"All because my head is full of poison
And my heart is full of doubt
I got toxins in my bloodstream
You tried so hard to suck out
âthe cure, Olivia Rodrigo
summary: youâre the ray of sunshine and overly dependable smiling intern the night shift crew has been needing. But a certain attending begins noticing you might need more help than you let on.
wc: 11.7k (a short one sorry guys)
warnings: crippling perfectionism, high-key people pleasing, reader is bright and bubbly to compensate for how awful she feels day to day, one vomiting scene, service dom jack, santos is on nightshift bc i love her and i wanted her in this fic. trinity and dennis and reader r basically siblings, jackâs characterization in this is DEF andrew pope cody-esque panic attacks, mental health struggles, reader is an intern again but i swear itâs just cause i watch a lot of greys and interns r the only stage of medical career i know enough about to write semi-well T-T
acknowledgments: once again a round of applause for @wesandresons for the lovely gif, and @uzmacchiato and @cursed-carmine for the dividers!
a/n: iâm not rlly sure i like how this turned out but oh well @leeknowpegger i hope this keeps you company
masterlist
When you first get to the PTMC, Jack canât decide what he thinks about you.
He vaguely remembers youâ youâd done a rotation here, some time ago. One of the unfortunate ones whoâd drawn the short stick and been stuck on the night shift. He has a hazy recollection of your face during an MVC, your jaw hard set and a permanent smile to your face. He vaguely remembers, at the time, the only thing heâd really though was:
Jesus, this kid needs to dial it back.
The sentiment, of course, remains the same when itâs handoff time, and Robby is telling him all about what an awful fucking day itâs been, and of course now he says âOh, remember that med student you got stuck with awhile back? Smiley-face? You mustâve done something right, because she matched into the ED for her residency. She starts today.â
Not exactly the news an attending wants to hear right after the horror show the day has been so far. Especially when intern/baby resident in question is⊠charismatic.
âYou say that like itâs a bad thing,â Ellis says, her eyes trained on you as you soothe a crying teenager who just got wheeled in. âIf you ask me, we could use someone who actually smiles. Bit too dark and dreary in here for my taste.â
âYou like dark and dreary.â
She gives him an unimpressed raised eyebrow. âSo? We canât all be doing it. Like, weâve got Shen, but his is more iced-coffee induced than actual smiling charm.â
âI can be charming when I want to be.â
âNo, you can be flirty or suggestive. Thereâs a difference.â
Jack does not justify her response with one of his own, instead choosing to look down at his tablet and pretend to chart while he listens to how youâre interacting with the patient. The teenager seems to be calmed down, and the parents don't sound frantic or worried.
Maybe Ellis is right. Unfortunately, this tends to be the case fairly often.
He sighs and focuses on the chart heâs supposed to be doing and attempts to wipe his mind of bright smiles and glittering eyes.
â
The PTMC and Emergency Medicine in general was not, actually, your first choice. It wasnât even your second, or your third.
First was surgical. Everybody wants to be surgical. You wanted surgical. Itâs flashy, it pays well, and itâs cool as fuck. Plus, unlike some of your classmates, you actually have the stomach for it (one of the many things that eventually translated well to emergency medicine.)
Second was Ortho. Because bones are cool. Ortho surgeries are fun too, when theyâre not arthroscopy after arthroscopy.
Third was any kind of unit like Burn or ICU. A high stress program that wouldnât let you think, let you run on adrenaline all day.
But then you did your rotation in general surgery and absolutely fucking hated it.
Surgeons are assholes. Surgeons are uptight nerds who like to subject anyone they consider beneath them to cruel and unusual punishment.
Even in during the short duration of your rotation through surgery, it almost killed you. You could practically feel the light in your soul dimming at every pointed comment, every sharp correction, every barked insult and something or other cruel word.
And then there was the PTMC. The stupid ED that wasnât supposed to fun, was supposed to be grueling and exhausting (especially since youâd gotten assigned to the night shift.) But instead of awful you got amazing, which sucked.
Seems counterintuitive, but itâs true.
You wanted to like surgery enough to power though. But not a single rotation after the ED even came close to measuring up. The speed, the action, the gore, and the kind but firm guiding direction from the attendingâs and residents.
Matching into the PTMC was an event actually worth celebrating. As in, you decided to un-tense minutely and splurge on actual champagne that you drank in your apartment while dancing to your favorite music.
And now, youâre here. Determined to not fuck this up. To keep moving, keep going, and be a fucking excellent ED doctor.
Except your attending, Dr. Jack Abbot, one of the reasons you joined the ED in the first place, keeps giving you funny looks when he thinks youâre not looking.
Youâre not sure if heâs aware that you know that heâs staring at you. You do have a wider than normal field of peripheral vision, so maybe he doesnât know that you can still see him out of the corner of your eye?
Regardless of if he knows or not, itâs unnerving. Because heâs your boss. And you know heâs capable of being an incredible doctor and mentor, because you see it every single day.
Just not directed at you.
Heâs not really mean, or standoffish, or anything like that, heâs just⊠not necessarily kind. Not in the way that you see him with the other residents on his service or even with you, during your rotation as a med student.
Hell, heâs nicer to Santos than he is to you.
âDid I like, say something to offend him and I donât know?â
Trinity makes a face at you from over the edge of the monitor. âIsnât that more my area of expertise?â
âNo. You offend people on purpose.â
âTrue.â
You prop your head on your hands, resting your elbows on the counter above her. Your keycard, attached to your breast pocket via a red, heart-shaped badge reel is lovingly adorned with pink rhinestones and cute stickers. The pocket itself is filled with several glitter gel pens (and regular pens, just in case.)
âI just donât get it. Iâm nice, right?â
âDisturbingly so.â
âExactly. The only thing I can think of is that Iâve messed up or something, but itâs Dr. Abbot. Heâd tell me if I did. He doesnât exactly hold back.â
âDo you really need me for this conversation?â
You level her with a look, but she just groans.
âWhy do you even care? So what, one guy doesnât like you, boohoo.â
âHeâs not just some guy. Heâs my attending. And you mightâve secured your spot here, but iâm all shiny and new. I canât exactly earn peopleâs respect if our boss doesnât like me.â
Trinity doesnât immediately respond with a scathing remark, which usually means that youâve made a valid point.
âShould I talk to him?â
She sighs. âI think youâre overreacting. Youâve only been here for like, two weeks? Three? Heâll probably calm down the more you work together.â
âDid he stare at you all weirdly when you first started?â
âWell, no, but thatâs because I donât suck at my job.â
Now itâs your turn to glare.
âSorry. I guess youâre not completely hopeless.â
You roll your eyes. âThanks, Trin.â
She scrunches her nose up at the nickname like you knew she would, because she hates it, which makes it one of the only weapons you have against her.
Trinity wasnât as helpful as youâd hoped, and night shift means no Dana to ask for advice. Thereâs Dr. Ellis, but sheâs pretty close to Dr. Abbot, which means thereâs a high chance that whatever you ask her will make it back to him. You arenât really close enough to Dr. Shen to ask him âHey, how come Dr. Abbot stares at me when he thinks Iâm not looking and isnât as nice to me as he is to you guys?â
The question is stupid and kind of pathetic, so really, you shouldnât be asking anybody, but youâve always been crippled by an intense need to be well-liked. It feels like winning, and it feels good and safe. Safe is good. Safe is great.
Wanting the guy who's essentially your boss to like you is completely rational, right?
You just wish heâd tell you what youâre doing wrong, so you can fix it.
Also, itâs just driving you crazy.
Even if he just legitimately didnât like you, and made that apparent, itâd be something. You could work with that. You could figure out what it was he didn't like via intense pattern recognitin and fix it. Problem solved!
But he isn't obvious about it. He behaves indifferent and detatched- like you could die tomorrow and he wouldn't care.
Itâs the not knowing. If you could just ask him, if he could just give you an answer, then youâd know where you stood, and everything could be fine.
