⥠SUMMERâS IN THE AIR AND BABY, HEAVENâS IN YOUR EYES when you end up drunk and alone on a beach, pope drops everything to bring you home and tries very hard not to want more than he should.
⥠SHED SOME LIGHT ON ME pope goes to smurf's house only to find you playing dress-up in lingerie
⥠SUGAR ON THE TRIGGER you discover pope's 'no' turns into a 'yes' the second you flash a little cleavage
âĄâ§ HELL ON YOU at a sweltering cody family pool day, pope ends up with you in his chair. your squirming quickly turns into a private torment as pope tries to hide just how hard you're making him
âĄâ§ PEARL NECKLACE after a creep makes a gross comment to you outside your apartment, pope is forced to explain what a pearl necklace really means. spoiler: it's not jewelry
⥠SUN-SPLIT LOVERS when pope tries to protect you from his family's crude conversations, he ends up having to answer your uncomfortable questions about sex
⥠TENDER IS THE CONCRETE you scrape your knees by the pool, pope attempts to fix it
Description- What happens when Andrew finds his partner's search history of how to help someone with PTSD. No gender or physical descriptors are given for the reader, and there's no use of "Y/N"
CW- brief mention of a friend having an unspecified and unexplored violent encounter, mentions of PTSD/treatment for it, Pope is sad for a while, accidental hurt and then lots of comfort to compensate
It had become regular for Andrew to use your devices. He knew your passwords, having been the one to insist you set them in the first place, giving you a well-meaning scolding for not taking your security seriously enough, and sometimes it was just convenient for him to use your things instead of his own. In between burner phones he could use yours to communicate with his brothers, and it wasnât unusual for him to grab your phone from the counter while you cooked to look up something to settle one of the many small arguments you had. He was always smug when he was right, leaning back against the counter next to where you stood at the stove, holding the screen in front of you so you could read while he fixed you with a pointed look. He would huff lightly when you gave him a sweet smile, pressing a kiss to his cheek as he muttered something about it not changing anything, and you still being wrong.
Using your tablet had been a more recent development. Andrew was shy to use your things, that timidness and sense of obtruding never fully leaving him the way you hoped it would after so long together. It started one night when you were watching tv, splayed out on the sofa while Andrew showered. You had chosen one of your favorite sitcoms, choosing an episode at random and letting it play while you buried your head into one of the throw pillows, listening to the show more than watching. It was comforting, hitting the familiar beats you knew so well after rewatching it so many times without taking any more of your mental energy. It gave just enough noise to fill the quiet, not overwhelming you, but giving you something to laugh about when you did bother to pay attention.Â
You lifted your head from the pillow when you heard Andrewâs footsteps, leaving a crater in the soft fabric that you would be sure to return to.Â
âWhatcha watching?â He didnât look at you, level eyes fixed on the tv as a laugh track played. His stoic expression and dark shirt and sweatpants, the collar pitched even darker as drops of water fell from his damp curls, made him stand out even more harshly against the overly animated characters on screen.Â
You sat up slightly, making room for him on the couch beside you as he came closer.Â
âAn old sitcom. Probably not something youâd like.â
He lowered himself down next to you, sitting as far back as the cushions would allow, until his straight spine pressed against the backing. He didnât say anything when you shifted closer, hugging his arm to your chest and resting your head on his shoulder. You could hear the quiet drips of the water as they landed on his clothed back.Â
âI can change it if you want,â you offered, glancing up at him as much as the angle allowed.
Andrew frowned. He was thinking, eyes still glued to the tv, as if trying to puzzle out what made it so appealing. After a moment, he shook his head, head dipping to glance down at you.
âNo,â he said simply. âYou like it.â
A small smile pulled at your lips. âWell, yeah,â you agreed. âBut that doesnât mean you have to.â He only looked at you with those big brown eyes youâd come to love, his jaw flexing as he thought.
âYou know, thereâs another option,â you offered, reluctantly sitting up and releasing his arm, your heart warming at the small frown that tugged at his lips at your absence. âI could watch this, and you could watch something you like, like a documentary. I saw one on Netflix the other day I donât think youâve seen yet,â you tempted. âItâs all about squids and the way they think, and how they can get out of all kinds of situations. I added it to my list so I wouldnât forget to show you.â
Andrew frowned, but you could see the way his eyes widened ever so slightly. He was interested.Â
âThereâs only one screen,â he said, confusion drawing his voice out lower. He gestured to the tv, as if you had forgotten the set up of your own living room. You had to bite back a smile, knowing there was another tv in the bedroom, but that he didnât even consider it an option without you by his side.
âYouâre right,â you conceded, standing up to walk behind the couch, crossing the room to where your bag hung from a hook in the hallway. âAnd yet youâre also wrong.â You pulled your tablet out of your bag, unzipping a smaller pocket and feeling around blindly until your hand closed on the small case that held your wireless earbuds. You held it in a closed fist as you walked back to the living room.
You held the tablet out triumphantly to show Andrew when you plopped back down next to him on the couch, leaning against his chest as you beamed up at him.Â
âBehold,â you announced, âanother screen. And-â you opened your closed hand, showing him the small bag youâd brought him. âLook at that, fresh ear pieces, just for you!â You were unable to stop the proud grin that took over your face. âEntirely unused, and kept in protective packaging. Ergo, or should I say ear-go, ha,â he rolled his eyes at your bad joke, not even trying to hide his small smile, âno germs!â
His brows furrowed as he looked down at the little baggie of ear pieces, turning them over in his broad hands like he expected them to disappear.Â
âWhy do you have these?â he asked.
You shrugged, leaning forward to press a kiss to his shoulder before resting your cheek on it.Â
âFor you. Figured you might want to use my earbuds someday, and I donât want you stressing out about germs when youâre here. Not when I can help.â
He swallowed thickly, Adam's apple bobbing in his throat. His hand closed around the little baggie, his other dragging up your thigh where it rested halfway on his lap, giving it an appreciative squeeze.
âThank you,â he said, quiet and low, the words wavering slightly.
His breathing stuttered a bit more when your hands found the nape of his neck, nails dragging soothingly through the wet curls.Â
âOf course. Anything for you, Andy.â
All of that led you to today. Andrew was having trouble sleeping. Story of his life. Usually, it was easier when he slept over, finding the warmth of you pressed against him and the weight of your body enough to ground him in reality and push away the thoughts that plagued him both in sleep and wakefulness. But tonight, not even that was enough. He might have left the bedroom to pace or settle in front of the tv and listen to the calm drone of a nature documentary had you not looked so peaceful beside him, stretched out further onto his side of the bed than usual in your search for him. He couldnât stomach the idea of leaving.Â
He was relieved when an idea clicked in his head.
He peeled back the covers as smoothly as he could, careful not to expose your sleeping form to cool night air. He moved quietly out of the bedroom and down the hall to where you kept your bag, removing your tablet and earbuds, making sure to also grab the small canvas pouch with an embellished A embroidered on it that youâd made once heâd started using your earbuds more regularly. Heâd thought it was ridiculous that you carried an extra little pouch in your bag just so he could steal your earbuds, but he would never complain, especially after he saw how happy it made you. He crept back to bed and slipped in beside you, making sure to tip the screen of the tablet away from you as he opened its case.
The screen leaped to life, and he blinked rapidly at the sudden brightness, wishing he could curse without risking waking you. He repeated the action youâd shown him once when he was frustrated that he couldnât see things well on the screen, successfully lowering the brightness to a more reasonable level before moving to unlock it. He felt satisfied with himself for thinking of such a plan, and knew youâd love finding out that he turned to you, even by extension of your belongings, to find comfort in the night. After heâd entered your passcode, the screen unlocked to a webpage.Â
The air stilled in his lungs when he skimmed the text scrawled across the screen.
You may be hurt by your loved oneâs distance and moodiness or struggling to understand their behaviorâwhy they are less affectionate and more volatile. You may feel like youâre walking on eggshells or living with a stranger.Â
He blinked, hard, and read it again. When the letters didnât rearrange themselves into something more palatable he brought his finger to the screen, scrolling to the top of the page as quickly as the device would allow.Â
How to Help Someone with PTSD
His heart dropped. An article. One from a medical journal no less.
His eyes slid over to where you slept, one of your hands now tangled in the fabric of his pillow case. Youâd picked out these bedsheets together, insistent that you wanted something that felt good for him too, even if he didnât officially live with you.
Your comfort is still important too, youâd teased him, tossing a fabric sample at him in the middle of the department store.Â
How long had this been going on? How long had you been researching, dissecting him without him knowing? His hands clenched, and he was aware that he was sitting much straighter now, any drowsiness he had once clung to long gone from his tired body.
You knew something was wrong as soon as youâd woken up. Your hand had stretched out before your eyes had even opened, unconsciously searching for Andrew. Only when your hand found cool linen in his place did you peel your eyes open, squinting in the morning light coming through your sheer curtains. Andrew was right. Blackout would have been the more practical choice, but you loved the morning light when it shone in, catching the red undertones of Andrewâs hair as it darkened with age.
You looked around, half expecting to see him in the adjoined bathroom, already brushing his teeth, or getting dressed to go meet his family. It wasnât uncommon for him to have to leave early in the morning, and you tried not to take it personally, but something felt off. His spot in bed was cold, the covers thrown off instead of neatly pulled back up like heâd tried to make the bed as well as he could without waking you.Â
âAndy?â you called hoarsely, suddenly feeling a bit worried.Â
âIâm here.â His voice carried through the cracked bedroom door. âIâm in the kitchen. Didnât want to wake you.â
He didnât turn to face you when you padded out to join him. Normally he would at least glance over at you, his usually carefully guarded mask slipping for just a moment at the sight of you in your pajamas, still rubbing sleep from your eyes as you wrapped your arms around him, letting his nose dip into your hair as you nuzzled against his chest.Â
This morning was none of that. He faced the wall, waiting for the toaster to go off, not even glancing over his shoulder at you. He was more rigid than usual, the muscles in his broad shoulders tense and his arms crossed over his chest, scowling down at the poor toaster as if it was its fault his life had gone this way.Â
You didnât know what had changed since last night, but you didnât want to push your luck first thing in the morning. The last thing he needed was to clam up and storm out, clamping the lid down on his feelings like he used to do when he first realized you noticed more than you let on.
âGood morning, handsome.â You walked closer, waiting until he hummed his acknowledgement before sliding up next to him. Youâd learned a long time ago it was wisest to let him see you before touching him, especially when he was this deep in his head. His eyes flashed with something unreadable when your hand came to rest on his shoulder, his muscles trembling as if they didnât know whether to relax or run under the warmth of your palm.Â
âWhatâs wrong, Andy?â You keep your voice soft, concern showing plainly on your face as you peer up at him. âYouâre looking at the toaster like it owes you money. What happened?â
His jaw works, and his grip on the edge of the counter tightens, fingers flexing impatiently as he thinks.Â
âI found your tablet,â he mutters after a few seconds. His eyes are still locked down, smoldering so hot they might cook his bread faster than the machine could. Your head tips to the side in confusion, and only then does he look at you.
âHow to help someone with PTSD?â He says it like a threat, anger and disbelief bleeding through his words as he looms over you. âHow long? How long have you been reading that shit, researching me like Iâm some wild animal you donât know how to be around?â His voice cracks at the end, and he turns, teary eyes fixed back on the counter, fighting to maintain even an ounce of composure.
It clicks then, what heâs talking about. Youâd been doing some reading, noticing that he seemed to fall asleep easier when there was white noise playing in the background. A friend had casually mentioned that it helped her after sheâd survived a violent ordeal, something about the one noise being easier to focus on than all the little noises that she was always worrying might be signs of danger. Youâd used it as a jumping off point, seeing if there was anything else small that might help the man you loved so you could keep it on hand and accessible to him. God knew he had a hard enough time asking for things that he wanted, and even then, half the time he didnât know what he wanted.
You scolded yourself for being so careless. You knew Andrew had blanket permission to use your things, and youâd even encouraged it, finding it comforting to see him do something as domestic as using your phone to look up something.Â
âHoney, I can explain-â you began, before being cut off.
âAre you scared of me?â His voice broke, and he couldnât meet your eye. âIs that why you were looking at those things? Trying to find ways to calm me down, to make me less crazy?â
Memories flashed before your eyes. Conversations youâd had, slowly revealing some of what his home life had been like before his mother died. Crushed pills hidden in his food, his brothers telling him to knock it off and be less intense, that he scared everyone away.
âNo, of course Iâm not!â you insisted. âI love you, I could never be scared of you.âÂ
He scoffed at that, eyes smoldering as he shook his head. âThat doesnât mean you shouldnât be.â He swallowed painfully, the first of his tears following as his anger subsided. âAnd clearly you are or you wouldnât be looking at those things. Youâre scared, and you want out. You donât want this,â he gestured towards himself, the anger in his voice breaking your heart in two. âItâs too much, Iâm too much, and you needed a reason to leave.â
You were shocked enough to struggle to find words. Andrew had had his bad days, where he went right back to the dark place that he had spent so much of his life in, but he had been doing better. Slowly, he had learned to trust you. Heâd had his backslides, like early in your relationship when you were sick with the flu and hadnât responded to his messages for a day and a half and heâd assumed you were either in danger or wanting nothing to do with him. It had been a long time since his insecurities had flared up so fiercely though, and you were worried.
âWhat? No, thatâs-thatâs not what I was doing,â you protested, but it was too late. He was already gone, pulled under the tidal wave of guilt and self-hatred that lingered within him, slowly festering under the surface until it reared its ugly head again. Of course you had to read up about him like he was some case study. Of course you didnât know how to act around him. He was a weirdo, just like everybody said, how theyâd always said, ever since he was little.
âAndrew, I promise thatâs not what that was.â You pleaded with him, desperate for him to look at you, to do anything but glare down at the counter as his shoulders slowly caved in on themselves, his chest heaving as his breaths came faster. âDarling, I-I just didnât want to make anything worse for you. I was just fact checking myself, and then I got interested in what I was reading, and I was wondering if there was anything I could do to help you, or anything that I was doing wrong.â
When Andrew spoke, his voice came out barely above a whisper, and the crack in his voice made your chest clench painfully.
âYou wanted to fix me.â
âNo.â You said it firmly, heart aching again when he lifted his head to look at you. His brow was furrowed, beautiful hazel eyes red as tears trickled down his cheeks. You bit down on your tongue not to let out a whimper at the sight. It took so much for him to crumble, years and years of walls heâd built up to protect himself all coming down around him in an instant.
âAndy, I donât want to fix you,â you said, speaking as firmly as you could. You cupped his cheek with one hand, your thumb wiping away tears and your heart shattering even more at how he leaned into your hand, one of his own coming up to hold your wrist, as if he was scared you might disappear. âI donât want to fix you because youâre not broken. Youâre beautiful and wonderful and amazing, and yes, you have your troubles and things from your past you still struggle with, but who doesnât? You went through hell, actually you grew up in it, but you came out the other end still caring and funny and good. Youâre not broken because of what happened to you. Youâre just hurt, and Iâm so so sorry youâre hurting. Thatâs why I was looking at those things.â You sigh, so annoyed at yourself for causing this situation. You knew how he felt about therapy, how his hackles went up at the mere mention of it. Why wouldnât they? Every time heâd ever spoken to someone about his mental health, theyâd made him feel like a freak, or taken him away from the only home heâd ever known.Â
âYou donât think Iâm broken?â His weak voice shook, but his chest wasnât heaving anymore and his tears had slowed to a trickle. âEven after everything that Iâve done?â His face fell, brow furrowing as he forced his words out. âAll the people Iâve hurt. Some of them were innocent.â
You cut him off before he could continue down the slippery path back to the depths of shame that still lived in his mind.Â
âYou donât do those things anymore,â you reminded him, keeping your voice gentle but firm. You trailed the fingers of your free hand through his hair, letting your nail gently drag down his scalp the way he once quietly admitted he found soothing. He needed to focus on where he was and ground himself in reality before the voices in his head swallowed him whole.
âYou donât hurt people anymore, love. You left that behind and youâve been good, so so good. You help people now. You provide a place for kids to go with your skate park. You bring them food and look out for them even though no one asked you to. You help me in a million ways, and youâre always there for your brothers, even when theyâre being idiots and causing their own problems.â
He exhaled at that, not quite a laugh, but close enough to make you smile.
âYou mean Craig,â he said roughly.
Your smile widened. âI mean all of them,â you teased, âbut Craig is certainly top of the list.â You wiped away the last of the tears from his face before slowly letting your hands slide down his chest and around his waist, pulling him in for a strong hug. His head dropped to your shoulder, his wet face buried into your neck.Â
âIâm sorry the world made you feel broken,â you murmured against his shoulder, rubbing his back. You werenât sure he could even hear you at first, but the warm breath fanning against your shoulder hitched and you knew he did. âAnd Iâm sorry for letting you think even for a moment that you were anything other than the best man I know. I just wanted to make sure I was helping you as much as I could. I donât want to let you down.â
Andrewâs grip around your shoulders tightened for a moment before loosening as he stood back up to his full height.
âYou donât.â
His words were simple, but the weight of them werenât lost on you. How could they be when he looked at you like that, all softness and warmth. That kind of vulnerability didnât come easily to him, and you would be damned if you didnât treasure it every time he pulled back his armor to let you see him.Â
He pulled you back to him without another word, pressing a slow kiss to your temple before tucking you back under his chin, just needing to hold you and know that this wasnât what his mind had made it out to be. You werenât going anywhere, not without him. And just in case he needed to hear it, you said it aloud.
âI love you, Andrew.â You could say it a hundred times a day and mean it fully. âAnd I always will. Because youâre the best part of me. Youâre my whole heart.â
You could hear his sharp intake of breath, feel his chest press even more firmly against you as it rose with a slight tremor. It never failed to make him emotional to hear you say those words.Â
His hand combed through your hair, his thumb sweeping gently over your cheek.
âI love you too.â
You both jolted as the toaster popped. You laughed when you realized what had happened, but Andrew only scowled at the machine over your head.
âGuess it had enough of our theatrics,â you joked.
âItâs burned.â
You shrugged, starting to pull away. âIâll make you more.â His grip on you tightened, pulling you securely back against his chest.
âNo. Youâre staying here. And Iâm buying you a new toaster. This oneâs a fire hazard.â
You only nuzzled closer to him. âWhatever makes you comfortable,â you murmured, glad to be back in his warm arms again.
Pairing: Dr. Jack Abbot x wife!reader (ft Michael Robinavitch)
Warnings: bloody angst, hurt, domestic accident, falling down stairs, blood, facial injuries, medical procedures, angry Abbot.
Summary: A routine task like doing laundry turns into a nightmare when a sudden slip makes you trip on the stairs. With a deep cut on your face and an injured knee, you try to downplay your clumsiness, but for your husband, Jack, the accident is anything but funny.
đ based on this request đ
Disclaimer: This story is pure fiction and written solely for entertainment purposes.
You were trying to balance a mountain of folded laundry in your arms, hurrying to get back downstairs before the timers on the kitchen stove went off.
Jackâs voice always echoed in your mind in these momentsââStop running on the stairs, please.â
But you rushed anyway.
Your foot caught the edge of the third step. The laundry flew from your grip, sending sheets and towels flying as your weight shifted violently forward.
You launched. Your knee slammed hard against one step, and before you could even register the ache there, the sharp edge another one scraped violently across your cheekbone.
For a second, the world just went completely quiet. You were crumpled on the steps, the breath knocked clear out of your lungs, staring down. The pain in your knee was loud and throbbing, and your face felt⊠numb.
"Doll, what happened? Are you okay?"
Jackâs voice broke the silence. You looked at him, his gaze sweeping over the scene. Because of his leg, he couldn't just drop to his knees or rush up the stairs to scoop you up; he had to take each step deliberately. The frustration of his own physical limitations was already written in the tight line of his jaw.
"I'm fine!" you managed, your voice sounding small. "Just... dropped the towels. And added another bruise to the collection." You tried to laugh, pulling yourself up to sit straight.
Jack reached the step just below you. "Don't move. Stay exactly where you are."
His tone was rigid. Stripped of all warmth.
"Jack, seriously, itâs just a scrapeâ"
"I said, don't move," he snapped, his fingers gently but firmly clamping onto your chin to tilt your face upward into the dim stairwell light.
That was when you felt it. A strange trickling sensation creeping down your cheek. Something dripped past your jawline. You reached up to touch it, but Jack caught your wrist mid air, holding it tightly away from your face.
But your fingers were already stained red.
"Oh," you whispered, the adrenaline suddenly spiking. "That's... blood." You tried to deflect with a nervous laugh. "Does the cut matches the bruise on my knee? A matching set for the collection. I'm keeping you in business, Doc."
Jack didn't laugh. He didn't even smile.
"Shut up," he said. "Don't make a joke out of this."
"Jack, I'm just trying toâ"
"I don't care what you're trying to do." He snapped, letting go of your chin. He pulled a clean handkerchief from his pocket and pressed it firmly against your cheek. "Apply pressure. Hold it there."
You took over, pressing the cloth to your face, the sting finally waking up beneath the numbness. "Don't talk to me like that. I just tripped."
"Because you were running! How many times do I have to ask you to slow down?" Jackâs hands were trembling slightly. "You treat your own safety like itâs a punchline. 'Another bruise to the collection.' Do you have any idea what itâs like for me to hear a crash and know I can't run down there to catch you? Do you know what went through my head when I saw you lying here?"
His voice cut through your defense mechanism. You looked at him, he was angry and terrified. And, you knew, he was trapped by a body that wouldn't let him be the protector he desperately wanted to be.
"I wasn't trying to minimize it," you said softly. "I joke because I'm embarrassed, Jack. I'm clumsy, and I hate that I make you worry."
"I don't care about being worried," Jack replied. "I care about you being safe. I spend all day at the hospital patching up people who didn't see the accident coming. And you... you're rushing through our own home like you're invincible. And I can't... if something happens to you, I can't get to you fast enough. You know that."
The silence returned, heavier this time.
Jack gently reached out, taking your hand away from the handkerchief to check the bleeding. The edge of the cut was clean, but it was deep enough that it would probably need a few butterflies, if not a stitch or two.
"It needs to be cleaned properly," he murmured. "Can you stand?"
"Yeah," you whispered, wincing as you shifted your weight onto your bruised knee. "I can stand."
"Good." Jack took a deep breath. Once he was stable on his good leg, he offered you his hand. "Let's go fix you up. No more jokes."
"Okay. No more jokes," you agreed, letting him pull you up into the kitchen.
Jack guided you to a stool by the kitchen island. Without a word, he moved around, pulling a first-aid kit from the cabinet and grabbing a damp washcloth from the sink.
"Keep pressure on it," he ordered softly, setting the kit down.
When he turned back to you, he pulled up another stool, carefully positioning his stiff leg out to the side so he could sit close enough to work.
"Okay, take the cloth away. Let me look."
You pulled the blood soaked handkerchief from your cheek. Almost instantly, a fresh crimson stream welled up from the split in your skin, tracing a rapid path down your jaw and dripping onto your collarbone.
Jackâs brow furrowed. He took the damp washcloth and gently tapped around the wound, trying to clear the area to see the actual depth of the laceration. "Hold still. I know it hurts."
The cold water hit the raw nerves, and you gasped, leaning back instinctively. "It stingsâgod, Jack."
"I know, I know. Don't pull away from me." His hand was firm on the back of your neck, holding you in place. But as he wiped a fresh layer of blood away, the wound immediately filled again, spilling over. The edge of the step had sliced deep, right over the prominent curve of your cheekbone where the skin was tight.
He waited a beat, pressing a clean piece of sterile gauze against it, counting silently under his breath. One minute. Two minutes. When he pulled it back to check, the blood welled up just as fast. It wasn't clotting. The edge of the cut was jagged, grinning open in a way that made his stomach do a sick flip.
Jack let out a frustrated breath. He didn't say anything, but the professional shift in his posture told you everything.
His ER doctor self had completely taken over.
"I-Is it bad?" you asked, your voice trembling.
"Itâs deep," Jack said, his voice felt cold. "It tore right through the dermal layer. Itâs too wide for butterflies, and because of the location on your face, itâs going to keep opening every time you talk or blink. I can't close this here. It needs a layered suture, and it won't stop bleeding until it gets one."
He packed a thick stack of sterile gauze against your cheek, taking your hand and forcing your fingers to hold it there with heavy pressure.
"We're going to the hospital," he said, already standing up. The sudden movement made his brace click sharply.
"Jack, can't you just do it? You have a kit, you're a doctorâ"
"I don't have a local anesthetic or the proper fine gauge monofilament sutures in the kitchen cabinet," he snapped, his voice cracking with sudden panic. He grabbed his car keys and his and your jacket from the hook by the door. "If I try to patch this up with what I have here, youâre going to end up with a massive scar on your face. Weâre going to the hospital. Now."
The drive was quiet. He kept his hand firmly on the steering wheel, his eyes locked on the road, while you sat in the passenger seat, pressing the now heavy gauze to your face.
You looked over at his profile, his jaw was clenched so tightly a muscle was jumping in his cheek.
"Jack," you whispered, the movement pulling painfully at the cut. "I'm sorry."
He didn't look at you, but his grip on the steering wheel tightened. "Just keep pressure on the wound, please. We're almost there."
-
The doors of The Pitt hissed open, swallowing you both into the familiar air of the emergency department.
Tonight, you were the intake.
"Jack? What the hell happened?"
Robby said from behind the central desk, his eyes darting instantly from Jackâs tense face down to you. He saw the blood soaked gauze you were holding tightly against your cheek and the dark stain on your collar.
"She took a fall on the stairs," Jack said, sounding entirely professional, though the tight grip he kept on your elbow betrayed him. "Laceration to the zygomatic arch. Itâs deep. Itâs been bleeding consistently for minutes. I couldnât get it to clot at home."
"Alright, let's get her into Room 4, it's empty," Robby said, immediately stepping into gear, stepping beside you. "Can you walk okay? Did you hit your head? Lose consciousness?"
"My knee is a little banged up, but my head is fine," you muttered around the cloth, feeling a flush of embarrassment as a couple of nurses glanced your way. "Just... really clumsy."
Robby guided you onto the examination bed. "Letâs take a look."
You layed down and slowly pulled the gauzes away. Without the constant pressure, a fresh bead of dark blood immediately welled up. Robby leaned in, using a piece of sterile gauze to gently dab the edges of the wound. He winced slightly, assessing the deep split over the bone.
"Yeah, you really did a number on this," Robby murmured. "Itâs a clean tear but itâs deep. Itâs definitely going to need a few sutures. I'll get the lidocaine andâ"
"I'll do it," Jack interrupted.
Robby paused, looking up at Jack, who was standing at the foot of the bed.
"Brother, you know the protocol," Robby said softly. "You don't treat family. Let me handle it. I'll make the lines clean, I promise."
"Itâs my wife, Robby." Jack said, he stepped closer to the bedside, his eyes locked on the wound. "Iâm doing the stitches. I need to do them."
The two doctors locked eyes for a long moment. Robby knew Jack, he knew his friend's frustrations, he knew how much Jack hated feeling helpless.
Letting Jack treat you wasn't standard, but Robby knew that forcing Jack to stand by and watch someone else patch you up would be worse.
Robby sighed, stepping back. "Fine. But I'm staying in the room to assist. And if your hands shake even a millimeter, I'm taking the needle."
"They won't shake," Jack said.
He moved to the side of the bed, carefully adjusting the stool so his rigid leg could extend comfortably.
Jack snap on a pair of sterile gloves, and when he pulled the tray of instruments closer, where a nurse put all the necessary.
"Look at me," Jack murmured softly. He picked up the syringe of lidocaine. "This is going to burn. A lot. Hold my knee if you need to. My good one."
You reached out, gripping his good knee tightly. He didn't flinch as your fingernails dug into his skin. "Okay, you're going to feel a little pinch."
The needle pierced the edge of the cut, and a sharp burning sensation flared across your cheek. You squeezed your eyes shut, gasping as the medicine flooded the tissue. Jackâs was completely steady as he repositioned the needle to numb the entire perimeter of the wound.
Within a minute, the burning subsided into a heavy weight.
Jack worked in absolute silence. He used a small suction tip to clear the pooling blood, exposing the deep layer of tissue beneath. With a needle driver, he began the meticulous process of closing the deep dermal layer first.
You only could feel the gentle tugging of the thread as he pulled the edges of your skin back together. You watched his face. His brow was furrowed, his eyes entirely locked on the millimeters of flesh he was mending. The anger from the stairwell was gone, completely replaced by an aching tenderness.
Every movement of his hands was incredibly precise, deliberate, and gentle.
Robby stood by, cutting the sutures as Jack tied off each knot. "Nice tension," Robby commented quietly, validating his friend's work. "That's going to heal beautifully."
Jack didn't reply. He just kept sewing, treating your face like the most fragile and precious thing in the world.
By the time he tied off the final knot, the wound was closed, reduced to a thin black line across your cheekbone.
Before Jack could even reach for the dressing supplies, Robby quietly stepped into his line of sight, a non adherent telfa pad and a strip of medical tape already in his gloved hands. "I've got the dressing, Jack. Step back for a second."
Jack blinked, the sharp medical tunnel vision breaking as he looked up at his friend.
He didn't argue.
His hands were just starting to develop a microscopic tremor from the adrenaline crash, and he knew it.
Robby offered you a warm smile as he leaned over the bed. He placed the small protective gauze pad directly over the neat row of black stitches, securing it firmly to your cheek with the clear tape. "There you go. Thatâll keep it clean and protected. Excellent handiwork, by the way. You won't even be able to see the scar in a few months."
Jack dropped the instruments onto the tray. He pulled off his gloves, tossing them into the bin, and took a deep breath.
"All done, baby," he said softly. "You're okay."
"Thank you," you murmured, with an uncomfortable feeling in your chest.
The ride back home was calm. The dashboard clock glowed a late hour as Jack pulled the car into the driveway and cut the engine.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
"Let's get you inside," Jack said softly. He had the night off.
He got out of the car and walked around to the passenger side. He opened the door and offered you his hand. As you stood up, your leg wobbled, and Jack immediately caught you. He held you close, bearing your weight as he carefully guided you into the house.
He led you straight to the living room, easing you down onto the couch. He disappeared for a few minutes, and when he returned, he was carrying a plush blanket, a fresh ice pack, and a glass of water.
He carefully lowered his weight onto the couch beside you and draped the blanket over your lap, then gently held the ice pack against your bruised knee.
Looking at him, seeing the dark circles of exhaustion, the faint smear of dried blood on his forearm that he hadn't fully washed off, and his unconditional care, the dam broke.
Tears slipped down your cheeks.
"Hey," Jack murmured, his brow furrowing as he set the ice pack down and instantly reached for your face. "Hey, whatâs wrong? Is the local anesthetic wearing off? Is it hurting?"
"No," you choked out, your voice thick and trembling. You shook your head, immediately regretting it as the movement pulled at the tight stitches. "No, it doesn't hurt. Jack, I'm so sorry."
"Sweetheart, you don't need to-"
"I do," you interrupted, a sob catching in your throat. You reached out, taking his hand and squeezing it tightly. "I'm so, so sorry. I know I make a joke out of being clumsy, but I hate that I frightened you. I hate that I made you feel... helpless. I know how much you want to protect me, and I was careless. I didn't think about how it would affect you to hear me fall and not be able to just run down there. I'm so sorry for being reckless with myself."
Jack stared at you, his eyes softening.
He reached out, his thumb gently catching the tears on your cheek, careful not to touch your wound. He pulled you into his chest, wrapping his arms around you and holding you close. You buried your face into the crook of his neck, breathing in the comforting scent of his cologne.
"Thank you for being honest with me" Jack whispered into your hair, his hand gently stroking your back. "But you don't have to carry that guilt. I was angry because I was terrified. When I'm at work, I can control things. I have a team. But when itâs you... here... Seeing you hurt, and knowing my own body slows me down from getting to you... it scares me, baby."
He pulled back to look into your eyes.
"I know accidents happen," he said softly. "But I just need you to take care of yourself, because you are the most precious thing in my life. Okay?"
"Okay," you sniffled, wiping your nose with the edge of the blanket. "No more running on the stairs. I promise. I'll take them like a snail."
A smirk broke across Jackâs face, crinkling the corners of his eyes. It was the first time he had smiled all night. "A snail might be a bit too slow, but I'll take it."
He leaned in, carefully placing a kiss on the uninjured side of your face, then another on the tip of your nose. "I love you, doll."
"I love you, my Jackie."
"Lay back, you need rest," he commanded gently, helping you settle on the couch. He placed the ice pack back on your knee and tucked the blanket securely around you. He picked up the TV remote and settled back against the cushions next to you.
As the soft sounds of a night time program filled the air, Jack's fingers gently stroked your head, lulling you to relax and close your eyes.
After a few seconds, you drifted off to sleep, feeling completely safe and secure in the tranquility of home.
đđđ đđđđđâđ đ đđđđđđđđ đđđđđ. đâ°đŠą.âᄫᥠâ please give all of these incredible writers the love and support. đŻ random fandom & character order, 18+ only please.
â part one, part two, part three, part four, part five, part six, part seven, part eight, part nine,
Gentle Touch, đ.đ, @annaevermore
Hoola Hoop, đ.đ, @inkydelusions
Slim Pickins, đ.đ, @seewhoyouwanttosee
Teaching Moments, đ.đ, @the-shedevil-writes
Little Joy, đ.đ.đ, @sargeant-bxrnes
Rusty, đ.đ, @stellamarielu
Not The Day, đ.đ.đ, @p1ttlings
Fuck It, I Love You, đ.đ, @astarlinggirl
Where Do I Put My Love, đ.đ, @alinathinkstoomuch
Head Over Feet, đ.đ, @lovebugism
Writing On The Wall, đ.đ.đ, @idyllicchaos
Iâve Got It, đ.đ, @honeypiehotchner
Special Treatment, đ.đ, @ovaryacted
Under The Skin, đ.đ.đ, @pittrabbit
Darkest Before Dawn, đ.đ, @flowersforbucky
Our Little Secret, đ.đ, @hotdocsandcowboys
Manchild, đ.đ.đ, @not-neverland06
Kissed & Made Up, đ.đ, @targaryenluvs
My Woman On Willpower, đ.đ, @miserymorgue
Sweet Little Thing, đ.đ, @dr-robbys
Pearl Necklace, đ.đ.đ, @mariasont
Love To Go To Paris, đ.đ & đ.đ, @miserymorgue
Date Night, đ.đ, @moodyabbott
Lay Your Head By Mine, đ.đ, @martyrmurdock
Reading The Newspaper, đ.đ, @vividxpages
Heat Waves, đ.đ, @peachyparkerr
Codys Girl, đ.đ.đ, @popecodysgirl
Stop & Smell The Roses, đ.đ.đ, @abbotsmyhabit
So Much To Adore, đ.đ, @flowersforbucky
Forever Yours, đ.đ.đ, @mx-pastelwriting
Out Of His League, đ.đ, @romantic-insomniac
Night Dada, đ.đ, @shadeofpeach
Bruised & Not Broken, đ.đ.đ, @voidsagent
Extra Shot, đ.đ, @zivistardust
Give It To Me, Baby, đ.đ, @oxalaia-quilombensis
Take Care, đ.đ, @snoopysupe
Passing The Blunt, đ.đ.đ, @amphib0e
Story About Love, đ.đ, @moodyabbott
Like It When You Blush, đ.đ, @shadeofpeach
Fade Into You, đ.đ.đ, @abbotsdoll
Meet Me At Our Spot, đ.đ, @whatif-ialreadydid
⥠summary: what starts out as a cozy night in while jack & robby watch a steelers game on tv soon sends you spiraling because of their endless shouting at coaches & players who can't hear them. you step out in attempt to calm yourself down & end up making nervous wrecks out of each of them when they can't find you.
⥠content: angst, domestic fluff, mention of childhood trauma, robby is flirtatious & it ticks off jack, jack & robby banter
⥠a/n: based off this request by @styx03. ty! | gif
"Oh, come on!" Jack bellows.
"Bullshit interception!" Robby interjects before slamming his beer down onto a coaster.
A porcelain plate slips from your sudsy hands and clatters against the walls of the sink you stand at. Intaking a deep, soothing breath, you slowly turn your head to the right to where the living room is located.
Just a football game, you reassure yourself. Nothing to be afraid of.
You watch silently for a moment as Jack relaxes back against the couch once more. Meanwhile, Robby stays rooted anxiously to the spotâelbows planted firmly atop his thighs while one of his hands stays cupped over the other that's pressed tightly to his lips in anticipation of the Steelers' next play.
Screaming patients already send your heart pattering from nerves while at work. The thought of not getting relief from such terror here at home for the next couple of months as football season wages on is discomforting, to say the least.
Shaking your headâreassuring yourself that you're just being foolishâyou return your attentions to scrubbing out a coffee mug instead.
You'd tried joining them earlier, but once they started in on howling at a ref that obviously can't hear them, your feet gained a mind of their own and led you into the kitchen, which you're gradually working on cleaning until it's as sterile as an OR. Force of habit. Can't be helped.
A sort of trauma response, maybe. A way to self-soothe in moments of fear.
You know it's something you should deal with: your physiological response to raised voicesâeven harmless ones. But they all sound the same to you; like angry parents hounding each other from another room as they go for the other's throat in a moment of rage while you try and pretend to sleep, hoping they don't come for you next.
Setting the mug on the nearby drying rack, you start in on the abandoned plate from a moment ago. You have no idea what quarter the game is at currently, so you can't even take comfort in the reassurance that it'll be over soon. You just wish Robby would sometimes watch them at his own place, because once he gets Jack going, they become an endless feedback loopâyelling about unfamiliar terms which all mean the same thing to you: another restless night where your heart continually beats out of your chest, despite drinking cup after cup of chamomile tea to calm it.
You set the plate next to the mug and frown at the quickly emptying sink.
Maybe you should mop next.
Just as you reach for the only remaining utensil left to be washed and rinsed, Jack throws an arm over the back of the couch and eyes you from the other room. "Could you bring me another beer, baby?"
You blink at him. "Oh, sure."
Robby turns in your direction. "Could I get one of those, too?" His lip twitches, knowing he's probably about to earn a smack upside the head. "Baby."
Your cheeks heat, so you quickly turn around and pad over to the fridge. "Okay."
You hear a quiet slap, followed by Ow! I was just messin' around!
You retrieve two amber-colored glass bottles from the fridge, leaving the door to click softly shut behind you.
"That's the excuse I'll give when I accidentally slice you open with a scalpel next time I'm ticked off at work," Jack retorts.
You roll your eyes, fighting against the smirk that's trying to force its way across your lips as you pad into the living room to dole out the requested refreshments.
Handing Robby his first, as he is the guest tonight, he grins mischievously and you wince quietly at whatever is about to come out of his mouth. "Thank youâ"
Jack shifts to face him, granting him his full attention.
Robby raises a brow, but finishes with a simple "Sweetheart."
"You're welcome," you reply quietly before handing Jack his bottle as well.
Before you can make to leave, however, he grabs your hand and pulls you down to him while patting his lips with his index finger. You roll your eyes, but ultimately oblige by giving him a swift peck on the lips before returning to your chores.
"I mean, if we're handing those out, tooâ"
"You're on thin fuckin' ice, buddy," Jack snaps while twisting the top off of his beer.
Robby merely throws his head back and laughs while you scurry back into the other room, not wishing to get between them and the flatscreen that has them so enraptured.
By the end of the third quarter, you're a nervous wreck. You've washed and put away the dishes, mopped the floor, tossed out expired leftovers and condiments that were in the fridge, wiped down the counters, and rearranged the spice wrack. But it's all done little to distract you from raised voices the next room over.
The game is going to take over another hour before it's through, and they're each having such a good time that you can't bear to ruin it by causing a scene. Or, at the very least, an awkward confrontation as you try and explain your trembling hands or shaking body, and how you'd really appreciate it if they could please use their inside voices for the remainder of the evening.
Instead, you head in the direction of the front doorâacting almost as if you're on autopilotâgrab your coat, slip on your shoes, and pocket your housekey before slipping out and into the night for a long walk and some fresh air to clear your head and calm your nerves, forgetting to make a note on the whiteboard stuck to the fridge that you're just popping out and will be back soon.
He's been pacing for an hour, worrying himself sick and calling every hospital in the tristate areaâincluding PTMCâasking whether you've been brought in tonight. Jack even went so far as to contact multiple non-emergency lines, desperate to hear them say 'No, sir, we've not had any women fitting that description called in tonight'.
You just...left. No note, no message written on the fridgeâYou were the one who insisted on buying that damn board in the first place!âand worst of all? Your cellphone left behind, mocking him from your beside table where it rests atop a wireless charger.
So here he sits at home, about to have a goddamn coronary. Meanwhile, Mike is out driving around, scouring the streets for hide or hair of you. If you were stepping out to pick up a couple groceriesâsince you apparently cleaned out the fucking fridge (it'd been sort of shameful just how much the two of you have let go to waste by practically living at work)âyou could've told him as much.
If it were the middle of the day, he'd be far less concerned. Instead, however, it's now bordering on midnight.
Just as he's about to speed dial Robby yet again, his head shoots up at the sound of the front door peeling opening.
Leaping up from his side of the bed, Jack practically races out of your shared bedroom, and quickly advances on you. You, who is just hanging up your coat like you've just come home from a casual jaunt around the neighborhood. "Where the hell have you been?" He demands.
You turn back to him with a sheepish look on your face. "I know. I forgot to bring my phone with me, I'm sorry."
"Do you have any idea what fucking time it is? I've called every hospital in the area, including the Pitt. Robby is out driving around looking for you andâ" He immediately goes silent when your lip trembles and tears well in your eyes.
"I just wanted to go for a walk," you say between quiet sobs. "With all the yelling... My head was pounding, and it was scaring me."
His greying brows furrow. "Scaring you..."
Jack breathes a sigh of frustration, but also relief. You're back and unharmed. That's what matters.
But he's still pissed.
"Why didn't you say something? Tell us to keep it down if it was getting to you. And why didn't you use that board you were all excited about buying?" It's initial intention had been so you couldâin your own wordsâ'leave each other cute little notes'. Instead, it's mostly used for grocery lists now. Coffee, medleys, chicken breasts and the like.
You nervously rub your arm, lowering your head so you don't have to face him quite so one-on-one. "IâI was worried it'd upset you. Both of you. If I told you what to do in your own home, I mean. How to act. I just wanted some fresh air."
He sighs. "Baby doll, it's your house too. You have just as much of a right to feel comfortable in it as me." Jack chews the inside of his cheek while he thinks. "We haven't had much chance to talk about themâour folks. Yours used to fight, didn't they?"
You nod solemnly. "Constantly," you murmur between sniffles.
He pulls you into his chest before folding his arms around you and kissing the crown of your head which smells of fresh air, if not a little like the sandwich shop down the street. Perhaps that's where you went tonight to decompress.
"I'm sorry," he says lowly. "From now on, no more yelling at the TV like a couple of idiots. I swear."
You nod and snuggle closer, enjoying the warmth being enveloped in his arms and against his brawny chest provides.
And then his ringing cellphone breaks the tranquil silence.
"That'll be Robby," Jack explains. "He's been out driving around, looking for you."
Guilt fills you to the brim. He must be so tired, and you kept him out later than needs be. And for no good reason.
Jack answers, putting him on speaker. "She's home. Just went out for a walk, she said."
"Thank God," he sighs, his baritone voice crackling slightly on the other line. "Where the hell she'd go?"
Sandwich shop, you mouth, not entirely wanting him to know you're listening. It'd require a long explanation if you answered yourself. And an even longer apology, which you'd prefer to give in person instead.
"Mr. Beef. That place with the hoagies and philly's down the street."
"Long as our girl's alright," Robby says.
Jack rolls his eyes toward the ceiling, but ultimately lets it slide, given his friend's good efforts tonight. "She is. We'll both see you in a few hours."
"See you then," he replies before the line clicks off.
You suck your lips inward to keep from laughing. The comedic side of youâwanting for a bit of relief from all this pent-up tensionâwins out, though. "Our girl, huh? So...do I get two for one twice in one night?"
Jack crosses his arms in irritation. You can't believe he's actually taking you and Robby's sarcasm seriously. You'd never really taken him for the jealous type, in truth.
Maybe he's just playing along?
"Keep it up. And twice? So you could've brought an extra sandwich home, but chose not to?"
You snort, then shrug. "I made you both burgers, fries, and a whole charcuterie board to snack off of. Figured I was owed something in repayment when I slipped a twenty from your jacket before leaving."
He barks a laugh. "Oh, you are so on my shitlist now, honey."
Before you can react, he sweeps his arms under you and tosses you over his shoulder before planting a firm smack against your ass. "Oh God, put me down!"
"No way," he snipes before carrying you into the bedroom and kicking the door shut behind him.
DESCRIPTION: You end up in the ED due to a nearly fatal case of heat stroke, leaving Dr. Robby needing to decide whether to tell your husband, Jack Abbot, or not.
WORD COUNT: 4.1k
WARNINGS: Heat stroke. Typical ED stuff- needles, talks of death, etc. Established relationship Wife!Reader. Probable medical inaccuracies. Morally grey Dr. Robby antics. Angst with a happy ending.
NOTES: Stay hydrated, gang.
READ ON AO3! - MASTERLIST
This had to be the day from hell. Y/n had stayed up the entire night before finishing last-minute details for a work project and didnât get a wink of sleep until around 2 AM. She ended up completely sleeping in while her husband, Jack, kissed her sleeping form goodbye to go on a SWAT shift. She woke up to her latest possible alarm in a cold and empty bed.Â
To make things worse, this was the day of her big presentation. People were relying on her to lead the meeting on the said work project. She rushed to get ready. But there was a difficult balance between a full face of makeup and an impossible time crunch.
She ran out the door, but then forgot her keys. She ran back out⊠then realized she forgot her laptop charger. Then ran back out and growled in frustration upon realizing she forgot her wallet. Definitely not something she wanted to leave behind.
By the time she sat in the car, ready to pull out, she was sweating profusely. The heat outside was heavy and dry, and the running back and forth had caused stains to appear under her arms.Â
Naturally, she cranked the AC, turning the knob as she backed the car outâŠ
Holy fuck- hot air blasted right at her face. Her brows scrunched. What? It was on the lowest possible setting it could be. That didnât make sense.
She tried turning it on and off. Ensuring that it wasnât on the heater by accident. Pressing buttons and turning the knob back and forth. All while trying to drive. But nothing worked. It just blasted hot air that made the car go from hot to sweltering. Sweat dripped down her face, and her lip began to quiver, knowing her makeup was going to be ruined.
With a deep breath, she turned the AC off and rolled down the window. Goodbye, fancy curled hair. But the whipping wind outside wasnât that much better. The temperature was pretty much the same inside and out.Â
She turned on the radio to try to distract herself.
âThis is radio KISS 44.6. And weâre in the middle of this huge heat wave-â
âYOU THINK?â She grumbled to herself as she stopped at a red light.Â
She had managed to stop at every red light on the way to the office. It was as if god was throwing every sign at her not to do this stupid presentation.
As she got closer to the office, her eyes started to get really dry. Her vision blurred. So she blinked hard to get the focus back. Damn contacts.Â
Her mouth was incredibly dry as well. Her tongue felt swollen against the roof of her mouth. A sudden sense of self-awareness overtook her. God, letâs hope she didnât have bad breath before the meeting.Â
Her head started to pound. She took a wavering breath, feeling that something was wrong. But she shook it off. Now was not the time for health anxiety. Once she got to the office, sheâd chug a water bottle and call it go time.
But by Murphyâs law, naturally, the only parking spot available was the furthest possible one. Thatâs what I get for being late. Her mind kept replaying that sentiment as she made the trek toward the building, body tingling. It felt like she couldnât think or process anything going on around her.Â
Her eyes slowly became half-lidded as a wave of nausea overtook her. She gagged a cough, but fortunately, nothing came out. She didnât really have time for breakfast that morning. The woman was set on her goal- making it to this goddamn work meeting.Â
She was so set in fact, that when she finally reached the front of the building, she didnât realize that the world around her was blacking out. And she was fully collapsing to the ground with no one to catch her.Â
Dr. Robby had been having a pretty normal morning. With the heat wave, he had just about as many dehydration and heat stroke victims as he figured he would, and it wasnât even noon. He was in the middle of convincing a woman that an IV does not inject microchips when Dr. Mohan knocked on the door frame.Â
âDana said to tell you thereâs an incoming trauma. ETA less than five minutes. Some friends from SWAT got very ambitious. GSW.â
Robby clapped his hands, âGreat. Iâll finish up here and get to lecture Jack about him and all his adrenaline junkie friends.â
She nodded and walked away, leaving Robby to convince this woman for another four minutes.Â
A few minutes later, he walked out to see Jack pumping an AMBU bag on a man being rolled in on a stretcher. Both in full-camo uniform, they were surrounded by EMTs. Robby walked up, helping take the stretcher from the medics.Â
âTake him to the trauma bay,â Robby instructed the nurses who took over for the EMTs.
