FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH
ONE-SHOT
pairing: dr. jack abbot x younger resident!reader summary: Youâre used to handling things alone, even if handling them means skipping meals, ignoring problems, and laughing before anyone can see where it stings. Then Jack Abbot starts noticing too much. He pays attention in that quiet, maddening way of his, all dry comments and practical solutions, until calling him your sugar daddy stops feeling like a joke and starts feeling like the only safe label for something youâre too terrified to name.
Because the problem with Jack Abbot isnât that he wants to take care of you. Itâs that you want to let him.
wc: 12.9k
a/n: and here it is, the accidental sugar daddy abbot fic i started over a month ago!! was initially toying with the idea to turn this into a multi-chaptered story but eventually settled on a one-shot instead because i have way too many ongoing fics i need to finish at some point lmao. i really wanted to take the sugar daddy trope and make it feel more grounded and in-character for jack, less flashy billionaire fantasy, more quiet practical care that gets way too intimate before either of you knows what to do with it. not beta read.
warnings: age gap, workplace power imbalance, attending/resident turned sd/sb dynamic, class/money insecurity, possessive/soft dom!jack, semi-public sex, piv, car sex, unprotected sex, creampie, dirty talk, praise kink, mild degradation, biting/marking, daddy kink adjacent, public humiliation, no use of y/n
MASTERLIST
By the third time your card declined in front of Jack Abbot, you were ready to walk into traffic and let Pittsburgh finish what your bank account started.
Not dramatically. Not even with much feeling.
Just a clean, practical exit from the kind of humiliation that made your skin feel too tight over your bones.
The cafeteria at PTMC was too bright for this hour, all hard fluorescent light and polished floors and the faint, permanent smell of fryer oil losing a war against antiseptic. Behind you, the emergency department pulsed on with its usual awful rhythmâmonitors chiming, stretchers squealing past, somebody coughing low and ragged, the sound dragging itself through the corridor, Dana Evans barking for someone to move their ass before she moved it for them. It was a living thing down here. Hungry. Overlit. Never satisfied.
You had a wrapped turkey sandwich in one hand, a bruised banana in the other, and that particular, skin-tight shame of being broke in public.
The cashier, who looked as tired as everyone else in the building, tried not to make a face at the register.
âSometimes itâs the chip,â she said.
âItâs not the chip,â you said, because apparently your mouth had decided the truth was less embarrassing than optimism.
You could feel the line behind you growing restless. A respiratory therapist with a Diet Coke. A med student in wrinkled scrubs whispering urgently into their phone. Dr. Whitaker, gentle-eyed and awkward, staring at the ceiling like he was trying to give you privacy by force of will. Somewhere near the coffee station, Santos was talking too loudly about a procedure she âabsolutely couldâve done faster if anyone had let her finish,â and Dr. Mohan was answering in that careful, measured way that made even a correction sound like sheâd considered the whole person first.
You shifted the sandwich lower against your palm.
âItâs fine,â you said, already turning. âI donât need it.â
A hand reached past your shoulder and tapped a card against the reader.
The machine beeped.
Approved.
You froze.
Jack Abbot stood close enough behind you that you caught the familiar edge of him before you looked upâthe clean, medicinal bite of hospital soap, the stale warmth of coffee, the faintest trace of sweat under scrubs after too many hours on his feet. He didnât look at you right away. He watched the cashier print the receipt with the same expression he wore when waiting for labs, jaw set, eyes tired, patience worn thin but not gone.
âBag?â the cashier asked.
âNo,â Jack said.
You stood there with the sandwich in one hand and the banana in the other, suddenly too aware of the bruised peel, the cold give of the sandwich through the cloudy plastic, the line behind you, and Jack Abbotâs shoulder beside yours.
You stared at him. âSeriously?â
He finally looked at you.
Jack Abbot always looked like heâd been awake since the Clinton administration. It shouldâve made him less attractive. It didn't. The exhaustion sat under his eyes and in the lines bracketing his mouth, but there was something about him that made tired look like discipline instead of defeat. His hair was a little mussed, his scrubs were creased at the hips, and his stance had that slight adjustment youâd learned to notice after months of seeing him around PTMCâthe subtle distribution of weight that came with his prosthetic leg and the old damage he carried without announcing it.
âWhat?â he said.
You lowered your voice. âYou didnât have to do that.â
âI know.â
âThatâs my lunch.â
âLooked like it.â
âYou paid for it.â
âSharp today.â
You huffed, heat crawling up your neck. âJack.â
That got you the smallest change in his face. Not a smile. He didnât hand those out recklessly. More like one corner of his mouth remembered humor existed and gave a half-hearted twitch before giving up.
âEat the sandwich,â he said.
âI was going to.â
âNo, you were going to put it back and pretend you werenât hungry.â
You opened your mouth.
Jackâs eyebrows lifted.
You closed it again.
Behind him, Whitaker looked down at his shoes like they might offer instructions, visibly desperate not to be part of this. Santos, unfortunately, had no such instinct.
âDamn,â she said, appearing at Jackâs shoulder with a coffee she had definitely not paid for recently enough to still be that hot. âAbbotâs buying lunch now? Is this a resident perk, or do I need to almost faint near the muffins?â
Mohan didnât look up from stirring sugar into her tea. âYou would never almost faint quietly enough to qualify.â
âI donât faint,â Santos said.
âYou got lightheaded during central line training.â
âThat was low blood sugar and a hostile learning environment.â Santos pointed two fingers toward Jack. âBut Iâm serious. I want in on the cafeteria patron program.â
Jack looked at her.
Santos looked back.
The silence lasted exactly long enough for her confidence to thin at the edges.
âOr not,â she said, taking a sip of coffee. âNoted. Very selective program.â
Dana passed behind the group with a stack of charts under one arm and a look sharp enough to split sutures. âIf any of you are done loitering in my cafeteria like itâs a damn wine bar, Iâve got three beds backing up, a grown adult arguing with registration, a kid melting down in triage, and a Lego stuck in one of their ear canals.â
Whitaker blinked. âWho? Adult guy or kid guy?â
Dana didnât slow down. âThatâs the part thatâs gonna disappoint you.â
Santos grinned. Mohan gave a small, resigned sigh. Jack, without looking away from you, said, âEat.â
Your face was still hot.
The sandwich felt heavier now that it had been purchased by him. Not because it was expensive. It was hospital cafeteria turkey on wheat, overpriced and bland, the cloudy plastic crinkling under your fingers every time your grip tightened. But Jack had noticed. That was the part you didnât know how to hold. Heâd seen the little calculation youâd tried to hide, the quiet defeat of deciding hunger could wait until later, and heâd stepped in with no fanfare. No pity. No soft voice.
Just a card tapped against a reader and a dry order to eat.
âI can pay you back,â you said.
Jackâs eyes dipped briefly to the sandwich and then back to your face.
âDonât.â
âI donât like owing people.â
âYou donât owe me.â
âThatâs not how money works.â
âIt is when I decide I donât care.â
You gave a small, disbelieving laugh. âThatâs very generous of you, Dr. Abbot.â
âDonât make it weird.â
You shouldâve let it go.
You really shouldâve.
But the humiliation had already burned off into something else, something warmer and more dangerous, because Jack was standing there with his tired eyes and that blunt, immovable steadiness, and you had never been good at leaving tension alone when you could poke it until it bit.
âCareful,â you said, tucking the sandwich against your chest. âPeople are gonna think youâre my sugar daddy.â
Whitaker made a strangled sound and turned toward the condiments with the strained focus of a man suddenly invested in ketchup packets, while Santos choked on her coffee hard enough that Mohan closed her eyes like she was choosing patience on purpose. Jack only stared at you, and for one awful second, you thought youâd gone too far.
Then Jack took the receipt from the cashier, crumpled it in one hand, and said, flat as a dead monitor, âPeople think a lot of stupid shit.â
He walked away before you could answer.
You watched him disappear through the cafeteria doors and into the arterial chaos of the ER, shoulders squared, limp controlled, already swallowed by the work waiting for him.
Santos leaned closer, grin wide enough to be medically concerning.
âOh, that was not nothing.â
âIt was lunch,â you said.
Mohan looked at you over the rim of her cup, thoughtful in a way that made you feel unfortunately examined. âHe noticed before anyone else did.â
You pressed the cold sandwich wrapper against your burning face.