What changed? You want to beg, What happened after my med student rotation? Do you even remember that? What did I do? Where did I go wrong?
It eats away at you over the course of the week. It has been since you noticed, which was pretty much on day one. You donât show this outwardly of course, because youâre pretty sure you can get through to him and level out the wrong-footedness you feel around him through stubborn determination. Surely, at some point your unwavering nature will win out and heâll finally see there isnât anything he needs to hate about you. This is an incredibly healthy mindset to move through life with.
The week closes with an MCI around 5pm, which is just everyoneâs favorite thing in the world. The night shift gets called in, minus Trinity, who was already there working a double, and everyone sets in for the long haul. You do your best to focus on the patients and do not at all think about the ease and camaraderie between Mohan and Abbot, because that would be a very fucked up progression of priorities.
Eventually itâs all overâ patients are stabilized, some arenât. Overtime ends with phantom blood on your hands and being strong-armed into drinks in the park afterwards.
You feel awkward, because you donât work with the day shift people that often, so youâre not really sure how best to be yourself and not come across as weird. Neither of your âsafeâ people (Trinity and Dennis) are present, so thereâs no way in hell youâre going to be capable of relaxing.
You take the beer thatâs tossed to you, even though you think beer is gross (why does it taste like that? Why do people enjoy it?) and sip on it excruciatingly slowly, trying to hide a grimace and occasionally chiming in with mentally rehearsed and carefully crafted jokes and comments.
Itâs exhausting, and not at all how you wanted to spend your night after an MCI. In a dream world, you donât have the social backbone of a wet paper bag, and you say no, and you go home to your house and shower, then watch one, maybe two episodes of a tv show, scroll through Pinterest, and then go the fuck to bed.
But for the low low price of much needed rest, you get to drink one of the most disgusting alcoholic beverages known to man and worry if everyone thinks youâre being weird! Yay!
Also. Side note. Minor comment. Little issue.
Jack Abbot is sitting next to you. Like, right next to you on the bench. Because he came late and it was the last spot open. So heâs just right there. Posture loose and open and not at all like he didnât just help you try to save a girl your age who had the misfortune of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Like two hours ago your elbows werenât brushing, elbow deep in a manâs organs, saving his life.
Jack, unlike you, looks comfortable to be at the park with everyone. He doesnât look like heâs analyzing conversation to determine the best thing to say next.
Jack isnât looking at everyone. Heâs not looking at anyone. Heâs looking at you.
You turn, give him a little smile.
Again.
Maybe he doesnât know you can still see him out of the corner of your eye. (No, heâs a vet, heâd definitely also have wide peripheral vision. But maybe he thinks that you donât have it, because youâre not a vet.)
(Youâre probably thinking too much about the peripheral vision.)
Jack doesnât stop staring at you. Instead, he reaches over to where your barely-drunk beer is in your hands, and says:
âHere, give me that.â
And then he just. Takes your beer. Straight out of your hands.
Jesus fucking fuck he so hates you.
â
âHe took your beer?â
âYes,â You groan from the kitchen island in Trinityâs apartment, âHe said âhere, give me thatâ and then just took it. He didnât say anything else to me for the rest of the night.â
She lets out a low whistle. âMaybe he doesnât like you. What could you have possibly done to make him not like you?â
âI donât know!â
âWell, you better fix it. Having your attending hate your guts will like, majorly suck.â
âI donât know how to fix it. Thatâs what iâm over here for. To brainstorm.â
âI thought you were here to steal the cookies Huckleberry made?â
Dennis peeks his head up from the couch. âWait, what?â
You wave a hand. âSemantics. Focus.â
âOkay,â Trinity taps a pencil on a notepad, âHave you tried sleeping with him?â
âHeâs like, probably over twenty years older than me.â
âSo? I know your type.â
You roll your eyes. âAs if heâd go after me, Trin. He doesnât like me.â
âHate sex is a thing.â
âName one time hate sex solved the hate part.â
âNo dice,â You sigh, âI canât bake for shit. Recipes never have enough context. Theyâre never specific enough.â
âTwo tablespoons of sugar isnât specific enough for you?â
âYouâre not helping.â
Trinity holds up her hands in mock surrender. âTo be fair, I never agreed to help. I just said weâd both be here if you wanted to come over.â
âI think you should just ask him.â Dennis pipes up.
He shuffles off the couch and slides into the second chair at the kitchen island adjacent to you. âDr. Abbot is a straightforward guy. He appreciates honesty. Doesnât beat around the bush. I canât imagine him being truly upset that you tried to fix a problem.â
âI want to, but thatâs like. Too straightforward. What ifââ
âOh my god,â Trinity moans, âJust ask him. Or fuck him. Do something so I donât have to hear about it anymore.â
You frown, opening your mouth to object, then close it with a sigh.
Sheâs right.
You have to just move on. Either deal with it or deal with it by⊠not dealing with it. Talk to him or donât.
Easier said than done.
â
It takes two more shifts of unrequited awkwardness for you to finally reach your limit. At a certain point, probably when you almost snapped at him for hovering (doing his job) while you were trying to intubate a patient, you realize that you cannot, actually, just get through to him via stubborn determination.
Damn.
So when you have a second, you corner him in one of the quieter hallways. The conversation has the potential to be horrifically embarrassing and mortifying, so itâs best if thereâs no audience.
âDo you have a minute, Dr. Abbot?â
He glances down at his watch, then crosses his arms and leans against the opposite wall.
He doesnât talk (unnerving, annoying) and his sharp, ever analyzing gaze makes your skin prickle as you cross your hands behind your back and mirror his position, leaning against the wall.
Heâs so irritating. He wonât even give you a fucking inch. Thereâs nothing to go on.
âDid I do something wrong?â
For the first time since you became a resident in the ED, he makes an expression: surprise.
âWhy do you think you did something wrong?â
âBecause you wonât fucking talk to me!â You hiss, absolutely fed up with Dr. Jack Abbot, âHalf the time you only look at me when you think I wonât notice. You donât talk to me unless itâs required for teaching, and even then, itâs short and stilted. Iâve seen how you interact with literally every other person who works here. I know you can be nice. Youâre just not nice to me, and Iâd like to know why.â
You pause. âAnd you took my beer!â
Thereâs a moment of silence, and then thereâs a breathy, almost wheezing sound that takes you a minute to place.
Heâs laughing.
Jack fucking Abbot starts laughing.
You honest to God want to kill him.
âSorry,â He says, eyes sparkling with mirth and shoulders loose, âI can see how all of that can be taken negativelyââ
âHow else was I supposed to take that.â
Jack levels you with a look, and you shut your mouth. âBut it was not my intention.â
He just stops speaking there, like thatâs a perfectly adequate explanation and not at all vague and almost more disconcerting.
âSoâŠ,â You drawl, âWhat was your intention?â
Something interesting, a little more heated than just analytical sparks in his gaze, and he tilts his head, eyes flicking up and down your body.
Under the silence and scrutiny, you resist the urge to squirm in place, hands squeezing themselves in an effort to subdue the itch.
âYou hate confrontation.â
Your chest feels like a cinder block just slammed onto it. âWhat?â
âYou,â He levels a finger at your chest, âHate confrontation. You hate it so much that you lie about yourself to people instead of saying things they might not like.â
You laugh nervously, voice high and reedy. âA lot of people do that. I donât think thatâs a crime.â
âItâs not. But it doesnât exactly make me want to trust you with my residents. With my team.â
âYouâre worried Iâll what? Get somebody in trouble? Do something shitty?â
âIâm worried that something is going to happen to you, and you wonât tell anyone about it.â
The hallway grows silent. In this distance thereâs beeping, someone shouting orders, a child crying. But not in the five feet of space you, Jack, and the conversion currently occupies.
âWhy do all of this?â You gesture vaguely to the space between you two, unwilling to be more specific. He does not deserve the itemized list you assembled in your head.
âI wanted to see if youâd confront me about it or not. Confirm my suspicions.â
âThatâsââ You wrinkle your nose, âActually kind of shitty of you.â
Jack just hums.