Jack looked to Robby, âThis is Peter. GSW in the right shoulder. Has an entry and exit wound. Carotidâs a little tachy, and had to give him an AMBU bag after he started to hyperventilate.â
âHi, Peter. You got lucky today, having Dr. Abbot by your side.â
The man blinked hard as if to say, âYes, thatâs true.â Robby looked to Jack, who was sweating much more than his usual, and the guy sweated a ton on the regular.Â
âYou been drinking water?â
âOf course. How do you think I can sweat through this goddamn jacket?â
They chuckled and rolled the man into the bay.Â
Mid-bleed, Langdon was able to take over for Robby as he seemed to be pulled in every other direction. He peeled his bloody gloves off and threw them away as he rushed out to see a woman being rushed in from the ambulance bay. His attention immediately piqued. She looked⊠familiar.Â
He started to rush forward as he would any other patient. But as he got closer, his footsteps quickened because this wasnât just any other patient. This was Jackâs wife, and she lay unconscious on a stretcher being pushed. Her hair was drenched, presumably from sweat and paramedics spraying cold water on her. Ice packs covered her neck, chest, and stomach.Â
âShit.â He said, getting to her side.Â
One of the paramedics began to speak, âThis is-â
âY/n Abbot. 25-year-old female.â
McKay, who had taken over for one of the EMTs, looked at him, confused. She didnât even register the last name at first.Â
âDo you know her?â
Robbyâs brows raised, and he hissed a sigh, âThis is Dr. Abbotâs wife.â
âOh shit. Do you want me to grab him?â
He looked over and saw Jack in the middle of giving compressions to Peter. If he took him, theyâd be left with no one but Langdon. While he was sure he could handle it⊠that was an all-hands-on-deck situation. And he knew that Jack would come sprinting if he learned.Â
âNo. Donât tell him yet. We donât need more chaos and a husband working on his wife.â
The paramedic continued, âHer coworkers found her unconscious outside their office. No idea how long she had been out there. Heat stroke. She was at 105, and we got it down to 104 through ice bags, but she hasnât budged since being admitted. Laceration on the right side of her scalp from the fall. Bad bleed, but the woundâs shallow. Surprisingly, no indentation.â
âDoesnât stop the possible concussion. Was she conscious and speaking at all?âÂ
The paramedic shook his head, âNo. Sheâs been unconscious from arrival to here.â
âShit. Perlah, Princess, get an ice bath ready in South 20,â Robby called out.Â
The women nodded and started prepping the room. They didnât necessarily have ice baths at the ready, but they did have the ability to fill a body bag with ice. They set up the blue bag on the bed and rushed to grab ice from a freezer nearby.Â
They wheeled her in just as the two nurses were setting the bottom bed of ice.Â
âPerfect, okay. Weâre gonna lift her and move on three, ready? One two three-â
Everyone moved her onto the ice, so Perlah and Princess could overlay ice on top of her. Robby stepped back and ran his hands down his face. He looked over to see Jack and Langdon directly across the pitt. They were focused on stopping the bleeding and seemingly starting to finish up. Shit.Â
âWe need to hustle people. Start checking core temp again. Weâve only got around thirty minutes to get her to 102 before organ failure.âÂ
Organ failure. He didnât want to be the one to tell Jack this. He didnât want to tell him at all, actually. But part of him knew that if he didnât tell him, heâd hate him for a long time⊠and itâd be even worse if this went awry.Â
McKay took her hand out of the ice, âSheâs at 104.4 right now.â
Robby barely registered it. He wrung his hands behind his neck.
She walked up to him with raised brows, âYou know someone who could have her entire medical history? Someone who can answer for her? Abbot.âÂ
âYeah.â Robby looked down at his shoes and shook his head, âYeah. I know.â
âWe need to tell him.â
He looked over at Jack and Langdon doing some sort of insane procedure. Par for the course of those two. He shook his head, then looked back at Cass.Â
âI donât think you understand how fragile this is, McKay.â
Her head bobbled as she stared at him in disbelief, her red ponytail swishing.Â
âIâm not saying he scrubs in. Iâm saying we need to ask him questions because his wife canât do so.âÂ
Robby tried to hush his voice, but it came out in his upset growl, âSomeone elseâs life is in his hands, and if we tell him right now, he will let it slip through his fingers.â
âWell, her life is in our hands for the next twenty-five minutes, and if she turns out to be allergic to a medication we push-â
âFuck, McKay! Let him finish up on that patient, and then weâll tell him!â He exclaimed, rubbing his eyes.Â
Perlah and Princess sent each other a wide-eyed look. Theyâd be talking about this in Tagalog later for sure.Â
McKay put her hands in the air. âOkay. Fine.â
Robby ran his hands down his face.
âKeep monitoring her. Every few minutes. If sheâs not lowering in ten, we need to prep for the worst. Keep the fans going and fresh ice and ice packs added.â He instructed McKay before heading out.
âGot it.â She said, knowing at the very least, he was right about the treatment.
Robby stormed out a bit more abruptly than he meant to. He had to check on other patients and needed to get his mind off Y/n and Jack until the time passed.Â
Ten minutes later, Robby came back around to her room. McKay, Javadi, Princess, and Perlah were all doting on her. Perla was switching out an IV bag.Â
âUpdate?â Robby crossed his arms.
âSheâs still 103.8. Far from 102.â Javadi said, âWeâve given fluids, but she started seizing and had to push Keppra.âÂ
âFuck. Okay. Her brain overheated, but hopefully, we may get some meaningful movement here soon. At least sheâs cooling down, thatâs what? .6 degrees in ten minutes? If we keep on this track, we should be okay.â
McKay stood up from her bedside. âUpdate on Abbot and his patient?â
âI uh- I havenât checked.â
âAre you kidding me?â Her eyes went wide at him.Â
âNot my patient, not my monkeys. I will ask Langdon for a status once we get her temperature under control.âÂ
McKay scoffed in complete disbelief. Just then, Mohan peeked her head through the door.Â
âDr. McKay, we need you back in West 14.â She said, then looked around, sensing the tense atmosphere. âDo you have a moment-â
âYes. Yes. Dr. Robby, care to take over?âÂ
He nodded, âOf course.âÂ
She slipped out past Robby and started speed walking away, leaving Mohan to catch up with her. Her sneakers squeaked against the linoleum.
âWhatâs going on?â Dr. Mohan held her clipboard to her chest.
They both immediately turned to see Abbot watching their trauma patient get wheeled away to the ICU, then turned back to each other.Â
Dr. Mohanâs eyes widened. âHave you told him?â
McKayâs jaw ticked. She raised her hands in innocent defeat.
âIâm about to.âÂ
Jack Abbot had just finished a miraculous pull-through. Peter had started to lose too much blood due to damage to an artery, but he and Langdon managed to use a balloon to pressurize it. He took a moment to catch his breath and throw off his camo zip-up, leaving him in just his black T-Shirt. Heâd have to get back to HQ and report that Peter was alright. A full write-up and a nap were waiting for him at home before heâd have to come back to the pitt for the night shift.
Just then, Dr. Mohan walked up to him. He brightened a little at the familiar face, but her face was incredibly stoic. Did something happen to her?Â
âDr. Abbot. I need you to talk to Dr. McKay.âÂ
His brows furrowed, âCan she not come up to me herself?âÂ
âJust come with me and donât talk to Robby.â
He followed her fast footsteps as she led him to the side of the nurses' station that couldnât be seen from the South wing. He tried to look around for Robby, but was shielded by the walls and columns. For the most part, he figured it was just Mohan dealing with Robby breathing down her neck again. The guy was way too hard on her. So sometimes Jack lent an ear to listen.Â
âWhatâs going on?â He asked as they approached Dr. McKay. Thatâs when he slowly started to realize that maybe this wasnât just about Robbyâs teaching techniques.
The red-headed woman clapped her hands gently. âDr. Abbot, I need to tell you that your wife is in this ED right now.â
His heart completely dropped into his stomach. His mouth dried up as he blinked, surely not hearing her right. This couldnât be true. He had to be hearing things after the adrenaline rush of being shot at. She wasnât supposed to be there. It couldnât be her usual dropping by to give him food mid shift because, well, he wasnât supposed to be there at all.
âWhat?âÂ
âSheâs in South 20, right now. Her co-workers found her outside unconscious. Heat stroke. Weâve got her in an ice bath and her temperatures coming down, but itâs slow.â McKay explained.Â
He immediately started trying to look over her shoulder, trying to get a better vantage point of South 20. He couldnât get a view, so he started walking past McKay. His walk at first was slow, but then he started to nearly sprint. The women ran after him as heÂ
âHow long has she been here? How come nobody fucking told me?âÂ
He burst into the room and immediately covered his mouth at the sight. His beautiful wife lay unconscious in the ice, most of her clothes off. Her skin pale and her face covered in dried blood. He choked. And after everything that man has seen, it was hard to get him to react this strongly.
Javadi immediately stood up with wide eyes as if she had just been caught. Robby pinched the bridge of his nose.Â
Abbot crossed his arms, his horrified eyes morphed into anger. He slowly shook his head. His jaw clenched.
âI need patient status right now.â
Robby reached out, putting his hands on Abbotâs shoulders, âJack, the best thing for you to do right now is to sit by her side and not-â
âJust tell me the fucking status of my goddamn wife!âÂ
Javadi spoke up in a shaky voice, âSheâs down to 103.2 from 104.8. She started seizing, but we gave her Keppra, and she responded positively. Her pupils reacted, and weâre waiting for meaningful-â She saw the disapproving look from Robby, so her voice trailed off, âMovementâŠâ
Jack didnât even look at Robby as he shrugged him off. He pointed to Javadi. âI want 2,000 milliliters of saline delivered. Her seizure could be from losing electrolytes from sweating.â
âYouâre not even on shift, Jack!â Robby exclaimed.
âScrub me in. Iâm not just gonna sit around while my wifeâs kidneys fail and her brain swells.âÂ
Princess stood on the sidelines getting a surgery gown for Abbot ready, but Robby pointed to her.Â
âPrincess, do not get that dressing gown. Jack, sit down. If something happens, you do not want that responsibility to be on you.âÂ
Jack got slightly in his face.
âSo you want it to be on you? My best friend, who didnât tell me that my wife has been here the entire time? When I had to learn from fucking Dr. McKay and Dr. Mohan?â He said through gritted teeth.Â
His chest heaved like he would cry any second. His heart was held together by the tiniest string, and at any moment it was ready to snap. Robby shook his head.Â
âIâll give the order for the saline, but you can go sit down. Iâm not budging on this.âÂ
Just then, Javadi looked down and noticed her hand starting to twitch and move. Reaching out. Reaching to grip the blue medical bag.Â
âWe have movement!âÂ
Jack glared at Robby, but shook his head in defeat. âGive the order.â
Robby sighed and gave out the order for the saline. Perlah was already on it.
Jack rushed over to her side as McKay ran in and gave him a chair to sit in next to her. He noticed her pointer and middle fingers twitching. Her wrist struggled to pull up. He reached down to hold it.Â
âHey. Hey, hey, hey, sweetheart. Iâm right here.â He didnât take his eyes off her, âLighten the sedative. I wanna see if she can squeeze my hand. Give a neurotest.âÂ
At first, Robby didnât say anything. With crossed arms, he had a look in his eyes as if he were thinking it over. Perlah looked to him for approval, and after a moment of consideration, he nodded.Â
âYeah. Do it.âÂ
Perlah shot an activator into the IV, and after a few minutes, her eyes began to waver. Her head began to shake side to side. Slurring words stumbled out of her mouth.Â
Javadi shot up excited, â102! We can move her.âÂ
âPerfect.â Robby called out, moving over to her side, âLetâs get a fresh bedside and dry her off.âÂ
Jack squeezed her hand, âGood job, baby. Coming back to us.âÂ
She made a half-conscious noise before her eyes grew completely heavy again. He lifted her hand and kissed the back of it, thankful to whatever god out there that her temperature had made it down in time.Â
An hour later, she woke up in a proper ICU bed. Her entire body ached like she had been hit by a truck. All her muscles felt wrung out to the point where even breathing felt like a challenging task. Her eyes fluttered open and then closed again at the bright hospital lights. She grumbled before forcing herself to look around.Â
âHi, sweetheart,â Jack said in the gentlest voice he could muster.Â
She looked over at him and blinked, confused. Last she remembered⊠she was heading to work. How did she get here? And why did her husband look so⊠fragile? The bags under his eyes looked heavier than usual, and he sat hunched over as if his bones were too heavy for him to bear.Â
He reached out and squeezed her hand.Â
âCan you say something for me?â
âWhat happened?âÂ
He put her hand to his forehead and shut his eyes tight, grateful to hear her voice. He brought it to his mouth to kiss it again, then looked to her.Â
âYou had a bad case of heat stroke.â His voice cracked, âI donât even know how you managed to get such a bad case.â
She swallowed, slowly putting the pieces together.
âI was running late⊠And I kept running back and forth to the car cause I kept forgetting stuff. Then- then my car AC broke. Just blasting hot air.â
His eyes widened in horror, âDid you roll the window down?â
âMmhm.â She nodded, then winced. It felt like her brain was weighing down her skull with a pounding headache. She sniffled, âThen I had to park in the far lot today⊠And I felt a little weird⊠Now Iâm here.â
âIâm sorry, sweetheart.â He reached out and brushed her messy hair back out of her face. He tucked a few strands behind her ear. âItâs been⊠Itâs been a rough day, huh?âÂ
Her eyes suddenly popped open, and she tried to sit up.Â
âTHE PRESENTATION. I donât know if my boss got the files to-â
Jack immediately stood up and pressed a calloused palm against her shoulder, gently guiding her back to lie back down.Â
âI donât think your boss is worried about that. Theyâre probably more worried about a personal injury suit.â He reassured, âYou can contact them after you get better, and if they donât understand, you shouldnât be working for them anyway.â
She slowly nodded with a pathetic, âOw.â
There was a moment of silence. The hospital beeps and the whir of the air conditioning were the only noise filling the air. Jack took a shaky breath, trying to exhale all his worries away, but failing.Â
âYou gave us quite the scare.â His voice cracked, âI-I was in the ED because of a SWAT shift. I didnât even know you were here until McKay told me. And it was⊠a close call, sweetheart. A real close call.â
She melted at his words. It was a rare sight to see Jack choked up. Sheâd only seen it a handful of times before. Even in his darkest moments, he preferred to cry to himself, not in front of her. She squeezed his hand.Â
âW-why were you in the ED? Are you okay?â
He let out a gruff laugh, âYouâre seriously worrying about me when youâre the one who passed out?âÂ
She nodded, and he sighed with a small resting smile now. His love apparent in his softened eyes.Â
âIâm okay. There was a hostage situation, and my buddy Peter was sent in to negotiate. Came out with a bullet through the shoulder.â He explained, âI was out of the line of fire. So nothing scary for me.â
âAnd Peter?â
âPeterâs okay too.â He reassured, âYou hungry? The doctors are gonna give you a bunch of tests soon for your blood and kidneys, and youâll need to eat after.â
She shrugged, âIâm really thirsty⊠And exhausted.â
âI bet, sweetheart.â He stood up and leaned down to kiss her forehead, âIâll go grab you some water.âÂ
Suddenly, she tugged at his hand, âDonât leave.â
He froze, looking down at her nervous expression. The quiver in her lip and the way her brows slanted down. There was no way he was gonna leave his girl like this.Â
âOkay.â He sat down at her bedside again, âIâll just text Robby to send a nurse, okay?âÂ
âOkayâŠâ
He sent the quick text on his phone, then pocketed it in his cargo pants.Â
âRest. Iâll be here the whole time⊠Quite literally, I have a shift here in six hours.â
She huffed, crossing her arms, âThen you should sleep too.â
âFine. Fine, weâll take a nap together. Howâs that?âÂ
And when she nodded with a small smile, he scoffed playfully and shook his head.Â
âAlways worrying about everyone else.â He murmured under his breath, making her giggle.
Shifting her back down against the stiff hospital bed, she did her best to get comfy. And once she found a decent spot, she looked over at Jack with half-lidded eyes. He was in the middle of trying to configure some sort of sleeping position in an armchair that looked practically plastic.Â
He eventually leaned back and crossed his arms against his chest. Shutting his eyes, he tilted his head back. She was glad to see him somewhat comfortable.Â
âI love you, Jack.â
One eye opened in a comedic fashion, making her giggle before his head lulled to face her. He looked at her with exhausted eyes.
âI love you too, sweetheart.â
Satisfied, she finally closed her eyes again and let herself succumb to sleep, knowing she was always safe under Jackâs watch.Â
Summary: After you win a prestigious award, Jack's stressed-out dismissiveness leads to your biggest ever fight.
Tags/Notes: light angst, hurt/comfort, fight and make up, fiancee!reader, robby's your bestie now, jack grovels excessively
Content: no warnings but jack being a dick
A/N: yes I will be writing a fic for that one throwaway line about robby and reader
Word Count: 3.0k
You tiptoe into the house, not wanting to wake Jack since itâs nearly midnight. Youâre already tugging off the long diamond earrings that have been weighing down your lobes the entire evening when you see that Jackâs still awake, the living room lamp feeding light into the entryway. You head over, the crystals of your dress flinging rainbows all over the place, and murmur, âHi, Jackie. I didnât think youâd still be up.â
âCanât sleep if youâre not here,â he replies gently, leaning up to catch a kiss before returning to his reading. âYouâre home awfully late.â
âYeah, it was my award banquet thingy,â you remind him as you slip out of your heels. You flash the trophy that says âPittsburgh Small Business of the Yearâ and add, âI won, by the way.â
Not even glancing up from his book, Jack replies, âThatâs great, hon.â
Your heart falls a little, but you swallow it down. Heâs had a long day; you read about the train derailment on the news earlier and know he mustâve been in the middle of all the ugliness, staying late to make sure things went well. So you donât say anything more about your night. In the morning, you know heâll apologize for being short with you and ask all about it and tell you how beautiful you looked.
Swallowing hard, you turn back around and head to the kitchen to have a glass of water before bed. After a beat, you hear Jackâs footsteps padding up behind you. He wraps his arms around your waist from behind and kisses up your neck. You hum a little and sip your water. Usually, youâd turn around and kiss him hard, play with his hair, take him to bed.
When he pulls away, Jack sighs and pinches the bridge of his nose. âYouâre mad at me for missing your thing tonight.â
You turn around and give him a soft kiss, trying to reroute him before it turns into a thing. âI saw about that train thing; Iâm sure you had a really hard shift.â
âHoney,â he replies gently, âI can tell youâre upset; donât deflect.â
âBut Iâm not mad.â You give a small smile, trying to put on a brave face because you know he needs to get to bed. âI understand; itâs no big deal.â
Jack prods, his tone light but with an edge you donât like the sound of. âYouâre a terrible liar.â
âIâm not mad,â you insist again, voice getting tighter and higher, admittedly getting a little mad that he wonât drop it when you donât want to get into anything with him this late. The two of you are really good communicators, but youâre both exhausted and youâre in opposite moods, so you know itâs a recipe for disaster. You reach out and give his bicep an affirming squeeze. âLetâs just go to bed, Jackie; we can talk about it in the morning when weâve both had some rest.â
Jack shakes his head and crosses his arms over his chest, taking up an army stance with you like he does during fights. âIâm definitely not going to sleep if youâre upset with me.â
âFine, okay.â You sigh and shrug and look at your feet, at the cute pedicure you got to match your pretty dress. âI wish youâd been there tonight. It was important to me and it kinda sucked to be there by myself. But that doesnât mean I donât-â
Jack gives a sharp sigh and you both know heâs taking work out on you before he even starts speaking. âYou canât have expected me to miss work for something as trivial as-â
You cock your head to the side. Offense crawls up your throat. âTrivial? I know itâs not exactly rocket science, but since when have you thought what I do is trivial?â
Jack rolls his eyes and huffs, âThatâs not what I meant.â
âThen what did you mean?â
He looks at you like youâre dumb and you want to slap him. Youâve been looked at like that way too many times by way too many people. But never by Jack. âSeriously? I was at the hospital dealing with a train derailment that had twelve casualties and you were at some glitzy dinner for local business owners. Expecting me to leave my job for something like that isnât the same as-â
âGod, I donât care that you missed it! I didnât even ask you to go because I knew you wouldnât be able to; stop putting words in my mouth!â You dump out the rest of the water and set the glass down with a ringing thud. âI know how important your job is; you literally save lives and, trust me, you never let me forget it. Do you really think Iâm so shallow that-â
âIf the shoe fits,â he scoffs, the sound way too harsh and way too judgmental, âand you sure own a lot of fucking shoes.â
Jack sighs, but he still doesnât have much apology in his tone, âBaby, I wasnât trying to imply that-â
Voice wobbling, you cut him off, whispering to stop the tears, âI just wanted you to be proud of me. Thatâs all. But you didnât even say congratulations. Not once since I got the nomination. I just told you I won a huge award that recognizes my whole career and you didnât even look at me. I work so, so hard to make you feel appreciated and to respect what you do and to make time for you and even your coworkers and- and the one time you have the chance to do the same for me, you donât even try. That fucking hurts, Jack.â
He canât remember the last time you called him âJackâ instead of âJackie.â It punches him in the stomach. Hard.
Heâs barely even processed the pain in your sweet voice before youâre turning around and heading for the front door, zero hesitation or doubt in your step as you snatch your purse from the kitchen island.
âFuck, where are you going?â Jack hustles behind you, touching your elbow as you grab your keys and shove your feet into your fluffy pink slippers. Itâs the dead of winter and you donât even bother with your fuzzy boots. The thought of you being so hurt youâre going to risk frostbite makes bile rise in Jackâs throat. He rasps, âDonât- Baby, please donât go out there by your-â
But youâre already gone.
The door slams.
You drive aimlessly for a long time, not even realizing youâre heading toward Robbyâs place until youâre parking out front. After a deep breath, you collect your bag and drop into the slushy street before marching to his door.Â
It takes a minute for Robby to appear; itâs late, after all. He pulls open the door, rubbing sleep from his eyes, and takes you in. Beautiful glittering dress, running mascara, pink bunny slippers wet from the snow. âWhatâs going on, peanut?â
Even in distress, Robbyâs refusal to let you forget the Halloween party anaphylaxis incident that led to the two of you becoming real friends independently of Jack makes you laugh. Maybe that was the point. You swipe off the most recent layer of tears and explain, âJack and I are in a fight. Can I stay here tonight?â
Robby steps back and opens the door wider, letting you push in past him. âYou wanna talk about it?â
You sniffle and give a bashful sort of smile. âNo; I just wanna be alone and sleep, if thatâs okay.â
âCasa Robinavitch is a great place for that. Iâll get the guest bedroom made up, alright? Grab a glass of water or something.â Then, seeing your eyes going misty again, he tentatively offers, âYou need a hug, donât you?â
You nod and whimper pathetically as he opens up his huge arms. Folding against his body, you let out a few shaky breaths to fend off more tears. âThanks, Mikey.â
âNo problem,â he soothes as you let him go. Once he started seeing you as more of a baby sister than his buddyâs girl, he realized how important hugs could be to a person and how good he is at giving them out. Because of you, he's become a hugger.
Embarrassed to even ask, you gesture to your getup and mutter, âUm, could I borrow a shirt? I wasnât really thinking about pajamas during my dramatic storming out thing.â
âGotta do what you gotta do when it comes to making a point at the end of a fight with our boy,â he sighs. If youâre showing up on his door instead of having makeup sex, it mustâve been bad. Jack lives to make you happy. âTees in the bottom drawer, sweatshirts in the closet. Knock yourself out.â
Robby scrounges up an extra toothbrush and towels for you to warm up with a shower before bed and then he leaves you be for the night with a reminder that heâs just down the hall if you need anything. Then he turns in, exhaustion still heavy in his body from the dayâs shift. On his side, he grabs his phone from the nightstand and sighs as he texts Jack.
You hate fighting with Jack. The two of you have always been so good about never going to bed angry â or at least never going to bed without agreeing to talk about it in the morning â so, before sleeping, you still send him a text
Three dots appear. Disappear. Appear again. Then the texts flood your phone right in a row.
But you donât text back.
You go to work early, checking Jackâs location to make sure you wonât overlap with him at the house when you stop home to change for the day. He sends you a few things throughout his shift like he always does, little reminders to drink water and notes about his interesting cases. But you donât say anything back. Each of your read receipts feels like a gunshot to his gut.
Then, as you close up shop for the night, you get one more message, this time with an address attached to it.
Meet me for drinks. Please?
Your fingers hover over the letters for a long time. Itâs not like you were planning on going back to Robbyâs for another night. This wasnât, like, a relationship-ending fight. You needed a bit of space and you got it. Jackâs still the man you want to marry more than anything at the end of the day. But, you reason, a little groveling over fancy cocktails definitely wouldnât hurt.
Iâm fifteen minutes away.
Itâs a rooftop bar you havenât been to before, twinkly string lights along the fences and happy couples sipping overpriced designer cocktails around patio heaters that keep the snow and the cold at bay. Jackâs waiting by the entrance in your favorite suit, sage green that brings out his beautiful hazel eyes and shiny silver hair, the top few buttons of his shirt undone just the way you like.
When you walk up with a tight smile, he touches your waist, kisses your cheek, and says, âHi, baby. I got us a table over on the far edge. Great view.â
He leads you over, hand on your lower back, pulling your chair out and pressing a kiss to the top of your head. When he sits across from you, itâs easy for you to see the nerves written all over his face. Call it schadenfreude if you have to, but thereâs a flicker of satisfaction in your gut knowing heâs been torturing himself over what he said.
After ordering some whiskey for himself and your favorite pink wine, Jack reaches into his jacket and says, âIâd like to start with the ceremonial apology jewelry, if thatâs alright with you.â
Already fighting a smile because heâs, well, perfect, you nod and agree, âThat is our tradition, after all.â
He presents you with a small dark red leather box, which he pops open at the hinges to present a golden bangle of countless small diamonds in a half pave around it. He confirms your sparking, delighted suspicions, âEnticelle collection from Cartier. To match your hoops and necklace from Christmas.â
As he removes the bracelet and clasps it around your wrist, you admire the delicate glamor and squeal, âJackie! This is so beautiful. Absolutely perfect.â
âThereâs three more at home,â he tells you sheepishly, relief flooding him at hearing you say his nickname again. âI know you like to wear your bangles stacked. And, ah, felt a little more fitting to go overboard since I fucked up so bad.â
The drinks arrive but you donât drop Jackâs gaze, going to assure him, âOh, sweetie, you didnât-â
âDonât,â he interrupts softly. So softly. âIâm sorry, angel. Youâre brilliant and talented and you work so damn hard for yourself and this whole community.â He takes your hand and looks at you intensely. Like he means it â because he does. âIâm so fucking proud of you. I mean, Pittsburgh Small Business of the Year? Thatâs huge. I shouldâve been there clapping and cheering and showing you off because thatâs what you deserve. The hospitalâs got a hundred doctors, but Iâve only got one you.â
Your heart melts as he kisses your fingers slowly.
Youâre ready to tell him heâs forgiven, but he goes on, âI wish there were a word stronger than âsorryâ to tell you how I feel. I wish I could take back every word I said. Christ, you're the least shallow person I've ever met. I was mean because I felt guilty and exhausted and I shouldâve just listened to you and gone to bed instead of lashing out.â With a final sigh, he moves his hand to the side of your face, guiding you close enough to kiss but waiting for you to close the distance. He tells you firmly, âI love you more than anything. I still canât believe you agreed to marry me. And Iâm so fucking grateful for you.â
All of a sudden, before you can talk or kiss him, he checks his watch, curses under his breath, takes your hand, and stands up to get a better look at the city. âHere, kitten, I got you something to go with my apology.â
âSomething besides thousands and thousands of dollars in gold and diamonds?â
Laughing at himself, Jack nods. âWell, you wouldnât be the girl for me if you didnât appreciate grand, over-the-top romantic gestures. Come on, I donât wanna miss it.â
Your brows wrinkle as you stand, slipping easily into Jack's arms. âMiss what?â
He stands behind you, one hand on your hip to line up your bodies, and points down the street. There, right in the middle of downtown, is your smiling face, blown up by a thousand, on a beautifully designed electronic billboard. You recognize the photo as a close crop from your engagement shoot, edited and maneuvered by a professional to look more like a skincare ad. Youâd never realized Jack made you smile like that in those pictures: A million watts, lit up for the world to see.
Charm Made Effortless
Kismet Boutique & Beauty Bar
Pittsburghâs Small Business of the Year
You turn back to Jack with tear-filled eyes, lips parted softly open. âIt hasnât even been 24 hours. How did you do this?â
âIt was extremely expensive,â he replies with a smile as a few tears slip onto your winter-pink cheeks, âand I may have had to stay awake all night and call in a hell of a lot of favors. Did you know I saved the mayorâs life a few years ago?â
Eyeing him carefully, you warn, âBe serious, Jackie.â
He tugs you close and explains softly, âI hired the graphic designer for the ad as soon as you got the nomination.â Then he wipes the tears from your cheeks and tells you, âI was going to surprise you with it next week because the lead times for billboards â even the electronic ones â are insane. Like, months. But apparently calling the company sobbing about how you need to apologize to your fiancee and then offering, ah, a lot more money will get it up a week early.â
You twine your fingers in the curls at the base of his neck and ask gently, âYou had this planned the whole time?â
âI knew you were going to win, baby, from the first moment we saw your name on the shortlist. Iâm always proud of you. And I always believe in you.â After kissing your forehead tenderly, he sighs and whispers, âApparently my attempts at being coy and subtle came off uncaring and shitty. And sometimes Iâm still just a stupid asshole who puts his foot in his mouth when heâs stressed. I know I donât deserve-â
You quiet him with a kiss that he softens into, so thankful to feel your lips on his after a day without that he whimpers. âYouâre forgiven, Jackie. Weâre okay. I love you.â
Jack presses his forehead to yours and pinches his eyes shut, telling you reverently, âI love you so much.â
You hug him again, but this time itâs mostly so you can press your lips to his ear and murmur, âIâd like to finish off the apology with the ceremonial forgiveness fucking in the nearest empty stairwell, if that works for you.â
He turns the hug into a grinning kiss, dipping you back by your waist and groaning, âYou really are the perfect woman for me.â
Happilymarried!Pope who makes everything a onesided competition on who treats their wife best. He just wants to brag how he kisses the ground u walk on because how are they criminals but Cath has to work at a bar??? Uh uh not Pope's wife, she's lapping up the sun by the pool in their house or busy spending his money around, not a care in the damn world hair done nails done in a cute lil car...his card has never graced the leather of his wallet cause its always in her purse
oh my gosh yes, absolutely. oh he's so husband ohhhh i'm sick!! i especially love this with ditzy, bimbo!reader <3 i got a little carried away but it's andrew so it fits! :)
everyone's at the house waiting for dinner to be made, just standing around and chatting. it's hot, bordering on nauseating humidity, and all andrew wants to do is see his pretty wife before dinner. he needs alone time, quiet time in his old room to just sit and gaze at you as you chatter.
but now? andrew's engaged in a mindless conversation with craig, hearing him drone on about his latest hook-up while he stands with his hands on his hips nervously. you're due at smurf's house at any minute, a promise you made as you laid out on the beachfront of your home, waving at andrew as he got in his truck to meet up with the boys earlier that day.
he couldn't stop himself from kissing you. he was 15 minutes late. big fuckin' deal. andrew's family knew he needed his "you time".
deran's cooking tonight, much to pope's chagrin, and the cody's are all a bit anxious to eat the food. "oh no i literally have the pizza place down the block on speed dial" j expresses in between sips of his beer, before deran angrily chimes in from inside the house "jokes on you, dickhead, i catered."
baz sits on a lounger with cath, holding her to his side as he talks to j about an upcoming job. she's sticky with bar-soda stains and exhausted with the sheer movement of a work ethic. staring down at her ring, she runs her thumb over the diamond, wondering how life could've been different. her eyes flicker over to the oldest cody, and she can remember a time when she'd always find him looking back at her. but that hasn't happened in a long time. her shoulders crack with resignation and envy.
a horn honking, a happy squeal from the driveway, and andrew's straightening up his miserable stance. the thick gummy sole of his jordans rub against the concrete as he, quite literally, walks away from craig mid conversation. "bro-" craig shrugs, turning to look at baz in confusion as baz smiles "his girls home bro, you lost him the second the tires pulled in the driveway." craig stomps into the house, but he's not really angry, never could be at pope, "fucker has super hearing, man"
andrew walks to the driveway, shoulders losing their hunch the closer he gets to your bubblegum pop music and toothy smile. it's hard for andrew to smile, he'd often tell you, late in the dark of your bedroom, "'it's like it hurts a bit. hurts my face, i guess" but right now? his smile is beaming; crooked, endearing teeth on display with a light flush. it's probably because his brothers are inside, he never liked smiling with his teeth before you.
"andy!!" you cheer, wide smile and bouncing in lightly between your left and right foot. andrew doesn't even slow his steps, just keeps trudging towards you until you're in his arms. one big hand hooked behind your head for a long, sloppy kiss. waaaay too much of a display for normal public settings. his breath hitches as your hands drag under his t-shirt, nails lightly scraping his sides.
breathing in through his nose, andrew pulls back to look down his nose at you, "missed you. where you been? how was shopping?" "good! really good andy, wanna see?" "later. lemme get a feel for you. missed you so much" with more kisses to your cheeks as he pushes the hair away from your eyes <3
when you go into the yard, you're smiling and waving at the cody's as you hang onto andrew's arm. your ring glistening in the reflection of the pool, cath can't help but swallow bitterly. andrew trails next to you, head fully turned to listen to you rant and rave about the latest sales and the cute clothing you bought for yourself and him. he looks like he could and would eat you whole at the nearest convenience. it's been years, and he still looks at you the same way.
at dinner, you sit on andrew's lap, legs swinging as you bring the fork to his mouth. craig can barely look but deran smiles into his food; it's nice to see pope happy (even if it is gross to witness at dinner). when his iced tea needs to be refilled, you lean forward over the table, his hand resting on the side of your ass to stabilize you. he's not comfy until the weight of his pretty wife is resting on his thighs.
later that night, when you are all cozy and chatting on the couch, you lift your feet into andrew's lap. he doesn't even bat an eye, moving like it's routine.... because it is. slipping off your lil platform flip flops, starting with a massage at your ankle, andrew massages your foot lovingly as he watches the conversations around him. "'s that good?" he speaks lowly to you, and you nod excitedly.
it's almost torture for cath to watch. she was on her feet for probably 9 hours today, and here you are: shiny toe ring, perfectly, freshly manicured toes. begging andrew for a massage, "think i twisted it after i ran out of victoria's secret." his voice sounds alien to her "'s no good baby, gotta watch your step, we talked about this" soooo husbandly and earnest.
this is certainly being written as a personal service⊠but pope cody definitely loves himself a chubby girl. iâve written about this before, but i need more. minors dni. 18+ only
pope cody experienced a shift in attraction after catherine and amy. it had been a while since he had a âcrush' and after a year or two, he felt as though no one would waltz into his life and tug his heart strings enough to tie him down.
he would go to strip clubs with craig. follow him around like a sick puppy, eager to go home and do absolutely nothing. he would get lap dances by women craig deemed 'sexy enough for the cover of vogue.' they were always thinâthe only difference among each woman was the size of their boobs and assess.
he would also go to bars with his brothers and watch them flirt. he would just sit there quietly, observing and realizing how pathetic everyone looked, waiting around for someone to come up to them; or drifting into the depths of their drunk mind to temporarily silence whatever waited for them outside.
pope never fully entertained these women. neither would he agree to the plans his brothers had for him that contained stepping out of his comfort zone to become a man whore.
"iâm not like you, craig," heâd say. "iâm perfectly content with being std-free."
when they would nearly beg him, heâd say, "someone will come. one day. or maybe not. whatever."
he repeated these words in his brain. over and over again.
and then he met you.
you were unlike catherine and amy. younger than them with a different attitude and style. you also had a tummy.
pope thought about bodies when heâd jerk off late at night. not in the degrading way, though. he wasnât making fun of bodies. but he would think about women with pudges, thick arms and legs while he pumped his cock. he would get off to the thought of sinking his fingers into big thighs with stretch marks dancing along the fatty parts of hips. he would get hard ons while thinking about a faceless woman with precious rolls riding him â his cock, his face, his legs.
sure, he occasionally had sex dreams of catherine or amy, but their bodies and faces only remained as they were in real life for a few minutes. after a solid five minutes, theyâd morph into someone else.
once pope met you, he thought that woman in his dreams was you, and it was the worlds way of notifying him that you were on your way.
pope cody was absolutely enamored by you from the jump.
he loved the way your shirt would ride up and expose your stomach that would try to sneak out of your bottoms. he loved how large your thighs were, and how theyâd eat up your shorts when youâd sit down. heâd even sink his hands in between them for heat when heâd get too cold. he loved how your body would move when heâd fuck you from the back. he loved counting your stretch marks and running his fingers over them before clutching at your love handles.
he always made sure to let you know how beautiful you were when youâd voice slight insecurities. if you complained about your arms being too big, heâd say something corny youâd usually hate hearing from anyone else.
"i think your arms are beautiful. i donât think anything other than how strong they are, and how delicious they look in those little tank tops you wear.â
if you complained about having thick legs, heâd give some dirty responses.
"if i were sick and they offered me assisted death or something, iâd ask them to let me die in between your thighs. iâd want you to suffocate me."
youâd probably swat at him and tell him that was terrible, but heâd just shrug and say, "i love being in between your thighs. that would be the perfect way to go."
if youâd take pictures and complain about your stomach being 'too big,' heâd kiss all over it and grip it while he fucked you in missionary. he would throw your legs onto his shoulders while his hands clutched at your tits and stomach. he would thrust so deep inside of you that youâd forget why you were insecure to begin with.
pope cody would also love the weird things a lot of chubby girls hate. the little fat that crawls out of certain tops that dip too low near the armpit. if you were to say, âi hate tops like this! my boobs look weird and the cut makes me look bigger," heâd roll his eyes and tell you to stop throwing a tantrum because he likes that shit. he likes when parts of you pool out of your clothing.
letâs just say⊠pope cody would be on his hands and knees for a thick girl. heâd want your tummy out all the time. heâd want your thighs out all the time. if itâs warm, he wants them out.
heâs the most body positive person out there. heâd buy you a million bathing suits. heâd take all your bathing suit pictures on his phone and most likely jerk off to them when youâre away.
pope cody is a thickkk man, and he for sure would want a thick woman.
I think this schedule could be very nice / Call up the boys and crack a Miller Light / Watch the fight / Us girls are fun but stressful / Am I right? / And you got a right hand anyway
Overview: You knew it was a risk, dating a cop and all, but Sammy is different. Or, he was, at least. He was probably the best boyfriend you've ever had, the only one you ever saw yourself getting serious with. But then, he had to go and make buddy-buddy with the assholes in his department. Now your sweet boyfriend is gone and you're left picking up the pieces.
a/n: I actually got pissed at myself rereading this because she let him off way too easily at the end. So it's been revamped and, in my opinion, I think she gives him a proper amount of hell (Also, note the lyrics of this song, itâs going to be following those slightly misogynistic points for the first section of the plot)
more at: Belleâs 3k Extravaganza
wc: 12.7k
By no means are you the type of woman to throw on an apron and go all June Cleaver for a man. However, Sammy seems to be the exception to your rule. The first time you surprised him with dinner, there had been such earnest gratefulness in his eyes that you couldnât help yourself. Every time you think of how stressed he gets at work, how much hell he receives on patrol, you just get the urge to take care of him.Â
Itâs bad enough youâre spreading it for a cop, now you can add traitor to feminism on the list. Who can blame a girl, though, when heâs got biceps like those? Every time you see him, you just want to sink your teeth in him. Mark your territory for any doe-eyed woman that tries to flirt her way out of a ticket.Â
Most of your time is spent at his place so you can cook for him like you are tonight. Usually, while you wait for the food to finish, you find yourself cleaning up a little. The way he practically drops to his knees every time you take care of him has your sixth sense going off.Â
You know itâs coming soon, him asking you to move in with him. Your female spidey-senses are primed to go off the second you find a man ready to commit. It is such a rare trait nowadays.Â
It would be smart to say yes to him; you practically live with him already. But something is holding you back. No matter how much you care about him (maybe even love him), there is this gnawing thought thatâs been plaguing you. Everything's been going good.Â
Perfect, even.Â
Youâre crazy about each other, your fights are always resolved quickly, and he does anything he can to make you happy. But things are too easy, too conflict-free. Something bad is coming, you just know it.Â
The lock clicks on the door, and you find yourself smiling, already untying your apron. Turning the heat down on the stove, you turn in time to see Sammy walking in. His face lights up as he sees you.Â
He drops into your embrace the second you open your arms. You laugh a little, shifting your hips so his holster isnât digging into you. He mutters into your neck how much he missed you, and you feel the rest of your carefully enforced independence shrink away.Â
Itâs inevitable. Youâve gone full housewife.Â
âHow was work?â You ask, dragging your hand through his hair as he pulls back. He shrugs you off, and you sigh, realizing this is going to be a man-no-talk-about-feelings night. He huffs and tosses his jacket on the kitchen island.Â
Your gaze narrows, and you click your tongue once. Sammyâs eyes widen before he picks it up, moving it to the entryway closet. Where it belongs.Â
âGood boy,â you murmur, smirking when you see the color that grows on his cheeks.Â
He comes up behind you, arm winding around your waist. You glance down at his thick forearm and physically hold back the urge to dig your teeth into him. âGod, sweetheart, this looks amazing,â he lets out a breathy exhale as he watches you finish up dinner. You grin, making him a plate as he lets go and takes a seat at the island.Â
âBeer?â You ask, already getting it for him. Iâm a traitor to my people, you think as you hand your man a cold one to go with the steak dinner youâd cooked. Youâre making yourself your own plate when you catch him frowning at the stove.Â
âWhatâs wrong?â He finally looks over at you and raises his brows. âI thought you liked this,â you tell him, nodding toward the food.Â
He lets out a scoff and gives you an incredulous look. ââCourse I do, are you kidding? I love anything you cook.â
You fight back your smile at such simple praise. âAlright, why do you look like someone pissed in your beer, then?âÂ
His face screws up and you canât help but laugh. Almost sheepish, he rubs the back of his neck, no longer meeting your eyes. âGot a couple guys from the station coming over.â
Shrugging, you finally take a bite of your dinner. Compliments to the chef, you think smugly. âWhatâs the big deal? Ben comes over all the time.â
Sammy moves his food around his plate and you glare down at the action. âThey might be a little hungry.â
You let out an astonished scoff and he shrinks back with that boyish grin on his face that makes it nearly impossible for you to be mad. âJeez, what am I, Sammy? Your girlfriend or maid? You know I donât cook for any man.â
He glances down at his plate and then back at you with a pointed look. Rolling your eyes, you wave him off. âThis is a rare exception because we have such amazing chemistry in bed. I swear, if you were an inch smaller down there, youâd be nuking stouffers.â
Sammy lets out a small huff of laughter that makes the constant tight feeling in your chest ease ever so slightly. âGlad to know what Iâm worth. Iâll just order a pizza.â
âShut up,â you tell him, already digging around in the fridge for some food to make his friends. You cut open a pack of kielbasa and toss it in a pan, your dinner going forgotten on the counter. Pointing a spatula at Sammy you warn him, âDonât get used to this.â
He laughs at the sharp look on your face, his smile dropping when you pinch your lips, openly glaring at him. âOf course, sweetheart.â
You turn back to the stove with a weak sigh. âIâm only doing this because youâve got that pathetic kicked puppy look on your face.â Quietly, he makes his way up to you, arms once again tugging you into his firm chest.Â
âI promise,â he mutters into your neck, pressing a soft kiss there that has your stomach flooding with warmth. âIâll make this up to you with my amazing bed chem,â he mocks. You laugh but it trails off as you melt further into him, an ache between your legs getting stronger the longer he kisses you.Â
âYou play dirty,â you mutter, and he smiles against your skin, knowing exactly what heâs doing.Â
The guys he invites over seem nice enough. Theyâre loud, brash, and a little abrasive in the way your dadâs old friends used to be. Nothing you canât handle or donât expect from a group of off-duty cops.Â
Though, your skin does crawl when you set the food out in the living room and you realize just the type of men youâre currently serving. Never ever again, you swear to yourself. Thereâs a knock at the door and you go to open it.Â
A little piece of you relaxes when you look through the peephole and find Ben waiting on the other side. He smiles as you tug open the door. âHey,â you greet, already pulling him into a hug. He presses a brief kiss to your temple and wraps his arm around your shoulder, pulling you back into the apartment. âYou have no idea how relieved I am to see you,â you tell him.Â
âYeah?â He lets out a low whistle as he takes in the disaster area that is Sammyâs kitchen. âWhenâd you have time for all this?â He chuckles, plucking some of your leftover steak and popping it in his mouth.Â
âWhen I skipped dinner,â you grumble, ignoring the concerned look he shoots you. âItâs just a one time thing,â you tell him. âSammyâs seemed a little off lately, I figured he needed an easy night.â
âYeah,â Ben walks up to you, hand once again finding your shoulder. âIâve noticed that, too. Was getting a little worried.â
Any further conversation is interrupted as someone shouts, âBeer!â from the living room. You shoot Ben an astonished look that he only laughs at.Â
âHey, sweetheart,â Sammy trails off, eyes narrowing at Benâs completely platonic touch on your arm. He walks over and swats his grip away, tugging you back into his chest.Â
You let out a short chuckle at the amused look on Benâs face. âIâve been designated the beer wench,â you tell Sammy. He scowls, brows furrowing as he scoffs.Â
âIâll take care of it.â He reaches over for the dinner youâd abandoned and places it firmly in your hands. âFinish eating, sweetheart.â He doesnât leave any room for argument, redirecting you to a seat as he points at Ben. âYouâre with me, come on.â Ben shoots you one last grin before he helps Sammy carry the beer into the living room.Â
The living room gets louder the longer they stay. For the most part, you manage to ignore it, flipping through your book as you pick at your dinner.Â
âWe need more dip!â Your brows furrow and you look up with a scoff. Thereâs no way they think youâre actually going to bring them any. Right?
