 here if it's too large )
a/n : ok this is long! but bare with me! I got inspired by Nothing Matters by The Last Dinner Party and I couldn't stop writing. College finals are coming up soon so I thought I'd put this out there now before I am in the trenches but that doesn't mean you guys can't keep sending stuff to my inbox!
You were nineteen the first time Jack Abbot kissed you.
Outside a run-down bar just off base in the thick of Georgia summerâair humid enough to drink, heat clinging to your skin like regret. He had a fresh cut on his knuckle and a dog-eared med school textbook shoved into the back pocket of his jeans, like that wasnât the most Jack thing in the worldâequal parts violence and intellect, always straddling the line between bare-knuckle instinct and something nobler. Half fists, half fire, always on the verge of vanishing into a cause bigger than himself.
You were his long before the letters trailed behind his name. Before he learned to stitch flesh beneath floodlights and call it purpose. Before the trauma became clockwork, and the quiet between you started speaking louder than words ever could. You loved him through every incarnationâevery rough draft of the man he was trying to become. Army medic. Burned-out med student. Warzone doctor with blood on his boots and textbooks in his duffel. The kind of man who took people apart just to understand how to hold them together.
He used to say heâd get out once it was over. Once the years were served, the boxes checked, the blood debt paid in full. He promised heâd come backânot just in body, but in whatever version of wholeness he still had left. Said heâd pick a city with good light, buy real furniture instead of folding chairs and duffel bags, learn how to sleep through the night like people who hadnât taught themselves to live on adrenaline and loss.
You waited. Through four deployments. Through static-filled phone calls and letters that always said soon. Through nights spent tracing his name like it was a map back to yourself. You clung to that promise like it was gospel. And nowâhe was standing in your bedroom, rolling his shirts with the same clipped, clinical precision he used to pack a field kit. Each fold a quiet betrayal. Each movement a confirmation: he was leaving again. Not called. Choosing.
âIâm not being deployed,â he said, eyes fixed on the duffel bag instead of you. âIâm volunteering.â
Your arms crossed tightly over your chest, nails digging into the fabric of your sleeves. âYouâve fulfilled your contract, Jack. Youâre not obligated anymore. Youâre a doctor now. You could stay. You could leave.â
âI know,â he said, quiet. Measured. Like heâd practiced saying it in his head a hundred times already.
âYou were offered a civilian residency,â you pressed, your voice rising despite the lump building in your throat. âAt one of the top trauma programs in D.C. You told me they fast-tracked you. That they wanted you.â
âI know.â
âAnd you turned it down.â
He exhaled through his nose. A long, deliberate breath. Then reached for another undershirt, folded it so neatly it looked like a ritual. âThey need trauma-trained docs downrange. Thereâs a shortage.â
You laughedâa bitter, breathless sound. âThereâs always a shortage. Thatâs not new.â
He paused. Briefly. His hand flattened over the shirt like he was smoothing something that wouldnât stay still. âYou donât get it.â
âI do get it,â you snapped. âThatâs the problem.â
He finally looked up at you then. Just for a second.
Eyes tired. Distant. Fractured in a way that made you want to punch him and hold him at the same time.
âYou think this makes you necessary,â you whispered. âYou think chaos gives you purpose. But itâs just the only place you feel alive.â
He turned toward you slowly, shirt still in hand. His hair was longer than regulationâhe hadnât shaved in days. His face looked older, worn down in that way no one else seemed to notice but you did. You knew every line. Every scar. Every inch of the man who swore heâd come back and choose something softer.
You.
âTell me Iâm wrong,â you whispered. âTell me this isnât just about being needed again. About being irreplaceable. About chasing adrenaline because youâre scared of standing still.â
Jack didnât say anything else.
Not when your voice broke asking him to stayânot loud, not theatrical, not in the kind of way that could be dismissed as a moment of weakness or written off as heat-of-the-moment desperation. Youâd asked him softly. Carefully. Like you were trying not to startle something fragile. Like if you stayed calm, maybe heâd finally hear you.
And not when you walked away from him, the space between you stretching like a fault line you both knew neither of you would cross again.
Youâd seen him fight for the life of a strangerâbare hands pressed to a wound, blood soaking through his sleeves, voice low and steady through chaos. But he didnât fight for this. For you.
You didnât speak for the rest of the day.
He packed in silence. You did laundry. Folded his socks like it mattered. You couldnât decide if it felt more like mourning or muscle memory.
You didnât touch him.
Not until night fell, and the house got too quiet, and the space beside you on the couch started to feel like a ghost of something you couldnât bear to name.
The windows were open, and you could hear the city breathing outsideâcar tires on wet pavement, wind slinking through the alley, the distant hum of a life you couldâve had. One that didnât smell like starch and gun oil and choices you never got to make.
Jack was in the kitchen, barefoot, methodically washing a single plate. You sat on the couch with your knees pulled to your chest, half-wrapped in the blanket you kept by the radiator. There was a movie playing on the TV. Something you'd both seen a dozen times. He hadnât looked at it once.
âDo you want tea?â he asked, not turning around.
You stared at his back. The curve of his spine under that navy blue t-shirt. The tension in his neck that never fully left.
âNo.â
He nodded, like he expected that.
You wanted to scream. Or throw the mug he used every morning. Or just⌠shake him until he remembered that thisâyouâwas what he was supposed to be fighting for now.
Instead, you stood up.
Walked into the kitchen.
Pressed your palms flat against the cool tile counter and watched him dry his hands like it was just another Tuesday. Like he hadnât made a choice that ripped something fundamental out of you both.
âI donât think I know how to do this anymore,â you said.
Jack turned, towel still in hand. âWhat?â
âThis,â you gestured between you, âUs. I donât know how to keep pretending weâre okay.â
He opened his mouth. Closed it again. Then leaned against the sink like the weight of that sentence physically knocked him off balance.
âI didnât expect you to understand,â he said.
You laughed. It came out sharp. Ugly. âThatâs the part that kills me, Jack. I do understand. I know exactly why you're going. I know what it does to you to sit still. I know you think youâre only good when youâre bleeding out in a tent with your hands in someoneâs chest.â
He flinched.
âBut I also know you didnât even try to stay.â
âI did,â he snapped. âEvery time I came back to you, I tried.â
âThatâs not the same as choosing me.â
The silence that followed felt like the real goodbye.
You walked past him to the bedroom without a word. The hallway felt longer than usual, quieter tooâlike the walls were holding their breath. You didnât look back. You couldnât.
The bed still smelled like him. Like cedarwood aftershave and something darkerâfamiliar, aching. You crawled beneath the sheets, dragging the comforter up to your chin like armor. Turned your face to the wall. Every muscle in your back coiled tight, waiting for a sound that didnât come.
And for a long time, he didnât follow.
But eventually, the floor creakedâsoft, uncertain. A pause. Then the familiar sound of the door clicking shut, slow and final, like the closing of a chapter neither of you had the courage to write an ending for. The mattress shifted beneath his weightâslow, deliberate, like every inch he gave to gravity was a decision he hadnât fully made until now. He settled behind you, quiet as breath. And for a moment, there was only stillness.
No touch. No words. Just the heat of him at your back, close enough to feel the ghost of something youâd almost forgotten.
Then, gentlyâlike he thought you might flinchâhis arm slid across your waist. His hand spread wide over your stomach, fingers splayed like he was trying to memorize the shape of your body through fabric and time and everything heâd left behind.
Like maybe, if he held you carefully enough, he could keep you from slipping through the cracks heâd carved into both of your lives. Like this was the only way he still knew how to say please donât go.
âI donât want to lose you,â he breathed into the nape of your neck, voice rough, frayed at the edges.
Your eyes burned. You swallowed the lump in your throat. His lips touched your skinâjust below your ear, then lower. A kiss. Another. His mouth moved with unbearable softness, like he thought he might break you. Or maybe himself.
And when he kissed you like it was the last time, it wasnât frantic or rushed. It was slow. The kind of kiss that undoes a person from the inside out.
His hand slid under your shirt, calloused fingers grazing your ribs as if relearning your shape. You rolled to face him, breath catching when your noses bumped. And then he was kissing you againâdeeper this time. Tongue coaxing, lips parted, breath shared. You gasped when he pressed his thigh between yours. He was already hard. And when he rocked into you, It wasnât franticâit was sacred. Like a ritual. Like a farewell carved into skin.
The lights stayed off, but not out of shame. It was self-preservation. Because if you saw his face, if you saw what was written in his eyesâwhatever soft, shattering thing was thereâit might ruin you. He undressed you like he was unwrapping something fragileâcareful, slow, like he was afraid you might vanish if he moved too fast. Each layer pulled away with quiet tension, each breath held between fingers and fabric.
His mouth followed close behind, brushing down your chest with aching precision. He kissed every scar like it told a story only he remembered. Mouthed at your skin like it tasted of something he hadnât let himself crave in years. Like he was starving for the version of you that only existed when you were underneath him.Â
Your fingers threaded through his hair. You arched. Moaned his name. He pushed into you like he didnât want to be anywhere else. Like this was the only place he still knew. His pace was languid at first, drawn out. But when your breath hitched and you clung to him tighter, he fucked you deeper. Slower. Harder. Like he was trying to carve himself into your bones. Your bodies moved like memory. Like grief. Like everything you never said finally found a rhythm in the dark.Â
His thumb brushed your lower lip. You bit it. He groanedâlow, guttural.
âSay it,â he rasped against your mouth.
âI love you,â you whispered, already crying. âGod, I love you.â
And when you came, it wasnât loud. It was broken. Soft. A tremor beneath his palm as he cradled your jaw. He followed seconds later, gasping your name like a benediction, forehead pressed to yours, sweat-slick and shaking.
After, he didnât speak. Didnât move. He just stayed curled around you, heartbeat thudding against your spine like punctuation.
Because sometimes the loudest heartbreak is the one you donât say out loud.
The alarm never went off.
Youâd both woken up before itâsome silent agreement between your bodies that said donât pretend this is normal. The room was still dark, heavy with the thick, gray stillness of early morning. That strange pocket of time that doesnât feel like today yet, but is no longer yesterday.
Jack sat on the edge of the bed in just his boxers, elbows resting on his thighs, spine curled slightly forward like the weight of the choice heâd made was finally catching up to him. He was already dressed in the uniform in his head.
You stayed under the covers, arms wrapped around your own body, watching the muscles in his back tighten every time he exhaled.
You didnât speak.Â
What was there left to say?
He stood, moved through the room with quiet efficiency. Pulling his pants on. Shirt. Socks. He tied his boots slowly, like muscle memory. Like prayer. You wondered if his hands ever shook when he packed for war, or if this was just another morning to him. Another mission. Another place to be.
He finally turned to face you. âYou want coffee?â he asked, voice hoarse.
You shook your head. You didnât trust yourself to speak.
He paused in the doorway, like he might say somethingâsomething honest, something final. Instead, he just looked at you like you were already slipping into memory.
The kitchen was still warm from the radiator kicking on. Jack moved like a ghost through itâmug in one hand, half a slice of dry toast in the other. You sat across from him at the table, knees pulled into your chest, wearing one of his old t-shirts that didnât smell like him anymore. The silence was different now. Not tense. Just done. He set his keys on the table between you.