âSo what now? Did I prove myself to you?â Your tone is mocking.
He scoffs, âGod, you really hate confrontation, donât you?â
Your skin prickles again. âNo.â
âLying again.â
âShut up.â
He knows how uncomfortable heâs making you. Heâs doing it on purpose. And right then and there, you decide you donât care what Jack Abbot thinks, because if Jack Abbot is going to be a self-assured asshole, Jack Abbot can go fuck himself.
Your pager going off saves you from verbalizing any of this, and with one last glare, youâre gone.
â
If Jack was an obnoxious lurker before, it doesnât hold a damn candle to how he behaves now.
Heâs just. Everywhere. Around every corner. Driving you crazy.
When you bring this up to Trinity, she looks at you like youâve finally lost it.
Which. Okay. You probably have. But thatâs beside the point! The point isâŠ
âŠThe point is that Jack Abbot is getting on your last nerve and you really donât have any to spare. Life has been stomping all over the other ones, so the singular nerve Jack is stabbing with his annoying pointed looks and almost lingering touches and stupid little questions (âHey, that was a rough one, are you alright?â) is just worn out. It doesnât have anything left to give. You donât have anything left to give.
But, like you were brought up to do, you keep right on giving. And working. And smiling.
Because it goes a little something like this: Thereâs no one to pick you up if you fall. You pick yourself up when you fall, and youâve gotten pretty fucking good at it. All of your friends (read: Trinity and Dennis and maybe Mel) are doctors, which means you all have shitty work/life balance and no one would even be available if you called and said âHey, every morning I lie awake and stare at the ceiling and convince myself to get up while listening to Hallelujah by Jeff Buckley, after which I will inevitably cry on the bus to work. Would you mind helping me with my laundry?â
Okay. Well. Trinity would probably show up if you asked because once she decides that youâre her friend sheâs really intense about it (sheâs a bit like a Doberman or some other dog like that, not that you would ever tell her) and Dennis probably would too, but only because he never says no when someone asks for help so it kind of just feels like youâre taking advantage of him. Mel is far too busy juggling being an ED doctor and caring for Becca for you to even think about asking her without feeling intense, soul crushing guilt.
So yeah. You donât really have a best friend, unless one would count the singular romance book youâve read so much the spine is completely fucked and the pages are yellow from years of travel and rereading. Counting any book as a best friend is probably very pathetic. But hey, donât fix what isnât broken.
So you have a system and a method and crying before and after work every single day is totally, completely normal, healthy, and sustainable. Probably even more so in the medical field, and especially since youâre a PGY1. Interns gotta suffer and all that jazz.
Jack Abbot does not need to make the suffering worse by existing near you constantly. Things are really honestly bad enough.
âHey,â Trinity grabs your arm as youâre going by during a mellow shift, grip not tight enough to hurt but enough to be a bit past uncomfortable, especially for a girl not used to physical contact, âYou good?â
âNo,â You want to shout, collapsing on the floor in a heap of bones and tears, âI havenât done laundry in so long that Iâve started wearing my cleanest dirty socks instead of washing more. I donât have the energy to spend my days off doing anything productive, but every time I sleep instead of doing chores the anxiety eats me alive. I canât sleep at night because the guilt makes me so nervous sometimes I throw up. Sometimes I donât wash myself in the shower and I just stand in the water until it gets cold. Every day I wake up with the same headache, and then I take medicine for it, but by the time itâs gone Iâm going to bed and then I wake up with it all over again. I think my liver is shot from over-the-counter medication usage. Everything hurts. Iâm so tired.â
Trinity needs you to be okay. Trinity is too busy and under too much stress to worry about you. She needs you to be okay. Everyone needs you be okay.
âMhm!â You nod, lips spread wide, âPretty good day actually, all things considered.â
Itâs not a total lie. The headache relief youâve been taking religiously is kicking in faster than it usually does today.
Trinity scans your face, looking for signs of a lie, and she must find something (not shocking, itâs very hard to pretend that everything isnât awful when Everything Is Really Awful) because her grip tightens minutely and she does that pursed lip thing she does when sheâs worried and about to express it through anger or bitchiness.
âDonât fuck with me. I donât want to find out youâre like, doing drugs or something stupid like that. If youâre having a hard timeââ
âTrin,â You interrupt, skin prickling uncomfortably as she implies that youâre not capable of handling things on your own, âIf I need help, I know I can ask for it. And look,â
You tap your unbroken collection of glitter gel pens still intact in the front pocket of your scrubs. âItâs gotta be a good day. I still got my glitter.â
She wrinkles her nose, but drops your arm. âI donât even know why you keep those. You canât use them on like, anything. Itâs against hospital policy.â
You shrug. âGlitter is a great motivator and mood elevator. Plus, kids love âem.â
You manage to feign something important coming up and duck out of the conversation and then, when the coast is clear, dart into one of the lesser used bathrooms and tuck yourself in the darkest stall.
Even in a hospital, toilet seats are disgusting, but you canât quite summon any actual disgust as you plop down on the white porcelain, only lightly cracked, and cradle your exhausted head in your hands.
You have to keep going. There is no alternative. There is no other option.
Your chest feels tight and loose at the same time, and your skin feels clammy and wrong. Everything feels wrong. The lights are too bright and the material of your scrubs is scratchy and awful, and the longer you sit in the stall the more you want to throw up.
Someone knocks on the door before you get the chance to move down to your knees and start worshipping the porcelain altar. Assuming it to be Mel, who sometimes has a habit of showing up at the wrong time, you open the stall door to reveal none other than Jack Fucking Abbot.
You stare at him blankly for a few beats, too bewildered to feel sick. âYouâre not allowed to be in here.â
âIn the menâs bathroom?â
âThis isnât the menâs bathroom.â
âThe sign on the door would say otherwise.â
Embarrassment brings the nausea back tenfold. You hold the stall door in a white knuckle grip to keep yourself upright and from hurling onto your boss.
âOh my god, Iâm so sorry, I swear I didnât do this on purposeââ
Jack raises an eyebrow, his hands folded behind his back. Military man, right.
âClearly.â
You stumble forward. âI need to goââ
âWoah, down girl. I didnât knock because I cared which toilet you use. You work here. Use whatever toilet you want. Preferably not the one in the attendingâs lounge.â
âThereâs an attendingâs lounge?â
âNo.â He grins, a devilish upturn to just the corner of his lips.
âOh,â You pause, then catch up to the rest of what he said, âThen whyâd you knock?â
âCause it kind of sounded like you were dying in there, and Iâd rather if you didnât.â
âWhy not?â
âThe paperwork, for one. Two, Santos would probably shank me.â
âAh.â
âAlso,â He shrugs, âIâd miss you.â
You scoff. âNo you wouldnât.â
âI would.â
âYou donât like me. You donât even trust me.â
Jack gets this pinched look on his face; his lips pull down, his brows furrow and he narrows his eyes, just a bit.
He opens his mouth to respond when the door bangs open.
Jack doesnât even look up before heâs barking:
âFind another bathroom.â
âBut I have toââ
âFind another bathroom or Iâll cut your dick off.â
The guy grumbles away, but Jack never takes his eyes off you. Itâs unnervingâ to be the sole focus of his attention.
Youâre the first to break the now tense silence of the bathroom.
âThat seemed a bit extreme.â
âIâm not a man who does things by halves.â
âNo,â You sigh, âI suppose youâre not.â
Jack cocks his head to side, almost predatory. More methodical than anything. He looks at youâ really looks at you. Shamelessly drags his eyes up your body, likely cataloguing every mystery bruise, frown line, eye bag, freckle, and all the million lines of exhaustion that seem etched on your very being, right down through the bones and marrow.
He sighs, crossing his arms before leaning back on the opposite wall of the bathroom.
âWhat am I going to do with you?â
His words instantly have you on edge, bristling at all the unsaid things behind his tone.