Dana shouted from somewhere down the hall, âSantos, if youâre socializing instead of working, Iâm assigning you Lego ear.â
Santos snapped upright. âIâm not socializing.â
âGood,â Dana called. âThen you can do it faster.â
You stood there with Jackâs lunch in your hands and tried very hard not to smile.
It wouldâve been easier if that had been the end of it.
But Jack Abbot, you learned, was not a man who did anything halfway once he decided it made sense.
He didnât become flashy. He didnât start acting like some rich asshole in a bad romance novel, throwing cash around and waiting to be thanked for it. That wouldâve been easier to resist, probably. Less intimate, anyway. You couldâve rolled your eyes at that. You couldâve made fun of him. You couldâve called it ridiculous and kept your pride intact.
Jack was worse.
Jack was practical.
He bought your coffee the next morning because, as he put it, âI was already standing there.â He brought you half a container of pasta from the staff fridge because âRobby ordered too much and nobody here understands portions.â He left a protein bar beside your laptop during a night when the waiting room looked like every bad decision in Pittsburgh had agreed to arrive at once. He noticed when your left shoe started peeling at the sole and said nothing, which somehow made you more self-conscious than if heâd pointed at it.
Robby noticed before you did.
Or maybe Robby noticed everything and simply chose when to weaponize it.
It was just after noon on a bad shift, the kind where every hallway seemed to have sprouted a stretcher and every call light sounded like one more thing nobody had enough hands to answer. You were near the nursesâ station, trying to make sense of a scheduling conflict that had three departments blaming each other in increasingly creative language, when Robby came up beside you with a tablet in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other.
His hair was doing that thing where it looked like heâd run both hands through it enough times to qualify as a cry for help.
âIs Abbot feeding you?â he asked.
You nearly dropped your pen. âWhat?â
Robby glanced toward trauma two, where Jack was leaning over a chart with Dr. McKay, both of them listening while Javadi spoke quickly and carefully, too eager to be casual. Jackâs attention was fixed, but his expression had that faintly skeptical set that made med students stand up straighter by instinct.
âFood,â Robby said. âCoffee. Whatever else heâs pretending is a coincidence.â
âHe bought me lunch once.â
âUh-huh.â
âAnd coffee.â
âSure.â
âAnd maybe pasta.â
Robbyâs eyebrows rose.
You narrowed your eyes. âDo you have a point?â
âNot one worth putting in writing.â He took a sip of coffee, then winced like it tasted exactly as bad as he expected and somehow worse. âJust be careful.â
That killed the humor faster than you wanted it to.
Your eyes shifted back toward Jack before you could stop them.
Robby caught it. Of course he caught it. He was annoying that way, all ragged compassion and clinical perception, the kind of man who could call out a hemorrhage, a lie, and a panic attack in the same breath.
âHeâs a good guy,â Robby said, quieter.
âI know.â
âThat doesnât mean heâs uncomplicated.â
You swallowed. âI know that too.â
Robbyâs face softened by a fraction. It made him look older, which was unfair, because he already looked like the hospital had been chewing on him for years and kept forgetting to swallow.
âOkay,â he said. Then, because sincerity seemed to physically pain him if left unbalanced, he added, âAlso, if this turns into some HR nightmare, Iâm denying I noticed.â
âThereâs nothing to notice.â
âGreat. Love that. Very convincing.â
You looked back down at your schedule so he wouldnât see your face.
Across the department, Jack glanced up.
For a second, through the moving bodies and swinging privacy curtains and fluorescent glare, his eyes found yours.
He didnât smile.
He just looked.
That was becoming the problem.
Jack didnât flirt the way other men flirted. He didnât crowd you with charm or drown you in compliments or make a show of wanting to be watched. He looked at you like noticing was a form of pressure. Like every detail went somewhere and stayed there. The coffee order. The bad shoe. The way you tucked your hands into your sleeves when you were cold. The way your voice got flatter when you were trying not to admit something hurt.
You wished heâd be less good at it.
You wished you liked it less.
The car thing happened on a Thursday.
You were leaving PTMC after a shift that had somehow lasted ten hours despite only being scheduled for eight, which felt like a violation of both labor law and physics. Your head ached from fluorescent lights. Your feet throbbed. The parking garage smelled like wet concrete, exhaust, and old rain, with the city beyond it slick and dark under a spring storm that had rolled in hard after sunset.
Your car made the noise again when you turned the key.
Not the cute noise. Not the âhaha, sheâs old but reliableâ noise.
The expensive one.
A grinding, metallic cough dragged itself out from under the hood, followed by a rattle that sounded like several important pieces had started a fight and nobody was winning.
You shut the engine off immediately.
âPlease,â you whispered, resting your forehead against the steering wheel. âNot tonight.â
The car answered by doing absolutely nothing, which was at least better than exploding.
You tried again.
The sound came back worse.
A knock hit your window.
You screamed.
Jack stood outside in the harsh garage lighting, rain clinging to his shoulders, one hand braced on the roof of your car. He looked unimpressed by your survival instincts.
You rolled the window down halfway. âJesus Christ.â
âNo,â he said. âJust me.â
âDo you always lurk in parking garages?â
âOnly when cars sound like theyâre about to die.â
âItâs fine.â
Jack looked at the hood. Then at you.
âThatâs not a fine sound.â
âIt does that sometimes.â
âIt shouldnât do that ever.â
You tightened your grip on the steering wheel. âIâm taking it in next week.â
âYouâre not driving it until then.â
A laugh slipped out of you, brittle and defensive. âOkay, Dad.â
His expression didn't change, but something in his eyes sharpened.
Your stomach dipped.
Not fear. Not exactly.
Something else.
Jack leaned slightly closer to the open window. âPop the hood.â
âI donât need you toââ
âPop the hood.â
There was a particular tone he used in the ER when people were bleeding, lying, or being stupid about symptoms that could kill them. Apparently, your car had been triaged into that category.
You popped the hood.
The storm pushed rain sideways into the garage, misting the concrete in silver sheets beyond the open level. Jack moved around to the front of your car and lifted the hood, shoulders hunching slightly as he looked inside. He wasnât wearing a jacket, just dark scrubs under a gray zip-up that had seen better decades, sleeves pushed to his forearms. The overhead light caught the tendons in his hands, the salt at his temples, the hard concentration in his face.
It was obscene, honestly, watching a man become attractive over engine trouble.
He checked something, frowned, checked something else, then lowered the hood with more control than the situation deserved.
âDo not drive this,â he said.
You were already shaking your head. âI have to get home.â
âIâll drive you.â
âNo.â
âYes.â
âNo, Jack.â
He stared at you over the hood. âYou got a better plan?â
You did not.
You had forty-three dollars in your checking account, a rent payment looming like an execution date, and a car making noises you couldnât afford to identify. But admitting that felt worse than standing barefoot on broken glass.
âI can call someone,â you said.
âWho?â
The question was simple. Too simple.
That was the problem with Jack. He had no patience for the decorative lies people used to get through conversations. He stripped things down until you either told the truth or stood there bleeding around it.
You looked away first.
Rain ticked against the garage opening. Somewhere below, an ambulance siren rose and fell, dopplering into the wet city.
Jackâs voice dropped. âGet your bag.â
âI donât want to be a problem.â
âYouâre not.â
âI donât want you fixing everything.â
âIâm not fixing everything.â He came around to your side of the car, opened the door, and stood back enough to give you room. âIâm stopping you from driving a death trap.â
You didnât move.
Jack exhaled through his nose, not quite a sigh.
âYou can be mad in my car,â he said. âIt has heat.â
That was how he won.
Not with softness. Not with a speech.
Heat.
You grabbed your bag and got out.
Jackâs car was clean in the way a personâs car got when they didnât spend enough time in it to make a mess. There was an old coffee cup in the holder, a folded jacket in the back, a snow scraper on the floor, and a faint smell of leather, rain, and whatever soap he used that always made you think of hospital sinks and his hands.
He turned the heat on without asking. Then, after a second, he aimed one of the vents toward you.
You noticed.
You hated that you noticed.
Neither of you said anything as he pulled out of the garage. The rain blurred the windshield, smearing Pittsburgh into traffic lights and dark brick, ambulance bays and slick streets, the city looking bruised and alive under the storm. Jack drove with one hand low on the wheel, the other resting near the gear shift, fingers flexing once when his leg seemed to bother him.