âI left a spare,â he said.
You nodded. âI know.â
He took a sip of coffee, made a face. âYou never taught me how to make it right.â
âYou never listened.â
His lips twitchedâalmost a smile. It died quickly. You looked down at your hands. Picked at a loose thread on your sleeve.
âWill you write?â you asked, quietly. Not a plea. Just curiosity. Just something to fill the silence.
âIf I can.â
And somehow that hurt more.
When the cab pulled up outside, neither of you moved right away. Jack stared at the wall. You stared at him.Â
He finally stood. Grabbed his bag. Slung it over his shoulder like it weighed nothing. He didnât look like a man leaving for war. He looked like a man trying to convince himself he had no other choice.
At the door, he paused again.
âHey,â he said, softer this time. âYouâre everything I ever wanted, you know that?â
You stood too fast. âThen why wasnât this enough?â
He flinched. And still, he came back to you. Hands cupping your jaw, thumb brushing your cheek like he was trying to memorize it.
âI love you,â he said.
You swallowed. Hard. âThen stay.â
His hands dropped.Â
âI canât.â
You didnât cry when he left.
You just stood in the hallway until the cab disappeared down the street, teeth sunk into your lip so hard it bled. And then you locked the door behind you. Not because you didnât want him to come back.
But because you didnât want to hope anymore that he would.
PRESENT DAY : THE PITT - FRIDAY 7:02 PM
Jack always said he didnât believe in premonitions. That was Robbyâs departmentâgut feelings, emotional instinct, the kind of sixth sense that made him pause mid-shift and mutter things like âI donât like this quiet.â Jack? He was structure. Systems. Trauma patterns on a 10-year data set. He didnât believe in ghosts, omens, or the superstition of stillness.
But tonight?
Tonight felt wrong.
The kind of wrong that doesnât announce itself. It just settlesâlow and quiet, like a second pulse beneath your skin. Everything was too clean. Too calm. The trauma board was a blank canvas. One transfer to psych. One uncomplicated withdrawal on fluids. A dislocated shoulder in 6 who kept trying to flirt with the nurses despite being dosed with enough ketorolac to sedate a linebacker.
That was it. Four hours. Not a single incoming. Not even a fender-bender.
Jack stood in front of the board with his arms crossed tight over his chest. His jaw was clenched, shoulders stiff, body still in that way that wasnât restfulâjust waiting. Like something in him was already bracing for impact.
The ER didnât breathe like this. Not on a Friday night in Pittsburgh. Not unless something was holding its breath.
He rolled his shoulder, cracked his neck once, then twice. His leg achedânot the prosthetic. The other one. The real one. The one that always overcompensated when he was tense. The one that still carried the habits of a body he didnât fully live in anymore. He tried to shake it off. He couldnât. He wasnât tired.
But he felt unmoored.
7:39 PM
The station was too loud in all the wrong ways.
Dana was telling someoneâprobably Perlahâabout her granddaughterâs birthday party tomorrow. There was going to be a Disney princess. Real cake. Real glitter. Jack nodded when she looked at him but didnât absorb any of it. His hands were hovering over the computer keys, but he wasnât charting. He was watching the vitals monitor above Bay 2 blink like a metronome. Too steady. Too normal.
His stomach clenched. Something inside him stirred. Restless. Sharp. He didnât even hear Ellis approach until her shadow slid into his peripheral.
âYouâre doing it again,â she said.
Jack blinked. âDoing what?â
âThat thing. The haunted soldier stare.â
He exhaled slowly through his nose. âDidnât realize I had a brand.â
âYou do.â She leaned against the counter, arms folded. âYou get real still when itâs too quiet in here. Like youâre waiting for the other shoe to drop.â
Jack tilted his head slightly. âIâm always waiting for the other shoe.â
âNo,â she said. âNot like this.â
He didnât respond. Didnât need to. They both knew what kind of quiet this was.
7:55 PM
The weather was turning.
He could hear itâhow the rain hit the loading dock, how the wind pushed harder against the back doors. Heâd seen it out the break room window earlier. Clouds like bruises. Thunder low, miles off, not angry yetâjust gathering. Pittsburgh always got weird storms in the springâcold one day, burning the next. The kind of shifts that made people do dumb things. Drive fast. Get careless. Forget their own bodies could break.
His hand flexed unconsciously against the edge of the counter. He didnât know who he was preparing forâjust that someone was coming.Â
8:00 PM
Robbyâs shift was ending. He always left a little lateâhovered by the lockers, checking one last note, scribbling initials where none were needed. Jack didnât look up when he approached, but he heard the familiar shuffle, the sound of a hoodie zipper pulled halfway.
âYou sure you donât wanna switch shifts tomorrow?â Robby asked, thumb scrolling absently across his phone screen, like he was trying to sound casualâbut you could hear the edge of something in it. Fatigue. Or maybe just wariness.
Jack glanced over, one brow arched, already sensing the setup. âWhat, you finally land that hot date with the med student who keeps calling you sir, looks like she still gets carded for cough syrup and thinks youâre someoneâs dad?â
Robby didnât look up from his phone. âClose. She thinks youâre the dad. Like⌠someoneâs brooding, emotionally unavailable single father who only comes to parent-teacher conferences to say heâs doing his best.â
Jack blinked. âIâm forty-nine. Youâre fifty-three.â
âShe thinks youâve lived harder.â
Jack snorted. âShe say that?â
âShe saidâand I quoteââHeâs got that energy. Like heâs seen things. Lost someone he doesnât talk about. Probably drinks his coffee black and owns, like, one picture frame.ââ
Jack gave a slow nod, face unreadable. âWell. Sheâs not wrong.â
Robby side-eyed him. âYou do have ghost-of-a-wife vibes.â
Jackâs smirk twitched into something more wry. âNot a widower.â
âCouldâve fooled her. She said if she had daddy issues, youâd be her first mistake.â
Jack let out a low whistle. âJesus.â
âI told her youâre just forty-nine. Prematurely haunted.â
Jack smiled. Barely. âYouâre such a good friend.â
Robby slipped his phone into his pocket. âYouâre lucky I didnât tell her about the ring. She thinks youâre tragic. Women love that.â
Jack muttered, âTragic isnât a flex.â
Robby shrugged. âIt is when youâre tall and say very little.â
Jack rolled his eyes, folding his arms across his chest. âStill not switching.â
Robby groaned. âCome on. Whitaker is due for a meltdown, and if I have to supervise him through one more central line attempt, Iâm walking into traffic. He tried to open the kit with his elbow last week. Said sterile gloves were âlimiting his dexterity.â I said, âThatâs the point.â He told me I was oppressing his innovation.â
Jack stifled a laugh. âIâm starting to like him.â
âHeâs your favorite. Admit it.â
âYouâre my favorite,â Jack said, deadpan.
âThatâs the saddest thing youâve ever said.â
Jackâs grin tugged wider. âItâs been a long year.â
They stood in silence for a momentâone of those rare ones where the ER wasnât screeching for attention. Just a quiet hum of machines and distant footsteps. Then Robby shifted, leaned a little heavier against the wall.
âYou good?â he asked, voice low. Not pushy. Just there.
Jack didnât look at him right away. Just stared at the trauma board. Too long. Long enough that it said more than words wouldâve.
ThenââFine,â Jack said. A beat. âJust tired.â
Robby didnât press. Just nodded, like he believed it, even if he didnât.
âGet some rest,â Jack added, almost an afterthought. âIâll see you tomorrow.â
âYou always do,â Robby said.
And then he left, hoodie half-zipped, coffee in hand, just like always.
But Jack didnât move for a while.
Not until the ER stopped pretending to be quiet.
8:34 PM
The call hits like a starterâs pistol.
âInbound MVA. Solo driver. High velocity. No seatbelt. Unresponsive. GCS three. ETA three minutes.â
The kind of call that should feel routine.
Jackâs already in motionâsnapping on gloves, barking out orders, snapping the trauma team to attention. He doesnât think. He doesnât feel. He just moves. Itâs what heâs best at. What they built him for.
He doesnât know why his heart is hammering harder than usual.
Why the air feels sharp in his lungs. Why heâs clenching his jaw so hard his molars ache.
He doesnât know. Not yet.
âPerlah, trauma cartâs prepped?â
âYeah.â
âMateo, I want blood drawn the second sheâs in. Jesseâintubation tray. Letâs be ready.â
No one questions him. Not when heâs in this modeâlow voice, high tension. Controlled but wired like something just beneath his skin is ready to snap. He pulls the door to Bay 2 open, nods to the team waiting inside. His hands go to his hips, gloves already on, brain flipping through protocol.
And then he hears itâthe wheels. Gurney. Fast.
Voices echoing through the corridor.
Paramedic yelling vitals over the noise.
âUnidentified female. Found unresponsive at the scene of an MVAâsingle vehicle, no ID on her. Significant blood loss, hypotensive on arrival. BP tanked en routeâwe lost her once. Got her back, but sheâs still unstable.â
The doors bang open. They wheel her in. Jack steps forward. His eyes fall to the body. Blood-soaked. Covered in debris. Face battered. Left cheek swelling fast. Gash at the temple. Lip split. Clothes shredded. Eyes closed.
He freezes. Everything stops. Because he knows that mouth. That jawline. That scar behind the ear. That body. The last time he saw it, it was beneath his hands. The last time he kissed her, she was whispering his name in the dark. And now sheâs here.
Unconscious. Barely breathing. Covered in her own blood. And nobody knows who she is but him.
âJack?â Perlah says, uncertain. âYou good?â
He doesnât respond. Heâs already at the side of the gurney, brushing the medic aside, sliding in like muscle memory.
âGet me vitals now,â he says, voice too low.
âSheâs crashing againââ
âI said get me fucking vitals.â
Everyone jolts. He doesnât care. Heâs pulling the oxygen mask over your face. Hands hovering, trembling.
âJesus Christ,â he breathes. âWhat happened to you?â
Your eyes flutter, barely. He watches your chest rise once. Then falter.
ThenâFlatline.
You looked like a stranger. But the kind of stranger who used to be home. Where had you gone after he left?
Why didnât you come back?
Why hadnât he tried harder to find you?
He never knew. He told himself you were fine. That you didnât want to be found. That maybe you'd met someone else, maybe moved out of state, maybe started the life he was supposed to give you.
And now you were here. Not a memory. Not a ghost. Not a "maybe someday."
Here.
And dying.
8:36 PM
The monitor flatlines. Sharp. Steady. Shrill.
And Jackâhe doesnât blink. He doesnât curse. He doesnât call out. He just moves. The team reacts firstâshock, noise, adrenaline. Perlahâs already calling it out. Mateo goes for epi. Jesse reaches for the crash cart, his hands a little too fast, knocking a tray off the edge.
It clatters to the floor. Jack doesnât flinch.
He steps forward. Takes position. Drops to the right side of your chest like itâs instinctâbecause it is. His hands hover for half a beat.
Then press down.
Compression one.
Compression two.
Compression three.
Thirty in all. His mouth is tight. His eyes fixed on the rise and fall of your body beneath his hands. He doesnât say your name. He doesnât let them see him.
He just works.