âIâm not something to be dealt with. Iâm a person, not some fuckingââ
âYouâre like a stray cat,â He interrupts, âAlways hissing. Do I need to win you over with treats? Should I start bringing canned tuna?â
âYouâre an asshole.â
âAnd youâre drowning.â
Just like that, all the humor gets sucked from the room, replaced with the cold, sharp grip of reality. Suddenly exhausted by the weight of it all, you drop back down onto the toilet seat.
Jack gives you a few moments to respond, get angry, or defend yourself, but you donât. Heâs too good at reading you, it seems. What is there to say?
When you donât speak, he does.
âDid you think no one would notice?â
âNo one has.â
âAm I no one?â
You lean back, closing your eyes and awkwardly resting the back of your head against the wall and the back of the toilet.
âYouâre nosy.â
If this were any other moment, any other scenario with any other person, you would never ever act so contrary. But youâre tired and Jack seems to bring out the worst in you.
He makes an amused huffing noise. âYouâre good at what you do, Iâll give you that.â
âWhat, exactly, am I doing?â
âPretending.â
You scoff. âFuck off.â
âCome on, sweetheart. How much longer are you going to do this to yourself?â
You lift your head off the back of the toilet. âYou act like Iâm killing myself:â
âYou are,â His inclined his head, âJust really slowly.â
You scrub a hand down your face.
âLook. I understand why you think you have to care, but you donât. Iâm just going through a rough patch. Iâll get through them like I always do. Iâm not gonna crash and burn or endanger myself or do whatever it is youâre worried Iâm going to do, okay? So you can leave me alone. Iâm fine.â
Jack doesnât get to respond, because the second the words are out of your mouth the nausea thatâs been churning in your stomach since you made it to the bathroom rises all at once, and you barely have time to slide off the toilet and turn before youâre throwing up hard enough to almost choke.
The worst part is that you forgot to eat lunch so your stomach is woefully, painfully empty. Youâre throwing up nothing but bile, throat burning and tears streaming down your face.
âAlright, come on,â A warm hand rubs soothing circles on your back, and if you werenât busy hurling your guts out, youâd marvel at the feeling and juxtaposition between the Jack you know, whoâs all cold indifference, and the Jack currently holding your hair out of your face while you vomit.
âLet it out,â He soothes, hand still rubbing, âDonât fight it. Itâll be over soon.â
âI hate throwing up.â You choke, coughing and gasping.
âNo one does. But youâll feel better when itâs over.â
Over feels like itâs never going to come. But eventually your stomach stops clenching, you manage to stop heaving, and youâre slumped over the toilet, sucking down gulps of air, sweat beading on your forehead and the back of your neck.
âThis,â You mumble in between gasps, âMeans nothing.â
You canât see Jackâs expression, but his response is so quiet you almost miss it.
âOkay.â
You canât see his face, but you know this isnât over.
â
Jack sends you home once youâre capable of standing on your own two feet without shaking like a newborn fawn.
(âYou canât send me home.â
âYes I can. Youâre not allowed to come back to work after throwing up in the bathroom.â
âWe both know Iâm not the only person to do it.â
âYeah, but I havenât caught the other people in the wrong bathroom and held their hair back while they vomited.â
ââŠâ
âYou only have two hours left anyway. Go home.â)
The problem lies in the fact that the buses arenât running yet, which means that you canât, actually, get home. Your house is an hour away on foot. An hour youâd normally be capable of walking, but your phone is almost dead, youâre exhausted, and you still feel a little weak because of the vomiting.
So after retrieving your things from your locker, you find yourself sitting on the little bench outside the PTMC, waiting for the minutes to tick by. If you didnât bring at least one book with you everywhere you go in case of emergencies (like this one) you probably would have just walked into oncoming traffic.
Itâs cold out and your jacket is cheap so you have to burrow into it, hood up to retain any semblance of warmth. It would be almost cozy âhuddled in your jacket, watching the city go by, tucked into your favorite romance bookâ if the shift hadnât gone the way it had and if a grueling bus ride and half mile walk didnât await you once the buses finally start running. Waiting for you beyond that is just chores and an empty apartment.
Your fingers tighten on the edges of your book.
âWhy the fuck are you still here?â
You jolt in place, cracking your neck over to the side and blinking blearily.
Jack. Again.
He makes an expectant face at you as if to say âWell?â when you donât answer immediately.
Your eyes dart back and forth nervously, even though you know you havenât done anything wrong. âThe buses arenât running yet. Itâs an hour walk to my house.â
Jack scrubs a hand down his face and curses under his breath.
âHow long until your bus gets here?â
You check your phone. Shit. Only four percent left.
âAnd hour and a half. Maybe a little longer if itâs running behind more than usual.â
He seems put out by your answer, as if the busâs heavily fluctuating schedule is of personal consequence and offense to him.
âUm,â You start, both uncomfortable at having been caught reading a romance book in public and at the general air of frustration Jack seems to be venting at the moment, âIâm fine. I have my book. I donât mind waiting.â
Jack just sighs.
âDo you really think Iâm just going to leave you out here, in the cold, after you threw up in the bathroom, to wait for the bus, for nearly two more hours?â
You wince. âWell, it doesnât sound great when you put it like that.â
He works his jaw. âHave you eaten?â
âNoâŠ?â
He shakes his head.
âCome on. Youâre coming with me.â
â
âI have to admit, this isnât where I thought we were going.
Thirty minutes later finds you seated on the cracked vinyl seat of a booth in a cheap diner, staring at a menu and rationalizing spending your last $15 on what will probably be mediocre pancakes.
Jack is seated across from you, already two mugs of coffee âblack, but oddly enough, decafâ and not even bothering to pretend to look at his menu. He either comes here often or doesnât care to act like he isnât staring at you.
Probably both.
âWhere did you think we were going?â
Steam curls out of your own untouched mug of coffee âordered for you by Jack, also unfortunately decafâ and you debate just getting up and running out of here.
Too bad youâre too exhausted to run anywhere. Jackâs probably banking on that.
âI donât know,â You shrug, setting the menu down, âMaybe to Gloriaâs office to write me up or something.â
âWhat would I even be writing you up for?â
âDisobeying direction? Iâm sure you could come up with something.â
The waitress chooses that moment to appear, notepad in hand. âAre we ready to order?â
Jack rattles off his order, and then two sets of eyes turn to you expectantly. Before you can order the single fruit bowl you were planning on getting (the cheapest thing on the menu) Jack pipes up:
âOrder whatever you actually want. Not whatever you think is cheapest or easiest.â
The waitress, a middle aged woman who has probably seen much worse than whatever the two of you have going on, just chuckles lightly under her breath.
You hesitantly list the item youâd been eyeing and thank the waitress.
It isnât until after the menus have been taken and Jackâs coffee re-upped for the third time that you manage to courage to speak.
âYou didnât have to do this, you know.â
âI know.â
âNo, I mean,â your fingers curl on the edge of the table, desperate for something to hold onto, âI canâtâ Itâll be awhile until I can pay you back. I barely made rent this month.â
âDo you think I would take you to breakfast and then make you pay?â
âYesâŠ?â
âYouâre not touching the bill, kid. Iâm a gentleman.â
âOh,â You didnât really see that coming, âOkay.â
Jack gets a funny expression on his face, then resumes his drinking coffee and glancing out the window routine.
âSo,â You say after a beat, âWas there something you wanted to talk aboutâŠ?â
The silence just feels so awkward. Itâs killing you.
He raises a brow. âDo you want to talk?â
âIâm asking you.â
âAnd Iâm asking you what you want to do. What do you usually do when you come out to eat?â
âI donât? Eating out is expensive, so. But when I do itâs usually by myself, so I end up just reading.â
Jack gestures to your bag beside you. âDonât let me stop you.â
âWhat?â
âRead your book.â
âBut thatâsâ isnât that boring for you?â
He sets his mug down. âI didnât bring you here because I wanted something from you. I brought you here because you had a shitty day and it seemed like you could use some cheering up. If reading makes you feel better, then do it.â
You have to look out the window to avoid his gaze. You donât understand how your perfectly crafted facade just crumbles into fucking dust around him. How he manages to see right through you at every turn, how he manages to uncover every lie and every half truth.