âYou okay?â you asked before you could stop yourself.
His eyes stayed on the road. âYeah.â
âYour leg?â
âI said yeah.â
âRight. Sorry.â
His jaw worked.
Then, quieter, âLong day.â
That was as much as he usually gave. A door opened an inch, then locked again.
You nodded. âYeah.â
The wipers dragged water from the glass in steady, tired arcs.
At a red light, Jack said, âWhere do you take the car?â
You laughed weakly. âTo a mechanic who knows me by name and already looks tired when I walk in.â
âIâll call someone.â
âNo.â
âYou donât know who yet.â
âI know itâs going to involve you paying for something.â
The light turned green.
Jack drove.
You looked at him, incredulous. âYouâre not even denying it.â
âSeemed like a waste of both our time.â
âJack.â
âI know a guy.â
âOf course you know a guy.â
âIâm old.â
âYouâre not that old.â
That got you a glance. Brief, sharp, almost amused.
âNo?â
âNo,â you said, and then because you had apparently decided self-preservation was for other people, you added, âJust old enough to have a guy.â
The corner of his mouth moved.
You felt victorious and doomed at the same time.
âI can handle it,â you said, softer. âThe car. Iâll figure it out.â
âI know you can.â
âThen why are you doing this?â
Jack was quiet long enough that you thought he might not answer.
Then he said, âBecause figuring it out shouldnât mean hoping your brakes make it another week.â
Your throat tightened unexpectedly.
You looked out the window so he wouldnât see it.
The thing about being brokeâreally, really, brokeâwasnât just the lack of money. It was the math. The constant, grinding math of survival. A sandwich became a calculation. A repair became a catastrophe. A strange noise under the hood became a negotiation with God or luck or whatever indifferent force kept old cars alive for one more day. You got used to making everything stretch until stretching felt like living, and then someone like Jack came along and called it unsafe in that blunt, infuriating voice, and suddenly the whole thing looked different.
Not brave.
Not independent.
Just exhausting.
He pulled up outside your building and put the car in park. Rain ran down the windshield in crooked streams.
You didnât reach for the door handle.
âThank you,â you said.
Jack nodded once.
âI mean it.â
âI know.â
âIâll pay you back if your guy does anything.â
âNo.â
You shut your eyes. âPlease donât make me fight you in your car. Iâm tired.â
âI noticed.â
âStop noticing.â
âNo.â
Your eyes opened.
Jack was looking at you now, body angled slightly in the driverâs seat, face cut by passing headlights and dashboard glow. Up close, in the dim, the lines around his eyes looked deeper. So did the restraint. He wore it like part of the uniform, like scrubs and a stethoscope and whatever pain he kept filed away under function.
Your voice came out smaller than you wanted. âWhy?â
He didnât pretend not to understand.
âI donât know,â he said.
It was the first answer heâd given you that didnât sound like a diagnosis.
That made it worse.
You tried to smile, tried to make the air lighter before it crushed you. âThis is getting very sugar daddy of you.â
The joke landed differently in the dark.
You felt it. So did he.
Jackâs eyes dropped to your mouth for half a second. Maybe less. Long enough for your pulse to trip, not long enough to accuse him of anything. Either way, when he looked back up, his face had gone still in a way that made the warm air from the vents feel suddenly too hot.
âYou should go inside,â he said.
You nodded.
Neither of you moved.
Then his phone buzzed in the cup holder, snapping the moment clean down the middle. Jack glanced at the screen, saw Robbyâs name, and declined the call before typing something one-handed with the resignation of a man who knew better than to leave him unanswered too long.
You opened the door before you could do something stupid, like ask him to come upstairs.
âNight, Jack.â
His hand tightened once around the phone.
âLock your door.â
You smiled despite yourself. âYes, Doctor.â
His eyes lifted.
There it was again, that almost-smile. Faint. Dangerous.
âDonât start,â he said.
You got out before your face could betray you.
The car repair cost eight hundred and sixty dollars.
Jack didn't tell you this.
The mechanic did, because you called behind Jackâs back after getting one text that said, Carâs handled. Pick it up Friday.
Handled.
Like it was a chart. Like it was a consult. Like it was one of the million things at PTMC that needed to be assessed, fixed, signed off, and moved along.
You stood in a supply hallway with your phone pressed to your ear, your grip tightening around the case while the mechanic cheerfully explained that Dr. Abbot had already squared it away.
Squared it away.
You were going to kill him.
Unfortunately, when you found him, he was in the middle of resetting a dislocated shoulder with Robby at the bedside and King handing over medication with careful, focused precision. There was a teenage patient crying, his mother pacing, Dana telling everyone who wasnât useful to back up, and Jack looking exactly like a man who could not be murdered until after he finished being competent.
You had to wait.
That made you angrier.
By the time he stepped out, stripping off gloves and tossing them into the trash, you had worked yourself into something sharp enough to throw.
âEight hundred and sixty dollars?â you said.
Jack stopped.
Robby, behind him, stopped too.
Dana looked up from the desk.
Santos, who had the survival instincts of someone convinced she could talk her way out of anything, immediately leaned over the counter.
Jackâs eyes flicked over your face. âNot here.â
âOh, no, definitely here.â
Robby pressed his lips together and took one very deliberate step backward.
âCoward,â Dana muttered.
âExperienced,â Robby corrected.
Jack lowered his voice. âYou called the mechanic.â
âYou paid the mechanic.â
âYeah.â
âEight hundred and sixty dollars, Jack.â
âWouldâve been more if you kept driving it.â
You stared at him. âThat is not the point.â
âThat is exactly the point.â
âI told you I didnât want you fixing everything.â
âAnd I told you I wasnât letting you drive a death trap.â
âYou donât get to decide that for me.â
For the first time, something like frustration cracked through his calm.
âNo,â he said. âI donât get to decide everything for you. But I do get to decide what I do with my money.â
Dana made a low sound. âJesus.â
Santos whispered, âThis is better than whatever I was supposed to be doing.â
Mohan, passing with a chart, said, âYou're supposed to be working.â
You barely heard them.
Your whole focus had narrowed to Jackâs face, the stubborn set of his mouth, the tension in his shoulders. He looked tired. He always looked tired. But underneath it was something else now, something protective enough to be annoying and personal enough to hurt.
âI canât pay that back right now,â you said.
âI didnât ask you to.â
âThat doesnât make it better.â
âIt makes it done.â
You laughed once, without humor. âYouâre impossible.â
âUsually.â
âYou canât justââ You stopped, aware suddenly of how many people were pretending not to listen. Your voice dropped. âYou canât just keep doing this.â
Jackâs gaze held yours.
âDoing what?â
The question shouldâve been innocent, but it wasnât. Not after the lunches, the coffee, the rides, the mechanic, or the way Jack looked at you like you were a problem he wanted to solve with his bare hands. You stepped closer before you thought better of it.
âYou know what,â you said.
For a second, the department moved around you, loud and bright and indifferent, but you and Jack were still.
Then Dana slapped a chart down on the counter hard enough to startle everyone within ten feet.
âOkay,â she said. âAs much as Iâd love to watch whatever this is turn into a workplace training module, Abbot, bed nine needs you. Youââ She pointed at you. âTake a breath before you rupture something expensive.â
Jackâs mouth tightened, but he listened.
Of course he listened to Dana. Everyone did, eventually.
He stepped past you, close enough that his sleeve brushed your arm.
âFriday,â he said under his breath.
You turned your head. âWhat?â
âPick up your car Friday.â
Then he was gone.
Santos waited exactly three seconds.
âSo,â she said, bright-eyed. âHow does one apply for the Abbot scholarship fund?â
Dana pointed at her without looking. âBedpan in curtain three.â
Santos deflated. âDamn it.â
You hated how badly you wanted to laugh.
By Friday, when you picked up your car, there was a new pair of black nonslip clogs sitting in the passenger seat.
Not fancy. Not wrapped. Just sensible, comfortable work shoes in your size, made for twelve-hour shifts and the brutal, steady wear of the ER. A sticky note was pressed to the box in Jackâs blunt handwriting.
Your old ones were unsafe.
That was it. No apology, no explanation. Just another problem heâd noticed and solved before you could decide whether to be grateful or furious.
You sat in the driverâs seat for a long time, staring at the note, then laughed until your eyes burned.
