List of Warriors concept album fanfics I have on Ao3
Since apparently I've made this my new brand, here's the links and what the primary relationship is in them:
wallacepolsom
Today's Document

⁂
Peter Solarz
Stranger Things

pixel skylines

titsay

JVL
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
DEAR READER
No title available

Andulka
Cosmic Funnies
taylor price

★

Product Placement

blake kathryn
we're not kids anymore.

Love Begins
🪼
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from Bangladesh
seen from Germany
seen from Uzbekistan
seen from Brazil

seen from Brazil
seen from Denmark
seen from India

seen from Ukraine
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@flowersandskeletons526
List of Warriors concept album fanfics I have on Ao3
Since apparently I've made this my new brand, here's the links and what the primary relationship is in them:
When We All Come Home Alive (one part): Ajax/Rembrandt
We Need A Tagger (five parts): Ajax/Rembrandt
A Tribute (two parts): Swan & Rembrandt
The Girl at the End of the Bar (one part): Rembrandt & Fox (kinda)
Don't Let Anything Happen To Her (two parts): Mercy & Rembrandt
Anniversary (one part): Ajax/Rembrandt
A Beaten Dog Will Always Bite (one part): Cleon & Ajax
Over the Edge (three parts): Ajax/Rembrandt
Pick Your Battles (one part): Ajax on her own mostly
Never Meant to Fight (one part): Ajax/Rembrandt
Mascot (one part): Ajax & Fox
Figure It Out (one part): Ajax/Rembrandt/Swan/Mercy
Put Your Gloves Up (7 parts + random scenes, remaining incomplete): Ajax/Rembrandt, Swan & Rembrandt
Get Your Colors (one part): Fox & Rembrandt
Rusty Kitchen Scissors (one part): Cochise & Rembrandt
Bluer Than A Butterfly (one part): Cleon & Rembrandt
I Don't Need You To Be Her (one part): Mercy & The Warriors, Mercy & Rembrandt
Waiting For The Axe To Fall (multi part wip): Ajax/Rembrandt ON HIATUS
The Smoke Clears When You're Around (multi part wip): Ajax/Rembrandt, Rembrandt & The Warriors ON HIATUS
Will update as I write more
"Chemistry is Rare" - Barantos fanfic (part 1/?)
Trinity has always had a spectacular talent for getting in over her head, and when Dr. Al-Hashimi invites her to attend a medical conference, she finds she never learned a lesson from it.
(I have only a vague idea where this is going but let's see if I can finish a multichapter fic this time! Enjoy!)
read on ao3
-------
“Fuckleberry, let’s go!” Trinity shouted. “I will leave you to walk if you’re not down here in five!”
“Coming! I’m coming, wait up.” Dennis came down the stairs with his backpack hanging off one shoulder, scarfing down a power bar while shoving more in his bag. Trinity made a note to steal one later, which wouldn’t actually be stealing since she bought them.
“Are you ready yet?” she huffed.
“Yeah, let’s go. Oh, hey, what do you think of the hair?”
He tried and failed to slick it back this morning. No wonder he took so long. Trinity immediately put an arm around his neck and scrubbed at his head to put it back to normal.
“Wha- Trinity! Ow! What the hell!”
“Absolutely not,” she said as she released him. “You look like Robby.”
“What’s wrong with that?”
“Of course you’d say that.”
“Huh?”
“Let’s go.”
She didn’t know why she ever gave him the privilege of the aux cord. Side-eyeing him from the driver’s seat, she watched him dance and mouth along to some funk song he played first thing every morning. God, she needed him to put it on shuffle for once.
“Put on your seatbelt, you’re setting a bad example.”
Dennis looked down and apparently realized he wasn’t wearing it. “Setting a bad example for who?”
“The ER spirits.”
“The what?”
“They’ll curse us with auto ejections for the whole shift.”
“I don’t think that’s a thing.”
“Huckleberry!”
“Okay!” As he buckled in, he glanced at Trinity with those stupid puppy dog eyes he got whenever he was about to ask something dumb. “Hey, you wouldn’t actually leave me behind if I was running late, right?”
No, never. “Depends.”
The ED was already a flurry of activity by the time they scrubbed up and got to the floor. Night shift was still wandering around, slowly filtering out. Trinity spotted Mel on the other side of the space talking to Joy before leading her into a patient’s room, and Javadi chatting it up with McKay by the computers. As Trinity and Dennis stepped up to the board, Dana shot them a look over the top of her glasses.
“Well, good morning, sleeping beauties!” she joked. “You sure took your time getting here.”
“D, we’re fifteen minutes early,” Trinity groaned.
“And everyone else has already gone through rounds! Go meet up with Langdon by south twelve, he’ll catch you up.”
“Aye aye, Captain.”
“Watch the attitude, missy!”
As they headed towards Dr. Langdon, making their way through the rush, Dennis leaned in. “You… all right?”
“Yeah. We’re better.”
It was true. It involved two more screaming matches, luckily outside of the ED, until the tension finally broke and Trinity believed his apology when it wasn’t in therapy-speak. It was touch and go for a few months - it still was - but they’d settled into working with each other. Even if they weren’t friends, they made a good team sometimes.
He offered a smile as they walked up. “Hey, guys, how’s it going this morning?”
“Pretty decent,” said Dennis.
Langdon looked pointedly at Trinity. She nodded once. “All good. You?”
“Good.”
Translation: on working terms until otherwise stated.
And maybe… maybe it helped that Robby wasn’t there. Maybe it made it easier to go at each other and get it over with when the hingepin of their first shift together was out of the picture, when they weren’t attached to the same person and both so terrified of disappointing him. Butting heads was still inevitable but now it didn’t carry the extra baggage. No biting back at every criticism, no defending a position with tooth and nail whenever it felt threatened. Trinity missed him in a weird way she didn’t want to interrogate but she couldn’t deny how much lighter it felt when she wasn’t looking for him to hide behind. And when his sabbatical got extended to four months, and then five, and then suddenly it was January and he was finally due back next week, it only gave them more time to stop hating each other without him there to instigate.
Rounds were as usual; minor burns, fractures, a fall and chest pains, which ultimately ended up being acid reflux from a minor hiatal hernia. Nothing major. While Dennis went to suture a face laceration for a home DIY-er mishandling a drywall taping knife of all things, Trinity went with Langdon for a forearm fracture. She felt bad for the kid; he was only seven, said his arm got caught and yanked in the chain on a swingset when he tried to jump off it. As Langdon got information from the boy’s mothers, she was in charge of keeping him distracted.
“I can do so many headstands,” he bragged, “and my coach said pretty soon I can start learning bars.”
“Wow, that’s so cool! So you like doing gymnastics?”
“Yeah! I’m gonna be in the Olympics!”
One of his moms stepped over. “His best friend at his new school does it, he’s been begging to go with her for months. He just started. We were hesitant because, you know, the horror stories.”
Trinity’s chest tightened, her mind flashing back to a time and place she wanted so desperately to fucking forget. “I’m sorry?”
“You hear about these accidents, people landing wrong or missing catches…”
“Oh, y-yeah. Yeah, right, well, trainers put a lot more focus on safety over performance than they did in my day.” She gave the little boy a fist bump. “Even the ones training Olympians.”