âHow did you even know I like diner food?â
âBecause I pay attention to you.â
You finally look back over at him, arms folded across your chest; not really defensively, more like youâre trying to hold your entire body together by sheer force of will.
Jackâs lips twitch. Not really a smile, but almost. âYou bring it up every time Santos wants to get food after a shift. She always says no, because she hates it, but it never stops you from suggesting it.â
Itâs just one detail. One tiny, inconsequential detail that heâs apparently memorized and held onto because to him, itâs important. For some impossible to understand reason, he seems to care.
"Also," He shrugs, "I'd miss you."
You scoff. "No you wouldn't."
"I would."
âDo you hate me?â
Jack looks back at you, seemingly startled by the abrupt question.
âNo.â
You take a deep, shuddering breath.
âOkay.â
â
âYou did what?â
You wince from your spot lying face-down on Trinityâs couch.
âNot so loud, Trin. I have a headache.â
She ignores you, seated on the floor almost directly in front of you. âSo youâve gone from hating each other to going on a date?â
âIt wasnât a date,â You groan, âWe spent almost the entire time in silence. I read my book and he stared out the window and did⊠whatever it is men like him do when they stare out the window.â
âBrooding,â Trinity says, âHe paid. That means itâs a date.â
âNo it doesnât!â
It doesn't. It totally doesn't. Just because Jack said he doesn't hate you doesn't mean he likes you either. There are a lot of emotions in between hate and love. Like toleration, for example. Mild amusement. Exasperation. An appropriate amount of annoyance.
Trinity pokes you on the back of your head, having none of it.
"He likes you. Why else would he willingly hang out with one of us after work?"
"He goes out for drinks in the park sometimes." You mumble.
"Yeah, after an MCI."
What Trinity doesn't know is the events leading up to breakfast at the diner, because that would involve telling her about the whole throwing up from anxiety in the men's bathroom directly after a mini-panic attack because she confronted you about your unhealthy lifestyle (which all just sounds a lot worse than it is), so there isn't really a way to give her the kind of context necessary to get her off your back and dissuade her from her (insanely insane) belief that Jack likes you. Romantically.
"Trust me Trin, he was just being nice. Nothing romantic about it."
It was kind of romantic. Just eating surprisingly good food in the company of someone you don't need to pretend around, enjoying being in the company of another human being without worry or expectation.
Not that she needs to know that.
"Jack doesn't do nice. Have you seen him? What happened to the hating?"
You shrug. "You'll just have to ask him, because I don't know."
You do know. He told you. Explained it.
It doesn't make sense.
Trinity throws her hands in the air dramatically.
"Whatever. You two are impossible."
She finally withdraws, leaving you to wallow in your headache-induced misery by yourself on her couch.
Your phone vibrates on the floor next to you, and you groan, rolling further over to hide yourself in the crack of the couch, shunning the light like the reclusive vampire you are.
Your phone vibrates again.
âDennis,â your voice is muffled by the couch cushion so it ends up sounding more like âdenimâ, âCan you please see whoâs texting me and tell them to fuck off?â
Dennis, who was eating cereal at the tiny table near the kitchen when you first showed up fifteen minutes ago and has pointedly stayed silent throughout the entire exchange between you and Trinity, finally speaks.
âYour phone is two inches away from your hand.â
âI have a headache I donât wanna look at the screen.â
You feel rather than actually see him roll his eyes, but then thereâs the clink of a spoon against a bowl and the faint sound of socked âyouâve genuinely never seen him ever be barefoot under any circumstances, no matter what, heâs always wearing socksâ feet as they make their way over to your temporary pit (couch) of despair.
Thereâs a quiet rustle as he picks up your phone off the floor.
âOh.â
You whine, dramatic and upset. âWhat?â
âUm,â He grabs your shoulder, slowly rolling you over and away from the back of the couch, âItâs Jack?â
âWhat!?â You screech.
You throw yourself up, wincing as you immediately regret it when the pain in your head doubles, take a steadying breath to ignore it, and then grab the phone from Dennisâs outstretched hand.
You turn on the phone andâ yep. Sure enough. A text from Jack, complete with the stupid picture of a dinosaur you made his profile picture. Because heâs old.
(It was funnier at the time.)
Somewhere behind you thereâs a crash, and then the thump thump thump that can only mean a person running towards you at dangerous speeds for sock covered feet on cheap linoleum.
âIncoming,â Dennis mutters.
âDid I just hear that right?â Trinity gasps, nearly giving herself blunt force trauma via the back of the couch, âDid Jack just text you?â
âI donât know!â You cry.
âHow do you not know! Your phone is right in your fucking hands!â
âIâm tired! Stop yelling at me!â
âGuys!â Dennis shouts, holding up his hands, âI refuse to spend my day off listening to you two argue over the validity of romance with our attending. Give me the phone.â
He snatches the phone without waiting for a response, quickly typing in your password (if there was ever a moment you regret telling him in case of emergencyâŠ) and opening the text.
He makes an incredulous face at the phone before saying:
âHe asked what youâre doing today.â
Trinity claps once. âFucking called it!â
âTrinity!â Dennis snaps, before sighing and tapping at your keyboard, âIâm telling him that you have a headache and youâre at our place and to please not text againââ
âNo!â You squeal, launching yourself off the couch, arms outstretched, but your legs tangle over each other and you fall and slam, gloriously and beautifully, face first into the coffee table.
âOo!â Trinity winces, covering her mouth.
âOh my god!â Dennis balks, âAre you okay?â
âJust give me the fucking phone.â
Peeling your face off, you grab the phone, squinting at the screen and ignoring the black spots in the corner of your vision.
hi, you type, Iâm at Trinity and Dennisâs. Did you need something?
You hit send before you can talk yourself out of it.
âWe,â You haul yourself to your feet and stagger over to the kitchen table, âWill never speak of this.â
âI definitely am. When Iâm the maid of honor at your guys wedding, Iâm gonna give a speech and be all âyou guys, she gave herself a concussion the first time he textedâââ
âThere will be no wedding!â
âThatâs just what you think.â
Your phone vibrates again, signaling a response.
Just wondering how you were doing. Surprised to hear youâre not holed up in your apartment reading something.
Ah, sexy old men and their correct grammar and punctuation when texting. Shouldnât be endearing.
âWhatâs he saying?â
âGo away!â
You tap out a quick response.
Not today unfortunately lol I have a headache so no reading for me
Isnât this the sixth day in a row youâve had a headache? Should I give neuro a call?
You stomach flips.
nooo Iâm fine i get them all the time
Thatâs not exactly reassuring.
I went to the doctor for them awhile ago apparently theyâre normal
Who?
if I tell you, are you going to call him and make him send over my chart?
Yes.
Your heart is starting to pound a fluttering beat in your chest, and you hunch over your phone.
then iâm not telling you. itâs fine, really
they usually go away when i take over the counter stuff
So your plan is just to destroy your liver?
pretty much
We need to work on your planning skills.
we?
Iâm not doing all the work.
Now stop looking at your phone. Drink some Gatorade and take a nap.
this is a resident apartment thereâs no gatorade here just redbulls
Have either of them buy you one. Iâll pay whichever one it is later. Go to sleep. You need it.
You turn off your phone, shuffling back over to the couch and flopping down onto it.
âIâm taking a nap. Jack wants one of you to go buy me a Gatorade. He said heâd pay you back later.â
âHe said what?â
â
You end up sleeping the entire day away, which should have screwed up your sleep schedule, but thankfully you live in a state of perpetual exhaustion and are fully capable of falling asleep anytime, anywhere, no matter how much you last sleep. Itâs a gift.
Shockingly, the shift you work the next day is actually much easier to survive and your smiles arenât nearly as forced. Go figure. Who knew that getting an appropriate amount of sleep would be so helpful?