The fundraiser was Robbyâs fault.
At least, that was what you told yourself, because blaming Robby was easier than admitting you had agreed to attend a hospital donor event while quietly hoping Jack would look at you in something other than scrubs.
PTMC held one every year, apparently. A grim little ritual where administrators, donors, board members, and exhausted medical staff gathered in a hotel ballroom to pretend the emergency department wasnât being kept alive by overworked staff, aging equipment, and the quiet fact that everyone had learned to make do with less. There would be speeches. There would be bad chicken. There would be wealthy people using phrases like âfrontline heroesâ while nurses calculated how many working monitors the cost of the floral arrangements couldâve bought.
You hadnât planned to go.
Then Gloria Underwoodâs office had needed extra administrative support for check-in, and Robby had said, âItâs easy money. Wear something nice. Try not to let the donors explain healthcare to you.â
Youâd said yes before checking your closet.
That was how you ended up in your apartment three nights before the event, sitting on the floor in a towel, surrounded by every dress you owned and the creeping realization that none of them worked. Too casual. Too tight in the wrong way. Too old. Too funeral. Too âcollege career fair,â stiff in all the wrong places and not nice enough to pass under ballroom lighting. One had a broken zipper. One still had a stain from a margarita incident you refused to revisit.
Your phone buzzed.
Jack:
Car still running?
You stared at the message, then at the graveyard of dresses around you.
You:
yes, dad
Jack:
Donât.
You smiled despite yourself.
You:
thank you, by the way for the shoes too even though youâre insane
Jack:
You going tomorrow?
You stared at the message for a second too long, then looked down at the heap of rejected clothes around your legs.
You:
maybe
Jack:
That means yes.
You shouldâve stopped there.
Instead, with the fatal confidence of a woman sitting half-naked on her bedroom floor and losing an argument with formalwear, you typed:
You:
it means maybe now i just need a dress that doesnât make me look like i wandered into the fundraiser by accident
The reply took longer than usual.
Jack:
Show me.
You stared at the message, suddenly aware of every inch of bare skin the pile of rejected clothes wasnât covering.
You:
the dress?
Jack:
What else would I mean?
Your face went hot.
You:
donât ask me that when iâm half naked on my bedroom floor
The typing bubble appeared.
Disappeared.
Appeared again.
Jack:
You have tomorrow off?
You stared.
Then stared harder.
You:
why
Jack:
Answer the question.
There were several smart things you couldâve said.
You said none of them.
You:
yes
Jack:
Iâll pick you up at 10.
Your stomach flipped.
You:
jack
Jack:
10:30 if youâre going to argue.
You:
you donât even know what i was going to say
Jack:
Iâm learning patterns.
You pressed your phone facedown against your thigh and sat there half-dressed and mortified, thighs pressed together, waiting for your body to stop reacting like heâd put his hands on you.
The next morning, Jack arrived at 10:28.
Of course he did.
He drove you to a small boutique outside downtown, the kind of place you wouldâve walked past without entering because the window displays didnât include prices, which meant the prices were rude. Jack parked, got out, and came around to your side before you had fully finished spiraling.
âI donât like this,â you said as he opened the door.
âYou havenât gone in yet.â
âThatâs why I still have hope.â
He gave you a look.
You stepped out, hugging your coat tighter around yourself. âJack, Iâm serious. Iâm not letting you buy me some expensive dress.â
âOkay.â
You blinked. âOkay?â
âYeah.â
âThat was too easy.â
âYou said some expensive dress.â He closed the car door. âFind a cheap one.â
You stared at him.
He headed for the shop.
âThat is not a loophole,â you called after him.
âItâs exactly a loophole.â
Inside, the boutique was too quiet, too soft, too expensive in ways it didnât need to announce. Pale wood floors, warm lighting, racks arranged with almost insulting confidence, the dresses hanging with more breathing room than your apartment closet could spare. The air smelled faintly of steamed fabric and perfume, and the woman behind the counter looked up with the calm precision of someone trained to know who was buying before anyone spoke.
You hated that. You hated more that Jack didnât seem to notice.
Or he did notice and simply didnât care.
He told her what you needed in a few clipped sentences: hospital fundraiser, semi-formal, comfortable enough to work check-in, not black unless you wanted black, shoes optional because you had shoes. He didn't mention size like a man trying to guess or gesture vaguely at your body like an idiot. He looked at you when that part came up and let you answer for yourself.
That tiny bit of respect did something inconvenient to your chest.
The saleswoman brought options.
You rejected the first three.
Jack rejected the fourth before you could come out of the dressing room.
âNo,â he said through the door.
You looked at yourself in the mirror, startled. âYou havenât even seen it.â
âI saw the sleeve.â
âYou can diagnose a bad dress by sleeve?â
âIâve diagnosed worse with less.â
You pulled the curtain back just enough to glare at him.
Jack sat in a low chair outside the dressing rooms, one ankle braced carefully, elbows on his knees, hands clasped. He looked absurd there, too solid and worn-in for the soft gold mirrors and velvet hangers, like someone had dropped a combat medic into a room built for silk and champagne.
His eyes flicked to the sliver of dress visible through the curtain.
âNo,â he repeated.
The saleswoman, traitor that she was, nodded. âHeâs right.â
You shut the curtain. âI hate both of you.â
The fifth dress was the problem.
You knew it before you opened the curtain.
The fabric skimmed instead of clung, soft where it needed to be, structured where it counted. It made you look like youâd meant to be invited. Like you hadnât spent the week calculating grocery money in your head and pretending exhaustion didnât count if you kept moving. The neckline was tasteful, but not innocent. The color warmed your skin without washing you out. You turned once in the mirror and felt something low in your stomach shift.
Confidence, maybe.
Or danger.
âLet me see,â Jack said from outside.
âYouâre bossy.â
âYes.â
âYou admit that way too easily.â
âIâm old.â
You smiled, then caught your own face in the mirror and watched the smile fade.
This was a bad idea. Not the dressâthe dress was perfect.
That was the bad idea.
You opened the curtain, and Jack looked up.
For a moment, he said nothing.
The shop noise seemed to thin around youâthe music, the soft movement of hangers, the saleswoman tactfully vanishing somewhere behind a rack. Jackâs gaze moved over you once, controlled enough to be deniable and slow enough to ruin you anyway. He didnât leer. He didnât smirk. He just looked, jaw set, eyes catching for half a second too long at your waist, your hips, the neckline of the dress, like the only thing keeping his hands to himself was the fact that you were standing under boutique lights instead of somewhere with a locked door.
His jaw shifted.
Your fingers tightened around the curtain.
âWell?â you asked, because silence was going to kill you.
Jack leaned back slightly, but it didnât make him look relaxed. It made him look like restraint had become physical.
âNo,â he said.
Your face fell before you could stop it.
Then he added, lower, âThatâs the problem.â
The words landed low enough to make your stomach tighten. You looked down at yourself, then back at him. âToo much?â
âNo.â
âThen what?â
His eyes returned to your face like it cost him effort.
âIt fits.â
It was such a stupid answer. Controlled, careful, almost uselessâand somehow hotter than a compliment, because you could hear everything he wasnât saying in the rough edge of his voice.
You stepped fully out, smoothing your palms down the front of the dress because you needed something to do.
âItâs probably expensive.â
âProbably.â
âJack.â
âYou like it?â
âThatâs not the point.â
âItâs my point.â
You exhaled, trying to laugh, but it came out thin. âYou canât keep buying me things.â
He stood. Not quickly, not dramatically. Just unfolded himself from the chair and came closer, stopping at a respectful distance that still felt indecent because his eyes hadnât left the dress, or you inside it.
âI can do what I want.â
âYou sound like a nightmare.â
âIâve been called worse.â
âIâm serious.â
âSo am I.â
You glanced toward the mirror, unable to hold his eyes. In the reflection, he stood behind you, hands at his sides, older and tired and steady, and you looked like something neither of you could keep pretending was professional.
The thought went through you too sharply.
You swallowed. âPeople are going to think Iâm exactly what I joked about.â
Jackâs reflection didnât move. âWhatâs that?â
You met his eyes in the mirror. âYour sugar baby.â
There. Said out loud in the warm boutique light, with the dress between you as evidence.