Like heâs still on deployment.
Like youâre just another body.
Like youâre not the person who made him believe in softness again.
Jack doesnât move from your side.
Doesnât say a thing when the first shock doesnât bring you back. Doesnât speak when the second one stalls again. He just keeps pressing. Keeps watching. Keeps holding on with the one thing left he can control.
His hands.
You twitch under his palms on the third shock.
The line stutters. Then catches. Jack exhales once. But he still doesnât speak. He doesnât check the room. Doesnât acknowledge the tears running down his face. Just rests both hands on the edge of the gurney and leans forward, breathing shallow, like if he stands up fully, something inside him will fall apart for good.
âGet her to CT,â he says quietly.
Perlah hesitates. âJackââ
He shakes his head. âIâll walk with her.â
âJackâŚâ
âI said Iâll go.â
And then he does.
Silent. Soaking in your blood. Following the gurney like he followed field stretchers across combat zones. No one asks questions. Because everyone sees it now.
8:52 PMÂ
The corridor outside CT was colder than the rest of the hospital. Some architectural flaw. Or maybe just Jackâs body going numb. You were being wheeled in nowâhooked to monitors, lips cracked and flaking at the edges from blood loss.
You hadnât moved since the trauma bay. They got your heart back. But your eyes hadnât opened. Not even once.
Jack walked beside the gurney in silence. One hand gripping the edge rail. Gloved fingers stained dark. His scrub top was still soaked from chest compressions. His pulse hadnât slowed since the flatline. He didnât speak to the transport tech. Didnât acknowledge the nurse. Didnât register anything except the curve of your arm under the blanket and the smear of blood at your temple no one had cleaned yet.
Outside the scan room, they paused to prep.
âTwo minutes,â someone said.
Jack barely nodded. The tech turned away. And for the first time since they wheeled you inâJack looked at you.
Eyes sweeping over your face like he was seeing it again for the first time. Like he didnât recognize this version of youânot broken, not bloodied, not dyingâbut fragile. His hand moved before he could stop it. He reached down. Brushed your hair back from your forehead, fingers trembling.Â
He leaned in, close enough that only the machines could hear him. Voice raw. Shaky.
âStay with me.â He swallowed. Hard. âIâll lie to everyone else. Iâll keep pretending I can live without you. But you and me? We both know Iâm full of shit.â
He paused. âYouâve always known.â
Footsteps echoed around the corner. Jack straightened instantly. Like none of it happened. Like he wasnât bleeding in real time. The tech came back. âWeâre ready.â
Jack nodded. Watched the doors open. Watched them wheel you away. Didnât follow. Just stood in the hallway, alone, jaw clenched so tight it hurt.
10:34 PM
Your blood was still on his forearms. Dried at the edge of his glove cuff. There was a fleck of it on the collar of his scrub top, just beneath his badge. He should go change. But he couldnât move. The last time he saw you, you were standing in the doorway of your apartment with your arms crossed over your chest and your mouth set in that way you did when you were about to say something that would ruin him.
Then stay.
He hadnât.
And now here you were, barely breathing.
God. He wanted to scream. But he didnât. He never did.
Footsteps approached from the leftâlight, careful.
It was Dana.
She didnât say anything at first. Just leaned against the wall beside him with a soft exhale and handed him a plastic water bottle.
He took it with a nod, twisted the cap, but didnât drink.
âSheâs stable,â Dana said quietly. âNeuroâs scrubbing in. Walsh is watching the bleed. They're hopeful it hasnât shifted.â
Jack stared straight ahead. âSheâs got a collapsed lung.â
âSheâs alive.â
âShe shouldnât be.â
He could hear Dana shift beside him. âYou knew her?â
Jack swallowed. His throat burned. âYeah.â
There was a beat of silence between them.
âI didnât know,â Dana said, gently. âI mean, I knew there was someone before you came back to Pittsburgh. I just never thought...â
âYeah.â
Another pause.
âJack,â she said, softer now. âYou shouldnât be the one on this case.â
âIâm already on it.â
âI know, butââ
âShe didnât have anyone else.â
That landed like a punch to the ribs. No emergency contact. No parents listed. No spouse. No one flagged to call. Just the last ID scanned from your phoneâhis name still buried somewhere in your old records, from years ago. Probably forgotten. Probably never updated. But still there. Still his.
Dana reached out, laid a hand on his wrist. âDo you want me to sit with her until she wakes up?â
He shook his head.
âI should be there.â
âJackââ
âI shouldâve been there the first time,â he snapped. Then his voice broke low, quieter, strained: âSo Iâm gonna sit. And Iâm gonna wait. And when she wakes up, Iâm gonna tell her Iâm sorry.â
Dana didnât move. Didnât speak. Just nodded. And walked away.
1:06 AM
Jack sat in the corner of the dimmed recovery room.
You were propped up slightly on the bed now, a tube down your throat, IV lines in both arms. Bandages wrapped around your ribs, temple, thigh. The monitor beeped with painful consistency. It was the only sound in the room.
He hadnât spoken in twenty minutes. He just sat there. Watching you like if he looked away, youâd vanish again. He leaned back eventually, scrubbed both hands down his face.
âJesus,â he whispered. âYou really never changed your emergency contact?â
You didnât get married. You didnât leave the state.You just⌠slipped out of his life and never came back.
And he let you. He let you walk away because he thought you needed distance. Because he thought heâd ruined it. Because he didnât know what to do with love when it wasnât covered in blood and desperation. He let you go. And now you were here.Â
âPlease wake up,â he whispered. âJust⌠just wake up. Yell at me. Punch me. I donât care. Justââ
His voice cracked. He bit it back.
âYou were right,â he said, so soft it barely made it out. âI shouldâve stayed.â
You swim toward the surface like somethingâs pulling you back under. Itâs slow. Syrupy. The kind of consciousness that makes pain feel abstractâlike youâve forgotten which parts of your body belong to you. Thereâs pressure behind your eyes. A dull roar in your ears. Cold at your fingertips.
Thenâsound. Beeping. Monitors. A cart wheeling past. Someone saying Vitals stable, pressureâs holding. A laugh in the hallway. Fluorescents. Fabric rustling. Andâ
A chair creaking.
You know that sound.
Youâd recognize that silence anywhere. You open your eyes, slowly, blinking against the light. Vision blurred. Chest tight. Thereâs a rawness in your throat like youâve been screaming underwater. Everything hurts, but one thing registers clear:
Jack.
Jack Abbot is sitting beside you.
Heâs hunched forward in a chair too small for him, arms braced on his knees like heâs ready to stand, like he canât stand. Thereâs a hospital badge clipped to his scrub pocket. His jaw is tight. Thereâs something smudged on his cheekboneâblood? You donât know. His hair is shorter than you remember, greyer.
But itâs him. And for a secondâjust oneâyou forget the last seven years ever happened.
You forget the apartment. The silence. The day he walked out with his duffel and didnât look back. Because right now, heâs here. Breathing. Watching you like heâs afraid youâll vanish.
âHey,â he says, voice hoarse.
You try to swallow. You canât.
âDonâtââ he sits up, suddenly, gently. âDonât try to talk yet. You were intubated. Rollover crashââ He falters. âJesus. Youâre okay. Youâre here.â
You blink, hard. Your eyes sting. Everything is out of focus except him. He leans forward a little more, his hands resting just beside yours on the bed.
âI thought you were dead,â he says. âOr married. Or halfway across the world. I thoughtââ He stops. His throat works around the words. âI never thought Iâd see you again.â
You close your eyes for a second. Itâs too much. His voice. His face. The sound of youâre okay coming from the person who once made it hurt the most. You shift your gazeâtry to ground yourself in something solid.
And thatâs when you see it.
His hand.
Resting casually near yours.
Ring finger tilted toward the light.
Gold band.Â
Simple.
Permanent.
You freeze.
Itâs like your lungs forget what to do.
You look at the ring. Then at him. Then at the ring again.
He follows your gaze.
And flinches.
âFuck,â Jack says under his breath, immediately leaning back like distance might make it easier. Like you didnât just see it.
He drags a hand through his hair, rubs the back of his neck, looks anywhere but at you.
âSheâs notââ He pauses. âItâs not what you think.â
Youâre barely able to croak a whisper. Your voice scrapes like gravel: âYouâre married?â
His head snaps up.
âNo.â Beat. âNot yet.â
Yet. That word is worse than a bullet. You stare at him. And what you see floors you.
Guilt.
Exhaustion.
Something that might be grief. But not regret. Heâs not here asking for forgiveness. Heâs here because you almost died. Because for a minute, he thought heâd never get the chance to say goodbye right. But he didnât come back for you.
He moved on.
And you didnât even get to see it happen. You turn your face away. It takes everything you have not to sob, not to scream, not to rip the IV out of your arm just to feel something other than this. Jack leans forward again, like he might try to fix it.
Like he still could.
âI didnât know,â he says. âI didnât know Iâd ever see you again.â
âI didnât know youâd stop waiting,â you rasp.
And thatâs it. Thatâs the one that lands. He goes very still.
âI waited,â he says, softly. âLonger than I shouldâve. I kept the spare key. I left the porch light on. Every time someone knocked on the door, I thoughtâmaybe. Maybe itâs you.â
Your eyes well up. He shakes his head. Looks away. âBut you never called. Never sent anything. And eventually... I thought you didnât want to be found.â
âI didnât,â you whisper. âBecause I didnât want to know youâd already replaced me.â
The silence after that is unbearable. And then: the soft knock of a nurse at the door.
Dana.Â
She peeks in, eyes flicking between the two of you, and reads the room instantly.
âWeâre moving her to step-down in fifteen,â she says gently. âJust wanted to give you a heads up.â Jack nods. Doesnât look at her. Dana lingers for a beat, then quietly slips out. You donât speak. Neither does he. He just stands there for another long moment. Like he wants to stay. But knows he shouldnât. Finally, he exhalesâlow, shaky.
âIâm sorry,â he says.
Not for leaving. Not for loving someone else. Just for the wreckage of it all. And then he walks out. Leaving you in that bed.Â
Bleeding in places no scan can find.
9:12 AM
The room was smaller than the trauma bay. Cleaner. Quieter.
The lights were soft, filtered through high, narrow windows that let in just enough Pittsburgh morning to remind you the world kept moving, even when yours had slammed into a guardrail at seventy-three miles an hour.
You were propped at a slight angleâenough to breathe without straining the sutures in your side. Your ribs still ached with every inhale. Your left arm was in a sling. There was dried blood in your hairline no one had washed out yet. But you were alive. They told you that three times already.
Alive. Stable. Awake.
As if saying it aloud could undo the fact that Jack Abbot is engaged. You stared at the wall like it might give you answers. He hadn't come back. You didnât ask for him. And stillâevery time a nurse came in, every time the door clicked open, every shuffle of shoes in the hallwayâyou hoped.Â
You hated yourself for it.
You hadnât cried yet.
That surprised you. You thought waking up and seeing him againâfor the first time in years, after everythingâwould snap something loose in your chest. But it didnât. It just⌠sat there. Heavy. Silent. Like grief that didnât know where to go.
There was a soft knock on the frame.
You turned your head slowly, your throat too raw to ask who it was.
