Summary: Abbotās mildly annoyed when he doesnāt seem to be his favorite residentās favorite attending ā heās pissed when he finds out sheās considering leaving the Pitt.
Warnings: general medical things, mentions of a past MCI (not detailed), did Some Research for this but Iām sure itās still all wrong
Authorās note: Long live Shen and his dunks!!! š„¤hooah!
ā
It starts the way things on night shift at the PTMC emergency department often do ā with Dunkinā Donuts.
Dr. Jack Abbot is speaking to an MS3 whoād just arrived for his first rotation when he sees the other attending on shift, Dr. John Shen, stroll in through the ambulance bay doors with his usual pre-shift coffee.
Itās hardly a rare sight at the Pitt, and Abbot only nods in greeting as he goes back to running the new kid, Wells, through what to expect on his first night shift.
What does surprise him, however, enough that he almost doesnāt hear what Wells asks him next as he head snaps back in the direction of the bay, is that youāre smiling at Shenās side, a matching pink and orange cup in hand.
āDr. Abbot?ā
āUh, yeah,ā Jack says, shaking his head, back to the task at hand. āSorry, dude, whatād you ask?ā
āWill it be a while before handoff?ā
Jack checks his watch. āProbably. We get started when all of the residents are here. Have you done any rotations in an ED before?ā
āThis is my first. I just got done with derm, IM and peds,ā he says, then smiles. āLove peds.ā
āWell, youāre very lucky to be learning from all of these guys. But youāll probably be overwhelmed,ā Jack says, honest. He almost canāt believe they sent a first-timer to nights; it must be a busy rotation. āTry to keep up best you can, eat whenever you have a millisecond. Let me or any of the residents know if you need help.ā
Jack opens his mouth to tell him to cut that shit out immediately, almost forgetting what had called his attention only a few seconds ago until it appears at his side.
āYou and me tonight, Jack?ā Shen says, shattering that illusion as he sips from his coffee. āAnd whoās this?ā
āDr. Shen and Dr. Y/l/n, this is Student Doctor Wells joining us on his first emergency med rotation,ā he says. āDr. Shen is the other attending on shift, and Dr. Y/l/n is our senior resident tonight.ā
āItās nice to meet you,ā you say, immediately shaking his hand. Jack saw your eyes light up the moment you heard there was a new student on shift. You loved working with the new kids. āWelcome to the Pitt.ā
āThanks,ā he says, shaking Shenās hand enthusiastically s well. āAw man, Dunkies? Thatās such a good idea.ā
Jack rolls his eyes outright, feeling his mouth screw to the side in annoyance while you sip from your cup.
āDr. Shen bought donuts for everyone, too. Theyāre in the break room,ā you say, checking your watch, a strand of hair falling out of your ponytail with the motion. āCāmon. I can show you before we start handoff.ā
Wells looks at Abbot, who shrugs. āLike I said, eat when you can.ā
You laugh at that, before your eyes find Wells again, tipping your head in the general direction of the break room. āHeās right. Letās go.ā
Abbot watches the two of you leave before directing his attention back to the chart of the patient heās taking over from Robby in Trauma 2, familiarizing himself with the results from the tests theyāve been running on day shift.
He hears Shen put down his coffee, the offending cup bound to leave a ring of water on Jackās preferred charting station at the central hub. Itās never bothered him before ā the ED is messy enough as it is ā but everything about it is pissing him off tonight.
āIs that something I need to know about?ā he asks quietly.
āWhat?ā
Jack looks up. āYou and Y/l/n. Coming in here holding hands after a coffee date.ā
Shen glitches for a second, frozen where his backpack is halfway off his shoulders.
Then he scoffs.
āIt was not a coffee date,ā he says. Thereās amusement in his eyes.
āHm,ā Abbot says, holding onto his stethoscope while he rolls out his neck, tablet forgotten on the desk. āIf you say so.ā
āUh, I do,ā Shen insists, still entertained.
āIām just saying, Iād rather know now, yāknow, before upstairs buries us in paperwork,ā he says, sniffing, glancing around his department. Robby beckons him from Trauma 2. āSee how we can get ahead with admin. Thatās all.ā
āJesus Christ, Jack,ā his co-attending laughs. āNobody is doing any paperwork. She just wanted to talk about, like, career stuff.ā
Jackās eyebrows furrow. āCareer stuff?ā
Shen shrugs, tugging a few pens out of his bag, clipping his badge onto his scrub pants. āSheās applying for fellowships right now ā you know this. She just wanted some advice. Sheās going around to all the attendings ā Iām sure youāre on the list somewhere, dude. Chill.ā
āAbbot. Shen,ā Robby calls. āIād really love to leave before puck drop.ā
āComing!ā Jack says, before turning back to Shen. āI am chill. I just wanted to know if ā hold on. Sheās going around to everyone, and you somehow beat me in the order?ā
Shen grins around his straw, already bitten beyond practical use, as slimy condensation ring on the desk right next to Jackās phone. Then he shrugs. āI probably just give off better mentor energy than you do.ā
āRight now, I need you to give off attending energy for this handoff,ā Jack bites. āCan you do that?ā
Shen laughs again, passing Jack on his way to Trauma 2. āYouāre on one tonight, old man. Wells better stay out of the way.ā
ā
A pediatric broken arm comes in only half an hour into your shift.
You grab Wells, who follows you obediently while Olive wheels the 8-year-old to the room number Lena calls out, speaking with her mom about the injury.
The childās cries are awful, and you briefly doubt if this was something to bring a med student in on so quickly. Kids were hard for you at first.
āWhatās this?ā Dr. Abbot says from behind the central desk.
āBroken arm. Playground,ā you say over your shoulder.
āWells stay on it. Iāll be in there to check in a few,ā he says, nodding at you. You nod back, pursing your lips in the absence of a smile given the scenario, feeling reassured all the same.
āWe are a teaching hospital, Mrsā¦ā you trail off, waiting for mom to supply her name as Wells and Olive help her daughter onto the bed in Central 11.
āRedford,ā she says. āYou can call me June, though. This is Penny.ā
āAnd whatās your name?ā you say to the younger boy whoād been clutching his motherās hand the entire time, tucked behind one of her legs. You crouch to his level.
āAaron,ā he says, his eyes bloodshot.
āNice to meet you, Aaron. Iām Dr. Y/l/n and this is Student Doctor Wells. Weāre going to take real good care of your sister, okay?ā you ask.
He nods, sniffling into his motherās Lycra pants.
āOkay,ā you say, standing back up. āLike I was saying, this is a teaching hospital, so Iāll have my med student here with me today, if thatās alright with you, Mom.ā
āSure,ā she says, smiling tightly at Wells, her worry still evident, nodding nonetheless. āIs it broken?ā
Turning your attention back to Penny, her left arm is lying limp and awkward. āWe wonāt know for sure until we do some imaging, but weāll give her something for the pain and bump her as far up the list as we can if she needs an x-ray, okay?ā
Mrs. Redford breathes. āOkay. Thank you.ā
āSound good, Penny?ā you ask. She nods.
You speak with Olive about starting ibuprofen and an order for an x-ray. Wells seems to be doing okay at Pennyās bedside, his eyes already scanning her injury.
āWhat would we do next?ā you ask, joining him bedside.