Jackâs gaze held yours. Then he stepped closer, just enough that his voice didnât have to carry. âThat what you want this to be?â
Your mouth went dry. The smart answer was no. The honest answer was more complicated, and the answer your body wanted to give had no business being spoken in public before noon.
So you made it worse on purpose.
âI donât know,â you said, tilting your head. âDepends on the benefits package.â
Jack looked at you for a long second. Then the almost-smile appeared, brief and devastating.
âChange,â he said. âBefore I regret asking.â
You spent the rest of the day pretending your hands werenât shaking.
Saturday night came wrapped in rain and reflected light.
The hotel ballroom looked too clean, too bright, and too expensive for a fundraiser built around people who spent most days trying to keep the whole place upright. White tablecloths. Gold fixtures. Centerpieces too tall for conversation. A stage at the far end with the PTMC logo projected behind the podium, clean and official and nothing like the controlled disaster of the emergency department. Nurses and doctors looked strangely exposed out of scrubs, like actors at the wrong rehearsal. Dana wore navy and carried herself with the same brisk authority she had at the nursesâ station, like the ballroom was just another crowded hallway she intended to get under control. Robby had put on a suit, but he wore it with visible reluctance, one hand already tugging at his tie before the first speech had started.
Dr. McKay arrived with her hair pinned back, already checking her phone for updates about her son. King stood beside her, fidgeting lightly with her bracelet while listening to Whitaker ramble about how strange it was to see everyone with ânormal arms,â which he then tried to explain and somehow made worse. Javadi looked polished and nervous, her mother somewhere in the room like a pressure system. Mohan was composed, elegant, and already listening to the opening remarks with the patient focus of someone rationing her tolerance carefully.
Santos wore a sharp dress and confidence like body armor.
âOkay,â she said when she saw you. âIâm going to say something, and I need you not to make it weird.â
âThatâs never a good opener.â
âYou look hot.â
âSantos.â
âWhat? I said donât make it weird.â
Mohan, passing behind her, said, âYou made it weird by announcing you werenât going to.â
Santos ignored her. âAbbot seen you yet?â
You busied yourself with the check-in list. âWhy?â
âBecause Iâm invested.â
âYou need a hobby.â
âI have one. Itâs being right.â
You were saved from answering by Dana appearing at your side with two badges and a look that missed nothing.
âYou doing okay?â she asked.
âYeah.â
Danaâs eyes swept over your face, then the room, then the entrance where Jack had not yet appeared. âUh-huh.â
âYou too?â
âMe too what?â
âNothing.â
Dana handed you the badges. âHoney, Iâve worked ER longer than some of these donors have been pretending to care about ER. I know when thereâs a thing.â
âThereâs not a thing.â
âThen stop looking at the door like youâre planning an escape route.â
You opened your mouth, found nothing useful, and looked back down at the check-in list.
Dana smirked and walked away.
Jack arrived ten minutes late in a dark suit, and something behind your ribs fluttered hard enough that you had to look away.
It wasnât fancy. That was the worst part. No special tailoring, no flashy tie, no clean magazine version of him. Just a dark suit on a man who looked like heâd rather be elbows-deep in a trauma bay than standing under chandelier light, his hair slightly unruly, his face tired, his posture adjusted in that familiar way. The jacket sat broad across his shoulders. The shirt opened at the collar because of course he looked better slightly undone. There was a roughness to him the room couldnât soften, something lived-in and disciplined and worn close to the bone.
Robby said something to him at the entrance.
Jack answered without smiling.
Then his eyes found you.
Everything else blurred.
Not fully. You were still aware of the check-in table under your hands, the murmur of donors, Santos whispering âoh my godâ somewhere behind you with absolutely no attempt to hide it. But Jack looked at you in that dress, and the rest of the room slipped out of reach for one dangerous second.
He walked over slowly.
âHi,â you said, which was embarrassing because you knew more words than that.
Jackâs gaze moved over your face first, then the dress, then back up slowly enough that your skin warmed beneath the fabric heâd bought.
âHi.â
You tried for a smile. âYou clean up okay.â
âI was going to say that.â
âYou can still say it.â
âNo.â
âToo generous?â
âToo easy.â
His eyes dipped again, just once, and something in your stomach tightened before he seemed to remember the room around you. He reached into his jacket and pulled out a folded piece of paper.
You stared. âWhat is that?â
âReceipt.â
âFor the dress?â
âFor the car.â
Your stomach dropped. âJack.â
âRelax.â He slid it across the check-in table with two fingers. âIt says paid. Thatâs all.â
You looked down.
Paid.
Your throat tightened.
âYou said you didnât like owing people,â he said.
âI still owe you.â
âNo.â His voice stayed quiet, but something in it made the word feel less like comfort and more like a line drawn in permanent ink. âYou donât.â
You looked up at him, and for a second the ballroom felt too bright, too crowded, too public for the thing trying to break open in your chest.
Before you could answer, Robby appeared beside Jack with the timing of a man either doing you a favor or robbing you of a bad decision.
âAbbot,â he said, âUnderwood wants us near the front for the photo.â
Jackâs voice came out clipped. âNo.â
âYeah, thatâs what I said. She used the phrase âvisible leadership.ââ
âThat makes it worse.â
âI agree.â
Robby looked at you then, eyes flicking once between your dress and Jackâs face. His mouth twitched.
âYou look nice,â he said.
âThank you.â
âAbbot looks like heâs about to be taken out behind the building and shot, but thatâs formal for him.â
Jack gave him a look.
Robby clapped him lightly on the shoulder. âCome on, visible leadership.â
Jack didnât move immediately.
His hand came to rest at the edge of the check-in table, close enough to yours that your fingers couldâve brushed if you shifted an inch.
âDonât disappear,â he said.
Your pulse kicked.
âIâm working.â
âAfter.â
Then Robby dragged him away with a level of cheer that was clearly retaliatory.
You watched Jack go and tried to remember how to do your job.
For a while, the event was exactly as awful as promised.
Speeches about resilience. Applause that sounded expensive. Donors talking about âthe Pittâ like it was a concept instead of a place where every decision had a body attached to it. Gloria Underwood spoke with smooth authority while Robby stared at the middle distance like a man practicing astral projection. Langdon appeared late and left early, moving through the edge of the room with a smile that didnât quite reach his eyes. Collins was mentioned by someone near the bar, her name landing with that particular hospital weight of people who had been part of the machinery and then werenât there in the same way anymore.
You checked people in. You directed donors toward their tables. You smiled until your cheeks ached.
And Jack kept finding you.
Not obviously. Not enough for anyone to call it hovering. But he passed behind your chair and set a glass of water near your hand. He appeared during a lull with a plate from the buffet because âyou werenât going to get one.â He stood beside you while an orthopedic surgeon whose name you immediately forgot talked at you for seven minutes about golf, his presence quiet and solid and just intimidating enough to make the man eventually wander away.
At one point, you leaned toward him and murmured, âThis is very attentive of you.â
He didnât look down. âYou looked like you were going to stab him with a pen.â
âI was.â
âBad idea.â
âBecause violence is wrong?â
âBecause youâd still have to finish check-in.â
You laughed into your glass.
Jack looked at you then, and the humor in his face faded into something warmer before he caught it.
You saw him catch it.
That was the dangerous part.
Near the end of dinner, a donor with silver hair and a smile like a polished blade cornered Jack near the bar. You recognized him vaguely from the check-in list, one of those names with a foundation attached, the kind of man who spoke slowly because he expected people to wait for the privilege of his point. His wife stood beside him in pearls, looking around the ballroom with faint disappointment.
You were close enough to hear because youâd gone to retrieve extra place cards from the side table.
âDr. Abbot,â the man said, clapping Jack on the shoulder like they were old friends and not strangers separated by several tax brackets and a moral canyon. âHell of a turnout. You ER people clean up better than expected.â
Jackâs smile was minimal and false. âWe try.â
The manâs eyes shifted to you.
You felt it like cold water.
âWell,â he said. âSome of you more than others.â
Jackâs face changed by degrees. Anyone else mightâve missed it. You didnât.
âThis isââ Jack began.
The man cut in with a laugh. âNo, no, let me guess. Youâre the resident Iâve been hearing about.â
His wife made a soft sound. Not quite a laugh. Not quite disapproval.
Your fingers tightened around the place cards.
Jack went still.