“You were a gymnast?”
“Only as a hobby.”
Dr. Langdon cleared his throat. “Dr. Santos, X-rays came back.”
She got up to look at the tablet in his hands and had to stifle a cringe. “Spiral fracture.”
“Of the ulna and radius. You want to call up to surgery?”
“If they can send down one of their ortho specialists to take a look at it.”
Langdon hesitated and glanced around the ED before saying, “I don’t mean to overstep, but… you know who’s probably going to come down.”
It wasn’t really an overstep, she could admit that. Not when everyone and their fucking mother knew about the fallout.
“And this is where I make my exit, thanks for your permission.” She crouched beside the bed, smiling at the patient again. “Okay buddy, we’re going to bring in some special doctors to look at the pictures we took of your arm. They’re going to take really good care of you, but in the meantime-” She raised her pinky finger. “-you gotta make me a promise. Okay?”
The boys linked their fingers. “Okay.”
“If you want to be an athlete, you need to take care of your body and be safe with it. That means no more jumping off the swings.”
“But I go so high!”
“And you’re going to go super high when you finally get to do vaults, but you can’t do those if you’re in a cast again. So, promise? No more jumping off swings?”
“I promise.”
“Good man.” Her smile disappeared the second her back was to the family, sighing as Langdon pursed his lips. “Keep me updated?”
“You got it.”
“Thanks, doc!”
She made a beeline for the single-stall bathroom. Slamming and locking the door behind her, she stood over the sink and splashed cold water on her face. She couldn’t bear to look at her own reflection, staring at the water droplets sliding down the side of the ceramic, doing her breathing exercises the trauma counselor taught her. She was not back there. She was in the hospital, where she worked, as a doctor, she was not in that place around that person anymore. It was an innocent comment from a mom worried about her son, and the kid would be fine, and she was fine, and everything was fine.
Taking a deep breath and holding it, she dried her face and shook her head. “All right,” she whispered to herself, “back to it.”
Dana was waiting for her at the nurses’ station. “Hey, you okay? You ran out of there pretty quick.”
“Uh, yeah, just… bathroom. What’s next?”
“How’s your little daredevil?”
“Spiral fracture of the ulna and radius.”
“Lord.”
“Yeah, we’re waiting to decide if we can reset it here or if he needs to go to ortho. Langdon’s calling Garcia down for an opinion.”
Dana made a face. It was the closest she’d ever get to commenting on the situation, but it made her position perfectly clear and it got a laugh from Trinity every time. “Well, in the meantime, we’ve got a basketball player with a hurt finger in thirteen or a possible concussion in six. Take your pick.”
“Let’s go with… possible concussion.”
“Really? No arguments about your charting getting interrupted?”
“I’m all caught up!”
“Round of applause!”
“Thanks, Dana!” Trinity called as she walked away.
The concussion was minor. A slip on some black ice and a rough looking egg on the guy’s forehead, but he seemed more upset about his girlfriend dragging him in than he was about the fall. When Trinity told him they’d keep him under observation for a few hours, he looked ready to walk out if it weren’t for the death glare the woman gave him. At least it would be a quick chart. Hopefully it would give her enough time to avoid Garcia before Langdon came to update her on their aspiring olympian.
But because the universe was cruel and hated her guts, she sat at a computer right as Langdon and Garcia passed the nurses’ station.
Trinity clenched her fists and kept her head high and her face impassive. Garcia didn’t spare her a glance.
“Santos.”
“Garcia.”
Langdon whipped his head around, watching Garcia disappear back to the surgery floor. “Yikes.”
“Not a fucking word.”
“Yeah, got it. No comment. They’re going to send the kid up to ortho. The bones are too far out of alignment for us to correct them here.”
“Figures.” She drummed her fingers on the desk. “Poor kid.”
“He’ll be fine. I’ll get the chart written in, I’m finished everything else.”
“Thanks, appreciate it.”
“Yeah.” Taking the computer beside her, he raised his eyebrows. “I didn’t know you were a gymnast.”
“Langdon,” she warned through gritted teeth.
“Sorry. Oh, Walsh! What are you still doing here?”
“Good morning to you, too, Ken doll.” Walsh smiled as she leaned over the counter. Trinity ducked her head to avoid staring too hard at her. She really didn’t need to be making eyes at yet another surgeon, even if she’d had a minor work crush on her since her first day. Then again, she’d had work crushes on almost every senior doctor at one point or another so it wasn’t exactly out of the ordinary for her. She wasn’t ready to investigate that too much. “I got held up and couldn’t resist coming down to harass Ellis before I left.”
“Trying to bring her back to the night shift?”
“No, she’s earned the sunlight for a while.” She turned that smile towards Trinity. “Dr. Santos, do you have a minute?”
Trinity leaned back, trying to look as nonchalant as possible. “Sure, what’s up?”
“Walk with me.”
Trinity was not proud of how quickly she scrambled up to follow, tugging on her stethoscope around her neck. “Do you need me for something?”
“I haven’t heard anything more about your double boarding plans. When are you going to get on that?”
“Oh, I…” She shrugged and tried a smile. “I’m still figuring out the logistics.”
“What’s stopping you? Burnout, home obligations…”
“Sure.”
Dr. Walsh stopped on a dime and turned to face her, lowering her voice. “I hope you’re not letting personal baggage get in the way of who you want to be as a doctor.”
Fuck. “So you heard about that?”
“I hate to tell you, the whole surgical department did. But listen, I would like to see you double boarding and, if it’ll make it easier, I also know night shift would be happy to have you. You’d have to give up being diurnal for a few years but it’s honestly not as bad as it seems.” She patted Trinity’s shoulder in a weird display of friendliness Trinity would never expect from her. “Talk to Abbot.”
“My attendings aren’t going to be very happy if they find out you’re trying to poach me.”
“Eh, they’ll get over it. Besides, they just got Ellis. It’s only fair.”
“Right. Thanks, Dr. Walsh.”
“No problem.” She winked, calling over her shoulder as she left, “Keep me updated!”
Trinity sighed, dragging her hands down her face. The ED knowing was bad enough, but the whole surgery department was even worse. Throughout their entire relationship, if she could even call it that, Garcia elected to keep most of her cards close to her chest about fooling around with an intern. She gave Trinity shit when she failed at doing the same. Did she really have to choose now to stop caring about everyone knowing their business?
Whatever. Fuck it. She would get her mind lost in charting and ignore it.
“Dr. Santos.”
“Jesus!”
Dr. Al-Hashimi was standing right fucking behind her, curls pulled back, wearing a deep blue jacket instead of her normal gray and a tiny amused smile. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to startle you.”
“All good. Did you need something?”
“Yes, I was hoping we could speak in private for a moment.”
“What did I do now?” Trinity asked before she could stop herself.
Al-Hashimi chuckled. “Nothing bad. Come with me, please.”