âSomebodyâs in a better mood today.â Jack mutters as you sidle up next to him under the board.
âIâm pretty sure I slept for like, fourteen straight hours. Thanks for the Gatorade, by the way. I woke up around hour three, chugged it, and then went back to sleep. No headache when I woke up!â
âWonderful,â He drawls, âItâs almost like taking care of yourself is actually beneficial.â
âI take care of myself plenty.â
He casts you a sidelong glance, expression pinched.
âWhen was the last time you drank water without being prompted?â
âThatâs different.â
âOkay,â He dips his head, âWhen was the last time you ever felt truly relaxed?â
You give him a beaming smile, so wide it hurts. âWeâre not going to talk about this right now!â
âYou started this conversation. Iâm trying to do my job.â
You snort. âYouâre waiting to see if someone else is going to take the sunburn guy.â
âAre you accusing an attending of cherry picking?â
âOf course not. Just observing, sir.â
Jackâs turned to look at you now, head tilted up, hands folded behind his back.
When you say sir, his eyes flick down to your lips, and then his jaw tightens.
The air suddenly becomes charged, the space between you two filled with something too electric to be air.
It smells like aftershave, hospital antiseptic, wanting, and something thatâs distinctly masculine.
You look away first, swallowing hard past the sudden dryness of your mouth.
âYou know,â You say, crossing your arms and looking up at the board, âTrinity thinks you like me. Romantically.â
âMm.â
âI told her that was dumb,â You babble, âObviously itâs not true, but. She wonât let it go, so if she says something, just ignore her. Or not. Whatever you want.â
âWhy wouldnât it be true?â
You whip your head around so fast youâre pretty sure something cracks. âWhat?â
âI mean,â Jackâs voice is gruff as he shrugs once, âIs that really so unrealistic?â
âOf course it is,â You sputter, âYou donât like me.â
âIâve actually never said that. That was a conclusion you came to on your own. I distinctly recall telling you that I donât hate you.â
âJust because you donât hate me doesnât mean that you like me, let aloneâ like that.â
Jack tilts his head, almost predatory, and all that sharp tension rushes straight back in.
âLike what?â
Something hot and dangerous is starting to unfurl in your chest, untethering from where it was previously lodged deep behind your ribs, out of sight, out of feeling.
âCode Blue en route, ETA two minutes.â
Jack jerks his head in the direction of the ambulance bay. âYou gonna go get that?â
âUh,â Youâre pretty sure youâre stroking out, having a seizure, or something, because the only thing youâre capable of comprehending is the fact that Jack just not-so-subtly implied to actually liking you. Romantically.
âGet going then.â
You scurry away, hot all over and absolutely done with emotions in their entirety.
â
The rest of the week is hell on Earth. Perks of being in your twenties.
Things could be worse though!
Kind of.
Itâs just that itâs been several days since Jack basically confirmed Trinityâs suspicions on romance and you canât stop thinking about it. Obsessively.
Itâs bad.
Bad enough that when Mel asked if there was any way you could cover her shift, you said yes.
âOkay,â Dennis stage-whispers as youâre downing your third coffee of the day, miserably charting at the nurses station, âI feel the need to ask how bad things can possibly be if youâre covering a day shift.â
âMel asked.â
Dennis blinks incredulously. âYou love Mel, but not enough to work a day shift voluntarily.â
âWhat exactly are you asking me here?â
âDid you and Jack hit a rough patch or something?â
âKeep your voice down!â You hiss, ducking your head as if you can hide from Princess and Perlah, âAnd for your information, no. We didnât. I just wanted to do something nice for Mel.â
âI donât believe you.â
âI donât need you to believe me.â
Day-shift crawls on in a whirlwind of chaos and a level of dumb-fuckery that can only be achieved from the hours of 8 a.m to 8 p.m. As usual, the place is understaffed, overcrowded, and filled with a lingering sense of impending doom.
By the time night-shift starts filtering in, youâre ready to completely give up and start a new life a sheep rancher in New Zealand. Itâs always been the plan if being a doctor didnât work out.
Jack finds you in the locker room once the handoff is over, sitting on the little bench in the same position Dennis found you in earlier. Face in your hands, heels in your eyes, methodically counting breaths and wondering if that fluttering feeling in your chest is from caffeine consumption or sleep deprivation.
Itâs fine. Your fine. Everything is fine.
âYou donât look too good.â
âIâmââ
âDonât say youâre fine.â
âBut I am,â You grit, âI just need a minute.â
âOkay.â
Thereâs the distinct sound of Jackâs slightly uneven footsteps, and then thereâs a warm weight pressed against your side.
You take another shuddering breath that feels less like breathing and more like placing a single brick in a wobbly foundation.
âShouldnât you be out on the floor?â
âI donât work tonight.â
You raise your head just enough to look at him. âYou donât? I thought I saw you on the schedule. Why are you here if you donât work?â
Now that youâre looking at him and not starburst patterns on the back of your eyelids, you can see that heâs wearing casual clothes, not scrubs, and he doesnât have his usual army-issue backpack with him.
âI got Shen to cover me. I came here for you.â
Your next breath in almost gets stuck in your chest, air struggling to move past that alive and wriggling thing that keeps moving every time Jack is around.
âWhatâd you do that for?â
The barest hints of a smile tugs at the corner of his lips. âDennis called me. He said youâd need picking up after your shift.â
Shame, guilt, and embarrassment flood your veins, turning your blood into sickly-sweet poison that makes your stomach roll and twist.
âOh my god, Iâm so sorry, I have no idea why he did that. You really didnât have to drive all the way over here, I swear I didnât tell him to call you or something like thatââ
âI know you didnât,â Jack soothes, voice a rumbly, smooth timber that washes over your permanently-frazzled nerves like a balm, âWhich is why I came.â
âI donât understand.â
Jack stands, pulling your bag and change of clothes out of your locker.
âIâm going to ask you a question, and I need you to be honest with me, so you donât have to answer it again. Can you do that for me?â
You nod once.
âWords.â
âUhâ yeah. Yes.â
âGood.â
Thank god the locker room is emptyâ everyoneâs either on the floor or already left for their homes.
He closes your locker down, shoulders your bag, and hands you your clothes.
âIs it easier for you to accept help when you donât have to ask and donât get the chance to say no?â
It sounds so pathetic, hearing it laid out like that. The ugly guts of you; cut open, laid bare, and marked for research. Exhibit A, the inside of the girl no one ever needed to worry about.
You donât want to agree. You want to laugh it off, maybe run away from it. Sit up straight, wipe your face, take the bag from Jack and explain that this is all a big misunderstanding and youâre perfectly fine and he can stop worrying about you now.
âYes.â
Jack doesnât verbally acknowledge your response besides a single dip of his head, like he knows that if he does anything more itâll turn your response into a confession and thatâs just too vulnerable for the hospital locker room.
âIâll drive you home.â
âI donât mean to be this way, you know.â
The passenger seat of Jackâs car isnât somewhere youâd ever imagined yourself being. Not even late at night or on the bus when youâre pretending to be someone else whoâs better at chasing what they want.
âIt stopped being intentional a long time ago,â your hands are fisted into the material of your sweatpants, nails digging into the fabric, âIt was just the natural progression of things. I like being liked.â
What you donât say, what becomes an unspoken truth that lingers in the air despite not being verbalized, is the survival aspect of it. Why and how a person fuses this kind of thing to their personality; to their life. The circumstances that makes the natural progression of things end it being better for everyone if you just donât have needs.
âI know.â
âI know you know, I just⊠needed to tell you. Myself.â
Itâs odd seeing Jack illuminated by streetlights instead of fluorescent overheads. Itâs odd being able to watch his hand flex on the steering wheel, watching his forearm tense as he shifts gears in his old stick-shift.
âYou like being told what to do.â
Your face heats, but youâre determined not to lose face now. Especially after managing to survive being emotionally flayed open, willingly, by him.
âIt feels safe. If I know what yoâ someone wants, then I canât mess it up, and I can relax.â
You can practically see the gears turning in Jackâs mind.