The man looked pleased with himself, encouraged by his own cruelty. âAbbot and one of his young residents,â he said, eyes moving over you slow enough to make the dress feel suddenly too visible. âPeople do talk.â
Jackâs voice came out clipped. âDonât.â
âRelax, Jack. Iâm joking.â He lifted his glass slightly, like that made it harmless. âI just didnât think you were going to start making public appearances with your little girlfriend now.â
The words entered you cleanly: little girlfriend. Not girlfriendâthat wouldâve been embarrassing enough. Little, like you were an accessory, a midlife crisis in a nice dress, something young and decorative Jack had brought out because he could. Something people could reduce in one glance and one ugly little adjective.
Heat rushed to your face so fast it felt like pain, and still you smiled automatically, hating yourself for it.
âItâs notââ you started, because apparently your first instinct was to make yourself smaller for the comfort of a man who had just insulted you.
Jackâs voice cut through yours. âDonât call her that.â
The donor blinked. So did you. The room didnât stop, not exactlyâthe music kept playing, silverware still clinked, someone laughed too loudly near the stageâbut the air around the four of you tightened.
The donorâs smile twitched. âEasy, Doctor. No harm meant.â
âIâm not interested in what you meant.â
Jack didnât raise his voice or step forward. He simply stood there in his dark suit, tired eyes gone cold, body held in a kind of controlled restraint that made the donorâs hand fall from his shoulder.
âIf youâve got something to say about me,â Jack continued, âsay it to me. Leave her out of it.â
The wife looked away first. The donorâs face colored.
âNo offense intended.â
Jackâs gaze didnât move. âYou donât get to decide that.â
Your breath caught.
People were starting to notice. Not enough to make a scene, not enough for anyone to step in, but enough that the space around you felt suddenly brighter. Dana had turned slightly from the bar, her attention fixed and assessing. Robby watched from near the stage, glass lowered now. Even Santos had gone still, the eager curiosity wiped off her face by the look on yours.
You couldnât stand any of it. Not the attention. Not the humiliation. Not the awful, sharp thrill of Jack defending you like he had any right to. Like he wanted the right.
You set the place cards down.
âI need some air,â you said.
Jackâs head turned toward you immediately. âWait.â
But you were already moving.
You slipped out of the ballroom and into the corridor, then through a side door onto a covered terrace overlooking the wet street below. The rain had softened to a mist, silvering the railings and turning the city lights hazy. Cold air hit your skin, raising goosebumps along your arms where the dress left them bare.
You gripped the railing and forced one breath in, then out. In, then out. In. Out. It didnât help. The door opened behind you, because of course it did.
You laughed under your breath because the tears were already gathering hot behind your eyes, making the terrace lights blur at the edges, and you refused to let them fall hereânot in the dress Jack bought, not with your hands locked around rain-cold steel, not because some rich asshole had found the ugliest name for what you were already afraid this looked like.
âYou shouldnât have done that,â you said.
Jack let the door close behind him. âDone what?â
You turned on him. âMade it worse.â
âThey made it worse.â
âNow everyone thinks Iâm exactly what he said.â
His face changed at that, anger tightening somewhere beneath the surface, but not at you. Never quite at you.
âThey donât know what you are.â
Your chest pulled tight.
âAnd what am I?â
The question came out too vulnerable to take back.
Jack didnât answer right away.
Mist clung to his suit jacket, darkening the shoulders. Behind him, warm light spilled through the glass door, all gold and soft edges, turning the ballroom into something distant and unreal. Out here, the air smelled like rain on stone, cold metal, wet city streets below. Everything was sharper than it had been inside. The railing under your hands. The damp hem of your dress against your legs. The silence between his breath and yours.
He looked so out of place and exactly right, a man built for crisis standing in the aftermath of one he couldnât stitch closed.
You hated that you wanted him to say it.
You hated more that he looked like he wanted to.
Instead, he said, âNot that.â
A hard little laugh left you before you could stop it. âThatâs not an answer.â
âItâs the one Iâve got.â
âGreat.â
Jack came closer, stopping beside you but not touching. The restraint was worse than touch. You could feel him there anyway, the heat of his body cutting through the cold night, the careful space he left like distance could still save either of you.
You stared out at the rain-blurred city. Headlights smeared over the street below. Somewhere, a siren rose and faded, thin and familiar enough to make your stomach twist.
âYou bought the dress,â you said.
âYes.â
âYou fixed my car.â
âYes.â
âYou buy my food. You show up. You pay for things before I can even figure out how to say no.â
Something moved in his jaw, but he didnât interrupt.
âWhat do you think people are going to call that?â
âI donât give a shit what people call it.â
âI do.â
âThen tell me what you call it.â
The words took the air out of the terrace.
You looked at him.
Jackâs eyes held yours, tired and dark and unflinching. He wasnât letting you hide in the joke this time. He wasnât letting himself hide either. That was the terrifying part. The thing between you had been allowed to live as banter because neither of you had forced it to stand under direct light.
Sugar daddy. Old man. Doctor. Daddy.
All those little names you used to turn intimacy into comedy before it could ask something of you.
Now Jack was standing there asking.
Tell me what you call it.
Your mouth felt dry.
âI call it confusing,â you said.
His expression shifted.
You kept going because stopping felt worse. âI call it you being too good at noticing things I wish you wouldnât. I call it you making it really fucking hard to feel normal around you. I call it embarrassing when someone says the quiet part out loud and I realize I donât even know how to defend myself because I donât know what weâre doing.â
Jackâs hands were still at his sides, but nothing about him looked relaxed.
You swallowed. âAnd I call it unfair that you get to act like this is all practical when you look at me like that.â
His voice dropped. âLike what?â
You shook your head. âDonât.â
âLike what?â
âLike you already know what I look like under the dress.â
The words left you too soft, too honest, and Jack inhaled slowly. Neither of you moved while rain whispered beyond the overhang and the ballroom noise pressed faintly through the door, muffled and useless, like it belonged to a different night.
Then he said, rougher than before, âI donât.â
The words went through you slowly, leaving heat in places they had no right to reach.
His eyes lowered, not all the way down your body this time. Just to your mouth.
âBut Iâve thought about it.â
The terrace went silent.
Or maybe your body stopped receiving sound from anything that wasnât him.
You stared at him, suddenly aware of everything at once: the dress clinging where the mist had touched it, the cold air slipping beneath the hem, the damp railing at your back, the small, charged space between your body and his. Jack hadnât touched you, but the way he looked at you made it feel like heâd already imagined where his hands would go first. The want in his face wasnât polished or easy. It looked dragged out of him, unwilling and hungry, like every careful thing in him had finally started losing.
âJack,â you whispered.
âI know.â
âYou donât know what I was going to say.â
âYes, I do.â
You stepped closer, just enough to watch his control take the hit.
âWhat was I going to say?â
His eyes lifted.
âThat we shouldnât.â
The truth of it sat there between you, almost laughable.
You shouldnât. He shouldnât. The age gap was there, humming under the surface. The hospital. The money. The care. The fact that everyone seemed to have noticed before either of you had admitted it out loud. The fact that Jack carried enough damage to make most people step carefully, and you were standing there in a dress he bought, wanting him to ruin every careful thing about you.
âYouâre right,â you said.
Jack nodded once, like the verdict had been delivered.
Then you added, âThat's what I was going to say.â
His eyes sharpened.
You took one more step.
âBut itâs not what I want.â
For the first time all night, Jack looked shaken.
Not much. Heâd never give that much away in public. But you saw it in the slight part of his mouth, the break in his breathing, the flicker of something raw beneath the restraint.
âSay that again,â he said.
The words nearly undid you.
You lifted your chin because if you were going to tell the truth, you were going to do it with your head held high.
âI donât want you to stop.â
Jack looked at you for one long, unbearable second, then lifted his hand slowly enough to give you every chance to step back.
You didnât.
His knuckles brushed your jaw first, careful in a way that made your whole body ache. Not rough. Not yet. Worse than rough, maybe, because he was still holding himself back and you could feel the effort in every inch he didnât take.
âYouâre not my little girlfriend,â he said.
Your chest tightened. âNo?â
âNo.â His thumb shifted under your chin, tipping your face up by degrees, not forcing you, just making it impossible to look anywhere else. âYouâre not little. Youâre not a joke. And youâre sure as hell not something Iâm ashamed of wanting.â
The words sank through you, hot and low, settling in every place he still hadnât touched. Jackâs eyes dropped to your mouth and stayed there long enough to make the choice for both of you.