Shaking your head, you settle back into your seat and resume reading. âDip!âÂ
âFuck me,â you mutter, shoulders tense as you work to ignore the assholes in Sammyâs living room.Â
Itâs not much longer until Sammyâs walking into the kitchen. His brows raise when he spots you at the table. You give him a tense smile thatâs met with a confused frown. âI thought you were in my room.â
You shake your head, âNope. Been in here the whole time.â
Sammy glances between you and the living room with a cute little furrow between his brows. âCan you hear us in there?â
âOh yeah,â you scoff. âLoud and clear.â Your point is almost instantly proven by a loud round of jeering laughter that makes your skin shrink back.Â
âOh, well,â he hums, digging through the fridge to grab the dip. âHow come you didnât bring this?â He asks, holding up the container.Â
Your eyes narrow sharply. âMaybe because itâs not the fifties and theyâre grown men who can walk their asses into the kitchen themselves. Besides, youâre the only one Iâm sleeping with, youâre the only one who gets to ask for it.â
A grin breaks out on his face as he walks over to you. You lean forward, chin tilting as his hand slides around your shoulder to cup the back of your neck. âIâll get them under control,â he promises, pressing a lingering kiss against your lips.Â
You just nod, head tilting as you admire his ass as he makes his way back into the living room. With a heavy sigh, you force yourself out of your chair and start cleaning up the disastrous array of dishes.Â
Your hands are pruny and dried out by the time youâre done. So, with the most reluctant gait, you force yourself out into the living room to fetch your favorite lotion. A football game is playing on the TV at an obscene volume, but they seem to be ignoring it in favor of whatever card game theyâve got going on.Â
Ben shoots you a small smile as he catches you creeping around the perimeter of the living room. Just as youâre about to sneak out, he calls your name, cutting through the buzz of chatter. âGonna join us?â
His smug grin is met with a stare that promises death. âOh, sure,â you grit out, wishing you could choke him out. Sammy waves you over and you perch on the edge of the couchâs armrest. âYou winning?â You ask, glancing over his cards and finding yourself completely lost on whatever game it is theyâre playing.Â
One of his buddies lets out a loud laugh and Sammyâs cheeks go red. Youâll take that as a no. The guy reaches over, slapping Sammyâs shoulder. âHey, who knows, maybe your little lady can be a good luck charm.â
âDonât love that,â you whisper to Sammy as he takes you by the waist and pulls you onto his lap.Â
âWhat,â he teases, âyou donât like being my little lady?â
You slap at his shoulder and he just laughs. You make yourself comfortable, head resting in the curve of his neck as you watch a few more rounds of this odd game play out. It doesnât seem that anyoneâs particularly good at it. Every turn ends with someone muttering something obscene under their breath.Â
When your brain has reached its threshold for drunken cheers, you turn your lips toward Sammyâs ear. âIâm going to bed,â you tell him. Already struggling to keep your eyes open.Â
He peers over at you, eyes a little wide. âYouâre staying the night?â
You pull back, slightly offended by his tone. âDonât I always?âÂ
Something shifts on his face, this fleeting emotion that he doesnât let you get a decent read on. âYeah, yeah,â his tone is too light, so casual you donât believe it. âI just donât want us being loud and keeping you up.â
You just shake your head and press a firm kiss to his cheek. âYou know I sleep through anything.â Balancing slightly on his shoulder, you push yourself up to your feet.Â
âCalling it quits?â Ben asks, looking just as bored as you are. You just offer him a tired smile and move to head to Sammyâs bedroom.Â
âHey, sweetheart, you mind clearing some of this away so we can use the table?â Turning, youâre shocked to find one of Sammyâs buddyâs addressing you. Although, youâre not sure how you can be certain considering he doesnât even look at you when heâs speaking, eyes too focused on his cards.Â
âExcuse me?â You mutter, so taken aback you forget to tell him off.Â
âYouâre a doll,â he dismisses, swiping one of the other menâs cards. Stunned by the audacity and such blatant dismissal, you actually find yourself doing what he asks. It feels wrong as you bend down and scoop up the plates. You practically made them a feast, the least these assholes could do is help you clean up.Â
With a low huff and a pointed glare at Sammy, you take the dishes into the kitchen. You donât even want to clean them. Youâve already spent half an hour doing that tonight. But the idea of all this food being dried on the ceramic tomorrow disturbs you just enough to grab the sponge.Â
Ben walks in from the living room, a couple of plates and glasses in his hands. He drops them by the sink and you send him a grateful smile. âThought you were going to bed,â he muses, digging around in the fridge for another beer.Â
A little bit of shame curls in your stomach as you clean up after the men in Sammyâs apartment. âYeah,â you shrug. âI just donât want to worry about this in the morning.â
He lets out a snort which snags a laugh from you. âWhy would you worry? This ainât even your place.â
Your hands still, soap and soggy crumbs dripping beneath your fingers as you hesitate to meet his eyes. âWell,â you force a cheeky smile and shrug. âNot yet, at least.â God, how pathetic are you?
He holds his hands up, surrendering even though you can see thereâs more he wants to say. You watch him as he heads back into the living room and drop the dishes in the sink. Youâre done for the night, youâve done far more than you even wanted to. Sucking in a sharp breath you dry your hands and try to head back to bed.Â
A quick, âBeer!â has you pausing at the threshold of the kitchen. It pains you, but youâre already in here and you donât feel like looking petty in front of Sammyâs friends. Grumbling under your breath about men and getting off their fat asses, you pluck a beer from the fridge and plop it in the first outstretched palm you see.Â
The man chuckles while Ben shoots you a surprised look. âNice, Sammy. Youâve got her well-trained. Mustâve learned from the first marraige.â Your jaw actually drops as you stare at the balding man addressing your boyfriend.Â
Another one pipes up, his laughter making your skin crawl. âEveryone knows the first is just a starter. Itâs not until, at least, the third that you actually land a decent broad.â
You suck your teeth, staring pointedly at Sammy while you wait for him to pipe up. When he doesnât, a low chuckle leaves you. âHear that, baby? You got one more after me.â
Sammy finally meets your eye, just barely. His head ducks down as he shrugs. âThey donât mean it like that.â You let out an astounded gasp, looking around for anyone to support you on just how insanely backwards this whole conversation is. But the only one who will meet your eye is Ben and his stupid face just says âI told you so.â
âRight, okay.â You finally make your way into Sammyâs bedroom, just to grab your bag and turn your happy ass right around. âIâm going home, Sammy,â you call over your shoulder.Â
âWait- What?â
You hear Ben let out a little laugh while you grab your coat from the hook. âHope youâre ready to get reacquainted with your right hand, man.â His tone is malicious.Â
Itâs strange, going to your own place after work. Not immediately starting on dinner. Itâs a slight wake-up call that youâre committing too much of your time to a man who hasnât even asked you to move in yet.Â
Still, that doesnât make you miss the smile he always greets you with any less. Tossing your coat on the back of your couch, you head into your kitchen. Your cabinets are hardly stalked, the majority of your meals taking place at Sammyâs apartment. Meaning your dinner tonight is going to be expired ramen and some saltines.Â
Youâve had worse.Â
Your phone rings just as you toss the ramen in the microwave. Glaring down at the screen you watch Sammyâs picture light up. Crossing your arms, you lean back on the counter and wait for it to stop. He immediately calls back and you decide to let him stew a bit. You allow three ignored calls before you finally pick up on the fourth.Â
âHey, sweetheart, where are you?â Heâs doing a horrible job at masking the stress in his voice and it almost makes you smile.Â
âIâm at my place. Where else would I be?â You turn to the microwave, watching as the water bubbles and froths over the lid of your ramen cup. Grimacing, you redirect your attention to Sammy. More importantly, the leftovers you know he has and you really want to dig into.Â
âWith me,â he supplies, laughter light and uneasy.Â
You hum a little and shake your head. âI donât know. Is this because you miss me? Or is it just because Iâm so well trained?â You make zero effort to hide the venom in your tone. He should know he screwed up. He should have also already figured out that he was going to be put on a week-long sex probation after last night.Â
Sammy lets out a low groan and you can picture the way he probably slides his hand across his jaw, eyes clenching shut. âIâm really sorry about that, honey. I swear, I told them off the second you left. I just got drunk andâŠâ
âAnd⊠acted like the sort of jackasses Iâve already spent a lifetime dumping?â You supply for him.Â
He lets out another low laugh and you hate how you find yourself smiling at the sound. âExactly. So, would you come over? Let me make it up to you?â
You let out a sharp breath, eyeing your boiling dinner with disdain. âYouâre lucky I donât have anything to eat over here.â
You let yourself in with the key Sammy gave you. Not an invitation to move in, just an easier way for you to get in before him and have dinner ready. Maybe his friends were right, he does have you trained.Â
Shaking away the disturbing thought, you narrow your eyes as Sammy walks out of the kitchen. He gives you that familiar smile of his you love and it takes every iota of self control not to return it.Â
He frowns when you donât reciprocate. âReally, sweetheart?âÂ
âWhat?â You take your coat off, kicking the door closed behind you.Â
Sammy shoots you a flat look, palm finding a spot on your lower back as he guides you into the kitchen. âIs this how weâre playing it tonight? You want to be passive-aggressive?â
You scoff, some of your anger easing as you realize heâs made dinner, tonight. âI actually just prefer aggressive-aggressive, you should be happy Iâm being passive.â Sammy just laughs and presses a firm kiss to your temple.Â
âYouâre impossible, you know that?â You hum, watching as he grabs two plates and drops them on the dining table. You follow him, moving to take a seat when his hands snake out and take a hold of your waist.Â
âWhatâre you-â Thereâs no stopping the laugh that bubbles out of you as he tugs you onto his lap. And that knowing smile he sends you means he knows exactly what heâs doing to you. âYeah, Iâm the impossible one,â you scowl, but itâs defeated by the smile tugging at your lips.Â
He reaches up, brushing some hair over your shoulder as he shifts you in his lap. Heâs got a better view of your face now, his expression softening into something sincere. âI really am sorry about last night, hun. Thereâs no excuse.â
You bite your lip, arm lifting to wind over his shoulders. Inside, youâre still fuming, raging at him for not even attempting to defend you, just letting those guys speak to you like you were some maid. But youâve spent years being the âcoolâ girlfriend, always letting shit slide so that guys donât get tired of you after a month.Â
So, instead of doubling down, you lean down and kiss him. âItâs fine, Sammy,â you tell him.Â
Unfortunately, the cool girl syndrome has and always will be a chronic blight on your life.
âWe, uh, have a schedule, now,â he tells you. His eyes drop from your face, fiddling with a stray thread on your sweater, instead.Â
You swat his hand away before he ruins the hem. âWhat do you mean?âÂ
âEvery Thursday night,â he tells you, head resting against your shoulder as you pick at the food he made. âThere shouldn't be any more surprise drop-ins for you.â
You let out a huff that he tenses at. As much as you want to object, youâve been on the receiving end of one of his rants when he was first divorcing Tammi. She had never wanted to go to his office functions. Never wanted to meet any of his cop buddies. She was always so neurotic and steadfast in being as separated from his work as she could be.Â
You didnât want to do that. You werenât looking to be the girl that shit on her man hanging out with his friends just because you donât like them (cool girl strikes again). You donât want his friends to be right, you donât want to just be the stepping stone while he looks for the third wife.Â
âAlright,â you acquiesce and he perks up. That stupid, crooked grin almost makes it worth it. âBut that bar-wench shit isnât ever happening again,â you warn him, tone icy as you pull him back by his hair, forcing him to meet your eyes.Â
Sammy nods eagerly, âI know, baby. Weâre just gonna order pizzas from now on, you wonât have to do a damn thing.â Your gaze narrows into something sharp and he offers a timid smile. âAnd for the rest of tonight, Iâm at your beck and call, promise.â
Slowly, you loosen your grip on his hair, running your fingers through the curls. And the way he preens when you call him a âGood boyâ almost makes you think his friends wonât be a problem.Â
Thereâs a game on the TV, soccer or football, you donât know. Sammyâs got it turned down low so you can focus on your book. Heâd dropped onto the couch an hour ago and hasnât found the energy to move since.Â
Peering over the edge of your book you watch as he pulls your legs into his lap, eyes never leaving the TV. A little smile curls on your lips as his hands idly stroke over your skin. He doesnât even look like heâs aware heâs awake and he still needs his hands on you.Â
You hide behind your book as your smile grows. Asshole, making you all flustered over something so small.Â
Really, though, itâs not your fault that all your exes were pieces of crap. That now your standards are so low you think a man respecting your ânoâ is a sign of saintliness.Â
Just as you settle back into your book, Sammyâs door slams open, loud footsteps sounding through the entryway. Your heart jumps to your throat, legs jolting as you try and get a look over the couch. Sammyâs hands tighten around your legs, stopping you from bolting. Despite the way you can feel your heartbeat in your abdomen and are about to soil yourself, Sammy looks utterly unbothered.Â
âWhere you at, man?âÂ
âShit,â you hiss at the unnecessarily loud voice coming from the door. Grabbing your phone you check the date and, sure enough, it's Thursday. Like an idiot youâve already forgotten that he and his buddies are now on a strict schedule. Youâve been getting good at staying away or making yourself unavailable during his Thursday night games. Not tonight, though.Â
The bald cop, Tony, you think his name is, makes his way to the living room. He eyes you and Sammy, cackling when he sees your legs in Sammyâs lap. âShit, man,â he slaps Sammyâs shoulder. âSheâs got you whipped.â
Itâs almost subtle, the way Sammy brushes you off, reaching up to greet the man with one of those bro hugs. But you know him too well, youâve gotten too good at recognizing the slight flush on his face is embarrassment. As if showing your girlfriend affection is something to be ashamed of.Â
No wonder theyâre all divorced.
Curling completely into yourself, you watch Sammy jump up, heading into the kitchen to greet the rest of his friends streaming in. At the very least theyâve decided the dining table is a better place to play than the living room. That way you donât have to sneak past them when you try to head into Sammyâs room.Â
With something venomous burning inside you, you pick up your book again. Youâll just ignore them, read, and go about your night like they arenât a newfound plague on your peace. As they all settle, it grows increasingly difficult to try and drown them out.Â
Theyâre filling the apartment with expletives and insults straight from the eighties, clearly none of them are any good at whatever theyâre playing. Youâre not even sure why they get together. Youâve never witnessed one successful game.Â
Through the tin of rowdy men, you manage to make out a knock on the front door. You canât imagine itâs anyone from this group, they prefer just busting through like the Kool-Aid man.Â
Sitting up, you tilt your head, trying to hear if anyoneâs moving toward it. Another knock and then Sammyâs shouting, âBabe, can you get that?â
âBabe?â You scoff, nose wrinkling as you push off the couch. Sure, youâll get the door heâs five feet from. You send him a glare he doesnât bother acknowledging as you throw open the door.Â
Benâs waiting on the other side with an easy grin. Heâs balancing an obscene amount of pizza boxes as you pull him inside. âGlad youâre here,â you tell him, taking half of the stack from him.Â
âThank you,â he mutters, trailing after you into the kitchen. Without even thinking, youâre grabbing plates, already pulling out slices for the others.Â
Ben gives you an odd look, leaning against the island, head tilted as he watches you. âYouâre turning domestic.â His tone is teasing, but itâs not friendly. It seems like a warning.Â
Swallowing thickly, you shrug, too embarrassed to meet his eyes. âItâs not that big of a deal.â You pause, finally looking up at him and he offers you a knowing smirk. âRight?â You whisper, suddenly unsure of yourself.Â
âSure,â he grins, taking some of the plates for you. âWhatever you say.â
âYouâre such an ass,â you hiss, following him into the dining room. His shoulders shake a little as he laughs and you roll your eyes. Sammy gives Ben a brief greeting, smiling up at you when you pass him his plate.Â
You toss Tonyâs plate on the table with barely enough control to not have the glass shatter. Just as you begin to walk off, his arm snaps out, hand wrenching your wrist back. âOw,â you curse, frowning down at the tight grip.Â
âHow about a beer, sweetheart?â He doesnât even look at you.Â
Youâre just about to tell him off when Sammyâs voice cuts through the chatter. âHow about you keep your hands to yourself, Johnson?â The rest of the guys go quiet, looking up from their cards with nosy intrigue. Sammyâs just staring at Tony, and you swear youâve never seen him so angry.Â
Youâve heard him yell before, sometimes into the phone, a lot of the times when heâs ranted to you. But this was a lot colder than what youâve experienced. Too calm to be safe. Slowly, Tonyâs disgusting, clammy hand releases your arm.Â
Sammy doesn't look away, cards splayed carelessly on the table as he leans forward. âYou touch her again and weâre gonna have a problem. Got it?âÂ
God, thatâs hot.
Tony cows under Sammyâs glare. He shrugs, picking up his cards and muttering how he didnât mean anything by it. You just scoff, glaring down at the bald bastard. Then, just as youâre thinking about dragging Sammy into the bedroom for being so commanding, he laughs.Â
Your lips part in astonishment, Benâs head snaps to him with a furrowed brow. Sammy reaches over the table and slaps Tonyâs shoulder. âAh, come on, man. Iâm fuckinâ with you. No big deal.â The other men let out stilted laughter, trying to get over the sudden tension.Â
Sammy looks over at you, âRight, babe?â
No, itâs a big fucking deal. If I feel those clammy palms one more time, Iâll cut off his fat fingers and serve them to you all on the next game night.Â
And stop fucking calling me that!
âWhatever,â you mutter, eyes narrowing at him as you swallow every venomous word down. Your dignity burns as it tries to crawl its way back up your throat. But, you force it down, making yourself turn around before you say something you regret.Â
But, then, Tony chuckles. âWell, the beer, sweetheart?â
That fraying thread of self-control unwinds just a little more as you turn around to glare down at Tony. âYou got legs, donât you? Go get your own fucking beer.â
One of the other guys pipes up, snickering at you like youâre just a little dog yapping at them. âYou on the rag or something? Just bring us another round.â
At this point, you donât even look to Sammy for help. You already know heâs not going to do jack shit. Heâs clearly too much of a pussy to snap back at guys with seniority over him. âPigs,â you mutter, not caring if they hear as you storm off to the bedroom.Â
The door to Sammyâs room is closed in a poor attempt to block out the noise thatâs starting to give you a migraine. You can still hear them, laughing and making fun of each other like they didnât just humiliate you. Like they didnât just drag your sweetheart of a boyfriend to the dark side.Â
You glare down at your phone, an article about that jackass Tony glaring back up at you. Youâve seen multiple bodycam videos, smaller articles, all about this asshole who uses excessive force and has been involved in multiple internal affairs investigations. Sammy might have a shorter temper than most, but heâs not corrupt and he doesnât just casually hang out with pieces of shit like this. He definitely doesnât play about someone putting their hands on you. Thereâs something about this whole situation that seems wrong. You just havenât figured out what, yet.
The door slowly creaks open and you look up with a scowl. Sammy never checks on you when these guys are over. So, itâs not much of a surprise when you see Ben poking his head inside. âHey,â he offers a tentative smile.Â
You sit up, patting the spot on the bed by the footboard. âWhatâs up?â You ask, anger simmering down slightly as he drops himself beside you.Â
âSo,â he flexes his hands, gaze darting to the door before landing on you again.Â
You give him a shaky smile. âWhatâs up, Ben? Youâre acting weird.â You tilt your head and shrug. âWeirder than usual.â
He lets out a low laugh, nudging you with his elbow. âShut up.â For the first time since game nights began, thereâs a genuine smile on your face. âWhat do you think of Sammyâs new buddies?â He nods toward the dining room and you scoff. Whatever face you make clearly says everything you havenât because he sucks his teeth and nods.Â
âYeah, Iâm not much of a fan, either.âÂ
âWhat the hell is going on? Iâve never even heard half their names before and suddenly theyâre infesting our apartment.â Benâs brows perk at the slip up and you shake your head, brushing it off.Â
He rubs the back of his neck, shifting further up the bed. âI donât know, there was a change in the shift rotation, weâve been seeing a lot more of them lately. I canât believe heâs actually getting along with the assholes.â
âYeah,â you laugh, but it does nothing to mask the hurt in your voice. âHow the hell do you think I feel?â He looks over at you, expression softening at the pain on your face. Carefully, he wraps an arm around your shoulders, pulling you in for a brief hug.Â
He seems hesitant to even touch you, probably out of respect for Sammy. But youâll take whatever comfort you can get, as small as it may be.Â
Just as you rest your head on him, the bedroom door creaks open completely. Sammy walks in, brows furrowed and a scowl on his face as he takes in the both of you. âWas wondering where you went,â he mutters, glaring at the arm Ben has around you.Â
Ben lets out an awkward sigh, slowly letting you go. You almost complain, but you donât feel like dealing with any more machismo drama tonight.Â
âWhatâs going on?â Sammy asks, closing the door behind him as he steps into the room. He stands in front of you both, arms crossed in that way that usually makes you want to bite him. But your attraction to him tonight has been severely and utterly depleted.Â
âWe were just discussing the impeccable manners of our guests,â you joke, trailing off when he doesnât even crack a smile.
âMy guests,â he corrects, tone painfully sharp.Â
âRight, well,â you stutter, completely unsure of yourself. Youâve had too manny slip ups tonight. Youâve allowed yourself far too many moments of delusion thinking that Sammy might actually take the relationship a step further.Â
Ben jumps in, a scowl on his face as he gets to his feet. âYouâre acting like she doesnât practically live with you, man. Cleaning the place and-â
âButt out,â Sammy snaps, taking a step closer to Ben. You can feel it brewing, the tension that always seems to linger between them. Theyâre one pissing contest away from just beating each other bloody.Â
âHey, you know,â you get up and stretch with a dramatic yawn. âIâm pretty tired, think I might go to sleep.â Sammyâs eyes dart toward yours before he takes the hint, scoffing as he storms out of the room.Â
Ben shoots you one last look before he follows after him. In the wake of their absence, something like shame seems to fill you. Your relationship is deteriorating right before your eyes, slipping through your fingers. It feels like youâre just letting it happen. Should you be doing something more?
Is this just a phase he needs to go through?
He did skip the whole bachelor pad thing after his divorce, pretty much already ready to date you. Maybe some part of him never got to expel that chauvinistic resentment of Tammi and heâs doing it now. Not that it makes it any better.Â
Turning off the lamp, you lay down over the comforter and force your eyes to close.Â
Barely a few hours later, you can feel the bed dipping behind you. Sammyâs arms wind around your waist, careful as they pull you into his chest. Heâs trying not to wake you, completely unaware that youâve been up the past few hours debating the future of your relationship.
There's a part of you that thinks you've figured out why he's acting like this, why he would ever possibly hang around these clowns. But it's not good enough to excuse how he's been behaving. Â
âThey gone?â You grumble, holding stubbornly to your pillow so you donât give in and turn around to hug him.Â
âYeah,â he hums, the noise vibrating against your back. He pulls you closer, lips slowly trailing along your neck, hands dipping to the waistband of your shorts. Your eyes narrow and you bite back a scoff. He canât seriously think heâs going to get lucky tonight?Â
âJust need to clean up,â he tells you, hands pausing their descent. The silence between you is loud, it takes a moment before you catch his meaning.Â
âWhen the hell did I turn into your maid?â He stiffens behind you, arms tightening around you. âNot my guests,â you spit out, ânot my fucking problem.â
âOh, baby,â he rolls you over and you hold tight to the pillow. He frowns down at it as it pushes him back from you. âI didnât mean it like that,â he promises, attempting to tug the pillow from your hands.Â
You kick out at his ankle and glare. âWhat did you mean it like? And what was all that with Tony? Youâre just going to pretend like it wasnât a big deal?â
With a low grunt, he wrenches the pillow from your hands. You scowl as he pulls you into him. âIâm really sorry, honey,â he whispers, brushing some hair off your cheek. âThat was justâŠâ You raise your brows, so fascinated with whatever BS excuse heâs got this time.Â
Sammy just sighs, forehead falling against your own as he gives up entirely. âPathetic,â you whisper. âYouâve got nothing?â Your finger digs into his side and he lets out a low laugh.Â
âNo, nothing.â
âWell then-â
ââCept this,â he cuts you off, lips finding yours as he rolls over, taking you with him and settling you comfortably on his lap. You canât help the little moan that slips out, hips Pavlovâd into immediately moving against his.Â
His hands drift down, palms finding your ass as he pulls you tighter against him. âYou do not play fair,â you mutter against his lips. He just lets out another laugh, thrusting up into you and shocking another moan from you.Â
âNever said I did,â he teases, hands already reaching for the hem of your shirt. With a defeated sigh, you relent, sitting up and peeling off your top. His hands trail up your body, rough callouses ticking the sensitive skin as he cups your breasts.Â
You fist his shirt in your hands, dragging him up to meet your lips. âOff,â you demand, tugging at his t-shirt. Sammyâs quick to oblige, soft muscles of his abdomen flexing as he tears it off. What little patience he has snaps as you finally take off your bra. You can't help the laugh that tears out of you when he grabs your waist and flips you over, pressing you into the pillows.Â
His lips carve a path down your body, skin igniting under every touch as he hooks his fingers into the band of your shorts. âLet me make it up to you?â He asks, shoulders already parting your thighs.Â
You consider it, he does look handsome between your legs like that. But thereâs a barbed hurt in your chest, and humiliation from earlier tonight that makes your tongue knot.
Mouth souring, you shake your head and pull back. âNo,â his face falls and you canât help the cruel laugh that slips from you. You tug him up by his chin and offer a sharp smile. âNo sex until you get your little buddies under control.â His jaw drops before his head is falling to the crook of your neck.Â
âYou donât play fair,â he grumbles, and you can feel just how unfair youâre being by how tight his boxers are.Â
âNever said I did,â you hum, pressing a kiss to his temple and rolling over. Sammy follows, arms winding around your waist as he mutters to himself.Â
He can clean his apartment by himself. He can cook his own meals and talk shop with his friends as much as he wants. But he does not get to disrespect you and think everythingâs going to be fine and dandy.Â
Youâll just have to discuss this with him when youâre both not pent up and disappointed.Â
Your head is resting on his lap, his hands idly stroking along your spine when he laughs. You peer up, curious as you try and catch a glance at his phone. âWhat is it?â
âCome here,â he pulls on your arm and you sit up, curling into his side. âJust some stupid shit from the guys.â He offers you his phone and you take it, stomach already burning with anticipation. Please just be Ben being a sweet dumbass and not something horrible.Â
T > Rookie lost it on me today
J > That oneâs got a stick up her ass
T > I swear to God I canât even get through a goddamn conversation without her calling me a Pig.Â
Your stomach knots itself completely as you glance over at Sammy. Heâs already turned his attention to the TV, completely unaware of your internal meltdown. Then, the kicker, Sammy, replying to Jâs message.Â
Pretty sure itâs just a tampon
Itâs immediately followed by one of those morons sending a gif of Miss Piggy losing it.
Not only did your man just make a goddamn period joke, they dragged Miss Piggy into this. How the fuck dare they?Â
You toss Sammyâs phone onto his lap and he lets out a slight groan as it nails his groin. âWhat,â he trails off at the look on your face. âOh, come on, sweetheart. Itâs not that big a deal.â
Crossing your arms, you put as much space between the two of you as you physically can. âYou really think thatâs funny?â Sammy rolls his eyes, turning back to the TV and ignoring you. âFuck that,â you hiss, reaching over and turning it off.Â
Sammyâs glare is sharp and for the first time he looks like he has no interest in you. That look on his face is just flat, empty as he waits for you to get your rant over with so he can go back to his game.Â
âSo, you agree with that shit?â You demand, heart pumping a little too fast.Â
Sammyâs head sinks back into the couch cushions with a heavy sigh. âNo, come on, leave it alone. Itâs just a joke.â Tears sting your eyes as you're reminded of every failed relationship. Every moment you were dismissed or appeased so they could just go back to whatever they want, not giving a damn about how you feel.Â
âSeriously, Sammy. When Iâm upset and just happen to be on my period, do you just dismiss how Iâm feeling? Pretend to give a shit so you donât have to deal with me? When Iâm upset do you just think Iâm being ridiculous?âÂ
Youâre honestly not trying to start a fight. But youâd grown up around the type of men who knew blaming it on your cycle was the best way to shut you up. The most effective way to invalidate your feelings and make you feel so small. You need to know if the man you care so much about has secretly been that sort of man this whole time.Â
Sammy scrubs his hand down his face and lets out an incredulous laugh. âThis is different,â he defends, staring at you like youâre overreacting.Â
And maybe you are, maybe you arenât. At this point, it doesnât matter, because there is no excuse for just how much heâs changed over a few weeks. âHow is it different?â
Sammy just shakes his head. He gives you a flat look and scoffs, turning the TV back on. You purse your lips, biting your tongue so the tears donât spill. âI don't like your new friends.â He either doesnât notice how choked up you sound or doesnât care.Â
âGood thing youâre not my mom,â he mutters.Â
âNo,â you stand up and he sighs. âJust your live-in maid.â Sammy lets out another tired sigh, head sinking into his hand as you collect your things.
âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm going home, Sammy. â And as the door slams behind you, he doesnât try to stop you.Â
As you head to his apartment, making sure it's not a Thursday, you have to build yourself up. Give yourself a dozen pep talks before you manage to crawl up the stairs.Â
Youâre going to sit down. Youâre going to have a conversation. After a copious amount of research on his new friends, you've come to your own conclusion. This has to be some sort of undercover shit he's doing for internal affairs to try and bust these asssholes. But that doesn't change the fact that prolonged exposure to their behaviors has shifted who he is as a person. Changed him into a man you want nothing to do with.
He should have given you a heads up. Told you to stay clear for a few weeks while he works on this. Anything other than throwing you into this deep-end blind.
By the end of the night youâre either going to be single, again, or have the man you care about back.Â
Tonight, you knock instead of using your key, just needing another minute before you face him. When the door opens, youâre caught off guard by the wide smile on his face. âOh, thank god.â He reaches out, arms wrapping around your waist as he tugs you into him.Â
âUh, hi,â you smile, taken aback by the sudden surge of affection. You barely have a moment to hug him before heâs pulling back.Â
âGuys are coming over tonight,â he tells you, and your heart drops to your ass as the door closes behind you. âThink you could whip something up for us, baby? I didnât have time to call the pizza place.â
Youâre stunned, absolutely gobsmacked by his audacity as he pulls you into the kitchen. While youâre frozen, jaw permanently dropped, he pulls off your coat and positions you in front of the stove. He even goes so far as to tie on your apron for you.Â
âI thought you guys meet on Thursdays?â You mutter absentmindedly, blindly pulling ingredients out of the fridge.Â
âHad a change of plans today,â he presses a kiss to your cheek, and then heâs gone. A minute later you hear his shower start up. You stare down at the stove for a long time before you finally move.Â
You whip up a feast for him, a last meal if you will. Because you donât need a conversation anymore. You know exactly how this night is going to end. Might as well give him something decent to eat while you dump him.Â
The guys start to flood in while heâs still in the shower. They donât take their shoes off, tracking mud across the linoleum, something Sammy can look forward to cleaning up on his own. They donât greet you, acknowledge your existence, just grab a beer and carry on.Â
Feeling numb, you dig through the fridge, finding an expired carton of milk that smells nauseatingly like sulfur. You pour it into your pan, expression flat as the clumps begin to slough out.Â
The door opens again, you can hear the person taking their shoes off and know who it is before he walks in. âNeed any help?â
You donât turn to face Ben, just toss a handful of vegetables into the pan. âDonât eat the dip,â you warn him.Â
âUh,â he lets out an awkward chuckle. You turn, eyes narrowed as you shake your head. âWell, shit, alright. You got Visine in there or something?âÂ
âMight as well,â you shrug. Slowly, eyes a little wide, he backs out of the kitchen. You just swallow down another wave of fiery rage as you brew up a crime against cooking. But, it will absolutely give them diarrhea for the next week, so youâll pardon yourself this one time.Â
Your anger and hurt just builds and festers with every call for beer. Every shouting bought of laughter that makes your shoulders jump and your head throb. By the time Sammy makes it out of the shower, your mind has been entirely made up. Humiliation has gone cold and turned your blood to ice as you stand in his kitchen.Â
No part of you melts or swoons when he comes up to you with wet curls and presses a kiss to your cheek. His hands hover over your waist, brows furrowing when you donât turn to reciprocate. You quietly plate his food, giving him an extra serving of dip, and pass it off to him.Â
âHey,â he puts the plate on the counter, voice low and soft. âWhatâs wrong?â He tries to get you to look at him but you stay stubbornly rooted in place, idly pushing the food around in the pan.Â
âWere you ever going to ask me to move in with you?âÂ
He goes stiff, backing up with a frown that somehow breaches your walls and makes your chest ache. Never been good with rejection, you remind yourself, poorly attempting to build those walls back up. âItâs a little soon, donât you think?â
You canât look at him. The second you do, you know youâre just going to cry. You finally thought you were good enough for someone. That someone actually liked you, flaws and all. But, like every other relationship youâve had, you were just deluding yourself.Â
Sucking your teeth, you just nod. âAre we okay?â He asks, taking the food and backing up.Â
âFine,â you tell him, turning to bring the rest of the snacks to the dining room. Sammy takes his seat, still looking worried as you set everything up. Ben reaches for the dip and you swat his hand, his eyes widen slightly as he remembers your warning and he backs off.Â
The last plate you set down is with barely any care. Youâre angry and hurt, about to leave the one relationship you really thought would last. So, a little sauce splatters on the guys shirts. Not enough to do permanent damage, but enough to have them bitching.Â
âDamn it!â
âWhatâre you blind?â
Smiling, you straighten up and let out a sharp laugh. âAlright, Iâm done.â
Sammy frowns, hand tightening around his fork. âWith the food?â Oh, and that poor pathetic ounce of hope in his voice makes something in you burn.Â
The TV is blasting behind you and itâs just another noise adding to the pain in your head. You pick up the remote, shutting it off for a moment of peace. Immediately, the grown men in front of you boo, one even tosses a napkin at you, hand reaching for the remote.Â
And you just⊠snap.Â
âShut up. Shut the fuck up! Jesus Christ, I am so sick of this, of all of you.â They go quiet as you slam the remote on the table, plates trembling. âYou are grown men, you want a beer, then you go get it your goddamn selves. And before any one of you fuckers says some shit about me being on my period⊠I want it to be very clear that I have never been dryer in my life than I am looking at you pathetic excuses for men.â
Sammy stands as you undo your apron, tearing it off and tossing it at him. But youâre not done, itâs just pouring out- everything you didnât say. Everything you held back for a man who never really wanted you.Â
âGod, you wonder why the female rookies donât like you people! Itâs because everytime she performs better than you, everytime she calls you on your shit, you undermine her and blame it on the ârag.â Youâre just pathetic little men who canât handle a woman who is secure in her job because it reminds you of just how small you are.â
Your face is hot, chest heaving as you stand there, staring at them all. Youâre sure theyâve seen this meltdown before. During their divorce proceedings, watching as their marriage fell apart or their daughters stopped talking to them. But, for once, they are blessedly silent and you feel like you can actually breathe again.Â
Thereâs laughter and you look up to find Ben leaning back with a grin. He surveys the otherâs faces and lets out a low whistle. Youâre almost tempted to laugh with him.Â
Then, Sammy reaches for you, hand hesitant as it lands on your shoulder. âSweetheart-â
âNo,â you snap, voice quieter now. He flinches as you slap his hand away, hazel eyes wide and shining with hurt. âI am done with you, Sammy. Alright?â
âWhat?â His eyes dart to the others and he takes a desperate step closer to you. But you just shove him back. âHun, letâs talk about this.â
âNo, no Iâm done doing that. So, uh, enjoy cracking a beer with the boys without the drama of your untrained woman. Youâve got a right hand, what the fuck else do you need me for?â You grab your purse and shake your head.
Sammy chases after you but youâre not letting him weasel his way out of this again. Youâd made a promise to yourself. Youâre leaving single tonight, heâs had far too many chances to get his act together.Â
Just as youâre running into the parking lot, you hear footsteps racing toward you. You whip around, watery glare turning confused when you see Ben catching up with you. âHey,â he calls out your name and you let out a tired sigh as you stop.Â
âLook,â he darts in front of you, slightly out of breath. âAs entertaining to watch as that was, whatâs happening⊠Itâs not what you think.â
âI know,â you interrupt him.Â
His mouth droops before snapping shut again. âHuh?â
âItâs got to do with an investigation, right?â Slowly, he nods, infuriatingly surprised by you connecting the dots. âYeah, I figured that out a while ago, Ben. But he didnât give me any warning before he turned into this Don Draper wannabe. He didnât prep me or just keep me out of this. This all being a part of something bigger doesnât change or excuse how humiliated he made me feel.â
Ben wants to say more, you can see it on his face. His arm lifts before falling limply to his side. With a sigh, he runs his hand over his face and offers you a sorry smile. âDo you need a ride home?â He asks softly.Â
âNo, but I appreciate it.â He nods, and you blink, eyes burning as you stare down at the pavement. Hesitantly, his hand lands on your shoulder, softly squeezing before he backs up.Â
âTake care of yourself.â
You hum, throat too tight for words and wait for him to go back into the building before you let the tears fall.Â
When you wake up the next morning, your eyes are crusted from crying too much and your head is throbbing from, again, crying a ridiculous amount. Blindly, you grope around your nightstand until you find your phone.Â
It shouldnât be a shock that Sammyâs reached out, but the amount of missed calls on your screen is a number you didnât think you could ever reach.Â
Heâs also blown your messages up. The majority of them promising to explain his behavior. Asking you to call him. Give him one more chance (heâs had plenty). And then there are ones where you can tell heâs starting to get pissed off that youâre just ignoring him.Â
Serves him right.Â
Your thumb twitches against the call back button. Almost wanting to hear how heâs going to explain this away. But you force yourself to put the phone down. You swore to yourself, no more cool girl BS. Youâre not going to just let him treat you how he did and get away with it.Â
So, as difficult as it is, you mute his notifications. You donât have it in your heart to block him, not yet. But you can at least spare yourself the misery of watching his picture light up your screen every ten minutes.Â
Occasionally, though, throughout the week you have a moment of weakness. Youâll check to see just how much more heâs reached out and then listen to a few voicemails. They all relatively sound the same:
âPlease, sweetheart call me backâ and then youâll hear Ben in the background âMan, this is patheticâ Sammy will tell him to shut it and, again, plead for you to just give him a minute of your time.Â
When you start to feel really lonely, when your bed is just too cold and too big, you almost do it. Youâre so close to just calling him so you can hear something other than the quiet of your apartment. This space that has become foreign to you because Sammyâs place was becoming home. And then, youâre reminded of how he treated you, what he took from you both by not just giving you a heads up on the investigation. And you put your phone down, hurt and angry all over again.Â
By weeks end, your friends call you out to go to a club with them. They donât know you broke up with Sammy, they think youâre still the perfect couple. Which leads to a night filled with painful, barbed reminders of how alone you are now, while your friends bemoan how perfect and sweet your relationship is.Â
You should have told them the truth before you went out with them. But theyâve witnessed so many messy breakups from you. Theyâd probably just blame you. If you canât keep a decent guy like Sammy than it has to be you whose the problem.Â
So, after a long night of playing the designated driver (because youâre the only one happy and dating someone, in theory) and being reminded of how amazing your relationship used to be⊠Youâre already in a foul mood when a passing cop decides itâll be funny to get a handful of your ass.Â
Not just a slap or a quick squeeze, either. This man puts both palms, cups your cheeks, and nearly lifts you in the air he squeezes so tight. And you, completely ignoring his badge, treat him how you would any other creep.Â
You deck him.Â
Suddenly your face is pressing against the hood of a patrol car. Your friends are shouting âWeâre recording this, babe!â And youâre being cuffed and thrown into the back of their car.Â
But, hey, at least your friends recorded it.Â
âWhoa!â Ben is the first one to see you as youâre pulled into the station. Youâd consider yourself lucky if seeing him didnât mean Sammy was around somewhere.Â
âWhat the hell are you doing?â He snaps at your arresting officer while the piece of shit jerks your arm out of socket.Â
âShe assaulted an officer,â his partner pipes up. Your gaze goes to the deep black bruise ringing his eye and you grin.Â
âAll right,â you huff. âLike he didnât assault me first.â
Benâs eyes dart between the both of you, his jaw clenching when he sees the marks on your arm from your rough detainment. âWhat happened?â He asks you, holding up a hand when the cop tries to talk.Â
âI was out with some friends and this asshole thought he could just stick his hand up my dress.â
âDidnât take much,â that bitch smirks. âLook at the length of that thing-â
âHey!â Ben snaps and it catches the attention of some of the others milling around. âThatâs enough. Now let her go.â
âIâm sorry, what?â
Ben pushes the guy away, taking his key and working off one of your cuffs. âThis is Sammyâs girl, youâre lucky Iâm the one that found you, not him.â
The guys eyes widen and he backs off with a huffy sigh. âShit, Iâm sorry.â
âOh,â your stomach rolls with disgust. âBut if it were any other woman, youâd still somehow make yourself the victim? I see I only hold value when thereâs a man attached to my name.â
âAlright,â Ben puts his hand on your back, turning you before you provoke another fist fight. âIâm sorry about that.â
He sits you down at his desk and watches you carefully. âI should file a lawsuit,â itâs an empty threat but you seriously considered it on the ride over.Â
Ben snorts, eyeing you up and down carefully. âHowâve you been doing?â
âFine,â you shrug. âAbout as well as anyone is after a breakup.â
Ben leans forward, elbows braced on his knees, a seriously concerned look on his fac. âHeâs falling apart.â
âBenâŠâ
âSeriously, and not just because you poisoned him with spoiled dip,â that brings a small smile to your face. Ben returns it for a moment before his face settles into something more serious. âI donât know how much more I can take. Heâs snapping at any little thing. He wonât stop bitching at me. Iâm losing my mind.â
âLook,â you rub your wrist and look away. âAm I being booked or not? I want to go home.â
Ben sighs and scrubs a hand down his face. âYouâre not getting booked.â
âThank you,â and before you can even get up, heâs grabbing the loose handcuff and snapping it to his desk. Your eyes widen, stomach sinking as you tug futilely at it. âBen,â you hiss. âWhat the fuck?â
âIâm sorry,â he shrugs off his jacket, laying it over your lap so your dress doesnât ride all the way up. âBut I canât take this anymore.âÂ
Your jaw drops as he walks off and you know exactly where heâs going. âTraitor!â You shout at his back, he gives you a sarcastic thumbs up that almost make you wish you had a gun.Â
Youâre sitting there for about ten minutes before Sammyâs rushing up. Most of the guys in here know you, but the few that donât keep asking how much a night will cost. Youâre starting to think it might be time to retire this dress.Â
âHey,â your name rushes from him in one panicked breath. âWhatâs happening? Why are you cuffed?â
You suck your teeth and give him a sharp smile. âYour partner decided to play Cupid.â Sammyâs brows furrow, his hands already working on taking the cuffs off.Â
âYeah, but why are you here?â He asks, thumbs brushing over the split skin of your knuckles. You jerk your hand back before his soft touch weakens your resolve. Sammy frowns and you canât make yourself meet the hurt look in his eyes.Â
âSome asshole grabbed a handful outside The Strip tonight.â
âWhat the hell were you doing over there?â His tone is far too sharp for a man youâve already broken up with. Eyes narrowed, your face snaps to his.Â
âTone,â you snap. Sammyâs jaw clenches but he backs off a little. âI was out with some friends. Still, being near that place doesnât just give guys an excuse to grope me.â
Sammy takes a hold of your arm, pulling you away from Benâs desk and leading you toward an empty room. âIâm not saying it does. I just thought Iâve told you a lot about staying away from there. You know how many half-naked girls weâve had to pull from their alley?â
âJesus,â you huff, pulling your arm away as he closes the door. âI got it. I was trying to go home, anyway.â
âWhy-â Sammy stops himself, taking a deep breath as color grows on his cheeks. You wait for another lecture but he seems to love proving you wrong. âWhy havenât you called me back?âÂ
Your jaw slacks, an unintelligible garble of words stuttering its way free. âSeriously?â You land on, voice pitched with anger. Sammyâs eyes widen, glancing through the windows of the room to make sure no oneâs paying attention. Taking in a deep breath, you force yourself to keep your voice mellow.Â
You really donât need to be arrested tonight. Again.Â
âSammy, thatâs why you dragged me in here? Not because a cop copped a feel?â His expression falls flat at your poor excuse for a joke. Fuck me, then, God forbid you try and ease the tension.Â
âObviously Iâm upset about that, sweetheart. But itâs not your fault and itâs not you Iâm going to be telling off for it. Iâll deal with him later.â Youâre sure that means Sammyâs going to beat the guy half to death and Ben will have to clean up the mess.
âRight now, I want to know why youâre just pretending I donât exist. Like we havenât been dating for six months.â
Your feet are aching from the obnoxiously tall heels you took out tonight. Not bothering to look at him, you take a seat at one of the desks and peel them off, letting out a low sigh of relief. Sammy just watches with his arms crossed, clearly at the end of his thread.Â
âLook, babe, I donât know what youâre not getting about me being done with you, but weâre through. No sex. No calls. No texts. This is what happens when people break up, Sammy.â
Sammy lets out a stressed sigh, lips pulling down as he drags his hand through his hair. âYou donât understand. I had to act like an ass, baby, Iâm-â
âWorking on an investigation?â You finish, giving him an unimpressed glare. âYeah, Sammy. Iâm not a moron, I figured out why you were acting like a chauvinistic pig all of a sudden. The problem here isnât that, itâs the lack of communication that led to me being completely humiliated.â
His arms drop to his sides and he just stares, mind spinning as he struggles to figure out a way out of this. Spoiler, there isnât one.Â
âI donât- What do you want me to do, hm? What can I do to make this better?â
Youâre ready to dismiss him when you catch an officerâs eye through the window of the room. Theyâre all out there, his buddies, the asshole that arrested you. Watching and trying to pretend like this isnât the most interesting thing thatâs happened tonight.Â
Slowly, you drag your gaze back to Sammy, a cruel smile pulling on your lips. âBeg.â
He stills, eyeing you warily. âWhat?â His tone is incredulous, slightly taken off gaurd.Â
You shrug, âYou really want me back?â
âYou know I do.â
âAright, beg.â You tilt your head, wondering if heâs actually capable of swallowing down his pride.Â
Slowly, Sammy takes another step closer. âPlease, sweet-â
âHm, no,â you click your tongue, shaking your head in disappointment. âDo this properly, Sammy. On your knees.â His jaw clenches and it's audible how he swallows. Sammy turns toward the blinds and you sigh. âBlinds open. Unless youâre just full of it?â
âYou know Iâm not,â he grits out, cheeks flushing as a few officers fail to hide their peeping. You almost think heâs going to give up. Before you can scold him for taking too long, heâs dropping to his knees in front of you.
Your eyes widen imperceptibly and itâs an effort not to give away your shock. Sammyâs hands skate over the smooth skin of your legs, squeezing around your calves. âI fucked up, honey, I know that. I will do anything I can to make up for it, just, please, give me another chance.â
Itâs a power rush, having such a domineering man on his knees in front of you. That boost to your ego is almost enough to make you cave. But you know Sammy, he can certainly do better than this. He just hates the idea of any of his men seeing it.Â
Pursing your lips, you lightly kick your leg out. âPut my heels on for me.â He huffs, clearly upset by the lack of response, but he listens anyway. Getting to your feet, Sammy follows, expression expectant.Â
You pat his shoulder in that condescending way men always do to you. âThat was cute, hun. But Iâm not changing my mind. You want to fix this, youâre going to have to work a little harder than that.â
Sammy doesnât object, just scratches at his jaw and lets out a disbelieving sigh. You give him a sharp smile before you make your way to the door. âYou're unbelievable,â he calls after you. You shrug, not bothering to look back as you make your way out of the station.Â
A week after your âarrest,â youâre flipping through channels when a familiar face catches your eye. Tony, the crapbag that Sammy had around, has been arrested. As well as a bunch of other game-night regulars. Extortion, violation of civil rights, spoliation, and a list as long as your arm that just keeps on going. Truly, they are the epitome of scumbags.Â
You can understand why Sammy was so bent on getting them put away. Even if it came at the risk of your relationship. As much as that makes him a good cop and an honorable man, it doesnât make him a better boyfriend.Â
Still, you find your hand inching toward your phone, finger hovering over his contact. You bite your lip, debating the risks when someone knocks on your door. Frowning, you toss your phone on the couch and get up to take a look through the peephole.Â
Itâs like heâs got a sensor for when youâre feeling weak.Â
Sammy stands on the other side, hands shoved in his pockets as he rocks back on his heels. You step back with a huff and glance down at yourself. Taking an extra minute to hike up your shorts and adjust your boobs, you throw the door open.Â
âCan I help you, officer?â
He scoffs, lips pulled in an endeared grin. âStill mad, I take it?â
You pause, taking inventory of emotions. The sting of humiliation has eased slightly since you practically put him on a leash at the station. And you do genuinely understand the motivations behind his behavior, you just wished he hadnât executed it all so stupidly.Â
âNo, Iâm not angry, Sammy. I just wish you a happy life of erectile dysfunction and involuntary abstinence.â Pulling back, you go to close the door when he slips his boot inside. Glaring up at him, you frown. âGot a warrant?â
âEnough,â he scolds, pushing the door open. You stumble back with an affronted noise. âYouâre not breaking up with me.â
If it were any of your other exes, youâd probably be terrified right now. But heâs not being malicious or threatening to stalk you or take out your family if you donât unblock him. Instead, thereâs almost a slight thrill coming to life in you.Â
âWhat?â You scoff.Â
âIâm not agreeing to this,â he says simply, eyeing your skimpy pajamas with an appreciative gleam in his eye.Â
You scoff and cross your arms,âThatâs not how this works, Sammy.â
He shrugs, âTough.â When he takes another step closer, youâre almost tempted to run, to drag this out a little longer. But his arms are already winding around your waist and heâs heaving you over his shoulder before you even get a chance to blink.Â
âUh, Sammy,â you grasp at his shirt as he marches through your apartment. âWhat the hell are you doing, you neanderthal?â
âIâm going to make it up to you,â you lift your head and peer around him to see heâs walking you straight into your room. Oh, thatâs how heâs going to play this. âThen,â you let out a shocked laugh as he drops you on your bed.Â
His grin widens at the sound as he grabs your ankles, pulling you even closer to him. âIâm going to ask you to move in with me.â
Your heart races as your expression falls. Your gaze darts to his eyes, trying to figure out if he means this or if this is just a last ditch effort to get you back. âWhat?â You shake your head, but he doesnât let you pull away. âSammy, do you really mean this?â
ââCourse I do, sweetheart,â he brushes a strand of hair off your cheek and leans down to kiss you. Your arms wind around his shoulders off muscle memory.Â
But you force yourself to pull back, noses brushing as you take a good long look at him. âIâm not playing housewife anymore,â you threaten.Â
He lets out a little laugh and nods. âIâm gonna take care of you, honey. Donât you worry.âÂ
And god help you, you actually believe him, but it still doesnât feel right. âNo,â you whisper. Sammy draws back, brows knit in hurt as he shakes his head. âNo,â you scramble back from him, arms wrapping around your stomach as you shake your head.Â
âThis isnât how itâs going to work anymore. You donât get to fix our problems with sex. Or just decide the course of our relationship. You fucked up, you made me feel like shit. For the first time, I felt safe with someone, and you just took that from me.â
Sammyâs face falls and he takes a seat on the edge of your bed. His head falls into his hands as he lets out a broken sigh. âIâm so sorry,â you believe him. Thereâs shame, disgust with himself in his voice, but that doesnât fix this.Â
âIâll move in with you, Sammy,â you promise, and his head lifts. âBut not anytime soon. I think⊠I donât think Iâve been honest about who I am. Iâm so used to putting on a show, to trying to keep someoneâs attention, I havenât been myself. I want you to be with the real me. To actually see me, not this glamorized version of myself perfectly made for your gaze.â
âHoney,â he reaches over, taking your hands in his. âOf course I see you. Youâre not as good actor as you think,â you let out a watery laugh while he rubs his thumbs across the back of your hands. âBut Iâm a patient man.â
You shoot him a look and he offers you that boyish smile you love. âI can be patrient,â he swears.Â
Nodding, you lean forward, brushing your lips against his. âOkay,â you whisper.Â
âOkay?â he questions, not quite believing you. You smile and let your head drop to the crook of his neck.Â
âBut if you ever treat me like that again⊠Not even Ben will be able to find your body.â
Sammy lets out a little chuckle, it cuts off as you pinch his side. âTrust me, I believe you.â You lace your fingers with his and let out a small sigh. A fresh start might be the best thing for both of you. The both of you could do with learning to be independent outside of your relationship. And he really needs to know what you look like not being the cool girl before he makes such a big promise as being with you for real.Â
Youâre not planning on making it easy on him. But you have an odd suspicion he might be into that. And anyways, how were you ever expected to say no to a man with arms like these?
papa bear jack is nearly at his worst when you end up being followed home with your daughter...
wc: 4.1k // cw: stalking, u and ur daughter are being followed, obsessive!jack, angst, angst and some fluff // fic directory
Youâre convinced that youâre not seeing this man. You wonât be like Jack and let your fear fill the room before any actual danger does. People can exist in the same aisle, right? It can be annoying, especially when youâre trying to shuffle through the Easter candy aisle because Easter is over and thereâs a very tempting clearance to take advantage of.Â
This is why the guy in the faded denim jacket doesnât scare you when he looks up just as you turn your stroller toward the produce section.