She felt bad about it now, but Trinity would not deny how much she wanted to hate the new attending after Robby left. The litmus test of Al-Hashimi’s first day didn’t exactly bode well for a positive working relationship. It took a long time for the “repeating your R2 year” comment to stop sounding like a threat when she played it over in her head, and Robby felt safe. Robby knew what she could do as a doctor, Robby was one of the few people in the ED who actually liked her, and Dr. Al-Hashimi… didn’t. That was enough for Trinity to write her off. Unfortunately for her, Dr. Al-Hashimi was very good at getting people to like her, and Trinity would admit - only to herself - that it worked on her. And if a bit of support and snippets of praise thrown her way was all it took for her to like someone, well… it was another thing to not think about.
Baran’s gentle touches on her shoulder as she passed had nothing to do with it. Her confident, controlled smile had nothing to do with it. The way those dark beautiful eyes stole the air from Trinity’s lungs as she led her to the stairs had absolutely fucking nothing to do with it. No chance. Nothing at all.
“First off,” Al-Hashimi began, “I wanted to applaud you on your charting. I’ve noticed a marked improvement in the past several weeks.”
“Thanks. I’ve been trying to stay on it.”
“I know you have. Your R3 year will be easier, I promise.”
“I hope so,” Trinity muttered. “What did you need to talk to me about?”
“There is a medical conference in Philadelphia in about a week and a half. I know it’s rather last minute, but there will be an important seminar on patient advocacy and bedside de-escalation tactics. I would like you to attend with me.”
Trinity raised her eyebrows. “You think I need a lecture on patient advocacy?”
“Just the opposite. I believe there are a great deal of senior physicians who could stand to learn something from you.”
“Oh.” Clearing her throat, she let her pre-emptive bravado deflate. “I don’t do public speaking.”
“No, you won’t have to speak. This is only to observe, learn, and network.”
“It’s pretty expensive to do a late registration, isn’t it?”
“The hospital has already paid for three registrations, they just need a name to put on them.”
“Three? Who else is going?”
“Dr. King is attending as well.”
“I… Okay. Yeah, I’ll go. Sounds like a good learning opportunity.”
Al-Hashimi smiled and nodded once. “I’m glad to hear that. I’ll send you the details later today.”
“Sounds good, boss.”
Later that night, Trinity sat across the dinner table from Dennis, cartons of Chinese takeout pushed to the side and textbooks surrounding them. As she read over mind-numbing blocks of text for what felt like the fiftieth time, Dennis watched her over the top of his page, like he had been for the past five minutes.
She dropped her book to glare at him. “What do you want?”
“How long are you going to be gone?”
“Four days. The conference is three. Why, are you going to miss me too much?”
“Maybe.”
Trinity threw a pencil at him. “You’re such a Fuckleberry.”
I’ll miss you, too.
yearn-a-tron 3000
don’t even talk to me because i went on the warriors website to revel in the joy of it releasing soon again and i notice THIS.
fox is on a different track than the rest of the warriors. I’M GOING TO CRY WHO DID THIS
not normal about this
"I'm Good, I'm Great" - The Pitt fanfic
Trinity Santos is have a hell of a bad day. Langdon is back. Garcia blew her off. Robo-doc won't leave well enough alone. It's only a matter of time before she snaps, and who could blame her?
(Canon divergent and maybe a little out of character, but this was an idea that came to me after the Santos Langdon showdown when I still thought we were going to see a full breakdown from her. So here's that! Complete with the usual amount of lesbian drama these doctors leave in their wake! Enjoy!)
--------
“You wanna have sex and eat ramen in bed, I’m your girl. But if you want to talk about this Langdon shit again, call a therapist.”
Trinity watched Dr. Garcia leave, back to the surgery suites until she was called down for another round of insulting everyone in the emergency department. Trinity especially, some days, with some halfhearted wordless apology in bed a few nights later. She was Yolanda there in Trinity and Dennis’ apartment - never at her own - but she took every opportunity at work to remind the resident that this was not a relationship, they were not together, and everyone could know they were fucking but God forbid they think Garcia actually liked her. How horrible a thought. So Trinity just watched her go. She could handle this herself.
She tried to keep it under wraps. She tried to cap the resentment at the normal level of bitchiness people expected and not interrogate the sick feeling she always got when she thought about it. But he kept following her! How was it her fault that he kept trying to include her in his stupid little apology tour? She didn’t need one. She didn’t want one. She wanted him to face real consequences, not be welcomed back with open arms and already cozying up to the new attending who kept fucking Trinity over and probably would until Robby came back.
If he ever did.
Trinity had that to panic about on top of everything else, the idea of losing the only senior doctor who actually liked her, and Dennis playing house and charting and Al-Hashimi and Yolanda-
And Langdon in her fucking face.
“My wife threatened to divorce me, I almost lost my kids!”
“Yeah that’s what happens when you fuck up!”
Her chest was tight, old pain morphing to rage until her hands shook and venom spewed from her lips because it was so much easier to be angry than hurt. Not that it helped, watching his face fall, watching the resolve drain from him when his therapy-rehearsed apology didn’t go the way he wanted like it did with everyone else. It didn’t help.
“You really want to atone for your sins? Tell everyone here you stole drugs and got kicked out of the ED because of it. Until then, stay out of my way.”
She got the last word, she left him standing there looking as stupid as he made her feel, and it didn’t help.
Fuck it. Forget it. She would go lose herself in mindless charting and maybe get pulled into some insane trauma and just try to make this shift end faster. Just focus on getting Al-Hashimi off her back. And if she happened to grab a scalpel from the suture cart on her way, who fucking cared.
Well, unfortunately and apparently, Dr. King did.
“All right, Melancholia, what are you staring at?” Trinity snapped, harsher than she meant.
“Are you sure you’re okay?” Mel pressed.
“You know how many times you’ve asked me?”
“Um, five now. I think.”
Don’t yell at Mel, don’t yell at Mel, Mel did not do anything to you.
“Look, I just want to finish my charting so I can go home on time.”
“Okay, but, if you’re not okay, maybe it would be good to take a break-”
“I don’t need a break! I need everyone off my back and Langdon to-”
She bit her tongue hard enough to draw blood. Mel frowned at the mention of the senior resident. Right. She actually liked him. Trinity wondered if he’d already admitted to her what everyone should know. Probably. Of course he would find his absolution through the most forgiving person in the entire department and think it was proof he deserved it from everyone else.
Would anyone even care if they knew? Would it matter? Not even Garcia cared, the one who had heard all of it and seen the scars and might have understood why it hurt so bad. Oh, who was she kidding with that one? Garcia only cared when it interrupted their hook-ups. No one else had the slightest reason.
She could almost imagine it, the rest of the team’s sentiments, so proud of the golden boy for getting help and coming back stronger for it but she, she was the same. She wasn’t getting help, she never tried to change or tried to get over it, did nothing to get rid of the aggressive energy, the standoffishness, she was trouble and nothing else while the man who actually committed a crime barely got a slap on the wrist! It was always the fucking same!
Trinity shoved her chair back from the table, heading for the stairs. Mel was calling after her but she didn’t listen. She just gripped the scalpel in her pocket and booked it to the roof.
----
What mess did I walk into?