It wasnât Jack.
It was a man you didnât recognize. Late forties, maybe fifties. Navy hoodie. Clipboard. Glasses slipped low on his nose. He looked tiredâbut held together in the kind of way that made it clear he'd been the glue for other people more than once.
âIâm Dr. Robinavitch.â he said gently. You just blinked at him.
âIâm... one of the attendings. I was off when they brought you in, but I heard.â
He didnât step closer right away. ThenââMind if I sit?â
You didnât answer. But you didnât say no. He pulled the chair from the corner. Sat down slow, like he wasnât sure how fragile the air was between you. He didnât check your vitals. Didnât chart.
Just sat.
Present. In that quiet, steady way that makes you feel like maybe you donât have to hold all the weight alone.
âHell of a night,â he said after a while. âYou had everyone rattled.â
You didnât reply. Your eyes were fixed on the ceiling again. He rubbed a hand down the side of his jaw.
âJack hasnât looked like that in a long time.â
That made you flinch. Your head turned, slow and deliberate.
You stared at him. âHe talk about me?âÂ
Robby gave a small smile. Not pitying. Not smug. Just... true. âNo. Not really.â
You looked away.Â
âBut he didnât have to,â he added.
You froze.
âIâve seen him leave mid-conversation to answer texts that never came. Watched him walk out into the ambulance bay on his nights offâlike he was waiting for someone who never showed. Never stayed the night anywhere but home. Always looked at the hallway like something might appear if he stared hard enough.â
Your throat burned.
âHe never said your name,â Robby continued, voice low but certain. âBut thereâs a box under his bed. A spare key on his ringâbeen there for years, never used, never taken off. And that old mug in the back of his locker? The one that doesnât match anything? You start to notice the things people hold onto when theyâre trying not to forget.â
You blinked hard. âThereâs a box?â
Robby nodded, slow. âYeah. Tucked under the bed like he didnât mean to keep it but never got around to throwing it out. Lettersâsome unopened, some worn through like he read them a hundred times. A photo of you, old and creased, like he carried it once and forgot how to let it go. Hospital badge. Bracelet from some field clinic. Even a napkin with your handwriting on itâfaded, but folded like it meant something.â
You closed your eyes. That was worse than any of the bruises.
âHe compartmentalizes,â Robby said. âItâs how he stays functional. Itâs what heâs good at.â
You whispered it, barely audible: âIt was survival.â
âSure. Until it isnât.â
Another silence settled between you. Comfortable, in a way.
ThenââHeâs engaged,â you said, your voice flat.
Robby didnât blink. âYeah. I know.â
âIs sheâŚ?â
âSheâs good,â he said. âSmart. Teaches third grade in Squirrel Hill. Not from medicine. I think thatâs why it worked.â
You nodded slowly.
âDoes she know about me?â
Robby looked down. Didnât answer. You nodded again. That was enough.Â
He stood eventually.
Straightened the front of his hoodie. Rested the clipboard against his side like heâd forgotten why he even brought it.
âHeâll come back,â he said. âNot today. Maybe not tomorrow. But eventually.â
You didnât look at him. Just stared out the window. Your voice was quiet.
âI donât want him to.â
Robby gave you one last look.
One that said: Yeah. You do.
Then he turned and left.
And this time, when the door clicked shutâyou cried.
DAY FOURâ 11:41 PM
The hospital was quiet. Quieter than it had been in days.
Youâd finally started walking the length of your room again, IV pole rolling beside you like a loyal dog. The sling was irritating. Your ribs still hurt when you coughed. The staples in your scalp itched every time the air conditioner kicked on.
But you were alive. They said you could go home soon. Problem wasâyou didnât know where home was anymore. The hallway light outside your room flickered once. Youâd been drifting near sleep, curled on your side in the too-small hospital bed, one leg drawn up, wires tugging gently against your skin.
Before you could brace, the door opened. And there he was.
Jack didnât speak at first. He just stood there, shadowed in the doorway, scrub top wrinkled like heâd fallen asleep in it, hair slightly damp like heâd washed his face too many times and still didnât feel clean. You sat up slowly, heart punching through your chest.
He didnât move.
Didnât smile.
Didnât look like the man who used to make you coffee barefoot in the kitchen, or fold your laundry without being asked, or trace the inside of your wrist when he thought you were asleep.
He looked like a stranger who remembered your body too well.
âI wasnât gonna come,â he said quietly, finally. You didnât respond.
Jack stepped inside. Closed the door gently behind him.
The room felt too small.
Your throat ached.
âI didnât know what to say,â he continued, voice low. âDidnât know if youâd want to see me. After... everything.â
You sat up straighter. âI didnât.â
That hit.
But he nodded. Took it. Absorbed it like punishment he thought he deserved.
Still, he didnât leave. He stood at the foot of your bed like he wasnât sure he was allowed any closer.
âWhy are you here, Jack?â
He looked at you. Eyes full of everything he hadnât said since he walked out years ago.
âI needed to see you,â he said, and it was so goddamn quiet you almost missed it. âI needed to know you were still real.â
Your heart cracked in two.
âReal,â you repeated. âYou mean like alive? Or like not something you shoved in a box under your bed?â
His jaw tightened. âThatâs not fair.â
You scoffed. âYou think any of this is fair?â
Jack stepped closer.
âI didnât plan to love you the way I did.â
âYou didnât plan to leave, either. But you did that too.â
âI was trying to save something of myself.â
âAnd I was collateral damage?â
He flinched. Looked down. âYou were the only thing that ever made me want to stay.â
âThen why didnât you?â
He shook his head. âBecause I was scared. Because I didnât know how to come back and be yours forever when all Iâd ever been was temporary.â Silence crashed into the space between you. And then, barely above a whisper:
âDoes she know you still dream about me?â
That made him look up. Like youâd punched the wind out of him. Like youâd reached into his chest and found the place that still belonged to you. He stepped closer. One more inch and heâd be at your bedside.
âYou have every reason not to forgive me,â he said quietly. âBut the truth isâIâve never felt for anyone what I felt for you.â
You looked up at him, voice raw: âThen why are you marrying her?â
Jackâs mouth opened. But nothing came out. You looked away.
Eyes burning.
Lips trembling.
âI donât want your apologies,â you said. âI want the version of you that stayed.â
He stepped back, like that was the final blow.
But you werenât done.
âI loved you so hard it wrecked me,â you whispered. âAnd all I ever asked was that you love me loud enough to stay. But you didnât. And now you want to stand in this room and act like Iâm some kind of unfinished chapterâlike you get to come back and cry at the ending?â
Jack breathed in like it hurt. Like the air wasnât going in right.
âI came back,â he said. âI came back because I couldnât breathe without knowing you were okay.â
âAnd now you know.â
You looked at him, eyes glassy, jaw tight.
âSo go home to her.â
He didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Didnât do what you asked.
He just stood thereâbleeding in the quietâwhile you looked away.
DAY SEVENâ 5:12 PM
You left the hospital with a dull ache behind your ribs and a discharge summary you didnât bother reading. They told you to stay another three days. Said your pain control wasnât stable. Said you needed another neuro eval.
You said youâd call.
You wouldnât.
You packed what little you had in silenceâfolded the hospital gown, signed the paperwork with hands that still trembled. No one stopped you. You walked out the front doors like a ghost slipping through traffic.
Alive.
Untethered.
Unhealed.
But gone.
YOUR APARTMENTâ 8:44 PM
It wasnât much. A studio above a laundromat on Butler Street. One couch. One coffee mug. A bed you didnât make. You sat cross-legged on top of the blanket in your hospital sweats, ribs bandaged tight beneath your shirt, hair still blood-matted near the scalp.
You hadnât turned on the lights.
You hadnât eaten.
You were staring at the wall when the knock came.
Three short taps.
Then his voice.
âIt's me.â
You didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Then the second knock.
âPlease. Just open the door.â
You stood. Slowly. Every joint screamed. When you opened it, there he was. Still in black scrubs. Still tired. Still wearing that ring.
âYou left,â he said, breath fogging in the cold.
You leaned against the frame. âI wasnât going to wait around for someone who already left me once.â
âI deserved that.â
âYou deserve worse.â
He nodded. Took it like a man used to pain. âCan I come in?â
You hesitated.
Then stepped aside.
He didnât sit. Just stood thereâawkward, towering, hands in his pockets, taking in the chipped paint, the stack of unopened mail, the folded blanket at the edge of the bed.
âThis place is...â
âMine.â
He nodded again. âYeah. Yeah, it is.â
Silence.
You walked back to the bed, sat down slowly. He stood across from you like you were a patient and he didnât know what was broken.
âWhat do you want, Jack?â
His jaw flexed. âI want to be in your life again.â
You blinked. Laughed once, sharp and short. âRight. And what does that look like? You with her, and me playing backup singer?â
âNo.â His voice was quiet. âJust... just a friend.â
Your breath caught.
He stepped forward. âI know I donât deserve more than that. I know I hurt you. And I know thisâthis thing between usâit's not what it was. But I still care. And if all I can be is a number in your phone again, then let me.â
You looked down.
Your hands were shaking.
You didnât want this. You wanted him. All of him.
But you knew how this would end.
Youâd sit across from him in cafĂŠs, pretending not to look at his left hand.
Youâd laugh at his stories, knowing his warmth would go home to someone else.
Youâd let him inâinch by inchâuntil there was nothing left of you that hadnât shaped itself to him again.
And still.
StillââOkay,â you said.
Jack looked at you.
Like he couldnât believe it.
âFriends,â you added.
He nodded slowly. âFriends.â
You looked away.
Because if you looked at him any longer, you'd say something that would shatter you both.
Because this was the next best thing.
And you knew, even as you said it, even as you offered him your heart wrapped in barbed wireâIt was going to break you.
DAY TEN â 6:48 PM Steeped & Co. CafĂŠ â Two blocks from The Pitt
You told yourself this wasnât a date.
It was coffee. It was public. It was neutral ground.
But the way your hands wouldnât stop shaking made it feel like you were twenty again, waiting for him to show up at the Greyhound station with his army bag and half a smile.
He walked in ten minutes late. He ordered his drink without looking at the menu. He always knew what he wantedâexcept when it came to you.
âYouâre limping less,â he said, settling across from you like you hadnât been strangers for the last seven years. You lifted your tea, still too hot to drink. âYouâre still observant.â
He smiledâsmall. Quiet. The kind that used to make you forgive him too fast. The first fifteen minutes were surface-level. Traffic. ER chaos. This new intern, Santos, doing something reckless. Robby calling him âDoctor Doomâ under his breath.
It shouldâve been easy.
But the space between you felt alive.
Charged.
Unforgivable.
He leaned forward at one point, arms on the table, and you caught the flick of his handâ
The ring.
You looked away. Pretended not to care.
âYouâre doing okay?â he asked, voice gentle.
You nodded, lying. âMostly.â
He reached across the table thenâjust for a secondâlike he might touch your hand. He didnât. Your breath caught anyway. And neither of you spoke for a while.
DAY TWELVE â 2:03 PM Your apartment
You couldnât sleep. Again.