If your daughter has no such anxieties, why should you?
Sheâs in the stroller, happily munching on her teething ring and distracting you with her round thighs every time she decides to remove her shoes by kicking them off.Â
âNo, baby. Stop.â
You murmur, reaching down to tug her pink baby sneakers over her heels.
âShoes are required in the grocery store. We donât need your dad having a medical event cause we lost another pair.â
Chubby kicks once, and you smile. After, you move through the store efficiently. You buy bananas, milk, and the yogurt melts you think sheâd kill you for. Coffee too. Jack claims he needs it as much as he needs his girls to survive.
You donât know if thatâs more flattering to you or to the coffee.
At the checkout, you see the man from the candy aisle again. Heâs in a different lane, and apparently, he had no interest in buying on-sale Easter candy packs, because he doesnât have a cart of anything. He doesnât even have a basket. Just a pack of gum.Â
He looks away just as your eyes find his.Â
Your stomach drops, and youâre like Jack in letting the fear overtake you enough that you almost forget youâre at the cash register.Â
âCute baby.â
The cashier smiles at you. Your hands tighten on the stroller. âThank you.â
âSheâs got perfect cheeks.â
âYes, she does.â Itâs true, and as her mother, you have every right to talk about her perfect, fat cheeks until the sun explodes.
âI'm very proud of them.â
But youâre too busy trying to convince yourself that youâre a little crazy. Itâs a small store. People are allowed to buy only one thing, and awkward moments where your glance catches someone elseâs happen all the time.Â
By the time you look back to where the stranger was checking out, heâs gone. By the time you get to the parking lot, youâve convinced yourself that you are ridiculous. Your nervous system has just been heightened by the beauty of motherhood.
Thereâs a beauty in that, even if itâs the reason youâve been googling âis my baby choking or discovering she has saliva?â recently. You have to find the silver linings.Â
You load the bags and buckle Chubby in. You get behind the wheel.Â
Your stomach turns when you see the man in denim near the cart return area, and you donât think itâs your fear clocking that heâs watching you.Â
But you donâtâŠyou donât panic. You see no need to peel out or to call Jack, because that would mean him asking a million questions that could turn a relatively good day cold.
If you were to even just slightly mention being uncomfortable because a weird man has decided to stare at you, heâd probably abandon his shift, and that would mean probably abandoning a patient. Poor, hypothetical patient.Â
Calling or texting him your worries wouldnât do anything but give a gruff nâ tough fear to a beautiful, thick, freckled body.
Yeah, letâs make it about it being for Jackâs sake instead of yours. Thatâs much easier.Â
The parkâs for kids, but it really does calm you down. Compare that to Chubby, who might excite herself in the swings so much that itâs not going to be hard to put her down for her nap later.
You press your mouth into the warm, sweet smell of your daughterâs hair. Inhaling all her sweetness is enough to cancel the sourness crawling along your nerves, and youâre just so, so enamoured by the squeaky-bellied laughs she gives every time you push her.
You hope itâll always be this easy to entertain her.
âAre you having fun, my little tax deduction?â
Chubby kicks both feet, and your smile drops when you see that one is only socked.Â
âWhere did your shoe go?â
Just as she grins suspiciously proud with her gums, you look past the swing set to see a car youâre not supposed to recognize.
You donât know why you do. Itâs not like recognition in the way of seeing something youâve seen 1,000 times before.
Itâs an older, dark car. You donât know how long itâs been parked. It gives you nothing as you watch it for ten to fifteen seconds. The windshieldâs reflecting a blur, youâre not even sure if thereâs anyone inside.Â
..But youâre sure youâre recognizing it in the way of recognizing something youâve just seen.Â
Youâre scaring yourself, but pretending itâs nothing wonât stop you from being scared. Time to go home.Â
The thought comes with Jackâs voice, except Jackie would never tell you youâre scaring yourself. You take Chubby out of the swing, cooing when she fusses and not giving a damn about finding her shoes. Her dad would buy her every pair if she wanted.Â
âSorry, sweetheart. We gotta go.â
You drive home while checking the rearview mirror more times than you can count, but even as every dark car becomes that one, youâre selfish in the safety you feel as you walk through the door, past the plants you keep forgetting to water.
At least Jack keeps watering them without comment. Heâs against plant murder. You can only try to be.
The camera Jack installed when Chubby was born watches you go inside. You remember rolling your eyes when he kept lecturing you on home invasions and the statistically unlikely but not impossible chance of some âfreaky fuckâ trying to get near you while heâs not home.Â
Youâre certainly not rolling them now, are you?
You lock the door. Then the deadbolt. Then the chain. You set your chubby baby down in her playpen, and you canât even give a shit about the way your hands tremble once youâre not holding her.
Your phone buzzes. Itâs Jack.Â
You home?
You text back.
yes â€ïžall good. Chubs kept kicking off her shoes in public and i think she's taken to trying to do the same with her socks
The dots appear immediately.
Send proof of life.
You laugh despite the day. You're home. You're safe. The both of you are safe.
You enter the playpen to take a picture of Chubby on her back, both fists around her bare foot. She looks innocent, like she's never committed the crime of wasting shoes in her life.
You send it. Jack answers immediately. Duh.
Sockless and disgraceful. That's my girl.
You okay?
...You know what? For the sake of you both, you can take to half-truths.
yeah, just tired.
Eat something.
You smile faintly and look down to find your daughter has managed to take off her other sock.
You hunch over to kiss her baby belly.
"I think your dada's teaching me how to be a worry wart, are you gonna grow up to be a worry wart---"
A knock on the door interrupts your tease.
You nearly drop your phone as Chubby startles. After she decides to not care, she blinks up at you with mild interest. You do not move.
The knock comes again.
"Ma'am?"
It's the voice of a man through the door.
Your blood goes as frozen as you are.
...He sounds polite.
"...Yes?"
You try putting on your nurse voice, but it's cracked.
"Sorry to bother you, but I think you dropped something. At the park. Your baby dropped something. I didn't want you to lose it."
You slap your hand to your mouth.
Oh. What the fuck? What the actual hell?
You think you might black out, everything within your line of sight stretches and blurs with the beat of your heart harsh against your bones.
"...What is it?"
"A shoe."
At that, your heart just might lurch out of you and turn you into a screaming mess.
"I---thank you," You can hear yourself becoming smaller, even though you want to ask him if he followed you all the fucking way home to give you your daughter's shoe. "You can leave it where you now."
Being harmless might make this situation easier. Maybe not. Maybe you should scream at him to leave. Maybe you should call the police.
But you don't know how many windows are locked, and making him angry might make him want to figure it out.
âI donât want it to blow away. It's pretty windy. I can hand it to you.â
âIt wonât. Please, leave.â
Leave, weirdass! Leave---
You almost drop your phone when it buzzes again. Again.
Whatâs going on?
Your thumb hovers over the keyboard as the man knocks again.
âYou there?â
You type fast.
Nothing
...Jack's reply comes so impossibly quickly that it feels more like his fingers pinching the back of your neck than an actual text.
Nothing is the man at the door?
You freeze. Again.
Move away from the door. Now.
...You had forgotten that he'd be able to see everything through the app on his phone, the one linked to all the cameras around the house. He can see the man.
He can see your lie.
And you practically jump when you hear his voice come through the speaker outside. It's low, rough in the gravel of his beautiful throat. Too calm.
âStep away from the door and leave.â
You can hear a scuffle outside, maybe the man shuffling back as he gives a nervous laugh.
"I'm just returning something. She dropped---"
"No."
Jack's decided not to yell or get loud, which is worse. You hate the voice he uses when he doesn't want to ask people for compliance more than once. It's usually with residents. Or drunk patients.
It's funnier with them.
You can hear scraping against the porch.
âLook, man, I was just trying to help.â
âYou followed my wife to my house? How else would you have my daughter's shoe?â
âI didnât follow her.â
The man sounds genuine, at least. Like, he actually believes that. You imagine Jack at the hospital, his shoulders high and tight, and face emptied out to let rage in. He's watching the camera feed, the man with Chubby's little shoe in his hand.
...But Jack, seeing that, calling him out on that, tells you he does have her shoe. Isn't that a perfect excuse to stalk you for miles?
â...Youâre on camera, fucker. Leave."
Jack's voice puts the chill in you. Chubby starts fussing.
You back away from the door and hurry to the playpen, scooping her up. She's offended by the suddenness and tells you that with another fuss, but she just presses her warm cheek against your collarbone.
Not afraid like you, thank God.
Your phone rings. Jack's name flashes on the screen. You answer instantly.
"Jackâ"
"Bedroom. Lock the door."
"Jack, Iâm sorryâ"
His voice is now in your ear. You can hear his clipped breath.
"Bedroom. Lock it. Take the baby."
"I have her."
You hear him swallow.
"Good. Good girl. Go."
You move down the hall with Chubby clutched to your chest. She grabs a fistful of your shirt and chews on the neckline.
You get into the bedroom and scramble to lock the door.
"I'm in the bedroom, it's locked. Is he gone?"
You can hear movement on Jack's end now, the sound of the Pitt before a demand leaves him, away from the phone and controlled.
"Robby. Take my rooms." A pause, a muffle. "No, Iâm not asking. I'm supposed to be leaving here, anyway."
A muffled, distant voice sounds out. Robby, probably. The sound of footsteps, Jack's, are what become the forefront of noise.
"Thereâs a man at my house. I have to go."
"Jack, Iâm locked in. Heâs probably gone. You can't just leave. I'll call the police if you want---"
Jack's voice drops when he decides he's having none of your excuses.
"You lied to me."
You feel your spit caught in your throat. Chubby nuzzles.
"You were scared, and you lied to me."
"I didnât want you to---"
"What?" ...He's snapping. "To know? React like anyone would? Come home? Keep you alive? Pick one."
Your throat might close up on you. It makes for the rushing silence that sits between you and him, just until you hear him inhale.
"Sorry, Iâm sorry. Iâm not---kid, Iâm not mad at you. I'm just out of my fucking mind."
His apology comes out angry, really. Ironic. Like he can still find ways to be mad at himself in this situation.
"I saw him at the store, then I thought--I thought I saw his car at the park. But I didn't know. I didn't want to be dramatic---"
"You saw him at the store. And at the park. And you came home?"
...Jack might as well be swallowing the knives in the kitchen with how he sounds. You stutter things that are barely words, bouncing Chubby.
"I didnât know what else to do, Jack."
I did. But I didn't want to deal with this on top of everything else.
"You call me!"
"I didnât want you to scare me more!"
That's your and Jack's talent. Escalating. You regret your words when the lines go quiet.
When Jack's voice returns, it sounds stripped. It's quiet, and you'd rather he'd yell like he just did.
"Yeah. Okay. That makes sense."
"...Did I hurt you?"
There's a breath with a hmph. That's an answer enough. You hold in your breath, only letting it go against Chubby's hair.
"You did. And that doesnât matter right now. Stay where you are. I'm going to hang up to call the police. I'll be there soon, Sleepy."
Jack hangs up. You start crying then, and your baby lifts her head and stares at you with confusion, even more offended than before.
You don't know how long you cry, but you're finished when Jack's truck tears into the driveway. He gets home before the police do. The distance between here and the Pitt...him getting home so quickly shouldn't be possible.
But shouldn't be one to not believe in him.
The front door opens, and you think it's okay to disobey his demand and leave the bedroom.
You find him pale with a jaw locked down so hard that you want to tease him and tell him that he's going to eat his lip. He looks at you, then at Chubby, then at every window in the room.
Chubby lights up.
"Da bah bahhhhh!"
He crosses the room, and you want this to be something you can tease later so badly, even though you're sputtering and reaching for him, because he looks like he could be called Dr. Violence right about now. Violence got himself a medical degree and scrubs and beautiful, silver hair.
Dr. Violence. Papa Bear. Jackie.
"Jack."
His arms come around you and your baby. One hand cradles the back of your head as you instantly fall into his stern, stoic body. He holds you too tightly. Never too tightly. Never tight enough.
"Iâm sorry I lied."
He slips his fingers to your neck, squeezing there with the rough tumble of his voice against your skin.
"Donât apologize yet. Iâm deciding how mad Iâm allowed to be without becoming fucked about this.â
Call the progress, baby. He's trying.
You pull back just enough to look at him.
"Youâre shaking."
"I watched a man stand on my porch with our daughterâs shoe in his hand. It's there. I can't touch it. I need to...I need to check the locks. The police should be here soon."
"Jack...let's just...let's just talk about this---"
"I need to check the locks. And the windows. And I'm getting more cameras tomorrow. And motion lights. I don't know why I didn't get motion lights before. That fucking...that fucking bastard. You donât know what it was like seeing him there and knowing you told me nothing. Knowing there was a whole day of you being afraid that I wasnât inside. I wasnât there. I didnât know. I didnât---"
"Jack, let's get you sitting down---"
"Youâre not going anywhere alone for a while."
...You should've guessed that's what would be the answer to this at some point. You swallow, voice softening carefully.
"We can talk about that."
Jack blinks. He rubs your neck. He only looks slightly helpless when he glances at Chubby.
Man-child / Why you always come a-running to me? / Fuck my life / Won't you let an innocent woman be? / (Why so sexy if so dumb?) / And I swear they choose me, I'm not choosing them
Overview: You're the Codys' new neighbor. You seem boring enough, not much of a threat. But Smurf and Baz are interested in that cushy new job at the bank you'd told them about.
So they send in Pope, hoping to get some decent information out of you. And he knows the rules, don't fall for the marks. But you make it impossible to stick to that rule and Smurf sees that as a threat. She sees you as a threat.
wc: 17.0k
Belleâs 3k follower extravaganza!!
Itâs hard to stare at the interior of your new home and not think that the past two years of your life have been a complete waste. Youâve dedicated them to one man who couldnât offer you anything more than broke-boyfriend hugs and a complete absence of emotional availability.Â
Twenty-four months of your life were spent financially, emotionally, and physically supporting a man who crawled right back to his motherâs basement when you finally dumped him. He had slept with every one of your friends, maxed out all your credit cards, and generally been a blight upon your life in every conceivable way.Â
Now, with no family or friends, you hauled out what little belongings you had from your U-Haul and dragged them into your new house. It had been an absolute steal, one you were still suspicious of. In a prominent neighborhood with houses that look straight from an architecture digest, you managed to find one you could afford with a bank tellerâs salary. Which, admittedly, is not as much as you need right now to get rid of your exâs debt heâd so generously left you.Â
The realtor had been more than happy to dump the keys in your palm. The owners themselves had dropped their price to your last-ditch offer in a way that made your stomach turn. But you needed something new. Something that didnât remind you of the man-child youâd spent two years cleaning up after and re-mothering.Â
So, despite the red flags and klaxon alarms, you took the keys and ignored the pitying way the people across the street watched you. Youâd researched the neighborhood, it didnât have any higher crime rates than your old one. You hadnât read any headlines in the news that would make you regret your choice.Â
It wasnât until your second night there that you realized why, exactly, everyone had treated you like a kicked stray.Â
You have your pillow wrapped as tightly as possible around your head without actually suffocating yourself. The house right beside you has its music blaring on obnoxious speakers, girls screaming the lyrics, and guys cheering as they jump off the roof into your neighborâs pool.Â
Despite the fact that everyone over there looks, at the very least, thirty, theyâre partying like itâs Y2K and the worldâs about to end.Â
So, this is why the house was so fucking cheap. Figures.Â
You let out a low groan and bury your face into the mattress. You have your TV on, white noise playing, even music blaring from your phone. It doesn't even put a goddamn dent in the howling happening in the next house over.Â
The universe really just did not feel like giving you a break. Dating Colin wasnât enough punishment for the sins of your past life. Now you had to live next to the goddamn Playboy Manor.Â
The number of women who had streamed in there in thongs and barely-there bikinis had been concerning, to say the least. And the fact that half of them received payment on entry was even more disturbing.Â
Admittedly, you probably shouldnât have been posted at your window, glaring down at the neighborâs house. But, really, you didnât have a choice. At least thatâs what you tell your nosy ass.Â
Tomorrow, you swear to yourself. You will march over there, demand an explanation, and then politely ask them to shut the fuck up. Tonight, though, you were too damn exhausted to do anything but bask in your own misery.Â
Fix the bitch face, you remind yourself, forcing a half-pleasant smile on your face as your neighbor opens her door. The smile slips into a slightly awed expression as you take in the older woman. Her hair perfectly tousled, boobs right in your face with that bikini, and a silk robe wrapped around her like a second skin. Holy shit. Youâd been expecting some finance ass in his thirties, not a hot mom in her fifties.Â
âHi,â you draw out uncertainly. Her eyes narrow, flitting up and down your form as she appraises you. Your shoulders straighten, chin jutting out under her judgment.Â
âCan I help you, baby?â The rasp of her voice should have been expected, but it still takes you off guard.Â
You hold out your plate of (poorly-baked) cookies and adjust your smile. âYes, hi,â you give her your name. âI just moved in next door,â you tell her, nodding toward your house. âI thought I would introduce myself to my new neighbors.â
And politely ask you all to shut. The. Fuck. Up. On weeknights. Youâre a reasonable woman.
The stern look on her face makes way for something you wouldnât describe as soft, but at least it didnât look like she was about to pull a gun on you. âWell, isnât that sweet?â She opens the door and motions you inside. You almost protest but the sharp look on her face has you stepping forward with your tail tucked.Â
âYou know,â her hand hovers over your lower back as she leads you deeper inside. âNot enough girls are like you, anymore. No manners,â she scoffs, voice airy like sheâs already a world away from your conversation.Â
âWhy donât you change, weâre having a little party by the pool.â Of course you are, the only reason you donât roll your eyes is because youâre 90% sure she would spank you like a child.Â
âOh,â you flounder. âI just wanted to introduce myself, thatâs all. Besides, I donât have a suit.â
She laughs, the noise unkind, and turns you toward a bedroom. âYou know the great thing about string bikinis,â she rasps into your ear. âThey look good on anyone. Bottom drawer,â with a slight shove, youâre stumbling into the room and the door is closing behind you.Â
That woman is a witch, youâre so sure of it. Not only did you obey, picking through different sizes of bikinis until you found your own, you found yourself waiting for her next instructions. Standing outside the bedroom in your heels and half naked, you feel ridiculous but that doesnât stop you from smiling when she lets out a low whistle at the sight of you.Â
âSmurf,â she offers, holding out her hand. You repeat your name again and follow her through the glass doors of her patio.Â
âLet me introduce you to the boys.â
Your eyes widen as you trip slightly. âBoys?â You croak. Meeting Smurf was bad enough, especially now that sheâs got you half-naked prancing around her pool. You had no interest in meeting any of the rowdy assholes screwing around in her backyard.Â
She hums and sends you a smug smirk, âMy boys.â Great, more of her. Youâd hit your quota of mama-boys in your life after your ex. You had no interest in meeting any more, but there wasnât much of a choice as she shouted, âBoys, get over here!â
Four messy heads of hair whip toward her and suddenly, four grown men are racing toward you. Your nails bite into the palm of your hand as you swallow down the urge to turn tail and run back home.Â
âCraig,â she motions toward the tallest and the one eyeing up your body like youâre a slab of meat at the butcherâs. Youâve never wanted to crawl out of your skin more. âBaz,â he offers his hand. You take it tentatively. His gaze isnât any better. Only Deran and J, the other two, seem to be looking at you like youâre a human being.
âShe brought us some cookies,â Smurf holds out the plate and you frown at the condescending tone of her voice.Â
âWho are you?â Craig mutters around a mouthful of chocolate chips.
âNew neighbor,â Smurf answers for you. Bazâs gaze darts to her and you donât like the narrow-eyed look they share.Â
âReally?â Baz asks. The interest in his stare is entirely different now. So unsettling you almost wish he would go back to objectifying you. It feels like heâs trying to crawl under your skin, pick you apart until heâs got your inner workings memorized. Â
Smurf hums and places the plate down on a nearby table. âI thought we should keep her around, maybe have her for dinner. Get to know her,â the menâs eyes widen slightly and you know that theyâre hearing something youâre not. Your stomach rolls unpleasantly.Â
âWell,â your voice cracks as you take a shaky step back. âI wouldnât want to intrude.â
Baz steps toward you, herding around you until youâre being pushed toward a lounge chair. âNo intrusion,â he insists as you pretend not to notice the woman doing a line off her hand beside you. You sit stiff and straight, praying as desperately as you can that youâre not about to be trafficked.Â
âStick around,â he instructs. âI want to get to know our new neighbor.â You offer nothing more than a squeaky hum. He walks back toward his family and suddenly youâre a deer caught in a fox's den as they stare at you, whispering amongst themselves.Â
God, you really stepped in it this time.Â
Youâve had three drinks shoved in your hand in under an hour. Each of them has gone untouched, passed off to whatever partygoer walked by you. Smurf doesnât speak to you, just sits in her chair and watches everyone. J and Deran asked you brief questions about yourself, but itâs been Baz whoâs truly been hounding you.Â
Every ten minutes, heâll stop beside you, ask you some âinnocentâ questions about yourself. You keep your answers brief, each response feeling like a test that you have no luck in passing. Your limit for strangers and loud music is about ten minutes and by this point, you feel ready to pass out or throw up.Â
Not only is Smurfâs family disturbing and intimidating. The people all around you have been snorting, sniffing, and smoking illicit substances that you want no part in. You actually donât care how loud they are at night, now, you just want to get out of this party alive.Â
So, when Baz gets held up breaking up a fight between Craig and Deran, you take your chance. Your heels click against the stone path as you make your way toward one of the doors. Smurfâs blocking the one she led you through, so you end up finding your way into someoneâs bedroom.Â
Just as youâre sliding the glass door shut, the one behind you clicks open. âFuck,â you hiss.Â
âWho are you?â The voice is gruff, sharp in a way that has chills breaking out along your body. With a tight smile, you whip around, back pressed to the cold glass.Â
Hazel eyes are narrowed in your direction, cold and emotionless. âHi-â
âWhoâs that?â A little girl pops up behind him, head tilted curiously.
âDonât know,â he replies. The man turns, pushing her out of the room. âFind your dad,â he tells her. He waits until she runs off to close the door and you realize how well and truly fucked you are. Because not only are you in a strangerâs house, youâre now being cornered against a bed by a man who looks like he hasnât felt remorse in years.Â
âWho are you?â He asks again. He doesnât raise his voice, but you still feel a shock of fear regardless.Â
âNeighbor,â you stutter out. His eyes dip down your body, not admiring, assessing. Still, you find your arms wrapping tightly around your stomach, wishing you were in more than, essentially, a bra and thong.Â
âWe donât have neighbors,â he takes a step closer, rolling up his sleeves in a way that has your breakfast coming up your throat.Â
âNow you do,â you offer weakly, hands splayed like youâre some sort of surprise. âI, um, brought cookies and Smurf told me to stay. Gave me a bathing suit andâŠâ you trail off as he comes to a stop. His shoulders roll back and for a moment, you feel a little bit of your anxiety ease.Â
âI was trying to figure out how to sneak out of here. I didnât realize this was your room, Iâm sorry.â He nods once, eyes still roaming across your body. Finally, he steps back, opening up the door and nodding you forward.Â
You hesitate just a moment before he lets out a slight huff. âGet out.â He doesnât say it unkindly, just bluntly. Itâs enough to get you hightailing your way through the rest of the house. You feel him following behind you, rather than hear him. His presence is looming despite his size, broad and an imitation of your own shadow.Â
When you pause at the entrance of the bedroom youâd first walked into, he comes up beside you, arms crossed. âWhat?â
You startle at his sudden appearance and wrap your arms around yourself once more. His eyes narrow on the movement but he says nothing. âMy clothes are gone.â
âClearly,â youâre so caught off guard by what could, almost, be a joke that you forget to take offense.Â
âNo,â you stutter over his audacity and glare. âSmurf put me in this. I left my dress in here. Itâs gone.â
The patio door opens behind you both and he shoots you a sharp look. âGo home.â
You glance down at your half-naked body and then back at him. âLike this?â
His hand, rough and calloused, is already wrapped around your arm and dragging you to the front door. âEither that or stay for dinner.â Even if you did want to stay, he gave you no choice. With a light nudge, youâre stumbling down their front steps and the door is slamming behind you.Â
Before any other neighbors see you, you book it toward your home and throw yourself inside. Tomorrow, youâll mourn the loss of that dress. Right now, youâre just thankful for the shark-eyed stranger who hustled you out of there.Â
âAgain, Mr. Murray, Iâm not allowed to date our clients.â You offer the eighty-year-old man in front of you a forced smile. He laughs you off and leans against the counter. Thereâs a distinct pop that youâre sure is his hip slipping out of place.Â
âNonsense, sweetheart, itâs just a little lunch.â Normally, the older clients are sweet, a little touchy. But they just want someone to talk to, to have someone listen to them, since their kids gave up on them years ago. Mr. Murray, however, is nothing more than a pushy nuisance who thinks sexual harassment is a PC snowflake term invented by prudes.Â
You glance around him and groan at the long line forming behind his hunched back. âMr. Murray, youâre flattering me, really, but I have a lot of people waiting.â
His brows draw in and you brace yourself for a temper tantrum when a frighteningly familiar voice interrupts. âAre you done?â Mr. Murray turns and you find a man with shark-eyes and auburn curls watching you. Jerking back slightly, your hand smooths over your hair, primping, as your neighbor moves beside the old man.Â
Mr. Murray draws back with a why-I-oughta look but he cowers under the younger manâs intense gaze. Itâs not even a glare, just the kind of stare that makes you completely rethink who you are as a person.Â
âJust a joke,â Mr. Murray grunts as he wanders off.Â
Itâs just you and shark-eyes now, you canât tell if youâre excited or dreadful. âHi, again.â He says nothing and you scratch the back of your neck. âNice to see you while Iâm fully clothed.â It takes everything in you not to drop your head to your desk, because what compelled you to say that?
A small noise leaves him, nowhere close to a laugh but you think itâs the best youâll get. âNeed to open an account,â itâs all he says before sliding a large pile of hundreds toward you.Â
âOh,â your eyes widen as you gape at the obnoxiously large amount of money. Youâre used to working at credit unions. Theyâre homely, poorly furnished, and not used by the richest people. This new job is cushy, a bank so fancy itâs even got a chandelier dangling from the ceiling.Â
You havenât had much time to grow accustomed to people with real money working with you. Still, though, this seems like an obscene amount. âUh,â you clear your throat and tidy the bills into two piles. âMy manager opens accounts, just give me a moment.â
His hands ball into fists and he lets out another sharp huff. âIâd prefer if you did it,â he insists and your brows turn in.Â
âI donât think Iâm-â
âWhatâs going on over here?â Your manager comes up behind you, hand trailing across your shoulders as he leans against your desk. Shark-eyes tracks the movement and how you shudder. Your managerâs attention falls to the stacks of cash and his breath stutters.Â
âHe wants me to open his account.â
âWhy arenât you?â He demands sharply, pulling back.Â
Your eyes dart between the two men and you shrink back. Switching jobs was supposed to help you regain control over your life, not put you under the thumb of another poorly developed man-child.Â
âIâm not supposed to,â you grit out. âYou said that, Mike.â
He rubs his hands together and lets out a nervous laugh, âGood day to start.â He collects the other manâs cash and pulls out your chair. He says your name and places his hand on your lower back. âSheâll take you to one of our offices and help you get set up.âÂ
With a huff, you jerk away from Mikeâs hand and motion for your neighbor to follow you. Heâs eerily silent as he trails behind you. Opening up an empty office, you motion him inside, letting the door shut quietly behind him.Â
Situating yourself behind the desk, you pull out the new account paperwork. âAlright,â you hum to yourself, leafing through the papers.Â
âIs he always like that?âÂ
Your eyes widen as you glance up. âSorry?â
He leans back in his chair, elbows on the armrests and body stiff with tension. âYour boss. Is he always like that?â
You scoff and log in to the bankâs system. âIf you mean domineering and a pain in my ass, then yes.â Somehow, his lips fall even flatter at your blunt admission. âItâs a new job,â you find yourself explaining for some reason. âOnce the âfresh meatâ interest wears off, Iâm sure heâll back off.â
He hums but doesnât offer you anything else. âOkay,â you draw the word out and slide him the papers. âFirst things first, need your name.â
He picks up the pen and scribbles it down, you tilt your head in curiosity. âAndrew,â you muse. His shoulders stiffen but he says nothing. âI thought Smurf only had four sons.â Itâs an innocent enough inquiry, but from the glare he sends you, youâd think youâd told him you ran over his dog.Â
âSorry,â you back off, sliding the papers back toward yourself. Your nails click against the keyboard, struggling to figure out the alien system as you try and finish this as quickly as possible.Â
âThree,â he suddenly announces.Â
You hum absentmindedly. âWhat was that?â
Andrew clears his throat and shifts slightly, but his stare remains strong. Practically burning into you. âSheâs got three sons. Deran, Craig, and me. Baz and J arenât hers.â
You glance over at him and your brows furrow at just how uncomfortable he looks at such a small admission. Further confirmation that you should probably stay as far away from the Codys as possible.Â
He clears his throat, shifting around again. âWhat about you?âÂ
You count his money and cast your eyes briefly toward him. Each question he asks sounds like someoneâs pulling teeth to force it out of him. He hasnât looked away, not once, but youâre wondering if thatâs just a different sort of stress tic. As if taking his eyes off you means leaving himself vulnerable.Â
âNope,â you click your tongue and pass him more forms to sign. âAll on my own.â
He straightens and lazily scribbles out his signature. âNo family? Boyfriend? You moved into that big house on your own?â
Your fingers still on the keyboard as your shoulders stiffen. From anyone else it could just be a hopeful ploy to see if youâre single. But this is the same man whose mother practically kidnapped you last night and all of a sudden, heâs popping up at your place of work.Â
With a sly grin you donât truly mean, you turn to him, arms crossed on the desk. He doesnât falter, eyes never wavering. âAre you trying to ask me out, Andrew?â
For the first time, you get a true reaction out of him. He blinks rapidly, lips parting as he pulls back from you. âNo,â he sounds incredulous and you canât help but laugh.Â
âRelax, Iâm messing with you. Because, honestly, you sound like Iâm going to find you waiting at my house for me tonight.â
He settles and crosses his arms. âI am your neighbor.â If you could read anything about him at all, you might have recognized it as a joke. But it feels more like a threat to you. Stiffening, you draw back and place his money in a bag.Â
âIâll just go deposit this for you.â You rush out of the room before he can say anything else.Â
Andrew turns and watches as you practically run down the hall. He sinks back into his chair with a heavy sigh. He hadnât even wanted to do this. It's not like he was exactly eager to be back in banks again.Â
But Smurf and Baz got on his ass about checking out the new neighbor. Making sure she wasnât a plant or going to cause any trouble. Heâd watched you all morning up until now. From all he could tell you were on your own, working a boring nine-to-five, and there was absolutely nothing interesting about you.Â
You also seemed pretty smart, already aware of just how far you should be staying away from his family. Even more reason youâre not going to be causing any trouble for them. Hopefully, this meant Smurf would get off his back and his day wouldnât have to revolve around some harassed bank teller.Â
The low murmur of conversation catches his attention and he turns back toward the glass door. Your manager has stopped you in the hall, hand cupping your elbow as he stands far too close.Â
Youâre actively shrinking back, face curled with displeasure as Mike only gets closer. Popeâs lips curl slightly as he watches you jerk away. You rush down the hall, bag clutched tightly to your chest. Mike glowers until he turns to find Pope watching him.Â
With a lazy smile, he approaches your office and takes a seat behind the desk. He steeples his fingers, eyes eager as he watches Pope. âIs she treating you alright?âÂ
âSheâs fine,â he grits out.
Mike shrugs and gives him a smile like theyâre sharing a secret. âNo need to cover. Weâve gotten quite a few complaints about her already. Thereâs only really one reason we hired her, you know?â
Pope doesnât feel like entertaining the conversation anymore. He wants Mike gone, he wants you gone. He wants to leave. But Smurf always knows when heâs lying and he doesnât have the option of bullshitting his way out of this ridiculous errand.Â
âNo, I donât know,â heâs speaking through clenched teeth and, still, Mike is incapable of taking the hint.Â
âWell,â Mike clears his throat, trying to find a way around a harassment suit. âItâs always nice to have something pretty to look at, you know? Decorâs just meant to be attractive, doesnât have to be smart.â
âNeither does the manager, apparently.â It takes a moment for the insult to settle. Mikeâs wide eyes only further prove Popeâs point.Â
He clears his throat uncomfortably and shifts, âRight. Well, Iâll just let her finish up here.â Pope says nothing, just watches the old man as he walks out with his tail tucked. He can hear you bump into him in the hallway, Mike snaps at you, taking his frustration out on the first easy target.Â
Pope turns again and when Mike catches his eye he shoves past you and storms his way back to the front. You watch him go with an awed expression and shake your head. Pope hears you mutter, âJackass,â as you make your way inside the office.Â
You settle into your chair with a loud huff. âHere are your checks. Itâs just a few, youâll receive the book in the mail.â He takes it wordlessly, eyes darting to your phone as it lights up on the desk.Â
đ«drunk texting shows on your screen for a split second before you offer him a sheepish smile and turn it off. âSorry about that.â
âWho is it?â Heâs being invasive, thatâs the whole point, but he almost hopes you donât tell him. If youâre the type to just spill so easily, itâs going to cause trouble for you in the future.Â
âA mistake,â you bite out, not meeting his eyes. Pope lets out a small sigh as you shove his papers haphazardly into a file. âThere you go, Mr. Cody. Please let us know if thereâs anything else you might need.âÂ
Your smile is tight, sharp at the edges, your tone is practiced. The same voice youâd given the old man who wouldnât take no for an answer. Youâre dismissing him and wordlessly making it clear that should he ever need anything you want nothing to do with it. Popeâs lips curl ever so slightly but they drop when he catches the surprise on your face at his expression.Â
He takes the folder from your hands and leaves the office without another word. Making his way through the lobby, he finds himself sitting in his truck, just watching. You never take a lunch break, not leaving your stall unless itâs to deposit money. Pope finds himself growing more and more irritated the longer he has to watch this.Â
Youâre harmless, worth nothing to Smurf. Yet, every time he tries to get her to let this go, she insists he stays. The entire day is wasted on you. Finally, at 5:30, you make your way from the bank. You donât wave goodbye to your coworkers, effectively ignored as they brush past you. You donât even linger in the parking lot, just get started going down the sidewalk.Â
Popeâs brows furrow as he watches you go. âFuckâs sake,â he mutters. You walk home. And itâs not like he can just trail beside you in his truck. Getting out, he follows after you, lingering behind just enough for you not to notice him.Â
He keeps his hands stuffed in his pockets, feeling more like a pervert than ever before. J or Craig should be doing this shit, not him. This is so far below him it's infuriating. After tonight, Baz better get that stick out of his ass about you.Â
You pause and Pope ducks back. You dig around through your purse, letting out a soft curse as your head drops to hang between your shoulders. âDammit.â Pope has no warning as you pivot around, eyes widening as they land on him.Â
âOh,â you let out a shrill sound that might have been a laugh and take a large step back from him. âYou. Again.â Your eyes dart over his form and he can see as fear settles on you. âI really want to think this is a coincidence.â
Popeâs prolonged silence probably isnât helping anything. But he genuinely has no excuse that could explain this away. And he knows what he looks like, unblinking, odd, something women donât want to see following them home.Â
âYou shouldnât walk home alone,â he finally settles on. The disturbed look on your face doesnât abate, but youâre also not running.Â
âClearly,â you snap. âI knew your family was weird,â you settle on the word carefully and Pope almost laughs. Weird doesnât even come close to explaining the Codys. Heâs not sure any one word could. âBut this is a lot.â
Pope shrugs and takes a step closer to you. You donât move, eyeing him warily. âDo you want a ride back?â
âAre you going to kill me?â He gives you a flat look and you deflate. âFine. I accidentally left my keys in the bank anyway.â This time, when you walk itâs beside him. Though you keep your purse clutched tightly to your chest, shooting him a wary look every so often.Â
âDo you want to tell me why you were following me?â
Pope watches you and you donât shrink away like he expects. You face him head-on, lips set in irritation. âWanted to check out the new neighbor.â He knows you understand what he means. Heâs not looking for a good time, heâs checking out that youâre not going to be a problem.Â
Finally, you break away from his stare. âIâm boring,â you mutter and he couldnât agree more. When you reach the parking lot, he waits in the truck while you head back into the bank. Heâs shocked you donât try to make a run for it and, instead, beeline straight toward him.Â
âThanks,â you tell him, almost sounding like you mean it. Itâs concerning, how easy it was to get you in his car.Â
Pope doesnât say anything and you keep quiet all the way back to your house. When you get out, you shoot him a wary look. âAm I going to see you tomorrow?â
âNo,â he responds. Baz and Smurf should feel better after all this. You give him a curt nod and he watches as you rush into your house before backing into his own driveway. In the house, everyone's waiting at the table, a family meeting that he hadnât been warned about.Â
âHey, baby,â Smurf smiles and puts a plate of food in front of him as he sits. âYou hungry?â He just nods, eyes boring across the table into Bazâs.Â
âWell?â He prods.Â
Pope shakes his head. âHarmless, like I said. Works a bank job and goes straight home. Itâs just her.â
Bazâs brows lift as Smurf hovers behind him. âBank job?â She asks, the question anything but innocent. Popeâs stomach turns as his grip tightens around his fork. He just fucked himself right into another week of stalking.Â
âCould be useful,â Baz mutters. Smurf squeezes his shoulder and nods. Pope doesnât need to hear the order to know what she wants from him.Â
For the first time in a week, you find yourself actually taking a lunch break. You rarely have the time for it and you know itâs a bad habit. Youâre trying to break it, but with Mike always breathing down your neck, itâs difficult to do so.Â
Today, though, youâre settled in a sticky booth of the diner closest to the bank. Your nails drum against the table as you wait for your food. Your phone lights up once again, your ex calling you for the fifth time in an hour. The sudden influx of communication is making you wonder if his mom cut him off again.Â
The doorâs bell jingles and you glance up, caught off guard as Andrew walks in. Your eyes narrow and you cross your arms. Itâs been a week since youâve seen him. You figured after that night he tried to follow you home, that was it. Maybe this is just a coincidence, he doesnât seem to be looking for you.Â
âAndrew!â Your mouth clamps shut as you curse yourself out. Youâre not sure what possessed you to actively vie for his attention, but youâve got it. He turns toward you, eyes narrowed as he glances at you warily. Maybe he really wasnât looking for you.Â
Slowly, he strides toward your table, hands in his pockets as he looms over you. âWant to join me?â You offer.Â
He seems caught off guard by the invitation, but sits nonetheless. âFancy seeing you here,â you joke, your laughter trailing off as he remains quiet. You clear your throat and go back to tearing up the paper from your straw. âDo you come here a lot?â
âWhy?â The suspicion in his voice is jarring, but you really shouldnât be surprised.Â
âJust trying to make conversation,â you toss your hands up and lean back in the booth. Silence permeates the air between you and you shift restlessly.Â
âI⊠donât.â He finally answers, voice stilted. âFirst time.â You suck your teeth and nod, nails once again drumming against the table. Blessedly, the waitress walks over with your food. Her eyes settle on Andrew as she sets down your plate.Â
âCan I get you something to eat?â
He shakes his head, âNot hungry.â Your eyes narrow on him as the waitress walks away.Â
âDon't tell me that youâre still following me.â
âSmurf wants you to come over tonight.â He slips out of the booth and briefly turns to you. âIâll drive you home.â Itâs not a question, thereâs no room for argument as he leaves the diner. Your head thunks against the boothâs seat, your appetite suddenly diminished.Â
True to his word, Andrew had driven you home. He didnât walk you to your door or wait to make sure you got inside, but you could appreciate that you didnât have to walk all the way home tonight.Â
Now, you stand in front of Smurfâs door with a bathing suit on and a fishnet cover-up that makes you feel slightly better about being half-naked around her sons. She opens the door, wearing a similar style bikini to the one youâd first met her in.Â
âGlad you could make it, sweetheart.â As if you had any choice. You only offer her a tense smile, following as she gestures you inside. âI know Baz wanted to talk to you,â she glances over her shoulder and you force yourself not to grimace.Â
âReally?â She hums and you both step out toward the pool. Sure enough, Baz is right at the door, pretending to just casually bump into you.Â
âHey there, neighbor.â Itâs disconcerting how quickly his hand makes itself comfortable on the small of your back. You shoot him a sharp look but he ignores you, urging you toward the bar at the other end of the pool.