Then he kissed you.
It wasnât frantic at first.
That wouldâve been easier.
It was deliberate, a firm press of his mouth to yours, steady and devastating, like he had finally decided to stop lying but still hadnât given himself permission to forget where you were. His hand held your jaw; the other stayed at his side, fingers curled tight like touching you anywhere else might finish what the kiss had started.
You made a small sound against his mouth.
That was what broke it.
Jack stepped into you, guiding you back until the rail met your spine, and the kiss turned filthy in one sharp, breath-stealing shift. His mouth opened wider, tongue pushing past your lips to lick deep and slow against yours, wet enough to make your knees weaken, sure enough to make heat pool low in your gut. His breath came rough through his nose, his hand sliding from your jaw to the side of your neck, thumb tucked beneath your chin like he wanted to feel the exact second you stopped fighting him and melted under his palm.
You grabbed his jacket.
He made a low sound, almost a warning.
You pulled him closer anyway.
The rail pressed against your back. Damp air cooled your bare arms. Inside, beyond the glass, the fundraiser glowed on with its speeches and donors and useless flowers, but out here Jackâs body cut off the light, his mouth hot and sure, his hand at your neck keeping you exactly where he wanted you.
When he dragged himself back, he didnât go far.
His forehead hovered near yours. His breathing was harsher now. So was yours.
âThis is a bad idea,â he said.
You laughed, breathless enough that it came out softer than you meant. âYou kissed me.â
âI know.â
âSo your professional opinion is hypocritical.â
His mouth twitched, but his eyes stayed dark, fixed on yours with a heat that made it impossible not to remember his tongue in your mouth. He looked like he was still tasting you, like he was one wrong word away from dragging you back against the railing and making a mess of that pretty, expensive dress.
âYou keep talking,â he said, voice low enough to feel like it belonged between your legs instead of in the open air, âand Iâm going to forget weâre still at a hospital fundraiser.â
Liquid heat shot through you, sharp and shameless. You curled your fingers higher into his lapels. âIs that supposed to scare me?â
âIt should.â
âIt doesnât.â
Jack searched your face for one last sign that you wanted him to be better than this.
You didnât.
His thumb dragged once along the side of your neck, slow enough to make your thighs press together under the dress, then he stepped back and opened the door.
âCome on.â
âWhere?â
His eyes held yours.
âMy car.â
The walk through the ballroom shouldâve been humiliating. Maybe it was. You couldnât tell. Jack stayed close without touching you, which somehow looked worse after what had just happened, like distance had become another form of confession. Your mouth still felt swollen from his, your skin too awake beneath the dress, your whole body lit with the kind of want that made every normal step feel rehearsed.
Robby saw you first, because of course he did. His eyes moved from Jackâs face to yours, then back again, and he lifted his glass slightlyânot smiling, just acknowledging the inevitable.
Dana caught your eye from near the bar with one eyebrow raised. Santos looked ready to say something disastrous until Mohan turned her gently but firmly toward the dessert table. McKay glanced over, clocked enough to know better, and immediately pulled Whitaker into a conversation he looked relieved to have guidance for. Javadi watched for half a second too long, then looked away like sheâd remembered curiosity had consequences.
Jack ignored all of them.
You loved and hated him for it.
The elevator ride down was worse.
Mirrored walls. Soft music. Your reflection beside his. His shoulder inches from yours. The phantom feel of his hand still on your neck. Neither of you speaking because speech had become a loaded weapon and you were both already wounded.
In the parking garage, the air smelled like rain and concrete again.
Jack unlocked the car.
You stopped by the passenger door, suddenly aware of the line you were crossing. Not the moral one. That had been smudged for weeks. This was more physical. More real. A door. A backseat. His face in the dim garage light, turned toward you with all that want and all that control and all the consequences waiting behind both.
He saw the hesitation immediately.
Of course he did.
âYou can change your mind,â he said.
The words loosened something in you.
Not because you wanted to.
Because he meant it.
You stepped closer. âIâm not changing my mind.â
Jackâs eyes searched yours.
âTell me if I do something you donât want.â
âI will.â
âI mean it.â
âI know.â
He nodded once.
Then you said, quieter, âDo you?â
His face shifted.
âDo I what?â
âKnow what I want.â
The garage seemed to hold its breath.
Jack opened the back door.
âGet in,â he said.
Not loud. Not cruel.
Just low enough to go through you like a match.
You got in.
The door shut behind you, and for one suspended second you were alone in the dark leather backseat with your heartbeat, the rain ticking somewhere beyond the garage, and the reflection of Jack moving around the car in the tinted window.
Then the opposite door opened.
He slid in beside you, too big for the space, too warm, too close. The dome light cut over his face for a second before it faded, leaving him in shadow and stray fluorescent spill. His knee brushed yours. His hand came up, not touching yet, braced against the seat near your hip.
âYou still think this is about money?â he asked.
Your breath caught.
You shook your head.
âWords.â
âNo.â
âNo, what?â
âNo, I donât think itâs about money.â
His gaze dropped to your mouth.
âWhatâs it about?â
You couldâve said care.
You couldâve said want.
You couldâve said every soft, terrifying thing his hands had been saying for weeks with coffee cups and repair bills and the new shoes you wore until they stopped hurting.
Instead, because you were trembling and stubborn and still you, you whispered, âYour sugar daddy complex.â
Jackâs eyes flashed.
Then he kissed you hard enough to knock your head back against the seat and it was nothing like the terraceâcareful and slow and weighted with confession. This was hungry. His teeth caught your bottom lip, tugged, and the sound you made was swallowed by his mouth as his tongue slid against yours, wet and deep and tasting like the whiskey he'd barely touched all night. His other hand found your waist, gripping the silk of the dress, bunching it, pulling you across the seat until your hip hit his and you gasped into his mouth.
"Jackâ"
"Don't talk." His lips dragged to your jaw, your throat, the spot behind your ear that made you arch. "Justâlet me â"
His hand slid up your thigh, pushing the dress higher, and the leather was cool against the backs of your legs but his palm was hot, rough, callused from years of work and combat and things he never talked about. You spread for him without thinking. He made a sound against your neckâapproval, hunger, reliefâand his fingers pressed higher, found the wet heat through your underwear, and stopped.
"Fuck," he breathed. "You're alreadyâ"
You bit his earlobe. "Your mouth on the terrace did that."
He laughedâa low, broken thingâand his fingers hooked the edge of your panties, dragged them down your thighs. You lifted your hips to help, and he dropped them somewhere on the floor mat, already forgotten, already gone. His hand came back wet.
"Look at me."
You did. His eyes were dark, half-lidded, his breathing ragged. The garage light caught the silver in his beard, the flush rising up his neck, the way his thumb was already circling your clit like he'd done it a thousand times before. He hadn't. But he knew exactly what he was doing.
âI tried to be careful with you,â he said, voice rough, his fingers sliding through your slick folds, gathering, teasing, âI tried so fucking hard. Then I walked in and saw you at that table in the dress I bought you, and I knew I was done.â
Your breath hitched as his middle finger pressed inside you, just the tip, just enough to make your hips buck.
"âand you knew, didn't you?" He pushed deeper, slow, watching your face. "Knew what it was doing to me."
You couldn't answer. His finger was inside you, thick and deliberate, curling, finding the spot that made your vision blur. Then a second finger joined it, stretching, and you heard yourself whimperâhigh and desperate and not caring who heard.
"That's it," he murmured. "Let me hear you."
He worked you open like he had all night, like the parking garage was empty, like the world had shrunk to the space between his fingers and your cunt. His thumb pressed your clit in slow circles while his fingers pumpedânot hard, not fast, just deep and aching, stretching you until you were dripping down his hand, until your nails dug into his shoulder through his jacket.
"JackâI needâ"
"I know what you need."
He pulled his fingers out slowly, deliberately, and you watched him bring them to his mouth. Watched his tongue slide across his knuckles, tasting you, his eyes never leaving yours. The sight of itâthis tired, controlled man in his undone suit, licking your wetness off his fingers like it was the best thing he'd tasted all nightâmade your hole clench around nothing.
"Get on top of me."