The pain meds made your body heavy, but your head was always screaming. Youâd been lying in bed for hours, fully dressed, lights off, scrolling old texts with one hand while your other rubbed slow, nervous circles into the bandages around your ribs.
There was a text from him.
"You okay?"
You stared at it for a full minute before responding.
"No."
You expected silence.
Instead: a knock.
You didnât even ask how he got there so fast. You opened the door and he stepped in like he hadnât been waiting in his car, like he hadnât been hoping youâd need him just enough.
He looked exhausted.
You stepped back. Let him in.
He sat on the edge of the couch. Hands folded. Knees apart. Staring at the wall like it might break the tension.
âI canât sleep anymore,â you whispered. âI keep... hearing it. The crash. The metal. The quiet after.â
Jack swallowed hard. His jaw clenched. âYeah.â
You both went quiet again. It always came in waves with himâthings left unsaid that took up more space than the words ever could. Eventually, he leaned back against the couch cushion, rubbing a hand over his face.
âI think about you all the time,â he said, voice low, wrecked.
You didnât move.
âYouâre in the room when Iâm doing intake. When Iâm changing gloves. When I get in the car and my left hand hits the wheel and I see the ring and I wonder why itâs not you.â
Your breath hitched.
âBut I made a choice,â he said. âAnd I canât undo it without hurting someone whoâs never hurt me.â
You finally turned toward him. âThen why are you here?â
He looked at you, eyes dark and honest. âBecause the second you came back, I couldnât breathe.â
You kissed him.
You donât remember who moved first. If you leaned forward, or if he cupped your face like he used to. But suddenly, you were kissing him. It wasnât sweet. It wasnât gentle. It was devastated.
His mouth was salt and memory and apology.
Your hands curled in his shirt. He was whispering your name against your lips like it still belonged to him.
You pulled away first.
âGo home,â you said, voice cracking.
âDonât do thisââ
âGo home to her, Jack.â
And he did.
He always did.
DAY THIRTEEN â 7:32 PM
You donât eat.
You donât leave your apartment.
You scrub the counter three times and throw out your tea mug because it smells like him.
You sit on the bathroom floor and press a towel to your ribs until the pain brings you back into your body.
You start a text seven times.
You never send it.
DAY SEVENTEEN â 11:46 PM
The takeout was cold. Neither of you had touched it.
Jackâs gaze hadnât left you all night.
Low. Unreadable. He hadnât smiled once.
âYou never stopped loving me,â you said suddenly. Quiet. Dangerous. âDid you?â
His jaw flexed. You pressed harder.
âSay it.â
âI never stopped,â he rasped.
That was all it took.
You surged forward.
His hands found your face. Your hips. Your hair. He kissed you like heâd been holding his breath since the last time. Teeth and tongue and broken sounds in the back of his throat.
Your back hit the wall hard.
âFuckââ he muttered, grabbing your thigh, hitching it up. His fingers pressed into your skin like he didnât care if he left marks. âI canât believe you still taste like this.â
You gasped into his mouth, nails dragging down his chest. âDonât stop.â
He didnât.
He had your clothes off before you could breathe. His mouth moved downâyour throat, your collarbone, between your breasts, tongue hot and slow like he was punishing you for every year he spent wondering if you hated him.
âYou still wear my t-shirt to bed?â he whispered against your breasts voice thick. âYou still get wet thinking about me?â
You whimpered. âJackââ
His name came out like a sin.
He dropped to his knees.
âLet me hear it,â he said, dragging his mouth between your thighs, voice already breathless. âTell me you still want me.â
Your head dropped back.
âI never stopped.â
And then his mouth was on youâfilthy and brutal.
Tongue everywhere, fingers stroking you open while his other hand gripped your thigh like it was the only thing tethering him to this moment.
You were already shaking when he growled, âYou still taste like mine.â
You cried outâhigh and wreckedâand he kept going.
Faster.
Sloppier.
Like he wanted to ruin every memory of anyone else who mightâve touched you.
He made you come with your fingers tangled in his hair, your hips grinding helplessly against his face, your thighs quivering around his jaw while you moaned his name like you couldnât stop.
He stood.
His clothes were off in seconds. Nothing left between you but raw air and your shared history. His cock was thick, flushed, angry against his stomachâdripping with need, twitching every time you breathed.
You stared at it.
At him.
At the ring still on his finger.
He saw your eyes.
Slipped it off.
Tossed it across the room without a word.
Then slammed you against the wall again and slid inside.
No teasing.
No waiting.
Just deep.
You gaspedâtoo full, too fastâand he buried his face in your neck.
âIâm sorry,â he groaned. âI shouldnâtâfuckâI shouldnât be doing this.â
But he didnât stop.
He thrust so deep your eyes rolled back.
It was everything at once.
Your name on his lips like an apology. His hands on your waist like heâd never let go again. Your nails digging into his back like maybe you could keep him this time. He fucked you like heâd never get the chance again. Like he was angry you still had this effect on him. Like he was still in love with you and didnât know how to carry it anymore.
He spat on his fingers and rubbed your clit until you were screaming his name.
âLouder,â he snapped, fucking into you hard. âLet the neighbors hear who makes you come.â
You came again.
And again.
Shaking. Crying. Overstimulated.
âOpen your eyes,â he panted. âLook at me.â
You did.
He was close.
You could feel it in the way he lost rhythm, the way his grip got desperate, the way he whimpered your name like he was begging.
âInside,â you whispered, legs wrapped around him. âDonât pull out.â
He froze.
Then nodded, forehead dropping to yours.
âI love you,â he breathed.
And then he cameâdeep, full, shaking inside you with a broken moan so raw it felt holy.
After, you lay together on the floor. Sweat-slicked. Bruised. Silent.
You didnât speak.
Neither did he.
Because you both knewâ
This changed everything.
And nothing.
DAY EIGHTEEN â 7:34 AM
Sunlight creeps in through the slats of your blinds, painting golden stripes across the hardwood floor, your shoulder, his back.
Jackâs asleep in your bed. Heâs on his side, one arm flung across your stomach like instinct, like a claim. His hand rests just above your hipâfingers twitching every now and then, like some part of him knows this moment isnât real. Or at least, not allowed. Your body aches in places that feel worshipped.Â
You donât feel guilty.
Yet.
You stare at the ceiling. You havenât spoken in hours.
Not since he whispered âI love youâ while he was still inside you.
Not since he collapsed onto your chest like it might save him.
Not since he kissed your shoulder and didnât say goodbye.
You shift slowly beneath the sheets. His hand tightens.Â
Like he knows.
Like he knows.
You stay still. You donât want to be the one to move first. Because if you move, the night ends. If you move, the spell breaks. And Jack Abbot goes back to being someone else's.
Eventually, he stirs.
His breath shifts against your collarbone.
Thenâ
âMorning.â
His voice is low. Sleep-rough. Familiar.
It hurts worse than silence. You force a soft hum, not trusting your throat to form words.
He lifts his head a little.
Looks at you. Hair mussed. Eyes unreadable. Bare skin still flushed from where he touched you hours ago. You expect regret. But all you see is heartbreak.
âShouldnât have stayed,â he says softly.
You close your eyes.
âI know.â
He sits up slowly. Sheets falling around his waist.
You follow the line of his back with your gaze. Every scar. Every knot in his spine. The curve of his shoulder blades you used to trace with your fingers when you were twenty-something and stupid enough to think love was enough.
He doesnât look at you when he says it.
âI told her I was working overnight.â
You feel your breath catch.
âShe called me at midnight,â he adds. âI didnât answer.â
You sit up too. Tug the blanket around your chest like modesty matters now.
âIs this the part where you tell me it was a mistake?â
Jack doesnât answer right away.
ThenââNo,â he says. âItâs the part where I tell you I donât know how to go home.â
You both sit there for a long time.
Naked.
Wordless.
Surrounded by the echo of what you used to be.
You finally speak.
âDo you love her?â
Silence.
âI respect her,â he says. âSheâs good. Steady. Nothingâs ever hard with her.â
You swallow. âThatâs not an answer.â
Jack turns to you then. Eyes tired. Voice raw.
âIâve never stopped loving you.â
It lands in your chest like a sucker punch.
Because you know. You always knew. But now youâve heard it again. And it doesnât fix a goddamn thing.
âI canât do this again,â you whisper.
Jack nods. âI know.â
âBut Iâll keep doing it anyway,â you add. âIf you let me.â
His jaw tightens. His throat works around something thick.
âI donât want to leave.â
âBut you will.â
You both know he has to.
And he does.
He dresses slowly.
Doesnât kiss you.
Doesnât say goodbye.
He finds his ring.
Puts it back on.
And walks out.
The door closes.
And you break.
Because thisâthis is the cost of almost.
8:52 AM
You donât move for twenty-three minutes after the door shuts.
You donât cry.
You donât scream.
You just exist.
Your chest rises and falls beneath the blanket. That same spot where he laid his head a few hours ago still feels heavy. You think if you touch it, itâll still be warm.
You donât.
You donât want to prove yourself wrong. Your body aches everywhere. The kind of ache that isnât just from the crash, or the stitches, or the way he held your hips so tightly youâre going to bruise. Itâs the kind of ache you canât ice. Itâs the kind that lingers in your lungs.
Eventually, you sit up.
Your legs feel unsteady beneath you. Your knees shake as you gather the clothes scattered across the floor. His shirtâthe one you wore while he kissed your throat and said âI love youâ into your skinâgets tossed in the hamper like it doesnât still smell like him. Your hand lingers on it.
You shove it deeper.
Harder.
Like burying it will stop the memory from clawing up your throat.
You make coffee you wonât drink.
You wash your face three times and still look like someone who got left behind.
You open your phone.
One new text.
âDid you eat?â
You donât respond. Because what do you say to a man who left you raw and split open just to slide a ring back on someone elseâs finger? You try to leave the apartment that afternoon.Â
You make it as far as the sidewalk.
Then you turn around and vomit into the bushes.
You donât sleep that night.
You lie awake with your fingers curled into your sheets, shaking.
Your thighs ache.
Your mouth is dry.
You dream of him onceâhis hand pressed to your sternum like a prayer, whispering âdonât let go.â
When you wake, your chest is wet with tears and you donât remember crying.
DAY TWENTY TWOâ 4:17 PM Your apartment
It starts slow.
A dull ache in your upper abdomen. Like a pulled muscle or bad cramp. You ignore it. Youâve been ignoring everything. Pain means youâre healing, right?
But by 4:41 p.m., youâre on the floor of your bathroom, knees to your chest, drenched in sweat. Youâre cold. Shaking. The pain is blooming nowâhot and deep and wrong. You try to stand. Your vision goes white. Then youâre on your back, blinking at the ceiling.
And everything goes quiet.
THE PITT â 5:28 PM
Youâre unconscious when the EMTs wheel you in. Vitals unstable. BP crashing. Internal bleeding suspected. It takes Jack ten seconds to recognize you.
One to feel like heâs going to throw up.
âMid-thirties female. No trauma this week, but old injuries. Seatbelt bruise still present. Suspected splenic rupture, possible bleed out. BPâs eighty over forty and falling.â
Jack is already moving.
He steps into the trauma bay like a man walking into fire.
Itâs you.
God. Itâs you again.
Worse this time.