Any other setting, any other man, you would shove him off and tell him to leave you alone. But youâre not stupid, you know that thereâs something off about these people. However Andrew made all the money he deposited, it wasnât through any honest means. Thereâs a gut feeling screaming at you to run away and it just makes you all the more terrified of what might happen should you piss them off.Â
âIâve been meaning to check in on you,â Baz says, passing you a beer that you hold with no intention of drinking. Getting drunk around these sorts of people seems like an invitation for life long trauma. âHowâre you settling in?â
âFine,â you tell him, pretending to believe he actually gives a shit about your life and isnât just pressing you for information. âItâs different from my last place, but itâs not bad.â
âNo?â He smirks and some distant part of your brain recognizes that its meant to be charming, but it just makes your skin crawl. âWeâre not keeping you up with these parties, are we?â
Yes, âNo, I sleep like a rock.â His eyes widen, lips parting with interest, and you suddenly wish you hadnât said anything at all.Â
âReally?â He muses, the interest in his tone absolutely nauseating. Luckily, someone calls his name from across the pool and he lets out a sharp breath. âOne second, sweetheart, donât move.â You can hear the underlying threat in his voice but you really could not care at this point. Ditching the beer, you grab a water and take a quick look around the pool.Â
Almost every lounge chair is filled with multiple people, some doing drugs, others grinding in a way that makes acid burn in your stomach. But there is one shadowed corner, a small perimeter around it like people are afraid to toe their way past. Andrew stands in that little bubble, arms crossed as he glares across the pool.Â
It takes you a moment to realize that itâs you heâs focused on. It doesnât unsettle you the way Bazâs poor attempts at charm had. Instead, you find yourself gravitating toward him, hoping for some form of peace in this god-awful party. He straightens as you approach, watching you warily. Or maybe watching you normally. Youâre still struggling to figure out the nuances of his glares.Â
âMind if I join you?â He says nothing and you take it as an invitation.Â
âThought you would be stuck by Baz,â he mutters. Thereâs something in his tone that has your brows peaking with interest, but you canât quite decipher his meaning.Â
You shake your head, placing your glass on a nearby table as you move to stand slightly in front of him. âYou know, I think I liked your approach a lot better than his.â He raises a brow and you snort. âI mean, Iâd prefer you following me home than having to deal with whatever bullshit was coming out of his mouth.â
Andrew shrugs, but you swear you see his lips curl up slightly. âHe comes on too strong.â
A man rams into you before you can respond. You let out a sharp gasp and trip forward. Andrewâs arms shoot up instantly, grabbing you before you can crash into him. The other man lets out a drunken apology as Andrew works to right you.Â
âSorry,â you mutter, hands lingering on his chest a moment longer than they should. Heâs firm, beefier than you had expected. The slight thrill that shoots through you is cause enough for concern. You already knew your taste in men was bad, but this might be a new low if a chest is whatâs getting you hot and bothered now.Â
âYou alright?â He asks and you nod, letting your hands slowly slip away from him. You reach over for your water, frowning at the slightly metallic taste it leaves coated on your tongue. âHate these things,â he mutters and youâre sure he hadnât meant for you to hear that.Â
âYeah,â you scoff. âSo do I. I bet itâs worse for you, though, being at your house and all. You donât really have any choice but to be here.â
The look he gives you now isnât assessing or the same blank stare. He seems intrigued, if thatâs the right word for it. âUsed to have my own place,â he tells you. âThey sold it while I was away.â
Your brows furrow and he watches as you work to connect the dots. Away? You think, but then you take in the sort of people youâre surrounded by and only one destination comes to mind. But youâre not about to outright ask the man if heâs been to prison.Â
Youâll just google it later.Â
âDamn, thatâs brutal,â you mutter. Taking another sip of your water, you find the metallic taste has only grown worse. Sticking your tongue out slightly, you shake your head as you drop it back on the table.Â
âIs something wrong?â Andrew asks, eyes darting between you and the drink.Â
âWater just tastes off,â you tell him, shrugging.Â
His eyes narrow and he begins to reach for it when thereâs a loud screech. You jump, whipping around to find a pile-up of bodies, each of them throwing punches as the sound of flesh breaking bone echoes through the party. âHold on,â he tells you, rushing forward.Â
Youâre not as compelled to leave like you were with Baz. No, you think you might even like to sit down. Your eyes droop as your head begins to grow heavy. Sinking onto a lounge chair you fight off the sudden urge for sleep, confusion fogging your brain as the world around you spins.Â
âOh, Jesus,â you mutter, rubbing weakly at your brow. This doesnât feel right. Itâs like youâre floating outside of your body, just barely managing enough control to keep you upright.Â
âHey,â Andrewâs voice materializes in front of you. Heâs back quicker than you thought he would be. Or maybe timeâs just passing by while youâre slowing down. The thought makes an odd-sounding giggle slip past your lips.Â
Andrewâs face appears before yours as he kneels down, rough hands cupping your cheeks and jerking your head up. You whine at the roughness while his eyes dart across your face. âHow much have you had to drink?â
You feel like he knows, heâs been watching you this whole time, after all. Still, you manage to slur out your answer in a slightly comprehensible sentence. âJust the water,â your voice sounds like you're underwater.Â
Andrewâs thumbs tug at the skin below your eyes, trying to gauge the size of your pupils, the sudden bloodshot look about them. âFuck,â he hisses and you try to move back, worried itâs you heâs mad at. His grip is firm, though, his hands insistent as he throws your arm over his shoulder and drags you to your feet.Â
âCome on,â he grits out, carrying the majority of your weight as your feet trip over each other.Â
âAndrew,â his name comes out wrong, garbled and barely comprehensible. But he manages to understand you, humming in answer as he pulls you through the house. âI feel weird,â you whisper, breath becoming harder to find.Â
âYeah, I know you do.â A man whistles as Andrew carries you past, slapping him on the back like heâs just won a prize. Andrew stops and you wonder, briefly, if heâs going to drop you so he can fight the guy. But the other man just goes running off, recognizing his mistake in time.Â
He keeps going, pushing through the bodies until the cold night air is biting at your cheeks and heâs walking up your driveway. Heâs gentler than you expected as he props you against your front door.Â
âKeys,â he demands, hands gripping your waist so you donât topple straight into the bushes.Â
You shake your head, the movement making you painfully nauseous. âDidnât lock it,â you reach for the handle, palm slipping across it uselessly.Â
His jaw tightens, eyes narrowing further as he clicks his tongue at you. âAlways lock it,â he snaps, tugging you back into his side as he pushes the door open. âWhat if it wasnât me walking in here?â
Your eyes narrow, vision blurring. Despite whatever you were slipped, you manage just enough cognitive functioning for an attitude. âHow,â you slur, âare you any better than someone else?â
Andrew pauses at that, hesitating at the base of your stairs as you wait for an answer. He stares into your drooping eyes and only huffs before practically carrying you to your bedroom. Itâs gentle, the way he sets you down, back pushed against the pillows so you donât just flop back. But it only takes the brief second he steps away for your eyes to close completely and your body to go limp against your mattress. By the time he returns with a change of clothes, youâre already out.Â
Itâs the sun that wakes you up. Normally, you remember to close your curtains before you pass out. But theyâre wide open this morning, blinds pulled up, sun beaming down on you like itâs shaming you.Â
âDamn,â you drag yourself up, head throbbing as you try to remember what exactly happened last night. You know you went over to the pool, Baz had creeped you out. Briefly, you think you might have spoken to Andrew but thatâs where it gets fuzzy.Â
Glancing up, you would scream if your throat didnât hurt so much. Andrew sits in the chair by your dresser. His eyes are boring right into you, no malice behind the look, just careful consideration.Â
You clutch your chest, heart racing under your palm. âWhoo,â you breathe out, giving him an awkward smile. âGive a girl some warning next time,â you attempt to tease but your croaking voice impedes you.Â
Looking down, you find yourself in one of your sleeping shirts and different underwear. Bile rises in your throat as your mind races to remember even one thing that got you in bed.Â
âI didnât look,â he tells you, finally getting to his feet. âBut you kept complaining about wanting to change.â He walks toward you, brows set in concern as he takes you in.Â
Any other man and you probably wouldnât believe him. Youâre not even sure how he could have gotten you out of that suit without a little flash of skin. But you donât really mind, better him than anyone else in that family. He seems to be the only one who understands the concept of morals.Â
âWhat happened?â You ask, grimacing as a pain akin to an ice pick digs its way through your temple.Â
Hesitantly, as if you might shout at him to get away, he perches at the end of your bed. His hands rest near you, heâs probably waiting for you to keel over.Â
âThink someone slipped you something,â he mutters, head tilting as his eyes trace over your pained expression. No shit. âI donât know what it was, wanted to make sure you didnât asphyxiate in your sleep.â
You look at him, frowning, and he nods toward something by your nightstand. You find a bucket by your feet, filled with what seems to be fresh vomit. âOh god,â you groan, body crumpling under the weight of your mortification.Â
âIâm so sorry.â The thought of him having to stay up all night taking care of you makes you feel even worse than you do now. But beneath the shame and embarrassment, there is the smallest semblance of appreciation. Most guys would dump you at home and leave, Andrewâs practically a stranger and he took better care of you than your ex ever did.Â
âWhy are you apologizing?â Blunt, like always, he gives you a sharp look. âItâs not your fault.â
âFeels like it,â you grumble. Hesitantly, you get to your feet, weak knees buckling slightly beneath you. Andrew stands, hand outstretched as you pick up the bucket and hobble toward your bathroom. âI should know better than to just leave my drink unattended like that.â
Andrew scoffs as you struggle to dump and clean the bucket. âMaybe people should just know better than to slip you something,â he mutters. He comes up beside you, taking the bucket from your hands and washing it out for you.Â
âThank you,â you whisper, leaning against your bathroom counter as another wave of nausea builds up in your stomach. âYou know, Iâve been roofied before,â his head whips up and you offer a wry grin. âDonât remember it feeling like this.â
You think itâs the casualness of your statement that catches him so off guard. But mickied drinks had practically been a rite of passage at your university. Doesnât make it good, but it softens the sharp edge of disappointment in humanity when you grow so used to it.Â
You let out a low groan and clamp your hand over your mouth, absolutely refusing to throw up in front of him. Again. Andrew drops the bucket in your tub and takes quick steps toward you. His hands wrap around your waist, head ducking to see the off-colored pallor of your skin.Â
âI think you should lie back down.â
Shaking your head, you let out another whine of discomfort. âI canât,â you object. âIâll be late to work.â Glancing at your nightstandâs clock, your stomach plummets. âDammit, later than I already am.âÂ
Andrewâs brows furrow and he shakes his head incredulously. âYouâre not going in.â
âIf only it were that simple,â you let out a low laugh. As reluctant as you are, you push his hands away, already missing the warmth heâd provided. âMike already wants to fire me, I canât give him any more ammo.â
His eyes narrow and he backs off. For a second, you think heâs actually going to listen. Then his hands are wrapping around your biceps and youâre letting out a surprised gasp. âAndrew!â You object, absolutely too weak to fight him as he wrestles you back toward your bed.Â
âI canât,â you snap, futilely pushing at his arms. He says nothing, just lifts you up and plants you stubbornly on the mattress.Â
âStay here,â he tells you, finger in your face like youâre a misbehaving dog.Â
You slap his hand away with a glare. âIâm going to miss the bus, Andrew. I canât just stay home.âÂ
He crosses his arms, completely silent as he stares down at you. For some reason, you can feel guilt bubbling in your gut and shrink back into your pillows. Thereâs also a shameful heat brewing between your legs at how easily he manhandled you back to bed. How firm he is in making sure youâre okay.Â
After years of nothing but men who wanted to be coddled and taken care of, youâve forgotten what itâs like to be on the receiving end of someoneâs concern.Â
You like it a little too much.
âStay,â is all he says as he walks out of your room, door shut firmly behind him. Your eyes narrow and you debate, for a moment, simply ignoring him and going to work.Â
You think being on the receiving end of his frustration might be even more interesting than this side of him. But some ridiculous part of you wants to listen, to do what he says so you might finally get something wriggled from that cold exterior of his.Â
With a dramatic huff, you toss yourself on your pillows. Prepared to stew for the rest of the day, youâre completely caught off guard by the sudden wave of exhaustion coming over you. Sighing, you promise to just let your eyes rest for a few minutes.Â
Youâre out like a light in thirty seconds.Â
When you wake up itâs already four and you know there is no hope of making it to work. Itâs not like youâre eager to deal with irritated clients all day while nursing the effects of getting drugged. But you are truly worried Mike is going to hold this over your head.Â
With nothing better to do, you take a shower and change your sheets to get rid of the smell of mistakes and vomit. As youâre transferring your comforter to the dryer, you hear the distinct click of your front door opening and closing.Â
Your hands freeze on your wet sheets while your body goes stiff.Â
Slowly, you creep out of the laundry room and tilt your head down the stairs. Plastic crinkles in your kitchen, cabinets opening and closing as dishes are retrieved. Despite the fact that you should be terrified, at the very least be grabbing some sort of weapon, you find yourself walking down the stairs without a care in the world. Subconsciously, you know who it is, and you should be afraid of him but you canât find it in you.Â
âHi,â you say dumbly, watching as Andrew dumps what looks like wonton soup into a bowl for you.Â
His head lifts and he lets out a huff. âYou need to start locking your door.â
You shrug, taking a seat at your island and watching him move through your kitchen like heâs been here before. âHow would you have gotten in?âÂ
Andrewâs shoulders tense as he sets your bowl in front of you, slamming it harder than necessary. âLock your door,â he warns. Rolling your eyes, you take the spoon he offers you and frown. He balls up the take-out bag, trashing it, and you realize he hasnât brought anything for himself.Â
With a sigh, you hop out of your seat and grab another bowl. He watches as you split the soup between the two of you with a displeased look. âIâm not hungry,â he tells you.Â
âI donât care,â you reply offhandedly, sliding him a bowl like you didnât google him and figure out he was in jail for three years for armed robbery. Sentenced to six, apparently, but got out early on good behavior. At the very least, it wasnât for murder.Â
Andrew glares down at the bowl, arms crossed and your tentative smile falls. âPlease,â you implore, âI donât like eating alone.â
He takes it, though you know he doesnât want to. âI got it for you.â
You shrug, taking your seat once more. âWhy did you, anyway?â You donât usually look a gift horse in the mouth, but itâs hard to believe that a reformed felon is just going around fetching his neighbors' soup.Â
Andrew wraps his hand around the spoon, but doesnât make any move to eat. Your head tilts as you take in the scars along his knuckles, spots where the skin has split and healed over one too many times. It should just push you further from him but you find yourself more enticed. After all, why would a man like him have any interest in taking care of you?
âYou donât eat,â his voice is low, the words a shameful secret he wasnât ready to admit.Â
Your brows furrow as you process what he said. Glancing over at him, a wry smile finds its way to your lips at the little splotch of color you spot on his cheeks. âAre you still watching me?â You laugh off a sentiment that should have you calling his parole officer.Â
Andrew rubs the back of his neck, gaze pointed down at the soup. âNot really,â he says awkwardly, not even believing himself.Â
Giving him a break, you go back to eating. âWell, youâre right. I was probably just going to eat some saltines and call it a night.â The huff he lets out shocks a laugh out of you. Slowly, Andrew picks the spoon up and starts to eat. Youâll count it as progress to thawing him out.Â
At 8:30, youâre already running late to catch the bus. Tugging on your heels, you let out an aggrieved sigh as someone knocks on your door. Frowning, you double-check the time and throw open the door.Â
Andrew stands there, scowl disapproving as you give him a small smile. âDid you even check who was at the door?âÂ
You consider lying but the way his eyes narrow into slits swats the idea away. âNo.â You grab your bag and usher him back as you close the door. âWhatâs up?â
âIâm giving you a ride,â itâs all he says. Blunt, concise, not even an offer. Heat flushes through you as he takes your keys from your hand and pointedly locks your door. You almost wish he would scold you again.Â
His hand hovers over the small of your back as he guides you to his truck. You fight back a shudder at the warmth he emanates while heâs not even touching you.Â
Youâre slightly taken aback when Andrew opens up the truck door for you, even offering you a hand up when your heel slips. The brush of his calloused hand against yours is enough to send warmth flooding your body, an ache settling between your legs.Â
As he rounds the front of his truck, you resist banging your head against the dashboard. You only just got out of a bad relationship a few months ago. You should not be so fucking eager to jump some manâs bones. Especially not when that man is a known felon and his family is probably full of them.Â
Andrew gets in and you jolt up, forcing your back straight and a strained smile on your face. The last few times you were in his truck, you had been more worried about what he was going to do with you to pay attention to the interior. But as you look around now, youâre taken aback by how clean it is. Itâs practically spotless, not a speck of dust on the dashboard or even an abandoned bag of chips on the floorboard. It could be new, but youâre certain that Andrew just knows how to take care of his things.Â
Is it completely wrong that it only makes you hotter for him?
The drive is quiet, as it has been the last few times youâve been with him. Youâre surprised when you turn the radio on and he doesnât object. You were starting to wonder if heâs quiet just because he prefers the silence or if itâs because he doesnât know anything else anymore.Â
He was in prison, youâre certain he was probably thrown in solitary a few times. You can imagine silence became a habit rather than comfort.Â
When he parks and gets out of the truck, youâre just surprised enough to allow him time to make it to your side and open the door for you. The sudden surge of gentlemanly conduct is odd, to say the least, but you wonât pretend it doesnât endear him to you further.Â
You wonder if this is how men in the 1800s felt when they saw a flash of ankle as you slip your hand into Andrewâs again and practically salivate at the feeling. âThank you,â you murmur quietly. He only nods, not stepping back, letting your hand rest in his. But you grow worried about your palm being clammy and pull back before he can feel it.Â
Andrew glances at your hand and you swear you almost see disappointment on his face. âUm,â you clear your throat. âMy lunch break is at one. Do you have any plans?â
Youâre not the type to make the first move. You learned a while ago that if youâre the one who has to start the relationship, youâre going to be the only one participating in it. But something about Andrew gives you a boost of assurance youâve never experienced before.Â
His eyes meet yours, lips in a flat line as you struggle to read the intricacies of his expression. âCanât. Family meeting,â he explains vaguely. Your eyes widen as mortification draws the color from your skin.Â
âRight, right,â you clear your throat and back away from him, suddenly desperate to get inside the bank and have Mike yelling at you. âWell, uh, thanks for the ride.â He nods and youâre quick to rush into the bank, your lonely stall calling for you as you try and toss Andrew Cody from your mind.Â
Pope watches you go, he almost laughs at how quickly you run off. He probably should have clarified that he would like to have lunch with you, he wasnât outright rejecting you. But, he figures he can just explain that to you when he picks you up after work today.Â
His phone buzzes and he rolls his eyes as Bazâs name invades his messages.Â
Get some info about the security switch-off from her
We donât want to wait much longer but youâre taking a while here Pope
Pope considers responding when another message comes through.Â
Donât forget to act like a human, donât want you scaring her off too early
With a discontent huff, he shoves his phone back in his pocket and climbs back into his truck. He can just barely make you out through the bank's window. That old man from the other day is right back at the front of your line. Youâre not great at hiding how youâre feeling and Pope almost laughs at the way your lips are curled up in disgust. He debates going in there and getting rid of him for you, but it would seem suspicious.Â
You already caught him watching you once. He needs you to think this is something else. Something more intimate. It's the best way to get your guard down, to get the information that Baz and Smurf want so this job can be over and done with.Â
So that you can be over and done with.Â
Youâre getting used to the sight of Andrewâs car and what should scare you only serves to further excite you. As you wave goodbye to the security guard, John, you see Andrew get out and wait for you on the passenger side.Â
âIf you donât stop, Iâm going to start getting used to this,â you warn him as you walk up.Â
He only shrugs, holding open the door for you, offering you a hand. âYou shouldnât be walking home alone,â his tone sounds like admonishment.Â
You almost ask him about his day when he gets in, but he beats you to the punch. âDid you eat today?â
You purse your lips and shake your head, receiving a barely-there scowl in return. âMike had me work through lunch to make up for my no-show yesterday.â In response, Andrew doesnât take the left turn back to your neighborhood, he goes right instead.Â
Narrowing your eyes, you stare at him suspiciously. âKidnapping me?â
He only shakes his head, shooting you what you desperately want to be a playful glare. âFeeding you,â he clarifies. âWouldâve gone to lunch with you if Baz hadnât been up my ass.â He mutters it under his breath, quiet in a way you know youâre not meant to hear.Â
âWhat did he want?â You find yourself asking, curiosity winning out over survival instincts.Â
Andrew stiffens, fingers tightening imperceptibly around the wheel as he shrugs. âNothing important,â he dismisses, tone closed off in a way you know means the conversation is over.Â
Something tightens in your chest, the first real warning of threat youâve felt around him. You dismiss it as nerves and shift uncomfortably in your seat. âWhere are we heading?â You ask, attempting to gauge what his intention is here.Â
Itâs pretty simple, a quiet, intimate restaurant and you know he means it as a date. Somewhere loud, however, slightly crowded and better for beer with buddies than going out with a woman, you know heâs just being strangely friendly.Â
âHere,â he nods and your stomach plummets as you watch him pull into Larryâs parking lot. A pub youâd grown acquainted with quite intimately when you were still with Colin. The same place he always liked to ditch you to get drunk with his buddies. The atmosphere inside dashes any hope of Andrew caring about you outside of your general welfare.Â
With a disappointed sigh, you help yourself out of the truck before Andrew can. He scowls and you ignore him, trying to tamp down any sharp jabs. Itâs not his fault that he got your hopes up. That he got you all hot and bothered after showing you that half-decent men still do exist.Â
Andrew trails slightly behind you as you walk inside. âOh,â the hostâs eyes light up and you offer a brief smile. âI haven't seen you in forever.â Robby rounds the stand to give you a side hug that you barely return.Â
In a second, Andrewâs at your side, gaze darting between the two of you suspiciously. Robby pulls back with an awkward chuckle and grabs menus for both of you. âCome on,â he nods. You shoot Andrew an odd look but he doesnât offer any explanation as Robby seats you both.Â
The second youâre seated, the atmosphere floods over your table. Loud, drunken conversations fill the air, five different sports commentary blasts on the TV. Itâs so much that you nearly jump out of your seat and just book it home. Your fingers clench around the menu as you force yourself to stay seated and just remain calm.Â
Andrew grimaces as he looks around, seemingly regretting his choice. âHave you not been here before?â You ask.Â
He glances back at you and shakes his head. Youâre honestly shocked he actually heard you. âIâm assuming you have.â
You nod and prop your head on your hand. âMy ex used to drag me here all the time.â Andrewâs knuckles whiten as his grip goes deathly tight around his menu. With a low breath, he sets the menu down and his features soften into something you canât place.Â
âI didnât know it was going to be like this,â he tells you. Your eyes narrow and a little bit of hope blooms inside of you.Â
âCan I be honest with you?â He nods, leaning further over the table so he can actually hear you. You donât have to, but you find yourself inching closer until your noses are nearly touching. You can feel the heat radiating off his cheeks and it only provokes you.Â
âI thought this was going to be a date.â Andrew pulls away slightly and you bite back a laugh at the first real emotion youâve wrenched from him. Heâs flustered, clearly, but he also seems incredibly caught off guard.Â
âYou did?â You let out a low hum and nod, slowly sinking back into your seat. âDid you want it to be a date?â He asks, hesitant and completely unsure of himself.Â
Thereâs a slight crack to his voice, vulnerability shining through in a way that makes your chest ache. âYeah,â you huff out a laugh. âI wanted it to be a date.â Slipping out of the booth, you hold out your hand to him.Â
His eyes dart between you and your open palm before he, very slowly, places his calloused hand in yours. âWhat are you doing?â You roll your eyes and tug him out of the booth. You know that if he wanted to, he could have just planted his feet and stayed where he was. But he lets you drag him out of the restaurant, hand squeezing yours slightly as you head back to the truck.Â
âIâll make us dinner,â you tell him. âThen we can have a proper date.â You stop, lingering by the passenger door. His eyes are boring into yours and you swallow, some of your bravado slipping away. âThat is, if thatâs what you want?âÂ
When his lips curl up, the first real sign of any semblance to a smile youâve gotten, you know you have your answer.Â
It becomes a habit. Andrew picks you up, drops you off, sometimes he brings you lunch or you just see him at the end of the day when he drives you back home. Most of the time, he stays. Coming inside and helping you make dinner since your last attempt ended with you somehow managing to burn spaghetti.Â
Itâs been innocent, a kiss on the cheek, or you reaching across the console to hold his hand while he drives. The majority of the time, you initiate the touch and he just reciprocates. You worry sometimes that youâre projecting your own desires onto him, not taking into account what he might want.Â
But he hasnât objected, hasnât ever pulled his hand away or told you to stop. You hope that means he doesnât mind how affectionate you can be when you really care about someone.Â
Youâre completely unaware of just how much the small kindnesses mean to him. Unaware that when heâs around you, heâs not Pope or a Cody, heâs just Andrew. He almost feels normal around you, like heâs just some regular guy who got lucky when he asked the pretty bank teller out.Â
Every time you touch him, kiss his cheek, and are just willingly in his presence without being intimidated, he thinks that he might be worth something. The feeling never lasts long, fading every time he goes back to his own house. Itâs completely wrenched away by Baz or Smurf demanding updates, seeing if heâs gotten any decent information out of you.Â
He has, not that heâs told them yet. You let it slip that there was a transport coming through on Thursday, lots of cash that Mike will probably want to take a dive in. And then, when heâd come in to bring you lunch, you complained that the security guard was late. Let it slip that thereâs a ten-minute gap every day at one when they switch shifts.Â
Itâs enough for Smurf and Baz. He could tell them all of this and theyâd relent, tell him to ditch you. Make sure youâre oblivious as he ghosts you and they take what they want. But he doesnât want that. He wants to keep standing next to you and making dinner. To pick you up and drop you off like youâre actually something real that he has to look forward to.Â
Andrew pulls into your driveway, the routine becoming more familiar to him than when he goes into his actual home. As always, he opens the door for you, takes your hand and leads you up the steps of your porch. He likes to linger on nights like tonight when he canât come in. Baz and Smurf want him home tonight and he knows theyâre not going to be giving him any leeway.Â
But heâs almost tempted to say screw it when you turn toward him, eyes shining under your porch light, expression earnest as you smile up at him. âDo you want to come inside?â
Itâs completely innocent, your question, something youâve asked a hundred times before. That doesnât abate the ache in his jeans and that tight feeling in his chest every time you look at him like this. Like heâs actually someone you want around and arenât just using.Â
Not like heâs using you.Â
A hot flush of shame shoots through him and he shakes his head. âI canât tonight.â Your lips turn down in disappointment and he wants to take it back immediately, but he forces his mouth shut.Â
âAlright,â you take his hands in yours and lean up toward him. He expects the usual kiss on the cheek, even looks forward to it. What he doesnât expect is your lips brushing against his, arms winding around his neck as you pull back with a smile like you didnât just stun him into silence.Â
His eyes narrow and when you let that breathy little laugh of yours slip out, he loses any semblance of self-control. Not that he had much to begin with.Â
Your shocked gasp against his mouth is enough for him to trace his tongue along the seam of your lips. And when you practically moan, body sinking against his, he canât help himself. His hand cups the back of your head, pushing you up against your front door and slotting his thigh between yours.Â
Something warm stabs through him, slightly unpleasant and completely unfamiliar. Itâs a feeling he only ever experiences around you and it never stops being overwhelming. Never stops drowning out any thoughts except ones that revolve around you, how you feel, how you make him feel.Â
You pull back, laughing when he chases your lips. âAndrew,â thereâs a low purr in your voice when you say his name, has his hands tightening around your waist. When you ask, âWould you like to come inside?â He doesnât say no, just opens the door, lifting you into his arms and not stopping until youâre breathless and smiling up at him on your bed.Â
He doesnât make it home until after heâs dropped you off the next morning. Heâd ignored all the missed calls last night, shutting off his phone so he could enjoy the feeling of your arms around him. It was surreal, waking up beside someone who his mother hadnât paid off or heâd gotten drunk with and didnât remember her name.Â
Youâd held him in a way no one ever has before and it only made that piercing pain of guilt thicken in his chest. Itâs practically suffocating as he steps inside, finds Smurf waiting for him with crossed arms and an expectant look.Â
âYou didnât come home last night, baby.â She says, watching as he brushes past her and grabs water from the fridge. He needs something to do with his hands, anything to not look up at her and see that she knows what heâs done. His hands flex, twisting the bottle cap around as the plastic creaks beneath his grip.Â
âHave fun with the neighbor?â She asks, tone innocent as she begins plating up the breakfast heâd missed. He doesnât tell her that you already fed him, had taken care of him without expecting anything in return.Â
Again, Andrew stays silent, heâs already given too much away just by coming home late. âIf I didn't know any better, baby, Iâd say you actually like her.â She drops the plate in front of him, crossing her arms as she leans against the island. âBut I know my baby boy, donât I?â
Itâs an effort not to jerk away as she drags her hand across his shoulders, smiling at him. âYouâre taking too long, hun. I had to stop Baz from going over there last night, just getting the information he wanted and getting rid of the girl.â
Andrewâs hands tighten around the bottle, water seeping from the top. White hot rage flashes through him and he imagines the bottle is Bazâs neck for a moment. Smurf laughs, already knowing what heâs thinking.Â
âIâm not going to be able to control him much longer.â She could, she just doesnât want to. âIâd hate for anything to happen to that sweet girl.â Her tone is laced with venom and Andrewâs head drops, knuckles white as he grips the counter. âDo you have what I need, baby?â
Itâs because he cares about you so much that he tells her what heâs learned. He knows her words are never empty threats. Baz will hurt you, she will hurt you, if he doesnât give them what he wants. He knows heâs trying to protect you, but that doesnât lessen the weight of guilt.Â
Itâs almost one, right around the time Andrew usually stops by if heâs decided to bring you lunch that day. You figure, after last night, he probably will visit. The thought sends a thrill up your spine that makes you giddy.Â
You really hadnât intended for last night to go in the direction it did, but you werenât complaining. And he hadnât been either. Still warmed by the memories of the night, you check your watch.Â
The second hand ticks and itâs exactly one. John gets up, heading to the back to take his break while Nathan will take his time coming back from his lunch. The paperwork from yesterdayâs delivery has finally been completed and you stand up from your stall, getting ready to pass it off to Sheila so she can look it over.Â
At exactly 1:01, the doors to the bank burst open and three masked men rush in. âEverybody down!â Itâs shock, you think, thatâs why youâre standing frozen. Why youâre not just doing what the big men with even larger guns say.Â
Then, heâs pulling the trigger, bullets embedding themself into the ceiling as the chandelier creaks dangerously above you all. Finally, your system shocks itself back to life and youâre dropping to the floor. Your fingers itch to press the emergency button beneath your stall, but one of the men has already found his way behind the divider.Â
âYou!â He points at you and your heart beats an erratic rhythm against your ribs. He stomps over, grabbing your arm and wrenching you to your feet. A strangled noise slips through your lips, your coworkers cower as they watch you with misty eyes.Â
The tallest of all of them keeps his guns pointed at those on the ground. Then the shortest man comes running over, trailing behind you and the one holding you. He drags you to the vault and shoves you into the metal door.Â
Your palms sting as you catch yourself and it takes every iota of survival instinct you have not to give him a nasty glare. âYou know the drill,â and he chuckles, the noise muffled beneath his hood. As if this is all one big joke.Â
Your fingers tremble over the lock pad as you shake your head. You try and step back but thereâs a firm hand, almost familiar, easing you forward again. Your gaze shoots to the short one and he nods at the vault. âWeâre not gonna hurt you if you just let us in. There doesnât have to be any trouble.âÂ
His voice is off, as if heâs purposely speaking strangely. Maybe itâs a way for them to mask their identity further. All it does now is serve to unsettle you even worse.Â
Then, thereâs a cold plunge in your body, everything going still when you feel something dull and metal pressing into your side.Â
âOr,â the other one drawls. âI shoot you right here and we just go get one of your friends to open this for us.â The short oneâs hand tightens around your shoulder and you grimace. He releases you instantly.Â
âCome on,â that sleazy voice is almost familiar to you. But maybe itâs just your mind playing tricks. âIâve seen you take the money in here, sweetheart. I know you know how to get in.â
Your breath stutters, terror wraps tight around your throat and blocks any further air. âYouâve been watching me,â you whisper, already reaching forward to punch in the code. The taller one hums with delight, gun easing as you slip your key from your blazerâs pocket. It doesnât take long for the vault door to pop open.Â
The shorter man grabs the handle before you can, letting out a low groan as he tugs the heavy door open further. âAlright, come on,â the other oneâs got his hands on you again. Your skin feels like it's going to rip under his tight grip, but you donât say a word, just follow obediently behind him.Â
This all feels wrong. Like this is someone elseâs life and youâve just accidentally walked into it. You have poor luck, sure, but not this bad. This canât be real, you swear to yourself. And itâs all you repeat as they open their bags, forcing you to stuff them full as you empty the safety deposit boxes.Â
 They call the other one in the vault but thereâs a dull buzzing in your ears and you barely hear what they say at all. The only thing you can truly focus on is the gun still pointed at your chest. âAlright,â he shoulders his bags and you can almost feel him grinning at you.Â
âOn your knees, sweetheart.â Your stomach twists, bile racing up your throat as cold panic wraps around you.Â
âHey!â The short one barks, but the other man just holds up his hand.Â
âCome on,â he urges, lifting his gun and leveling it with your face. Slowly, you drop to your knees the dull thud of cement is a welcome shock to your body. He kneels in front of you but you refuse to meet his eyes through the holes of his mask. You just bite your lip, stare boring into the ground beneath you and pray you wake up from one long nightmare.Â
âLetâs go, man!â Sirens begin to sound closer and you would be relieved if this man wasnât still in front of you.Â
He doesnât listen to his partner, just tips your chin up with the end of his gun. âYou say a goddamn word about any of this, I will find you and I will hurt you, sweetheart.âÂ
What could you possibly say?
Finally, you lift your head, meeting sharp blue eyes. Something stutters in your chest, mind racing to shove down the sudden familiarity you see in this manâs gaze. Slowly, you nod and he finally backs off, racing through the vault door. The shorter man lingers a second longer but when you donât move he follows after his partner.Â
It isnât until you hear the police rush into the bank that you finally collapse against the ground. Pained sobs wrack your body as you struggle to breathe deeply enough to get your heart rate under control.Â
Your name flashes on Andrewâs screen and Baz sends him a sharp look. âDonât want to look suspicious now, do we?â
Andrew rips his mask off and glares at Baz. âIf youâd stuck to the fucking plan, we wouldnât have anything to worry about.â Craig glances between them both, looking at them like he doesnât feel like breaking up a fight today.Â
Baz glares and pushes off the wall of the semi-trailer theyâd hid themselves in. âMaybe if you hadnât done that reassuring bullshit, I wouldnât have had to threaten her.â
Rage surges through Andrewâs body, your ringtone going off over and over again as he and Baz stare at one another. âYou wanted to,â Andrew grits out. âI got you the info you wanted, did what you asked, but you still wanted to hurt her.â
Baz sees the way Andrew takes a step forward and knows this is a fight he wonât win. Again, he nods to Andrewâs phone. âAnswer the fucking call, Pope.â
If it werenât you, if it were anyone else calling, Andrew would have just drilled Baz into the fucking ground. But heâs right, this will look suspicious if he just keeps ignoring your calls. Besides, after the shit Baz pulled, youâre probably terrified.Â
With one last glare at Baz, he picks up the phone, turning his back to the other men. âHey, whatâs going on?â
Your voice is tight and panicked on the other end, tone clogged like youâve been crying. It just makes that ache in his chest burn worse and he hates himself a little bit more. For letting you get wrapped up in this. For ever pretending like he wasnât going to get selfishly attached to you.Â
âAndrew! The bank was just-â you suck in a sharp breath and his anger only intensifies as your voice cracks. âCan you come get me, please? I need you.âÂ
This is what heâs wanted this whole time. For Smurf and Baz to be appeased. For you to need him so badly you donât have the choice of leaving. So why does he feel so shitty? âIâm pretty far away, itâll take me a little bit.â
You blubber, another sob drowning out your voice. âOkay,â you finally whisper and Andrew hangs up, knowing he doesnât deserve you. He doesnât deserve those small moments of kindness youâd gifted him, where heâd felt like a person again. Not some attack dog or errand boy. You made him feel real and heâd just held you at gunpoint.Â
By the time he picks up his truck and drives back to the bank, youâre gone. He wanted to ask the people still there if theyâd seen you leave. But he doesnât need the cops seeing his face right after a freshly robbed bank.Â
His chest is tight with panic as he peels out of the lot. You hadnât called him that long ago. Thirty minutes, maybe. If heâs lucky, one of your coworkers offered you a ride and you just didnât feel like waiting anymore. He knows heâs never lucky, though. He thought he had been with you and heâs already tainted this fragile thing you had between each other.Â
The dread thatâs been brewing since you called is only worsened when he pulls into your driveway and sees you waiting on your front steps. He barely manages to get the truck in park before he jumps out.Â
You donât twitch, donât move an inch as he runs toward you. And that aching, festering feeling that burns inside him, itâs telling him a truth heâs not ready to admit. This is it. Youâre too smart not to know what happened. And Baz was too much of a dumbass to just keep quiet and stay distant.Â
This is what he wanted, Andrew is sure, to get you away from him so Smurf has her dog back.Â
âHey,â his hands cup your cheeks and a little piece of him finds hope when you donât push him away. âWhat happened? You werenât at the bank.â
Finally, you lift your gaze to meet his. The color of your eyes is dulled, face flat in an infuriating way he canât read. âI didnât want to wait. Walked home.â Andrewâs eyes dip to the heels resting beside your feet, the red backs of your ankles.Â
âWhy?â He already knows why, but that doesnât stop his hands from drifting down your legs, trying to soothe away the ache he knows has settled in your calves.Â
You let him just kneel before you for a little while. He canât find the courage to meet your eye, hands just moving over your soft skin because he knows that this is it. Subconsciously, he can recognize that this sudden emptiness in your eyes isnât because of what happened today. It's because of who was there. Youâre keeping yourself hidden from him and he wonders if this is how you always feel around him.Â
âAndrew,â you whisper and his hands tighten around your leg. âLook at me,â your voice is so disarmingly soft and he knows it's a trap, but he obeys because he doesnât know what else to do.Â
âIâm going to ask this once,â you tell him, hand lifting to cup his cheek. He leans into your touch, soaking it up greedily as your thumb smooths over the planes of his face. âWere you there today?â
Itâs like everything goes cold. Your hand stops moving, grip tightening around his jaw as your eyes flatten into something sharp. His heart skips a beat once before heâs sucking in a sharp breath. He canât lie to you, he doesnât want to, but he canât hurt his family and outright admit his guilt.Â
Silence lingers between you before youâre ripping your hand away and heâs trying to chase after your warmth. Your legs kick out, gently getting rid of his hands as you finally stand. Andrew follows, palms outstretched, unsure of what heâs supposed to do with himself when youâre right there and he isnât allowed to hold you.Â
âOh,â you whisper and thereâs a grin on your face thatâs cold and slightly panicked. âI fucking knew it. I knew it and I still gave you a chance!âÂ
Andrew shakes his head, but you just wave him off, not interested in anything he might have to say to you. âI was nothing but a mark to you, right? An easy way to get access to the vault, to figure out the quickest way in and out. Jesus, I just handed it to you, I actually fell for your bullshit.â
âNo,â Andrew objects, following you as you climb up your stairs. âIt wasnât bullshit, none of it was.â
You whip around on him, eyes glassy as you stare at him with something that looks painfully like hatred. âYou got what you wanted, Pope,â you hiss the name out and it breaks something inside of him. âTell Baz he doesnât have to worry, I wonât be calling the cops. I donât want anything to do with you people anymore. Got it? Stay the hell away from me.â
Andrew tries to follow you, but you slam the door in his face. He lingers there longer than he should, eyes boring into the wood like you might change your mind and open it. But he heard the lock click a while ago and he knows you meant every word. He canât blame you, shouldnât blame you. Honestly, not calling the cops is more than he ever could have asked of you.Â
But logic doesnât abate the anger, the sharp, barbed pain inside his chest. You hadnât given him a chance to explain. You didnât believe how much you meant to him and he had tried to show you constantly. You just tossed it all aside like it meant nothing. But it wasnât nothing.Â
Andrew knows that.Â
It meant something. It meant everything to him and he canât just let you pretend it never happened.Â
The bed dips behind you and you grumble tiredly, flipping over as you try to yank the blankets up to your chin. Thereâs a weight on them, though, pulling them down and away from you. Ever so slowly, the fogginess of sleep begins to fade and your brain shocks itself awake.Â
There is someone on the bed behind you.Â
Trying not to breathe too loudly, you lift your head and peer over your shoulder. You arenât surprised when you recognize Andrewâs hunched form, the moonlight from your open window giving a good enough view.Â
With a loud huff, you flip on your lamp and leap out of bed. His shoulders jump but he doesnât turn to face you. âWhat the fuck do you not get about staying away from me?â You snap. Your anger only grows when he remains silent.Â
âFucker,â you mutter under your breath, rounding your bed so you can see his face. Your feet still, anger abating for a moment as you take in the redness along his cheeks. As if heâs been crying. But youâve never seen Andrew cry before, you werenât even sure he was capable of it.Â
At his prolonged silence, something wedges itself into your chest, apprehension and nervousness. Heâs quiet but this isnât normal. Bazâs threat from earlier rings in your head as you slowly approach him. Andrew doesnât meet your eye until you drop to your knees in front of him.Â
Bloodshot and weary, you know he really has been crying. It tugs on something in you. That soft, weak part of yourself thatâs so used to caring for other people, you can hardly resist the urge now. Your hands lift and cup his cheeks, brows furrowing as you take in the devastation on his face.Â
âAndrewâŠâ You trail off, speechless as he nuzzles into your hand, eyes falling shut. âWhatâs wrong?â
It takes a long while for him to speak, but you just wait, dread building with every second. Passively, you smooth your hands over his cheeks, attempting to keep him calm. The last thing you need is Andrew snapping and you being the nearest target.Â
âSheâs doing it again,â he finally whispers, hands coming up to trap your own.Â
Swallowing down the lump in your throat, you ask, âDoing what, honey?â
He shudders at the pet name, melting further into you until heâs nearly on the floor with you. âSmurf, what she did with CathâŠâ He shakes his head and you can feel it, the slight buildup before someone begins to cry. Slowly, you creep forward, arms winding around his neck as you pull him into your embrace.Â
Andrew clings to you instantly, head buried in your shoulder as you drag your fingers through his curls. You hope he canât feel how your heart is racing against your ribs, that he canât sense just how scared you are right now.Â
Youâre not scared of him, not really. But you know what Smurf is capable of. You know how deep mothers like that can embed themselves in their sonâs head. Itâs her thatâs terrifying to you. âWhoâs Cath, sweetheart?â
He shudders again, arm winding tight around your waist. âI loved her,â he whispers the admission into your skin and it feels like something no one was ever meant to hear. âSmurf, she told me Cath talked to the cops, I,â he cuts himself off and you feel your breath catch in your chest. âI hurt her,â he finally settles on. But thatâs not the whole truth. You can feel it, can hear it in how his voice cracks.Â
He killed her.Â
You jerk back, jumping to your feet. Andrew lets out a low noise, eyes cloudy and cheeks ruddy. He stares up at you, hurt by how quickly you pulled away from him. âAndrew,â itâs a Herculean effort to keep your voice steady. âIs that why youâre here? Did Smurf send you to hurt me?â
His eyes drop to the floor, posture slipping under the weight of shame. âYes,â he finally whispers.
This time you canât stop the way your voice cracks. âAre you going to?âÂ
Andrewâs head whips up, eyes wide as he stares up at you. âNo,â his voice breaks around the word. You step forward as his hands reach out, wrapping around your hips and tugging you closer to him. âNo, Iâm not,â he insists and you really want to believe him.Â
He sees it, the fear in your eyes. In the one person he never wants to see looking at him like that. âYou donât believe me,â he mutters, head falling forward as his forehead rests against the softness of your stomach.Â
Your hands go to his back, scratching through his hair and trying to use your touch to ground him. âI believe you, Andrew. I just,â you hesitate, eyes darting around the room like you might be able to find an escape. âI donât know why youâre here if youâre not going to listen to her.âÂ
He sucks in a deep breath, face nuzzling into the softness you provide before he pulls back. You startle as he stands, eyes wide as he keeps his grip on your hips and tugs you even closer. His eyes lose the softness of sorrow, narrow into something harsher.Â
âYou canât stay here. Smurf expects you gone and if youâre not, sheâs just gonna send Baz.â You tense under his grip and his thumbs draw circles into your skin, as if that would calm you after threat of death.Â
Andrew reaches into his back pocket and you watch as he pulls out a large envelope. He passes it off to you, slightly reluctant to release it as you take it from him. You move away from him, dumping the contents on the bed. An ID, a passport, and a thick stack of cash sit in front of you.Â
âGot you a new license plate, too. I already put it on.â He stands beside you, eyes boring into the side of your head. You can hardly breathe, let alone try and muster up a response. Tentatively, his hand lands on your back, the touch is enough to have you jolting back.Â
âAndrew, what is this?â You know. You know what it is, no part of you wants to admit, though.Â
âYou have to go,â he whispers your name and you shake your head, body going numb. âYes,â he insists. âItâs that or Smurf sends someone else to deal with you.âÂ
âAnd,â you stutter slightly, scrubbing your hands down your face. Not only were you held at gunpoint today by your boyfriend, and then broke up with him. Now, heâs standing here telling you his mother wants you dead.Â
Death or change your identity.Â
This is why you had sworn to yourself no more mamaâs boys. Now look where you are.Â
âAre you coming?â You ask, noticing that the only identification there is for you. Andrew pulls back and your heart drops. âTell me youâre joking,â you snap.
That sad look in his eyes is all the confirmation you need. Swallowing down tears, you try to turn from him. His hands snap up, grabbing your jaw and forcing you to meet his eye. âI canât just leave,â his tone is desperate, eyes imploring you to understand. âIâm sorry but I canât.â
âFine,â you whisper, reality settling like a stone in your gut. âIf Iâm doing this right, then I guess this is it.â His brows furrow and you let out a shaky exhale. âGoodbye, Andrew,â you tell him, pushing up to press a light kiss on his cheek.Â
Despite the fact that itâs his mother getting rid of you, his fault you got wrapped up in this, he canât let you go. You try to back away but his grip is firm as he drags you back and presses his lips to yours.Â
Itâs the sort of desperate, dramatic kiss you thought you would only ever experience through movies. Tears are hot as they race down your cheeks, salty as they drip between your lips and you find yourself melting into him. Heâs not kissing you like heâs saying goodbye. Heâs kissing you as if he holds you close enough, this might not happen.Â
Itâs you who pulls back, chest too tight to continue without taking a breath. Your forehead rests against his, hands sliding down to cover the ones on your cheeks. He lets out a small noise that rips through your chest as you finally pull him away from you.Â
âThank you,â you whisper, incapable of looking at the passport on the bed, the new name youâll be stuck with while you get away from the Codys. He tries to keep his hand in yours but you force yourself to break away, to put enough space between you so you can breathe again.Â
Without a word, you go into your closet to grab a suitcase. When you return, Andrewâs already gone. Another sob rips through your chest, but you force yourself through it, swallowing roughly as you start packing your life away.Â
You wait. Itâs stupid, you know. Just a few hours ago, you were shouting at Andrew to stay out of your life, to forget you so you could forget him. But now, youâre sitting in your car, forehead resting on your steering wheel.Â
He told you he wouldnât leave. That he couldnât. And you know why. He feels obligated to his family, feels like their burdens are his to carry, even if they arenât. Heâd taken the fall for Baz once, and now he was doing it all over again.Â
Sitting up, your head thumps against the headrest as you suck in a sharp breath. You drag your hand down your cheeks, forcing away any remaining tears. You canât wait for him forever. Smurf probably already thinks youâre dead. You know sheâs got connections, like any good leader would, it wouldn't take her long to catch up to you. You have to leave now, while you still have the advantage of night.Â
âAlright,â you click your garage opener and finally force yourself to turn the ignition in your car. The car that Andrew had fixed for you, even if he still insisted on giving you rides after. The thought sends a stabbing pain in your stomach that you force yourself to ignore.Â
The headlights flick on, illuminating your driveway, and you bite your tongue to tamp down a scream. It takes a moment for the shock to wear off and for you to realize that the man standing in front of you is Andrew. Brows furrowed, you watch as he walks up to your car and tugs open the passenger door.Â
Youâre left speechless when he just stares straight ahead, not looking at you once. âI need to make sure you get settled safely,â he tells you. You nod dumbly, trying not to let the relief on your face show so plainly. âJust for a few days,â he warns, trying to keep the hope in your eyes dimmed.Â
You both end up in Nevada. First, Andrew says just a few more days while he tries to help you find a place to stay. He tells you that when Cath happened, heâd gone AWOL for a while. Smurf wouldnât go looking for him anytime soon. You hadnât said anything to that, just shown him another listing for an apartment you could barely afford.Â
Days turn into two weeks as he gets some cash for you so he knows that youâre going to be able to settle in comfortably. You donât ask where he gets the money from and he doesnât offer you any sort of explanation.Â
Conveniently, the very night he swears heâs going to leave, the apartment below you gets broken into. Itâs not hard to call up the waterworks, to blubber and cry in his arms about how scared you are. He promises you a few more days, just until you feel better.Â
By then, youâre getting better at catching his familyâs calls before he does. Dismissing the notifications and deleting the messages trying to figure out where he is. With less distractions, he starts to forget just how many days heâs promised to stay.Â
Then it gets easy. You distract him simply by caring for him. Holding him at night and making him feel human rather than an animal. His days blur into weeks until itâs been two months and heâs got clothes in your new closet.Â
âHow was your day?â You ask as he walks into the apartment. Heâs got the shirt of a local HVAC company on. Just something on the side he picked up for some extra cash, he told you. But heâs been asking for more hours and suddenly itâs almost like heâs got a full-time job.Â
âHot,â he grumbles, cheeks flushed from the sun. You turn the heat down on the stove and finally turn to face him. You open your arms and he falls into them like heâs been trained to do it. Maybe he has, maybe youâve both been conditioned to shower each other in as much affection as you can.Â
âWanna take a shower?â You ask, running your hands through his curls and smiling at how his body sinks into yours.Â
He lifts his head and a smile thatâs almost become frequent shows in his eyes. âAlone?â
You snort and reach over to turn the stove off completely. âDonât blame me if your meal gets cold.â
Thereâs no warning as he hefts you up, you let out a short squeal, hands tightening around his shirt as he carries you up the stairs. âGot my meal right here.â
âOh my god,â you roll your eyes, but there's a grin so big on your face that your cheeks hurt.Â
Youâd once sworn off man-children, mamaâs boys who were too reliant on their mothers to be emotionally stable. But Andrew was never so bad, he just needed Smurfâs leash cut so he could finally breathe. Heâs fully reformed, you think, as he shuts the bathroom door and helps you strip out of your clothes.Â
Andrew deserves something good in his life. He deserves to know what it feels like to be loved without conditions attached to your affection. And you donât deserve to be alone because of what his family did to you.Â
ă»PART TWO to CRASH ă»
As you fight for your life after the graphic accident on Robby's bike, the Pitt has to deal with Jack's innate, desperate need to never let you go again.
LINKS to OTHER JACK ABBOT FICS
AUTHOR MASTERLIST (do a lotta Lalo Salamanca, you know him?)
CRASH THE LENGTHS FIRECRACKER SHIFTING
CRASH (PART ONE) DESCRIPTION: When Jack catches you out walking to work in 30-degree weather alone in the fucking dark, he has no choice but to realize his feelings for you are far past romantics and hurdling towards possession. That only becomes more apparent when he catches you on Robby's motorcycle after.
Graphic depiction of blood, wounds, etc. Angst. Jealousy. Fluff. Yearning. Hurt reader. Jackâs mean when heâs worried about you. Sorry Dana. Jealous Jack. Angry Jack. Pathetic Robby. Could be read as part of âThe Lengthsâ but also not. Depictions of anxiety and suicidal ideation. Inaccurate depiction of the medical field. Jackâs slightly aggressive in his projection and deflection of his feelings for you (sexually, romantically, professionally). Call him the Jack of all trades lol. Unhealthy relationship dynamics.
Itâs sometime after three in the morning. The Pittâs deep into that strange, hollow quiet when the traumas somehow slowâŠsorta. Jackâs stolen trauma two to finish his paperwork in silence. Itâs against protocol, sureâŠbut. Whatever.Â
Then he can hear it, Dr. Shenâs voice drifting in from the nursesâ station, smooth and unhurried.Â
âTry this. Just one sip.âÂ
âI already told you, that looks like diabetes in a cup.â
Itâs your voice that replies, obvious in fatigue, but light in a softening laugh. Dreadfully beautiful. Something like that.Â
Jackâs spine straightens against nothing.Â
You talking to other men is not a crime. Not at all. Not at fucking all. But you do know Shenâs flirting with you, right?Â
The question is, are you going to stop him?
âItâs called a caramel macchiato. Stop acting like itâs plutonium.â
âDr. Shen,â You sigh out the other attendingâs name. âYour sugar and caffeine tolerance is something else entirely.âÂ
No? Okay.
Jack keeps his head down as he signs another discharge. His head cocks once to the side. Stiffly. But only once. He picks up the next chart.
âŠBut he ends up walking out a minute later, becauseâŠreally. After the next chart, heâd be finishedâand thereâs always charts to do. Itâs an endless hell of charts, always. And Jack knows heâll find more of his at the nursesâ station.Â
When he finds his way to the nursesâ station, chart in hand, he sees you holding a tall cup drizzled withâŠsomething. Youâre studying it with obvious, visible skepticism.Â
Jack doesnât slow when he sees Shen leaving his crossed arms on the counter, leering down above you.Â
What the fuck is going on here?
âYouâre going to like it. Trust me.â
âI can smell the calories and, again, diabetes.â
Jack clears his throat, letting the chart snap shut. He doesnât blink when Shen looks over, grin easy and bright. âAbbot. You want some?âÂ
âI will stick to coffee that looks like coffee.âÂ
He says it dryly, and when you duck your head, he can catch you trying to hide your smile.