It wasn't a question. He was already reaching for his belt, the buckle rasping open, the sound sharp and final in the close air of the car. You climbed over him, the dress bunching around your waist, your knees finding the leather on either side of his hips. His cock was hard beneath his briefs, straining against the fabric, and you reached down and wrapped your hand around it.
He hissed through his teeth. "Fuck â"
He was thick. Hot. The head slick with something that might have been precum, might have been your imagination, but when you stroked him once, slow, his hips bucked into your palm.
"If you keep doing that," he said, his voice strained, "this is going to be very embarrassing for me."
You laughedâbreathless, wildâand leaned down to kiss him. "Then stop me."
He didn't.
His hand found your hip, guided you forward, and the head of his cock nudged against your entrance. Wet. Ready. The two of you hovered there, breathing each other's air, and his forehead pressed against yours.
"Tell me you want this."
"I want this." Your voice was barely a whisper. "I want you. Please, Jackâ"
He pushed inside you.
The stretch was a shockâfull and deep and so much more than his fingers had promised. You gasped, your nails digging into his shoulders, your head falling back as he filled you inch by inch, until you were seated in his lap, his hips flush against yours, his cock buried to the hilt inside your tight, wet heat.
"Fuck," he breathed. "Fuck, you feelâ"
He couldn't finish. His hands found your hips, held you there, and for a moment neither of you moved. Just the feeling of him inside you, the throb of his pulse through his cock, the way your body adjusted, accepted, wanted.
Then you moved.
Slow at firstâa roll of your hips that made his eyes roll back, a tilt of your pelvis that drove him deeper. His grip tightened on your waist, guiding, and you found the rhythm together: him thrusting up as you sank down, the slap of skin loud in the enclosed space, the wet sound of your bodies meeting.
"Look at you," he said, his voice rough, his eyes fixed on where you were joined. "Taking all of me. Fucking yourself on my cock in a parking garage."
You moaned, riding him harder, the dress bunched around your waist, the silk skin-warm and bunched up. His thumb found your clit again, pressing, circling, and the pleasure coiled tight in your belly, hot and sharp and building.
"The dress," you gasped. "You bought me this dressâ"
"I bought it so I could take it off you." He tugged at the strap with his teeth, the fabric slipping down your shoulder, exposing your breast to the dim light. His mouth was on it instantlyâhot, wet, his tongue circling your nipple before he sucked, hard, and you cried out, your rhythm faltering.
"Say it again." His mouth against your skin. "Say sugar daddy again and see what happens."
You laughed, breathless, your hips grinding against him. "Sugar daddy."
He bit your shoulderânot hard, but enough to make you gaspâand then his hand was in your hair, pulling your head back, forcing you to meet his eyes.
"Then take what I give you." His voice was low and rough and it made your pussy squeeze around him. "Take this cock like you've been wanting to since I fixed your goddamn car."
You did. You rode him harder, faster, the leather squeaking beneath your knees, the car rocking with the motion, your breath coming in short, desperate gasps. His hand stayed in your hair, his other gripping your hip hard enough to bruise, and he thrust up into you with a rhythm that was pure instinctâhungry, claiming, the restraint he'd held for weeks finally snapping.
"That's it," he growled. "That's my girl. Taking what she needs."
"JackâI'm closeâ"
"I know. I can feel you. You're squeezing me so fucking tightâ"
His thumb pressed harder on your clit, circling faster, and the orgasm hit you like a waveâsudden and overwhelming, your vision white, your back arching as your cunt clamped down on his cock, pulsing, milking, the pleasure so sharp it was almost pain. You heard yourself cry outâhis name, a curse, something that might have been a sobâand he kept thrusting through it, drawing it out, letting you ride him through the aftershocks.
"Fuckâ" His voice broke. "I'm going toâ"
"Inside me." You grabbed his face, forced him to look at you. "I want it. Please."
He came with a groan that was almost a prayer, his hips driving up one last time, his hand gripping your hip so hard it would leave marks. You felt itâhot and thick, pumping into you, filling you, his cock twitching with each pulse, his breath ragged against your lips. The sensation pushed you into a second, smaller climax, your body clenching around him, drawing out every drop.
For a long moment, neither of you moved. His forehead rested against yours. His breathing was harsh, uneven, mingling with yours in the close air. The car smelled like sex and sweat and the faint, stubborn trace of hospital soap beneath his cologne, and your thighs were slick and trembling, and his cock was still half-hard inside you, and it was the most real you'd felt all night.
Then he laughed.
A low, disbelieving sound, his shoulders shaking against yours. You started laughing too, breathless and giddy, and you kissed himâmessy, open-mouthed, tasting salt and spit and the whiskey he'd barely touched.
"Well," he said, pulling back just enough to look at you. "That wasâ"
"Stupid," you supplied.
"Reckless."
"A really bad idea."
His hand came up to cup your face again, his thumb tracing your cheekbone. "Worth it."
You kissed him again, slower this time, and you felt him smile against your mouth. When you pulled back, you were still straddling him, his cock still softening inside you, and the reality of it settled into your bones like warmth.
"We should probablyâ" you started.
"Yeah." He didn't move. "In a minute."
His hand found yours on his chest, lacing your fingers together, and the garage light caught the gray in his hair and the tired lines around his eyes and the way he was looking at you like you were the first real thing he'd seen in years.
"I'm not going to pretend this was casual," he said.
"Good," you said. "Because it wasn't."
He helped you clean up with the wet wipes he found in the glove compartmentâabsurd, practical, so perfectly himâand then he helped you rearrange the dress, his hands careful now, almost reverent, smoothing the silk over your hips like he was putting something precious back together. The fabric was wrinkled now, carrying the memory of his hands, and when you looked at yourself in the window reflection, you saw the flush on your chest, the bite mark on your shoulder, the way your hair had come loose from the careful updo.
You looked like someone who had been thoroughly, completely, indisputably wanted.
He watched you adjust the strap, his eyes following the small, careful movement like it mattered. You sat half-turned against him in the backseat, put back together enough to face the world again, though both of you knew exactly what had happened here. Jackâs hand rested at the back of your neck, thumb moving slowly against your skin, and in the dim garage light he looked less like the man everyone trusted in a crisis and more like someone whoâd finally let himself want something he couldnât triage.
âWhat?â you asked.
He shook his head.
âDonât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook like youâre about to disappear into your own head.â
That almost-smile moved over his mouth, faint and tired. âYou diagnosing me now?â
âI learned from a very bossy doctor.â
âHe sounds unbearable.â
âHe is.â
The quiet settled, full of everything waiting outside the car: the fundraiser, the rumor, the receipt, the repaired car, the shoes, the dress, every careful thing Jack had done before either of you had dared to call it care. You looked down. âI donât know how to let someone take care of me without feeling like a burden.â
Jack didnât answer quickly. That made it worse. Better. Finally, he said, âNeeding help isnât the same thing as being helpless.â
Your throat tightened. You hated him a little for knowing exactly where to put the words. You loved him a little for it too.
âJack,â you said softly.
He waited.
You smiled, small and shaky. âDo I get an allowance now?â
For half a second, he stared at you. Then his eyes closed, and the laugh that left him was quiet, rough, almost unwilling. It felt like winning something no one else got to see. When he opened his eyes, they were warm.
âYou get breakfast.â
âThatâs it?â
âAnd your car.â
âAlready got that.â
âAnd the shoes.â
âAlso already got those.â
âAnd whatever else you need,â he said, thumb brushing once at your neck, âif you stop acting like needing it makes you less.â
Your smile faded into something softer. âThat sounds an awful lot like a boyfriend.â
Jack looked at you for a long moment, tired and undone and still there. âYeah,â he said. âIâm working up to that.â
The fundraiser was still waiting upstairs, all polished glassware and polite cruelty, the kind of room where people could turn want into rumor before the night was over. You would have to go back to PTMC after this. You would pass Jack in hallways. You would hear his voice over trauma bays, see his name on charts, feel the weight of every title that should have made this impossible.
But in the backseat, with his thumb moving slowly against your skin, Jack wasnât looking at you like a mistake, or a risk, or something heâd have to explain away in daylight.
He was looking at you like something worth keeping.
And for what it was worth, you finally believed you were.
I LOOOOOVE
Me being feral after reading this fic too.
Something about the way OP wrote Jack makes me absolutely đŤŁđĽş a man who speaks through action is just đ






