âHer name is [Y/N],â he says tightly, voice rough. âWe need OR on standby. Now.â
6:01 PM
Youâre barely conscious as they prep you for CT. Jack is beside you, masked, gloved, sterile. But his voice trembles when he says your name. You blink up at him.
Barely there.
âHurts,â you rasp.
He leans close, ignoring protocol.
âI know. Iâve got you. Stay with me, okay?â
6:27 PM
The scan confirms it.
Grade IV splenic rupture. Bleeding into the abdomen.
Youâre going into surgery.
Fast.
You grab his hand before they wheel you out. Your grip is weak. But desperate.
You look at himââI donât want to die thinking I meant nothing.â
His face breaks. And then they take you away.
Jack doesnât move.
Just stands there in blood-streaked gloves, shaking.
Because this time, he might actually lose you.
And he doesnât know if heâll survive that twice.
9:12 PM Post-op recovery, ICU step-down
You come back slowly. The drugs are heavy. Your throat is dry. Your ribs feel tighter than before. Thereâs a new weight in your abdomen, dull and throbbing. You try to lift your hand and fail. Your IV pole beeps at you like it's annoyed.
Then thereâs a shadow.
Jack.
You try to say his name.
It comes out as a rasp. He jerks his head up like heâs been underwater.
He looks like hell. Eyes bloodshot. Hands shaking. Heâs still in scrubsâstained, wrinkled, exhausted.
âHey,â he breathes, standing fast. His hand wraps gently around yours. You let it. You donât have the strength to fight.
âYou scared the shit out of me,â he whispers.
You blink at him.
There are tears in your eyes. You donât know if theyâre yours or his.
âWhatâŚ?â you rasp.
âYour spleen ruptured,â he says quietly. âYou were bleeding internally. We almost lost you in the trauma bay. Again.â
You blink slowly.
âYou looked empty,â he says, voice cracking. âStill. Your eyes were open, but you werenât there. And I thoughtâfuck, I thoughtââ
He stops. You squeeze his fingers.
Itâs all you can do.
Thereâs a long pause.
Heavy.
ThenââShe called.â
You donât ask who.
You donât have to.
Jack stares at the floor.
âI told her I couldnât talk. That I was... handling a case. That Iâd call her after.â
You close your eyes.
You want to sleep.
You want to scream.
âSheâs starting to ask questions,â he adds softly.
You open your eyes again. âThen lie better.â
He flinches.
âIâm not proud of this,â he says.
You look at him like he just told you the sky was blue. âThen leave.â
âI canât.â
âYou did last time.â
Jack leans forward, his forehead almost touching the edge of your mattress. His voice is low. Cracked. âI canât lose you again.â
Youâre quiet for a long time.
Then you ask, so small he barely hears it:
âIf Iâd died... would you have told her?â
His head lifts. Your eyes meet. And he doesnât answer.
Because you already know the truth.
He stands, slowly, scraping the chair back like the sound might stall his momentum. âI should let you sleep,â he adds.
âDonât,â you say, voice raw. âNot yet.â
He freezes. Then nods.
He moves back to the chair, but instead of sitting, he leans over the bed and presses his lips to your foreheadâgently, like heâs scared itâll hurt. Like heâs scared youâll vanish again. You donât close your eyes. You donât let yourself fall into it.
Because kisses are easy.
Staying is not.
DAY TWENTY FOUR â 9:56 AM Dana wheels you to discharge. Your hands are clenched tight around the armrests, fingers stiff. Jackâs nowhere in sight. Good. You canât decide if you want to see himâor hit him.
âYou got someone picking you up?â Dana asks, handing off the chart.
You nod. âUber.â
She doesnât push. Just places a hand on your shoulder as you standâslow, steady.
âBe gentle with yourself,â she says. âYou survived twice.â
DAY THIRTY ONE â 8:07 PM
The knock comes just after sunset.
Youâre barefoot. Still in the clothes you wore to your follow-up appointmentâa hoodie two sizes too big, a bandage under your ribs that still stings every time you twist too fast. Thereâs a cup of tea on the counter you havenât touched. The air in the apartment is thick with something you canât name. Something worse than dread.
You donât move at first. Just stare at the door.
Thenâagain.
Three soft raps.
Like heâs asking permission. Like he already knows he shouldnât be here. You walk over slowly, pulse loud in your ears. Your fingers hesitate at the lock.
âDonât,â you whisper to yourself. You open the door anyway.
Jack stands there. Gray hoodie. Dark jeans. Heâs holding a plastic grocery bag, like this is something casual, like heâs a neighbor stopping by, not the man who left you in pieces across two hospital beds.
Your voice comes out hoarse. âYou shouldnât be here.â
âI know,â he says, quiet. âBut I think I shouldâve been here a long time ago.â
You donât speak. You step aside.
He walks in like he doesnât expect to stay. Doesnât look around. Doesnât sit. Just stands there, holding that grocery bag like it might shield him from what heâs about to say.
âI told her,â he says.
You blink. âWhat?â
He lifts his gaze to yours. âLast night. Everything. The hospital. That night. The truth.â
Your jaw tenses. âAnd what, she just⌠let you walk away?â
He sets the bag on your kitchen counter. Itâs shaking slightly in his grip. âNo. She cried. Screamed. Told me to get outâ
You feel yourself pulling away from him, emotionally, physicallyâlike your bodyâs trying to protect you before your heart caves in again. âJesus, Jack.â
âI know.â
âYou donât get to do this. You donât get to come back with your half-truths and trauma and expect me to just be here.â
âI didnât come expecting anything.â
You whirl back to him, raw. âThen why did you come?â
His voice doesnât rise. But it cuts. âBecause you almost died. Again. Because Iâve spent the last week realizing that no one else has ever felt like home.â
You shake your head. âThat doesnât change the fact that you left me when I needed you. That I begged you to choose peace. And you chose chaos. Every goddamn time.â
He closes the distance slowly, but not too close. Not yet.
âYou think I donât live with that?â His voice drops.Â
You falter, tears threatening. âThen why didnât you try harder?â
âI thought youâd moved on.â
âI tried,â you say, voice cracking. âI tried so hard to move on, to let someone else in, to build something new with hands that were still learning how to stop reaching for you. But every man I metâit was like eating soup with a fork. Iâd sit across from them, smiling, nodding, pretending I wasnât starving, pretending I didnât notice the emptiness. They didnât know me. Not really. Not the version of me that stayed up folding your shirts, tracking your deployment cities like constellations, holding the weight of a future you kept promising but never chose. Not the me that kept the lights on when you disappeared into silence. Not the me that made excuses for your absence until it started sounding like prayer.â
Jackâs face shiftsâsubtle at first, then like a crack running straight through the foundation. His jaw tightens. His mouth opens. Closes. When he finally speaks, his voice is rough around the edges, as if the admission itself costs him something he doesnât have to spare.
âI didnât think I deserved to come back,â he says. âNot after the way I left. Not after how long I stayed gone. Not after all the ways I chose silence over showing up.â
You stare at him, breath shallow, chest tight.
âMaybe you didnât,â you say quietly, not to hurt himâbut because itâs true. And it hangs there between you, heavy and undeniable.
The silence that follows is thick. Stretching. Bruising.
Then, just when you think he might finally say something that unravels everything all over again, he gestures to the bag heâs still clutching like it might anchor him to the floor.
âI brought soup,â he says, voice low and awkward. âAnd real teaâthe kind you like. Not the grocery store crap. And, um⌠a roll of gauze. The soft kind. I remembered you said the hospital ones made you break out, and I thoughtâŚâ
He trails off, unsure, like heâs realizing mid-sentence how pitiful it all sounds when laid bare.
You blink, hard. Trying to keep the tears in their lane.
âYou brought first aid and soup?â
He nods, half a breath catching in his throat. âYeah. I didnât know what else youâd let me give you.â
Thereâs a beat.
A heartbeat.
Then it hits you.
Thatâs what undoes youânot the apology, not the fact that he told her, not even the way heâs looking at you like heâs seeing a ghost he never believed heâd get to touch again. Itâs the soup. Itâs the gauze. Itâs the goddamn tea. Itâs the way Jack Abbot always came bearing supplies when he didnât know how to offer himself.
You sink down onto the couch too fast, knees buckling like your body canât hold the weight of all the things youâve swallowed just to stay upright this week.
Elbows on your thighs. Face in your hands.
Your voice breaks as it comes out:
âWhat am I supposed to do with you?â
Itâs not rhetorical. Itâs not flippant.
Itâs shattered. Exhausted. Full of every version of love thatâs ever let you down. And he knows it.
And for a long, breathless momentâyou donât move.
Jack walks over. Kneels down. His hands hover, not touching, just there.
You look at him, eyes full of every scar he left you with. âYou said you'd come back once. You didnât.â
âI came back late,â he says. âBut Iâm here now. And Iâm staying.â
Your voice drops to a whisper. âDonât promise me that unless you mean it.â
âI do.â
You shake your head, hard, like youâre trying to physically dislodge the ache from your chest.Â
âIâm still mad,â you say, voice cracking.
Jack doesnât flinch. Doesnât try to defend himself. He just nods, slow and solemn, like heâs rehearsed this moment a hundred times in his head. âYouâre allowed to be,â he says quietly. âIâll still be here.â
Your throat tightens.
âI donât trust you,â you whisper, and it tastes like blood in your mouthâlike betrayal and memory and all the nights you cried yourself to sleep because he was halfway across the world and you still loved him anyway.
âI know,â he says. âThen let me earn it.â
You donât speak. You canât. Your whole body is tremblingânot with rage, but with grief. With the ache of wanting something so badly and being terrified youâll never survive getting it again.
Jack moves slowly. Doesnât close the space between you entirely, just enough. Enough that his handârough and familiarâreaches out and rests on your knee. His palm is warm. Grounding. Careful.
Your breath catches. Your shoulders tense. But you donât pull away.
You couldnât if you tried.
His voice drops even lower, like if he speaks any louder, the whole thing will break apart.
âIâve got nowhere else to be,â he says.
He pauses. Swallows hard. His eyes glisten in the low light.
âI put the ring in a drawer. Told her the truth. That Iâm in love with someone else. That Iâve always been.â
You look up, sharply. âYou told her that?â
He nods. Doesnât blink. âShe said she already knew. That sheâd known for a long time.â
Your chest tightens again, this time from something different. Not anger. Not pain. Something that hurts in its truth.
He goes on. And this partâthis part wrecks him.
âYou know what the worst part is?â he murmurs. âShe didnât deserve that. She didnât deserve to love someone who only ever gave her the version of himself that was pretending to be healed.â
You donât interrupt. You just watch him come undone. Gently. Quietly.
âShe was kind,â he says, voice barely above a whisper. âGood. Steady. The kind of person who makes things simple. Who doesnât expect too much, or ask questions when you go quiet. And even with all of thatâeven with the life we were buildingâI couldnât stop waiting for the sound of your voice.â
You blink hard, breath catching somewhere between your lungs and your ribs.
âIâd check my phone,â he continues. âAt night. In the morning. In the middle of conversations. Iâd look out the window like maybe youâd just⌠show up. Like the universe owed me one more shot. One more chance to fix the thing I broke when I walked away from the one person who ever made me feel like home.â
You canât stop crying now. Quiet tears. The kind that come when thereâs nothing left to scream.