Shen takes a sip of his own drinkâsomething suspiciously green. Jack blinks once and quickly when your name comes out as a sigh. When it comes out of someone else's mouth.Â
The two-second hatred for Shen is as ridiculous as much as it is something Jack canât stop from reaching the coils of his stomach.Â
âBack me up here. Tell him he should live a little.âÂ
You look up at Jack, and he studies the way your eyes still dance with the smile youâre failing to suppress. Hey. At least he knows youâre not great at everything.
Go ahead. Tell me I should live a little. Act like a giddy teenager with the next attending that can actually have fun and make me feel bad for thinking that an hour later when I realize youâre justâŠexisting with someone who isnât me. Go ahead.
âHe does live a little,â You say it gently. âHe justâŠdoesnât admit it.â
Jack lifts a brow. His shoulders rise with an inhale.Â
Nevermind. Good girl.Â
âDonât defend me.âÂ
â...Sorry.â
And you do not sound sorry at all.Â
Jack ignores whateverâs like a smirk on Shenâs face before he walks off.Â
The next night, itâs the same. Except this time, you bring something for Shen, because youâre the most perfect co-worker woman nurse in the fucking world, apparently. Not apparently. Jackâs known since the day he met you.Â
Itâs a little Tupperware container with a foil wrap inside. Jack watches you hold it out, his face and focus only narrowing back to the trauma board with a headshake.Â
âHere, since you keep bribing me with coffee.â
Heâs not gonna ask what it is. He doesnât want to know. He doesnât care.Â
Youâre just the nicest girl in the world, arenât you?Â
âOh?âÂ
âJust something small. I know I didnât have to, butâŠyeah.â
âSo this is why they call you sunshine. Got it.âÂ
Jack closes his eyes. When he opens them, he doesnât look up from the trauma board as he presses his pen against the laminate with a force he doesnât realize. But still, he doesnât flinch.
Not until Shen peels back the foil with a stupid quiet wonder.Â
âYou made this?âÂ
âMhm.â
âOh. I love you.âÂ
His head snaps to the sight of you and Shen at the counter, and whateverâs burning at the stupid, fucking asshat decision Shen made to jokingly call out his love for you pairs too damn well with one word. It pounds in his head as Santos snorts from across the station.Â
Homemade.
Jack's hands tighten around the chart. He doesnât look up, because heâs patient for his simple reprimandâŠhe just waits until the next break in conversation.Â
Heâs this close to calling you a slut and bending you over and wanting to shoot himself in the head for it.Â
âSo Iâm gonna have to break bank to serve the nurses matcha if I want brownie bars?â
âI donât know what makes you think weâre gonna bake for youââÂ
He breaks Princessâs quip with his throat clearing.Â
âLetâs cool it with the snack-and-drink exchanges for now.â
Both you and Shen turn towards him. Jackâs stare doesnât budge. The other nurses at the counter go quiet. Even Dana raises her head two computers away.Â
Sorry that I donât want to hear my fellow attending try to get into her pants. Heâs amping up the flirtations and praises because sheâs wearing her fitted scrubs.Â
Itâs the most unnecessary, dramatic thought Jackâs had all day. Itâs your fault. And thereâs nothing wrong with you.Â
Resentfully, perfect anomaly you. Jesus fucking Christ.Â
âWhen did you start working for HR?âÂ
Jack places his chart on the counter at Shenâs quip, palms going up. âIâm not trying to be a stickler, but HRâs been cracking down on outside food handlingââ He eyes yourâŠbaked brownie thing that unfortunately looks delicious.Â
His mouth goes thin.Â
âEspecially anything homemade. If someone has an allergic reaction or thereâs any contamination, it becomes a liability.âÂ
Itâs the truth. Itâs also the easiest thing he could come up with.Â
He doesnât flinch when Shen gives a massive, purposeful side-eye. But when you somehow becomeâŠsmaller at his lecture, Jack turns away.Â
He didnât think heâd have to feed you liquid calories to make you want him. Regretfully, he thought everything else was enough. Whatever. Itâs fine. Just a hard quip along his brain.Â
âIâŠdidnât realize.âÂ
Jack scratches his ear when you mutter it.Â
âŠYouâre not supposed to feel bad, sleepy. He didnâtâ
You just made something. With your hands. In your kitchen, out of your tight scrubs you decorate against healthcare managementâs rules. He wonders what you were where when you were thinking of Shen while making something for him. You probably worried itâd be too sweet.Â
His jaw flexes as he watches Shen takes one last bite, groaning like itâs the best damn thing heâs ever eaten. âOf course, Abbot. Our bad.âÂ
Cum in your seat, why the fuck not?
âŠItâs over when you both leave.Â
Almost.
âJack?âÂ
âDana.âÂ
Dana taps the arms of her chair. âConsidering I assisted you on the case where you threw the medical playbook out the window two hours agoâŠIâm surprised youâre quoting HR.âÂ
Jackâs jaw tightens.Â
âYou ainât ever said a thing when we brought in crockpots for football Sundaysâor when the pharmacy staff gave us those dry-ass muffins, but when Shen gets something thatâs edible? Whatâs thatââÂ
âDana. I was making a suggestion.âÂ
Jack blinks when the Pittâs charge nurse tilts his head, eyeing him like she knows something.Â
âHomemade, no less.â
Jack doesnât respond to that word, said exactly the way he did. He just rolls his shoulders, because the past ten minutes have been absolutely fucking ridiculous.Â
He doesnât respond to Danaâs look. Or to your silence when you come to walk past him.Â
Or to that nauseating, perfect smell of cinnamon and sweetness now wafting from Shenâs station.Â
Instead, he turns back to his work, the scribble of his pen not aggressive enough to notice.Â
You smile without filter. You give without pause. You sway your hips without any sort of care of where youâll go next, and Jack feels like the dirtiest old man in the world.
âŠThat doesnât stop him from realizing that youâve never baked him anything.Â
The ER doors slam open with the thunder of wheels. The first thing Mel catches is the red that it tracks in. She swallows.Â
Samira moves right behind her. Sheâs not on an assignment, so her and King can move easily to whateverâs about to make its way to a trauma bay. Her voice is clipped but routine to the medic as she clocks vitals.Â
But the two of themâthe three of them, as Dana finds her way at their side, they freeze.Â
Itâs a single second, a heartbeat going missing as the gurney fully comes into view, when they do a double-take at the patient, whoâs supposed to be just another patient.Â
But on it?
âOh my God.âÂ
You.Â
Youâre unconscious. Full of pallor. They watch your chest jolt and flutter under the oxygen bag being squeezed in rhythm. Your arms are streaked with road rash and blood and bits of your body that should be inside of you. Any piece of gauze thatâs been wrapped or stuffed too hastily is already soaked through.Â
And youâve brought a pond of blood along the tile. You. Sunshine.Â
Mel puts a hand over her mouth. Samira doesnât blink. Dana leans over the gurney.Â
â...SunâŠoh my God.â
The nurse who never takes a real break. The girl who brings snacks thatâs not from a vending machine to the Pitt every other week. The one who knows everyoneâs birthdays.
For one suspended moment, all three of themâDana, Mel, and SamiraâŠ
They forget how to breathe.Â
âClear trauma two. Now.â
Danaâs voice snaps, and their world jolts back into motion, because this is what they do. Thisâgloves snapping as they order monitors to be wheeled in, but stillâŠstillâthey canât stop exchanging looks over you.Â
But before they can start lines, before Dana can even check the monitor, another shadow barrels through, but they hear it before they see it.Â
His boots.Â
Angry. Heavy. Stomping.
Jack.Â
He storms in, and theyâre not sure if heâs wet from rain or sweat, because the forecast didnât call for drowsy weather, but heâs dripping.Â
His jaw is locked so tight that Dana swears she can hear his molars grind.
âMove.âÂ
Heâs at your side in seconds. His gloved hands hover over your ribs. Dana, in all her fucking shock, takes a moment to catch the face of Mohan and King, and as good as the doctors they are, she knows they canât be the ones to handle this.Â
âJackââ
âI said move.â He nearly barks it out under the dry of his throat, eyes only focused on your battered, torn skin. âGet your hands off her if you donât know what youâre doing.âÂ
Danaâs hands drop. Thatâs not something Jack Abbotâthe one she knows would ever say.Â
But she realizes, there, that Jack doesnât even know whoâs beside him.Â
Heâs already tearing open another thoracostomy kit, elbowing Mel back like sheâs some well-meaning amateur. As if he wouldnât be the first attending to throw her or any other resident at a case to let them thrive and swim and learn.Â
But this case is you, and Dana understands everything that he must be feeling when she realizes that.
â...Dr. Abbot,â Samira is trying in her careful voice, âwe need to get accessââ
âYou can do it over me.â
He says it with a dead, flat tone. Itâs terrifying. Dana manages to step forward, making her voice firmer.Â
Absolutely not.
âJack. Iâm telling you right now, you are not cleared. With the way youâre acting, you cannot be the one to work on this caseââ
âI donât care.âÂ
When Jack looks up finally, as if itâs a betrayal to you for looking away from the table, Dana sees how wild his eyes are.Â
Itâs so much worse than she thought.Â
His lip twitches. His eye twitches. His brow twitches.Â
âCase? Sheâs a case to you, Evans?â
His hands work on your chest as he talks, checking the site where he placed the decompression needle, and Danaâs assuming he did that in the field.Â
âYeah. She needs to be a case, Jack. Thatâs how weâre gonna get her through this, and youâre not in a state to work at all. Not at all. Look at youââÂ
âI am looking very clearly,â Jackâs words are dragged in whatâs almost a growl, something low in the back of his throat, and when he turns his eyes back up on Dana, the unblinkingâŠthe focusâÂ
Yeah. Thatâs terrifying as shit too.Â
âNone of you know how to do this the way I do.âÂ
Her breath catches in her throat.Â
What the fuck are they gonna do?
She turns to Samira, a whisper is the best she can do.
âRobbyâs on shift tonight?âÂ
Samira nods something unsure. âHeâs supposed to be, why?âÂ
âIf itâs gonna be someone to bring him down, itâsââÂ
Jackâs head whips towards them.
His eyes snap up, feral.Â
âWho do you think put her here?â
âŠThe silence that follows is fucking holy. Worthy of Mass on Sunday.Â
Samira steps back. Mel goes still, her hands hovering over your wrists, as if trying to save you is the worst thing she could possibly do in this moment. And as if on cue, the doors open again.Â
Another gurney. Not as rushed. Somewhat as bloodied.Â
âYou gotta be fuckinâ kidding me.â
âJesusââ
Robbyâs being barreled through with a neck brace and a gash at his temple, and some of his skin missing. Arm bandaged and slung. Aliveâbut barely able to keep his head up straight.Â
Out of the two of you, the two residents and charge nurse can deduce heâs the lucky one.Â
And the moment his stretcher crosses into view of the trauma bay, the entire room stops.
Not just the trauma team. Not just the nurses. The entire Pitt.
And Jack hasnât moved since Robby came through those doors. Not a twitch. Not a word.
Jesus. If looks could fucking kill.
Dana notices his jaw managing to lock more somehow, teeth grinding behind his lips pressed so tight that they looked bloodless. His shoulders might as well be concrete under his scrubs, and his fistsâŠ
They tremble.Â
When Danaâs eyes shift away from Robbyâs stretcher, slowing to a crawl, she finds Jackâs eyes back on you.Â
He swipes your blood-strung hair out of your face. He doesnât blink. He doesnât move.Â
âJack. You canât do this.âÂ
Jack doesnât move away. He doesnât look towards Dana. He simply works his hands over the first place where gauze has been stuffed, because thereâs the first and fifth and tenth.Â
âYouâre going to compromise her care if you stay in this stateââ
Still nothing. But behind them is a groan, then a shuffle. The scrape of knee and shoulder dragging off the gurney.Â
âRobbyââÂ
Itâs one of the medics snapping, trying to stop him.Â
Too late.Â
Robby swings himself down, hand pressed to his bandaged arm as his skinned cheek twitches. He sways, but god, does he manage to stay upright.Â
His mouth moves urgently.Â
âSh-she gonna crash if you donât start another lineâget fluids wide open. One of you needs to suction around the intubation tube, sheâs got blood in the back of her throatââ
Jack says something Dana canât make out, but itâs deep.Â
âI know she doesâŠI heard it. And get-get the dopamine, JackâŠJack you have toââ
âShut the fuck up!â
Jackâs voice rips through the trauma bay.Â
Everyone jolts.Â
Even you, somehow, flinch in spirit. Mel shushes a bare whimper that comes out of you.Â
Robbyâs eyes, Dana knows the pain in them isnât just made up of every wound heâs given himself.Â
She watches them get wet as Jack stalks forward. Behind him, Samira and Mel take the moment to work on you instantly.
âWe are going to end up with two people dead if you keep playing doctor right now. You need to get back on your fucking gurney, and you are going to let them help you while I make sure she doesnât die because of this. Do you understand?â
Robby, hair matted with blood and eyes unfocused, decorated with the pallor of a man on the brink of shock, shifts his sight from Jack to you. You to Jack.Â
âShe needsââÂ
âShe needed someone who would keep her safe!â Jack points with one impossibly shaking hand. âYou sworeâyou swore youâd keep her safe. And now look at her. Look at what you did.â
Jack to you. You to Jack. Jack to Dana. Dana to you.Â
Your name is cried out, Robbyâs voice hoarse and cracking.Â
He staggers forward, hand outstretched, only to collapse when his knee buckles.
âDr. RobbyââÂ
Itâs Mel who gasps. Dana rushes forward.Â
âNo, IâI know. I know.â
Robbyâs trying to crawl towards your side, lips sharing a slurry of explanations and pleas.
âI wasâŠshe was behind me, I tried toââ
The next thing Jack does almost puts a shock as intense as Robbyâs in Danaâand Samira. And Mel. And every other person whoâs able to look through the glass.
He merely moves past a crawling Robby as if heâs nothing more than a roach he canât be bothered to deal with. His best friend. His boots squeak with your blood.
âSomeone get him up, please.âÂ
He doesnât look up from where he spikes an IV line for you.Â
âRobby. Get up. Get away from her. Please.â
Robby shakes his head weakly, tears streaking down the grime on his face as Dana tries like hell to hold his body weight.
âI can helpââ
âYouâve done enough.â
Jackâs voice, as hoarse and low as it is, could freeze hell over. Dana hopes what sheâs hearing is rightâthat thereâs guilt and pity for Robby in there somewhere. Cause, if not? Jackâs not the person she thought he was.Â
And shit, sheâs not gonna blame you for changing him. Not you, Sunshine.Â
From behind, a new voice cuts in.
âHe canât even stand, Jack.â
Heather Collinsâs already gloved and stepping forward, trying her best to stay clinical, but her jawâs clenched.Â
âYou can get him out of this room and triage him.â
Heather ignores Jackâs dry, harsh tone as she catches Robbyâs good arm. Perlah, in a rush, takes the other arm from Dana. Together, they maneuver their way back to the gurney.Â
Jack reaches for your wristâŠhe searches for a pulse he obviously already knows is there.Â
Dana watches him squeeze your wrist.
âWait.â
Itâs Robbyâs voice again. Broken. Small.
Jack doesnât turn.
âWait, Iââ
Jack exhales. Dana closes her eyes. âWhat now, Robby?â
When they both glance back, Dana catches his breath halting.Â
Robby reaches for something the medic holds out like a crying baby grasping for its favorite toy.
A helmet.Â
Yours.Â
Itâs half-crushed and bloodied. Dana has to turn away when she catches your hair caught on the cracked visor.Â
Robbyâs reaching out for it as if he just needs to hold it.
â...You. Gave him that?âÂ
âHe wouldnât go in the ambulance without it, Dr. Abbotââ
âTell me, how does that better his chances of not dyingââ
âJack.â
Jack stares at the helmet, and no one can know how something twists in him.Â
Possessiveness. Guilt. Horror.
He hasnât thought about it since he saw that thing thirty feet away from the hell he found you in. Jack hadnât thought about what you had done to protect yourself.Â
It wasnât Robbyâs body shielding you. Couldnât possibly be with the way he found youâŠthere. Out in the street.
Why were you with Robby, kid? Why werenât you with him?
Didnât he promise heâd take care of you? Why didnât that mean anything to you?
âŠNo. It wasnât Robby who was shielding you. It was that. A fragile shell of black plastic.Â
And Robbyâs clutching it like it's a fucking talisman.Â
Jackâs finger twitches around your wrist.Â
âJack. Donât.â
Donât what? He canât do anything when Robbyâs wheeled away.Â
Well. No. He can save you. Feel you. Make sure youâre alive and you have no chance of getting away from himâand he can think how absolutely stupid it is that it took you being cracked against asphalt to forget how much he doesnât deserve youâŠ
To just take you.Â
He doesnât realize he was still gripping the side rail of your gurney until his knees begin to burn. Your wrist lies limp beneath his fingertipsâlike youâre dead. But youâre not dead. Youâre his, youâre fucking perfect. You canât be.
Jack lets out a breath at the feel of your pulse. Itâs thready, but there. A beat he can anchor to.
Heâs going to stay. He has to.Â
This is you.Â
His girl.Â
He decided that a long time ago. Heâll be sorry about that later, but right now, heâll stabilize you, monitor your post-op, handle your chart, andâ
âJack.â
No. Absolutely fucking not.Â
Danaâs voice is controlled. Calm. Almost gentle.Â
He doesnât like it. Not that tone.
Jack doesnât look up. âGet the dopamine running. Mohan, whatâs her BP?â
â...Dâdropping. Eight-two systolic and falling.â
âThen we push the epi. Now.â
âAbbot.â Jack blinks slow at Danaâs voice again. âStep back.â
âŠHe looks up there.Â
And. Fuck. Danaâs not behind him to unwillingly assist like he thought she eventually would. Sheâs standing at his side, face leaning in front of his vision.Â
He canât see you.
âMove! Dana, Iââ
Sheâs blocking him from you, like you arenât hisâlike he canât save you. Like youâre another coder heâll fail, and youâre not. You canât be.Â
Are they trying to kill you? Why the fuck are they hurting you? Just to punish him? For what?
âEvery second counts. What the hell are we doing?â Jack straightens. His voice drops. âEvans, do not play with me right now.âÂ
âIâm not.â
Jack's head lowers at the way Dana says her words so fucking evenly. His thumb runs over your knuckles.Â
His eyes travel to the mess of you. He thinks of you down the hall. Hair in a braid. Pink sneakers.Â
âŠWhere are your sneakers?
â...She needs me.â
He tries saying it in a way that King or Mohan wonât hear, but at this point, he can only care later. Danaâs eyes flash something full of the pity heâll spit back up. Something sad. Something knowing.Â
But if she knew, sheâd let him work on you.
âShe needs me.â
âYouâre not what she needs right now.â
Jack stills.
No.
All he can hear is Mohan and Mel knowing what to do without him. Your monitors. The life he has to keep steady so he can have you for the rest of his. Sure. Itâs the most aggressive thought heâs ever had, but itâs drowned out by the blood in his ears.Â
His voice edges out quieter.Â
He doesnât know how dangerous it sounds. Not even when Danaâs mouth parts or the other two look up.Â
âGet out of my way.âÂ
âYouâre in no state to treat her.âÂ
âYou think Iâm notââ
âI know youâre not.â
Danaâs words land like a fucking punch, but that doesnât stop Jack from staring into her.Â
Nobody has to interrupt. To break up whatever the hell this is. Even Jack knows sheâs already gone further than anyone else would dare.Â
âWeâve all seen it, Jack. What thisâŠis. What itâs been becoming.âÂ
Jackâs eyes narrow.Â
Not fucking now.Â
His head tilts up, shaking slightly â because this is ridiculous. They have him to save you, and this is what he gets?Â
The truth? No.Â
âYou think I donât see the way you look at her? The way you act âround her? The way you canât seem to breathe when sheâsâŠJack, this stopped beinâ professional a long time ago.â
Jack blinks.Â
He says nothing.Â
âŠWhy canât she just give you to him? Why?
âYouâve trained every single one of them to handle this kind of trauma. You know that. You know Samira and Mel and anyone on this team are more than capable.â
âDonât be selfish. If youâŠif you care for her the way I know you do, you let us help her. Let us take care of her.â
Silence presses into Jackâs body.Â
Yeah? What happened the last time he let someone else take care of you?Â
Mohan adjusts a line near your arm. King preps for another aspirate and release. Dana doesnât move. And Jack feels like the room has no edges. No air.Â
He looks down at you.Â
The streaky pulse of your bruised neck. Your blood seeping beneath his gloves. He thinks of where you should beâ
At your station. In his arms. Under him.Â
God, he didnât know he could miss when he felt like the dirtiest old man in the worldâwhen the girl who put unspeakable things in him wasnât bloodied with the street she fell into.Â
All the things he kept buried with dry professionalism, with late nights and self-denial and a touch of self-hatred, with standing at the edge of your apartment after tucking you in and pretending it meant nothing.Â
He thinks about that split-second in the ambulance, when the sirens wailed overhead, high and keeningâa sound heâs heard a thousand times but never like that. When he held your hand and had to remind himself to be gentle, not selfish, and he couldnât take the time to realize that heâs done that for you over and over and over again.Â
When he cupped your cheek and ordered you.Â
âStay with me, kid.â
And your breath caught on a wet gurgle.Â
âYou donât get to leave us, sleepy. You understand?â
He felt the tremor in your chest under his palm. That shallow, failing effort to pull airâbut, GodâŠyou were trying. But Jack thinks about how he reminded himself that your left lung wasâis partially collapsed, with the tension pneumo relieved but not resolved.Â
And if it had gone again, you wouldâve suffocated before they made six blocks.Â
âItâs me. Jack. Your doctor. You donât get to leave me.â
âŠYeah. That split second.Â
All the promises to let you go, to be better, to stop smothering the girl he hadnât even taken out on a real date cause heâs fucked enough to think youâre too good for him while still needing you anywayâ
They died in his throat.
But Dana? Sheâs not gonna let up, is she?
âJackââ
Jack storms out of the room, snapping his gloves off and throwing them to tile.Â
Heâs stepped back to give just enough room for the three of them to take his place, to act as if heâs let go.Â
But sure as hell not far enough that he isnât right outside, ready to push them aside at a single mistake.Â
At the simplest whimper or moan or plea for him, he begs whatever God isnât up there for.Â
Robby knew heâd hit the asphalt when the lights exploded behind his eyes. The metal of his bike screamed against the street before everything wasâŠreally, really fucking quiet.Â
Then came the taste of copper and smoke, his own breath catching nothing as the world flipped and tilted and slammed against him. He didnât black out when he skidded away from his pile of parts. No. Not really. It was more like a seizure of time orâŠsomething, where the seconds jammed and snagged at his throat and bones, and the bits of his skin peeled off. The world felt it had stopped, and every minute without knowing where you were or what happened felt too fucking longâbut there were lights and soft voices over him before he knew it.Â
He was pinned between the curb he slammed into and the wheel that skidded with him. His knees were screaming. His helmet cracked. His hands were scraped raw and red from instinctively trying to shield the one who was behind him.
You.Â
You.Â
You had called him for a ride to work, and he was surprised you even wanted to after the parking lot ordeal. Crazy. But he was happy, maybe happier than he shouldâve been. And hey, it seemed like Jack made peace with it, and even if he didnât, his lack of it didnât mean shit, because he knows his friend well enough that he can figure his own shit out, even if it has to do with you.Â
Sunshine of the Pitt. Harbinger of a silliness that would be resentful if you didnât know how to do your job so well. You. You.Â
God, Robby. What the fuck did you do?
He turned his head too fast. Pain bloomed bright behind his eyes. His vision doubled, then cleared.
And then it stopped. Everything.
You were in the middle of the road like you had been thrown there, limbs folded wrong, blood running from your forehead, your shoulder crunched, your leg bent in a way that made him, with all the shit heâs seenâŠ
He wanted to vomit.Â
Your name came out of his mouth in a rasp. No answer.Â
He threw up. He cried out your name again when he was finished. He watched your chest rise too shallowly and unevenly, and your face was pale in a way that reminded him of every dying patient he had ever failed.Â
âHey! WakeâŠhey!â It was your name. Over and over and over again.Â
Robby crawled. He dragged himself across the street, glass and gravel piercing his knees, but he only went faster, focusing on how your lips were parted, as if you had just been about to scream.Â
He choked on his groan when he made it to your side, just as the first poor-sorry bystander ran up with a phone shaking in their fist, and something deep in his shoulder and cheek shrieked, but Robby really didnât give a shit.
âSheâs breathing,â He gasped to no one. âSheâsâŠsheâs brââ
But it was wrong. The breathing wasnât right, and you do everything right. Thatâs who you are.Â
What the fuck did he ruin? What the fuck did he do to you?
Why arenât you crying and screaming to make him feel worse?
The sirens cameâtoo fast, too close. Too fucking loud. Robby winced as he dragged his body over you, trying to keep your head still when the medics surrounded both of you. Their hands moved too hastily, like they didnât know what they were doing, and he swears, sunshineâthat wasnât the brain bleed talking.Â
They werenât doing right by you. They didnât know what the fuck they were doing. And heâŠ
He didnât know what else to do but hang his body over you and be a fucking doctor.Â
âNoââ Robby tried to wave them off. âNo, her breathingâs shallow, I think she has internalâŠjustâyou have to be careful!â
A firm arm pulled him back.
âSir, you need to step away and let us help youââ
âIâm a fucking ER doctor!â He shouted it, dizzy, and he didnât realize blood was dripping into his eyes until his vision was painted red, and he wondered if this was what all his vehicular trauma patients see. âShe needs a collar, I think thereâs head trauma...DONâT tip her. Her arm and leg are dislocated or fracturedââ
Robby tried grabbing one of the field med kits, reaching over your bodyâyour heartbeat that he swore he could hear, which was good, but another medic restrained him. âSir, youâre bleeding. Youâre in shock. Weâve got her.âÂ
âŠNo. No. Please.Â
He had her.Â
He couldnât fight them when he had wounds that bled into lakes, and they were medics who could carry three hundred pounds on a good day. So, he just let his voice crack into something really fucking pathetic, but something he neededâbecause they needed to hear him.Â
âPlease be careful. PleaseâŠsheâsâsheâs not built for this. This wasnât supposed to happen.â
âRobby?âÂ
Robbyâs head snaps up, eyes beady and wet. He catches Perlah holding steady pressure to the side of his ribs while Heather works a pair of tweezers against the raw scrape across his jawline. He knows the gravel stuck there isnât bottomless, just bloody and uglyâand that Heatherâs covered the missing part of his cheek to deal with later.Â
He spits out a piece of pavement, eyes closing. He needs to fix what he ruined, and theyâre wasting their time and resources trying to fix him. Why are they doing this to him? Why are they being good?
âRobby.â Heather says it softly. âHow about you tell us what happened?â
He would roll his eyes. Robby knows what sheâs doing, just making conversation to make sure he doesnât crash before they send him off for a CT, but he wonât be difficult. Difficult didnât get him anywhere in your trauma room.Â
With Jack.Â
â...I was driving.â He canât even try to bring his voice above the sound of his heart monitor. âWe were on the bike.â
Jack. Heâs so fucking sorry.Â
â...Wasnât going fast. Wasnâtâwe werenât speeding. We werenât speedingââ
âOkay. Okay, Robby. Thatâs good.âÂ
He doesnât know how Heatherâs focus on him can be a comfort and a death sentence at the same time. He rubs his eyes. Harshly. Maybe. But it can hurt more than anything else on his body. He keeps rubbing.Â
âRobby, donât do thatââ
âI didnât speed. I didnât, you know? I would never do that with her. She called me to pick her up for work. I didnâtâŠI didnât even think sheâd want to ride again. But I let her. She needed a ride. I gave her a ride, I donât know whyââÂ
Heather glances towards Perlah.Â
âHow about you tell me how exactly did the accident happened, RobbyâŠif you canââ
âShe asked for it.â
Robbyâs voice cracks.Â
God. Heâs a fucking bastard. Heâs the worst person in the world. Do No Harm means fuck all to him. Heâs killed you, the most sorta-perfect thing to walk into his hospital, and he manages to blame you cause heâll vomit again if he has to swallow any more guilt.Â
Did he kill the sweetest girl in the world?
Robby closes his eyes shut. He doesnât even hear Heather or Perlah breathing. Theyâre holding in their judgement, right?
âThat sounds wrong. But she did. She did this time. SheâGodâŠI kept it slow, Heather. And the light was green. It was fucking green. I checked. I always check!âÂ
Something clatters.Â
âRobby!âÂ
He opens his eyes to see his fist where the supply tray was. He shakes his head. Over and over, because heâs not capable of anything else.Â
âIâm sorry. Iâm sorry. Iâm sorryââÂ
He feels a hand, Heatherâs, on his wrist. The one place he is broken or bleeding or bruised.Â
âJust keep telling me and Perlah what happened. About the other driver, okay?â
Robby feels the whole of his face twitch and jolt. He nods.Â
âThere was a car. He ran the light. I wasnât going fast. I said that, right? Iâhe just came out of nowhere. Why the fuck would heâŠwhy would heâŠâ
Why would he make me hurt you?
âHe crashed, sorta. He had a purple treeâŠthe scented hanger thing. His wheels skidded before he drove off. Heâwe treat those stories every day, but if he walked into this hospital right now, I donât thinkâŠâ Robby shakes his head violently.Â
âRobby, keep still. Iâm almost done with your jawââÂ
âHeâs gonna be the one to make me break my oath if he walks in here, Heather.âÂ
And he canât look at her or Perlah when he spits that out.Â
He can feel Perlah dress the wound over his rib a bit more firmly than she needs to, mouth slight in what could be a smile.Â
âWell, the bastardâs lucky youâll be a patient for the next few days, Robby.âÂ
He shakes his head again, only regretting it when he can finally look Heather in the eye and realize she really is on the last piece of gravel.Â
âNo. I told you, Iâm clean breaks and surface wounds, Iâm not gonna waste a bed upstairs when sheâsâŠâÂ
âŠHe doesnât know why your smile and breakage come to him in flashes. He sees it, right there, every other moment out in the street. But it doesnât matter, he canât focus on any one image for more than a half-second before he starts grasping at his stomach.Â
âHer helmet fit. I made the helmet fit.â Itâs the first time heâs as quiet as he was when he started talking. Robbyâs justâŠrelaying facts. He doesnât catch the way Perlah and Heather exchange glances again. âI check the straps. I checked them when I picked her up.âÂ
âRobby.âÂ
âI donât know whyâŠwhy it would come off like that. Whyââ Robby straightens up instantly, panic rumbling at his chest. Did they make him a victim of out of sight, out of mind? âWhereâs it? Do you still have it? Perlah, whereâd you put itââÂ
âWe didnât throw the helmet away. Youâre getting it back after we treat those surface wounds and breaks.âÂ
Robby slumps. He nods. His eyes narrow.Â
âI know what youâre thinking.â It comes out inside of a choke. He didnât realize heâs been crying all this time until his new tears smear the stains of the old ones. âI know. Everyoneâs thinking it. I saw Jackâs face. I know.â
Heather watches the way his hand curls against nothing, like heâs holding on to the edge of something thatâs already dropped out from under him.Â
âYou werenât reckless.âÂ
Robby laughs. Snorts. Itâs something bitter and wet.Â
No?
âNo? Then why the hell is sheââ He canât stop his voice from cracking so hard he canât finish. He breathes something shaky for a moment.Â
âI went slow. I swear I went slow.â
He couldnât know how something fold painfully in her chest as Perlahâs eyes shift to the ground. She simply nods. âI know, Robby.âÂ
âShe smiled when I picked her up, you know?â Itâs softer than the first word he spoke, because he really canât speak anything more. âShe smiles a lot, right?âÂ
âRobby,â Heather says it firmly, and with all the blood swimming in his ears, Robby can only guess itâs heartbreak starting to show in her voice. âYou can stop now, alright?â
Heather felt something fold painfully in her chest.
âI wouldâve never let her on if I thoughtâif I knewââ
âRobby.â
âI wouldâve neverââ
Heather touches his finger. She squeezes.Â
âI know.âÂ
She says it softly.
âWe know.â
And still, he keeps mumbling it under his breath in all his pitiful as shit tears. Itâs his prayer.Â
He didnât plan it. He told himself he was just being practical.
The night after Shen had brought you that caramel monstrosity, Jack stops at the twenty-four-hour grocery store on his way into the Pitt. Heâs tired, but aware of how ridiculous he looks in front of the pastry case at 8:52 pm. Heâs trying to remember what you said you liked.
Jack would think about how more ridiculous it is that heâs doing this for a woman he hasnât even felt the lips of yet, only to then feel gross in guilt while thinking of the way you bend over when you drop your glitter penâwhich he swears is on purpose. He hopes it is, because he doesnât think he could possibly feel more dirty than he does when he thinks of every crevice of youâbody and brain, but if youâre really unknowingly beautiful in body and brain, then fuck him. But then heâd have to admit heâs in a twenty-four-hour grocery store for you. So.Â
He ends up buying a box of plain glazed donuts, cause Shen always brings the fancy ones, and he doesnât want this to look like heâs competing.
Heâs not. Thereâs no competition.Â
He tells himself that all the way to the Pitt. When he walks in, youâre already there, reviewing the incoming admits. Your hairâs braided over your shoulder. You look up at him when you hear his footsteps.Â
He really could roll his eyes at the way his heartbeat grows faster. What in the absolute hell?
âWellâŠhello, my doctor. You were pushing your clock-in time.âÂ
â...Hi.âÂ
â...Hi.âÂ
Jack clears his throat and sets the box down on the counter, like itâs no big deal. Itâs donuts. People bring food in all the time.Â
You especially.Â
âThought we might want something for later.â
He mutters it.Â
Heâs already regretting it when you blinkâbat your eyes at the box.Â
âYouâŠbrought donuts?â
He shrugs, and heâs not feigning indifference because he is the epitome of indifference right now. Really.
âThey were on sale.âÂ
âOn sale.â Why are you repeating? Heâs told you he doesnât like mocking, or the immediate thought of what he could do to you if he had you and you continued to mock him after he established he doesnât like you mocking him. âWhat happened to cooling it on snack exchanges?â
âŠJack hopes his ears donât look as red as they feel.Â
âLook at you.âÂ
Of course, Shen chooses this exact moment to walk in. Of course.Â
Jack doesnât blink at his grin. âTrying to corrupt her with carbs, Dr. Abbot?â
âItâs not a bribe.âÂ
âŠHe doesnât know what that snaps out of him with all the speed in the world. His hand flexes.Â
Shen holds up his hands in surrender, eyes dancing.Â
âWasnât even thinking thatâŠof course not.âÂ
You open the box carefully. âYou didnât have to do this.âÂ
You say it softly, eyes meeting his. Theyâre smaller when looking down at you.
No. He had to. Because Jack hates the way Shen had smiled when heâd unwrapped the brownie gift. The way you had glowed. But he hates how badly he wants the version of you that laughed and cooked and gave thoughtful things to belong to him.Â
And still, he canât help himself to make sure you belong to him. You donât deserve that, but he canât help making sure that guys who have an easier time picking having you over their self-assured hatred of themselves stay away from the girl who bends over in tight fitted scrubs and giggles too hard and knows just how to make every patient relax under her touch and word.Â
He canât help himself, kid. Heâs almost sorry about that.Â
âI know.â
He nearly mutters his words again. Shen leans over her shoulder, inspecting the selection.
âWow. No sprinkles? No fancy glaze? You really went all out.â
Jackâs head snaps towards the other attending.Â
Your gaze bounced between them, cheeks flushed.
âItâs perfect, Jack. Thank you.â
âDonât mention it.âÂ
Jack grumbles it, already regretting every second of this interaction.Â
He thought that would be the end of it. But later that night, he comes around the corner and finds you sitting at the nursesâ station, one of the donuts in your hand.
You look up, eyes as bright as you. Fitting.Â
âBest donut Iâve had all month! Can I kiss you?âÂ
Yes. Please. Kiss me on the mouth. Be the one to do it first, so Iâm not a disgusting old man. I promise I think of all the good parts of you. Not just the way your body sits perched at your desk. I think of the pink bits of your brain when Iâm in bed, and Iâm slowly feeling less guilty about how itâs the only thing to get me to sleep.Â
Or how itâs the only thing to keep me away for a couple of more minutes before my man hands that are so much older than yours fumble their way into my pants.Â
Jack opens his mouth. Nothing comes outâŠbut he smiles, head lowering.
You bite into the donut again, face purely happy, and something in his chest unclenches.Â
For a second, itâs almost worth itâjust to see you look at him that way.
âDonât.â
Itâs a thought that dies quickly when he catches Shen smirking at him over the top of his chart, and whatever warmth Jack had at his stomach turns into mortification.Â
Yeah, he really finds solace in the night shift, doesnât he?
Samira always wonders how they get blood out of the linens. This is what she thinks now as she stands at the helm, because you canât stop bleeding. She canât stop you from bleeding. And she knows she can keep herself composed with a quiet steel, but sheâs figuring out that with you under her hands, she really canât do that.Â
So, she thinks about getting all this blood out of the linens. She ignores the beeping, frantic rhythms and hopes Mel is, too.Â
âWe need two more units of O negâDana, letâsâŠrefocus on airway protocolâand then we can getâŠDr. Mckay. Dr. Mckay and Santos. We donât know whatâs going on internally yet, we wonât until we get her up to testing butâŠitâsââÂ
âItâs a lot of blood.âÂ
Melâs right on the nose with that. She doesnât look away from you as they move around you. The strapping, the IVs and saline flushes.Â
Your body looks too small, too still on the table. Your normally warm skin, one she remembers you faux sobbing over when you got a large pimple on your cheek, is waxen. Your lashes are sticky with blood. Every other part of you is either broken or shredded or mattedâand itâs only every other part of you because your bloodâs done all too well in painting you red to the point that there could be wounds they canât make out.Â
Samira swallows hard. Melâs nose twitches.Â
Theyâve seen hundreds of traumas. Enough to know they need to be thinking of the mechanics of it, but they canât. Theyâre thinkingâŠ
Thatâs you on the table. The one who calls everyone babe and customizes her badge clip with glitter and tapes stars to the back of scrubs when someone passes a certification exam.Â
Sunshine.Â
Their friend.Â
âPressureâs low. Skinâs cold. We need the ultrasound, Dr. Mohan.â
Samira nods once, lips pressed flat. âDana went to go get Dr. McKay and Dr. Santos. And moreâŠunits of O neg. Weâre gonna needââ
Her words break at a sound.Â
Something wet and strangled.Â
A gasp.Â
They watch your eyelids flutter, then lift. Glazed. Wild.Â
â...IsâisâŠRobby okay?â
Everything stops.Â
Melâs hand is already on the pulse oximeter. She startles. Your name slips out, itâs something of comfort but mostly a shock she canât hide. Samira stiffens by the IV with oneâtwo questions pounding at the back of her head.Â
How the hell are you awake?Â
And how the hell are you not screaming in pain?
But both residents instantly rush towards you when you try to sit up, breath hitching in broken gasps.Â
âIs Robby okay?!âÂ
Samira finds your name falling out of her mouth firmly. âYou need to lie back downââÂ
âMel, is heâis h-h-he okay? He wasâŠhe was right there andâŠI-IâI. God, I think Iâ
Both of their hearts sputter against their chest when you cough hard, a splatter of blood catching your lips before it spurts all over the gurney.Â
The monitors go wild.Â
Mel already knows to snap her focus up at the door.Â
Sheâs not going to know what the hell to do if Jackâs right outside. She hopes security took him. Not anywhere bad. JustâŠsomewhere else.Â
Samiraâs doctor masks drops. Completely. Thereâs no way it canât when your chest convulses with IVs tugging. She moves fastâleaning over you, brushing hair from your damp forehead.
âListen to me. Robbyâs alive. Youâre both here. Weâre taking care of it. But you have to let us help you.â
âDonât lie! You canât...can't lie! Is he okay?â
Samira takes a glance at Mel as your voice breaks, caught in sobs too sharp to form fully. Your hands twitchâsearching.Â
But when you sputter up more blood in your pleas, she can only realize thereâs no hope that those footsteps behind her are Dana with backup.Â
âMove.â
The single word of their attending is so deep, buried in his throat, that it pierces both residents.Â
âDr. Abbot! Weâre fine! Dr. McKay and Santos are on their way with DanaâŠdonâtâwe donât want you to get in trouble, sheâsâ
âMove.âÂ
Itâs an order Mel doesnât have to follow when sheâs practically pushed out of the way, and Samira only lowers her head.Â
They watch Dr. Abbot touch your swollen cheek, and they donât know why youâre watching his chest.Â
âSleepy, hey, lie back down, babyââ
âI need to know where Robby is! IâIâIâŠâÂ
The only thing Samira and Mel can be grateful for is the way your adrenaline is making sure you donât feel the way you look. But you shake, keening, flinching. Heaving.Â
â...Jack?âÂ
Dr. Abbot nods with something so genuine on his face.Â
Like this is the moment he needs, you needing him to take care of you. They couldnât know how it hits like morphine.
Itâs okay, kid. Heâs got you.Â
âItâs me. Itâs me. Youâre gonna lie back down, and IâmâŠweâre gonna help you. Just lie back downââÂ
âNo! No! Noâno no no no!â
What mustâve been almost a smile on Jackâs face drops.Â
Mel, her hand awkward but urgent, finds yours. She squeezes it hard.Â
âCalm down. Weâre going to take care of you, Dr. MohanâSamira told you, Robbyâs okay. Heâs going to be okayâ
And no, none of them know the way something in him dies when he sees blood pushing through your chest tube. His mouth parts.Â
No. No. No.Â
âWe need to sedate her.âÂ
âNo! NoââÂ
âSleepy, listen to meâ
âYouâre going to crash if you keep panicking. Stop talking. Okay? For you?âÂ
Jack takes hold of your shoulders when blood spits from your lips when you gasp, shredded voice against his.Â
He wants to hold you till you fall asleep. He wants to kill Robby. His brother. He wants it to be yesterday.Â
He wants you so much better, and he canât do shit. What kind of doctor is he?
Jack stills at your sputtered, panicked words.
âYouâyouâreâyouâre mad!â
He blinks, eyes staring into yours. He doesnât know if you see anything.Â
He shakes his head violently.Â
âNo. No. Iâm not mad, babyââÂ
âIâm sorry!âÂ
âDr. Abbot, we need her blood pressure to stabilizeââÂ
He doesnât even know whoâs talking every pointless point.Â
Heâs not mad. Heâs not mad. Heâll never be mad at you again, even when your cries break his stomach and heart apart. Heâs not mad, sweetheart.Â
âIâm not mad. Youâre okay. Youâre okay, alright? Thatâs all I care about. I just need you to breathe. Thatâs all.âÂ
âI didnât think this woâŠwould happen, donâŠdonât hate meââ
âNo.â Jackâs mouth shuts thin, eyes staring through his brows, focusing on you, you, youâ âNever. You will never have to apologize. I want you safe, and IâmâŠâÂ
âDr. Abbot, please, please move out of the wayââÂ
âIâm sorry.â
When you choke, Samira takes the initiative to brush past Dr. Abbot and push you back down on the gurney. An alarm from the monitors wail. Your chest leads have slipped.Â
âDonâ hate meâŠâ
His hand burns when it slips away from you.Â
What did he do to his girl?
Jack pushes himself back against the wall as he realizes the pain youâve ignored finally bleeds into your voice as you cry hard. The blood at your mouth bubbles.Â
His head hits the wall.Â
âBoth of you need toââÂ
âDr. Abbot, pleaseââÂ
Heâll give it to King, her pleas sound genuine.Â
âNo, both of you need to answer me. Is her decompensation systolic or diastolic? Do you knowââÂ
âDr. Abbot, weâre losing her and youâre compromising usââÂ
No. Never that word. No. Fuck that.
âIf you donât, Iâm putting on another pair of gloves, and youâre going to let me lead on herâ
âGet your hands off the patient.âÂ
Jack head snaps.Â
Dana stands with reinforcements. Dr. McKay. Santos. Both very capable. He knows that. He knows them.Â
And heâll never be able to help himself with you.Â
His eyes lock with her.Â
âIâm going to stabilize herââÂ
âYouâre gonna let the ones assigned to do the job to finish it. Jack.â She steps closer. Jack doesnât move.
âDonât make me call security and have them drag you out of your own fuckinâ ER. Please.â
Silence collapses on the room. Jack doesnât even flinch.Â
But your pulse does. It jolts and flutters. He finds a promise hiding in your veins, like you caught it when he was promising to let all his promises about letting you go die.Â
The first time Dana noticed something was up between you and Jack, the night was chaos.
When something was really up, she should say. All she needed was five seconds working with the two of you on the night shift for the first time to pick up how badly you and he wanted to jump in bed with each other. All she needed was five seconds after that to realize how youâve got Jack wrapped around your finger, but the week after Fourth of July is where she couldnât deny JackâsâŠsituation with you any longer.Â
Fourth of July had nothing on the mess that came the week after. The Pitt had been bottlenecked by a multi-car pile-up, an allergic reaction gone critical way too quickly, a psych hold swinging fists when he escaped to the waiting room, and then, a goddamn kitchen fire that landed two kids in trauma bays with second-degree burns and a sobbing mother who vomited on Danaâs shoes.Â
But stillâŠshe noticed it in a moment of stillness.Â
That flicker. That look. That flicker of a look. Whatever.
She had just come around the corner of Bay 2, flipping through labs of the allergic reaction case, when she paused. Quiet, somehow. Unseen. Because there they were.Â
Jack and Sunshine.Â
You were standing beside him, so close. Really, really close. Which, sure, was nothing new for you two. Your hand rested on the small of Jackâs back. Not exactly touching, but more like a risky hover. And you werenât saying anything. Not out loud. But shit, if Dana takes the chance to write a poem, she could say that the silence between you and Jack spoke well enough.Â
Jackâs shoulders, always stiff with the weight of everything he never said, had lowered. It was willing, it had become willing when you did end up sprawling your fingers on his back. And you. And youâŠyou were looking at him with something more than teases and trust. Maybe you were reminding him of something, as you always do, like that Jack hadnât eaten.Â
And god, sunshine, he was looking at you like you were the one thing that made everything else bearable.Â
Yeah. It wasnât just desire or lust. It was somethingâŠconsuming. That kind of closeness, that type of care for somebody didnât come from some shifts worked together for the past couple of months.Â
That shit came from belonging. From need.Â
And suddenly, little things clicked into place. The way Jack always knew where you were in the ED. The way heâd flinch when a resident or nurse would make you laugh. The way he didnât like it when anyone else called you kid. And shit, she hasnât forgotten the stare he gave Santos when she tried to call you sleepy.Â
Dana blinked.
She didnât even know what she was feeling. Unease? Concern?
No. She was thinking how disgustingly cute it was. That was easy. Because who would it have hurt? Who or what had it been hurting except Jack Abbotâs stoicism? Dana smiled, because you two were ridiculous.Â
But then Jack stepped away too quickly, as if heâd suddenly remembered himself, and Dana slipped away before either noticed her. She was standing just outside of Bay 2, her eyes drifting from the labs she pretended to read. She watched you tuck a loose strand of hair behind your ear.Â
Someone approached.Â
Donnie. Dana thought he was an alright enough paramedic. Newer and slim-shouldered, smile bright, but definitely more eager as he came up to you fast.Â
âYou were a machine in there. That kid wouldâve been a code if you hadnât gotten that line in.âÂ
You looked up, caught off guard by the praise, but you managed a smile. âWell, Dr. Abbotâs a master of his craft, and Danny was already more stable by the time you rolled in with him.â
âNah, just got him here. Youâre the nurse with all the magic.âÂ
Donnie lingered, not too close, Dana would say. JustâŠpresent, and you ducked your head with a soft laugh, embarrassed and flattered.Â
Dana didnât even see where Jack had come from to reappear. One moment heâs gone, the next heâs standing around the cornerâsilent and still. Watching. Donnie was too busy joking about buying you a coffee as a âcomplimentâ for either of you to notice cowboy attending before your gentle smile and shift of your body told the medic that the conversation was over. Donnie gave a mock salute and jogged off, unaware of the stare being bored into him.Â
Jack had crossed his arms, head lowered, and he didnât even have the class Dana wore to make sure it wasnât so damn obvious she was stalking the conversation. He probably didnât care to hide the way his jaw flexed, or the way his fingers twitched on top of his biceps like he had to stop himself from doing something.Â
And the idea that this all was disgustingly cute died when he didnât say a word to you as he walked past you. Like youâve made some mistake.Â
Dana scoffed.
She watched you blink and glance after Jack, confused by the sudden coldness when you couldnât even finish whatever quip you were making. He didnât even look at you. She saw it in real time.
Your soft guilt. You wondering if youâd done something wrong as you looked to the tile, your smile dropping with your brow going down.