âMakes sense.â
The rest of the drive is quiet, the silence only filled by the sounds of Pittsburgh around you and the gentle crackle of something from the radio turned down too low to hear.
And for the first time in longer than you can remember, you begin feeling something that approaches calm.
Jack doesnât have any expectations. There isnât any one particular way he wants you to act or expects you to behave like. Thereâs nothing he wants you to do.
So you do what you want to do.
You relax.
â
In the weeks following Jack driving you home, there is a quantifiable shift in behavior between the two of you.
He starts pulling back.
It strikes you as odd first, and your natural inclination is to pull back tooâ to guard the soft, vulnerable bits youâve showed him in case he throws them back at you.
But then you realize what heâs doing.
Instead of telling you how to proceed on a case when you come to him for advice, he asks you questions and steers you to the answer. He holds back when heâs evaluating a case with you, patiently following your lead and only interjecting when necessary.
Heâs making space for you try new things and learn without fear of rejection. Building your confidence bit by bit.
It feels more intimate than sex.
After much deliberation, screaming into your pillow, and Reddit forum searching for HR violations, you decide to get him a card. Because heâs actually been really kind and helpful and he makes you feel like you can actually survive residency.
âWhatâs this?â
âA thank you card.â
Youâre staring at your shoes, eyes flicking up and down between Jackâs face and the floor.
âWhat for?â
âIt says it in the card.â
You scurry away, attaching yourself to the closest patient to avoid seeing Jackâs face when he does finally open it.
But when you look back, heâs just staring at it, a small smile on his face.
â
Itâs the card that does him in.
Jack hasnât made his feelings for you a secret, despite your unwillingness to see him as anything other than standoffish in the beginning.
He came on too strong at firstâ that was his fault. He didnât yet understand how imbedded your need ran and how long itâd been since anyone bothered to look deeper.
Heâd hoped, at least, that you were letting Whitaker and Santos help, and though you let them closer than most, it was clear you still seemed intent on holding up yourself and everyone around you on your own.
But it wasnât just that. It was the way you oozed kindnessâ like it was a byproduct of your existence. He watched you get so wrapped up in being the perfect resident, perfect friend, perfect person, that no one ever stopped to let you know how good you were just by being.
He hadnât planned on developing feelings or anything of the sort. At first, youâd just been one of his residents. Smart and capable but lacking confidence in yourself to fully commit. Then there was that MCI, and drinks in the park afterwards where heâd painfully watched you sip a beer you clearly hated, and everything just clicked right into place.
He never intends to flirt with you. It just happens. He canât help himself. Heâs a weak fucking man when it comes to you.
And then you bring him a card. A fucking card. To thank him for doing his job as an attending, a job he shouldâve been doing better from the start. It has an illustration of bananas on it and says âThanks a bunch!â.
He knows heâs completely gone, then. He was capable of being in denial before, could delude himself into thinking that what he felt was casual, but the sight of you before him, hands nervously wringing, your glitter gel pens sparkling as they caught the light was just the final nail in the coffin.
He allows himself a modicum of flirting on a day to day basis, mostly because if he couldnât tease that real smile out of you at least once per day, heâd lose his mind.
Sometimes he takes you back to the diner, especially on longer days where none of your smiles reach your eyes and you start obsessively uncapping and capping your gel pens.
Even though you think it âlooks dumbâ youâve also taken to sitting shoulder to shoulder with him in the booth, and he pretends he canât see you sneaking fries off his plate because he knows how much effort it takes you to ask him if you can sit with him instead of on the opposite side.
Then he starts driving you home during a string of bad weather after you start sneezing from walking in the rain everyday, but even after the storm passes and the weather clears up he still finds you at the lockers, every day, car keys in hand. No matter how many times he does it, you always look so happily surprised that heâs still offering.
As if heâs not wrapped around your finger.
One day, after things have been mellow for awhile, Whitaker calls him and says that neither he nor Trinity have seen you in three days and you called out of work.
So naturally, as a calm and collected man, he showed up to your house.
Youâd answered the door after the third time he knocked (which was great, because he was gearing up to force the door open) and you just looked miserable. Your hair was a mess, you head blanket wrinkles imprinted onto your face, and your eyes were puffy.
âJack?â Youâd mumbled, squinting your eyes against the not very bright light in the hallway, âWhy are you at my apartment?â
âNo oneâs heard from you in three days.â
You wince. âI swear I meant to text Trinity. I just have a bad headache.â
His fingers twitch towards a penlight he doesnât have. âHow bad?â
âI donât know. Like a seven on the pain scale?â
âJesusâ Iâm coming in.â
âNooo,â You cry, but shuffle back from the door and put up very little fight as he ushers you to the couch.
Your apartment isâŠ.. exactly as messy as heâd imagined a resident who lives alone would be. For someone who doesnât drink enough water, there are an incredible amount of beverage bottles and cans littered about.
âDo you have headache relief?â
You gesture to the kitchen. âCabinet furthest to the left.â
While rifling through your very disorganized medicine cabinet, he spies an orange prescription bottle with your name on it, dated for the previous year.
âWhy do you have a prescription for a high level antihistamine?â
âStop snooping. Itâs for my migraines.â
âYouâve had a prescription this entire time and youâve been taking all that over the counter shit?â
âStop being mad,â You mumble into the couch cushion, âMy migraine meds put me to sleep, so I canât take them when Iâm working. Plus I donât have any refills left so I save them for when itâs really bad.â
âYou called out of work and havenât left your apartment in three days and you donât consider this bad?â
âCould be worse. Could be throwing up.â
He sighs. Sets the bottle on the counter, breathes in once, then lets it out slowly. Imagines all the ways he could murder whoever made you think suffering alone for three days is preferable to asking for help.
âIâm going to help you back to bed,â He starts, voice low as he rounds the couch, âAnd then youâre going to drink some electrolytes, have a snack, and take your meds. Okay?â
The migraine has clearly taken it out of you, because you put up zero fight as he manhandles you to your feet and helps you drag yourself back to your bed.
âMâ sorry my apartment is a mess. I was supposed to clean it.â
âIâm not judging, sweetheart,â He says, tucking the blankets up around you, lips twitching as you make grabby hands for a giant triceratops plushie that looks to be the size of your upper body. âIâm gonna make you a snack, so try to stay awake until I come back. Can you do that?â
âMhm. Iâll try.â
âGood girl.â
He manages to find a cucumber in your fridge, cuts it into slices and then adds a few pieces of lunch meat for protein. Last but not least, he snags a bottle of blue Gatorade from your pantry.
(He only knows they were there because he bought them for you a few weeks ago.)
He doesnât make you sit up to eat, but instead scoots you a little ways away from the edge of your bed so thereâs space for the plate.
You slowly nibble your way through, taking little sips of Gatorade when he nudges the bottle into your hands.
You finish the cucumbers, eat most of the lunch meat, and drink half the Gatorade before burrowing back into the blankets and declaring yourself done.
âCan I have my sleep mask please? I think itâs on the floor under my nightstand?â
âOf course you can.â
After your face mask is on and the curtains closed, he gives you the correct dose of your meds and gently shuts the door to your bedroom.
He fires off a quick text to Whitaker (he doesnât have Santosâs number) that says youâre fine, stuck in bed with a migraine, and that heâs handling it.
And then he gets to work.
Two hours later your apartment is clean, your laundry is started, and Jackâs relaxing on your couch, aimlessly watching the news.
He hears the door creak open but knows you hate feeling on the spot, so he keeps his gaze trained on the tv even as he hears the sound of you shuffling over to the couch.
And then you pause.
âJack.â
âYes?â
âDid you clean my apartment?â
He finally looks over to you, and when his gaze reaches your face his stomach drops.
Youâre crying.
He hauls himself off the couch (heâs thankful that he put his leg back on a few minutes prior) and stops in front of you, arms twitching at his sides with the need to fix, help, to stop whatever it is thatâs making you cry.