âI hated you,â you whisper. âI hated you for a long time.â
He nods, eyes on yours. âSo did I.â
And somehow, thatâs what softens you.
Because you canât hate him through this. You canât pretend this version of him isnât bleeding too.
You exhale shakily. âI donât know if I can do this again.â
âIâm not asking you to,â he says, âNot all at once. Just⌠let me sit with you. Let me hold space. Let me remind you who I wasâwho I could beâif you let me stay this time.â
And god help youâsome fragile, tired, still-broken part of you wants to believe him.
âIf I say yes... if I let you in again...â
He waits. Doesnât breathe.
âYou donât get to leave next time,â you whisper. âNot without looking me in the eye.â
Jack nods.
âI wonât.â
You reach for his hand. Lace your fingers together.And for the first time since everything shatteredâYou let yourself believe he might stay.
ââ -> // SOA Masterlist// <-â â
(each can be read as a stand alone or as a series, and I will do my best to keep them listed here in chronological order)
⥠Fun and Responsibility
⥠Princess Band-aids Can Fix Broken Hearts
⥠Muffin Dragon and Blue Bunny (new)
⥠Hopscotch Headache
⥠Too Young For Boys
⥠Freedom and Florals
⥠Boxes and Orange Juice
⥠Flower Crowns
⥠Flower Crowns Pt.2
Daughter to Clay and Gemma
There is a 14 year age gap between her and Jax she was born a year after JT died đ
Works as an assistant to the town florist Mrs Miller she is very stern and disapproving of the club and their activities.
Mrs Miller and the florists v
Her parents, Jax, and all of the club are very protective of her she doesn't hang around the club house much outside of lockdowns and charity events.
She has her own apartment on the quieter side of town, which she has turned into her own cosy sanctuary, and occasionally used as a place for an outer chartermember to lay their head, wash their clothes, catch a shower and some food as they only have 2 dorm rooms at the club.
(As I think that's what the family members of the club would do its just expected of them I think, and as she is the daughter of a founding member and the president anyone who stays are very respectful)
Her apartment inspo:
Chibbs, Bobby, Tig, Otto, and Piney are like her Uncles as they watched her grow up from a baby and often watched her when her parents asked.
Out of all the other club members, excluding her dad and brother, she is closer to Juice as when he was prospecting he was told to help her move out into her apartment and whenever the florists had a big order she'd often borrow the club van and he'd be the one to drop it off and stay for a chat.
If you have any questions or want to request a scenario about Katherine, feel free to put them in my ask box. I'll do my best to answer them as quickly as I can.
yeah yeah fuck me, jack abbot x f!doctor!reader
dr abbot finds your resume and thinks you are leaving the pitt - absolute disgusting and pathetic behaviour ensues, its all very endearing.
~~~
from the office of the author: DOn't even LOOK at me, I'm embarrassed. the pitt consumes my every waking thought so I'm going to make that everyone else's problem :)
this is my very first fic!!! it is a work of fiction!!!!! i do not know anything about being a doctor!!!!!! inaccuracies are none of my damn business!!!!!!!!!!
i canât help but love the emotional constipation of jack and robby in this show, and i was feeling inspired by jack, so this is my attempt at unpacking a bit of it. reader is indeed reader, but i have formed a bit of a character in my head, so pls forgive me she does get a last name late in the piece. hope you enjoy!!!!! maybe more soon!!!!! <3
warnings: cussing, jack being pathetic, snooping based behaviours, mentions of loss of bodily function/traumatic injuries, mentions of war, mentions of covid, a spider may or not be guilty of a crime, miscommunication i fear, bad grammar from yours truely, bit o' angst
word count: 2.1k
Dr. Jack Abbot thought he was doing a very fine job not staring at you all shift long, thank you very much. It had gotten harder since youâd changed the way youâd done your hair, letting the blonde grow out. When the lights hit the top of your two fastidiously tied french braids it set the crown of your head on fire, like the sun itself sat behind you in some kind of imitation of a halo. angel indeed. Youâd pierced your left ear again, yet another little golden hoop in the soft shell of cartilage at the very top. Every now and then, he would see you reach for it, as if to scratch an itch, but catch yourself before you could touch the still healing wound. The smallest, prettiest crease would form between your eyebrows, and your hand would curl into a tight fist of frustration. You were going to be the absolute death of him.
The last trauma had been difficult; damage to the neck not only making finding an airway close to impossible, but suggested a grim future for the patients ability to move as he once did. Walking was now in question. Fucking e-scooters, they were starting to offer up more victims than motorbikes. It had been an excruciating emotional dance to explain to the teenagerâs recently widowed mother, that her 15 year oldâs life would now be dramatically different, that she was going to have to take on a new burden. The quiet, contained grief in her eyes, not breaking contact with his, was just about all he could take for this shift.
It was easy then, to justify a little bit of gratuitous selfishness in front of the board; the easiest place to catch a glimpse of you. This shift youâd remained calm and switched on, as you always were, but something was clearly scratching at your mind. Standing dutifully behind Jack as he spoke to the mother, gently answering her questions, offering sincere condolences, introducing her to Kiara had all been done with perfect form. but when it was done, you had all but fled back to the nursesâ station, logging onto one of the computers at break neck speed.
This is where you now sat, chin resting on your linked fingers, eyes in a predatory narrow. Without meaning to, without really realising it was happening, Jack let himself drift slowly around the desk. On his journey closer to you he let his hands fall into nonchalant, non-suspicious motion. Adjusting the cord of the landline, running his finger over some forms to see if they needed his signature, flicking on a tablet to consider the chart on it. He didnât really have the time to think too hard about it, but some small voice in the back of his head told him he looked like a fucking idiot. Jesus Christ, heâd committed now.
To get a decent angle of your screen he would have to step back a little from the desk, making it pretty damn obvious he was snooping. If it was only a glance, just a few seconds, he should be in the clear. Mindful not to get to close (you seemed to have eyes in the back of your head when it came to him, probably since he was your attending), he took one last scan of the room to check no one was clocking every last shuffle he was taking.
Pursing his lips with arms crossed tightly across his chest, he stepped back swiftly, eyes flicking down your screen. The majority of it was taken up by a word document, your name is bold letters across the top. Underneath was a jumble of dot points, places and years and accolades and societiesâa resume?
A resumeâŚyour resume. You were leaving?
His heart went somersaulting into his stomach, bouncing off his ribs on the way down.
When had you decided this? Where were you going? When were you going to tell him?
Jack felt anger and grief and confusion and jealousy all at once in his veins like some kind of poisonous cocktail. What was he, some kind of teenager? What had he ever done to deserve an explanation from you? You, who was so wonderful and so clever and so funny and so so beautiful. You who had only ever weathered his grumpiness and sour expressions and poorly timed criticism with grace and patience. You whoâd never figured out how to be a pessimist, who never let the bad days win. The thought of your absence was more painful than he could have ever expected â it scared him goddamn shitless.
âDr Abbot?â
Dr Ellis had materialised out of nothing on the other side of the desk, one eyebrow cocked. Jack nearly tripped over his own feet to get away from you and the scalding sensation of shame burning across his face, âYa?â
âUh, can I get your eyes on a case in South 15? Weâve got a 10 year old, lethargic, sweaty, confused. Her parents are insistent she hasnât ingested anything.â
Your head snapped up, finally divorced from whatever hypnotic pull the resume had on you.
âDoes she have control over her extremities, fingers?â
Ellis frowned, âShe was moving them a lot, almost obsessively. I figured if might just be a reaction to the confusion and being in a strange place.â
You stood in one fluid motion, hands quick to grab a pair of gloves, feet quick to dance around the station to get to Ellisâ side.
âMind if I join? I think we need to look for a spider bite. Funnel-weavers are usuallyââ
And with that the pair of you were gone, walking shoulder to shoulder into the fray like soldiers in arms, conversing in low, practised tones. Ready to tackle whatever the inside of that room held; the scariness of having to diagnose quickly, the stress of terrified parents breathing down your neck. It didnât matter how bitter-of-heart Jack had become after all the years of carnage, there was still a part of him that sang at the sight of a well-oiled team. It was selfish, he considered, to believe your leaving would effect just him. Every last doctor, nurse, support worker, radiologist, technician, transport aide, frequent flyer and desk clerk would mourn your loss. Perhaps the endearing Mel King most of all. She had taken to your cheerful demeanour and calm teaching style like someone drowning does to oxygen. In the time Langdon had been a voluntary inpatient, you had been a much needed rock in the stormy wake of that revelation. Another loss could send her off kilter again, and the ER needed herâŚbadly.
So where exactly were you planning to run off to? Surely you wouldnât go overseas again, not after what had brought you home the last time...
Morality was telling him to just walk away, to busy himself in some problem that likely was currently yearning for his help.
They hadnât reached out had they? Could they convince you to go back?
He wished Bridget would just call for him, that Shen would bustle in with all his careful questions. But wishing would not make it so. And he had fought so long, all his life. The older he became, the easier it was to just surrender. To drift. The computer was about to fall asleep, locking it to the world. One swift movement of the mouse sealed his fate. He was a shameless snoop, a betrayer of privacy - your privacy.
It couldnât be denied, the resume was impressive. Very, very impressive. How many graduating honours could one 30 something year old have? And the places youâd been, youâd practised - how many names could you possibly stack next to each other? Some of them he hadnât even seen with his eyes, even after all the time in the camouflage pants that chaffed like you wouldnât believe. Youâd seen the very worst Covid had served up in Mexico City and Rio, you had been at the very front in Ukraine, in Afghanistan, traipsed all the way across North Africa and South America and just about every island in Indonesia. Pittsburgh, even with its fair share of tragedy, felt so foreign on the page next to all the adventure and danger. It would be easy to think that you had simply become bored, and wished once again to go somewhere that you could stem the flow of blood. Jack thought the blue beret would match the new blonde hair quite nicely.
âDr Abbot?â
He froze. That voice. How long had he been staring at the carefully typed words, wishing they would reveal an answer?
There was no way, no way at all that he could gracefully and silently retreat from this one. He was elbow deep in the cookie jar, no better than a child, spited at not being told the grown upâs secret. He looked behind himself with humiliating slowness, feeling infinitely small and ashamed. The small crease between your brows had deepened into a valley he could not dig himself out of.
âDr James.â He said, his voice sounding all together too loud and too far away, âIf you are walking away from a computer in any circumstance other than a complete emergency, you must log off, there is confidential information of patients that must be protected from wandering eyes.â
âWandering eyes?â You let a laugh escape, entirely hollow.
And then, with more steel then he had ever heard, âCan I speak with you privately for a minute?â
âFine.â He said, straightening with an angry click from his back. Too old for all this high school shit. You made a point to lean past him, and log off with a few aggressively passive aggressive snaps of the keys.
He trailed behind your long, mechanical strides, deeply unsettled by the stiff set of your shoulders. Maybe youâd developed the ability to be negative in the time to took to stomp from the nursesâ station to the family room door, which you promptly shoulder charged open. Once it was safely closed behind both doctors, you whirled on him.