Dana sighed, because she realized that Jackâs jealousy wasnât just uncharacteristically childish or romantic. It was protective, yeah, but not like a partner. Shit, you two werenât even there yet.
It was protective like Jack was watching a stranger trespass on his property.Â
âHer oxygenâs creeping back up.âÂ
Danaâs eyes snap from you on the table to Mel. She puts on fresh gloves, because it didnât take her more than twenty seconds trying to save you to make her first pair useless with blood.Â
âSheâs stableâfor now. We reassess imaging, Samira?âÂ
â...Yeah. Sheâs going to need another CT cycle before we get her up to surgery. â
This fucking messâwhere she sees sunshine, you, broken on the table with the road rash that tears across your jagged ribs, flesh hanging in ribbons and skin marbled and slick with sweat and blood and grimeâŠshe feels it all take root at the pit of her stomach. Her eyes are dry in focusing on the purple blooming over your thigh, right where the medics scissored open the fabric of your scrubs. Your clavicle is probably shattered.Â
But when she turns to the glass of the door, she sees Jack waiting, staringâŠ
Youâre not on the table. Youâre asking him whatâs wrong when he grabs a chart from the counter and flips through it with white knuckles. Youâre swallowing with quick-blinking eyes when he barely gives you some noncommittal shrug.Â
â...Did I do something wrongââ
âItâs been a long shift. Thatâs it. Thatâs usual, right?â
Youâre flinching like his words are louder than they were. But you step closer, and Dana sees him take in a deep breath he doesnât let go of, just as you go ahead with fixinâ something thatâs not your fault.Â
âI brought something for you.â
Youâre trying to hand Jack a protein bar and a plastic cup of coffee. Jack looks at it.Â
But he doesnât take it. He just sighs, turning back to his chart.Â
Danaâs brows furrow when you set the coffee and snack down on the counter, pinching your wrist as you slip away.Â
There, with the first moment Dana realized something was really up with you and Jack and Jack, is where you, sunshine, were somehow smaller than you are now.Â
Heâs crossing his arms over his scrub top thatâs soaked in your blood, standing rigid with unblinking eyes fixed on the trauma room, as if heâll be let back inside if he just stares hard enough.Â
Like if he waits long enough, the rules and his residents and Dana will bend for him.Â
God, itâs the way heâs not even pacing. Not pacing, not complainingâŠjust waiting. Like deep down, Jackâs really, really thinking that sheâs just delaying his right to be with you.
Dana turns away, because if she looks too long at him like that, sheâs gonna forget the thousand little good things that makes Jack a pillar of the Pitt, that makes him good and too fucking perfect. Sheâs gonna forget the time he guided you to your car after your blood sugar tanked after you didnât eat before coming in to work a double. Sheâs gonna forget his shaking hands after a patient pushed you into a wall when you were trying to dose him.Â
She canât forget the good things, cause theyâre still there, right?Â
âSheâs gonna be okay, you guys. I donât count on making those promises outside of here, butâŠâÂ
Dana glances back at Jack, still and quiet and calculating. A storm behind glass, waiting for any one of them to make a mistake, as if he doesnât know how capable they are.
He may have forgotten the good things about himself, but she wonât.Â
When you find Jack in the supply closet during the slow stretch of the shift, he wants to push you up against the shelves and discover that the body heâs been fantasizing about looks nothing like what he imagined, and how that makes itâyou all the more fucking perfect. Well. Not push. Thereâs nothing soft for you to land on in here.Â
Dirty old fuck.Â
âDr. Abbot?â
Instead, he just barely looks up.Â
â...Jackie?â
Jack stills.Â
Heâs a dirty old fuck, and youâre too cheeky for your own good.
He smiles. âBusy, kid.â
You step inside and shut the door behind you. Jack letâs out a breath, your name following it.Â
Keep it up, sleepy. See where pretending you donât know youâre tempting him gets you.Â
âI justâŠâ You trail off, your fingers curling in the hem of your scrub top. âI wanted to say thank you again.â
âFor what?âÂ
Do not bring up the donuts.
âFor the donuts. You didnât have to do that.â
His hand flexes. âThey were on sale.âÂ
Yeah. He said it too quickly. But he doesnât stop eyeing your smile.
Even when you pull on his scrub sleeve and he has to remember to breathe evenly.Â
Keep it up.Â
âYou donât have to thank me.âÂ
Jack looks you over when your finger trails his bicep. You have to know. Itâll make it so much easier if you know.
âBut I want to, Jack. Courtesy is my specialty.â
You tap his elbow. He almost laughs when you try to step back, even as he clenches his jaw.
Unfortunately, for his ethics, pleasure settles in his chest when your mouth parts with a squeaky inhale when he grabs your wrist.Â
âOh. I know it is. But itâs not a big deal. Stop making it into one.â Jack steps closer, patting your palm. âOr youâre not getting donuts again.âÂ
He watches you watch where heâs touching you, and sorry, sleepyâheâs selfishly hoping youâre feeling whatever youâre making him feel. He doesnât mean to blame you.
He smiles wide and closed-lipped when your shoulders roll.
âItâs okay. Iâll take a coffee next time.âÂ
âOh, Shenâs got you in that department.â
Sorry. He couldnât help himself. And itâs where he doesnât even realize he canât look at you.Â
â...Jack?âÂ
âYeah?âÂ
You better not have felt his breath on your hair. Or, if you did, heâd rather have your face flush with those batted lashes.Â
âWhatever it is youâre worrying aboutâŠâÂ
Oh, kid.
Poke the place above the navel one more time.
âDonât.âÂ
It takes everything in Jack not to squeeze his hands to your waist and hips. Seriously. It takes everything. How fucking ridiculous.Â
Pretty, ridiculous girl. What the fuck are you doing that you donât know youâre doing it? Probably. If he finds out you do, itâll be worse for you the day he doesnât let you walk away from him.Â
Hearing you squeak when he pokes your spine on your way out isnât the fantasy at the coil of his stomach, but it does just fine.Â
Two nights later, Jack finds himself in a place no man should find himself at 8:32 pm at night.Â
âCan I get theâŠcaramel swirl with theâŠthe frothed milk on top?âÂ
The teenager at the counter stares. Blink.Â
âThe cold foam?âÂ
â...Yeah. That. Thanks.âÂ
Itâs not him, itâs youâbecause thereâs no one else heâd stand in line at an unholy Dunkinâ Donuts for.Â
â...You sure you donât want like a black coffeeââÂ
He canât keep himself still watching them work on you.Â
Jackâs a restless guy. Itâs not something unknowable. Heâs put his heart in a place that might as well have the word restlessness on the sign outside. When heâs not in the Pitt, he tosses in bed. He taps his fingers along his police scanner when he gets lunch by himself. He can barely keep himself from going back and forth to different work-out equipment in his makeshift gym in the garage. His body requires movement. Always.Â
But heâs never known restlessness like this. The kind that buries itself in worry and the white of his bones, like standing still doing fuck all is going to be the thing to kill you. ButâŠyouâd be proud of him, sleepy.Â
He doesnât get himself kicked out of his ER. He doesnât burst through the doors of your trauma room. He doesnât pace from wall to wall or up and down the hall to then dead-eye every person who walks by. He doesnât begâŠorder Dana to let him back in.Â
No. He does the right thing, which is fuck all, right?Â
Jack is more than aware of the logistics of keeping him out here, but his body doesnât know that. His heart and muscles arenât as smart as him, so itâs asking him:
Why are you out here doing nothing when sheâs in there? You know what to do. You know how to do it. And itâs her. Do you not care about her?Â
Of course he fucking does. He wouldnât feel like his muscles are about to fall out of his skin as every second of him not being in there with you passes if he didnât.Â
But.
âHeart rateâs picking up. Thatâs notââÂ
âSedationâs wearing off already.âÂ
It isnât just logistics and the threat of being thrown out of the ER where heâll be even farther from you that keeps him out there. Thatâs not something unknowable too.Â
You woke up guilty, crying apologies and pleas because you thought he was going to be mad at you about the bike. He did that. Jackâs the one to make you wake up and find yourself bloodied and battered and have your first thought be about how mad heâs going to be at you.Â
Jack glances at the stairwell. He wipes dried grime of sweat off his neck.Â
Youâve fractured him, kid. Youâve put him in a place where he wants to keep you in the inside of his bodyâwhere he can pretend youâre not capable or strong so the need is justified. The bat of your lashes and the corners of your smile and the bareness of your stomach that he can see when your scrub top lifts at your arms going over your head is what makes him know itâs right to feel mad and bulging every time you giggle with someone else, when you put yourself in situations where you end up like this.Â
And then you cry. Or you look at him with confusion like you didnât know indulging with a paramedicâs flirtations or shrugging off a fixated patient is what makes him go cold on you. Or you beg him not to hate you because, in deliruim, his coldness is what youâre afraid of.Â
And then he feels like the worst man in the world. Hence the fracture.Â
Jack locks his eyes shut.Â
He smothered the promise to stop smothering you. But for your sake, maybe he has fish it out of his throat, because heâs not going to be able to handle you crying like that ever again.
He wonât make it to the point where he can finally have you if you hurt like that in from of him again. Do you hear him? Does he hear himself?
He wonât make it. So. Maybe itâs best to stay out here, even if it feels like death. Itâs okay. Heâs felt worse.Â
 ââŠJaâŠ?â
Jackâs sights snap back from the stairwell to the trauma room. He steps forward, fist clenching.Â
No fucking way. Absolutely not.
Youâre awake. Again.Â
People are calling out your name. Thereâs pain burned and bruised in every crevice of your body. You donât really even know where you are.Â
But whereâs Jack?Â
He was taking you home, right? He was taking you home is his truck, and you heard a car scream before youâŠand you went flying. But Jack was taking you home.Â
Where is he? Where did he go? Did you hurt him again? You donât even know how. You never know how.Â
Jack?
Samira freezes mid-suture. Dana and Mckayâs eyes dart up. Mel, hunched by the monitor, rises and leans closer, swallowing everything she pretends isnât fear and heartbreak.Â
âWhereâŠwhere is he?âÂ
â...Who?âÂ
âJack? Is he⊠okay?âÂ
The question snaps all heads into the room. Not Robby this time. Jack?
Santosâs first thought isnât uncouth. Itâs fact.Â
This might be fucking brain damage. Sheâs hoping itâs just delirium projecting your undying love for her attending.Â
Mel says your name. Gentle enough, as alwaysâbut firm enough to ground you, hopefully. âHey. Itâs okay. Youâre in the Pitt. Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. Weâve got you. Dr. AbbotâJack. JackâŠis fine.â
When your brows knit as you begin to claw at the sheets and IVs, your crew is more than aware the hard part isnât over.Â
 âIs heââ You cough hard, and Mckayâs mumbling soft, sweet okays as you hard-spit a speck of blood onto the gauze taped beneath your chin. âHe was driving! He was drivingâI shouldnâtâve let himâIâd walk. I told him Iâd walk. He was just trying toâŠtrying toââ
Santos leans forward, feeling your stomach for any distension thatâs definitely gonna show with this oncoming panic attack.Â
âYou need to calm down. Dr. Abbot is fine, sunshine. Heâs right outsideââ
âNo! It was his pickup. It was his truck. I looked up and the whole street shookâŠJackâs hurt, I know! HeâsâheâsââÂ
Your breathing stutters, and in the blur of your eyes, you can make out shouts, and a blonde woman rushing towards the door, and another figure coming in. Or trying to.Â
âLook at me. Weâre in the hospital. Dr. Abbot is not hurt. Jack is not hurt. You were. We sedated you. Weâre going to sedate you again and give you another transfusion because youâŠyou really need. And youâre going up to the OR after we do. But Jack is okay.Â
Mel interjects Samiraâs words gently. âThe accidentâyou had an accident. The accident was on a bike. Not in a truck. Okay?âÂ
The truth, apparently, isnât enough for you. You choke on a sob, and it splinters into whimpers that twist around in your lungs.
âIâŠI made him come get meâŠif he hadnâtâhe wouldnât have been thereâŠhe wouldnât haveââ
Mckay sweeps your hair away from the dried crusts of blood on your forehead.Â
âYou didnât do anything, sweetie. It was you and Robby who crashed. You remember? I heard you made quite a stir for him. Which is good. You up and talking like this is a silver lining. But Jack wasnât anywhere near any accident. JackâŠâÂ
âDana, she is literally asking for me. Let me in. Now.âÂ
âJack, noââ
âWell. You can hear him, canât you?â
Santos blinks. She guesses she could say something too. Make this easier on her heart, because she needs to forget that sheâs seen you like this at the end of the day. She will, because youâre going to be back in the Pitt annoying the crap out of here before she knows it.Â
You better be.Â
âYouâre not to blame. Youâre both safe. Heâs fine.âÂ
But nothings enough for you.Â
Except him. What a curse thatâs gonna be for the both of you.Â
You shake your head, breath ragged. Tears cut through the dried blood on your cheeks. Youâre looking past them all now. Looking for him, but that womanâDana. Danaâs here.Â
Sheâs blocking your view.Â
âIâm gonna call securityââ
âDana! Dana, Pleaseâplease, I just need to see him. I needâI nâneed to knowââ
Really. Itâs on Dana for leaving the space of the door. She knows that.
It SLAMS open. You jump.Â
âIâm right here. Iâm right here, kid.â
Itâs this man storming inâshoulders squared like a blunt weapon, eyes glassy with fury and fear, but you couldnât name it in the state youâre in. Neither could he.Â
His face is drained, scrub collar crumpled, dread stitched in the lined features of his face. You see him.Â
Jack.Â
You couldnât know how he sees you, crumpled and desperate, and feels the wounds of everything he doesnât want to name burning and knifed into his skin.Â
That old, familiar stab of fear. But God, that relief.Â
You need me. Always.Â
Jack brushes past the team, anxious and fractured, which is what he can realize at the very least. He doesnât blink as he makes way to your side.Â
But he stills when you gasp.Â
His mouth parts when your face crumples in horror.Â
No. No. No. He had you. He has you. You wanted him. You let him in. Why are you scared? What could he have possibly done again?
âOh my god. Youâre bleedingâJack, youâre bleeding! I knew it, I knew itââ
Jack edges closer. He swallows the crack of his voice down his throat. He doesnât need his asks to dare anyone to stop him from grabbing your palm.Â
His fingers tremble at your wrist as he says your name.Â
âLook at me.â You can look at him now. âHeyâhey. Itâs not my blood.â
Jack slows in his breathing as you pause in your panic, eyes wild.
Look at him and realize everythingâs going to be okay. Thatâs what heâs doing right now.
ââŠWhat?â
He lifts your hand, pressing a cool kiss to your knuckles. His voice catches.
âItâs yours, kid. Itâs all yours.â
Everything stills. The monitorâs beep.Â
They watch your heart rate go down.
âIt wasnât me. It wasnât my truck. Youâre mixing it up. He was driving. Robby.â Jackâs head jolts in a slight twitch at your whimper. âIt was you and Robby, baby. Not me. I wasnât there. But RobbyâŠRobbyâs going to be fine. Heâs gonna come out of this stronger than ever.âÂ
No thanks to me.Â
âBecause thatâs what he does. And so are you, because youâyou, sleepy areâŠâÂ
Jack looks to where another whimper, small and wounded, slips through your slips. Jack looks to the wet pleas of your eyes. He looks to every part of you that still bleeds.Â
His stomach drops.Â
âYou are the most capable and strongest nurse, woman, person weâŠI have ever seen.âÂ
Jack leans forward, pressing his forehead to the side of your damp hair.
âEven if youâre making me look like a fool and act like an asshole in front of everyone I respect.â He exhales against you. âSo, after you get better, I deserve to make sure that you use those charms of yours to make them forget this ever happen, yeah?âÂ
When you nod frantically, the crew around him decide to not notice how itâs everything to Jack.Â
âYouâre going to go to sleep, and theyâre going to take you up to surgery. But when you wake upâŠâÂ
The truth sits like fire upon wood in his throat.Â
âI will be there. With you. For you. Iâm not going anywhere. I know itâs a little much, but we can call it a professional favor. Okay?â
Your eyes lock onto his. Your desperation is raw.Â
Jack never thought heâd be in a place to try and not enjoy it, but he rather not be the worst man in the world.Â
âYouâre okay. Youâre still here. And IâŠIâm okay.â
The last line is shaky, but trueâbecause itâs your eyes heâs looking into, even as your tears spill down. Even when the sight against him is familiar, when he realizes your bodyâs a battlefield. IVs in both arms, tubes secured at your nose, bruising spread like ink across your ribs and collarbone and thighs and shins and stomach and arms.Â
Because your lashes flutter, and your lips part in a rasp under his whispers of comfort against your knuckles, steadying your panic with every soft, graveled-throat vow. Youâre safe, Iâm okay, Iâm here.
Iâm never letting you go ever again.
âIâm glad youâre here.â
âŠDana waits another minute before she tugs Jack away. Again. She just watches his hands intertwine with yours.Â
When Jack catches you out walking to work in 30-degree weather alone in the fucking dark, he has no choice but to realize his feelings for you are far past romantics and hurdling towards possession. That only becomes more apparent when he catches you on Robby's motorcycle after.
WORD COUNT: 15.7K || Based on the implication weâre gonna see Robby riding a motorcycle in season 2. I am sure Reader's a nurse. dot dot dots like no tomorrow. Graphic depiction of blood, wounds, and vehicular accidents. Inaccurate medical terminology and situations. Age gap between Jack and the reader. Jealousy, possession, romantic entitlement. Dr. Robby x Reader, if you squint like there's no tomorrow. You can read this as a part of the series Lengths, but also not. Might get ocish đ„žđ„ž. Angst. Jack goes coo coo.
Early evening on a Winter Street. Just before heâll find you at the nurses' station with your glitter pen and the smile he canât bear with the cheeks he tries to make blush all at once--
The city is already dipped in that steel twilight, where the breath of drunkards fog, the drunkards heâll probably have to treat deeper in the night. Wind cuts sharp through the collars of late commuters, but Jack? Heâs gonna be early to work, probably. Name him trauma attending of the month.
You are the most ridiculous, resentfully genius nurse and woman and person I have ever met. I wish I could blame you for something.Â
Heâs behind the wheel of his battered black truck, thermos in the cup holder, window down to breathe in the sting of the too-cool air. Jack doesnât know why he does this, other than the fact that itâs a place where pain can feel good. When does that happen? Not in the Pitt, thatâs for fucking sure. Itâs against his medical oath to claim pain can be tolerated. ButâŠthatâs only in reference to patients, not him, right?
Thereâs no way youâve possibly beaten him to the E.R. One thing you resent him for? Itâs the way heâs quick. Casually so. And heâs not too humble about that, if Jack says so himself.Â
Ah. Fuck.Â
Jack shakes his head stiffly; itâs more like one slight jolt to snap him out of it because thinking of you while heâs on his way to work with you is as ridiculous as you are. Itâs uncharacteristically pathetic of him, maybe. There. Maybe thatâs something he can blame you for.Â
âNice use of your blinker, bmw-bastard-bitch.âÂ
Jack nearly whispers it, but that asshole of a driver is what gets his mind to slip away from you, soâŠthank them for that. Trafficâs slow, and he begins flipping through mental protocol for the night. Staffing numbers, open beds, that critical case that might get transferred down from Fox Chapelâ
âDr. Abbot, there is no need to dryly sass me when all Iâve been doing is assisting you like a champ.âÂ
â...You are. You are assisting me very well, which is why I need to sass you. With all the praise Dr. Robbyâs been giving you, I canât have your ego building on me.Â
Jackâs mouth twitches widely before he jolts his head once again to slap whatever was gonna decorate his face.Â
Just leave him alone, kid.Â
âŠHe hopes youâre still wearing your pink shoes after he teased you about them for the fortieth time. Jack likes them. TheyâreâŠvisual stimulation for the slow shifts.Â
Okay. Traffic? Trafficâs slow. Staffingâs short on him. Of course, but there seemed to be an endless number of open beds last night. That critical case is definitely getting transferred down from Fox Chapel, poor, bare-budget fucksâ
âWhat the fuck?âÂ
And there. He sees her.Â
You.Â
Across the street. Walking alone. Head down, coat zipped tight, tote bag slung over one shoulder and a thermos at your hip. But thenâŠJackâs focus locks in.Â
Youâre wearing your pink sneakers and a wool beanie with little specks of glitter. Your badge is clipped to your coat, which bounces with every hurried step. Youâre tugging your scarf higher, cheeks are flushed from the coldâŠbecause, of course, they are. Itâs 30 fucking degrees. Your fingersâtheyâre bare. What the hell? Do you not own gloves?
Jackâs jaw locks. His foot eases off the gas before his eyes narrow like heâs tracking a threat. Because this, sleepy?Â
This isnât cute. It isnât quaint. It isnât you not knowing whatâs good for you because you believe the world is perfect and kind, and everything Jack could roll his eyes at you for thinking in the first place, only to let up and realize that, eventually, thatâs what makes you you. Thatâs what been prodding at his fucking heart like a badly held needle to skin in all the months heâs known you.Â
This? This is dangerous.
Jack slows the truck. Stops. His fingers flex around the steering wheel, because seriously. What the hell are you doing walking alone?
He watches, heartbeat climbingânot from the initial surprise, but fromâŠa casual, dry rage. Hey, if he werenât in therapy, he probably wouldnât know how to name that feeling. But youâyouâre so damn feminine in the way you move, the bounce in your step, the shiny pastel accessories clipped to your grey scrubs. Even the ridiculous pink thermos swinging at your hip looks out of place in the darkening, frozen street.
âWhat the hell are you doing?âÂ
He mutters his question before making the next turn hard and quick, looping the block with whatâs probably muscle memory before pulling up to the curb just ahead of your path. He flashes his lights once.Â
If you keep walking cause you think heâs some creep, heâs going to drag you into this truck.Â
Youâre blinking in surprise, and Jack knows youâre hesitating when you donât recognize the truck just yet. But when you do, you smile as you pick up your pace, jogging the last few steps to him.Â
Jack rolls the passenger window down.Â
âHey, Dr. Abbot! What are you doing out here so early? Trying to beat me agaiââ
âGet in.âÂ
Jack says it flatly. Eyes unblinking. He doesnât care for or about your face wearing confused, slight hurt when he does.Â
You flutter those eyelashes quickly, and this timeâŠisnât gonna work on him, sleepy. Again. Not this time.Â
âWaitâwhat? Jack, Iâm only five minutes from the hospital. Ainât a big deal.â
Jack doesnât take his eyes off you, because what is wrong with you? Why are youâŠout here alone, putting yourself in danger? Whether that be the cold or somethingâsomeone else. And you donât accept his first offer?Â
His first order.Â
His voice goes sharper.Â
âItâs below freezing. Itâs already dark. Youâre walking alone. I said get in.Â
Jack doesnât know thereâs something in his voice that silences any further teasing from you, but his eyes flicker to the way thereâs hesitation in your hands, and then he uses his to grip the wheel of his truck.Â
âJack, Iâm not a baby bird. Itâs Pittsburgh. People walk.âÂ
âNot women alone. Not at night. Not in that.Â
Jack gestures to your coat, which is too thin. Your shoes, too pink.Â
You frown. âWhatâs wrong with my coat? AndâŠhow are you still finding a moment to get on me for my shoes?âÂ
âWhatâs wrong with it? Jesus,ââ Your name comes out of his mouth in a near groan, and he doesnât understand why your mouth parts slightly at that. âYou dress like a candy striper in an alleyway. You ever heard of blending in? That maybe, if youâre gonna walk alone in the fucking dark, then try not wear something that screams âIâm the bubbliest woman on earth?" Seriously, sleepy.âÂ
Your frown deepens, and maybe Jack will feel guilt over that later. But not now. He needs you to understand.Â
âWow. Rude.âÂ
Youâve never seen him like this before. Sure, he forced you to report that flirtatious old man, whom you swore was just a victim of dementia, who thought you were his wife, to HR. Sure, sometimes you catch the dry snark in his quips whenever you get âtooâ smiley with your Mel or Dr. Langdon. But thisâŠthis confuses you as much as it hurts you.Â
âYou donât get to be oblivious. Not out here. You walk like nothing can touch you, like no oneâs watching. Youâre you. You? You're allâŠpink shoes and wide eyes, and you talk to strangers like theyâre already friends.âÂ
He breathes in sharply through his nose before heâs not breathing at all.
âAnd thatâs exactly the kind of person who doesnât come home one night.â
The wind picks up. You stare at him. He doesnât look away. Not now, but itâs the way thereâs difficulty in that, difficulty where there never was with anyone else.
What are you doing to him?
âJack...you think Iâm that careless? I'd never...â
Jack blinks. No. Because youâre fucking perfect.Â
Itâs nearly gritted.Â
âNo. I think." Jack's head shifts stiffly. He swallows. "I just...think the world doesnât deserve someone like you walking through it alone believing in it.â
Youâre quiet, and Jack ignores that feeling that he purposefully doesnât nameâŠbecause itâs almost something like fear. That he went too far, which he couldnât possibly have because you need to understand what youâre doing to himâ
To yourself.
Youâre quiet. Then, almost shylyâsomething so unlike you unless heâs confident enough to want to make your cheeks flush. âYou always this dramatic?â
Jack reaches the other seat to open the passenger door.Â
âGet in. You need a ride, you call me.âÂ
His eyes flicker to the hesitation in your hands, but he can tell you see thereâs no point in arguing, which is good.Â
Because something in his voice says this isnât up for debate.Â
âThank you.âÂ
âDo not worry about that, kid.âÂ
Jack waits until you're buckled before he pulls back into the lane. His jawâs still set. His shoulders are still stiff. But when he glances at you, really looks at you, thereâs something in his eyes thatâs closer to fear than frustration. But you donât know that. He hopes you...or he never will.Â
He rolls up the passenger and driver windows. He turns on the heat with a tense grip on the wheel. His prosthetic achesânot that he feels it under the rush of adrenaline simmering through him just because he found you taking a solo stroll.
âIâve walked that street a hundred times, Jack. Iâm fine.âÂ
âYou ever hear a woman say that when we wheel her into the Pitt with a stab wound? Withââ
Jack stops himself. No breath. No sigh. Just a slight head shake.
With severe injuries from sexual assault?
The rest of his question is said dryly. You falter, looking down at your hands. And quietly, almost to himselfâ
âYou donât get to be 'fine' when itâs dark and cold and you look like youâve got a target on your back.â
Silence settles between them.
You donât argue this time. You just sit beside him, small in the passenger seat, watching him out of the corner of your eye.
Jack stares straight ahead...cause heâs realizing something.
This isnât just about attraction getting the best of his character, or admiration thatâs shot in the head when he realizes the perfect, smartest nurse has the bright idea to walk in the cold streets of Pittsburgh after dark. Itâs not even that reckless flutter he feels every time you brush past him in the trauma bay.
This is deeper. Sharper. Something dangerous in its own right.
Because you donât even realize how vulnerable you are. How trusting. How bright in a world that eats people like you alive.
And JackâŠhe shouldnât be at the point where heâd burn down the city if it meant keeping you safe, because thatâs fucking weird. At most, he should feelâŠentitlement in his romantics. But this is not romantic. This is protective.
Too protective.
And that realization fucking punches him almost more than seeing you walking alone ever could.
The hallwayâs warmth fogs Melâs glasses as you see her on her way out. She nods before she greets you and Jack brightly. The way of her adorable nature is almost enough to forget where you just came from.
But when her smile drops at Jack's inability to really greet her back, it all comes seeping through.
"Don't tell me you forgot how to smile--"
"I'm betting my other leg that that case from Fox Chapel is being transferred down. I heard it's psych-central, and that's your house. You'll be the front nurse on that, I'm sure."
You unwrap your scarf, cheeks still flushed from the cold, while Jack shrugs off his jacket without saying much. You keep glancing sideways at him.Â
You still carry the weight of his earlier tone, how surprised you are by howâŠrattled he got.Â
Itâs usually not hard for you to make your voice sit light, but here, you push it through your smile.Â
âSoooâŠyou yell at all our nurses for walking to work?â
âNo. I would if I caught them.â
You raise your brows, but he doesnât elaborate when you do. He just fishes through his coat pocket, pulling out gloves. His.Â
Worn black leather, and his handsâŠtheyâre big. The gloves are too big for you by a mile. He holds them out.Â
You smile.Â
What is your doctor doing?
âIs this an apology? Or some sort of peace offering?â
You watch his eyes focus on the gloves before they flicker up into yours. And the intensity of his brown eyes is telling you heâs still serious, and you canât have that. Not after the way he thought you were deserving ofâŠwhatever the moment on the street was.Â
Maybe heâs just having a bad start to his shift, and youâre receiving the brunt of it, because he cannot be this worried over you, because youâre worth Jack Abbotâs worry.Â
You don't deserve his worry, or his casual, dry genius. You don't, and you can't have him pretending that you do.
So, you laugh softly, but Jack doesnât crack. He just pushes the gloves into your hands more firmly.Â
âKeep them.âÂ
He says it quietly. You blink. Your voice goes startled.Â
âJack, you donât have toââÂ
âI said keep them.â
Your eyes lock for a heartbeat too long. You can feel it in the way yours speeds up.Â
You hold the gloves now, your smile gentling. Now? Youâre less amused, you guess. More touched and blushed, but Jackâs already looking away, pulling open his locker and putting away his backpack like itâs just another shift, like he didnât just nearly yell at you on the sidewalk for doing something youâve done a thousand times before, only to then gift you with something you donât think heâs ever lent out to anyone.Â
âYou know, for someone whoâs probably the fortieth most dramatic person in the E.R, this is kindaâŠreactive. Possessive, doc. Where's H.R. when I need them?âÂ
Truly. You mean it as a tease. Just a soft joke. Not even as something to test the waters, but Jack only crosses his arms against his chest.Â
âJust wear them, sleepy. If you paid attention, maybe you'd see that you don't live in the Bahamas."
There. You think he's over it with his dry joke along the slight smirk on his lips.
You slip the gloves on.
"Not now, we are literally about to start our shift-"
"I know, I'm just trying them on."
They hang a little over your fingers. Loose around your palms. You flex both hands. You study the way his warmth feels on your hands.
God. You try not to blush.
What is wrong with this man? What is wrong with you?
...Nothing, really, because who wouldn't feel their heart leap out of their chest when Jack Abbot is like this in his concern? In the slight lines and strong jaw of his face.
You try not to shudder when his hands take yours, casually slipping the gloves to fold them. He shoves them in your tote bag, nothing but the word nothing on his face.
"Does it bother you?"
"What bothers me?"
Jack doesn't blink at your question.
"The reaction." His eyes take a half-second glance at someone passing by, only to face back to you, his head shifted, and his voice is slightly quieter. "Would you rather me not care about you?"
The word not is nearly dragged out in the back of Jack's throat. The entire question is joking. Not teasing. Just asked like itâs nothing.
His mouth twitches when you do end up shuddering, because how can you actually not?
"...I could take it or leave it."
Jack nods with sarcasm in his thinning lips and narrowing eyes. He crosses his arms.
"Yeah. Okay, sleepy."
And Jack doesnât say another wordâhe just heads for the trauma bay with that stiff walk, the one that comes when heâs thinking too much, when the limp you wouldn't know was there if you weren't paying attention disappears because he's focused.
You watch him go before you tug out his gloves from your bag. You don't laugh. You don't roll your eyes or come up with an internal quip to lessen whatever's at the pit of your stomach now.
You just put on his gloves to feel the warmth of them.
Two days later. Sun is setting, but there is a resentful solace that doesnât exist in the dark. Jack doesnât think thereâs anything about you he could call dark. Heâd kill himself before betting on it.Â
Robbyâs half-dressed in street clothes, which is pretty unusual for Jack to see. The sweatâs still clinging to the back of his neck from the shift that just ended for him. Jack leans against the lockers, arms crossed, watching his friend shove his scrub bottoms into his bag with a little too much force.
Jackâs not feeling all too swell at a quip from his friend, the friend whoâs obviously in a rush to go somewhere, still had time to make.Â
âDidnât know you were on hall patrol now, Abbot.âÂ
âIâm not?âÂ
Robby grins stupidly for a second or so. âYou sure, brother? Cause I heardâŠwhat? A day? Two days ago, Dana saw you with sunshine. Thought you were gonna drag her in by the scarf.âÂ
Jack doesnât take to the bait, even though and because itâs fucking stupid. He just picks something off his scrub top and muttersâ
âShe was walking alone.âÂ
âI know, thatâs what Dana said she told her. And the scarf thing? Her words. Not mine. But uhââ Robbyâs head shifts, tilting slightly with his eyes looking to the tile. He zips up his bag. âWalking alone as an adult. I know we donât usually talk about things like thisâIâm in no place to say anythingââÂ
âAnd here we are.âÂ
Jack finally takes himself away from the lockers to put his backpack in his. The pause sits for a minute, and there he thinks about it.Â
Justification and defensiveness comes way too easy to him.
âIf it was just you peeved enough to make her roll her eyes, that wouldâve been that. But with what Dana was saying, just about the way you were acting when you came inâŠpeople walk in cities. Like, millions of people do. Every day, Jack.â
Jack doesnât turn to Robby. He stares at the bottom of his locker.Â
Jesus Christ, he wishes he could make this about his disbelief. He wishes how his inability to find this conversation funny and not targeted would be the result of the frustration over why everyone is questioning his frustrationâhis frustration over an E.R nurse who would know the dangers of walking alone at night as a woman found walking alone at night as a woman.
And sure. Yeah. Itâs still there in his usual, casual confidence, butâ
He knows what this is. Heâs known it from the day he found you out in the street. He knows that you couldâve been walking in the middle of the day, sun down upon you andâŠwhatever. You couldâve been with someone.Â
And heâd still feel this heaviness in his chest telling him to go after you.Â
Heâd question if itâs smart for you to walk to work in the heat with scrubs and a sleeved shirt underneath. Heâd question who it was you were walking with. Heâd lecture you for riding with a stranger if you took an uber.Â
It would be easier to not feel so damn guilty about it if he knew you werenât so damn capable and compentent. That would make his possession over you valid. ButâŠhere they are.Â
âYou wouldnât stop if you saw one of our nurses or residents taking a thirty minute stroll in the dark while theyâre trudging through the snow? That you wouldnât question their judgement, Robby?â
â...No. No. I would. Iâd stop, Iâd offer a ride. And walking by yourself when itâs dark out in the cold isnât the best or most logical situation. Maybe Iâd tell her thatâŠI donât know.â
Jack finally turns around, looking Robby in the eyes when he lets him. They stand under that familiar mechanical humming. The walls of the Pitt at work.
âFor her sake, Iâd bring up that Iâd rather see her come into work in a cab and not an ambulance that had to have been called because she was robbed and hurt.âÂ
âThere. That is what I am saying. That isââ Jack crosses his arms before sitting down on the bench. âItâs freezing. And dark. And sheâs...look, sheâs not street-sharp. You know her. Not cautious. Not really. She probably talks to every cab driver like theyâre her therapist.âÂ
âWouldnât this not be a situation if she took a cab instead?âÂ
Jack stops his breath. Smartass.Â
âAnd what about us or the place sheâs dedicated her life to scream caution, brother?âÂ
Jack shakes his head before focusing in on Robbyâs face, because as much as this isnât the most valid anger, itâs also the most valid anger and why canât Robby see this?Â
â...She had no gloves.âÂ
Jack says it curtly, only going lower and louder on the word had.Â
The closest he gets to turning away first is when Robbyâs brows raise.Â
â...No gloves? Thatâs your breaking point?âÂ
No. Itâs the point where he realizes you matter more to him than you should, cause you have to matter to him a whole fucking lotâcause he shouldnât feel like this and the only possible explanation as to why his heart is gonna jump out of his fucking chest at the sight of you is because you made it so he finds himself too worried at every step and too proud at every accomplishment you make with a needle or IV.
Because youâre too pretty and competent and bright and everything he canât handle. SoâŠthe most you can do is allow him is worry.Â
Even when that worry scares the shit out of him.Â
âI am saying, statistically, women alone at night are more likely toââÂ
âI know, Abbot. We know. Butââ Robby looks up to the ceiling before crossing his arms. Jack laxes his cross to rest his palms on his knees.Â
âYou were worked up.âÂ
âHow could you know? I didnât monologue in front of Dana or anyoneââ Jack blinks in his breaking. His head tilts before he glances a glare at the door. â...It wasnât just Evans who mentioned it, was it?âÂ
Robby doesnât nod, but his narrowing eyes give way.Â
And Jesus Christ, it has to be a good thing. The usual thing of his characterâthe guilt in the first question Jack asks in his head. The question thatâs aided by his hands turning into fists for a second or so.Â
Itâs not âWhy would you tell Robby?â. Not âDid what he did bother you that much that you brought it up a day or two later?âÂ
Itâs âWhy the fuck were you talking to Robby in the first place?â.Â
âŠThe guilt makes him aware, right?
âConcern, thatâs warranted, Jack. More than. Also, donât think Iâm in a place to care butâŠI think itâs safe with the way you two act around each other to say that you wouldnât have reacted like that if it were anyone else. And the way you reacted was a bitâŠfor you, for youâit was just a little over the top. I mean...with the way you've been reacting to her more aggressive patients have been...a lot."
Jack's words come out defensive, fast. And there goes the fucking guilt.Â
The patients? Why is he bringing up your slew of sleezy overdoses and drunks?
âYouâre right, weâre good with each other, but we donât usually talk about things like this. But if youâd like to know, I wasnât that worked up, and even if I was, you are also right on how we donât need our nurses hitching rides by gurnies.âÂ
â...Youâre worked up right now.âÂ
âŠIs he?
Jack gives Robby a look, dry as desert from forever ago.Â
âShe had no gloves, Robby.âÂ
He couldnât know that his fellow attending makes the decision to smile smally, itâs not natural, itâs a choice he makes in chance to have Jack get more worked up.Â
What are you exactly doing to this guy?
Maybe the smile becomes more genuine with the question popping into Robbyâs head.Â
âThis interrogation is stopping you from wherever you need to go. Go.âÂ
Itâs definitely more genuine when Jack decides he wants the previous conversation to end. Robby nods his head.Â
â...Date?âÂ
Robby scoffs. âNo.âÂ
âSomething with Jake?â
â...Nahâjust taking the new bike out. Just got her from a guy upstate. Jack, you gotta see this thing. Iâm trying to be casual about it, but I guess, uh, sly biker isnât my style.âÂ
âŠOh God, Robby.
Jack knows this isnât a mid-life crisis. Not really, probably. What he knows is that E.R doctors tend to be adrenaline junkies, and sometimes they tend to be adrenaline junkies with the habit of suicidal ideation. Sometimes you get MDs turning into gamblers, sex addicts, drug addicts. Sometimes they put themselves somewhere dangerous.Â
Sometimes they buy a motorcycle.Â
He watches Robby scratch the back of his neck. His own expression doesnât shift much, but thereâs a delayâjust enough time for a beat of concern to flicker behind his eyes becauseâŠyeah. A motorcycle.
âYou get a helmet too, or just the death wish?â
He tries to say it casually. Robby laughs with a slow blink. âYou used to jump out of helicopters. Donât come for me.â
âYeah, with a parachute. And orders. And a med evac team on standby. And Iâm not exactly bragging about my military resumeââÂ
Not now. Jack swallows. He pretends Robby doesnât for the sake of keeping the conversation light.Â
âYou jealous, man?âÂ
Jack snorts, lips twitching in something that might be a smile.
âJealous of bugs in my teeth? No thanks.â
âYouâre not invited anywayâŠâ Robby swings his bag over his shoulder. âGrandpa.â
Jackâs head jolts back before he turns his palms up to the ceiling.Â
âOne, you on every technicality is closer to being a papa more than me. Two, you told me I have to see it. Thatâs an invitation. I am welcome. Three, Iâm sayingâyou know better. Youâve been in the trauma bay long enough to know that.âÂ
He knows this conversation wonât exactly go anywhere, because Robbyâs stubborn as shit. And thatâs okay. Heâs an adult. Jackâs sure he wonât be doing any BMX tricks around the block. But still, the reasoning for a sudden motorbike is obvious, and he canât help but question. But the questions turn into quips, and heâllâŠhis friend will be okay.Â
Robby simply shrugs before grabbing his keys from the locker.
âI need something, Jack. Maybe itâs good to find an outlet that isnât running laps around the hospital. Like you. And me. And everyone else in here. Just, gotta get the edge of somehow.â
Thatâs the first time Jackâs posture falters.Â
âThe edge off what, exactly?â
He sees it quietly and again, Robby gives him a vague, dismissive shrug as he makes his way out. Doesnât answer. Jack doesnât push. But he watches.
We donât need to find each other on the rooftop again.Â
âJustâdonât go looking for chaos. You know how it wins. Often. And usually.â
Robby pauses at the door.
âYeah.â His voice is softer. âI know.â
Then heâs gone. Jack keeps himself there for a bit, standing up to stare at Robbyâs empty locker that he never actually locks, his reflection faint in the metal, its decorations of scratches.Â
Heâs not judging. Seriously. He just knows the feeling too well, and sometimes the feeling takes you over, promises you you deserve to feel it while telling you all the shitty ways you can get rid of it. Some of them get addicted to adrenaline. Some to noise. Some to numbness. Jack isnât perfect in that department, he canât be when he finds being co-dependent with his work and the Pitt ideal. Thatâs not healthy, right? No. Itâs not. And he doesnât care. Still, the guyâs trying to keep his addictions to minimum.Â
His head snaps at the sound of a familiar voice trailing past the locker room. Jack makes his way out quickly, ignoring the ache of prosthetic when his does.Â
He calls you out by your last name before he turns into the hall.
âWhen did you start gossiping with Robbyââ
He stops when all he finds is Santos. A very confused looking Santos.Â
His mouth parts. He grips the door frame before pulling on both ends of his stethoscope.
âSorry. I thought you were someone else. You canâŠcontinue to go wherever you were going.âÂ
â...You thought I was sunshine?â
âSantos, I am apologizing. Do not push it.âÂ
âYou heard me and you thought I was her? I sound nothing like her...I mean, I feel complimentedââÂ
âGo. Now. Thank you.âÂ
Santos leaves with what Jack thinks is a smile. He blinks once.Â
The trauma bay smells a little more like antiseptic than usual. An overhead light flickers. The night, as much as it started with Robbyâs confrontation, is good. Itâs been a long night, but the kind that Jack thrives in. Thrives in exhaustedly, but thrives none-the-hell-less.Â
And sure, even with you as his little snitch, itâs easy to stay sharp when youâre across the room.Â
âI think Iâm having heart palpitations, Dr. Abbot. The means itâs been a good shift, right?âÂ
You pull off a pair of blood-streaked gloves. Youâre breathing a little harder than usual, but of course, youâre smiling that smile of yours thatâs somehow more energizing than cocaine. Heâs guessing. Whatever the comparison, itâs resentfully more energizing.Â
He watches you. As always nowadays. Screw you.
âIâm not saying our nurses fumble their way through central lines. But you? You, sleepy, are like a damn sniper. Solid work tonight.âÂ
He says it dryly. You raise a brow.Â
âA sniper?â
âOne shot. Clean. No mess. I blinked and you already had it taped.â
You snort as you toss your gloves and itâs streaky red into a bin. âI know what a sniper is. Just...that is probably the weirdest compliment Iâve ever gotten.âÂ
Jack shrugs, eyes still on you.Â
Itâs a compliment. His compliment. Just take it.Â
âI meant it as high praise. Snipers are efficient. Focused. Lethal.â He cocks his head to the side. âBut unlike you, theyâre usually the silent type.âÂ
You obviously donât get his little jab is specific to you talking about him with Robby, but he lets that go when you let out a half laugh.Â
In the end, heâs sure itâs good that heâd rather have you laughing that tucked away in the corner of his truck.Â
âOkay. Doc, you are either flirting with me or insulting me and I genuinely canât tell which one it is.âÂ
Jackâs mouth twitches. âThat is the beauty of it. I keep you guessing.âÂ
He doesnât answer your quip along your grin after. Thereâs only something quieter in his smirkâsomething heâs probably not gonna name because tonight was mostly good despite everything and he doesnât want to ruin them.Â
âYou are definitely flirting. So, noâIâm not finishing off your charts for you.âÂ
âŠWhateverâs the quiet thing in the lines of his face must against his better judgement. Itâs what got him flirting with you in the first place, what makes him softly slip up and find confident justification for said slip up later.Â
He pretends to focus on a chart that, no, you will not finish. You are bullshitting him. Heâs always finishing your ends of a chart.Â
âYou belong on the night shift.â
Itâs an efficient thing inside of him, Jack guesses. Itâs really quick to make him confident in his dry, low blurtings.Â
You blink. He looks into your eyes.Â
âWhat?âÂ
âYouâre good. Too fast. Again, youâre from a more than capable bunch, but even the best nurses trip over themselves when they get assigned to night. YouâŠadjusted like you didnât have to.âÂ
Jack wonât notice the way your smile falters just a little. If he did, there goes his chance of staying confident. But he watches you shrug with folding arms, your soft voice slipping away from him.Â
âI learned how to survive in chaos a long time ago.âÂ
âŠYeah. He can tell. Itâs why itâs unfortunate that it takes one moment of you out in the dark to know that doesnât make a difference.Â
Beautiful, capable girl.Â
His eyes hold yours. Heâd thank you for letting him if he didnât realize the both of you are already post-shift. The morning sky is that bruised purpleâŠlike. Lavender. Lavender-grey. Thereâs headlights blinking down wet, frosted streets.Â
âWalking again, sleepy?âÂ
âJust to the bus station. Itâs not far.â
âStill dark out.â
âThanks for the update, Weatherman. Jack, I promiseâIâll be fine. Iâm not walking home, just making my way for the bus.â
He doesnât smile as the both of you make your way down the hall to find the nursesâs station where you tucked your bag underneath a desk. You always leave himâÂ
The Pitt so quickly. He watches you tie your scarf with practiced hands.Â
He feels himself press something more firm to the bottom of his throat. âI can pick you up. Drop you off. We work the same shifts most nights anyway. Itâs just convenient.â
You look at him, and heâs beginning to accept the way your gentle expressions make himâŠfalterâs a weak word. Ew. But also, it would be you, wouldnât it?Â
âJackââÂ
Get in his car. Let him take you home.Â
âItâs not a big deal. Iâm offering. Thatâs all.â
Itâs obvious youâre hesitating on a reply, but Jack isnât exactly sure itâs because you donât believe the concern orâŠthat you can see it all too well.Â
âIâm suggesting, really. Butâso you know. You donât need to be out like that again. Not when Iâm...when you have people willing to help you out.â
The latter is a bit more heavy on his chest, because thatâs more likely to scare you away from him, right?Â
â...Okay, Jack. If I need it. I promise.â
Jack nods once, briskly. Like itâs settled. But thereâs something tight in his jaw, something he doesnât say. Another unnameable thing.
Youâre bundled up, yesâbut your pace is one of a slowpoke. Youâre tired. Youâve just finished a double, and itâs cold enough to bite at the tip of your nose. That damp Pittsburgh chill thatâs seeping through your coat no matter how tightly you wrap it is almost as lovable as Whitaker, or the way Jack smells.Â
Golly, youâre smart, arenât you?Â
But you needed the walk, the quiet. The feeling, however temporary, that you can move through the world on your terms. Even if itâs just ten blocks. Even if the reason why you first walked to the Pitt and then home isnât as poetic. You just missed the bus twice that day.Â
You pull your scarf higher over your mouth, hugging yourself as you pass the bar on the corner, one Heather and Co. promised they would take you out to when you first started working in the E.R. You watch a man stumble out, so youâre obviously missing all the fun.
You try not to flinch when he shouts something you canât catch. You donât really look up, even. Itâs just a man being loud, as drunk men are.Â
But whatâs louder is that rumble of an engine slowing behind you. You canât help the way your heart skips with a cold spike of adrenaline. That soundâthereâs no way you donât flinch at its rumble.Â
âŠOf course.Â
You sigh shakily, watching your breath managing to go cool against your scarf. Itâs only a strange mix of relief and frustration tightening at your chest.Â
You doesnât even have to look to know who it is.