It was all Baran could think as she watched Santos and Langdon in each other’s faces, hissing a heated argument through their teeth. Good. As much as it concerned her watching them go back and forth, tempted to step in before it came to blows like she had witnessed in past services, she knew whatever they were saying was not something any patient or staff should hear. She swore she saw Trinity’s hands shaking from across the room as she crossed her arms and said something sharp and final, harsh enough to leave Dr. Langdon standing with his head hung in defeat.
Langdon already admitted to being “a pretty big asshole” to the younger resident in the past but this was… beyond that. Far beyond. And of course it came after Dr. Robinavitch told her she had nothing to worry about with their spitfire of an R2.
“Dr. Robby!” Baran dodged a gurney headed for the ICU. “Dr. Robby, a minute, please-”
“Dr. Al-Hashimi, you know I’d love to talk,” he interrupted, barely breaking his stride towards who knows where to avoid her, “but I’ve got some important things to handle so it’ll have to wait!”
“It will only take a… Dammit.”
So much for his help. Langdon obviously did not give her the entire truth of the situation. She considered asking Dr. Santos directly, but she imagined the response would be something so insubordinate, she’d be forced to reprimand her if anyone heard. Santos had been reprimanded enough today by Baran, for which she now found herself a bit remorseful, not to mention-
Dr. Garcia.
Baran spotted a flash of purple scrubs across the department as the surgeon stalked past, staring at her pager. Baran’s shoulders tensed. They’ll be thrilled to clean up your mess. The remark, in simple words, pissed her off. Her options were do the slash trach or let the boy die, apologies if the incisions were not as pristine as a surgeon’s in a calm controlled operating room might be. And this coming from the doctor who chose to relocate a destroyed shoulder in the ED, whose response to Baran being right was “I am the OR.” Another surgeon with a massive ego. No surprise.
She thought of how Garcia flashed one look in a trauma and the younger doctor rapidly retreated into herself. Now with it in the forefront of her mind, she realized she witnessed it multiple times already. Whenever she spotted Garcia and Santos from the corner of her eye, the resident had that same look: shoulders curled in, eyes on the floor, arms crossed or tugging on her stethoscope, fixing her expression the second she turned back towards the rest of the ED. She didn’t back down like that during her argument with Langdon - quite the opposite - or even when her new attending continuously reminded her about charting. She had a smartass remark for everyone in the department.
But not for Garcia. It left a sour taste in Baran’s mouth, though she didn’t know why.
God, don’t make me talk to this woman, she thought, and jogged over to intercept her anyway.
“Dr. Garcia.”
The surgeon looked less than thrilled to see her. “What’s up?”
“Could I have a word? In private?”
“I have one minute.”
“That’s fine.”
They stood off to the side in the stairwell, facing each other across the hall. Baran kept one eye on the door in case they were interrupted.
“Is this about your slash trach patient?” Garcia asked, raising her eyebrows.
Baran clung to her calm, professional smile and fought the urge to physically wipe the condescension off Garcia’s face.
“No, I already received an update,” she said evenly. “I was hoping to ask you about Dr. Santos.”
----
Dennis was still reeling from Robby’s request. Housesitting seemed normal enough, maybe a little long-term in this case, but normal. The comment, though, how he would have a nice place if Robby never came back, what the hell was that? Why wouldn’t he come back?
He needed to talk to Trinity. She and Robby were close. Well, close enough in the world of the emergency department; they were a good team at work, and even if she didn’t say it out loud, Dennis knew she was upset about his sabbatical. Langdon’s first day back didn’t help either, that fucking asshole, and Garcia…
There was a litany of insults he would throw in her face if he ever got the chance, if Trinity ever told her off and he could do it maybe without ruining his career. Over the past ten months, he heard too many hushed arguments on the other side of the wall, watched Trinity check her phone every five minutes for a reply that wouldn’t come for hours or days, listened to drunken heartbroken rants she didn’t remember about a woman who didn’t give a fuck. Not to mention that Garcia and Langdon were friends before everything and Dennis knew she was not exactly team-Trinity through it.
Maybe he should cancel the weekend at the farm. He needed to talk to Trinity.
He found Mel.
“Hey.” Dennis slid into the empty chair beside her. She jumped, startled out of her notes, before turning to smile at him. “How did your deposition go?”
The smile faded. “Oh, um, it went… Dr. Ellis said I did fine. And the attorney said I’m not allowed to talk about it anymore.”
“I’m sure you were great,” he offered.
“Thanks, can we please talk about something else?”
“Yeah. Right.” Dennis shook his head and took a deep breath. “Hey, have you seen Santos anywhere? I need to talk to her but I keep getting pulled away.”
“Yes! Yes, I saw her,” Mel said excitedly at the change of subject. “She was here a while ago, maybe twenty minutes? She said something about Langdon and-”
“Langdon?” he interrupted. “Wait, wait, did she talk to Langdon? What did she say?”
Blessed Mel, her confused surprise made him regret his tone the second it left his mouth. “Did they need to talk about a patient?” she asked.
“No, Trinity - I mean, Santos… Do you know where she went?”
“She went towards the stairs. The roof, maybe? She looked like she needed some air.” Her eyes remained on him as they both stood. “Is something wrong with Santos?”
“M-Maybe, I don’t know, I… I have to go.”
“Whitaker-”
“I got it!”
He didn’t know how he kept his gait steady through the emergency department. By some miracle, he only started sprinting when he saw the stairs, flying past Garcia and Dr. Al-Hashimi on his way to the roof.
----
Dr. Santos’ name must have touched a nerve. Baran puffed her chest as Dr. Garcia stood up straighter, cocking her head to the side and pursing her lips, and was her eye twitching?
“What do you need to know about Trinity?”
Trinity?
“I know there’s some tension between her and Dr. Langdon,” Baran explained, “and now it’s seemingly come to a head.”
“She finally grew up and said something to him?”
She blinked. “I’m sorry, what?”
“Yeah, they have beef, it’s an old thing.”
“All right, well, if you’d like to share-”
“Not my business to share, and frankly - Woah, white chocolate, watch it!”
Baran stepped back as Dr. Whitaker came flying around the corner, his shoes squeaking on the tile as he ran up the stairs. She glanced down at her pager. No alerts to an incoming Life Flight. No one was following him to whatever prompted such a rush. Garcia jerked her head after him.
“Do you need to go handle that?” she prompted. Baran stayed steady, and Garcia rolled her eyes. “Look, their problems are not something I want to deal with anymore. I’ve heard enough about it from Trinity off the clock, I’m not interested in using hours I could be doing my job listening to more of this.”
Baran’s eyes narrowed. “Off the clock?”
“It’s not a secret.”
“Not a… wait.” She shook her head, pinching the bridge of her nose as Garcia pointedly stared at a clock on the wall. “HR did not provide me any relationship disclosure forms from my staff.”
“Because there isn’t one,” Garcia scoffed.
“A relationship or a form?”
“Either. You know, with all due respect, Dr. Al-Hashimi, this is starting to sound like a more personal interrogation. If you wanted to find out if Santos is single-”
“Excuse me?”
“Relax.”
“I want to know if two of my residents hate each other, and since you apparently have a connection with one of them, I am asking for some insight!”