āAfter pain management, X-ray?ā he asks.
āWe could,ā you say, smiling at both Penny and her mom as you both turn away slightly to deliberate. You look at him expectantly. āBut pediatric fractures are also a great candidate forā¦?ā
Wells is still locked in on her arm, but then he looks up for a second, a look of recognition passing on his face.
āUltrasound,ā he says. āOf course.ā
āRight,ā you say, smiling again. āGood job. Didnāt wanna spoil it, but Olive probably already sent for a machine.ā
āNurses, man,ā he says, appreciative.
You finally settle on the stool at Pennyās bedside, getting a closer look.
āWhat happened?ā you ask, looking between both of them.
āI fell from the monkey bars,ā she says.
āThe monkey bars?ā Wells asks, his tone light and happy. He did say he had some peds in him. āOh no! Were you racing your brother?ā
You roll to the side as Wells keeps talking to Penny, and her mom directs her attention to you. āI was watching them, I swear I was, but her dad called, and sheās just so fastāā
āItās alright,ā you say immediately. You werenāt at all worried about this case from a social perspective ā both children presented clothed, well-fed and clean, and mom was caring and cooperative to start. You could keep an eye out through the rest of the exam, and you catch Wellsā eye when sheās not looking.
But with Penny comfortable and the room calmed down slightly, Aaron sitting at the end of her bed, you let June know she could take her son to the family room if she wanted.
āNo, thatās okay. Weāll stay with her at least until her father is here,ā she says.
āOkay,ā you nod, watching Olive pull back the curtain to wheel in the ultrasound machine.
A blur of movement and an audible commotion near the hub catches your ear, but you and Wells remain focused on the task at hand.
Olive is leading him through the set up of the ultrasound, so you keep your ears open, staying aware of your surroundings, noting already where Dr. Abbotās standing in front of the board at the central hub.
Then itās Lenaās voice, followed by a manās.
āSir, you canāt just barge back hereāā
āMy daughterās back here! June? Penny?ā
A man enters the bay suddenly, his chest heaving and eyes wild, pushing past Olive on his way to Pennyās opposite bedside. Father.
āOh, Pen,ā he sighs, shrugging off his suit jacket. āWhat happened?ā
āI fell off the monkey bars,ā she says, a fresh round of tears springing.
āIs it broken? Has she been for an x-ray?ā he asks, shifting his attention to you.
āHi, Mr. Redford,ā you start, nodding for Wells to begin smoothing the gel over Pennyās arm. āWeāre beginning the ultrasound now. Iām Dr. Y/l/n, and this isāā
āUltrasound?ā he says, his face screwing up immediately. His suit jacket discarded in his wifeās lap at some point, he loosens his tie. āIsnāt that for babies? Her arm is fucking broken.ā
The atmosphere in the room changes on a dime, you feel Wells still beside you, and Olive freezes, too, where sheās checking Pennyās chart at the monitor again.
āWe suspect so,ā you say, taking a measured breath. You make sure Wells has a good enough view of the monitor, handing him the wand with a reassuring nod. āWeāre doing the ultrasound to see what kind of break it is so we can properly set it, then recommend her a cast or a brace depending.ā
āHow long has she been waiting here in pain while you guys are fiddling with this machine?ā he asks. He turns to his wife, who has also fallen silent at this exchange. āBabe, why didnāt you push for an x-ray?ā
June looks to you, suddenly helpless. āWell, she saidāā
āNo, no,ā Mr. Redford cuts her off, his eyes squinting at you. āI want a different doctor in here right now.ā
Wells, to his credit, is focused completely on the machine, moving the wand over her arm. You lean in closer.
āKeep going. Try to identify the type of fracture,ā you say softly, before turning your attention back to the father.
āMr. Redford, on fractures such as your daughterās, an ultrasound gives us a quicker diagnosis, and then we donāt have to expose her to radiation,ā you explain. āOn injuries like this, where the hand goes out to catch the fall, ultrasounds are very common.ā
But you see this all the time. Tensions run high enough in the ED, way before a kid is involved. You can tell nothing youāve said has carried any weight as his frustration grows.
Abbot is still visible over his shoulder, now focused on a chart on his tablet but inched a few feet down the counter at the central hub, marginally closer to the bay youāre in.
āWhat is this place?ā Mr. Redford says, his volume growing. Olive looks to you, a question in her eyes, and you nod. āMy wife rushed my daughter here an hour ago and sheās still not in a fucking cast?ā
āWeāll get her in a cast as soon as Student Doctor Wells and Iāā
āAnd youāre letting a student touch my daughter?ā
āGreenstick,ā Wells says quietly. You pull your attention away, checking the monitor, and nod at him.
āGood. Weāll want Ortho down here to be sure,ā you say.
āHey!ā the father shouts suddenly. Your eyes shoot to both of his children, their faces scared. His wife is standing at his side, a hand on his arm, pleading, but he surges on. āIām fucking talking toāā
āSāthere a problem here?ā
Jack appears with Olive behind him, his jaw set as he looks around the room. His eyes donāt go to Mr. Redford first, but to you. He glances at Wells, too, who still has his head down, even if at some point he had moved himself slightly in front of you, in between you and the father.
Only then does Dr. Abbot speak, pointing at Mr. Redford. āDad, out here with me. Now.ā
Mr. Redford scoffs. āOh, are you in charge? Do you want to explain to me why youāre letting college kids run rampant around your ER?ā
āBuddy, I wasnāt asking,ā Jack says. āOr I can get security involved if I need to. Howās that sound?ā
That seems to register with the man, who finally detaches himself from the beside, stalking over to where Dr. Abbot grips the bay curtain. Which is promptly shut as soon as heās on the other side, but not before he meets your eyes one last time.
āYou need to calm down. Youāre scaring your daughter, and your son, too, for that matter,ā you hear him say.
āIāll calm down when sheās been properly seenāā
But Jack cuts him off. āYour daughter is in the care of a very talented, knowledgeable and experienced senior resident, and your wife consented to a student doctor on the case.ā
āI didnāt consent to that.ā
āBut you werenāt here, and thatās none of my business,ā Jack says. āWhat is my business, is my ED and my staff. And you cannot talk to my staff that way unless you want to be removed. Got it?ā
Silence for a bit longer, and then the curtain wooshes open again. Dr. Abbot lingers, hands tucked behind his back, as Mr. Redford returns to his daughterās bedside, looking dejected.
Jack nods at you.
āOkay,ā you sigh, a smile on your face again, trying to breathe a bit a life back into the room. June is beet red. āOlive, can you please call an Ortho consult?ā
āI did earlier,ā she says. āTheyāre sending Park.ā
You whistle. āLucky you, Wells, meeting Park the Shark your first day.ā
ā
After you explain the next steps to both parents, Dr. Park arrives to assess the fracture, fist bumping Dr. Abbot, who then takes his leave, one more nod at you. You wave him off.
Park ultimately agrees with Wellsā diagnosis, telling him not to get too excited over a simple pediatric greenstick under his breath when Wells smiles at you proudly.
Park orders Penny moved up to Ortho to cast her, noting that the swelling isnāt too severe and that she can go home with a new cast tonight. And that yes, that she can pick whatever color she wants.