âWhatâs wrong? Did I overstep?â
âNo,â You warble, voice wet, âI just havenât had the time or energy to clean in here for so long, and itâs been stressing me out so bad I avoid staying here during my off days. Itâs just really, really nice of you.â
You look at him, eyebrows pinched and eyes wide with worry, âIâ Iâm not sure how to repay you for all of this. I know you said going to the diner was fine, but this isâ a lot.â
âSweetheart,â He starts, bracing one hand on the side of your face, thumb deftly sweeping across your cheek and wiping away the quickly drying tears, âIâm not doing any of this because I expect you to repay me. Iâm doing it because I care about you and I want to see you happy.â
You sniff hard. âThis is a lot of work, though.â
âI like doing it. I like taking care of you.â
Another sniff. âIt doesnât seem very fun.â
âI told you. Youâre like a cat. Had to coax you over and now look at you,â he thumb rubs circles over your cheekbone, âPractically purring.â
You wrinkle your nose. âI donât know if I like this metaphor.â
âGet used to it.â
You sigh, dramatic and long.
âI suppose Iâll allow it.â
âOh, youâll allow it, huh.â
You fold your hands behind your back, rocking back and forth on your heels. âYes. Iâll allow it.â
âWell, arenât I lucky.â
Later, when youâre lying on the couch, two movies into what Jack thinks is an unofficial early 2000s rom-com marathon (your favorite genre) you turn to look up at him from your spot tucked into his side.
âThis is romantic, right?â
He presses a lazy kiss to your forehead, because he knows how much you like physical affirmations as well as verbal ones.
âYes.â
âYouâre serious about this?â
âYou need confirmation?â
âIâd rather have it in writing, but this will do for now.â
He huffs a breathy laugh, tucks you closer to his chest.
âIâll put it in writing for you later.â
You hum, pleased, and snuggle back into him, letting out a content sigh.
I am very far behind my book goal for the year so far, so I did some TBR triage by moving shorter books up to the front of the request queue with my library. Poets Square is one of the first of that reshuffle to make its way to me and was a welcome bit of solace this past weekend. Â
Poets Square is Courtney Gustafsonâs story of how she accidentally inherited a feral colony of 30 cats which inâŠ
This is a great example of trusting an author you know you enjoy even when the concept doesnât initially grab your attention. Iâm on Janine Amestaâs advanced reader list having loved Love at First Flight and The Wedding Con (The Love Feud is currently sitting on my end table waiting for me). Initially the description of Shrunkation didnât grab me, but I know I like Amestaâs way of buildingâŠ
I have a history being interested in cults and cult-like behaviors, so when Read Harder included a task to read a book about cults, I was excited. Iâve already read The Quiet Damage this year and have a couple others lined up, including Empire of Orgasm: Sex, Power, and the Downfall of a Wellness Cult by Ellen Huet.Â
Letâs start with the headline â I did not enjoy this book. I am an outlier inâŠ
Following news at the beginning of May that the End the Backlog campaign had finally achieved rape kit reform legislation in all 50 states, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico. Now, in the year of aggravation that is 2026. But, with a goal of being thankful for the wins and not angered by their delay I decided it was time to move The Secret History of the Rape Kit up to the top of my readingâŠ
Reviewing a re-read is always a bit of a stumper for me, and even though Iâve been systematically making my way through re-reading the Murderbot books over the past couple of years the idea of trying to have something new to say about Network Effect is a bit daunting. Even though it has been over four and a half years (ouch) since I last read this book it was still fresh in my mindâs eye, thereâŠ
When I read Emma Southonâs A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum I was pleased by the way Southonâs immense understanding of the available primary and secondary sources historians have available to work from regarding Roman history impact the ways in which we can know anything at all about things that happened so long ago. That same nuance in explaining the sources â and how much theyâŠ
A few years ago, it felt like everyone and their neighbor were reading The Thursday Murder Club. I was intrigued but hadnât pulled the proverbial trigger. But here we are and the time has arrived for me to dig in to the story of a group of friends in a retirement village who investigate cold cases for fun, and the new member they invite into their ranks, and the murder that happens that lets themâŠ
Gender Queer: A Memoir was only the third most challenged book in the United States in 2025 per the American Library Association's tracking, down from second in 2024 and first from 2021-2023. This book will be seven years old in May 2026, and it's now spent five of those years in the top three most challenged book in this country.
Here is an excerpt from the ALA report:
"The 2025 data reported to ALAâs Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) shows that the majority of book censorship attempts continue to originate from organized movements. In 2025, 92% of all book challenges were initiated by pressure groups, government officials, and decision makers, up from 72% in 2024. Less than 3% of challenges originated from individual parents. The most common justifications for censorship provided by complainants were false claims of illegal obscenity for minors; inclusion of LGBTQIA+ characters or themes; and covering topics of race, racism, equity, and social justice."
Another example of how book banning is now originating from government officials is HR 7661, a federal level book banning bill hastily penned by Republicans after Trump's last State of the Union speech. If passed, this bill would pull federal school funding from any public school in the US which offered programing or literature with âsexually oriented material,â including depicting âgender dysphoria or transgenderismâ or âlewd or lascivious dancingâ (aka drag.) If this bill passed it would essentially ban every trans book from every public school in the US, unless a school was willing to risk loosing its federal funding. This bill has 20 co-sponsors as of April 22 2026- if one of them is your representative please call them and tell them you don't support this bill! It has unfortunately already passed it's first committee- Kelly Jensen, writing for Book Riot, has a vote breakdown in her excellent article on the bill here.
We need to kill HR 7661 if we want to protect trans books in public schools. Please call, email, or write your House Rep to say NO on HR 7661! EveryLibrary has a letter you can sign and a call script (copied below the cut).
Hi, my name is [NAME]Â and Iâm a constituent from, [CITY, STATE]
I'm calling to ask [REP NAME]Â to oppose H.R. 7661, a bill that opens the door for nationwide book banning. I am appalled at how this bill is being used to target marginalized communities and deepen the divisions in our country. It claims to be about protecting children, but it is really aimed at giving the federal government the power to control whose stories are on shelves. It is censorship and a blatant violation of our First Amendment, and wild government overreach.Â
[OPTIONAL]: Instead, I urge [REP NAME]Â to support H.R. 6440, the Right to Read Act, and H.R.7691, the Fight Book Bans Act to fund education and increase student literacy across America.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
IF LEAVING VOICEMAIL: Please leave your full street address to ensure your call is tallied.
I honestly donât understand why there arenât more people who, when given the platform to discuss minimum wage, donât simply distill it to the simplest of facts:
A forty hour work week is considered full time.
Itâs considered as such because it takes up the amount of time we as a society have agreed should be considered the maximum work schedule required of an employee. (this, of course, does not always bear out practically, but just follow me here)
A person working the maximum amount of time required should earn enough for that labor to be able to survive. Phrased this way, I doubt even most conservatives could effectively argue against it, and out of the mouth of someone verbally deft enough to dance around the pathos-based jabs conservative pundits like to use to avoid actually debating, it could actually get opps thinking.
Therefore, if an employee is being paid less than [number of dollars needed for the post-tax total to pay for the basic necessities in a given area divided by forty] per hour, they are being ripped off and essentially having their labor, productivity, and profit generation value stolen by their employer.
Wages are a business expense, and if a company cannot afford to pay for its labor, it is by definition a failing business. A company stealing labor to stay afloat (without even touching those that do so simply to increase profit margins and/or management/executive pay/bonuses) is no more ethical than a failing construction company breaking into a lumber yard and stealing wood.
Our goal as a society should be to protect each other, especially those that most need protection, not to subsidize failing businesses whose owners could quite well subsidize them on their own.
Wages are a business expense, and if a company cannot afford to pay for its labor, it is by definition a failing business. A company stealing labor to stay afloat (without even touching those that do so simply to increase profit margins and/or management/executive pay/bonuses) is no more ethical than a failing construction company breaking into a lumber yard and stealing wood.