“Fine! Here’s some insight. Trinity doesn’t play well with others. She’s had a problem with Langdon since day one and she’s been harping on it for ten months, especially since she found out he was coming back. It’s nothing new. If they finally talked and it didn’t go well, which I’m guessing not since you’re asking me about it, keep them separated. After Rabbit-Bitch goes on his sabbatical, those two and this mess-” She made a wide gesture towards the ED. “-are your issue. This can’t be the first time you’ve had residents who don’t like each other.”
Baran laughed in disbelief. “Not liking each other hardly explains them looking like they might start a fist fight in the middle of the ER!”
“Just shut it down when she starts bitching about it,” Garcia said coolly. “The worst she’ll do is be snippy in front of patients and that is no different than any other day with Dr. Trinity Santos.”
It made her almost sick. Santos had a mouth on her, sure, it didn’t take long to realize, but… shut down her bitching? And the blasé way Garcia talked about her, like she was a plaything, like whatever Trinity meant to her was so little that even HR in all their overreaching wouldn’t care if they knew. Were they even talking about the same woman here? All day, Baran watched Trinity in trauma after trauma working with the skill and intelligence and patient care some doctors several years her senior had yet to accomplish. She watched her seamlessly flow through a life-or-death call, calm down every scared child who came through the department, and she wasn’t sure exactly what happened but the abandoned baby girl finally stopped crying after Santos checked on her. There was so much good she did behind the snarky comments. Of course, Baran wanted to encourage it. And yet, every time she went to compliment Trinity, she was met with a pre-apology for an expected reprimand on charting; like praise was such a rare novelty. Now she understood why.
She shouldn’t have threatened to make her repeat her R2 year. It wasn’t her intention at the time but she understood how it might have come across. Perhaps an apology was in order before asking anything about Langdon.
Standing toe to toe with Dr. Garcia, Baran found herself suddenly and alarmingly protective over Trinity Santos.
She took a deep breath and squared her shoulders, slipping back into the comfortable role of cool collected attending physician. “Well,” she said curtly, “I appreciate the information, Dr. Garcia.”
“Sure.”
They turned in unison and headed back into the emergency department. Baran ground her teeth, glancing up at Garcia to see the same fuck, we’re walking the same way expression on her face. Her one saving grace was Princess walking up to them and hopefully saving her from any further interaction.
“Dr. Al-Hashimi, you have an update from the OR on your slash trach patient.”
Dammit!
“Let me see.” Dr. Garcia took the paper from Princess and gave it a quick scan. “Hm. They were able to do a clean repair.” She passed Baran the report with an amount of attitude that made her wonder where Garcia got off reprimanding Santos about hers. “Maybe do a few more cadaver labs before you try it again.”
Princess’ beeline towards Perlah did not go unnoticed, but it stopped Baran from laughing outright when Garcia got shoulder-checked by Javadi sprinting by.
“Jesus Christ, nepo baby!” the surgeon barked. Javadi froze in her tracks, quickly followed by Dr. King looking just as panicked. “Can you and Robinavitch please put your Pittlings on a leash?”
“Pittlings, what - Mel, Javadi,” said Baran, “speed in the emergency department also requires attention to where you are going. That could have been a patient.”
“S-Sorry, sorry,” Mel stammered, “we just, um… Javadi, take over?”
“We got a text from Whitaker,” the med student explained.
“About what?”
“We don’t know. He just said ‘roof now’ and then ‘Trinity.’”
“In all caps,” Mel added, “and she’s been off all day-”
“Go.” Baran pushed Mel and Javadi towards the stairwell with Garcia close behind. “Go now.”
----
Trinity was not on the edge. She sat on the railing, one hand steadying her, a scalpel in the other. The city stretched so far, lit up with countless lights and a backdrop of soft sunset orange, the edge of the sky darkening as her shift went on and on and on. Pretty soon fireworks would replace it. She was sure a few of the staff would come up here to watch if overtime went that far. It probably would.
She was supposed to be out with Yolanda for it. Other plans, she said. Trinity wished she would just say it was another woman. Hearing it would fucking suck, even if they were casual, but she thought it wouldn’t hurt as bad as Yolanda simply making an excuse to blow her off. Again. What did she have to do now besides go home to an empty house for the weekend, pick up Huckleberry’s clothes he left everywhere and hope he got a chance to text her, staring at the wall trying to forget her life.
Javadi for sure got called home by her parents already. She doubted Mel liked her enough to go out, and frankly she thought she might explode if Mel brought up Langdon and she did not want to blow up on someone who really, really didn’t deserve it. She knew better than to ask anyone else.
Santos doesn’t play well with others. Santos is the angriest person I’ve ever met. Santos is always aggressive and always a bitch and everyone knows it.
The thoughts swirled in her head until they drowned out everything else. She remembered that kid from the day of the mass casualty, how she told him how grateful she was that she stayed alive back then and made it this far. Was she, though? Was pushing through all the awful back then really worth where she ended up?
She toyed with the still-packaged scalpel. It used to help. She knew it wasn’t healthy but it gave her some control over her own body again. Or maybe it was penitence for buried survivor’s guilt. She wanted one option; she figured she deserved the other.
The scalpel slipped from her hand. She began to climb off the railing.
“Trinity!”
Dennis snatched the back of her scrubs and yanked her so hard they both ended up on their asses on the concrete.
“What the fuck, Huckleberry!” she snapped as they sat up. “You could’ve knocked me over the edge!”
“You were already on the edge!” he hollered back.
“I was getting down-”
“On the wrong side! What are you doing up here?”
“Oh, so everyone else can take a breather on the roof but when I do it-”
“Not everyone stands on the edge looking down.”
“I’m shocked more people don’t.” She stood, turning towards the door, praying he’d get the hint and drop it.
“Trinity, Trin, stop.” Dennis jumped in front of her and she seriously considered punching him. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing.”
“Bullshit.”
“Why do you care!”
She’d never seen him so angry at her.
“Because we’re friends, I think! I’ve been worried about you all day! Just tell me what happened. Did I do something? W-Was it Langdon or did Garcia say something or-”
“Both!” She was screaming so loud she bet they heard her in the ambulance bay, and Trinity didn’t yell, not often, but the world was too much right now and Dennis was the only one safe enough to hear it and not hate her after. “He tried some bullshit apology with me after being in my space all day and when I didn’t accept it, he started talking about everything he’s been through like it makes up for what he did. It sounded so fucking rehearsed I don’t even think he believes it. Even if he got sober, he’s still a fucking asshole and you wanna know something?”
Her eyes stung. Whitaker’s calm, gentle face blurred as her heart raced and her breathing became harsh and shallow.
“When he screamed in front of everyone that I was stupid and arrogant and didn’t belong here, that was Mohan’s mistake. I didn’t even do it. I just took the fucking fall for her.”
“Why would you do that on your first day?”
“’Cause I didn’t want her getting in trouble and getting screamed at like I did! It’s the same reason I went to Robby instead of the state medical board! I should have but I didn’t want to get anyone in trouble,” she spat, mocking her intern self. “No one knows he stole from the hospital and from patients’ prescriptions. They just think I ‘uncovered his addiction’ for brownie points with the attending, and on top of it, Yolanda just fucking-!”