Kids always bring out a a different side of even the most intimidating doctors, and you smile when Park promises to have the pink options set out for her.
āSee ya, bottom dwellers,ā he says, snapping his gloves into the trash once Penny and her family have been moved out of the room and sent upstairs.
āThanks,ā you say sarcastically. āThat one is all yours. Dadās a lot. You were warned.ā
When he leaves, you check in with Wells, who seems a bit overwhelmed by everything that just occurred as you both sanitize.
āIs that kind of thing normal?ā he asks. āYou were so⦠calm.ā
āSadly,ā you say. āYeah, it is. You just have to focus on the patient. Escalate if you need. Youāll learn.ā
He follows you to the board, brand new Hokas squeaking along the floor. āDudeās a badass.ā
āWho, Park?ā you laugh. āYeah. He knows it, too.ā
But Wells shakes his head as he joins at your side. āNo, Abbot.ā
You quirk a brow, thinking back to the scene, hating that you have to force yourself to relive it to remember the details so quickly, because youāre that used to those kinds of things happening to you.
Youāve gotten so good at packing it up and picking up the next patient, to the point that it almost scares you sometimes.
Maybe not the exact wording youād choose, but Dr. Jack Abbot is a badass.
Because itās true, that youād sought his reassurance on bringing Wells into the room almost as soon as youād decided to do it.
That when a man entered the picture with a raised voice, aggressive posture and foul language, you ran through escalation procedures in your head and looked around for anyone who could help, but your eyes were really only looking for him.
That when Olive had raised her eyebrows at you, you knew she was silently asking if you needed Dr. Abbot, not anyone else, and that you were nodding before you could even properly consider it.
That when he did arrive, seconds later, you felt steady once again, properly able to focus on treating Penny as quickly as possible while still letting Wells learn when it was appropriate.
That when Abbot called you talented and knowledgeable, it wasnāt even the first time youād heard it from him ā because he was usually saying it to your face ā but hearing it for the benefit of someone else had doubled its impact on you.
And that when Jack lingered until Park arrived from Ortho, caught your eyes one last time while you began presenting to the surgeon, you felt yourself trying not to preen.
And most of all, that all of these things point to one irrefutable fact that youāve spent weeks, months trying to ignore, white knuckling your way through brushed shoulders, reassuring words and touches to the small of your back, only feeling like you can breathe again when itās time for your next elective elsewhere ā which is that you have the biggest, most inconvenient, unprofessional and distracting crush on one of your attendings.
āYeah, heās ā he has our backs,ā you say, considering your next words carefully. āSo does Shen.ā
āHe just came in there all āyou, with me, now,āā Wells imitates, which succeeds in making you laugh, forgetting your grief momentarily. āShut him up real quick. So sick.ā
āYeah,ā you sigh, rubbing a hand over your face, looking back to the board for the newest arrival waiting for a doctor. āSo⦠so sick.ā
ā
Hours later, Jack finds you finishing up charts at your favorite desk, on the north side by the family room. You hadnāt seemed rattled earlier by any means, but he still had to check on his resident.
āHi,ā he says softly, tapping his fingers on your desk as he approaches.
āHi, Dr. Abbot,ā you smile. You stretch your arms over your head, your scrubs exposing a strip of skin as you lean back.
He looks away, pretending to suddenly study the chart on his tablet, clearing his throat. āHow are you? Howās the kid doing?ā
āPenny?ā
āNo,ā he laughs. āSorry. Our MS3.ā
āOh. Wells is doing good. Great on peds. Weāve been needing that on nights,ā you say, your smile growing. āHe was with me and Shen on that MVC, and now I think Parker has him with her on scut.ā
Jack nods. āGood. Iām gonna tell him to stick with you, if thatās alright.ā
You nod enthusiastically before you go back to typing and he keeps looking at his own charts, a beat of silence shared between you two before he speaks again.
āYou handled that really well earlier.ā
Your smile from earlier diminishes as you sigh.
āThanks, I guess. He didnāt leave us alone until the big scary attending came in.ā
āMen like that donāt always tend to respond to receiving expert medical advice,ā he says. āYou know that. But you sent for help and kept the exam rolling, keeping the rest of the family calm and making sure your student got some time. You did everything right.ā
Your smile is back, and he feels his own face fit to match yours against his better judgement. The feeling evaporates when you reach for your Dunkinā cup only seconds later.
Itās quiet for another moment as you sip and tap away at your keyboard, Jack still fiddling with his tablet, beginning to think about handoff. Heād really love to be able to admit both cases in BH upstairs before Robby gets in.
āYou still thinking of that pediatrics fellowship?ā he asks, setting his tablet down, resting his hip on the desk. āYou know thereās an attending offer coming.ā
āI donāt know,ā you say, swiveling in your chair to face him. āKids are great, but parents are⦠I think I might be too soft.ā
āYou are not soft. Did someone tell you that? Who told you that?ā
You look surprised, and Jack wonders if heās said the wrong thing or came across as overbearing ā just as soon, he realizes he doesnāt care.
But you just shrug, tucking a leg under you in your chair. āNobody said anything. Fellowshipās still on the table. Iāve just got a lot to think about.ā
āAgain. That offer is coming,ā he reminds you. āIf youāre sick of school.ā
He expects a quip back. Maybe āneverā with an offended face.
But you just nod seriously, logging out of the computer. āYeah. Thatās a whole other thing to think about.ā
āHey. Let me know how I can help, yeah?ā he asks, tracking your movements, the way you wipe your hands on your pants as you stand.
āThanks Dr. Abbot,ā you say, reaching for your tablet. āIām sure Iāll come knocking for a letter of rec or two.ā
āRight,ā he says, still stuck at your desk, even as you walk past him, heading toward the nurseās station. But you stop, his hand reaching out for your shoulder before he can decide on a better tactic.
You pause, looking up at him, no idea how fired up he is over that coffee.
āIf you ever wanna just, like, talk. Iām here for that, too,ā he says, hoping it comes across nonchalant, laid-back. The exact opposite of how he feels saying it.
But you donāt say anything, just nodding with a slightly confused expression as you leave him, his hand falling from your shoulder as he tries not to turn and watch you go.
āOh, that was painful to watch.ā
Jack whips his head toward Shen, whoād supposedly been watching the interaction from the nurseās station, with that stupid coffee still in hand.
Jack had skipped the box of donuts in the break room earlier purely on principle.
āWill you finish that fucking coffee already? Itās been hours.ā
ā
The next blow is arguably worse, because it comes from his best friend.
āI had coffee with your resident over the weekend,ā Robby says offhandedly, just a footnote at the end of sign-out.
Jack raises his eyebrows. āAre you fucking kidding me?ā
Robby laughs, tucking his glasses into his jacket pocket and slinging his backpack over his shoulder, handing the tablet he was carrying over to Jack. āYou supervise how many residents and youāre not even gonna ask me who?ā
āI know who,ā Jack grumbles lowly.
Robby grins tiredly. āShe said she was asking all of the attendings, some of the seniors ā talking with other specialities, too.ā
Jack feels his jaw tick, glad you were requested for a follow-up at triage first thing and arenāt anywhere near this desk right now.
āJack,ā Robby says.
āWhat?ā he bites out, frustrated. Why couldnāt his resident just fucking talk to him?