âJeez.â
You steel yourself when Jackâs truck crawls up beside you, the window sliding down with that creaky, mechanical whine.Â
Quick, whatâs the quickest way you can settle your doctor?Â
âHeyâŠâ You look down to your bundled hands. âAt least Iâm wearing your gloves this time.â
Jackâs pale face wears nothing. Not even a blink.Â
âIââÂ
âI thought you said if you needed a ride, youâd tell me.âÂ
You close your eyes for a beat at how sharp Jackâs voice is. You count to three before you look at him.Â
Quick, whatâs the quickest way you can settle yourself?Â
You watch your breath fog the air, scoffing light. âAre you, like, following me now?âÂ
Inside of you is a wanting you want to berate. That thingâthat stupid, anxious flutter it always does around Jack, the thing that almost kills your quips and banter and births blushing and a shyness you can barely handle. Itâs still here now. When heâs berating you. For being a grown adult, making the decision to walk home.Â
âI just finished a double, youâre on your way to the PittâŠwh-why would I call you? That would make me someâŠl-leechy asshole. And you're gonna be late for work.âÂ
Jack nods sharply. Blinks once. Your heart speed up.Â
âLeechy asshole. You made a good choice becoming an E.R nurse and not a poet, sleepy. Good choice.â You watch him press a button and faintly hear something like air start to blow. Heat. âGet in.âÂ
That thing. The flutter. As much as it infuriates you, itâs a small, pathetic part of you that makes you feel safer seeing him here. And if this was any other situationâflirtations in a trauma bay, watching him go stern when a patient hits on you and such, you wouldnât hate that part of yourself. You usually donât.Â
But that part of you is what makes you almost immediately listen to him. Itâs what makes you want to please him, satisfy whatever this is. And that? As much as you like him, you canât let that happen when itâs not right, right? The way he worries isnâtâŠnormal, right?Â
And youâre almost to the point of not caring, of getting in the car, and that canât happen.Â
âYou walked past a drunkard stumbling around with a bottle like itâs a damn .47.âÂ
His voice goes low, irritated. Your jaw tightens.Â
Youâre already at the point of feeling more embarrassed he caught you walking alone than angry at how he thinks he can act this way with you. And thatâsâŠyouâre 90 percent sure thatâs not right either. So.Â
âThat guy from the bar? You noticed thaâŠâ You shake your head. âHe didnât even look at me, Jack.âÂ
Itâs obvious Jack isnât satisfied with your defensiveness, because his voice lifts just enough that you know this is as close as he gets to raising it.Â
âThat is not the point. He couldâve. Orânot him, but the next night you decide to play with hypothermia, you find someone who takes advantage of the situation you put yourself in.âÂ
And there, with Jackâs lowering eyes and stern jaw, you feel your frustration curl into something meaner. Something tired. And you think he can see that, and that he can see why.Â
You feel satisfaction swell against the fatigue of having to justify every step you take, of denying any justification of why Jack can act like this.Â
âIâm not saying it would be your faultâI willâŠI am going to backtrack on that.âÂ
âYeah, Jack. You better if you want me to get in your truck.âÂ
You couldnât know how he takes that as an immediate challenge, even when he cocks his head lower and stiffly.Â
âYouâre donât have to assume that every single being on the sidewalk is a threat. Iâm just saying Iâd ratherâŠIâd rather have someone be there for you if there is.âÂ
You watch his jaw clench, and for second, you think you see something youâll ignore.Â
An actual raw, ugly fear in his eyes. That, if itâs there, it doesnât matter how unjustified it is, you think you might have to let Jack have it.Â
âIâve told you this already. You know doctors donât like to repeat lectures.â The wind gusts between you and the truck. âGet in.â
You look down at your shoes, fighting the way your throat aches, but when you begin to speak, you already know that your voice is gonna be smaller than it wants to be.Â
âI said Iâd ask when I needed you.â
âŠYou know this canât just be about tonight, or about the last time he found you one the street. Itâs never just one moment about tonight.Â
Itâs every moment and shift and look you decided to find endearingâthe times where Jack is waiting for something to go wrong so he can be the one to fix it.Â
And with his soft curls and demanding eyes, you canât ignore how you feel more grateful than furious.Â
âAnd I said I didnât want you waiting to you do.â
..Itâs why you get in the truck with spite and cause all at once, why you buckle your seatbelt with stiff, careful hands before Jack pulls away from the curb without a word.Â
âYouâre freezing.â
â...Youâre dramatic.âÂ
Jack pushes the passenger vent towards you, and the other passing carâs headlights catch the faint lines around his mouth, the oneâs that appear when heâs close to a smile.
âYou wanna talk about dramatic? You catch Robby's ride before he left?â
Both of you. Settled.
You stifle a giggle. "Yep. ItâsâŠnice."
You have to stifle another when Jackâs head snaps at you.Â
âDo not tell me youâre a biker girl. Absolutely notââÂ
âNo. Absolutely not. They are death trapsâŠnot that Iâm judging your friend!â
The headlights pass, itâs nothing but the dark. You donât see how Jackâs mouth falters, the way the lines disappear.Â
He is definitely late for his shift, like you said. But heyâŠitâs not exactly your fault. The heater hums low, pushing warm air towards you, and with that, the exhaustion you garnered from your double, and your strolling through snow, Jack assumes itâs why you ended up curled into the passenger seat, head tilted against the window, lips parted in a dream or whatever. He doesnât say a word, he drives.
One hand loose on the wheel, the other resting on his thigh near where his prosthetic makes him whole. The radio is off, the scanner is off, and both his phone and pagerâs been buzzing on the dashboard. Both are ignored. The hospital is long behind both of you.Â
And he passed your street ten minutes ago. Hence, his being late isnât your fault.Â
Heâll claim that it isnât your fault, cause that means the reason as to why heâs not at the job he needs to feel like breathing matters isnât you. It canât be. There canât be any more chances to let you be the one to ruin him. Thatâs not really fair to you.Â
âSleepy?âÂ
Youâre only stirring. Jack doesnât sigh, and he doesnât remember when he decided to keep goingâŠbut he did. Youâre here. Youâre safe. Youâre asleep. And JackâŠJack canât remember when the hell was the last time someone trusted him like this. Outside of the Pitt and off of a gurney, away from charts and recommendation letters.Â
He watches your chest rise and fall with every breath, watches as your hair shifts as the truck bumps along a quiet neighborhood road. And really, heâll tell himself itâs just about the peace in the way he tells him itâs not your fault. Itâs cause of the stillness, the calm before a shift full of bleeders and chaos. But shit, when the hell has he ever been one to enjoy that calm?
No. Jack deserves the truthâŠmost of the time. So. He knows itâs not the bullshit stillness or the calm.Â
Itâs the way you look right now.Â
The prettiest, most unguarded thing curled up in his truck. Youâre beautiful when youâre too competent for everyoneâs good and when youâre the most vulnerable thing on earth. How dare you, kid?Â
The realization finds that it isnât just admiration. Itâs not just protectiveness. ItâsâŠoh. God. Fuck him. Itâs in the way that saysâŠthat saysâ
Youâre mine. And if the worldâs too loud, Iâll drive us through the quiet until morning just to prove it, as if the light is where Iâve found solace all along. Crazy.Â
He exhales slowly. Looks at the clock. 9:38 P.M.
Yeah, heâs miles past your apartment, nearly at that overlook where he sometimes parks when the weight of the world and past wonât lift. Heâll listen to his police scanner. Eat a ham sandwich.
He lets the truck roll to a gentle stop and puts it in park. He justâŠsits. He watches you.Â
âŠHe lets himself need you, as if itâll only be this one, unspoken moment heâs indulging in. He lets his chest feel warm and his shoulders roll with what might be a shudder without guilt. Without denial.Â
How can someone so beautiful make him feel ugly things?
âYou donât even know what youâre doing to me.â
You stir faintly, nose scrunching. You donât wake. He doesnât really move.Â
He promises heâll drive you home soon, but not yet. Not while the world still lets you sleep beside him, and not while heâll let himself feel good about it.
"...You know nothing. How impossible is that?"
His hand flexes. His head cocks as he closes his eyes at a little noise you make. Something like a rumble.
You blink awake on your couch. Not in Jackâs truck or in your bed as if you made it there by yourself. Your couch. A blanket is tucked over yours, and itâs not the one you usually fold on your chair. Itâs heavy. Wool and worn.Â
Like itâs from Military surplus.Â
You realize it has to be Jack. It smells like himâsanitizer and cedar and whatever soap you keep trying to figure out the brand of. The thing that gets Jack to call you a freak. You shift.Â
Your shoes at next to the door, and your scarf is folder on the coffee table with your bag and thermos. Itâs the pisces your brain has to pull together through the soft haze of the morning sun.
Jack didnât drop you off at the curb. He didnât nudge you awake with that gruff, but not unkind efficiency you and others know. You may not remember the ride, and you certainly donât remember being carried inside, but clearlyâŠyou were.Â
He took off your shoes. Placed the blanket over you. Tucked you in.Â
Jeez, Jack. Why, why, why?
You canât deny him when he does shit like this, and how can you think it when you end sniffing his blanket as end up wrapping it tighter around yourself, heart pounding quietly in the hush of your apartment.Â
âJackâŠâ
If you end up wrapping yourself in his warmth again, not because he orders you to, but because you want to, then how can you deny both of you?
"Jack."
You breathe in cedar.
"Sleepy, what in the hell is this?"
The next shift is a good shift. The kind that runs smooth and quiet, and Jack feels need in his throat. What, you may ask? Good question. He doesnât know. But he wonât go looking for an answer. Itâs been a good shift.Â
Jack, as usual, is dry-witted, and youâve been laughing in a way that makes Dana more than once, smiling faintly at the inside jokes and medically-based flirtations between the two of you. You bump your shoulder into his when he grumbles at your handwriting on a chart. He tries not to smile and pretends not to watch you when you turn.Â
The ease of it all sits under the night he dropped you off and carried you inside, where he had to press his hand against your scrub top to find your keys.
Neither of you dares to lift said ease. You both assume itâs because the other doesnât care to. Both of you are right. So, thereâs that usual, perfect rhythm of nurse and doctor, that trust, and now that quiet, dangerous acceptance of whatever the hell you two are seeping through.Â
âYour notes are in all caps. Again.â
âThatâs just passion. You should try it sometime.â
âIf I have passion, it comes in black ink. Not red or pink.âÂ
You were really planning to get to work with anything that wasnât your two feet, this time. But for the first time ever, your luck would have you, the bus ends up being twenty minutes early, before you can catch it after you were called in.
You had to make a choice. JackâŠyou guess heâd be satisfied with the way you thought of his offers (demands) first, but you knew today was his one day off. You would think he appreciates the way you thought about him with consideration.Â
An uber wouldâve taken twenty minutes to get to you when it would take you twenty or so minutes to find yourself just in time for work. You made a choice, and really, itâs not the worst when youâre walking with the sun coming up instead of going down. Itâs beautiful, honestly. You nearly forget what Jack would say, and you definitely canât focus on the ache in your feet with how the glow of golden rises over Pittsburghâs steel and brick bones.Â
You almost collapse from pure frustration when you hear the rumble pull up to the curb just behind you.Â
How? Possibly how?Â
You turn, ready to find another excuse for Jack, but you donât find him, and the slighter engine purr makes senseâbecause itâs Robby with his motorcycle. He kills the engine.Â
âŠHis choice in transport is really something.Â
âHey.â Finding him at your side is less with anxiousness and more with a pleasant, friendly curiosity. More with something casual and less with the need to grasp for what makes you feelâŠsafe.Â
âHey, Robby.â
You smile when Robby does, even though his is slight.Â
âListen, I know Abbot probably sounds like a broken record by now, but Iâll have to agree with him. I donât know how you find this sort of strollâŠsuitable. You good?â
âYep, just got roped into picking up an morning half-shift. I was gonna grab a bus ride and missed it, because Iâm the luckiest girl in the world.â
Robby nods, then his noses scrunches under a blink or two.Â
âWell, didnât know I was gonna pick up trouble today. Come on. If you want, but Iâve already found you.âÂ
You laugh. âYouâre a menace.âÂ
Robbyâs smile grows thinner. You watch his hands on his handlebars tighten.Â
âYouâre flattering.â He says it with a quiet, casual sarcasm before pulling outâoh. Oh no. âWeâre both heading to work, and you were lucky enough to not let Pittsburgh Transit devour you up. Câmon, Iâll take youâŠif youâd like.âÂ
He holds out his spare helmet. Your hand tightens over the strap of your tote.Â
âIt hasnât been used by anyoneâŠso. If youâre, you know, worried about headlice. Iâd, uh, hope any future person Iâd potentially ride with wouldnât be likely to have them.âÂ
Your smile falters.Â
âIâve actually never been on one of those.âÂ
âDamn, you are a good girl.â
You roll your eyes to the point you canât see Robby already regretting his own quip, eyes closing shut for a half-second.Â
âNo, I get it. Iâm kinda surprised by how many people at work havenât ridden one at least once before.âÂ
âI mean, it is a motorcycle, Robby. And they just always seemed... dangerous.âÂ
You think Robbyâs listening to you in the way he keeps a slight nod before tilting his head from side to side, but if heâs anything like Jack, which God, you know the both of them are like each other more than they want to admit, you know he wonât let it go. He probably wonât end up berating you onto his motorcycle or end up carrying into the Pitt, but you just know heâs gonna push, and it might work, because youâre you and Robbyâs Robby.Â
Your friend whom you trust.
âI will go slow. Take no unnecessary journeys. And IâŠdrive like I suture.âÂ
âJagged?âÂ
You let yourself laugh when Robby scoffs. âHey.â
When he hands you the helmet, you study it in your hold before looking at the sidewalk ahead.Â
You hear his voice in the back of your headâgruff, dry, concerned and knowing, but you push it down.Â
Youâve accepted whatever Jack is to you, and youâve done more than accept whatever he makes you feel, but the fact his voice is the first to pop in your head at the fear of riding a motorcycle instead swallows you with something overwhelming.Â
And also, Robbyâs your friend. And to deny him is to deny exceptional E.R skills, or his occasional kindness and constant sharp sarcasm, or the fact you want to get closer to him. Something like that.Â
âOkay. Just this once. I better not owe you anymore lemon bars."
Robbyâs brows raise when you take the helmet and try to buckle it, and despite everything you just thought to justify this, you nearly regret taking up his offer at the way youâre definitely buckling this thing up wrong.Â
âOh. She trusts me. Letâs not tell Abbot.âÂ
âI wonât if you wonât.âÂ
You can tell heâs close to sighing and you know why when his hand is hesitant to reach out.Â
âHelp me out here, attending.âÂ
You watch Robby smile the way one does at a stranger they accidentally make eye contact with before dropping it when he gently fixes the buckle. You climb carefully on the backâarms hesitating, then wrapping around his waist, and itâs not so awkward when you can feel his body through the layers of jackets and scrubs and long sleeves over.Â
You donât feel the weight of him, really, and your mind automatically drifts to a question: How did the weight of you feel in Jackâs arms?Â
Thereâs nothing else like spending your night off at work. Jack will feel less about it later, knowing thatâŠwhat? Therapy sessions and lying at home reading or sleeping isnât this.
Still, heâs thankful for the shift to end, at least lying at home means he can take off his prosthetic for more than ten minutes. He took a guilty twenty in pedes when it was empty.Â
He walks out of the entrance with Dana, whoâs mid-sentence concerning something ridiculous Whitaker did with charting, because Whitaker on nightshift rotation is hilarious. Whatever the mistake, it was slight enough to go without attending reprimand and humorous enough to make Jack smirk.Â
Thatâs when his eyes flicker toward the far end of the lot.Â
Robbyâs parking with someone pressed up against his back.Â
You.
You pull off a black helmet, your hair tumbling out as you laugh with cheeks flushed from the wind. Robby follows you just after. Also helmeted as he grins slight. He kicks the stand.Â
What in the actual fuck?
Jack takes in a breath he doesnât let go. He slows mid-step.Â
âYou good, Abbot?âÂ
When his jaw locks, it almost aches as much as his leg, but he doesnât even blink as Dana follows his gaze. Jack thinks sheâs wincing dramatically in his peripheral.Â
âOh. OhâŠno.â Dana puts her hands on her hips. âCalling Nurse and Doctor Sunshine to trauma one, leave the ride behind. Jesus Christ, howâd he get sunbeam on that thing?Â
What the fuck are you doing? Why would you do this?
âHe wants to die? Okay. Thatâs unfortunate. He does that?â
His near-casual, throaty spat comes out easier that it wouldâve been keeping it in, and maybe thereâs something opposite to the external telling Jack what he said was too much, because his shoulders roll, and deep down he knows heâs just being mean as hell to be mean as hell.Â
 âJesus, Jack.â
Evans is the external something. Jack lifts his head back. âItâs the truth. That isâŠabsolute insanity. Dana?â
â...I think I left something inside.âÂ
Dana disappears back into the E.R and itâs nothing but Jackâs chance to start walking towards the both of you.
For the sake of keeping his anger high, he pretends that this is solely about you getting on a fucking motorcycle. Because it is. Why are you getting on a motorcycle? You. Fucking you.Â
Why are you doing this to him.Â
âWhat is this, a midlife crisis field trip?âÂ
Again. Being mean for the sake of being mean, cause Jack knows it isnât that, but itâs what gets you to look up at him surprised with Robby sighing something low.Â
âRobby, what the hell, man?â His voice goes nearly high.Â
âOh, câmon, Abbot. She needed a rideââÂ
âNo. Yeah. As she usually does. But a motorcycle? Youââ His head snaps towards you. âRobby, you want to risk your own neck for a Harley, fineâbut bringing someone else on that suicide ride? Why the hell would you agree to that?
The words thrown towards both you cut harder than he means it to, but itâs what he feels in his gut, because why?
He keeps himself sturdy when Robby scoffs.Â
âSunshine, help me out here. She isâŠweâre adults.â Robby crosses his arms. âShe needed a ride, Jack. It was either that or be late waiting for a cab or walking again. Which is what you were worked up about. SoooâŠdonât really understand the fucking issue. This? This right here is what we talked aboutââÂ
âYou talked about this?â
Robbyâs reply is what Jack would expect, maybe what he deserves, that voice thatâs tingy and knowing, not loudâbut definite in a bite. Still. Fuck him.Â
His head tilts towards you, voice towards youâ
âWhy didnât you call me? Seriously?â
You shift. He watches your arms cross over your chest. âI didnât know you were working tonight, and again, wouldnât make sense to make you pick me up to drive to the place you came from. Seriously, youâre not supposed to be workingâand we wereâŠsafe, Jack. Helmets. He went slow, I held on, IââÂ
Just took the first chance to wrap yourself around Robby?
That thought scares Jack as much as it makes his fist clench.Â
âYou think that matters when a car cuts you off and you skid thirty feet into a curb?â He doesnât stop eyeing your focus when he hears Robby scoff again. âAnd hey, okay. You hitched a ride on the back on what you called a deathtrap because you thought you wouldnât be caught by me?âÂ
Robby nods shakily. Itâs not from nerves, itâs from that growing, steady impatience thatâll probably make his voice go sharp.Â
â...Being caught? Jack, what is this? You sound like an aggressive PSA and a dad and itâs as offensive as it is confusing. Definitely wouldnât have guessed this reaction from the first time I talked to you about my bike. Which. I do prefer honesty. ButâŠyou wanted her off the street. We were safe. You shouldnât even be entitled to my justifications right now. Iâm surprised that I even care enough to feel offended, because this conversation should be treated as bullshitâŠbut because I wanted you settled, manâIâŠshe did exactly what you wantedâshe took helpââ
His eyes donât leave you, even when bits of Robbyâs rant shakes him, triggers him.Â
He couldnât know that you see something feral flickering behind themâsomething you canât shake or he canât help.Â
Something he wouldnât want to help if he could.Â
âYou think this is help?â He jabs a finger at the motorcycle like itâs something obscene. âYou think putting her on the back of that thing is better than a cab? Or the bus?âÂ
âIt was explained. There was no chance for a bus or cab or uber or fuckingâŠyou, man.â Robby lifts his hands in whatâs probably exasperation.Â
Not him. No chance for him, huh?Â
âI figuredââ
âYou figured what?â Jack cuts in, voice dropping lower, more dangerous. âThat itâd be fun? That sheâd enjoy it? ThatââÂ
âThat sheâd get to fucking work!âÂ
Robbyâs arms go up as his yell booms across the lot. Jackâs not scared by it.Â
âŠBut yeah, even in his stone rage that heâs sure heâs right to have, Jack knows that was warranted.Â
Whatâs warranted to is the feeling of hot coals in his stomach when you grab Robbyâs arm, comforting himâlike heâs not the one that convinced you to go on a death trap.Â
Like Jackâs not the one whoâs vision when black when the motorcycle came speeding in. Like itâs not his heart thatâs slamming against his fucking ribs for you right now.Â
What the fuck is wrong with him? What are you doing to him?
âRobbyââÂ
Your mutter is barely heard when Robby shifts the weight of his legs, looking up at the sky. âNothing happened.âÂ
Robby knows thereâs more to say, that really, this shouldnât matter in the first place, that he should not be on trial and itâs already ridiculous heâs letting himself sit in the face of Jackâs fucking jury, but thatâs not gonna do any good, is it?Â
âNothing. Happened.âÂ
â...Thatâs not the point, Robby.âÂ
âThe point doesnât matter, butâŠIâm gonna ask you what it is anyway. Just so we can get it out of the way.â
Jack opens his mouth. Closes it.Â
He sees the real point in the way you keep your hand, which manages to stay soft somehow even though you scrub your palms to shit with antiseptic and sanitizer like everyone else, on Robbyâs bicep.Â
Itâs not that fact something couldâve happened.Â
Itâs the fact he canât see you with someone else like this. Even if itâs just a ride. Even if itâs just a ride heâd rather you have than needing to walk alone in the fucking dark.Â
Even if itâs Robby. Especially because itâs Robby. And the guy gave you a ride. A thrillâeven if heâs just taking you to work as he so humbly did today.Â
Something primal and ugly claws up his throat, looking at where you touch him.
âI donât give a damn what you ride, Robby. But if you convince others to get thrown in what is a statistically dangerous hobby, try remembering they might be worth more intact.â
Robby goes still before he runs a hand down his face.Â
And for the first time, Jack doesnât want to look at you.Â
â...JackââÂ
So. He turns away, stalking back to his truck before he can say something worse and learn how to find it the right thing to say later. He climbs in, slams the door.
And when he looks in the mirror, he sees you two standing togetherâyour hand on Robbyâs arm? He finds a realization sliding sharp under his ribs.Â
Heâs not gonna stop wanting you, even if it turns him into a fucking asshole.
It's the next day. Or the next. Apologies are in order. Are they given? No. Jack will claim this is how men are. But shit, for men? He and Robby do a pretty good job of communicating.
The night shift has finally slowed to a manageable hum, which is not that surprising, even when Robby ended up having to share it with Abbot. Theyâre mature enough, yeah? Still, heâd be impressed if he found it important.Â
God. Heâs never seen Jack like that before. Ever. There have been points of time of snappy, semi-quiet bouts of professional frustration, towards him and others, but what happened the other day wasâŠsomething else. And itâs taking a hold on him.Â
Because Robby catches Jack in a supply closet. Heâs organizing, settling a neatness between surgical gloves and IV kitsâand itâs the 12th weirdest thing heâs ever seen in his life.Â
âWe good, Abbot? You good?âÂ
Obviously not, because one of the busiest men on earth, a man who craves chaos as much as it eats at him on occasion, is alphabetizing medical supplies. But Robby has to ask anyway.
He could pretend heâs better than the ache in his chest rising at the sightâthe one that creeped in when you climbed off the back of his bike, hair tangled from the ride, cheeks flushed and alive in a way that couldâve been funny to look at.
That ache that he felt ridiculous for having in the first place when that moment was ruined with the look on Jackâs face.Â
Like someone had pulled a pin from a grenade heâd been holding inside. That someone being Robby when he just offered you a fucking ride.Â
Robby steps into the supply room, letting the door swing shut behind him before crossing his arms. He can tell Jackâs already tense in the shoulders, his back set like concrete as he rummages in the cabinet.Â
âIâm fine, Robby. Weâre fine.âÂ
âŠRobbyâs gonna try for humor first. Try to pretend the knot in his own chest isnât there and that heâs not expecting an apology.Â
âIf organizing the supply closets was added onto attending responsibilities, I missed the memo. And Iâm also fucked.âÂ
âŠNo answer. Jack doesnât even glance over his shoulder. Robby leans one shoulder against the doorframe.Â
He should just walk away, because this will die. And itâs not important.Â
But he can still see your face when you thanked him for the ride. That sortaâŠsoft and tired and relieved look. And then you looked up at Jack when he came striding across the street.Â
Like you knew exactly how bad you were gonna get it for accepting a ride from a person you trusted.Â
That canât happen again. Not just because itâs uncharacteristically unprofessional as shit concerning Jack Abbot, but you donât deserve that. Nobody deserves that.Â
âYou came at me like I put her on a live grenade, man. And I know weâll get over this without dragging it back up, but if sheâs gonna get lectured like sheâs 12 years old every time she comes into the parking on a ride that isnât yoursââÂ
Jack closes the cabinet shut. Not hard enough to be a slam, but loud enough to make a point. He turns to do what he does so well, focus his eyes on anothers. Robby sighs.Â
He doesnât have time for this. But heâs making time for his friend. And you.Â
âYou put her on a machine with two wheels and no shell. Donât act like I overreacted. Iââ
âŠHeat crawls up his neck. Itâs annoyance, yeah. Maybe, but itâs something that really doesnât need to be as deep at it is right now.Â
But Jackâs a good guy, he owes Robby this muchâthe ability to see just how fucking annoyed his is.Â
â...There were parts of what I was saying that other day that were aggressivelyâŠunneeded. Iâm not oblivious. The suicide ride quip, that wasâŠâÂ
âThat kinda fucked me up, Jack.âÂ
âI know. I knowââ Jack looks to the ground, eyes straightening out on the tile. â...Itâs a motorcycle, Robby. You have every right to ride one. And yeah, she has every right to accept a ride from you or from anyoneâŠbut itâs a motorcycle.â
Robby doesnât nod or shift. He blinks once. âI know.âÂ
Jack shakes his head stiffly as it lifts back in slight. â...And I just canât fucking stand it. And I end up overreacting. I give a wonderful performance in our trauma center parking lot because I canât stand it.âÂ
âI know.â
âAndâŠyou knowââ For a rare moment, Jack almost looks uncertain in what heâs gonna say. Crazy stuff, but Robby can make thatâŠitâs not him being unsure in his words, itâs him unsure in if he should say them.Â
â...You know how I am with her. You know.âÂ
Robbyâs eyes narrow to the shelf beside them in an instant. He pushes himself off the doorfame, hands in his pockets.Â
âNo, brother. I donât.âÂ
Jackâs brow furrows, the confusion is too obvious flickering across his face.Â
âDo not bullshit me, Robby. You, unfortunately, have known me longer than anyone here and itâd be you to pick out whatâs exactly going on with me and herââÂ
âYeah. I have. I have, man.âÂ
Heâs known Jack long enough to care about the guy. Heâs known him long enough to really, really wish that whatever is going on between you and him is something he couldnât bother to acknowledge, but itâs something else, something that he and others are gonna be able to ignore anymore.Â
Something that Jack stopped ignoring a long time ago, to hold it in his fists. Long, long time ago.Â
âIâve known you long enough to see the way you look at her. Act around her. Sometimes itâs endearing, sometimes itâs concerning! ItâsâŠâÂ
Robbyâs voice is flat, tired. Cause heâs really, really tired. âItâs every patient of hers you deem too aggressive when you donât even have to be there. Itâs that very, very obvious jealousy when she laughs with Whitaker or King.â
He counts it off on his fingers. Yeah. Like itâs something heâs rehearsed in his head.
âBut then youâll have dry flirtationsââ He gestures vaguely toâŠsomething. âThe little gifts, the dumb as shit nicknames, and itâs almost like something people can ignore.â
He pauses, he sits in what heâs just spat out in something thatâs nearly facetious, but mostly something thatâs making Robby realize what this is. His hands drop, his head drifts to the tile before he remembers heâs an adult, and he should look at the person heâs talking to.Â
Jackâs wearing the blankest expression heâs ever seen.Â
â...And you get at me in the parking lot because I picked her off the street, something you berated her for. And I could tell you over and over again that I rode safe. Slow, that I wouldnât have her or anyone else in danger, but I also know that it doesnât matter to you, because itâs not the fact she took up a ride, itâs because she held onto me. Thatâs what you saw? Thatâs what you canât standââÂ
âRobby.âÂ
Robby stills in his breath before focusing on how his and Jackâs gaze lock. Heâs obviously tired, cornered, but still sharp.Â
Desperate to justify something he knows he shouldnât.Â
Robby blinks, his mouth thins.Â
âAnd then you look at her like youâve already decided something for both of you.âÂ
Jack closes his eyes. Robby regrets nothing and everyone.Â
You wish not to be bothered with acknowledging him and her, but you notice every bit. You are hilarious.Â
Jack's voice is ragged when it crawls out of his throat.Â
âSo you do know.âÂ
âNo.â Robby drops his hands to his sides. âI know what it looks like. But IâŠI donât know what to call it, Jack.â
He watches Jack search his face as he runs a hand through his hair, shaking his head.Â
âI donât know the name for this because itâs not normal.â He can already feel his voice gentling without a softness Robby doesnât think he can muster if he tried. âAnd even if I did know the name, it wouldnât matter.â
Jack blinks once.Â
âWhy?â
âŠJesus fucking Christ.Â
Robby tries to make his gaze steady and unflinching, exhaling with every other way.Â
âBecause the way youâre starting to act is unacceptable.â
He doesnât catch it.Â
The way Jack flinches.Â
âYou have to care about that. Iâm telling you this as your friend.â He gestures between them, helpless. âThis thing youâre doingâhovering over her, cutting off every exit, lashing out at anyone who gets nearââ
His jaw tightens.Â
âIt doesnât matter what you call it. It doesnât matter that you know how you are with her. You canât keep going like this.â
They stand in between the humming of the walls. And yeah. Robby doesnât feel any better with what heâs said. But hey. Itâs communication.Â
Jackâs hand comes up on the metal shelf beside him. It flexes.Â
âI didnât ask for this.âÂ
Robbyâs chest goes tight.Â
He thinks about the first week he met you, when your skills rivaled those of a 2nd year resident, when you put him under a load of disbelief.Â
He thinks about you in his kitchen for five minutes when you dropped off lemon bars just because, as if thatâs an actual fucking reason. How you caught him when his loneliness was less casual and more pathetic looking, where his lone microwave was still steaming on the kitchen table, but you smile like you werenât thinking how fucking alone he was.Â
It had been easy it had been to let you in, even when Robby knew he shouldnât.
When he remembers the feel of your arms around him, your cheek resting against his back. How natural it had feltâŠhow much heâd liked it.
Robby told himselfâtells himself it didnât mean anything. Whatever he felt.Â
Doesnât have to mean anything, no matter what he feels.Â
But standing here, watching Jack come apart. God, kid, heâs not so sure anymore.
Itâs past midnight, and in the fluorescent glow of every floor, the Pitt feels like it always does at this hourâtoo bright with man-made sunlight. But earlier, you were laughing with Mel in the hallway, a giddy and awkward rush of shared jokes about a patient who swore the candlestick up his ass got there by accident.Â
Itâs almost a normal shift, like youâre just another nurse in a chaotic E.R that you wouldnât choose to escape. You hope your shaking hands donât look as obvious as they feel.Â
But now itâs just you and Jack. And the airy silence, of course. Yippee.Â
You know it wouldâve had to have been confronted at some point, that you wouldâve had to find enough courage in you to make your anger about what happened with him and Robby known. Youâre impressed, really. You didnât think your doctor would beat you to it.Â
â I wasnât fair. About the bike. About Robby.â
Heâs standing by the lockers, arms folded tight across the chest with a scratch to his elbow. He doesnât look right away, but when he does, you feel it like always.Â
His stare goes straight through you. A shiver shoots down your spine.Â
You press your thighs together.Â
âNo, not really.âÂ
âI shouldnât haveâŠacted the way I did in the parking out. It wasnât just unprofessional, it wasâŠmean. See? I know enough to use a juvenile word to describe what an asshole I was.âÂ
âAnd why the sudden realization?âÂ
â...It was brought to my attention, and denial is pointless.âÂ
You shift your weight, clutching the strap of your bag.Â
You feel itâthe words you should say pressing down on the pink of your tongue. Something rightfully rational and grown-up.Â
Yes. You overreacted. You made me feel like a child. You were awful to Robby in a way I couldnât think was possible. It isnât fair. You were an asshole. And I know itâs coming from a place I was to crawl into, but you canât act like this.Â
But no, you step closer instead, because the truth isâŠ
You know now that that part of you is small and shameful.Â
Itâs what makes you like how much he cares. Even if it comes out wrong or feels too big.Â
Itâs why youâve been sleeping with his blanket for the past week.Â
âWellâŠyou were just being you.âÂ
Your throat tightens around the softness of your words.Â
âItâs just another end of the gruff, quietly concerned cowboy.âÂ
And even though you could buckle under his stare, you watch Jack blink in startle. Like he wasnât expecting her to tease him as she always does.Â
Settle. Loosen.Â
And even when heâs the one in the wrong, find yourself wanting to make him smirk down at you.Â
âCowboy again?âÂ
Jack says it dryly. Your mouth curves.Â
âBig olâ boots and an unrelenting stare. Tell me Iâm wrong.âÂ
And youâll leave it at that, because you donât think youâll ever tell him that itâs that stare and the worry and that entitled, raw possession that makes you feelâŠseen, even when it shouldnât.Â
When it makes you feel wanted.Â
Protected. Claimed.Â
God, you knowâthatâs not healthy. Youâre not supposed to feel any of it, but hey. At least you can name that part of you now. And you know exactly all the reasons as to why you shouldnât tell Jack about them.Â
Except for one, you couldnât know. You couldnât know that if you told him, thatâd only fuel him more.Â
Jackâs expression softens, and you can tell that heâs trying not to smile.Â
He fails.Â
âIt still doesnât excuse how I spoke to you. Or Robby. It wonât happen again.â
The locket room hums around the both of you.Â
â...Unless you knowingly get on a bike you called a death trap. That, Iâll have to report your lapse in judgement toâŠsomeone.â
When he stretches his hand out to pull you up from the bench, you take the moment to study Jackâs face. The lines around his eyes, the tired and chiseled slope of his jaw and shoulders, and the way you donât think heâll ever not meet your gaze.Â
Itâs all that and then some as to why you canât help but feel warmed at everything he doesâeverything that should be named a mistake but isnât.Â
Itâs why youâll never waste a moment to see if Jack Abbot can blushâwhy this moment of bravery exists.Â
Why you kiss the back of his hand when you take it.Â
His fingers are scarred and strongâand they clench when you press your lips to the soft hairs at his knuckles.Â
Cedar. Sweat. And everything nice.Â
When you realize how harshly your heart is pounding against your ears, you realize just how stupid this mightâve been. Your eyes widen.Â
This assurance in stupidity is especially true when Jack jerks suddenly. Smoothly, but in a second where youâre thinkingâ
Oh, fuck me.Â
You're already pressing fumbled apologies to the back of your teeth, but before you can pull away from the moment where you think itâs like your lips burned himâ
Jackâs fingers wrap around your wrist.Â
Itâs not exactly a grip, but he squeezes.Â
Your eyes are already locked on his, and you think theyâre darker under the dim light. They have to be.Â
You want to collapse. Thereâs nothing but the feeling of fire against the pit of your belly, and your hands, and your thighsâ
âJack? Iââ
Whatever you were going to say, which couldnât have been anything at all, is broken in the air when Jack begins pulling. Not to stop you.Â
âŠBut to turn your palm upward, exposing the soft center of your palm.
Your breath hitches.Â
He lowers his mouth to your skin.Â
His lips brush the base of your fingers, firm and unshaking, then trail gently to the center of your hand.Â
Heâs returning your kiss.Â
â...Iâm working a double. I-I know youâre notââÂ
âNo.âÂ
Jackâs eyes close when his mouth presses deeper, like heâs savouring something, and it takes everything in you not to slip a soft moan against this moment.Â
And it takes everything in you not to think about the way his voice went high and cracked when he found you on the back of Robbyâs bike. How his words hadnât sounded like anger so much as terror. As both, and how that shouldâve made you mad. Maybe it did.Â
But itâs so easy to remember that white-hot, belly need to close the distance between the two of you. SayâŠ
Itâs okay, Jack. Iâm here. And I like that youâre here for me.Â
âBut weâre coming and leaving at the same time on Tuesday. Right?â
His eyes are unblinking against yours when he opens them again. You nod so quickly that itâll embarrass you when you think about it before bed. But with the way his mouth feels about your flesh, his dry, deepening lips? The ends justify the means.Â
âWell.âÂ
Itâs only fire along every crevice of yours when his nose presses into your knuckles.Â
Jackâs running late. Again. This time, itâs on account of you, sleepy.Â
You know him, if thereâs anything he takes a sick pride in, itâs his punctualityâbut tonightâŠhe lingered in the front of his apartment complex. Just tapping away at the wheel at his other hand rested on the edge of his phone.Â
You make him feel like a little boy who canât sit still. Absolutely ridiculous. Heâs nervous. The last time he went to work nervous wasâŠnever. Not even on his first day, itâs so expected of Jack that heâs sure he doesnât take sick pride in that.Â
You make him not quite brave enough to text you. Something. Anything. Anything thatâll give him more of you.Â
Sleepy, sleepy.Â
The way you looked at him yesterday, kid. Smiling in that soft, resigned way when you called him your cowboy, finding your way back to the light or something like it, letting go of hisâŠokay. Heâll call them mistakes. For now. For your sake.Â
But the memory and your kiss are what makes him, for the time ever, very sure that heâs allowed to think of you on his way to work.Â
âCan afford those rims, but not new headlights? Right. On.âÂ
âŠHeâs telling himself heâll do better. So thereâs that.Â
Heâll stop snapping every time you step out of line when it comes to your safety. Heâll make sure there is no line. Thatâs weird. Heâll stop you from watching the back of your head across the trauma bay like youâre the only thing tethering him to the fucking floor.
Thatâs weird too, especially when he had his teaching and the good days and his crew and every slight good thing about him tethering him to the floor first.Â
He would do better. He will.Â
Jackâs not gonna risk whatever you gave me yesterday. Not any way in hell. He owes you that.Â
âŠAnd with the way you touched him, with the way you didnât leave after an apology he had to burn out of himâmaybe he owes himself that too.Â
Jack merges onto the main drag. His hand flexes. When did his hand get so hairy? And scarred?
If I can.Â
If I want toâÂ
âOh. Very nice on that turn.â He nearly whispers his road rage. âAsshat.â
âŠHeâs not gonna look under the rug of promises. Whatâs that gonna do?
Under the Iâll be betterâs, under the Iâll let you breathe, heâs gonna find some useless truth.Â
Something like the idea that heâs not going to want to stop.Â
That JackâŠlikes how it feels to be the one you look to when things get ugly. Because you do, right? You accepted his bare-bones apologies with your lips on his hand. You wouldnât have done that if you didnât.Â
His eyes glance to the passenger seat, where your hair clip from the night he drove you home lies next to a folder and his ham sandwich.Â
He did mean to give it back.Â
Maybe I can still be her cowboy.Â
Itâs a wry thought.Â
Just a little less fucking unhinged.Â
He doesnât blink when the scanner crackles dispatch static. Itâs something heâs trained himself to tune out unless it catches wind of the worst disasters.
So. Jack doesnât know why tonightâs words cut through the air.Â
âUnit 14, be advised: Motor vehicle accident. Motorcycle involved. Two confirmed. Severe trauma inflicted on female passenger. EMS has arrived on scene.â
Jackâs head cocks to the side as he stares straight forward. Itâs his bodyâs own doing, a reaction he doesnât understand.Â
Because this is Pittsburgh. Thereâs already been a fire, a stabbing. A car flipped over on 28. Itâs a city that never runs out of ways to bleed people dry and keep the beds at the Pitt full.Â
âRepeat: Motorcycle collision. Female passenger is unresponsive. Male rider attempting to interfere with EMS. Confirm blocking lanes and priority traffic.â
He knows better, which is why he doesnât understand how the blood from his knuckles ends up disappearing. He doesnât understand that until he realizes heâs been gripping the wheel.Â
Itâs nothing. It is absolutely fucking nothing. Stop the internal panic. Stop acting like youâre gonna fucking collapse.Â
âŠJack knows better.Â
âConfirm accident is at intersection of Carson and 22nd.âÂ
And on cue, he hears the sirens four blocks away.Â
Jack lowers his head in one curt nod as feels his muscles tense in the way they do when he realizes a patient is gonna be more of a challenge than he first thought. That useful, nerved feeling that only gets in the way of logic and ability.Â
Anxiety. He can name that. Youâll be proud of him when he sees you in the Pitt.Â
Because you will be there, curled up at the nurses station, complaining about the cold as if you didnât trudge the small of you through it because youâre too good. You will be there. Jack will see you.Â
He will see Robby there too, and heâll pass that sorry sight of a motorcycle crashâone that heâs probably gonna be in charge of by the time he gets to work.Â
Yeah. This is it. A ridiculous and unneeded point of anxiety in his chest. One heâs gonna regret by the time he pulls into the Pitt because it is his fault. He shouldnât be feeling it.Â
Jack presses the gas pedal. He runs a red light. He pulls out his phone, eyes flickering up at the window and down at his thigh as he types with a stiff, hot hand. His hand shouldnât be this hot.Â
âOn my way. can meet me at the front ent rance?â
Youâre already at the Pitt. Or hell, heâll catch you walking the streets again. Thatâs fine too. Thatâs perfect.Â
âI know this is an od d requst but can you just call me?â
âSleepyâÂ
And like that, Jack doesnât even realize he turned onto Carson until he sees the flashing lights. Two ambulances.Â
No. God.Â
He throws the truck into park. His tires scream as he does.Â
Itâs like someone put a bomb under Robbyâs motorcycle.Â
Itâs in piecesâhalf crumbled against a lamppost, the other half smoking in the gutter. Glass and blood make the asphalt glitter.Â
The paramedics crouch over two bodies.
Jack shoves the door open as he storms forward. A red hazeâred as the road, swims behind his eyes.Â
Thereâs so much blood.Â
More blood than heâs seen in his worst cases. Splashed up the curbs, smeared in arcs and black cracks.Â
How the hell is it everywhere?
Jack chokes on his own breath as he walks in a stiffened pace thatâs telling the ache in his prosthetic to go fuck itself. As he does, he realizes what that cracked-open black half-moon thing is. Itâs thirty feet away from the scene.Â
The helmet. The helmet you wore.Â
Thereâs a chunk of your hair stuck to the visor.
He shouts out your name. He doesnât register that itâs almost a cry.Â
He crosses the last few feet at a run, not because he recognizes the first body to be Robby.Â
âJust le-let me help her, man! I promiseâŠI-Iâm a doctor, I work at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical CenterââÂ
His face is ash-gray, a strip of skin peeling off his cheekbone. His scrub top is soaked near-black at the shoulder. Heâs fighting the medics as they try to pull him onto a gurney. But heâs fighting none-the-fucking-less, streaky gash on the hairline and all.Â
The blood on the road canât possibly all be from him. Why the fuck is there so much of it?
What did he let happen to you?
âWe know who you are, Dr. Robinavitch. Weâve met a few times, remember? You need to let them help her and us help you, okay?âÂ
No. Jack runs with his vision tunneling in and out towards the scene, because the next body he recognizes is you.Â
His girl. In all his failure.Â
Youâre sprawled on your side, crumpled like someone folded you in half and dropped you to watch you spread. Your hairâs soaked red. It streaks your throat.Â
He canât remember if you had your hair in a braid or ponytail yesterday.Â
Youâre glistening and caked with blood and broken bits in the way heâs only seen patients he ends up coding for hours. You. Sunshine. Sunbeam. Sleepy.Â
Oh God. God. Why would you expect him to believe in you when you let this happen to her?Â
Why would Jack let this happen to you?Â
He stands over you at your right legâright where itâs twisted at an impossible angle under your hip. Your left leg, your tibia, has snapped against your skin. Not enough to make bone jut out, but enough.Â
And your face, your faceâ
â...I could care that youâre unusually pretty.âÂ
âNo?âÂ
âNot here. By the end of shift, that face will be covered in blood, vomit, or some other fluid youâd be better off not naming. It doesnât matter.âÂ
â...So youâre saying Iâd trigger the senses if you took me out of here?âÂ
â...Can you finish your chart?â
One cheekâs caked in road grime, the otherâs split from eyebrow to chin with your eye swollen shut.Â
Jackâs focus goes black around the edges, but he catches a drop of water falling to the ground.Â
â...Sir?âÂ
Your abdomenâs rising unevenly and too shallow, and Jack knows without touching you that your lungâs collapsing already.Â
But youâre breathing. Youâre alive. His girlâs alive.Â
â...Dr. Abbot?â
âBP?âÂ
He doesnât catch the way the medic startles at the bark. He just drops to his knees to do what he does best.Â
âGloves.âÂ
â...Dr. AbbotââÂ
âGloves. Now!â
If these medics were any older or more experienced enough to fight Jackâs protocol breach, theyâd have a problem on their hands.Â
Heâs given gloves in a second and putting them on in the next.Â
He ignores the cold under his gloves when he presses two fingers to your carotid. Rapid. Thready. He ignores anything that could make him pause or remember just how fucked this situation, because you donât deserve that. He was already pushing it by standing over you for more than five seconds.Â
âHeyâŠJack?âÂ
Robbyâs voice is made up of glassy shock.Â
And suddenlyâŠJack feels like his own skull is going to split.Â
âSheâshe was behind me, okay? They ran the light. Sheââ
Itâs slurry and desperate from the throat, and Jack doesnât look at him.Â
Really, he canât even know how he doesnât trust what heâd do if he did.Â
âJack. Iâm sorryâs-sheââ
He can see out of the corner of his eye that Robbyâs gesturing at the medic trying to staunch the blood at your scalp.Â
âI triedâGod, I was trying toâŠto tell them, they need a thorââ
âThoracostomy kit. Now.âÂ
The medicâs blanching. Jack narrows his eyes at them.Â
Are you really making me take my eyes off her?Â
âDr. AbbotââÂ
âDo not make me repeat myself.â
Jack says it low in his throat, unblinking with a tilted head forward.Â
He takes the oxygen mask heâs handed before the kitâs thrust into his palm.
He fits it over your mouth. Rasps out your name.Â
Your lashes flutter. Your eyes roll in the back of your back.
No. Heâs wrong.Â
âLook at me.âÂ
Jackâs not ignoring the things that could make him collapse, heâs just not collapsing.Â
Jack rips the kit open as your blood soaks the knees of his pants. His gloved fingers map your ribs. He counts the intercostal spaces.Â
He finds the fifth. He plants his palm.Â
He closes his eyes for a second. Then three.Â
For the next ten seconds, youâre waiting for him at the Pitt. You walked from your apartment. Your hair is braided.Â
Youâll come home with him by the end of the night, but for now, youâre where he can always find you.Â
Where youâll always be able to find him.Â
âOn my count, pressure release.âÂ
One. Two. Three.Â
Jack makes the incision in a clean, practiced motion. He can hear the blood hissing around his fingers.Â
The chest rises a fraction deeper.Â
He hunches over before he can hear the medic swallow their spit.Â
âWeâre gonna load her.â
Nine, ten.Â
Jack doesnât take his eyes off you. âIâm coming.âÂ
âDr. Abbotâ
Jack looks up. The ambulance radio crackles.Â
When the medic nods, he has to try his hardest not to let his prosthetic disconnect when he rises with no groan.Â
âIâm fine, man. I ca-can help her. Everyth-everything on meâs a clean break or a slow bleederââ
âDr. Robby, weâre gonna load you in tooââ
âWeâre going the same wayââÂ
âRobby.âÂ
When Robby looks up with glassy eyes and glassed skin, he sees Jack looking at him.Â
âŠNot now, because the pity and worry for Robby that evaporated at the sight of you?Â
Every ounce of it finds its way back to Jack when he sees his brother. Still slumped, blinking dully at the wreckage.Â
âShut up and let them help you.â
âŠNearly all of it.
He turns back before he can see Robby trying to peek over at where youâre being lifted, and Jack has to flex his hands not to grab onto you. But as they lift you, your limp hand falls against his chest.Â
Your little sniper fingers leave a smear of blood over his scrub top. And a secondâŠheâs gotta be allowed to close his hand around yours. Just for a second, kid.Â
In the second, heâll allow a thought, too. And maybe heâll kill it with his hands. Maybe he wonât. Heâs not really thinking about that when he has to make sure youâre alive. And with what Jack saw on the streetâŠ
Oh. Heâs allowed.Â
Itâs a clear thought, clear as the sirens screaming in his ears.Â
Heâs not going to stop. Heâs not going to let go. Heâs not going to make himself less for the sake of anyone. Because heâd been right. Jack had always been right.
This is what happens when you pretend someone else can keep you safe. And heâs not going to stop needing to be the only one who can keep you safe.Â
BecauseâŠwell. Look.Â
When he tries, the world reminds him exactly how close it is to taking you away from him.Â