Her voice broke. She wrapped her arms around herself, ducking her head as Whitaker held her shoulders and led her to sit back against the railing. “She cancelled,” she admitted quietly. Dennis exhaled sharply. “Said that casual shit again and said she’ll try to text tomorrow.”
“Try,” he scoffed.
“But then I was in a trauma with her and Langdon and she tore into me about decency and when I asked her if we were okay, she just told me to be a big girl and get over it. I’ve told her everything about it and she just… doesn’t care. No one does. Everyone thinks I’m the one who did something wrong and he just gets away with it.”
Trinity brought her knees to her chest, covering her head so Dennis couldn’t see the tears she tried to blink away despite being positive he already noticed.
“I don’t want to be here anymore.”
She felt Dennis tense as he wrapped his arms around her. “At… at the Pitt?”
All she could do was shake her head.
He sighed and covered her fully, as best as he could sitting beside her, shielding her from the world crumbling around her like no one had, like no one ever cared enough to do. She dimly noticed the light of his phone screen over her head.
“Who are you texting?” she mumbled.
“Don’t worry about it.”
“Don’t tell Robby.”
I already disappointed enough people.
“I’m not. Promise.”
----
Baran and Garcia burst onto the roof behind Mel and Javadi. The senior doctors froze in their tracks when they spotted Dr. Whitaker sitting against the railing and staring into space, arms around Trinity curled into a ball against his side. Even after only a day of knowing her, Baran never imagined someone with such a big personality, who took up so much space in every room she walked into, could ever look so small.
Javadi crouched beside Trinity and rested a gentle hand on her shoulder, speaking quietly as Trinity shook her head. Dennis pulled away from her enough to talk to Mel. As Baran watched, he jerked his head towards the edge of the roof. Mel straightened in shock. Baran and Garcia realized in unison exactly what happened when Mel grabbed the railing and leaned over to stare at the pavement far below.
“Oh my God,” Garcia whispered. Baran followed at a distance only to remain in earshot as she knelt in front of Trinity. Whitaker tensed when she got close. “Trin-”
Trinity stiff-armed her in the chest.
Whitaker jumped up, getting in Garcia’s face. Baran rushed forward before he completely destroyed his career but he kept his hands at his sides and a calm expression on his face. She put a warning hand on his shoulder, anyway. She did not need one of her interns getting suspended for cursing out a trauma surgeon over personal issues at work.
Garcia raised her hands. “Dennis-”
“You can go back to the surgery floor, Dr. Garcia,” he said, clipped and curt. “Thanks for checking in.”
“Come on-”
“We have it under control here.” He lowered his voice so Baran barely heard. “I’ll let you know when you can come get your shit from our apartment.”
“Enough.” Baran stepped between them, facing Garcia. “Dr. Whitaker is right, we have this under control.”
Garcia’s jaw tightened. “Let me talk her down.”
“She seems down enough,” she insisted, “and, respectfully, I believe we just saw you will only make it worse.”
Garcia’s eyes flickered between Baran and Whitaker standing over her shoulder, and then her stare turned past them. Baran didn’t need to look to know she was watching Trinity, still guarded by Javadi and Mel and - Baran prayed - not staring back. Neither of the senior doctors backed down for a full minute, toe to toe again with each silently threatening the other to fuck off, but Baran already heard quite enough from her today and now they were here and… no. Garcia was not getting anywhere near her. Not if Baran had a say and as an attending and as Trinity's attending, she absolutely fucking did.
In the end, the surgeon inclined her head, shot her one last dark look, and left the roof.
Baran took a deep breath and turned on her heel. Whitaker had replaced Mel at Trinity’s side, who was still curled up shutting out the world. Mel, rocking back and forth on the balls of her feet, came running up to her the second she saw her looking.
“She’s not hurt,” she whispered haltingly. “Not physically, at least. But, there’s a, um… there’s a scalpel on the other side of the railing. I’m not sure how it would have gotten up here.”
“Open?” Baran asked.
“No.”
“Thank you, Mel. Please return to the ED, they need you down there.”
“Should I call someone or…?”
“No, let me handle this.”
“Okay. Thanks, Dr. Al.”
She called to Javadi as Mel left, walking the med student over to the door, out of earshot. “Do you know if Dr. Jefferson is still on shift?”
“I think so? Should I get him?”
“Please, and keep it quiet. I do not want the entire department coming up here.” She paused, shook her head, and sighed, “Especially Dr. Robinavitch.”
Javadi’s eyes widened. “You… you don’t want me to tell Robby.”
“After his reaction to Samira today, no. I do not.”
“Got it. Um. Yeah. Yeah, I’ll tell Caleb.”
“Thank you.”
Whitaker was up, meeting her halfway across the roof, glancing over his shoulder at Trinity who still hadn’t moved. He shoved his hands in his pockets. “Guess you’re kicking me out next?”
“Not kicking you out, but I’ve handled more situations like this. As her attending, I’d like to make an assessment before psych gets here and I believe it will be easier if we are alone,” Baran explained. He pursed his lips and nodded, avoiding her eyes. “Do you know her emergency contact off the top of your head?”
“It’s me. We’re roommates.”
“All right. I’ll page you with an update. If anyone asks, you can just say I need you. I’ll cover.”
“Thanks, Dr. Al-Hashimi.” He took a deep breath. “Don’t hold it against her if she says something rude right now.”
“Of course. I understand.”
Whitaker nodded sullenly. He glanced at the door back into the building, hesitating for a moment, and leaned in close with an anger in his eyes Baran did not realize the young man was capable of displaying. “I don’t know if anyone’s told you yet, but Langdon tried to get Trinity fired on her first day because she figured out he was using benzos at work. That’s why there’s tension between them.”
And then Baran was alone with Trinity on the roof, staring at the empty space Whitaker had occupied, barely able to comprehend what he told her. God, she was going to rip Robby a new one the next time she saw him, what was his fucking problem that he forgot to mention that? How did “no problems” turn into a patient safety violation and potential retaliation case? Was he so obsessed with making it seem like he was the only one who could manage the ED that he would-
She cut off the train of thought. Not the time.
Dragging a hand down her face, she sat a polite distance from Trinity and nothing more. She didn’t talk, or try to get her to talk, or offer a hand for a long, long time. Trinity’s breathing was slow and even. In, hold, out. But Baran caught the occasional smothered hiccup crying always seemed to leave over. She watched the steady rise and fall of Trinity’s shoulders until the younger woman finally lifted her head.
Her eyes were unfocused, lazily trailing a faultline in the concrete. “Come to talk to me about my charting again?”
Baran smirked and tried to ignore how much it stung. “No, I’m not.”
“You can go now. I’m not going to jump off the roof. I wasn’t in the first place, Huckleberry just freaked.”
“Nice try, Dr. Santos, but I am not leaving you alone right now.” She risked a hand on Trinity’s shoulder and considered it a win when she didn’t pull away. “Where did the scalpel come from?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“All right.” That was a later conversation. “Trinity, be honest,” she said gently. Trinity finally lifted her head and looked at Baran, her eyes glassy and red. “What were you doing up here?”
“I just needed a breather. Don’t worry, I didn’t run out on any patients.”