āI didnāt know she was considering other fellowships,ā Robby says.
Jack shakes his head. āIf she does one, itās peds. We talked about it last week.ā
āOh, I wouldnāt be so sure about that,ā Robby says, sucking his lips to his teeth, his knees bending. He feels awkward.
Abbot looks up from his tablet, not saying anything.
Robby continues quietly, āUltrasound. She even threw out crit care. And I told her she should ask Langdon about education.ā
Jack sets the tablet down on the hub with a thunk, collecting his thoughts silently for a second, his eyes not leaving Robbyās.
āWe donāt have any of those here.ā
āNo,ā Robby says slowly. āBut Presby has ultrasound and education.ā
Three years at the Pitt, an attending offer with your name on it, and you wanted to go to Presby?
Jack sniffs, turning away as he looks back at the tablet. āWell thatās news to me. Who even has crit care? Westbridge?ā
Robby shakes his head.
āOh,ā Jack says in realization, his attempt at looking at his charts useless.
Not PTMC, not Presby or Westbridge.
Not Pittsburgh at all.
āBrother, I hope you know what youāre doing with that one,ā Robby sighs.
āI can assure you that I fucking donāt,ā Jack says lowly. āI donāt get why she wonāt just come talk to me.ā
Robby shakes his head. āYouāll figure it out.ā
As he watches Robby leave, a pitying smile on his face, he catches him nodding in greeting to you near the Chairs entrance, your hand thankfully free of the offending Dunkinā cup tonight.
But as welcome of a sight as you are, it does nothing to quiet the voice in his head telling him that in a few short months you might not even be here. That he might not be treated to the sight that heās come to realize is more than half of what gets him out of bed at 5pm every day.
His dilemma ā teetering so hard toward the personal that heās beginning to forget it was ever professional in the first place ā all fades away as soon as Jack sees you talking with another man, recognizing him immediately as the agitated father from the pediatric broken arm the other day.
Someone, he hasnāt the faintest idea who, tries to get his attention behind him. āDr. Abbotāā
āOne sec,ā he says, already pushing his way past nurses, his steps quick to the other side of the central desk.
The closer he gets, he sees that the daughter is with him, too, and he slows his pace. Everything looks calm, but he waits near the edge of the hub.
āPenny was hoping her doctors would sign her cast,ā Mr. Redford says. āHer doctor upstairs said you guys would be back around this time.ā
Jack busies himself reassigning charts to night shift on the station heād ended up in front of, busy work that he can do while still listening, unable to remember if heād given the stomach pain in South 18 to Parker or Nazely as he listens to your every word, his fingers slipping while he splits his attention between his monitor and your interaction.
āWeād love to!ā you say, bending partially out of his sight in order to sign her cast. āI love the color you chose. Very pretty. Wow! You got Dr. Park sign, too?ā
Jack makes eye contact with Mr. Redford while youāre distracted talking to Penny, whoās in much better shape than she was last week. To his minor, minuscule credit, the man looks sheepish.
āAnd also,ā he says, looking back to you and clearing his throat. āI wanted to apologize. To you and your student, if heās around. The way I acted was unacceptable.ā
āOh,ā you say, and Jack hears the surprise in your voice, watching you tuck Penny out of the way as a gurney comes racing by. āThank you for saying so. It happens. Itās scary to be in here for your kiddo.ā
Donāt dismiss it, Jack thinks. Donāt let him off.
āIām really sorry,ā he says again, his hands back on his daughterās shoulders. Nowhere near you.
Jack breathes.
āI hope you can remember this in the future, whenever you interact with healthcare workers,ā you say, so quiet that Jack can barely catch it over the noise in the ED. Probably so Penny canāt hear. But itās firm, and your voice doesnāt waver. āThis is a very stressful system, but we all just want whatās best for the patient.ā
Jack hears you direct the man and his daughter toward where Wells should be, and fully locks back into what heās been pretending to to be doing for the entire interaction.
He definitely assigned that stomach pain to Henderson, now that he thinks about it.
āYou saw that, right?ā you ask, peeking over the front of the desk, bringing a whoosh of your perfume over his senses.
āI saw,ā Jack nods, clearing his throat before taking his time looking up at you fully.
When he does, youāre almost breathless, beaming with pride, your nails tapping on his desk.
Heād sooner die than let that smile go to Presby.
āTold you,ā he says, weighted. He shakes his head. āYouāre not soft.ā
ā
āYouāll definitely get in.ā
āYeah?ā Crus says, pressing the crosswalk sign, the two of you slowing to a stop as you wait for the signal. The airās nippy for April, your fleece pulled tight around your shoulders. Your hand freezes where itās clutched around a plastic cup of cold brew. Youād never give up your iced drinks, weather be damned.
Youād asked Henderson for coffee before tonightās shift, and heād recommended meeting at his favorite spot that was walking distance from the hospital. The coffee was alright, but the cinnamon buns were just as good as he said.
āI appreciate that,ā he continues. āIād miss this place, though. What about you?ā
You sigh, rolling your neck out as you see the top floors of the Pitt over the trees, a chill going down your spine, and not from the weather. āMillion-dollar question these days, isnāt it?ā
āI thought you wanted peds. You thinking of going straight to community?ā Crus asks, his expression curious.
āNot really,ā you admit. āI could. But I still want to do something else. I just donāt know what anymore.ā
āSo not peds, then?ā he presses.
āPeds is⦠I love it. But itās so hard sometimes,ā you sigh, your lip worried between your teeth. You donāt need to speak the reasons why out loud ā itās obvious. Crus has been by your side since you started, and heās been gloved up with you for some of your worst cases. āSo I just wanted to look around.ā
āWhat else are you thinking, then?ā he asks, eyeing you suspiciously ā like itās absurd that Dr. Y/l/n could land anywhere but at PTMCās emergency pediatrics fellowship next year.
āWell, youāve fully tanked my ultrasound chances at Presby,ā you joke. āBut thatās okay. Iāve thought about critical care, too.ā
āI donāt know. I heard you were coming for my spot on that broken arm a few weeks back,ā Crus laughs, the two of you finally making your way across the street once the walk sign flashes on.
āI learned that from you.ā
āWe learned that. From Abbot,ā he corrects.
You donāt respond, the two of you quietly walking lockstep down the ramp to the public entrance. You revel in the last few moments of normalcy before everything starts to scream at you for the next 12 hours.
āIām surprised you havenāt considered emergency med education,ā Crus says. āYou couldnāt do it here, but. Weād see each other around at Presby, Iām sure.ā
You look up at him as he holds open the door for you. āYeah?ā
āWherever we go, co-res. I hope we stay in touch,ā he smiles. You feel a surge of fondness for him ā feeling slightly less anxious after everything youāve discussed. That was the point of these talks, anyway, to hear from the people who know you, whoāve taught you everything or learned alongside you these years.
Thereās just one you know you canāt bother with, even if it kills you.
You both flash your badges toward security as you bypass the line, and you smile at your favorite guard working the screening today.
āI would miss this place, too,ā you say.
āCan you imagine us ever saying that on our first day here?ā he asks.
You think back to yours and Hendersonās first day as interns. Youād been a ball of nerves, fresh out of med school in Virginia. If he was as nervous as you, he didnāt show it.