âWhat the hell were you doing looking at that?â
âLike I said, you need to log offââ
âBullshit, Jack!â You looked wild, eyes impossibly wide, âThere was no reason for your face to be 2 inches from the screen to log me out. Or have your eyes completely given out since the start of shift?â
If there was no way to dodge the bullet, he may as well try swallowing it, âWhat exactly do you plan on doing with that document? You gonna flee the country again? Run from all us sorry fucks here in the Pitt?â
You recoiled, like the venom in his words had actually struck your skin. Jack watched them sink in, the sizzle of their marks.
You shook your head once, looking down at your sneakers, the 10-year-too-old linoleum floors.
âI canât believe you. I cannot believe you.â The words were pulled straight from your chest at the end of meat hooks.
Jack opened his mouth to strike again, but your gaze shot upwards and locked onto his. The attacks died on his tongue.
âAll I have done since I set foot in here was try and get close to you Jack Abbot. I have offered you my full attention, my utter respect and confidence and trust, all my effort, all my energy, everything I have.â You took an incredulous step backwards, unsteadied by your own words and the weight of them now sitting between you, âThere is nothing I wouldnât do for you, I would ride right on back into all the shit and misery all over again if that is what you asked of me.â
Something that looked frighteningly like a tear slipped down your cheek and off your chin.
âAnd what do you offer in return? You push and push and push me away.â The words wobbled now, exhausted from the revelation.
âWhat right do you have,â You gasped, âto now act betrayed about this? To declare youâve always cared? Like its me thatâs hurting you?!â
Killshot.
Jackâs mouth pressed into a hard line, a terrible burning spreading through the back of his eyes, a horrible pressure on his chest. All that time he had been pretending not to look at you, you had been staring straight through him into his very soul. Seeing every ugly inch of his insides. He wanted to run, he wanted to throw up, he wanted to fall to his knees and beg for forgiveness at your feet.
Bridget rapped sharply on the door of the window, her face grave, âCar pileup on the highway, multiple traumas, 4 minutes out.â
By the time he turned back to you, your face had been schooled back into cool neutrality, a deep breath filling your lungs. Before Jack could reach out and touch you, you were gone, like you were never even there.
~~~~~
um, so yeah I guess? more soon! x
Pairing: Dr. Michael Robinavitch x Doctor!Reader (fem) đ Warnings: Fluff, family chaos, dad jokes so bad they might be a medical emergency, light language, mentions of past teen pregnancy, one (1) Belgian Malinois with too much energy, and an 8-year-old attempting crazy scientific experiments. đ Series: The Robinavitch Chronicles
𩺠Summary: Welcome to the barely controlled chaos of the Robinavitch householdâwhere the operating room is somehow less stressful than breakfast time. Dr. Y/N is a badass senior resident, Michael a genius attending with the patience of a saint (most days), and their three kidsâSawyer (teen with a sass level over 9000), Alex (mad scientist in training), and Spencer (tiny terror in a tutu)âkeep them on their toes. Add in Kojo, their overprotective Belgian Malinois who thinks heâs part babysitter, part security detail, and youâve got a family sitcom disguised as a medical drama. Expect: snack-fueled standoffs, bubble bath bribes, science experiments gone rogue, and enough love to keep this whole circus together.
Paging all readers: Things are about to get adorably unhinged.
(Coming soon...)
Author note: You can share and tag me, but I forbid anyone from stealing my work and making it yours. I put my heart and soul into coming up with this series. Unfortunately, I have witnessed creators coming across this problem.
Episodes:
a series / masterlist of works based on being the only female mechanic at TM and everyone being in love with you. Reblogs, comments and feedback are very highly appreciated. Please feel free to send ideas my way or inbox me (even if just for anonymous feedback). Hope you all enjoy!
The OG Post
Being the only female mechanic at TM and everyone being in love with you.
The favorite.
A customer gets too bold and puts hands on you, suddenly everyone is reminded you're untouchable when the guys step in.
Brain rot so bad Iâm posting on Tumblrđ
Word count: 1.2k
Heâs a stubborn alcoholic with depression who copes by being rude or otherwise sarcastic, you test his patience SO MUCH. He knows he hates you, thatâs about it, but also he finds a good deal of fun in goading you and bantering with you whenever youâre around. This man is a handful, and heâs mean, and he has literally no patience for bs.
Idk how you win him over, the logistics donât matter rn Iâm going nutty thinking about him. Imo I love the whole co-mentor thingy, anything that forces him to be around you bc otherwise heâs off hiding somewhere moping. Like imagine being depressed together, fighting over your different tastes in drinks or coping. Heâs hugging a whole bottle of liquor or maybe wine if itâs fancy enough and heâs scrutinizing your fruity cocktail like itâs any of his business.
Especially love the thought of getting drunk with him, at this point he just falls asleep when heâs buzzed but heâs trying to stay awake just to bicker and get as much of a reaction from you as he can. The only time he shuts up is if you roast tf out of him, heâd slump down into a chair or on the couch mumbling something barely coherent and then heâs out like a light.
Or, even better, youâre both sleepy drunks and start nodding off at the bar. You barely remember the walk to bed, all you know is somehow youâre still arguing with Haymitch. He throws himself onto the mattress, your mattress, both to piss you off and because heâs too burnt out to bother walking to his own bed across the hall. You flop down next to him and then all of a sudden youâre waking up hungover and half hugging that fool. The both of you freak out to find youâre in bed with one another, fearing the worst, and eventually having to accept the harsh reality that you spent the whole night cuddling and nothing more.
He doesnât just refuse to admit he likes you, heâs literally oblivious to even the idea of it. No he definitely doesnât enjoy your company, and he definitely doesnât seek you out, and thereâs no way he would ever think about you outside of your brief and unfortunate interactions. But then you start joking around talking about some pretty celebrity or a handsome victor from another district and suddenly heâs so defensive.
âHer? Sheâs two faced.â
âHim? Heâs not even average.â
âThem? Theyâre frugal.â
He canât even begin to realize heâs getting jealous, heâs too busy trying to shoot down all your compliments to these half baked crushes.
But if you compliment him he thinks youâre joking. You say he looks handsome and heâs all âHaha, very funny, yâknow you look good too- with your mouth shut.â Heâs gonna go for the jugular, but also he finds it getting harder and harder to insult you. Since when did your annoying smile become something he could tolerate? He must still be drunk..
Youâve wormed your way into his life and his head and suddenly youâre over at his house in the Victorâs Village, cleaning up for him while talking about self care and how he deserves it. Youâre infuriating, and yet his lawn is trimmed and his walkway is clear of weeds and even his bookshelves are free of dust- and maybe he should go outside for a bit today and get some fresh air.
Youâre tidying everything up and then heâs bringing you some old Knick Knacks, keeping track of your hobbies so he can leave you gifts, forcing you to sit down and relax for a minute between daily stressors. You call him an enabler and the laughter that follows makes your heart all fuzzy in the worst way. Every time you do something for him he thanks you in a way that makes it clear he didnât think anyone would ever do this for him. And when you thank him for his gifts, his occasional reality checks, and his unwilling hospitality, he canât help but feel more proud than he should that something he did held even an ounce of substance in your life.
How do you even confess??? Do you??? Itâs like one second nothing was there and the next you both just agreed that you were a thing, end of discussion. Heâs yours, youâre his. Youâve basically moved in at this point, and youâve been egging him on and showing him heâs worth the effort, and itâs starting to get through his thick skull that maybe thereâs worth in improvement. You donât fix him, as I said before, heâs stubborn, but he finds his own rationale getting weaker and weaker each time he tries to argue why he should go out for drinks tonight. And then when things break and youâre telling him just what he means to you, heâs finding himself falling into you like a damn safety net.
And once heâs got you he is not letting go.
Protective is one thing, this man is clingy. Like Velcro. But heâs a brat and heâs not going to let you tell him how needy he is, itâs just a coincidence that heâs always by your side. Heâll say heâs âkeeping you in lineâ its âyour faultâ because youâre in his way, but you both know heâs been following you around on his own fruition. Heâs attached to your hip at this point, literally. He has a particular affinity though, and thatâs hugging you from behind. He just comes up like he owns the place and wraps his arms around your midsection, shoving his face into the back of your neck with the biggest sigh he can muster. And if you reach up to play with his hair thatâs it, heâs going to drag you to whatever couch is closest and have an impromptu nap session.
Also did I mention heâs petty? Because he is. And heâs annoying unlike anything. You go to sit down in a chair? Heâs already seated in it, patting for you to come into his lap. You want to try a bite of his food? Heâs making you take it from his mouth. You need to shower? Heâs asking to come so he can keep you company. And if you let him join you, heâs 100% sitting there watching while going on about how âyou missed a spotâ just to see how irritated you can get.
Letting him come into the bathroom with you when you shower is like making a deal with the devil. This man is going above and beyond for your attention while youâre trying to focus on the task at hand. Heâs definitely offering to help you out, saying he can scrub your back for you and all that, itâs up to you whether you let him join or kick him out.
Either way after youâre done heâs so soft and tender, wrapping you in a towel and drying your face off, saying you look like a drowned rat while also telling you that youâre the prettiest thing heâs ever seen. He ruffles your hair with the towel just to squeeze it around you and grab you by your waist, pulling you until you kiss him. But if youâre still mad at him heâll keep drying you off and messing with you until he can get you to crack a smile, and then heâs peppering kisses all over your cheeks as you push his face away.
Heâs a nuisance, but heâs your nuisance, and you wouldnât have it any other way.
Ummm anywho thatâs all I got đ
A series Masterlist
Series Summary: Bradley Bradshaw broke your heart five years ago when he made it abundantly clear that he couldnât support how selfishly dedicated you needed to be in order to chase your law degree. Five years on and youâre representing Bradleyâs soon to be ex-wifeâŚ..and youâre just about willingly to do anything to ruin his life.
Series Warnings: Ex reader x Bradley Bradshaw. Revengeful, spiteful Reader. Hero Complex Jake Seresin x Reader. Rated R themes (smut) ANGST!
Prologue: {Karma} Whatâs funnier than finding out the love of your life is getting divorced? Representing the clearly disgruntled soon to be ex-wife.
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A quick introduction. Hi y'all, my name is Phoebe (she/her), Iâm 22 years old, biromantic asexual and like my username suggests, I am a big ass nerd so I write. I write for all my favourite fandoms because I like serotonin :)
I have an Instagram account y'all are free to go follow if you want, it's @/justabigassnerd just like on here and tbh it's a bit of a mess but hey it's just like me.
Below I've attached links to my request details and masterlists to hopefully make navigating my page a little easier. My asks/DM's are always open so y'all are always free to ask me questions to get to know me or request things or hell just scream about fandom stuff.
All the love and good vibes <3
Side blog - @justabigassnerdreads
I DO NOT consent to my writing being copied/posted anywhere else (yes that includes any use of ChatGPT or any similar AI thing DO NOT do it)
REQUEST STUFF (subject to change):
Who I write for
Guidelines
MY MAIN MASTERLISTS:
Marvel
Peaky Blinders
TASM!Peter Parker
Top Gun
Mission Impossible
OLD MASTERLISTS (no longer write for):
Musicals