“I wasn’t worried. I know you wouldn’t.”
“You haven’t even gone through a whole shift with me yet,” she scoffed. She pulled her undershirt up to wipe her eyes with the collar. “Give it another few hours, you’ll think the same thing everyone else does.”
“And what does everyone else think?”
“Don’t bullshit me, I know someone’s told you I’m the fucking problem child of this department. Go ahead and ask them.”
“I think there are… far bigger problems… than anything you could have caused.”
“Wrong again.”
“Whitaker told me about Langdon,” she blurted out. Trinity bristled, staring at Baran with a kind of fear she never wanted to see again, expecting another apocalyptic consequence for doing what was ethically and legally right. Baran just squeezed her shoulder and prayed it came across as comforting. “Robby should have told me when I arrived and I will be having a long, long discussion with him about this. You did nothing wrong.”
Trinity just watched her, unresponsive. She didn’t know why, and maybe it wasn’t the most professional thing in hindsight, but she reached out to tuck a loose lock of hair behind Trinity’s ear. Trinity closed her eyes and leaned into the touch. Baran kept her hand there, gently resting on her cheek, and attempted a reassuring smile.
“I know what it’s like,” she said softly, “to think you’ve done everything right and it still not be enough. To feel like you have no control over yourself. But you cannot let it stop you from doing what you were put on this earth to do. And you, Trinity, were meant to be an emergency physician. You belong here. I want you to know that.”
“Just keep grinding?” she mumbled.
“Exactly.”
“Are you going to make me repeat my R2 year?”
“No. That was meant to be an encouragement to stay on top of it, not a threat.”
“It sounded like a threat.”
“I realize that.” She swiped her thumb along the curve of Trinity’s cheekbone, wiping away a stray tear. “I do need you to talk to Dr. Jefferson when he gets here.”
“Figures.” Sitting up straight, she took a deep, shuddering breath and let her hands fall into her lap. “Don’t make it look like I had a breakdown. It’s bad enough Mel and Crash already saw me like this.”
Baran smirked. “I won’t, I promise. And, from what I saw, I think your fellow Pittlings are more understanding than you might think.”
Trinity whipped her head around to stare at Baran in shock, the life flooding back into her as she groaned, “Oh God, who told you about that?”
“Is it that bad?” she laughed.
“No, it’s… Ugh, it’s some stupid little nickname we got because we all started together last year. I think the night shift crew started it and it kind of spread. I know surgery knows about it because Crash said Dr. Shamsi actually brought it up to her once. Said it was ‘unprofessional.’”
“Ah, well.” A sour taste coated her tongue. “You know how surgeons can be.”
Baran regretted it the moment it left her mouth. Trinity winced, turning away and hiding her face, choking out, “Yeah, I know,” as she brought one arm up to cover her head again.
“I’m sorry, I… Where’s your phone?”
“What?”
“Open your contacts and give me it.”
Trinity looked at her like it was a trick, reluctantly logging into her phone and passing it to her attending. Opening a new contact, Baran typed in her name and number and sent herself a quick text so she had Trinity’s number saved before handing it back, their fingers brushing as Trinity frowned in confusion.
“That is my personal number,” she explained. “If you ever need to talk when we’re not on the floor, if you ever have any concerns you might want to discuss off the record, text or call.”
Trinity looked down at her phone; at Baran; at her phone again. When she finally smiled, Baran couldn’t ignore the way her own heart lit up with it.
“Isn’t that kinda unethical?” she joked.
“Mm. Not technically.”
“Wow, what a rulebreaker.”
“I have to set an example.”
“Right.” Trinity wiped her eyes one last time. The door to the roof opened, and she leaned her head back as Javadi and Dr. Jefferson stepped out. “Let’s get this over with.”
Baran stood and offered a hand to help her to her feet. She felt Trinity shaking, her grip tight and clinging long after both of them should have let go.
“I want you to know you can trust me, Trinity.”
She didn’t respond.
----
Trinity needed a distraction. She needed noise in an empty house. She needed to not think about anything to do with work. So maybe watching reruns of “Untold Stories of the ER” wasn’t the best choice but there was nothing good on literally any streaming service and it was cool to see the stranger traumas she prayed she never had to handle in real life.
Four more days, she told herself, rotting on the couch and staring at the TV. Four more days and life could kind of go back to normal.
Dr. Al-Hashimi helped her craft a “family emergency” story for when she came back, something about a sick cousin, to explain her two week long break. She thought it was a stupidly long reset period but it was implied her choices were this or a psych hold, so she chose the break far away from the hospital.
The only other people who knew were Victoria and Mel. Crash checked in and tried to act normal. There was definitely something to be said about her considering a psychiatry rotation. She was the first one to get a genuine laugh from Trinity since that night, by way of a voice message of her screaming, “When did you tell Princess about my birthday?!” It was light coming through a crack in the dark walls around her. It was a break from everything else, especially when she realized she could hear the laughter in Javadi’s voice, too.
Mel kept her updated on the most interesting cases. No names, no interpersonal drama mentioned, just presenting, treatment, and outcome if she knew. Trinity appreciated it. And she did ask if Trinity was okay a few times but didn’t push and Trinity appreciated that even more. Sitting at the kitchen table for a change of scenery, she watched the little typing bubbles pop up. Go away. Pop up again.
MEL-ATONIN: We should celebrate when you get back!
Me: Karaoke?
MEL-ATONIN: YES!
Huckleberry passed on a goodbye from Robby, one Trinity let herself sit with and be sick
with for a few hours before she gave it up. She knew it was happening, she just… wanted to say it in person. Dennis promised he told Robby she said goodbye, too, at least.
And Yolanda… she didn’t know. On purpose. She’d muted and hid any notifications from her, not interested in anything she had to say if she had anything at all. She was a little startled by herself, how she’d shoved her away on the roof. Not that she didn’t deserve it. Everything she already said to her that day and she thought she could swoop in and be the savior of the moment because Trinity always folded so easily with her. Not again. Not anymore.
The tears were just starting to well up again when the doorbell rang. Trinity groaned, throwing her head back, and dragged herself off the couch to answer.
And because the universe is cruel, she found Yolanda standing at her door.
Dark circles hung heavy beneath sleepless eyes, her curls frizzy and loose falling over her shoulders, and she smelled like cigarette smoke. She only smoked when she was on the edge of losing it. Trinity had seen Yolanda in a lot of states before, from the fallout of a bad surgery to lazy, happy morning-afters, but this was new. Even the ever-present emotionally una-fucking-vailable hardness was missing as she met Trinity’s shocked stare.
She was a wreck.
“Hey.”
“Uh, hey.” Trinity crossed her arms, leaning against the doorframe and wishing she’d made an attempt to put herself together before she answered. “What’s up?”
“Just… stopping by,” Yolanda mumbled, her voice rough. “Where’s Whitaker?”
“He got called in for a few hours until the night shift takes over.”
“I’m guessing he probably would have chased me off if he was home.”
“Yeah, he’s not your biggest fan right now.”
“Don’t think he ever was.” She glanced over Trinity’s shoulder at the messy living room. “Have you been sleeping on the couch?”