āHm. Would it have been before the debridement or after the MCI?ā
He winks.
āWe better head in. Abbotās gonna be all over me if I make you late,ā he says, waiting for you to scan your badge into the ED before he does. āShen said he gave him a hard time the other day.ā
You stop walking at his words, hugging the wall just inside the doors, suddenly nervous to even catch a glimpse of the aforementioned attending now. āWhat do you mean?ā
Crus chucks his empty coffee in the trash and crosses his arms, his voice dropping low around his next words. Itās not hard to go unheard in a room this loud and busy, but itās just as easy to accidentally be overheard. You lean closer.
āYou could talk to him, yāknow,ā Crus says. āHe knows you the best. He could tell you what he thinks.ā
You shake your head, the idea impossible. āI already know what he thinks. He wants me here.ā
āWell, that doesnāt surprise me,ā Crus mutters.
You have no time to ask him to expand, unsure if youād even want to, your stomach so turned over at every underlying implication. You hadnāt eaten enough before shift and you were starting to get shaky from the caffeine, your hands clammy.
āAll this coffee coming in these days, and yet nobody is asking for my order.ā
The source of your anxiety had arrived through the ambulance bay doors at some point, his backpack slung over his shoulder as he stands staring between you and Crus, his eyes trained on your cup, before he looks to your face, eyebrows raised.
His scrubs donāt even match today, and heās gone and worn the top thatās just a bit too big for your liking ā the one that doesnāt accentuate his arms like they deserve. Maybe thatās a godsend today. Your eyes trail over his freckled forearms anyway ā itās useless.
āThey donāt serve break room sludge at my spot,ā Henderson says, before turning back to you. āY/n/n, think about what I said.ā
Crus walks off, and you smile tightly at Jack as you attempt to walk past him as well, but he starts to trail just a pace behind you.
āWhatād he say?ā he asks.
āJust helping me talk through some fellowship apps,ā you answer, stopping at the central hub to glance at the board. He stops too, leaning his arm on the desk.
āYeah? Howās that going?ā
āItās⦠fine,ā you nod, hiking your own bag up higher on your shoulder. āFinishing up soon. Hopefully.ā
āGood,ā he says. āThatās good. Deadlines coming up, right?ā
āYou keeping an eye out?ā you joke, but your hand twitches around your cup.
āYouāve just been⦠drinking a lot of coffee lately,ā he accuses.
Your mouth falls open in protest. āWhat do you āā
āYouād let me know, right?ā he asks, turning to you. āIf you needed any help? And I donāt just mean a letter, Y/l/n. Seriously, anything.ā
Youāre nodding on autopilot, even if his words have hit you in the deepest part of your chest. His words so earnest, youāre attending so unaware of the impact heās even having on you because thatās just who Jack Abbot is. He looks out for everyone in his department no matter how long heās known them, and he gives his heart over and over to patients until he has nothing left in him but a trip to the roof at daybreak.
Itās ironic, in a sad way, that watching him all of these years has made you unable to even let him in like heās asking you to. Because he just doesnāt know what it means to you, and he never will.
āI know, Dr. Abbot,ā you say. āThank you.ā
If heās convinced by your answer he doesnāt look it, and he sighs as he unzips his backpack. āGo drop your stuff. Sign-out is in five.ā
Dismissed, you toss your half-full cup of coffee in the trash on your way to the lockers. Your nerves are shot enough.
ā
Abbot is overseeing you, along with your now near-permanent sidekick in Wells, on a traumatic amputation later that night. Motorcycle accident turned nearly deadly ā he files a mental note to sign this patient out to Robby.
He lingers where he usually does when youāre leading on a patient, hands tucked behind his back near the doors, in a paper gown that youād tied on for him in case he needed to hop in, even if he knew he wouldnāt. Once Ortho had come down for a consult, he felt even less of a need to be actively involved. You could do this in your sleep.
āYou a third year?ā Park asks, watching Wells flush the limb with saline.
Wells looks bewildered. āWho? Me?ā
āIām looking at you, arenāt I?ā he spits.
āYeah, I am, um ā is this notā¦ā he gestures toward the limb, shaky. āIāve never done a saline flush before.ā
Park nods. āItās fine. Come back for an ortho elective next year.ā
Jack watched as Wells looks over to you immediately, and you just raise your eyebrows at him, nodding. Jack can practically feel the pride emanating from you like a force field around the kid.
āUh, yeah,ā Wells says, turning back to Park, then back to the limb. Back to Park again. āI hadnāt thought about it. But I will.ā
āYou stealing my med students, Park?ā Jack quips, hands on his hips. āArmās not even reattached yet.ā
āYour residents, too,ā Park grins, before turning to you. āWe still on for ā whatād we say, tomorrow?ā
Jackās stomach sinks.
You sigh, still holding your gloved hands up. āUh, shoot. Can we do Thursday instead?ā
Park cocks his head. āBefore nights? Sure.ā
āI was thinking we could just hit the caf? Itās easiest, especially if weāre already coming in earlier,ā you say.
āRe-attachmentās favorable,ā he tells one of the OR nurses who appears in the room, ready to bring the patient up. āCan you call up and book the OR they were holding? Wells, you coming up?ā
āHell yeah,ā he says, standing quickly, the stool heās sitting on skidding into the wall behind him. You stifle a giggle, and Jack can feel you turn to him, but he canāt bring himself to share in your amusement.
āOkay, well make sure you bring that,ā Park says, pointing at the arm. He turns back to you. āIām not doing the caf. Get my number before you leave in the morning and weāll figure it out.ā
Jack doesnāt hear the rest, shedding his PPE into the corner bin and shouldering the trauma door open with force, muttering an excuse toward one of the OR nurses thatās inadvertently stood in his way, aggressively rubbing sanitizer into his hands as he stalks back to the central desk.
He stares at the board as new arrivals filter in, but he canāt process any of it.
Because ā fucking Park? It sits in his stomach like a rock ā the knowledge that youād sooner turn to an attending on a different floor, in a completely different speciality, than youād come to him for anything.
Robby and Shen had hurt, too. Henderson he didnāt even mind ā he was glad his residents had a close relationship, happy that you had an equal to turn to. Because Jack prided himself on his mentorship. Itās been one of the most rewarding things of working at this hospital, the never-ending parade of new kids coming to check a box for med school that ended up discovering their passion. It was few whoād actually have the chops to stay.
But you were always supposed to be one of them. From the day heād met you, he knew he wanted you to want to stay. Heād held his breath every time you came back from an elective, bright-eyed, explaining everything youād learned with a new-found enthusiasm he was worried the Pitt had long ago stolen from you. And then heād feel selfish, realizing his biggest fear is that youād fall in love with something else and leave him and this place behind, when he knew he should just want you to be the best doctor you can be.
So Park feels like a slap in the face, like ice-cold water poured over him in the middle of Trauma 2.
Jack had spent three years watching over you ā he knew your tells. He knew you were stressed the last few months, your anxiety not impacting your performance, but definitely his own mood. Maybe it made him feel inadequate as a leader that his resident was clearly struggling and wouldnāt talk to him about it. Or maybe it just worried him in a way that heād realized long ago that he shouldnāt be worrying for you.