“Yeah, I have. It’s easier for Huckleberry to watch me and make sure I’m not trying to kill myself!” she snapped. “Since everyone thought I was going to!”
“You were on the roof-”
“What the fuck do you care? Oh, you got your wish, by the way, I’m finally seeing a therapist! And the trauma counselor, once a week, and Caleb is going to be on my ass if I miss an appointment, so there you go. Happy now?”
Yolanda scoffed. “Trinity, I didn’t mean it like that.”
“You didn’t mean it? That’s what we’re going with? Yolanda, why are you even fucking here?”
“I came to apologize. I…” She threw her hands in the air and wouldn’t look Trinity in the eye. “I fucked up. I’ve been fucking up with you and I didn’t realize how bad until now and I’m sorry.”
Trinity dug her fingers into her bicep and stared straight ahead praying it would make her seem somewhat more formidable than she felt in the moment. “Yeah. You have been. Thanks for noticing.”
As much as Trinity was trying to instigate an argument, something to give her an excuse to tell Yolanda to fuck off for good, Yolanda seemed hellbent on keeping them out of one. “Can I come in? Please?”
She should have slammed the door in her face. Instead, she silently turned around and went to sit on the couch, letting Yolanda come in and shut the door behind her, but she managed to shoot her a cold enough glare to keep her standing in the center of the room. It was all she had the strength for in the moment.
“Look, the thing between you and Langdon,” Yolanda continued, “I just wanted to forget it. I know that’s not an excuse-”
“You don’t think I want to forget it, too?”
“No, no, that’s not what I meant. I don’t want to think about what he did, and I don’t want you to have to think about it, and yeah! I’m frustrated with it! I want you to get help for it!”
“And you don’t think there was any other way you could have said it instead of ‘get a therapist?’”
“Will you let me talk?”
Trinity shot to her feet. “Will you be sincere for once!”
“I’m trying!”
“Not sure why! We’re casual, right? Last time I checked, that doesn’t usually include telling people you can talk me down when someone else already helped and you showed up late!”
Yolanda faltered, her mouth opening and closing, searching for a rebuttal she didn’t have. Trinity wanted it to feel good, to finally be on the front foot for once, and fucking hated when it didn’t, and hated even more when her eyes started stinging with unshed tears again. It was not the first time she cried in front of her, not by a long shot, but this was absolutely the worst time for it to happen.
“A rain check?” Her voice was weak and thready. “Blowing me off for fireworks? Really?”
“My roommate from college was in town, it was last minute.”
“Why couldn’t you just tell me that, then?”
“You get jealous!”
“You went radio silence on me for three days because Dr. Walsh said she wanted to see me on the night shift! Again, why do you care!”
Yolanda didn’t answer. She reached out, gentle and cautious, letting Trinity take her hand before coaxing her closer. Trinity couldn’t help it. She let Yolanda hold her tight, softly shushing her as she broke down in her arms for the thousandth time, threading her fingers into her hair and kissing her temple as she whispered apologies in her ear. Trinity followed without complaint as Yolanda brought her to the couch, leaning back against the arm so Trinity could lie on her chest and listen to her steady heartbeat with her head tucked beneath her chin.
She wasn’t sure how long it was before she stopped crying. Yolanda kept silent the whole time. She pressed small circles into the muscle knots in Trinity’s shoulders until the younger woman let go of a ragged breath and relaxed fully into her.
“I want to run something by you,” she murmured, curling a lock of Trinity’s hair around her finger. Trinity grunted a permission to speak. “I think we should submit a relationship disclosure form.”
Her eyes went wide. “What?”
“So they know not to consult me when you do your double residency on the surgical floor. Let your skills speak for themselves and no one can claim I helped you get it.”
When?
Trinity’s mind flashed back to that night on the roof. To Baran Al-Hashimi smiling at her, gently caressing her cheek and telling her she did belong at the Pitt. She did have a place there. Telling her she was meant to be an emergency physician and to not let anyone bully her into believing otherwise.
“I’m… not sure if I want to anymore.”
“Still.”
“You’re just telling me what I want to hear.”
“I’m not. Really.”
She couldn’t resist one final dig. “That’s not very casual, Dr. Garcia.”
“I figured it’s time I start acting like a grown-up,” Yolanda sighed. Trinity smiled. It was so easy to ignore the nagging voice in the back of her mind when Yolanda kissed the top of her head and traced the line of her cheekbone, an uncharacteristic display of tenderness no one got to see but her. “When do you go back?”
“Four days.”
“We’ll do it next week. I’ll get the form from HR and we can fill it out after dinner?”
“Okay.”
“That’s my girl.”
My girl.
Yolanda took the opportunity to grab the remote off the coffee table as Trinity fished her phone out of her pocket. “Oh God, ‘Untold Stories of the ER?’ You’re watching videos about your own job?”
“Not my job if I’m not the doctor onscreen.”
With her arm hanging off the side of the couch, where Yolanda couldn’t see, she opened Dennis’ contact and sent a quick text:
Don’t be mad…
She immediately turned her phone on silent to avoid the flurry of outraged texts she was bound to get when he saw it. As she went to close out of her messages, she saw one unread.
Baran: Hello, Dr. Santos. Just checking in again. How are you feeling?
----
Across the city, alone in a house that felt too big with only her in it, Baran sat in silence at her kitchen table. She had her phone in one hand and a glass of wine in the other and stared at the open conversation, anxiously awaiting a reply.
She got a thumbs-up.
you'd think they're telling her her father died instead she just got caught losing the idgaf war absolutely hysterical character
My hot take on the Pitt fandom is that people don’t know what to do with themselves when a show doesn’t have a villain
The necessary corollary to this post is that no one knows what to do with themselves when every single character in a show is a villain in their own right
Had to do something silly
Cowgirl is really bad at geography, I'm sure of it. Cleon's taking care of who's winning
Cowgirl, putting her hands over Rembrandt's eyes: Guess who!
Rembrandt: It's either Cowgirl or the cold, clammy hands of death.
Cowgirl, putting her hands away: It's Cowgirl!
Rembrandt: Dammit.
thinking about the "can we stay on track?" rembrandt and "can we change this track?" ajax contrast 😔
Thinking about how Somewhere in the City ends with Cleon's soft "survive the night" and then we get to go immediately into Reunion Square and subsequent events.
a remjax
Ajax and Rembrandt from the warriors musical 🥺👉👈
Writing Description Notes:
Updated 19th October 2025 More writing tips, review tips & writing description notes
Dialogue Tags
Facial Expressions
Masking Emotions
Smiles/Smirks/Grins
Eye Contact/Eye Movements
Blushing
Voice/Tone
Body Language/Idle Movement
Thoughts/Thinking/Focusing/Distracted
Silence
Memories
Happy/Content/Comforted
Love/Romance
Sadness/Crying/Hurt
Confidence/Determination/Hopeful
Surprised/Shocked
Guilt/Regret
Disgusted/Jealous
Uncertain/Doubtful/Worried
Anger/Rage
Laughter
Confused
Speechless/Tongue Tied
Fear/Terrified
Mental Pain
Physical Pain
Tired/Drowsy/Exhausted
Eating
Drinking
Warm/Hot
Cold/Freezing