ā
Nearing the end of his rotation, Wells had become a presence you realize youāll miss having around. But you have a sneaking suspicion heāll be back.
āHowād you feel last weekend?ā you ask, walking with him toward the break room.
āOh,ā he says holding the door once you swing it open. āYeah. That sucked.ā
āDid you end up getting to talk to your niece?ā you ask him quietly, the two of you loitering at the coffee pot now. Not really enough time to sit down, but just enough to duck away for a second after walking him through some sutures.
āMhm.ā
āDid it help?ā you ask.
He shrugs, titling his head side to side. āMaybe? I think a little.ā
āGood,ā you nod. āItās good to have people you can reach out to outside of all of this that remind you why. Even if weāre here for you, too.ā
Wells talks about his next rotation, in psych ā which heās told you many times by now heās not particularly excited for. But you told him it might surprise him; you remember enjoying it back in your MS4 year, after youād avoided it as long as possible.
āYouāre coming back for that Ortho elective though, arenāt you?ā you say, idle chatter.
The NP that had been taking their lunch leaves, and itās just the two of you after a while. Wells immediately angles his body toward you.
āListen. I have a question. Itās kinda embarrassing,ā he starts.
āOh?ā you blink, shaking away the cobwebs that crowd your mind in the dead hours of this shift. The microwave tells you itās almost 6am.
āWhat are the moral implications of me asking out a nurse? Even if sheās on day shift?ā
You canāt help the laugh that bubbles out of you.
āIs it that bad?ā Wells asks, distressed.
But you cover your mouth, clearing your throat to stop your laugh but unable to fight your smile. āItās Emma, isnāt it?ā
āHowād you know?ā
āI have eyes.ā
His cheeks flame red, a feat considering how pale heād just been. āWell, yeah. It is her. Is that, like, kosher? Is there a policy?ā
You pat his shoulder. āOh, Wells. If a doctor got in trouble every time he hit on a nurse around here weād be a skeleton crew.ā
āSo itās fine?ā he says, his tone hopeful.
āSure. Some personal advice, though,ā you wince, thinking back to an elective last year when an EMT asked you out your first day. Youād avoided the ambulance bay for four straight weeks after youād kindly rejected him. He was cute, built in the way that a lot of EMTs are, and he never held it against you. Your heart was just a little locked up at your home hospital. āWait ātil after your rotation ends.ā
He nods seriously. āGot it.ā
āCāmon, loverboy, we should go,ā you tell him, reaching for the door handle as you make for the exit.
āThanks, Dr. Y/l/n. I figured youād know.ā
You pause, your hand releasing, letting the door shut again as you turn back to him, skeptical. āWhy?ā
Wells tilts his head down at you, his eyebrows furrowed. āāCause youāre⦠dating an attending?ā
Your heart begins to hammer in your chest. He hadnāt specified, but you know who heās talking about. And if an MS3 can clock you after a few weeks on shift, you were worse off than youād thought.
āIām not dating anyone,ā you say, simple denial that you hope heāll buy.
You curse the casual relationship youād built with Wells over the last few weeks, because he knew by now nothing was out of bounds. He knew he could talk to you ā something youād have been proud of an hour ago. Something you were proud of when he asked you about hospital dating policy.
āWait, so you and Abbot arenātā¦ā
āWells,ā you say quietly. āNo.ā
āIām sorry!ā he whisper-shouts, his eyes wide. āIām so sorry, I just figured ā the way people talk about it, I just ā ā
Your body goes cold, your back finding the wall of the break room. āWhat do they say?ā
āUh,ā he says sheepish. āJust that ā ā
But you raise your hand, cutting him off when Shen walks in, nodding to you both on his way to the fridge.
āActually, no. Um,ā you clear your throat, trying to collect your thoughts, painfully cognizant of the other attending whoās now within ear shot of your on-set panic. āAnyway. Like I said, wait until you rotate. Or donāt. Youāre fine. Youāll be fine.ā
Youāve probably gone as pale as you feel, as pale as heād been at the beginning of this conversation, because Wells looks concerned. āDr. Y/l/n?ā
āIām gonna step out for just a sec,ā you mutter, avoiding eye contact with Shen, who now seems curious over Wellsā shoulder. āCheck back in on our South patients. Then Shen can take you. Or find Ellis.ā
āY/l/n,ā Shen calls. āYou good?ā
āJust gonna get some air,ā you say over your shoulder, opening the door again, not waiting for Wells or, god forbid, Shen to follow you out as you let it swing shut, hoping more than anything you can make it up to the roof without running into Jack Abbot.
ā
You manage to avoid him, even if you almost barrel full-speed into Crus on the floor and are forced to share an elevator with Park on your way up to the roof, mad at your past self for just trying to make connections with your coworkers, who can now recognize when youāre in the middle of an existential crisis and horrifyingly both ask if youāre alright.
Itās cold on the roof, even as the sun rises in pink and orange tones. You donāt cry yet, but you feel it coming, your elbows resting on the railing, palms pressed into your eyes. You think you might need to sit down soon.
When the door squeaks open a few moments later, you donāt turn, but you recognize the gait of the footsteps before theyāre even halfway to joining you at the railing.
āIād ask you whatās wrong,ā Jack starts, and his tone is steeped in frustration. āBut would you even want my help?ā
Youāre bewildered, lowering your hands, turning to see him, his arms crossed stubbornly over his chest with one of his eyebrows raised. āWhat?ā
āNothing,ā he shrugs. āJust feels like my senior resident has gone around to every doctor in this hospital before coming to me even once.ā
āDr. Abbotāā
āYou know I begged Robby to let me have you on nights?ā
Youāre slow to stand up straight. āWhat?ā
āYou came to me as an intern, Y/n,ā Jack says. āI saw what you were capable of the first time you swung shifts.ā
āBut Iāā
āNight shift is hard,ā he continues. āPacing is weird. Patients are weirder. Itās not for everyone. But I watched you, and I just ā I knew you could find your place here.ā
Itās a streak of pride, you realize, underlying all of that tension.
āAnd you have. So what I canāt work out is why youāre going to leave Pittsburgh without even talking to me about it, when you and I both knowā¦ā he continues, he tears his eyes from the sunrise, looking unsure suddenly, finally meeting your eyes. āYou know you have a place here with us, donāt you?ā
Heād made that clear enough since you started your third year. Unfortunately for you, that was right around the time the line had started to blur.
āBut thatās it, Jack, I donāt ā I donāt know anything anymore. Because this place is ā itās you,ā you accuse. āIāve tried so hard to make my own lane and youāre just all over it.ā
He balks at that. āItās my fuckinā shift. I brought you on it so you could make that lane. And you have.ā
āBut youāre my attending,ā you say, begging him to understand. If Wells could read between the lines after four weeks, surely Jack had, too. Maybe he had been doing that all along if the hospital really was abuzz about it. You cringe, thinking about him discussing this with anyone else.
āRight. So you come to me when you need help,ā he says, his hands on his chest. āNot Robby. Not Shen. Surely not fucking Park.ā
āI canāt,ā you plead, feeling tears brim at the back of your eyes. āYou know I canāt.ā
āWhy not?ā he says, moving closer. You wish he wouldnāt ā you wish heād go downstairs and just let you freak out like youād been needing to for weeks.
You wish above all that you didnāt have to leave the place you loved so much because you love the man in front of you more.
āWhy?ā he repeats, his hand reaching for you. Your breathing stops, your eyes finding his again. His eyes are dark as his hand rests on the side of your jaw, making sure your gaze doesnāt stray again. āJust talk to me for once. Please.ā
You feel a giant tear leaking out of your eye, racing a hot path toward his calloused palm. He catches it with the side of his thumb.
āI always thought that Iād move right back to Texas after residency. And then I came here,ā you admit. His left hand finds the other side of your face, and you realize youāre fully crying only by the movement of his fingers. āAnd I met you.ā
Realization across his face, his brow unfurling, his lips parted ā to be quickly followed by his touch gone from you, youād assume. Maybe an awkwardly offered tissue and a promise to forget all of this. Another reminder about getting a letter of rec before the door swings open and closed again.
But the whipping cold doesnāt bite at your cheeks. You actually only get warmer as his body moves closer, your chest touching his; youāre worried heāll feel your heartbeat soon if he presses any closer.
āY/n,ā he says slowly.
āI love this place, Jack,ā you continue, swallowing around a new set of hot, ugly tears that fall anyway. He tracks the movement of your throat. āIt breaks my heart every single day but I love it. And I looked up one day and realized I hadnāt even considered a program outside of Pittsburgh in years.ā
āNo. Donāt bullshit me anymore,ā he says, shaking his head. āRobby said you wanted to leave.ā
āBecause of you, Jack,ā you whimper. āBecauseāā
āNo,ā he says again, shaking his head with more vigor. āNo. You take me out it. Now.ā
āWhat?ā
āIām here. Iāll be right here after youāre done,ā he says, his voice steady and his words precise, like heās walking you through a procedure or explaining to a patient their options. āIām yours, whether you stay here or not. Wherever you go. Iāll be here.ā
āJack,ā you breathe. āWhat are you doing?ā
He moves closer, his breath fanning over your face; the warmth welcomed as the cold cools your tears. His hands tilt your head up slightly.
āYou still need me to spell it out for you sometimes,ā he asks, not an ounce of mirth or amusement, not longer just asking. Begging. āDonāt you?ā
You nod.
āYouāre an amazing doctor,ā he says with conviction. āI donāt know if this is gonna help your situation or not. Butā¦ā
His nose nudges against yours, and his ribcage heaves against your chest. Your eyes flicker to his lips, and you donāt know if this will help you either.
āPlease,ā you say anyway.
Jack Abbot is a bit of an asshole ā the edge to his personality that he needs in order to run a place like this bleeds through on some nights more than others. He can be stern, more stubborn in the midnight hours.
And he kisses you just the same. You pull away after a moment, somehow finding the mental space to be worried people will notice youāre both gone.
āJack,ā you breathe into his mouth, your head spinning. āWe shouldāā
āNuh-uh,ā he speaks through spit-slicked lips, his mouth finding yours again quickly. āCome here.ā
ā
āYouāre not getting out of a coffee chat with me. You know that, right?ā
Jack watches you freeze where youāre digging through his dresser, your hands paused on an olive green t-shirt. You hold it up to him in question and he nods.
āWhat do you mean?ā you ask, pulling it over your body, kneeing your way back up the bed, settling back at his side. Your hand finds where his is outstretched.
He checks his watch where heād discarded it on his night table after shift, your PTMC badge right next to it. āCoffee potāll go off in like two minutes. And then youāre gonna talk to me about your fellowships.ā
āYeah? Thatās what this all was?ā you ask, your eyes trained on where your fingers trail up the inside of his forearm, tracing the lines of his veins. He grabs your hand when itās back within his reach.
āTalk me through it,ā he says.
You rejoin him in bed minutes later, carrying two cups of coffee from his kitchen. Youād asked him how he liked it before you went down the hall, wrinkling your nose when he says black with a little sugar from the tin on the counter. Heād enjoyed the view anyway as you sauntered down his hallway, bare except for his old ARMY shirt.
āNo almond milk for me?ā you accuse.
āIāll add it to my list for next time,ā he says, sitting up against his headboard, accepting the cup offered to him. You hand him your cup too, which he sets to the side with confusion.
He notices then the black leather notebook tucked under your arm, that you must have grabbed from the bag youād discarded in his entryway last night.
āWhat is that?ā
āWhere I keep all my notes,ā you say, bashful, flipping it open, a PTMC waiting room pen jammed between its pages. āFrom talking to people.ā
Heās silent for a moment.
āWhat? You saidāā
āNo. Go ahead,ā he says. āYouāre so hot right now.ā
He bends his leg, which you immediately lean on, hiding your smile in his knee. āStop.ā
āGo.ā
You sigh, flipping through your pages, biting the pen between your teeth. āUltrasound at Presby is out. Crusāll get that for sure.ā
āNope. I havenāt finished his letter of rec yet,ā Jack says. āIāll tank his chances if you say the word.ā
āI didnāt even want it,ā you admit with a one-armed shrug. āItād be really cool, butā¦ā
āNot your thing,ā he finishes. You nod.
āThen, I talked to Park about peds,ā you say. āI knew he did a peds fellowship. For ortho, obviously. At PTMC, too.ā
āWhatād he say?ā
āThat Iād be stupid not to do it,ā you deadpan.
Jack grumbles. āHeās right.ā
You flip to the next page, giggling. āDonāt let him hear you say that.ā
āTrust me. He will never hear it in my ED.ā
A glint in your eyes, like you see right through him. You remember that interaction that had knocked him off-kilter a few days ago. You see it differently now.
āAnd then, oh ā Robby, Shen and Crus all talked to me about emergency med education,ā you say. āRobbyād write my letter.ā
āI already wrote your letter,ā Jack admits. āIāve been waiting for you to bring that fellowship up for weeks.ā
Your pen falls to the pages, your mouth twisted in confusion as you tear your eyes away to look at him. āWhy didnāt you?ā
āYouāre smart enough. And I knew youād love peds just as much,ā he says, tugging your notebook out of your grip, the pen, too. He tosses it aside. āBut only one of them is at my hospital. And I didnāt wanna⦠Itās all yours for the taking, baby. Anything you want.ā
He sees your eyes trail his bare chest, the skin of his legs where his thighs are peeking out from beneath his boxers, still tangled up in the sheets. āAll of it?ā
āYou mean me?ā
You nod.
āFor a long time now, Y/n,ā he says. āAnd you donāt need to write that down.ā
āWhy?ā you ask, rising up to your knees, his free hand finding the back of your thigh, helping you swing it over his lap.
āāCause Iāll never let you forget it,ā he promises, tilting his head up to you.
āPut your coffee down,ā you command, settling in his lap, your hands finding his cheeks.
āWhy?ā
āāCause Iām gonna spill it,ā you warn.
He turns his head, nudging your discarded phone out of the way with his mug to make room. Your things all intermixed with his so naturally, he feels silly thinking back to how this all even started. āHow does my wisdom measure up to the otherāā
You cut him off mid-sentence, your lips slotting over his open mouth. You taste like his toothpaste and the shitty coffee he buys pre-ground at the grocery store. The skin on the back of your thighs is so damn soft, but he already knew that. Your jeans are in his living room.
āThey donāt even compare,ā you murmur.
āNo?ā
You shake your head, before eyeing the cups of coffee on the side table. Your face twists.
āBut we have to get you a new machine, Jack. What the fuck are you drinking?ā
ā
A few weeks later, you walk into work with Jack, a cold brew with almond milk in your hand and a drip coffee with one raw sugar packet in his.
The closing baristas had already memorized your pre-shift orders at the shop youād found near Jackās place that has quickly become his favorite spot ā not Crusā, Robbyās or Parkās.
And for the love of god, not Dunkinā.
The matching logos leave no room for mistakes to be made by anyone whoās paying attention ā and as Jack had recently discovered, theyāre all paying attention.
You leave him at the central hub for the lockers, just a smile in parting. You were professional enough. And youād already kissed him enough in his car, his lips still tasting like coffee and your coconut lip balm.
You received two fellowship offers earlier that morning, only a few hours after shift. Peds at PTMC or education at Presby.
Both in Pittsburgh.
But the choice was yours, which he made sure you knew before he helped you celebrate properly.
āIs that something I need to know about?ā
Jack looks up from where heād been yanking pens out of his bag, depositing them into his scrub top pocket. Your pen had somehow made it into his backpack; he could tell from the bite marks.
Shen is leaning against the back of the central desk, slurping the remnants of his coffee through his straw loudly. Lena is pretending, very poorly, not to listen.
āWhat do you mean?ā Abbot says, unamused.
He takes another much-needed sip of his own coffee ā you were so far proving detrimental to his post-shift sleep schedule.
He turns his head from Shen to find you across the room at West 12, already seated bedside, nodding along to whatever Langdon is saying about the patient present.
You catch Jackās eye, your lips pulling up around your words, and he decides heāll be fine even if that smile goes to Presby.
Because itās still coming home to him.
āItās just,ā Shen continues, waving his cup around, his grin mischevious as Jack turns back. āI just seem to recall there being a concern about ā what was it, being buried by paperwork?ā
Matsukawa tilts his head to the side as you approach, slowly taking a drag from the cigarette in his hand before he exhales. Smoke slides from his parted lips, drifting and disappearing into the night air.
He doesnāt answer your question.
Heās leaning against the brick wall outside of the venue, dark hair still damp with sweat from the set he just played. The sounds of the next bandās soundcheck pour out from the front door as it swings closed on the heels of a couple walking in.
You hold out the cold bottle of water clutched in your hands, and his mouth tilts upward ever so slightly as he shakes his head. Mattsun brings the cigarette to his lips again, regarding you for a moment with that quiet, careful gaze of his.
Itās difficult not to fidget, not to step closer into his space.
Itās difficult to pretend that thereās anything platonic about the hitch in your breath.
(Itās difficult to ignore the fact that every single interaction you have with Mattsun anymore feels like flirting.)
Thereās a tear in the sleeve of his black t-shirt. He flicks the ash off of the edge of the cigarette, the silver ring on his pointer finger catching in the flood of pale light that blankets the sidewalk. The sky shudders with the dull rumble of distant thunder.
You keep staring at his hands, wishing the dexterous movement of his fingers picking and sliding down his guitarās fretboard wasnāt burned into the back of your mind. It makes your mouth go dry.
Mattsun stubs the cigarette out on a brick and pushes off of the wall, tossing whatās left into a trash bin before he approaches you. Youāre facing opposite directions when he stops, standing shoulder-to-shoulder. He smells like the familiar notes of his detergent, his body wash, and the vaguest undercurrent of sweat.
(And youād be a liar if you said the combination doesnāt make your toes curl.)
Reverberations of sound leak from the building as the next band starts playing. Mattsunās head is turned toward you, eyes sliding down the length of your face.
Your lips prickle under the weight of his attention.
The venueās front door swings open again, and you can hear Makki call out to the both of you. Mattsun ignores him, doesnāt take his eyes off of you.
āIāll quit when you finally let me kiss you,ā he says, mouth quirked in a half-smile, voice low and a little rough around the edges from singing.
Heat floods your gut, and you find yourself rooted to the spot.
Mattsun huffs, nudging your shoulder once before striding toward where Makki waits at the door.
(Like you can both pretend that was a joke, if thatās what you want.)
(Like he has no idea that you desperately, pathetically want nothing more than to feel the bite of the brick wall digging into your shoulder blades as Matsukawa presses you up against it. Your fingers in his hair, his hands at your waist. His mouth on yours.)
it gets me bc my dad was NEVER in his house. he was a beach bum and was allowed out 24/7 and i couldnāt even go get the mail by myself (itās on the other side of my GATED neighborhood) until i was like 19
fandom etiquette as a whole died when people who didnāt grow up on fandoms became stans during lockdown, yes, but why am i seeing people openly mocking fics on twitter. why am i seeing screenshots of fics with captions like ābro what is this š.ā why am i seeing people mock fic writers for not knowing how sports or theater or college or any other organization operates in the real world.
ācollege is absolutely nothing like thisā āwhy are we writing four people on the team scoring a hat trick in one gameā āso tech work is nothing like this, hope that helps!ā
if you donāt like a fic, and if you canāt suspend your belief enough to enjoy a fic that exaggerates or ignores real-world orgs, you donāt have to read it. you donāt have to screenshot it and put it on blast for twitter. you donāt have to post a link to it in the replies. the back button is literally there on your phone. itās not giving babyās first fandom anymore, itās giving entitled asshole and it isnāt as cute as you think it is.
honestly i think the reason this rhetoric has been so prolific on tumblr is because the user base is largely very impressionable and sheltered people who get most of their opinions from the internet, and i donāt mean that to be a form of shaming or anything, just a fact that sets the scene for the information breakdown that had to happen for this to be such an issue on here. many of the people on here never bothered to think about or learn to understand why things like pedophilia and incest are frowned upon so heavily. they just know that theyāve been told āitās badā so when someone comes along with a big platform full of like-minded people, who at a surface level sound well educated and smart, and starts saying āyouāve been told these things are bad because of christian conservative puritanism, thereās nothing inherently wrong with this stuff! unlearn your biases!ā thereās no argument these people can think of for why that isnāt true. because they didnāt bother understanding why these things are so terrible. they blindly trusted the shallow morals they were fed growing up, and because they never interrogated those morals to either change or bolster them, theyāre easily persuaded into another opinion, just as blindly. itās the same way someone whose only opinion on trans people is ātrans rights!ā can easily be radicalized into a transphobe years later. they donāt have any core principles to ground that belief, and were easily swayed by an argument saying the opposite of what they were ignorantly parroting
And it's crazy bc it just further reinforces actual puritanical ideals like the value of conquest and power over your ""property"" (marginalized people). These folks have always used terms like "purity wank" or whatever, but in recent years, they've truly tried to flip the narrative and use progressive dogwhistles to erase the feminist framing of this conversation entirely.
Like... y'all. Many intersectional feminists have always opposed the romanticization of sexual violence on the grounds of how it's been used to dehumanize and humiliate marginalized people. The objectification of victims is not new, it's not progressive, it's still systemically supported by our government, courts, entertainment industry, etc.
Rape culture and white supremacy didn't go away just bc you personally stopped talking about it.